Abstract
The Alloys Research Committee of The Institution of Mechanical Engineers began its work in 1890, and from 1902 onwards the investigations were conducted in the National Physical Laboratory. The Eleventh Report, published in 1921, dealt very fully with the light alloys of aluminium. At that stage it was decided that further research should be devoted to the alloys of iron with the object of determining the fundamental nature of the alloys of iron with various metals and non-metals to serve as a basis for a more systematic knowledge of the steels used in practice. The investigation has comprised the construction of equilibrium diagrams using thermal, microscopical, X-ray, and other physical methods. Iron being more sensitive to the influence of minute quantities of impurities than most other metals, it was necessary to prepare very pure iron as the basic material. Since 1921, the alloys of iron with oxygen, phosphorus, silicon, chromium, and manganese have been studied. As all the alloys are of high melting point, many new laboratory methods have had to be developed, the technique of experiments at high temperatures becoming more difficult the higher the upper limit is raised. In the course of the research, therefore, it has been necessary to prepare new refractories and to design special forms of apparatus in order to avoid contamination. The paper contains a summary of the results obtained in the course of the work, and it is shown how these bear upon the improvement of steels for structural and engineering purposes. The investigation is being extended to other elements, and ultimately to the influence of more than one solid element when present simultaneously in the alloy.
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More From: Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers
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