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I took some time to do a little research today about common materials used in heating coils and potential health concerns. I'm still digging for more info but was not encouraged by this article I came across today.
Quick summary, it investigates how two popular alloys, kanthal and nichrome can degrade when heated via passing currents through them in typical coils. They examine both dry coil heating and coils immersed in liquids.
Here's an excerpt:
With dry heating, chromium composition in the Kanthal wire in contact configuration decreased from 19.72–21.03% to 13.47–15.53% after one heating cycle and to 5.76–8.54% after 50 burn cycles across the three gauges (Figure 4). After 150 heating cycles, the final chromium composition was 4.55%, 2.54%, and 1.86% for 30, 32, and 34-gauge wire, respectively. The iron composition decreased from 59.59–66.62% to 33.52–43.17% after 1 heating cycle and to 14.85–23.50% after 50 heating cycles. After 150 heating cycles, the metal content for nickel was 23.50%, 14.85%, and 22.15% for the three gauges, respectively (Figure 4). The total loss of metal in a contact configuration was between 15.27–19.17% for chromium and 52.48–58.26% for iron.
What surprised me is not only the amount of degradation over time but the fact that the coils still degrade appreciably even when kept at "low temps" around 300C when immersed in liquids during electrification.
Wanted to share this and get opinions.
I took some time to do a little research today about common materials used in heating coils and potential health concerns. I'm still digging for more info but was not encouraged by this article I came across today.
Quick summary, it investigates how two popular alloys, kanthal and nichrome can degrade when heated via passing currents through them in typical coils. They examine both dry coil heating and coils immersed in liquids.
Here's an excerpt:
With dry heating, chromium composition in the Kanthal wire in contact configuration decreased from 19.72–21.03% to 13.47–15.53% after one heating cycle and to 5.76–8.54% after 50 burn cycles across the three gauges (Figure 4). After 150 heating cycles, the final chromium composition was 4.55%, 2.54%, and 1.86% for 30, 32, and 34-gauge wire, respectively. The iron composition decreased from 59.59–66.62% to 33.52–43.17% after 1 heating cycle and to 14.85–23.50% after 50 heating cycles. After 150 heating cycles, the metal content for nickel was 23.50%, 14.85%, and 22.15% for the three gauges, respectively (Figure 4). The total loss of metal in a contact configuration was between 15.27–19.17% for chromium and 52.48–58.26% for iron.
What surprised me is not only the amount of degradation over time but the fact that the coils still degrade appreciably even when kept at "low temps" around 300C when immersed in liquids during electrification.
Wanted to share this and get opinions.