Determination of the furnace effect of two high-temperature furnaces on metal-carbon eutectic points

Author(s):  
F. Bourson ◽  
S. Briaudeau ◽  
B. Rougié ◽  
M. Sadli
1961 ◽  
Vol 5 ◽  
pp. 169-190 ◽  
Author(s):  
William J. Campbell ◽  
Stephan Stecura ◽  
Clark Grain

AbstractThis paper summarizes developments in the field of high-temperature X-ray diffractometers through 1959, evaluates various furnace designs, and describes briefly the X-ray diffraction facilities of the Federal Bureau of Mines.X-ray optics, for those furnaces that have precision sample movements, are equivalent in resolution and line profile to conventional X-ray techniques. There is a 10-25% loss of intensity due to absorption of X-rays in the furnace windows, magnitude of which depends on wavelength and type of window used, and a reduction (5–40° 2θ) of useful angular range from limiting X-ray windows, radiation shielding, or the viewport for an optical pyrometer. In oxidizing atmospheres, temperatures up to 1500°C were obtained with furnaces wound with platinum—20% rhodium wire. Under nonoxidizing conditions temperatures of 1800 to 2000°C were obtained with both tantalum-foil and tungsten-wire heaters.Accurate temperature measurement over the area and depth of samples being studied is the most difficult problem in high-temperature X-ray diffractometry. Below 500°C, there are several furnace designs which are reported to reduce thermal differentials to less than 1°C across the sample. However, at temperatures around 1000°C, there are thermal gradients of 20-30°C/cm across the sample and 100–600°C/cm through the sample holder, making thermocouple location critical. Secondary standards have been used extensively to calibrate the furnaces; however, there is disagreement concerning which are the most reliable data to use. For these reasons, plus others discussed in this report, there is a probable error in the temperature determination of ±10 to 20°C at 1000°C, with the error increasing with temperature.


1998 ◽  
Vol 25 (1-3) ◽  
pp. 255-265
Author(s):  
C. L. Koster ◽  
Charles J. Hoogendoorn ◽  
J. A. Wieringa ◽  
T. W. J. Peeters

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document