Electric Tube Furnaces with Calorite Resistance for the Laboratory

Aug., 1911. THE JOL-R.\7d;AL ... 1 Read at the May meeting of the New York Section of the American ... The furnace is assembled by passing one of the ...
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Aug.,

THE JOL-R.\7d;AL OF I N D U S T R I A L A N D EiVGI,VEERIAVG CHE-ZIISTRk’.

1911

per minute and have none of the solution splash out, at the same time having enough air passing into the

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ELECTRIC TUBE FURNACES WITH CALORITE RESISTERS FOR THE LABORATORY BY SAMUEL A4.’ h C K E R .

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Wire-wound resistance furnaces have now come into general use for electric furnaces in the laboratory and fill a place that perhaps no other heating appliance is capable of. I n our experience we have tried several types of resisters, starting with platinum and some types of chromium-nickel alloys. Platinum, besides being expensive, is not ideal for resister purposes, as the life is limited and repairs are b y no means easy. Nichrome has shown a tendency t o crystallize and in this condition breaks under slight strain. The General Electric Company manufactures a resistance material known as calorite, some of which was kindly furnished to us, and with it several furnaces were constructed which have given great satisfaction. Calorite is a n alloy of nickel, iron, chromium, and manganese, and has a melting point of 1550’ C. and a low temperature coefficient. The material as furnished was in the form of tape or ribbon 2.38 mm. (0.094”)wide and 0 . 2 4 mm. (0.008”) thick. It has a resistance of 0.878 ohm per foot and is fairly soft, which is increased by annealing a t a low red heat in the air just as platinum wire can be annealed. Oxidation, when heated in the air, is merely superficial even a t quite high temperatures, and there seems to be no tendency to crystallize. The alloy cannot be used in contact with silica a t high temperatures, and the furnaces were therefore constructed with a view t o this property. Three furnaces were made as follows: No. I was designed for tube-heating having a short heating zone which will bring t o an even temperature the average size combustion boat. The general construction consists in winding the resister on a porcelain combustion tube, surrounding it with chemically pure alumina which is held in a n asbestos tube and then surrounding the whole with asbestos wool packed between the inside asbestos tube and the outside container which is also of asbestos. Figs. I and z are drawings of No. I furnace. A is the porcelain tube of Royal Meissen ware glazed inside, but not on the outside, 4 5 7 mm. (IS”) long with internal diameter of 25.5 mm. (I~’), outside diameter 30.5 mm. ( 1 3 1 1 a ” ) . There were collars a t R

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into the bottle. STANFORD UNIVERSITY, May, 1911.

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Fig. I. Read a t the May meeting of the New York Section of the American Chemical Society. 1

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T H E JOURA’AL OF I N D U S T R I A L A N D ENGINEERI;L’G C H E M I S T R Y .

each end of the tube which serve no purpose, but the tube would have been too short had they been removed. These collars had a diameter of 51 mm. (II/~”) and a length of 2 5 . 5 mm. (I”). The tube projected out of the furnace 95.5 mm. (33/,”) at each end, leaving a n available winding space of 2 6 7 mm. (IOI/