Abstract

An archaeometallurgical characterization of a VI to VII century Lombard steel bar from Ponte di Val Gabbia I site (northern Italy) was performed to reconstruct its manufacturing process and extract processing thermochemical parameters (i.e., temperature and oxygen chemical potential) from the slag inclusion-metal systems. Metallographic observations by optical microscopy and Vickers microhardness measurements indicated that the steel bar was forged from a heterogeneous steel lump, most probably an iron bloom, which was cooled in the air after the forging process. The chemical composition of non-metallic inclusions was determined by scanning electron microscopy coupled with X-ray dispersive spectroscopy. A multivariate statistical analysis of the smelting-derived non-metallic inclusions chemistry allowed to conclude that the steel bar was obtained by the direct or bloomery method. Under the hypothesis of local near-equilibrium conditions for the slag inclusion-metal systems, a thermodynamic-based strategy was adopted to estimate the firing conditions in the bloomery furnace in terms of both temperature and oxygen chemical potential of the reducing gas atmosphere. In particular, the computed temperatures are in the range of 1003 °C to 1171 °C, whereas the values of oxygen chemical potential vary between − 447.47 and − 385.79 kJ/mol.

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