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Iron and Steel Division - Production of High Manganese Slags by Selective Oxidation of Spiegeleisen
By R. C. Buehl, M. B. Royer
High manganese slags of low phosphorus and iron content are produced by air oxidation of high phosphorus spiegeleisen in a basic-lined converter. Control of phosphorus and iron within specification li
Jan 1, 1953
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Iron and Steel Division - Production of Spiegeleisen from Open-Hearth Slag in an Experimental Blast Furnace
By R. C. Buehl, M. B. Royer
A three ton per day blast furnace using blast temperatures up to 2200°F was operated to recover manganese from open-hearth slag and manganiferous iron ore. The spiegel product containing 12 to 2
Jan 1, 1953
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Iron and Steel Division - Rate and Mechanism of the Sulfur Transfer Reaction
By S. Ramachandran, N. J. Grant, T. B. King
MANY investigations of the rate of the sulfur transfer reaction between carbon-saturated iron and blast furnace type slags have been made." It is evident that the reaction is complex, the rate being a
Jan 1, 1957
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Iron and Steel Division - Rate of Dissolution of Carbon-Steel in Molten Iron-Carbon Alloys
By V. Koump, T. F. Perzak, R. G. Olsson
Jan 1, 1965
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Iron and Steel Division - Rate of FeO Reduction from a CaO-SiO2-Al2O3 Slag By Carbon-Saturated Iron (Discussion, p. 1403)
By W. O. Philbrook, L. D. Kirkbride
IN the normal operation of the iron blast furnace, reduction of the iron oxides is accomplished almost entirely above the tuyeres.' Blast furnace slags usually contain less than 0.5 pct FeO, alth
Jan 1, 1957
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Iron and Steel Division - Rate of Reduction of an Oxide Sphere in a Stream of Reducing Gas
By Hillary W. St. Clair
An equation is derived for the rote of reaction of a sphere of metal oxide in a restricted enclosure through which a reducing gas is flowing. The equation takes into consideration the reaction rate co
Jan 1, 1965
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Iron and Steel Division - Reaction Zones in the Iron Ore Sintering Process
By R. D. Burlingame, T. L. Joseph, Gust Bitsianes
DESPITE almost fifty years of commercial practice, the sintering of iron ore has received little fundamental study. Much of the theoretical work1-'has dealt with the constitution of sinter produc
Jan 1, 1957
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Iron and Steel Division - Reactions in Ferromanganese Blast Furnace Hearth Refractories
By Arnulf Muan, Hobart M. Kraner
Ferromanganese alloys react with aluminu-silica brick in blast furnace hearths and cause the formation of new phases with low refractoriness and consequent failure of the refractory lining. The nature
Jan 1, 1962
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Iron and Steel Division - Reducing Period in Stainless Steel Melting
By H. P. Rassbach, E. R. Saunders
MUCH progress has been made in recent years in the theory and practice of making stainless steel. By effective utilization of oxygen for decar-burization and more suitable alloying agents, it has been
Jan 1, 1954
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Iron and Steel Division - Reduction Kinetics of Hematite and the Influence of Gaseous Diffusion
By N. A. Warner
Dense cylindrical specimens of artificial hematite were reduced in hydrogen over a range 0-f total pressures between 0.1 and 1.0 atm and temperatures between 650" and 950°C. Hydrogen reduction at a to
Jan 1, 1964
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Iron and Steel Division - Reduction Kinetics of Hematite in Hydrogen-Water Vapor-Nitrogen Mixtures
By W. M. McKewan
Jan 1, 1962
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Iron and Steel Division - Reduction Kinetics of Magnetite in H2-H2O-N2 Mixture
By W. M. McKewan
Dense magnetite pellets were reduced in hydrogen-water vapor-nitrogen mixtures over a temperature range of 400° to 500° C at a pressure of 0.97 atm. The rate of reduction per unit area was found to b
Jan 1, 1962
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Iron and Steel Division - Reduction Kinetics of Magnetite in Hydrogen at High Pressures
By W. M. McKewan
Magnetite pellets were reduced in flowing hydrogen at pressures up to 40 atm over a temperature range of 350° to 500°C. The rate of weight loss of oxygen per unit area of the reaction surface was foun
Jan 1, 1962
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Iron and Steel Division - Reduction of Silicon from Blast Furnace Type Slags
By J. Chipman, N. J. Grant, J. C. Fulton
This paper contains data on the distribution of silicon between liquid iron-silicon-carbon alloys saturated with respect to graphite and CaO-SiO2-Al2O3 slags under 1 atm of CO at 1600°C. The ranges of
Jan 1, 1954
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Iron and Steel Division - Reduction of Undoped and Chromium-Doped Wüstite in Carbon Monoxide-Carbon Dioxide Mixtures
By J. Bruce Wagner, Roger L. Levin
Integrated forms of two solutions of Fick's second law for the movement of a plane interface through a sample of wustite, and for diffusion into a semi-infinite slab of wustite, are shown to yiel
Jan 1, 1965
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Iron and Steel Division - Reduction Rates of Iron Ores in a Fluid Bed Reactor
By F. C. Schora, H. P. Meissner
Iron ore from Cerro Bolivar, Segre', and Sierre Grande was reduced in fluid beds at about SOOT, using gas analyzing 20.5 pct CO, 41 pct Hz, and 38.5 pct N2. Except in the early stages of reductio
Jan 1, 1962
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Iron and Steel Division - Regenerator Efficiency and Air Preheat in the Open Hearth (Discussion page 1298)
By B. M. Larsen
A discussion based on three commercial furnace tests and electrical analogue calculations is presented. It shows that while regenerator efficiency is mainly dependent on loading or relative amount of
Jan 1, 1955
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Iron and Steel Division - Relation between Chromium and Carbon in Chromium Steel Refining
By D. C. Hilty
It has long been known that in melting high-chromium steels, some of the carbon might be oxidized out of the melt without excessive simultaneous oxidation of chromium, and that higher temperatures fav
Jan 1, 1950
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Iron and Steel Division - Relation between Chromium and Carbon in Chromium Steel Refining - Discussion
By D. C. Hilty
C. E. SIMS*—This is a most interesting and important paper. It is important from two standpoints. First, it has as-spects of being highly accurate and therefore extremely useful to the operating man i
Jan 1, 1950
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Iron and Steel Division - Relative Deoxidizing Powers of Some Deoxidizers for Steel. (With discussion)
By C. E. Sims, F. W. Boulger, H. A. Saller
Most of the data on equilibrium constant and the deoxidations potentialities of those elements, considered to be stronger deoxidizers for steel than is silicon, have been calculated from thermodynamic
Jan 1, 1950