BurningKrome
Bioengineer
- Mar 8, 2017
- 13
I'm a biotechnologist, however I am learning metallurgy as a hobby. I have a question I hope the professionals can help me understand.
I've been working with the easy metals (pewter, tin, silver). I melt the metals for casting in a ceramic crucible with a handheld butane torch, using borax as flux.
I ordered some powdered tin with the expectation that it would melt like sugar due to the large surface area from the small particle size (80um). To my surprise, I find it nearly impossible to melt completely. I've basically destroyed one crucible due to all the metal powder residue impregnated on the surface.
Can anyone explain why powdered tin melts so poorly compared to pellets? Is it the oxidation on the particle surface?
I've been working with the easy metals (pewter, tin, silver). I melt the metals for casting in a ceramic crucible with a handheld butane torch, using borax as flux.
I ordered some powdered tin with the expectation that it would melt like sugar due to the large surface area from the small particle size (80um). To my surprise, I find it nearly impossible to melt completely. I've basically destroyed one crucible due to all the metal powder residue impregnated on the surface.
Can anyone explain why powdered tin melts so poorly compared to pellets? Is it the oxidation on the particle surface?