Abstract
As Dr. W. H. Hatfield has said in the discussion before us, “there is to be found in this collection of papers by far the most weighty and valuable treatment of the subject of furnace reactions that we have had.” Almost every phase of modern steel-making is dealt with, and, although the symposium reveals, as the chairman, Sir Robert Hadfield, pointed out, the many important gaps in our knowledge of the reactions which take place at these high temperatures and of the physical data necessary for their elucidation, the general feeling after reading the present volume will be that a distinct advance is being made in this important scientific and industrial subject.
The Physical Chemistry of Steel-making Processes: a General Discussion held by the Faraday Society and the Iron and Steel Institute, June 1925.
Pp. 167–296. (London: The Faraday Society, 1926.) 8s. 6d. net.
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T., F. The Physical Chemistry of Steel-making Processes: a General Discussion held by the Faraday Society and the Iron and Steel Institute, June 1925 . Nature 118, 296–297 (1926). https://doi.org/10.1038/118296b0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/118296b0