It is calcium fluoride also called Fluorspar.
Lou said:A similar process can be done for deoxidation of silver (or copper) by sparging with methane, town gas, or hydrogen.
when you are blowing gasses into a melt ,what do you use for the part that goes inside the crucible?
4metals said:when you are blowing gasses into a melt ,what do you use for the part that goes inside the crucible?
usually a quartz glass tube
Smelting is a process not unlike a chemical reaction you have going on in a beaker in your hood. Except it happens at a higher temperature, much higher. But let me phrase the question a little differently, because more of us can relate to the beaker.alexx said:How carbon can affect your melt ?
4metals said:Lou said:A similar process can be done for deoxidation of silver (or copper) by sparging with methane, town gas, or hydrogen.
Now that's a horse of a different color.
Care to go into a little more detail Lou?
Lou said:4metals said:Lou said:A similar process can be done for deoxidation of silver (or copper) by sparging with methane, town gas, or hydrogen.
Now that's a horse of a different color.
Care to go into a little more detail Lou?
The oxygen is undesirable for more than cosmetics: oxygen saturated solid silver does not have the physical or electrical properties.
Lou
butcher said:I cannot point to specific papers, and I cannot say about oxygen in silver (silver oxide) crystals?
But in electrical contact points silver oxide can be a problem silver points can burn up easier or hold the arc longer while the points open burning the points up faster or being unreliable, example a higher resistance across the points and a higher amperage of the circuit...
Many contacts, or switches are made to mechanically "wipe" as they open or close to clear them of an oxide film, which can degrade the continuity.
Many times the silver has other metal or even metal oxides added to change the properties of the silver to better suit their use in different electrical or mechanical conditions.
It makes sense that the oxides or salts of metals would not be as good of a conductor as the metal, and that if the metal has an oxide film or oxide crystals in its structure it would not be as reliable of a conductor as a more purer metal.
Electrical copper (wire bus bars...) is normally a fairly pure copper metal, if the copper had more other metals involved its resistance or mechanical property could change to the point of not being reliable or uniform for the use in electrical application...
I suspect similar to gold in the jewelry industry, or the metals electronic industry, the purity of the metal becomes very important, especially in electronics as we are running lower current circuits and faster frequency's in the digital switching or pulses...
4metals said:I know that years ago I ran a large electroplating shop, we did a lot of silver cyanide plating. The anode stubs that come from the undissolved pieces which remain above the solution level as the anodes dissolve were always melted down and cast into bookmolds to make new anodes from the residues. Because of the way we melted them, in a gas furnace with no gas cover to prevent oxygen absorption, the recast anodes were not oxygen free.
There was a huge difference in the performance of oxygen free anodes vs. the recast anodes we made. The recast anodes dissolved in a way that produced scales which flaked off into the anode bags while the oxygen free anodes dissolved beautifully and left a nice crystal pattern on their surface. To the point where the oxygen free anodes did not need to be bagged but the recast anodes did. So there was definitely something electrical going on because it was essentially the same silver just recast in a way that did not exclude oxygen absorption.
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