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HOW A BLAST FURNACE 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 the final product of
liquid slag and liquid iron. These liquid products are drained from the
furnace at regular intervals. The hot air that was 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 for four to ten years with only short stops to perform
planned maintenance.
The Process
Iron oxides can come to the blast furnace plant in the form of raw ore,
pellets or sinter. The raw ore is removed from the earth and sized into
pieces that range from 0.5 to 1.5 inches. This ore is either Hematite
(Fe2O3) or Magnetite (Fe3O4)
and the iron content ranges from 50% to 70%. This iron rich ore can be
charged directly into a blast furnace without any further processing.
Iron ore that contains a lower iron content must be processed or
beneficiated to increase its iron content. Pellets are produced from
this lower iron content ore. This ore is crushed and ground into a
powder so the waste material called gangue can be removed. The remaining
iron-rich powder is rolled into balls and fired in a furnace to produce
strong, marble-sized pellets that contain 60% to 65% iron. Sinter is
produced from fine raw ore, small coke, sand-sized limestone and
numerous other steel plant waste materials that contain some iron. These
fine materials are proportioned to obtain a desired product chemistry
then mixed together. This raw material mix is then placed on a sintering
strand, which is similar to a steel conveyor belt, where it is ignited
by gas fired furnace and fused by the heat from the coke fines into
larger size pieces that are from 0.5 to 2.0 inches. The iron ore,
pellets and sinter then become the liquid iron produced in the blast
furnace with any of their remaining impurities going to the liquid
slag.
The coke is produced from a mixture of coals. The coal is crushed and
ground into a powder and then charged into an oven. As the oven is
heated the coal is cooked so most of the volatile matter such as oil and
tar are removed. The cooked coal, called coke, is removed from the oven
after 18 to 24 hours of reaction time. The coke is cooled and screened
into pieces ranging from one inch to four inches. The coke contains 90
to 93% carbon, some ash and sulfur but compared to raw coal is very
strong. The strong pieces of coke with a high energy value provide
permeability, heat and gases which are required to reduce and melt the
iron ore, pellets and sinter.
The final raw material in the ironmaking process in limestone. The
limestone is removed from the earth by blasting with explosives. It is
then crushed and screened to a size that ranges from 0.5 inch to 1.5
inch to become blast furnace flux . This flux can be pure high calcium
limestone, dolomitic limestone containing magnesia or a blend of the two
types of limestone.
Since the limestone is melted to become the slag which removes sulfur
and other impurities, the blast furnace operator may blend the different
stones to produce the desired slag chemistry and create optimum slag
properties such as a low melting point and a high fluidity.
All of the raw materials are stored in an ore field and transferred
to the stockhouse before charging. Once these materials are charged into
the furnace top, they go through numerous chemical and physical
reactions while descending to the bottom of the furnace.
The iron ore, pellets and sinter are reduced which simply means the
oxygen in the iron oxides is removed by a series of chemical reactions.
These reactions occur as follows:
| 1) 3 Fe2O3 + CO =
CO2 + 2 Fe3O4 |
Begins at 850° F |
| 2) Fe3O4 + CO =
CO2 + 3 FeO |
Begins at 1100° F |
3) FeO + CO = CO2 + Fe
or
FeO + C = CO + Fe |
Begins at 1300° F |
At the same time the iron oxides are going through these purifying
reactions, they are also beginning to soften then melt and finally
trickle as liquid iron through the coke to the bottom of the
furnace.
The coke descends to the bottom of the furnace to the level where the
preheated air or hot blast enters the blast furnace. The coke is ignited
by this hot blast and immediately reacts to generate heat as
follows:
C + O2 = CO2 + Heat
Since the reaction takes place in the presence of excess carbon at a
high temperature the carbon dioxide is reduced to carbon monoxide as
follows:
CO2+ C = 2CO
The product of this reaction, carbon monoxide, is necessary to reduce
the iron ore as seen in the previous iron oxide reactions.
The limestone descends in the blast furnace and remains a solid while
going through its first reaction as follows:
CaCO3 = CaO + CO2
This reaction requires energy and starts at about 1600°F. The
CaO formed from this reaction is used to remove sulfur from the iron
which is necessary before the hot metal becomes steel. This sulfur
removing reaction is:
FeS + CaO + C = CaS + FeO + CO
The CaS becomes part of the slag. The slag is also formed from any
remaining Silica (SiO2), Alumina
(Al2O3), Magnesia (MgO) or Calcia (CaO) that
entered with the iron ore, pellets, sinter or coke. The liquid slag then
trickles through the coke bed to the bottom of the furnace where it
floats on top of the liquid iron since it is less dense.
Another product of the ironmaking process, in addition to molten iron
and slag, is hot dirty gases. These gases exit the top of the blast
furnace and proceed through gas cleaning equipment where particulate
matter is removed from the gas and the gas is cooled. This gas has a
considerable energy value so it is burned as a fuel in the "hot blast
stoves" which are used to preheat the air entering the blast furnace to
become "hot blast". Any of the gas not burned in the stoves is sent to
the boiler house and is used to generate steam which turns a turbo
blower that generates the compressed air known as "cold blast" that
comes to the stoves.
In summary, the blast furnace is a counter-current realtor where
solids descend and gases ascend. In this reactor there are numerous
chemical and physical reactions that produce the desired final product
which is hot metal. A typical hot metal chemistry follows:
| Iron (Fe) |
= 93.5 - 95.0% |
| Silicon (Si) |
= 0.30 - 0.90% |
| Sulfur (S) |
= 0.025 - 0.050% |
| Manganese (Mn) |
= 0.55 - 0.75% |
| Phosphorus (P) |
= 0.03 - 0.09% |
| Titanium (Ti) |
= 0.02 - 0.06% |
| Carbon (C) |
= 4.1 - 4.4% |
The Blast Furnace Plant
Now that we have completed a description of the ironmaking process, let
s review the physical equipment comprising the blast furnace plant.
There is an ore storage yard that can also be an ore dock where boats
and barges are unloaded. The raw materials stored in the ore yard are
raw ore, several types of pellets, sinter, limestone or flux blend and
possibly coke. These materials are transferred to the
"stockhouse/hiline" (17) complex by ore bridges equipped with grab
buckets or by conveyor belts. Materials can also be brought to the
stockhouse/hiline in rail hoppers or transferred from ore bridges to
self-propelled rail cars called "ore transfer cars". Each type of ore,
pellet, sinter, coke and limestone is dumped into separate "storage
bins" (18). The various raw materials are weighed according to a certain
recipe designed to yield the desired hot metal and slag chemistry. This
material weighing is done under the storage bins by a rail mounted scale
car or computer controlled weigh hoppers that feed a conveyor belt. The
weighed materials are then dumped into a "skip" car (19) which rides on
rails up the "inclined skip bridge" to the "receiving hopper" (6) at the
top of the furnace. The cables lifting the skip cars are powered from
large winches located in the "hoist" house (20). Some modern blast
furnace accomplish the same job with an automated conveyor stretching
from the stockhouse to the furnace top.
At the top of the furnace the materials are held until a "charge"
usually consisting of some type of metallic (ore, pellets or sinter),
coke and flux (limestone) have accumulated. The precise filling order is
developed by the blast furnace operators to carefully control gas flow
and chemical reactions inside the furnace. The materials are charged
into the blast furnace through two stages of conical "bells" (5) which
seal in the gases and distribute the raw materials evenly around the
circumference of the furnace "throat". Some modern furnaces do not have
bells but instead have 2 or 3 airlock type hoppers that discharge raw
materials onto a rotating chute which can change angles allowing more
flexibility in precise material placement inside the furnace.
Also at the top of the blast furnace are four "uptakes" (10) where
the hot, dirty gas exits the furnace dome. The gas flows up to where two
uptakes merge into an "offtake" (9). The two offtakes then merge into
the "downcomer" (7). At the extreme top of the uptakes there are
"bleeder valves" (8) which may release gas and protect the top of the
furnace from sudden gas pressure surges. The gas descends in the
downcomer to the "dustcatcher", where coarse particles settle out,
accumulate and are dumped into a railroad car or truck for disposal. The
gas then flows through a "Venturi Scrubber" (4) which removes the finer
particles and finally into a "gas cooler" (2) where water sprays reduce
the temperature of the hot but clean gas. Some modern furnaces are
equipped with a combined scrubber and cooling unit. The cleaned and
cooled gas is now ready for burning.
The clean gas pipeline is directed to the hot blast "stove" (12).
There are usually 3 or 4 cylindrical shaped stoves in a line adjacent to
the blast furnace. The gas is burned in the bottom of a stove and the
heat rises and transfers to refractory brick inside the stove. The
products of combustion flow through passages in these bricks, out of the
stove into a high "stack" (11) which is shared by all of the stoves.
Large volumes of air, from 80,000 ft3/min to 230,000
ft3/min, are generated from a turbo blower and flow through
the "cold blast main" (14) up to the stoves. This cold blast then enters
the stove that has been previously heated and the heat stored in the
refractory brick inside the stove is transferred to the "cold blast" to
form "hot blast". The hot blast temperature can be from 1600°F to
2300°F depending on the stove design and condition. This heated air
then exits the stove into the "hot blast main" (13) which runs up to the
furnace. There is a "mixer line" (15) connecting the cold blast main to
the hot blast main that is equipped with a valve used to control the
blast temperature and keep it constant. The hot blast main enters into a
doughnut shaped pipe that encircles the furnace, called the "bustle
pipe" (31). From the bustle pipe, the hot blast is directed into the
furnace through nozzles called "tuyeres" (30) (pronounced "tweers").
These tuyeres are equally spaced around the circumference of the
furnace. There may be fourteen tuyeres on a small blast furnace and
forty tuyeres on a large blast furnace. These tuyeres are made of copper
and are water cooled since the temperature directly in front of the them
may be 3600°F to 4200°F. Oil, tar, natural gas, powdered coal
and oxygen can also be injected into the furnace at tuyere level to
combine with the coke to release additional energy which is necessary to
increase productivity. The molten iron and slag drip past the tuyeres on
the way to the furnace hearth which starts immediately below tuyere
level.
Around the bottom half of the blast furnace the "casthouse" (1)
encloses the bustle pipe, tuyeres and the equipment for "casting" the
liquid iron and slag. The opening in the furnace hearth for casting or
draining the furnace is called the "iron notch" (22). A large drill
mounted on a pivoting base called the "taphole drill" (23) swings up to
the iron notch and drills a hole through the refractory clay plug into
the liquid iron. Another opening on the furnace called the "cinder
notch" (21) is used to draw off slag or iron in emergency situations.
Once the taphole is drilled open, liquid iron and slag flow down a deep
trench called a "trough" (28). Set across and into the trough is a block
of refractory, called a "skimmer", which has a small opening underneath
it. The hot metal flows through this skimmer opening, over the "iron
dam" and down the "iron runners" (27). Since the slag is less dense than
iron, it floats on top of the iron, down the trough, hits the skimmer
and is diverted into the "slag runners" (24). The liquid slag flows into
"slag pots" (25) or into slag pits (not shown) and the liquid iron flows
into refractory lined "ladles" (26) known as torpedo cars or sub cars
due to their shape. When the liquids in the furnace are drained down to
taphole level, some of the blast from the tuyeres causes the taphole to
spit. This signals the end of the cast, so the "mudgun" (29) is swung
into the iron notch. The mudgun cylinder, which was previously filled
with a refractory clay, is actuated and the cylinder ram pushes clay
into the iron notch stopping the flow of liquids. When the cast is
complete, the iron ladles are taken to the steel shops for processing
into steel and the slag is taken to the slag dump where it is processed
into roadfill or railroad ballast. The casthouse is then cleaned and
readied for the next cast which may occur in 45 minutes to 2 hours.
Modern, larger blast furnaces may have as many as four tapholes and two
casthouses. It is important to cast the furnace at the same rate that
raw materials are charged and iron/slag produced so liquid levels can be
maintained in the hearth and below the tuyeres. Liquid levels above the
tuyeres can burn the copper casting and damage the furnace lining.
CONCLUSION
The blast furnace is the first step in producing steel from iron oxides.
The first blast furnaces appeared in the 14th Century and produced one
ton per day. Blast furnace equipment is in continuous evolution and
modern, giant furnaces produce 13,000 tons per day. Even though
equipment is improved and higher production rates can be achieved, the
processes inside the blast furnace remain the same. Blast furnaces will
survive into the next millenium because the larger, efficient furnaces
can produce hot metal at costs competitive with other iron making
technologies.
NOTE:
This article was prepared by John A. Ricketts, Ispat Inland,
Inc. The illustrations "the process" and "the blast furnace plant"
are provided courtesy of ATSI Engineering Services from their
publication "An Introduction to Blast Furnace Technology".
| blast furnace, ricketts, iron ore, coke, limestone skip, hot blast, cast house, hot metal, pig iron |
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