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Primary Metals Production 2007
Part 4:
Ironmaking


Rob Boom
Metals Production, Refining and Recycling (MPRR)
Department of Materials Science and Engineering
Course contents
Ironmaking and Steelmaking

•   Steelmaking process flow
•   Coke making
•   Agglomeration
•   Ironmaking
•   Steelmaking
•   Secondary steelmaking
•   Casting
Steelmaking process flow
Steelmaking process flow

   gas      coal                                                             ore
                                                        Sinter plant




                                                        Pellet plant
                                                                              Raw materials transport
   Coke plants                                                     Ore agglomeration



                                                            Gas          Oxygen
                                                                       Gas
                                   Coal injection


                       Steam


                                                                                         Steel sheet


         Air + Oxygen                                       Slag
                                                            Iron

                   Power station            Blast furnace                     Basic oxygen steel plant
Ironmaking process flow
Course contents
Ironmaking and Steelmaking

•   Steelmaking process flow
•   Cokemaking
•   Agglomeration
•   Ironmaking
•   Steelmaking
•   Secondary steelmaking
•   Casting
Coal stock area
Cross-section coke plant


                           In the coke
                           ovens coal is
                           being
                           processed to
                           get pure
                           carbon fit for
                           the BF
Coke battery
Charging
Level bar
Gas pressure
The ‘Plastic’ Layer
Pushing coke
Transport to quench tower
Transport screening
To Blast Furnace
Course contents
Ironmaking and Steelmaking

•   Steelmaking process flow
•   Coke making
•   Agglomeration
•   Ironmaking
•   Steelmaking
•   Secondary steelmaking
•   Casting
Feed preparation: iron ore sintering
• Agglomeration techniques
   • Pelletising: drum or pan (disk) pelletiser, with water, drying
     and firing often needed, very popular
   • Sintering: partial melting and re-solidification
• Why sintering?
   • An agglomeration process
   • Gases going thorough a charge of solids
   • Permeability (packed bed)
• Why pelletising?
   •   An agglomeration process
   •   Fine ore (dust) not suited for direct charge to BF
   •   Transport and storage possible
   •   Additions to iron ore in pellet feed for metallurgical purposes
Feed preparation: sintering

• The Nature of Sintering
   • Physical nature: partial melting, bridges vis-a-vis porosity.
       • Strength and porosity, influenced by particle size, water content, coke
         quality (size, reactivity)
   • Chemical nature: self-fluxing, reduction (partial, oxides e.g. iron
     ores)
• Heat source
   • Coke particles for oxide ores (coke breeze)
• Sintering Capacity
   • Suction duty (0.1-0.2 atm), ignition length, band speed, bed
     permeability
• Sintering Equipment
   • Grate sintering: Dwight-Lloyd sintering machine, most popular
Sintering Equipment: grate sintering
Iron ore sintering process
Layering
Principle Chevron method




             Cross section

            Layering
                                       Reclaiming

                                     Rake
                                        Bucket wheel




              Longitudinal section
Reclaiming
Reclaimer
Pellet Plant




• Dry grinding
• Straight grate induration
  strand 430 m2
• Acid, olivine doped
• 4.6 million ton per year
Pellet plant lay-out




                                 Induratio
                       Balling



    Grinding
Grinding and balling
Induration


                                             To grinding section
                                   Hot air
                 Stack
                            gas
                            Combustion air

Green balls in   Drying                               cooling    Cooling
                          Drying         Induration                        Fired pelle
                                                                               out




                              Hot air
                                                           Cold air
                          Stack
Sinter Plant


• Suction Area 354
  m2
• High Basicity
• Screened at 4mm
• 4.4 million ton per
  year
• EOS and Airfine
Sinter Strand with EOS System

                 EOS 50 % of flue gas

           hearth sinter mix
           layer     ignition
                                                        Air for pO2
                     hood
                                    flame front

                        sinter strand   wind boxes
                                                     sinter crusher

flue gas                                             sinter to cooler
to stack
Sinter Strand with EOS
Summary: ore preparations
Course contents
Ironmaking and Steelmaking

•   Steelmaking process flow
•   Coke making
•   Agglomeration
•   Ironmaking
•   Steelmaking
•   Secondary steelmaking
•   Casting
Ironmaking
Aim of the blast furnace process
• Reduce the iron oxide (30 wt% oxygen)
• Separate iron from waste rock (10 wt%)
• Remove the impurities
• Continuously produce liquid iron (hot metal)

Why not put ore directly in the BF?
• Size: < 1 mm
• Variable composition
• Calcination/dehydration are endothermic processes
• Metallurgical quality:
        reducibility/disintegration/swelling/softening
Ironmaking blast furnace
• General information
  • Dominant iron production process for steelmaking
     • Oxygen steelmaking   60% (70% liquid iron + 30% scrap)
     • EAF steelmaking      40% (100% scrap)
  • Requiring sinter or pellets of ore, fluxing agent
    (lime), high quality coke, compressed hot air
  • Complex plant
Ironmaking blast furnace: How it works
•   The purpose of a blast furnace is to chemically reduce and physically
    convert iron oxides into liquid iron called "hot metal“
•   The blast furnace is a huge, steel stack lined with refractory brick,
    where iron ore, coke and limestone are dumped into the top, and
    preheated air is blown into the bottom
•   The raw materials require 6 to 8 hours to descend to the bottom of
    the furnace where they become liquid slag and liquid iron
•   The liquid products are drained from the furnace at regular intervals
•   The hot air blown into the bottom of the furnace ascends to the top
    in 6 to 8 seconds after going through numerous chemical reactions
•   Once a blast furnace is started it will continuously run years with only
    short stops to perform planned maintenance
•   BF campaigns last 15-17 years, future 30 years


    Source: http://www.thepotteries.org/shelton/blast_furnace.htm
Blast furnace plant
Blast furnace plant
BF Development IJmuiden



Blast Furnace No.                1      2      3      4      5       6         7
Hearth diameter         m       5.6    5.6    5.8    8.5     9       11       13.8
Built                           1924   1926   1930   1958   1961   1967      1972
Initial productivity    t/day   280    280    360    1380   1700   3000      5000
Last renovation                                                    2002      1991
Campaign overview                                                  ’86-’02   ’91-pr.
Production              Mt                                          34.2      36.3
Current/last production t/day   800    800    1200   3600   3600   7000      10500
Demolished                      1974   1974   1991   1997   1997
Ironmaking blast furnace

• Daily consumption of a blast
  furnace (10,000 ton/day hot metal)
   •       16,000 – 20,000 ton iron ore
   •       4,000 – 6,000 ton coke
   •       2,000 – 4,000 ton flux
   •       11,000 kNm3 compressed air
• Generating
   •       4,000 – 5,000 ton slag
   •       15,000 kNm3 top gas

Production of 1 ton hot metal
       •   1.6 – 2.0 ton iron ore
       •   0.4 – 0.6 ton coke
       •   0.2 – 0.4 ton flux
       •   generate 0.4 – 0.5 ton slag
The ironmaking blast furnace

• How large a blast furnace
  (c.a. 10000 t/d hot metal)
   •   Hearth diameter    14 m
   •   Height             46 m
   •   Volume             4450 m3
   •   Hot blast          1250 oC
                          6800 Nm3/h
Ironmaking blast furnace
                                                  Coke
• Raw materials to Blast furnace                  25-70 mm
   • Coke: size 40 – 60 mm                    Sinter
       • Fixed carbon, S content, volatile    5-50 mm
       • Ash content
   • Sinter and pellets, or lumpy ores
       • Strength, permeability
                                             Pellets
   • Fluxes                                  10-25 mm
       • Basic: limestone, dolomite (10-50
         mm)
       • Acidic: silica (10-30 mm)

                                             Lumpy ore
                                             10-30 mm
Blast furnace: Principle in-out

 Ore (Fe2O3) & coke (C) 25 °C    Top gas (N2,CO2,CO) 150 °C


 Layered burden


 Cohesive zone
                                    Coal (C) injection        35 m

                                       Hot blast (N2+O2) 1200 °
                       2300°C

 Raceway
                      dead man
                                     Slag
                                     Hot metal (Fe) 1500 °C

                       14 m
Blast furnace: Basic reactions gas/solids


                                   Burden descent
Fe2O3+ CO « Fe3O4 « ‘FeO’ «
Fe + CO2
                                                 Heat
                              Chemical
                                               exchange
                              reaction


C + CO2 « 2CO
                                         Gas flow
C + O2 « CO
The ironmaking blast furnace
  • Zones in BF
        • Stack: 400 – 1000oC
                  • Preliminary reduction
                  • Thermal reserve zone
        • Bosh: 1800oC
                  • Fusion
                  • Reduction
                  • Slag – metal equilibrium
        • Tuyere: coke/coal combustion
        • Hearth: 1400oC
                  • Slag – metal separation
                  • C-saturation
                  • Consumption of dead-man
  • Stage-wise reductions:
        • Fe2O3 → Fe

                                 alles              alles
oxide     oxide          ox.      Fe        oxide    Fe
Reduction stages


                                        alles
    oxide       oxide       ox.          Fe




       Fe2 O3       Fe3O4         FeO       Fe




                                        alles
   oxide                                 Fe




      Fe2O3       Fe3O4       FeO         Fe
The Process
The Blast Furnace as a countercurrent mass and heat
exchanger




         Gas                        Burden
         ascent                    descent
                      2300°C



                     Dead Man
BF as counter-current reactor
Blast furnace zones
                         Top
                         Gas      Throat
    Burden


      Coke
                                  Stack    Shaft
                                           zone
Cohesive zone


  Active coke zone                Belly
                       2300°C
                                  Bosh
Raceway
                       Dead Man
Hearth
             Taphole
Reductions and temperatures

>500 °C (wet zone):        150 °C
Fe2O3 + CO à Fe3O4 + CO2
Fe3O4 + CO à FeO + CO2
FeO + CO à Fe + CO2
>1100 °C (dry zone):
                          1100 °C
CO2 + C à 2CO
(Boudouard)
                         1450 °C
FeO + C à CO
Raceway:                            2300°C

C + O2 à CO
H2O + C à H2 + CO
                         1500 °C
Burdening

    PW CHUTE               PW BELL




                                     Moveable
                                     armour


               BF6   BF7
Smelting the burden: the tuyere
flame

                                    2200°C,
                                    CO, N2
                                    (+H2)


                          Blast,
            Blast         CO, CO2

             Coke (and coal):
             C +1/2 O2 à CO
Blast furnace ironmaking
•   The furnace gas: RTD~ 6-8 seconds
     •   Hot blast: via tuyere, preheated at 1000oC (hot stove)
     •   Generation CO: raceway, combustion of coke, pulverized
         coal (coal injection): C+O2=2CO (due to Boudouard
         reaction)
     •   Reduction of FexOy by CO, generating CO2 in the stack
     •   Top gas composition: 500oC, 26%CO+CO2+62%N2, 3
         MJ/m3
•   The solid charge: RTD 6-8 hours
     •   Primary reduction zone: higher oxides reduction,
     •   Thermal reserve zone: 1000-1200oC, only wustite stable!
     •   Fusion zone: 1200-1800oC, reduction to Fe metal,
         melting, slag formation
     •   Coke is consumed in the raceway, but will stay in the
         hearth (dead-man) for a very long time (many days)
•   The liquid phases
     •   Liquid metal (Fe): from fusion/dripping zone
     •   Liquid slag phase: from fusion/dripping zone
     •   Other reactions: C-saturation (~4% via dead-man);
         reduction of MnO, P 2O5, SiO2 as impurities to liquid iron
         (Mn, P, Si, also S from coke) → “pig iron”
Blast furnace ironmaking
                                           Iron (Fe)           93.5 - 95.0%


Products                                   Silicon (Si)        0.30 - 0.90%

    • Hot metal (pig iron)                 Sulphur (S)         0.025 - 0.050%


                                           Manganese (Mn)      0.55 - 0.75%

    • Temperature                          Phosphorus (P)      0.03 - 0.09%

      1450-1550 °C                         Titanium (Ti)       0.02 - 0.06%


                                           Carbon (C)          4.1 - 4.4%

    • Liquid slag: SiO2-CaO-Al2O3 system
        •   Basic type and acidic type
        •   25-35% SiO2
        •   35-50% CaO
        •   6-17% Al2O3
        •   Important for hot metal quality (e.g. S content)
Heat Balance
                  Loss


                                                        Coke Oven Gas
                            HBS
                                             Heat from
                                       combustion of BF Gas
                   Heat in hot blast
                                                                     To Power Plant

                             Blast         BF                                Heat in BF Gas
                                                                                               Heat in S
                            Furnace        Gas
Heat from
gasification of
coke, coal, oil
                                                                                              Cooling Lo
                                            Hot Metal                    Heat in Hot Metal

                                                              Heat of Formation
Pulverised coal injection


• Pulverised coal injection (PCI) to replace coke
• Grinding of suitable coal types
• Transport and injection by nitrogen carrier gas
• Oxygen enrichment to assist process
• PCI partial solution for coke batteries end-of-
  life problem
• Corus IJmuiden leading in daily practice
Coal Injection
                 Injection at Tuyeres
      )
                     (Gasification)
Tuyere injection arrangement
Pressure drop versus coke rate
      1200
                                Total
                              Column              Upper




                                                             Total column
            800
dP [mBar]




                                Upper


            400
                                                    Middle
                               Middle

                                 Low
                                                    Low
             0
              280   310 340 370 400      Hearth
                    Coke rate [kg/tHM]
World’s best performing blast furnace




                         BF6
                         Corus Strip
                         Products IJmuiden
                         Data 100 BF’s
                         Period 2005
Future trends in ironmaking

• The issues facing the blast furnace are
  • external such as coke supply
  • internal such as limitations on coal injection and
    hearth life,
  • influenced by phenomena in the various furnace
    zones.
  • The challenges to the blast furnace process
     • Alternative steel production routes such as the integrated
       DRI/scrap/EAF mode
     • Alternative hot metal processes.
Alternative ironmaking
• Direction reduction
   • Using solid fuels:
       • SL-RN process, coal and rotary kiln
   • Using gaseous fuels:
       • Midrex, CO+H2 reductant, shaft furnace
         (commercially popular)!
   • Product: sponge iron (DRI), EAF steelmaking!
   • Commercial processes
   • Main problem: corrosion of sponge iron
• Smelting reduction
   • Many process options
   • not yet commercialized!
Pre-reduction and direct reduction
• Alternative ironmaking for steel production
• Nature of pre-reduction
   • Iron (800oC): partial or complete reduction
       • 3Fe2O3 + CO    = 2Fe3O4 + CO2
       • Fe3O4 + CO     = 3FeO + CO2
       • FeO + CO       = Fe + CO2
   • Chromite (FeCr2O4): at 1500oC, only partial reduction
• Sponge Iron: directly used for steelmaking
   • Directly reduced iron (DRI)
   • Increasing portion in total primary iron supply
   • Solid Fuels:
       • SL-RN Kiln: 7/3Fe2O3 + 6C =14/3Fe + CO+CO2
   • Gaseous Fuels: CO and H2
       • Midrex: shaft furnace, using CO+H2 mixture
Midrex
Production of directly reduced iron (DRI)
Midrex – dominating process
Corex
FIOR (+Circored/Circofer)
Cyclone Converter Furnace CCF


       fine ore
          and           oxygen
       oxygen
      coal




        hot
       metal
      and slag

                     stirring
                       gas
End of the lecture
Ironmaking

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Lectures%202007%20 ironmaking

  • 1. Primary Metals Production 2007 Part 4: Ironmaking Rob Boom Metals Production, Refining and Recycling (MPRR) Department of Materials Science and Engineering
  • 2. Course contents Ironmaking and Steelmaking • Steelmaking process flow • Coke making • Agglomeration • Ironmaking • Steelmaking • Secondary steelmaking • Casting
  • 4. Steelmaking process flow gas coal ore Sinter plant Pellet plant Raw materials transport Coke plants Ore agglomeration Gas Oxygen Gas Coal injection Steam Steel sheet Air + Oxygen Slag Iron Power station Blast furnace Basic oxygen steel plant
  • 6. Course contents Ironmaking and Steelmaking • Steelmaking process flow • Cokemaking • Agglomeration • Ironmaking • Steelmaking • Secondary steelmaking • Casting
  • 8. Cross-section coke plant In the coke ovens coal is being processed to get pure carbon fit for the BF
  • 18. Course contents Ironmaking and Steelmaking • Steelmaking process flow • Coke making • Agglomeration • Ironmaking • Steelmaking • Secondary steelmaking • Casting
  • 19. Feed preparation: iron ore sintering • Agglomeration techniques • Pelletising: drum or pan (disk) pelletiser, with water, drying and firing often needed, very popular • Sintering: partial melting and re-solidification • Why sintering? • An agglomeration process • Gases going thorough a charge of solids • Permeability (packed bed) • Why pelletising? • An agglomeration process • Fine ore (dust) not suited for direct charge to BF • Transport and storage possible • Additions to iron ore in pellet feed for metallurgical purposes
  • 20. Feed preparation: sintering • The Nature of Sintering • Physical nature: partial melting, bridges vis-a-vis porosity. • Strength and porosity, influenced by particle size, water content, coke quality (size, reactivity) • Chemical nature: self-fluxing, reduction (partial, oxides e.g. iron ores) • Heat source • Coke particles for oxide ores (coke breeze) • Sintering Capacity • Suction duty (0.1-0.2 atm), ignition length, band speed, bed permeability • Sintering Equipment • Grate sintering: Dwight-Lloyd sintering machine, most popular
  • 24. Principle Chevron method Cross section Layering Reclaiming Rake Bucket wheel Longitudinal section
  • 27. Pellet Plant • Dry grinding • Straight grate induration strand 430 m2 • Acid, olivine doped • 4.6 million ton per year
  • 28. Pellet plant lay-out Induratio Balling Grinding
  • 30. Induration To grinding section Hot air Stack gas Combustion air Green balls in Drying cooling Cooling Drying Induration Fired pelle out Hot air Cold air Stack
  • 31. Sinter Plant • Suction Area 354 m2 • High Basicity • Screened at 4mm • 4.4 million ton per year • EOS and Airfine
  • 32. Sinter Strand with EOS System EOS 50 % of flue gas hearth sinter mix layer ignition Air for pO2 hood flame front sinter strand wind boxes sinter crusher flue gas sinter to cooler to stack
  • 35. Course contents Ironmaking and Steelmaking • Steelmaking process flow • Coke making • Agglomeration • Ironmaking • Steelmaking • Secondary steelmaking • Casting
  • 37. Aim of the blast furnace process • Reduce the iron oxide (30 wt% oxygen) • Separate iron from waste rock (10 wt%) • Remove the impurities • Continuously produce liquid iron (hot metal) Why not put ore directly in the BF? • Size: < 1 mm • Variable composition • Calcination/dehydration are endothermic processes • Metallurgical quality: reducibility/disintegration/swelling/softening
  • 38. Ironmaking blast furnace • General information • Dominant iron production process for steelmaking • Oxygen steelmaking 60% (70% liquid iron + 30% scrap) • EAF steelmaking 40% (100% scrap) • Requiring sinter or pellets of ore, fluxing agent (lime), high quality coke, compressed hot air • Complex plant
  • 39. Ironmaking blast furnace: How it works • The purpose of a blast furnace is to chemically reduce and physically convert iron oxides into liquid iron called "hot metal“ • The blast furnace is a huge, steel stack lined with refractory brick, where iron ore, coke and limestone are dumped into the top, and preheated air is blown into the bottom • The raw materials require 6 to 8 hours to descend to the bottom of the furnace where they become liquid slag and liquid iron • The liquid products are drained from the furnace at regular intervals • The hot air blown into the bottom of the furnace ascends to the top in 6 to 8 seconds after going through numerous chemical reactions • Once a blast furnace is started it will continuously run years with only short stops to perform planned maintenance • BF campaigns last 15-17 years, future 30 years Source: http://www.thepotteries.org/shelton/blast_furnace.htm
  • 42. BF Development IJmuiden Blast Furnace No. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Hearth diameter m 5.6 5.6 5.8 8.5 9 11 13.8 Built 1924 1926 1930 1958 1961 1967 1972 Initial productivity t/day 280 280 360 1380 1700 3000 5000 Last renovation 2002 1991 Campaign overview ’86-’02 ’91-pr. Production Mt 34.2 36.3 Current/last production t/day 800 800 1200 3600 3600 7000 10500 Demolished 1974 1974 1991 1997 1997
  • 43. Ironmaking blast furnace • Daily consumption of a blast furnace (10,000 ton/day hot metal) • 16,000 – 20,000 ton iron ore • 4,000 – 6,000 ton coke • 2,000 – 4,000 ton flux • 11,000 kNm3 compressed air • Generating • 4,000 – 5,000 ton slag • 15,000 kNm3 top gas Production of 1 ton hot metal • 1.6 – 2.0 ton iron ore • 0.4 – 0.6 ton coke • 0.2 – 0.4 ton flux • generate 0.4 – 0.5 ton slag
  • 44. The ironmaking blast furnace • How large a blast furnace (c.a. 10000 t/d hot metal) • Hearth diameter 14 m • Height 46 m • Volume 4450 m3 • Hot blast 1250 oC 6800 Nm3/h
  • 45. Ironmaking blast furnace Coke • Raw materials to Blast furnace 25-70 mm • Coke: size 40 – 60 mm Sinter • Fixed carbon, S content, volatile 5-50 mm • Ash content • Sinter and pellets, or lumpy ores • Strength, permeability Pellets • Fluxes 10-25 mm • Basic: limestone, dolomite (10-50 mm) • Acidic: silica (10-30 mm) Lumpy ore 10-30 mm
  • 46. Blast furnace: Principle in-out Ore (Fe2O3) & coke (C) 25 °C Top gas (N2,CO2,CO) 150 °C Layered burden Cohesive zone Coal (C) injection 35 m Hot blast (N2+O2) 1200 ° 2300°C Raceway dead man Slag Hot metal (Fe) 1500 °C 14 m
  • 47. Blast furnace: Basic reactions gas/solids Burden descent Fe2O3+ CO « Fe3O4 « ‘FeO’ « Fe + CO2 Heat Chemical exchange reaction C + CO2 « 2CO Gas flow C + O2 « CO
  • 48. The ironmaking blast furnace • Zones in BF • Stack: 400 – 1000oC • Preliminary reduction • Thermal reserve zone • Bosh: 1800oC • Fusion • Reduction • Slag – metal equilibrium • Tuyere: coke/coal combustion • Hearth: 1400oC • Slag – metal separation • C-saturation • Consumption of dead-man • Stage-wise reductions: • Fe2O3 → Fe alles alles oxide oxide ox. Fe oxide Fe
  • 49. Reduction stages alles oxide oxide ox. Fe Fe2 O3 Fe3O4 FeO Fe alles oxide Fe Fe2O3 Fe3O4 FeO Fe
  • 50. The Process The Blast Furnace as a countercurrent mass and heat exchanger Gas Burden ascent descent 2300°C Dead Man
  • 52. Blast furnace zones Top Gas Throat Burden Coke Stack Shaft zone Cohesive zone Active coke zone Belly 2300°C Bosh Raceway Dead Man Hearth Taphole
  • 53. Reductions and temperatures >500 °C (wet zone): 150 °C Fe2O3 + CO à Fe3O4 + CO2 Fe3O4 + CO à FeO + CO2 FeO + CO à Fe + CO2 >1100 °C (dry zone): 1100 °C CO2 + C à 2CO (Boudouard) 1450 °C FeO + C à CO Raceway: 2300°C C + O2 à CO H2O + C à H2 + CO 1500 °C
  • 54. Burdening PW CHUTE PW BELL Moveable armour BF6 BF7
  • 55. Smelting the burden: the tuyere flame 2200°C, CO, N2 (+H2) Blast, Blast CO, CO2 Coke (and coal): C +1/2 O2 à CO
  • 56. Blast furnace ironmaking • The furnace gas: RTD~ 6-8 seconds • Hot blast: via tuyere, preheated at 1000oC (hot stove) • Generation CO: raceway, combustion of coke, pulverized coal (coal injection): C+O2=2CO (due to Boudouard reaction) • Reduction of FexOy by CO, generating CO2 in the stack • Top gas composition: 500oC, 26%CO+CO2+62%N2, 3 MJ/m3 • The solid charge: RTD 6-8 hours • Primary reduction zone: higher oxides reduction, • Thermal reserve zone: 1000-1200oC, only wustite stable! • Fusion zone: 1200-1800oC, reduction to Fe metal, melting, slag formation • Coke is consumed in the raceway, but will stay in the hearth (dead-man) for a very long time (many days) • The liquid phases • Liquid metal (Fe): from fusion/dripping zone • Liquid slag phase: from fusion/dripping zone • Other reactions: C-saturation (~4% via dead-man); reduction of MnO, P 2O5, SiO2 as impurities to liquid iron (Mn, P, Si, also S from coke) → “pig iron”
  • 57. Blast furnace ironmaking Iron (Fe) 93.5 - 95.0% Products Silicon (Si) 0.30 - 0.90% • Hot metal (pig iron) Sulphur (S) 0.025 - 0.050% Manganese (Mn) 0.55 - 0.75% • Temperature Phosphorus (P) 0.03 - 0.09% 1450-1550 °C Titanium (Ti) 0.02 - 0.06% Carbon (C) 4.1 - 4.4% • Liquid slag: SiO2-CaO-Al2O3 system • Basic type and acidic type • 25-35% SiO2 • 35-50% CaO • 6-17% Al2O3 • Important for hot metal quality (e.g. S content)
  • 58. Heat Balance Loss Coke Oven Gas HBS Heat from combustion of BF Gas Heat in hot blast To Power Plant Blast BF Heat in BF Gas Heat in S Furnace Gas Heat from gasification of coke, coal, oil Cooling Lo Hot Metal Heat in Hot Metal Heat of Formation
  • 59. Pulverised coal injection • Pulverised coal injection (PCI) to replace coke • Grinding of suitable coal types • Transport and injection by nitrogen carrier gas • Oxygen enrichment to assist process • PCI partial solution for coke batteries end-of- life problem • Corus IJmuiden leading in daily practice
  • 60. Coal Injection Injection at Tuyeres ) (Gasification)
  • 62. Pressure drop versus coke rate 1200 Total Column Upper Total column 800 dP [mBar] Upper 400 Middle Middle Low Low 0 280 310 340 370 400 Hearth Coke rate [kg/tHM]
  • 63. World’s best performing blast furnace BF6 Corus Strip Products IJmuiden Data 100 BF’s Period 2005
  • 64. Future trends in ironmaking • The issues facing the blast furnace are • external such as coke supply • internal such as limitations on coal injection and hearth life, • influenced by phenomena in the various furnace zones. • The challenges to the blast furnace process • Alternative steel production routes such as the integrated DRI/scrap/EAF mode • Alternative hot metal processes.
  • 65. Alternative ironmaking • Direction reduction • Using solid fuels: • SL-RN process, coal and rotary kiln • Using gaseous fuels: • Midrex, CO+H2 reductant, shaft furnace (commercially popular)! • Product: sponge iron (DRI), EAF steelmaking! • Commercial processes • Main problem: corrosion of sponge iron • Smelting reduction • Many process options • not yet commercialized!
  • 66. Pre-reduction and direct reduction • Alternative ironmaking for steel production • Nature of pre-reduction • Iron (800oC): partial or complete reduction • 3Fe2O3 + CO = 2Fe3O4 + CO2 • Fe3O4 + CO = 3FeO + CO2 • FeO + CO = Fe + CO2 • Chromite (FeCr2O4): at 1500oC, only partial reduction • Sponge Iron: directly used for steelmaking • Directly reduced iron (DRI) • Increasing portion in total primary iron supply • Solid Fuels: • SL-RN Kiln: 7/3Fe2O3 + 6C =14/3Fe + CO+CO2 • Gaseous Fuels: CO and H2 • Midrex: shaft furnace, using CO+H2 mixture
  • 68. Production of directly reduced iron (DRI) Midrex – dominating process
  • 69. Corex
  • 71. Cyclone Converter Furnace CCF fine ore and oxygen oxygen coal hot metal and slag stirring gas
  • 72. End of the lecture Ironmaking