|
Definition of Fusibility
1. n. The quality of being fusible.
Definition of Fusibility
1. Noun. The ease with which a material will melt. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Fusibility
1. [n -TIES]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Fusibility
Literary usage of Fusibility
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Manufacture of Iron, in All Its Various Branches: Including a by Frederick Overman (1854)
"The relative degree of fusibility of the cinder is, however, ... The most desirable
condition is that in which the cinder and iron have the same fusibility, ..."
2. An elementary treatise on mineralogy and geology: being an introduction to by Parker Cleaveland (1816)
"fusibility. 149. When the fusibility of a mineral is mentioned, it is always to
... In order to derive the greatest benefit from the fusibility of minerals, ..."
3. Clays: Their Occurrence, Properties, and Uses, with Especial Reference to by Heinrich Ries (1906)
"Expression of fusibility.—Several investigators have aimed to express the fusibility
of a clay by means of a formula based on the relation of fluxes to ..."
4. The Manufacture of Iron, in All Its Various Branches by Frederick Overman (1850)
"The relative degree of fusibility of the cinder is, however, ... The most desirable
condition is that in which the cinder and iron have the same fusibility, ..."
5. Journal of the American Chemical Society by American Chemical Society (1890)
"In general, other things being equal, the composition of the slags directly
affects their fusibility and bears a close relation to the grade of iron ..."
6. The Metallography and Heat Treatment of Iron and Steel by Albert Sauveur (1918)
"CHAPTER XXVI EQUILIBRIUM DIAGRAM OF IRON-CARBON ALLOYS fusibility Curve of ...
fusibility curve of iron-carbon alloys. 6.67 IOO noted against the ..."
7. An Elementary Treatise on Mineralogy: Comprising an Introduction to the Science by William Phillips, Robert Allan, Francis Alger (1844)
"Scale of the fusibility of Minerals. It has long been desirable that we should
have some general standards of comparison in the case of the fusibility of ..."