Abstract

Performed for the first time, the thermodynamic analysis of oxygen solutions in titanium-containing Fe–Co melts showed that the deoxidizing power of titanium with increasing cobalt content of the melt first decreases, reaches a minimum at a cobalt content of 20%, and then increases. The titanium contents [%Ti]* at equilibrium points between the oxide phases TiO2, Ti3O5, and Ti2O3 were determined. The curves of the oxygen solubility in titanium-containing iron–cobalt melts pass through a minimum, which shifts toward lower titanium contents with increasing cobalt content of the melt. Further alloying with titanium leads to an increase in the oxygen concentration of the melt so that the higher cobalt content of the melt, the steeper the increase in the oxygen content after the minimum as titanium is added to the melt.

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