Some Structures in Steel Fusion Welds

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
S. W. MILLE
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
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1
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53 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 5, 1918

Abstract

GEORGE F. COMSTOCK,* Niagara Falls, N. Y. (written discussion?).¬I have recently had the pleasure of reading Mr. Miller's interesting paper, and would like to call attention to a reference to this subject which apparently has escaped his notice. It is an abstract of a German research on the subject of nitrogen in steel, and appeared in the Iron Age of Feb. 17, 1916, page 432. Photomicrographs of needles such as Mr. Miller found in his welds are given, and their identity is discussed. The conclusion reached is that the needles are slip lines due to the brittleness of the ferrite crystals caused by their absorption of nitrogen. The deformation necessary to develop the slips is supposed to be accomplished either in cutting or polishing the microsections or by cooling strains after welding. It seems very reasonable to expect that nitrogen would he absorbed by steel in either electric or oxy-acetylene welding, and the reference I have mentioned gives instances of many unusual structures resulting from the presence of considerable nitrogen with carbon in steel. But the nitrogen is .rapidly given off from steel by ordinary annealing in air, hydrogen or vacuum, and this would explain the disappearance of Mr. Miller's needles after annealing. I think the conclusion that the needles are cementite might well be revised in view of this German work on nitrogen.
Citation

APA: S. W. MILLE  (1918)  Some Structures in Steel Fusion Welds

MLA: S. W. MILLE Some Structures in Steel Fusion Welds . The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1918.

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