The freezing points of high-purity metals as precision temperature standards. VIIIa. Sb: Apparatus, freezing techniques, and ingot morphology
- 1 March 1968
- journal article
- Published by Canadian Science Publishing in Canadian Journal of Physics
- Vol. 46 (5) , 369-400
- https://doi.org/10.1139/p68-053
Abstract
This paper describes the apparatus and the freezing techniques that have been developed to determine the liquidus points (630.55 °C) of samples of high-purity antimony to a reproducible precision of ± < 0.0005 °C. Freezing plateaux steady to ± 0.0001 °C for long (hours) durations are readily obtained on freezing curves of high-purity antimony using an outside-nucleated slow induced freezing (ONSIF) technique in a balanced three-winding inconel block furnace. The pressure effect on the freezing temperature of antimony was determined as + 0.000 85 °C for 1 atm, which corresponds to a contraction on Sb solidification of 0.98%; a contraction on freezing is supported by volumetric measurements on the shrinkage pipes in Sb ingots and by observations on decanted and quenched (during freezing) ingots that Sb dendritic solid is more dense than Sb liquid.Metallurgical studies using decanting, quenching, and tracer techniques determined the ingot morphology during freezing and melting to verify that a satisfactory control of the transforming ingot had been attained for liquidus point realizations and to provide auxiliary information on the nature of solute segregation and segregate remelting for the interpretation of alloy melting-range comparisons on several samples of high-purity antimony described in Part VIIIb of this series of papers. Abundant evidence of the fragmentation of masses of large rod dendrites and the surface recontouring of dendrite spines by recalescent remelting was found in both decanted and quenched Sb ingots: the pileup of dendritic solid in the bottom of the crucible does not preclude precise temperature determinations on ONSIF freezes.Keywords
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