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Peter C. Hayes

Researcher at University of Queensland

Publications -  367
Citations -  9776

Peter C. Hayes is an academic researcher from University of Queensland. The author has contributed to research in topics: Liquidus & Slag. The author has an hindex of 36, co-authored 360 publications receiving 8021 citations. Previous affiliations of Peter C. Hayes include University of Strathclyde & Australian National University.

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Establishment of product morphology during the initial stages of wustite reduction

TL;DR: In this article, the product morphologies obtained on the reduction of wustite in CO/CO2 gas mixtures between 1073 and 1373 K were reported, and three types of product morphology were identified.
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Mechanisms of porous iron growth on wustite and magnetite during gaseous reduction

TL;DR: In this paper, three principal mechanisms of porous iron growth were identified: a continuous coupled reaction, involving cooperative pore and iron growth, a continuous dendritic growth mechanism, in which pores advance ahead of the iron formation, and a discontinuous mechanism, involving the successive formation and breakdown of dense iron lay-ers on the oxide surface.
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Subsolidus phase equilibria of the Fe-Ni-O system

TL;DR: The phase equilibria of the Fe-Ni-O system in the temperature range between 800°C and 1600°C, at various oxygen partial pressures, in the subsolidus region, have been experimentally studied using equilibration and quenching techniques followed by electron-probe X-ray microanalysis (EPMA) as discussed by the authors.
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Development of a Quasi-chemical Viscosity Model for Fully Liquid Slags in the Al2O3–CaO–‘FeO’–MgO–SiO2 System. Part 1. Description of the Model and Its Application to the MgO, MgO–SiO2, Al2O3–MgO and CaO–MgO Sub-systems

TL;DR: In this article, a quasi-chemical viscosity model for fully liquid slags in the Al2O3 CaO-'FeO'-MgO-SiO2 system has been developed.
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Phase equilibria determination in complex slag systems

TL;DR: Despite the wealth of information available on phase equilibria of oxide systems, there remain many gaps and inconsistencies in the knowledge base as discussed by the authors and there is also an ongoing need for accurate experimental data.