US348258A - Art of making sheet-iron - Google Patents

Art of making sheet-iron Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US348258A
US348258A US348258DA US348258A US 348258 A US348258 A US 348258A US 348258D A US348258D A US 348258DA US 348258 A US348258 A US 348258A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
iron
sheets
chamber
gas
art
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
Publication date
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US348258A publication Critical patent/US348258A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C21METALLURGY OF IRON
    • C21DMODIFYING THE PHYSICAL STRUCTURE OF FERROUS METALS; GENERAL DEVICES FOR HEAT TREATMENT OF FERROUS OR NON-FERROUS METALS OR ALLOYS; MAKING METAL MALLEABLE, e.g. BY DECARBURISATION OR TEMPERING
    • C21D9/00Heat treatment, e.g. annealing, hardening, quenching or tempering, adapted for particular articles; Furnaces therefor
    • C21D9/46Heat treatment, e.g. annealing, hardening, quenching or tempering, adapted for particular articles; Furnaces therefor for sheet metals

Definitions

  • My present invention relates more particularly and chiefly to an improvement in the process described in Letters Patent of the United States No. 291,260, granted to XV. Dewees Woods, January l, 1884, and more particularly to that part of said process which may be termed the baking operation, in which the sheets, being coated with red oxide, are piled one on top of another with intermediate layers of pulverized charcoal or charcoal-dust until a package is formed of, say, from twenty to one hundred sheets, more or less. Such package is then charged into an open chamber or retort of iron or clay or other suitable material and subjected to a high heat for from four to eight hours, more or less, substantially in the manner and with reference to the result therein set f'orth.
  • natu ral gas the general formula of which is O,EI,'VCXI ⁇ IX+H, is by combustion converted into carbonio oxide and water.
  • the former of these ingredients combines with the oxide surfaces of the iron in like manner, it is believed,as the carbonic oxide ordinarily evolved in the combustion of the charcoal, and hence to this extent furnishes simply an additional reducing agent in performing the chemical work referred to.
  • the hydrogen of the gas having a still greater afiinity for the oxygen present in the surface oxide attacks and eliminates the same with still greater readiness and rapidity than the carbonio ox ⁇ ide alone, so that in this way and by the use of this agent the chemical effects desirednamely, the reviving ofthe oxide surface-is more quickly and effectively secured; and it is also true that in so far as the charcoal introduced between the sheets is in a granular state or one of comparatively coarse sub-di vision, the pores or interstices thereof provide an open path through whichv the ingredients of the natural gas find ready access to the oxide surfaces ofthe sheets, whereby their reducing or reviving action is correspondingly facilitated.
  • I omitted to state above that it is well in most cases to lightly cover the packs of sheetiron ends, sides, and top with coarse granular charcoal, though this does not of itself constitute any part of my invention, except as the natural gas co-operates therewith in the reducing or reviving work above referred to.
  • I also include, as within the invention which I desire to protect, the like use of natural gas in the treatment of sheet-iron preliminary to planishing, whether such sheetiron is packed in boxes or retorts or in an open furnace, and under this head I include the process described in this application to packs of sheet-iron prepared,'made up, and otherwise treated, as described in United States Letters Patent Reissue No. 5,474 of July 1, 1873; No. 210,735, of December 10, 1878; No.
  • a pack of sheets,l,prepared as above described, is placed in either one of the heating-chambers 2 and 3, and there heated to the desired heat.
  • the chamber 2 is connected with the fire-chamber 4 by flues 5, and in said fire-chamber is located the burner 6, connected by pipes 7 to any suitable gas-supply.
  • the front of the re-chamber is closed, except at the bottom, where an air-inlet, 8, is arranged, said inlet or lue being provided with a regulating-damper, 9.
  • the chamber 3 is located above the chamber 2, a space, l0, being formed between the top of the chamber 2 and the bottom 11 of the chamber 3.
  • This space or chamber 10 is provided with air-inlets 12, provided with suitable damper, and into said space above the air-inlets is inserted gas-pipes 13, provided with suitable burners.
  • the ame and products of combustion after circulating through the chamber 10 are conducted by dues 14. into the chamber 3.
  • the chambers 2 and 3 are connected to a suitable stack by the exit-dues l5.
  • the air-inlets are open to supply the proper amount of air for good combustion, as are also the dampers on the top of the stack, the air-inlets and the dampers on the stack are closed, or partially so, thereby reducing the combustion of the gas, and hence ⁇ permitting large quantities of partially-con sumed gas to flow through the chambers 2 and 3 in contact with the heated plates.
  • care should be taken not to admit such quantities of air as will produce an oxidizing effect on the sheets.
  • they may be packed inboxes or retorts, through which the gas or partially-consumed gas is allowed to pass while the sheets are being heated.
  • any suitable solid carbon may be employed, or any porous highly-refractory and neutral substance may be employed, by which I mean one which will provide the proper openings or interstices between its grains, so that the natural gas or the products of combustion thereof may have ready access to the surfaces of the sheet, and also will be so refractory that it will not fuse, or under the high heat employed will not, by adhesion or otherwise, affect injuriously the surfaces of the sheets; or, in the third place, one of such character that, though subject to a high heat, it will have no injurious effect on the iron under treatment; and for this purpose I believe that fire-clay or other non-fusible refractory neutral clays may be advantageously used; also, these clays, or such of them as are suitable for these purposes, may be mixed in any desired proportions with the carbonaceous matters above referred to; or other matter-such as is sometimes used in this branch of the art-may in like manner be mixed with such carbonav ceous material.
  • my invention- 1 A method of treating sheet-iron in packs, with intermediate layers of charcoal or other carbonaceous material,mixed or uninixed with other matter, by the application thereto of natural gas during or after partial combustion, substantially in the manner above set forth.

Landscapes

  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Thermal Sciences (AREA)
  • Crystallography & Structural Chemistry (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Materials Engineering (AREA)
  • Metallurgy (AREA)
  • Organic Chemistry (AREA)
  • Paper (AREA)
  • Carbon And Carbon Compounds (AREA)

Description

UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE.
RICHARD G. VOOD, OF MCKEESPORT, PENNSYLVANIA.
ART OF MAKING SHEET-IRON.
SPECIFICATION forming part of Letters Patent No. 348,258, dated August 31, 1886.
Application filed December 12, 1885.
To all whom, it may concern:
Be it known that I, RICHARD G. WOOD, residing at McKeesport, in the county of Allegheny and State of Pennsylvania, aeitizen of the United States, have invented or discovered certain new and useful Improvements in the Manufacture of Planished Sheet-Iron, of which improvements the following is a speciication.
In the accompanying drawing, which forms part of this specification, is shown a longitudinal vertical section of a furnace suitable for carrying out my invention.
My present invention relates more particularly and chiefly to an improvement in the process described in Letters Patent of the United States No. 291,260, granted to XV. Dewees Woods, January l, 1884, and more particularly to that part of said process which may be termed the baking operation, in which the sheets, being coated with red oxide, are piled one on top of another with intermediate layers of pulverized charcoal or charcoal-dust until a package is formed of, say, from twenty to one hundred sheets, more or less. Such package is then charged into an open chamber or retort of iron or clay or other suitable material and subjected to a high heat for from four to eight hours, more or less, substantially in the manner and with reference to the result therein set f'orth. lThis feature of the operation described in said patent is more particularly set forth on page 2 of a printed copy of the same,at the bottom of the first column and the top of the second. By reference to said patent it will also be seen that one purpose of the charcoal thus introduced between the sheets is to revive or convert the oxide surface of the sheets into metallic iron, or bring it so near to the condition of metallic iron as to be in what may be termed a nascent state.77 I have discovered that by the use of natural gas in the retort or oven as a heating agent in the operations just referred to, such gas, while undergoing combustion and while acting in oven as a heating agent, is also peculiarly adapted to act at the same time as a chemical agent,reviving or reconverting the oxide previously formed on the surface of the sheets. The chemical action of the charcoal is so well Serial No. l85,538. (No model.)
understood that it need not be further explained. The natu ral gas, the general formula of which is O,EI,'VCXI^IX+H, is by combustion converted into carbonio oxide and water. The former of these ingredients combines with the oxide surfaces of the iron in like manner, it is believed,as the carbonic oxide ordinarily evolved in the combustion of the charcoal, and hence to this extent furnishes simply an additional reducing agent in performing the chemical work referred to. The hydrogen of the gas having a still greater afiinity for the oxygen present in the surface oxide attacks and eliminates the same with still greater readiness and rapidity than the carbonio ox` ide alone, so that in this way and by the use of this agent the chemical effects desirednamely, the reviving ofthe oxide surface-is more quickly and effectively secured; and it is also true that in so far as the charcoal introduced between the sheets is in a granular state or one of comparatively coarse sub-di vision, the pores or interstices thereof provide an open path through whichv the ingredients of the natural gas find ready access to the oxide surfaces ofthe sheets, whereby their reducing or reviving action is correspondingly facilitated.
I omitted to state above that it is well in most cases to lightly cover the packs of sheetiron ends, sides, and top with coarse granular charcoal, though this does not of itself constitute any part of my invention, except as the natural gas co-operates therewith in the reducing or reviving work above referred to. I also include, as within the invention which I desire to protect, the like use of natural gas in the treatment of sheet-iron preliminary to planishing, whether such sheetiron is packed in boxes or retorts or in an open furnace, and under this head I include the process described in this application to packs of sheet-iron prepared,'made up, and otherwise treated, as described in United States Letters Patent Reissue No. 5,474 of July 1, 1873; No. 210,735, of December 10, 1878; No. 172,235, granted January 11, 1876; No. 186,959, granted February 6, 1877, all to W. D. Wood, as also patent No. 280,799, granted July10,1883, to Isaac E. Craig, it being a feature of all these patents that solid carbona-l IOO ceous materialis introduced between the separate sheets preliminary to a treatment under high heat, such that chemical action takes place between the carbon so introduced and the contiguous surfaces of the sheets.
In carrying out my invention a pack of sheets,l,prepared as above described,is placed in either one of the heating- chambers 2 and 3, and there heated to the desired heat. The chamber 2 is connected with the fire-chamber 4 by flues 5, and in said fire-chamber is located the burner 6, connected by pipes 7 to any suitable gas-supply. The front of the re-chamber is closed, except at the bottom, where an air-inlet, 8, is arranged, said inlet or lue being provided with a regulating-damper, 9. The chamber 3 is located above the chamber 2, a space, l0, being formed between the top of the chamber 2 and the bottom 11 of the chamber 3. This space or chamber 10 is provided with air-inlets 12, provided with suitable damper, and into said space above the air-inlets is inserted gas-pipes 13, provided with suitable burners. The ame and products of combustion after circulating through the chamber 10 are conducted by dues 14. into the chamber 3. The chambers 2 and 3 are connected to a suitable stack by the exit-dues l5.
` After the packs have been properly heated,
during which operation the air-inlets are open to supply the proper amount of air for good combustion, as are also the dampers on the top of the stack, the air-inlets and the dampers on the stack are closed, or partially so, thereby reducing the combustion of the gas, and hence `permitting large quantities of partially-con sumed gas to flow through the chambers 2 and 3 in contact with the heated plates. During the heating operation care should be taken not to admit such quantities of air as will produce an oxidizing effect on the sheets. In lieu of placing the packs in the open chambers 2 and 3, they may be packed inboxes or retorts, through which the gas or partially-consumed gas is allowed to pass while the sheets are being heated. l
I do not limit myself to the furnace herein shown and described, as other forms of furnaces may be used; nor d0 I make any claim to the furnace as of the subject-matter of the invention herein, as said furnace, in so far as it presents patentable subject-matter, will be set forth in another application to be ledin due time.
Instead of using charcoal in the manner above described any suitable solid carbon may be employed, or any porous highly-refractory and neutral substance may be employed, by which I mean one which will provide the proper openings or interstices between its grains, so that the natural gas or the products of combustion thereof may have ready access to the surfaces of the sheet, and also will be so refractory that it will not fuse, or under the high heat employed will not, by adhesion or otherwise, affect injuriously the surfaces of the sheets; or, in the third place, one of such character that, though subject to a high heat, it will have no injurious effect on the iron under treatment; and for this purpose I believe that fire-clay or other non-fusible refractory neutral clays may be advantageously used; also, these clays, or such of them as are suitable for these purposes, may be mixed in any desired proportions with the carbonaceous matters above referred to; or other matter-such as is sometimes used in this branch of the art-may in like manner be mixed with such carbonav ceous material.
I claim herein as my invention- 1. A method of treating sheet-iron in packs, with intermediate layers of charcoal or other carbonaceous material,mixed or uninixed with other matter, by the application thereto of natural gas during or after partial combustion, substantially in the manner above set forth.
2. A method of treating sheet-iron in packs, with interposed layers of suitable porous solid material, by the application thereto of natural gas during or after partial combustion, substantially in the manner above set forth.
In testimony whereof I have hereunto set my hand.
RICHARD G. WOOD.
Witnesses:
DARWIN S. VVoLoo'rT, R. H. WHITTLEsY.
US348258D Art of making sheet-iron Expired - Lifetime US348258A (en)

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US348258A true US348258A (en) 1886-08-31

Family

ID=2417326

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US348258D Expired - Lifetime US348258A (en) Art of making sheet-iron

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US348258A (en)

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US1798802A (en) Method of and apparatus for burning carbonate rock
US348258A (en) Art of making sheet-iron
US9540721B2 (en) Method of carburizing
US1305414A (en) Process and appabatits fob
US1713834A (en) Heating substance susceptible to oxidation
US660533A (en) Method of annealing and oxidizing metal sheets or plates.
US949500A (en) Process of bluing iron or steel articles.
US1558965A (en) Apparatus for treating ores or the like
US1065697A (en) Annealing process, &c.
US1395866A (en) Canada
US716894A (en) Method of annealing iron or steel castings.
US847588A (en) Case-hardening.
US2012165A (en) Heat treating in circulatory gases
US409276A (en) George wyckoff cummins and james henry coleman
US994322A (en) Case-hardening.
US1024678A (en) Process for increasing the temperature of combustion in gas-fired furnaces.
US125138A (en) Improvement in hot-blast ovens
US404181A (en) Charles j
US1288202A (en) Metal-heating furnace.
US543992A (en) Process of and apparatus for manufacture of gas
US8993A (en) Improvement in the construction of retorts for chemical furnaces
US389104A (en) Apparatus for the manufacture of gas
US1170375A (en) Treating ores.
US1214520A (en) Process of operating gas-fired furnaces.
US1206821A (en) Process for producing a diffused flame with producer-gas.