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Melting carbon flux

Lithium Chloride. Lithium chloride [7447- 1-8], LiCl, is produced from the reaction of Hthium carbonate or hydroxide with hydrochloric acid. The salt melts at 608°C and bods at 1382°C. The 41-mol % LiCl—59-mol % KCl eutectic (melting point, 352°C) is employed as the electrolyte in the molten salt electrolysis production of Hthium metal. It is also used, often with other alkaH haHdes, in brazing flux eutectics and other molten salt appHcations such as electrolytes for high temperature Hthium batteries. [Pg.225]

Substances which are insoluble or only partially soluble in acids are brought into solution by fusion with the appropriate reagent. The most commonly used fusion reagents, or fluxes as they are called, are anhydrous sodium carbonate, either alone or, less frequently, mixed with potassium nitrate or sodium peroxide potassium pyrosulphate, or sodium pyrosulphate sodium peroxide sodium hydroxide or potassium hydroxide. Anhydrous lithium metaborate has found favour as a flux, especially for materials containing silica 12 when the resulting fused mass is dissolved in dilute acids, no separation of silica takes place as it does when a sodium carbonate melt is similarly treated. Other advantages claimed for lithium metaborate are the following. [Pg.112]

Electric arcs from carbon electrodes melt the scrap metal. The flux reacts with impurities. [Pg.155]

Potash (composed of potassium oxide), also a flux, was mainly used as a glass modifier. It was generally introduced into the glass melt in the form of either pearl ash, composed of potassium carbonate, vegetable ash, one of the main constituents of which is potassium carbonate, or saltpeter, a mineral composed of potassium nitrate. [Pg.141]

KEYWORDS Ulsan carbonate rocks, Kyongsang Basin, magnetite deposit, melting/fluxing of crustal carbonate melt, Alkaline A-type granitic rocks... [Pg.493]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.181 ]




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