The Effect of Impurities on the Electrical Conductivity of Copper

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Lawrence Addicks
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
10
File Size:
292 KB
Publication Date:
Mar 1, 1905
Industry Topics:
Automation, Economic Viability, Green Technology, Mine Planning, Operations, Processing, Rare Earth Elements, Reclamation, Regulation, Social License, Sustainability, ESG, Tailings, Water Management, Workforce

Abstract

ONE of the properties of copper, which has done much to give it its present prominent place among the useful metals, is its electrical conductivity, a property which has now become the chief criterion of 'the value of the commerical product. In pursuance of that distinctively American principle that, 1' the best is none too good," metal of the highest conductivity is usually called for even where such extreme purity is of no advantage, for instance, in the making of brass and other alloys. The average brass-founder feels nervous unless his copper is so very pure that it shows a conductivity of 99 or 100 per cent., while the character of the zinc used is usually overlooked in his anxiety. Electrolytic refining has made it possible to produce copper of a' very high degree of purity, the metallic impurities averaging but a few thousandths of 1 per cent.; oxygen, usually present in the form of cuprous oxide, bringing the total up to about a tenth of 1 per cent. The published data bearing upon the relationship between chemical purity and electrical conductivity is, however, very scant,' nearly all the work that has been done having dealt with alloys carrying considerable quantities of the foreign elements. In this paper I have brought together the results of experiments extending over a period of several years that have been carried out with the idea of determining the amount of various elements which would lower the conductivity 3 or 4 per cent.-a series of impure coppers rather than alloys. There are many precautions necessary to keep the conditions
Citation

APA: Lawrence Addicks  (1905)  The Effect of Impurities on the Electrical Conductivity of Copper

MLA: Lawrence Addicks The Effect of Impurities on the Electrical Conductivity of Copper. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1905.

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