Cupola Furnace a Practical Treatise On the Construction And Management of Found

Cover Cupola Furnace a Practical Treatise On the Construction And Management of Found
Cupola Furnace a Practical Treatise On the Construction And Management of Found
Edward Kirk
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bonic acid and 4. 80 to 11. 73 per cent, of carbonic oxide. The analyses show, furthermore, that in the case of the Herbertz cu- pola, the fuel is thoroughly utilized and yields the maximum of heat.
To obtain such complete combustion it is necessary that the air should be in slight excess, and that this actually happens is shown by the presence in the gases of a certain amount of free oxygen. Several reasons have been advanced to explain this complete combustion of carbon to carbonic acid. The
...first is that the air enters the cupola all around the circumference in a thin sheet and gives rise to very uniform combustion. Another reason is the very reduced velocity with which the gases rise.
In the ordinary blown cupola these gases are pushed upward with great pressure and velocity, and the combustion under such conditions cannot be obtained entirely in the lower regions, but some of the air will reach the upper regions unburnt, where it causes the reduction of part of the carbonic acid.


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