US1435686A - Process for the direct manufacture of iron and steel - Google Patents
Process for the direct manufacture of iron and steel Download PDFInfo
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- US1435686A US1435686A US448072A US44807221A US1435686A US 1435686 A US1435686 A US 1435686A US 448072 A US448072 A US 448072A US 44807221 A US44807221 A US 44807221A US 1435686 A US1435686 A US 1435686A
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- iron
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- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
- C21—METALLURGY OF IRON
- C21B—MANUFACTURE OF IRON OR STEEL
- C21B13/00—Making spongy iron or liquid steel, by direct processes
- C21B13/08—Making spongy iron or liquid steel, by direct processes in rotary furnaces
- C21B13/085—Making spongy iron or liquid steel, by direct processes in rotary furnaces wherein iron or steel is obtained in a molten state
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- Y—GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
- Y02—TECHNOLOGIES OR APPLICATIONS FOR MITIGATION OR ADAPTATION AGAINST CLIMATE CHANGE
- Y02P—CLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION TECHNOLOGIES IN THE PRODUCTION OR PROCESSING OF GOODS
- Y02P10/00—Technologies related to metal processing
- Y02P10/10—Reduction of greenhouse gas [GHG] emissions
- Y02P10/134—Reduction of greenhouse gas [GHG] emissions by avoiding CO2, e.g. using hydrogen
Definitions
- a metal is required from the blast-furnace practically free from phosphorus.
- a basic line sla is produced which combines with the sulfur to form calcium sulfid.
- This calcareous slag being diflicultly fusible, it is necessary, for causing it to melt, to operate at a high temperature, but, at this high temperature, the coal mixed with the ore, acting as the heating agent as well as the reduction agent, strongly reacts with all of the elements of the burden, which, apart from lime and alumina, are thus partially or entirely reduced; it therefore, follows that the metal produced, contains as impurities, silicon, manganese, phosphorus, etc. At this very high temperature, the slag is nearly completely free from oxide of iron; in fact, the latter, which is the most easily reducible of the oxides present, is the first to be reduced to metal, and hence eliminated from the slag.
- My present invention has for its object a process of directly producing iron and steel, which will produce these metals in a form in which they can be directly used, that is to say, practically free from sulfur and phosphorus.
- This process consists, substantially:
- the basic calcareous slag may contain a small quantity of oxide of iron, proportional to the quantity of phosphorus contained in the ore and inversely proportional to the calcic-basicity of the slag.
- the small quantity of oxide of iron left in the basic slag checks the phosphoration of the metal, the reduction of silica and of manganese oxide, while maintaining the desulfurizing function of the calcareous slag.
- the sulfur and phosphorus (present as impurities in the ore), are fixed and taken up by the slag before they can be absorbed by the metal, and as this fixation of the sulfur and phosphorus is produced at the same time as the production of the free metal, the production of the latter in a pure state, is not delayed by a subsequent refining operation, such operation being unnecessary.
- this furnace comprises an inclined rotary cylindrical furnace a of great length, (for instance, a length of 50 meters and a diameter of 2.5 meters).
- This cylinder has an internal refractory lining and external rings 1) running on rollers.
- a toothed gear a? imparts a rotary motion to the furnace a.
- an orifice 6 through which enters a nozzle f; through the latter are injected hot air and pulverized coal in the form of an impalpable powder; the coal coming from a hopper g is re ularly discharged by a feed screw 72, of regu ated speed, so that the supply of coal may be carefully regulated to give-the necessary proportion for causing the combustion of this coal in the cylindrical body a to !produce practically only carbon monoxide.
- the air injected by the nozzle f is previously heated in a heat exchanger operated bya portion of the combustible gases issuingfrom the furnace.
- the furnace at is provided, at its lower 7 end with tap holes 71, j, the tap holes 71 being nozzle f.
- the tap holes 71 for the metal, are
- the tap holes 7', for-the slag, remain always open.
- one of thel-tap holes a will be left permanently open;-both metal and slag being tapped at each revolution, when this tap hole is at low points of its revolution.
- the furnace a opens into abrick-Work chamber k for receiving the combustible a fan Zto points of use, a part being burned for heating the ,air to be injected by the
- the iron ore to be treated, mixed with fluxes and with the quantity of coal just short of the proportion sufficient for the complete reduction of thisore, is fed in at ases.
- These gases are sent by attains cherry red the coal continues to burn alone.
- the operator ascertains if the proportions of air and coal are suitable for giving only carbon monoxide, If this is not the case, these proportions are adjusted ,to give this condition.
- the iron ore is introduced into the furnace; the iron ore is preferably finely crushed and is mixed with suitable fluxes for obtaining a calcareous slag and with the quantity of coal necessary for effecting the reduction of about 95% of the iron oxid in ore.
- the quantity of iron oxid which is to be left in the slag will be proportional to the content of phosphorus in the ore and reversely proportional to the lime in the slag.
- an ordinary basic calcareous slag containing 5% of iron oxid is amply sufficient for dephosphorizing the ores.
- the mixture regularly advances towards the hearth and is heated, the iron oxid is reduced in the proportion of 95% and the slag is formed, taking away with it the 5% of iron oxid which have not been reduced, the metal melts in theghottestzone and the metal and slag are tapped as above described.
- This slag containing a small and readily controllable proportion of 'iron oxid, prevents by its oxidizing function, the phosphoration of the metal, the reduction of silica and oxide of manganese and, by its basic function, the sulfuration of .the metal.
- The' process forming the subject-matter of this invention permits the direct production of iron andste'el. If it is desired to obtain carbon dioxid and water vapor, in the continued presence'of a basic slag containing a small amount of iron oxid, whereby said slag prevents reduction of phosphorus, silicon and manganese compounds and the passage ofthese elements into iron, and
- a rocess of producing refined iron and steel direct which comprises heating a mixture containing iron ore, lime, and a solid carbonaceous reducing agent,, by means of a flame free from: substantial amounts of carbon dioxid and water vapor, in the continued presence of a basic slag containing a small amount of iron oxid, whereby said slag prevents reduction of phosphorus, silicon and manganese compounds and the passage of these elements into iron, and also prevents the passage of sulfur into the metal.
- a process of producing refined iron and steel which comprises heating a mixture containing iron ore, lime, and a solid carbonaceous reducing agent, by means of a flame free from substantial amounts of carbon dioxid and water vapor, agitatin and progressing the charge toward said flame, durin such heating operation, in the continue presence of a basic. slag containing a small amount of iron oxid, where- -by said slag prevents reduction of phosphorus, silicon and manganese compounds and the passage of these elements into iron, and also revents the passage of sulfur into themetall 4.
- the ment which comprises conducting the operations in an inclined rotary furnace, the ore being'fed at the upper end and the flame being sup lied at the lower end.
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- Manufacture And Refinement Of Metals (AREA)
Description
P. BASSET. PROCESS FOR THE DIRECT MANUFACTURE OF IRON AND STEEL.
APPLICATION FILED FEB. 26, 1921.
Patented Nov. M, 1922.
Patented Nov. 14, 1922.
UNHTEED STATES LUCIEN PAUL BASSET, OF PARIS, FRANCE.
PROCESS FOR THE DIRECT MANUFACTURE OF IRON AND STEEL.
Application filed February 26, 1921. Serial No. 448,072.
T 0 all whom it may concern:
Be it known that I, LUCIEN PAUL BAssnr, of Paris, France, have invented a certain new and useful Process for the Direct Manufacture of Iron and Steel (for which I have filed applications in France Feb. 24, 1920; Belgium May 1, 1920 and Luxemburg April 28, 1920), of which the following is a specification.
In the manufacture of cast-iron in the blast furnace by the ordinary well known processes, it is not possible to obtain a product free from foreign metals and impurities.
Various foreign bodies are present. capable of being absorbed by the metal. These bodies have different properties relatively to the burden, and it is possible, by giving to the slag a predetermined composition, to prevent the absorption by the metal of one body or of a group of bodies having some one or more common reactions. But such regulation of the slag has no effect on the action of other impurities or groups of impurities present. Hence in the manufacture of cast-iron, many of the impurities can be gotten rid of, only by removal from the iron, by a subsequent operation, (refining operation).
Thus, it is not possible, by the usual metallurgical processes heretofore known, to directly obtain a metal both desulfurized and dephosphorized, as, in these processes, the desulfurization and dephosphorization are two rather dissimilar operations, requiring different conditions; the first being a deoxidizing, (reducing) operation and the second an oxidizing operation.
Generally, a metalis required from the blast-furnace practically free from phosphorus. For that purpose, by the addition to the ore of calcareous fluxes, a basic line sla is produced which combines with the sulfur to form calcium sulfid. This calcareous slag being diflicultly fusible, it is necessary, for causing it to melt, to operate at a high temperature, but, at this high temperature, the coal mixed with the ore, acting as the heating agent as well as the reduction agent, strongly reacts with all of the elements of the burden, which, apart from lime and alumina, are thus partially or entirely reduced; it therefore, follows that the metal produced, contains as impurities, silicon, manganese, phosphorus, etc. At this very high temperature, the slag is nearly completely free from oxide of iron; in fact, the latter, which is the most easily reducible of the oxides present, is the first to be reduced to metal, and hence eliminated from the slag.
For preventing the reduction of silica, manganese compounds and phosphate of lime, it would be necessary to operate at a lower temperature and conse uently, to provide a more easily fusible s ag, containing oxide of iron, but such a slag would be more highly siliceous-than that above referred to, and accordingly, would not have so good desulfurizin properties.
It will, tierefore, be seen that the desulfurizing and dephosphorizing operations cannot be carried out together in the blast furnace, owing to the fact that the coal acts at the same time as fuel and as reducing agent, and it is not possible to separate these two unctions.
My present invention has for its object a process of directly producing iron and steel, which will produce these metals in a form in which they can be directly used, that is to say, practically free from sulfur and phosphorus.
This process consists, substantially:
(a) In heating in a furnace a mixture of ore and iron, coal and basic fluxes, if necessary, by means of a flame produced by the combustion of either coal pulverized to the condition of flour (i. e; in the form of an impalpable powder) or of a finely pulverized hydrocarbon, such fuel being burned in preheated air in carefully regulated proportions, whereby this combustion gives practically only carbon monoxide;
(b) In regulating the reducing conditions in the furnace, so that the basic calcareous slag may contain a small quantity of oxide of iron, proportional to the quantity of phosphorus contained in the ore and inversely proportional to the calcic-basicity of the slag.
In this process, the small quantity of oxide of iron left in the basic slag, checks the phosphoration of the metal, the reduction of silica and of manganese oxide, while maintaining the desulfurizing function of the calcareous slag.
Besides, the heating and reducing operations. contrarily to what takes place with the ordinary processes in the blast furnace, are kept distinct from. each other, and it is easy to modify the working of one of these operations without modifying the other.
By means of the present process, the sulfur and phosphorus, (present as impurities in the ore), are fixed and taken up by the slag before they can be absorbed by the metal, and as this fixation of the sulfur and phosphorus is produced at the same time as the production of the free metal, the production of the latter in a pure state, is not delayed by a subsequent refining operation, such operation being unnecessary.
In order that the invention may be clearly understood, I will describe, by way of example, a method for carrying out the present process in a rotary furnace constituted as diagrammatically illustrated in the accompanying drawino which shows the furnace in longitudinaf sectional view in two separated sections.
As shown in the drawing, this furnace comprises an inclined rotary cylindrical furnace a of great length, (for instance, a length of 50 meters and a diameter of 2.5 meters). This cylinder has an internal refractory lining and external rings 1) running on rollers. A toothed gear a? imparts a rotary motion to the furnace a.
At the lower end of the furnace a is proi vided an orifice 6 through which enters a nozzle f; through the latter are injected hot air and pulverized coal in the form of an impalpable powder; the coal coming from a hopper g is re ularly discharged by a feed screw 72, of regu ated speed, so that the supply of coal may be carefully regulated to give-the necessary proportion for causing the combustion of this coal in the cylindrical body a to !produce practically only carbon monoxide. I
The air injected by the nozzle f is previously heated in a heat exchanger operated bya portion of the combustible gases issuingfrom the furnace. The furnace at is provided, at its lower 7 end with tap holes 71, j, the tap holes 71 being nozzle f.
arranged near the periphery of the furnace a, and the tap holes 7' nearer the axis ofthe latter. The tap holes 71, for the metal, are
normally closedbut are opened periodically;
the tap holes 7', for-the slag, remain always open.
If it is desired to continuously tap small quantities, one of thel-tap holes a will be left permanently open;-both metal and slag being tapped at each revolution, when this tap hole is at low points of its revolution.
At its other end, the furnace a opens into abrick-Work chamber k for receiving the combustible a fan Zto points of use, a part being burned for heating the ,air to be injected by the The iron ore to be treated, mixed with fluxes and with the quantity of coal just short of the proportion sufficient for the complete reduction of thisore, is fed in at ases. These gases are sent by attains cherry red the coal continues to burn alone. When the lower end of the furnace a is at white heat, the operator ascertains if the proportions of air and coal are suitable for giving only carbon monoxide, If this is not the case, these proportions are adjusted ,to give this condition. Then, by means of the screw m the iron ore is introduced into the furnace; the iron ore is preferably finely crushed and is mixed with suitable fluxes for obtaining a calcareous slag and with the quantity of coal necessary for effecting the reduction of about 95% of the iron oxid in ore. I
As previously stated, the quantity of iron oxid which is to be left in the slag, will be proportional to the content of phosphorus in the ore and reversely proportional to the lime in the slag. Generally, an ordinary basic calcareous slag containing 5% of iron oxid is amply sufficient for dephosphorizing the ores.
Under the effect of the inclination and rotation of the furnace, the mixture regularly advances towards the hearth and is heated, the iron oxid is reduced in the proportion of 95% and the slag is formed, taking away with it the 5% of iron oxid which have not been reduced, the metal melts in theghottestzone and the metal and slag are tapped as above described.
In the present process, the only object of the flame is to heat, This flame gives essentially a mixture of nitrogen. carbon monoxid and of the hydrogen contained in the coal, and hence cannot exert any oxidizing action on the metal produced and it exercisesonly a small part of the reduction of the iron ore.
The reduction is therefore eflected substantially entirely by the coal \mixed with the ore. It is therefore possible, by modifying the proportion of this coal, to vary the percentage of the iron oxid, which will be reduced. and hence the non-reduced fraction which goes into the slag.
This slag, containing a small and readily controllable proportion of 'iron oxid, prevents by its oxidizing function, the phosphoration of the metal, the reduction of silica and oxide of manganese and, by its basic function, the sulfuration of .the metal.
Moreover, in the present process, the tendency to sulfuration is much less in the blast duced to the metallic state, then a small quantity of metallic iron is re-oxidized, so asj to provide in the slag the required small quantity of iron oxid. For that purpose a "small excess of air is supplied to the hearth relatively to the coal projected by the nozzle, the flame produced by the combustion of this coal, will then contain a small proportion of carbon dioxid and water vapor; both of which are powerful oxidizing agents for iron at the temperature of the furnace, and they will accordingly reoxidize a small portion of the metallic iron produced.
It is thus possible, by a judicious regulation of this additional air, to limit the reducing action of the coal mixed with the ore and to leave the desired quantity of iron .oxid in the slag.
carried into practice-in other types of fur- The use of a rotary furnace has been in dicated above 'as a preferred means for carrying out the present process, but it is to be understood that the latter can be naces.
'The' process forming the subject-matter of this invention permits the direct production of iron andste'el. If it is desired to obtain carbon dioxid and water vapor, in the continued presence'of a basic slag containing a small amount of iron oxid, whereby said slag prevents reduction of phosphorus, silicon and manganese compounds and the passage ofthese elements into iron, and
also prevents the passage of sulfur into the metal.
2. A rocess of producing refined iron and steel direct which comprises heating a mixture containing iron ore, lime, and a solid carbonaceous reducing agent,, by means of a flame free from: substantial amounts of carbon dioxid and water vapor, in the continued presence of a basic slag containing a small amount of iron oxid, whereby said slag prevents reduction of phosphorus, silicon and manganese compounds and the passage of these elements into iron, and also prevents the passage of sulfur into the metal.
3. A process of producing refined iron and steel direct which comprises heating a mixture containing iron ore, lime, and a solid carbonaceous reducing agent, by means of a flame free from substantial amounts of carbon dioxid and water vapor, agitatin and progressing the charge toward said flame, durin such heating operation, in the continue presence of a basic. slag containing a small amount of iron oxid, where- -by said slag prevents reduction of phosphorus, silicon and manganese compounds and the passage of these elements into iron, and also revents the passage of sulfur into themetall 4. In the process of claim 1, the improveby the combustion of finely comminuted.
solid carbonaceous fuel, in a blast of preheated air, the relative proportions of these being so adjusted as to roduce substantially only carbon mbnoxi to the substantial exclusion ofcarbon dioxid and water vapor.
5. In the process of claim 1, :mixing the iron ore with coal as the reducing agent.
6. In the process of claim 1, the step of mixing the iron ore with an amount of coal which is slightly less than that amount which would be necessary to reduce all of the iron oxid to metal.
7. In the process of claim 1, the ment which comprises conducting the operations in an inclined rotary furnace, the ore being'fed at the upper end and the flame being sup lied at the lower end.
"The oregoing specification of Pro- I cess for the direct manufacture and refining of iron and steel, signed by me this 9th day of February 1921.
LUCIEN PAUL'BASSET.
improve-
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US448072A US1435686A (en) | 1921-02-26 | 1921-02-26 | Process for the direct manufacture of iron and steel |
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US448072A US1435686A (en) | 1921-02-26 | 1921-02-26 | Process for the direct manufacture of iron and steel |
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Cited By (4)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US2729556A (en) * | 1952-12-02 | 1956-01-03 | Mars G Fontana | Method for making pig iron or steel |
US2747985A (en) * | 1952-05-05 | 1956-05-29 | Arata Vincenzo Stefano | Methods of producing commercially pure iron |
US3505061A (en) * | 1964-07-13 | 1970-04-07 | Stora Kopparbergs Bergslags Ab | Process of desulphurizing pig iron in the reduction of ore in a rotary furnace |
US8852396B2 (en) | 2006-02-09 | 2014-10-07 | Arjowiggins Security | Sheet material comprising at least one watermark having a colored shade |
-
1921
- 1921-02-26 US US448072A patent/US1435686A/en not_active Expired - Lifetime
Cited By (4)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US2747985A (en) * | 1952-05-05 | 1956-05-29 | Arata Vincenzo Stefano | Methods of producing commercially pure iron |
US2729556A (en) * | 1952-12-02 | 1956-01-03 | Mars G Fontana | Method for making pig iron or steel |
US3505061A (en) * | 1964-07-13 | 1970-04-07 | Stora Kopparbergs Bergslags Ab | Process of desulphurizing pig iron in the reduction of ore in a rotary furnace |
US8852396B2 (en) | 2006-02-09 | 2014-10-07 | Arjowiggins Security | Sheet material comprising at least one watermark having a colored shade |
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