Principles of the Manufacture of Iron and Steel: With Some Notes on the Economic Conditions of Their ProductionG. Routledge, 1884 - 744 pages |
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Page x
... carbon in upper region of furnace to be avoided , 67. Extent of loss by such combustion of carbon , 68 . Combustion of carbon at the tuyeres , 69. Quantity of heat evolved in reducing iron by means of carbon and by means of oxide of carbon ...
... carbon in upper region of furnace to be avoided , 67. Extent of loss by such combustion of carbon , 68 . Combustion of carbon at the tuyeres , 69. Quantity of heat evolved in reducing iron by means of carbon and by means of oxide of carbon ...
Page xiii
... carbon it contains , 234. Heating power of fuel , how modified , 235. By quantity and nature of foreign matter , 235. By temperature and condition of air , 238. By state of oxidation , 238. By quantity of heat which escapes in gases ...
... carbon it contains , 234. Heating power of fuel , how modified , 235. By quantity and nature of foreign matter , 235. By temperature and condition of air , 238. By state of oxidation , 238. By quantity of heat which escapes in gases ...
Page 33
... quantity of carbon required for the reduction of the particular compound of iron and oxygen usually found in our ores as they reach the smelter - viz .: the peroxide - is in reality inconsiderable . Heat , applied to a mixture of the ...
... quantity of carbon required for the reduction of the particular compound of iron and oxygen usually found in our ores as they reach the smelter - viz .: the peroxide - is in reality inconsiderable . Heat , applied to a mixture of the ...
Page 47
... carbon , and necessarily also with considerable expense for labour , and for ... quantity of coke it is capable of affording . This is the only portion which ... carbon to secure its expulsion . For the present we will confine our ...
... carbon , and necessarily also with considerable expense for labour , and for ... quantity of coke it is capable of affording . This is the only portion which ... carbon to secure its expulsion . For the present we will confine our ...
Page 48
... quantities of heat , according to the amount of oxygen with which it may be made to combine in different cases . As an example , one unit of carbon can take up either one or two equivalents of oxygen ; but it gives out 2,400 heat units ...
... quantities of heat , according to the amount of oxygen with which it may be made to combine in different cases . As an example , one unit of carbon can take up either one or two equivalents of oxygen ; but it gives out 2,400 heat units ...
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Common terms and phrases
20 units actual afforded amount analyses average Belgium Bessemer blast furnace Britain burnt calcined calories carbon as carbonic carbonic acid cent charcoal charge cinder Clarence Cleveland CO₂ coke collieries combustion compared composition considerable consumed consumption contained converter cost cubic feet cwts difference district Durham earnings employed England escaping gases estimated experience figures fixed carbon forge fuel Germany given hearth heat evolved hematite hot blast hydrogen increase Iron and Steel iron trade ironstone labour less lime limestone loss malleable iron manganese manufacture materials matter metallic iron metalloids Middlesbrough mineral mines nitrogen obtained oxide of iron oxygen paid Phosphoric acid phosphorus pig iron present produced puddling furnace quantity of carbon railway raw coal reduced referred silica silicon slag smelting steel rails Sulphur temperature tons Total tuyeres unit of carbon unit of coke units of iron wages weight
Popular passages
Page 99 - ... example, very little increase of lung capacity can be expected ; yet even here, I have noted a decided improvement in the contour of the chest, as well as the acquirement of increased respiratory power. It is during childhood, however, that the greatest successes of physical culture are to be noted, and it is not difficult to understand why this should be the case. All the conditions are at that time favorable for development. The bones and cartilages forming the framework of the chest contain...
Page 39 - A personal and apparently immaterial event produced a revolution of public feeling, for which it would be difficult to find a parallel in the history of English politics.
Page 64 - Practically, therefore," adds Sir L. Bell, " the combustion of a unit of carbon burnt to carbonic oxide in a blast furnace of 80 feet gives nearly as good an effective result, although it evolves only 2,400 calories, as the same quantity of carbon burnt to carbonic acid in a low fire, although, in the latter case, 8,000 calories per unit of carbon are generated. There is, however, this marked difference between the two examples, that whereas the 7,992 heat units referred to in the case of the blast...
Page 65 - ... is indeed visible in the flame and incandescence at the surface of the fuel. On the other hand, in a blast furnace of 80 feet the materials are, it is true, red hot for more than 50 feet above the hearth, but the upper surface of the materials, instead of being red hot, exhibits little or no signs of incandescence, proving a comparative freedom from waste due to this cause.
Page 315 - Fuller's earth to the extent of 5 per cent of the weight of the tallow is added and the whole mass agitated about thirty minutes.
Page 470 - Law from the standpoint of the Law. In neither case are we able to call in question the propriety, or indeed the historical necessity, of such a line of procedure ; at the same time we cannot shut our eyes to the great difficulties which arise for thoughtful minds from this employment of conceptions belonging peculiarly to the antiquated standpoint in establishing and formulating the truth of the new principle. The contradictions and theoretical stumbling-blocks which are the inevitable consequences...
Page i - Principles of the manufacture of iron and steel, with some notes on the economic condition of their production.
Page 300 - Birkinbine, editor of the Journal of the United States Association of Charcoal Iron Workers.
Page 370 - I think it has no equal ; as a melter 'it is inferior to many ; as to endurance it was the shortest-lived of any, and as to convenience of repairs it was one of the most difficult.
Page 228 - ... not only the virulence with which the febrile poison acts on the blood, but also the particular organic lesions which occur. Now these variable lesions which occur in various epidemics, and which are known to modify the duration of fevers, not being sufficiently characterized by symptoms during life, it is impossible to speak with any degree of confidence as to the precise organic lesion in them ; so that no numerical calculation will afford much aid to the practical physician in single cases....