#81
[account deactivated]
#82
[account deactivated]
#83

roseweird posted:

swirlsofhistory posted:

I care, I just think you're wrong



lol whatever, i'm never going to forget you compared giving birth to wisdom tooth extraction until you repent in sackcloth and ashes so just like, don't post posts


I compared the trauma of being unconscious during a c-section to the trauma of being unconscious during oral surgery, with the point of showing how dumb your theories about biological families are.

#84
[account deactivated]
#85

roseweird posted:

Superabound posted:

Anonymizer is a TrapWire program owned by Abaxas/Cubic Corporation/NSA

oh shit now they know all about me trolling some 48-year-old smac nerd



thats a flagrant violation of 47 U.S.C. section 223 of the Violence Against Women Act, you should be worried

#86

roseweird posted:

right but that's because you don't actually care about the features of human society that arise from human biology, just like you don't acknowledge the fact that language arises from human biology, i guess complete ignorance about biology is your posting gimmick?



only human language arises from human biology

#87
http://www.rsc.org/chemistryworld/2013/05/greener-cleaner-steel-metal-oxide-electrolysis

Greener, cleaner steel
9 May 2013James Urquhart
steelUS researchers have developed a greener and cheaper way to produce metals such as steel. Their process could produce steel of higher purity, while cutting greenhouse gas emissions, and may even be useful on missions to the Moon and Mars.
The molten oxide electrolysis (MOE) technique uses high temperature electrolysis to make liquid metal and oxygen from a metal oxide feedstock. It is not a new process for producing metals, but is limited by its high cost and the fact it only works with consumable or highly expensive and rare anode materials such as iridium. As iron production requires temperatures of around 1600°C most metals corrode under such harsh conditions.

Now, Donald Sadoway and colleagues at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology have discovered that chromium alloy anodes can do the job and overcome these limitations. 'For the first time, it shows that earth abundant and affordable metals, and alloys in particular, could be used as an anode in high temperature electrolysis to generate oxygen,' says co-author Antoine Allanore.

Inert anode
The team observed limited consumption of the anode during the process over a period of five hours and say the stability of the anode is due to the formation of an electronically conductive solid solution of aluminium and chromium(III) oxides in the corundum structure.

'Now a new class of anode material is available to enable scale-up,’ says Allanore. ‘Furthermore, iron can only be obtained by electrolysis in molten oxide using a non-carbon anode, so for steelmaking in particular this is a dealmaker. The removal of carbon in the system allows you to make metal of better quality that is free of carbon impurities.'

Existing iron production uses carbon as a reductant and fuel meaning too much carbon ends up in the iron. A second step is therefore required to remove the excess carbon to produce mild or low carbon steel with less than 0.5% carbon.

Just add salt
'With MOE, there would be a shift in the secondary metallurgy practice, since with carbon-free iron, the addition of carbon to get the requested composition is easy, like adding salt to a dish,' explains Allanore. He suggests that this would make it possible to create new grades of steel that are not currently feasible or too expensive.

'It's an interesting experiment to get people thinking about changing the carbon-intensive process of iron making by means of the blast furnace,' says Tony Petric, a materials scientist at McMaster University, Canada. However, he has reservations about the longevity of the chromium anode operating at 1600°C for long periods. 'If the product was a precious metal or an expensive commodity, the costs may be justified, but it's hard to imagine this as a viable process for steel.'

What's more, to cut green house gas emissions, the electricity for MOE would need to be from renewable sources. Allanore acknowledges these issues and suggests that the MOE route at present might not have much competitive advantage to replace the existing route. However, he says the method could be useful for producing other metals such as rare earth, zirconium, ferrous and copper alloys.

The technology could also be useful for producing oxygen, as well as metals on the Moon or Mars. 'The initial and only choice of anode material for this application was platinum or iridium – very dense and expensive metals,’ says Allanore. 'With our discovery, provided the material performs successfully with the Lunar or Martian soil composition, one would decrease the costs and the weight of the anode, this last aspect being key to leave the Earth's orbit.'

REFERENCES

A Allanore, L Yin and D R Sadoway, Nature, 2013, DOI:10.1038/nature12134
#88
please replace all tpaine posts with dolphin noises GqteBewLJzk
#89
http://scripts.cac.psu.edu/users/n/w/nwh5089/Steel%20Recycling%20Process.pdf

Environmental life-cycle comparisons of steel productionand
recycling: sustainability issues, problems and prospects

Mohan Yellishetty a,b,
*, Gavin M. Mudda
, P.G. Ranjitha
, A. Tharumarajahc

http://www.onesteel.com/images/db_images/pages/page20_Life_Cycle_Perspective_on_Steel_Building_Materials.pdf

“A Life Cycle Perspective on Steel Building
Materials”
Submitted by the Australian Steel Institute on behalf
of the above Australian steelmaking companies
April 2006
Report prepared by:
Dr Les Strezov and Dr Joe Herbertson
Principals of the Crucible Group Pty Ltd

From Figure 3 one can see that current rates of steel arising at end of life
(4.4Mt/a, see Table 6) correspond to production levels in 1963, 40 years ago.
This suggests an average lifespan of steel products of 40 years, which is in good
agreement with published studies35
.

Edited by Lucille ()

#90
[account deactivated]
#91


The song is worth listening to for the swastika at 4:15.