How's Steel Manufactured?: Raw Materials For Ironmaking
How's Steel Manufactured?: Raw Materials For Ironmaking
How's Steel Manufactured?: Raw Materials For Ironmaking
Iron is the most used of all the metals, comprising 95% of all the metal tonnage produced
worldwide. Pure iron is not a good engineering material. It lacks sufficient strength and resistance
to rusting. However, its properties can be significantly altered by alloying, thermal, and mechanical
processing. Steel is the best known alloy (a mixture containing two or more metallic elements
or metallic and nonmetallic elements usually fused together or dissolving into each other when
molten) of iron. Its combination of low cost and high strength make it indispensable, especially
in applications like automobiles, the hulls of large ships, structural components for buildings, and
household appliances. Annual production and consumption of steel is often taken as a reliable
indicator of economic performance of a country.
Ironmaking
Ironmaking is known to man from prehistoric times. Modern ironmaking is about 200 years old. It
is done by a smelting process (extracting metals by heating) in a huge furnace known as the Blast
furnace. These furnaces can be as tall as 70 meters. Blast furnace has a circular cross section and
its diameter varies such that it tapers up like a chimney. Its height and geometry is optimised to
give best performance. Blast furnaces are never stopped except for major repairs. Usually they
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can continue to operate without interruptions up to 15 years. In big steel plants there can be more
than one such furnaces.
Iron ore, sinter, coke, and flux are charged through the top of the furnace in a certain sequence.
A hot air blast (900-1200 ◦ C) at high pressure (3 to 4 atmospheres) is send from the bottom of the
furnace. Coke begins to burn when it comes in contact with the hot air. This generates enormous
amount of carbon monoxide and heat. Temperature in the burning zone in the furnace can be
as high as 2000 ◦ C. Hot gases travels upwards through the furnace transferring heat and causing
chemical reactions. As the gas ascends through the furnace it comes in contact with iron oxide
causing reduction reactions. It progressively gets cooled as it moves up and the amount of carbon
monoxide also gets diminished. Some of the most important chemical reactions taking place in
the blast furnace are listed below:
C+O2 =CO2
CO2 +C=2CO
3Fe2 O3 +CO=2Fe3 O4 +CO2
Fe3 O4 +CO=3FeO+CO2
FeO+CO=Fe+CO2
FeO+C=Fe+CO
Iron that is formed by reduction reactions eventually melts and collects at the bottom of the
furnace. Temperature of the molten metal (or hot metal as it popularly known as) can vary
between 1200 and 1500 ◦ C. Besides carbon, hot metal has small amounts of silicon, manganese,
sulfur, and phosphorous dissolved in it. Along with ore reduction, slag formation also takes place.
The slag floats over the hot metal as it is lighter than hot metal. Its temperature is usually about
50 to 100 ◦ C higher than that of the hot metal.
Both hot metal and slag are taken out of the blast furnace through tap holes. Hot metal is send
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to the steelmaking shop, while slag is send to slag pits for granulation and later sold to cement
industry.
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EAF process can operate with 100 % scrap, thus saving valuable natural resources. External
arc heating permits better thermal control than does the oxygen process, in which heating is
accomplished by the exothermic oxidation of elements contained in the charge. This allows larger
alloy additions to be made than are possible in basic oxygen steelmaking. However, electric-arc
steelmaking is not as oxidizing, and slag-metal mixing is not as intense; therefore, electric-arc
steels normally have carbon contents higher than 0.05 percent. In addition, they usually have a
higher nitrogen content of 40 to 120 parts per million, compared with 30 to 50 parts per million
in basic-oxygen steels. Nitrogen, which renders steel brittle, is absorbed by liquid steel from air
in the high-temperature zone of the arc. The nitrogen content can be lowered by blowing other
gases into the furnace, by heating with a short arc, and by applying a vigorous carbon monoxide
boil or argon stir to the melt.
Very clean steeli.e., with low oxygen and sulfur contentcan be produced in the EAF by a two-
slag practice. After removal of slag from the first oxidizing meltdown, new slag formers are added.
The new reducing slag may consist of 65 percent lime, 20 percent silica, calcium carbide or alumina
(or all three), and practically no iron oxide. Alloys, which oxidize easily, are added at this time to
minimize losses and to improve metallurgical control. Refining continues under the reducing slag
until the heat is ready for tapping. Total heat time is one to four hours, depending on the type
of steel madethat is, on the amount of refining applied and auxiliary heating used. Many shops
do not apply a two-slag practice but treat the steel, after scrap meltdown and tapping, in ladle
treatment stations. These secondary metallurgical plants allow the EAF to run only as a highly
efficient scrap melter.
From time to time, as the arc erodes their tips and the high-temperature furnace atmosphere
oxidizes their bodies, new electrodes are added to the top of the electrode strings at the furnace.
Electrodes are consumed at the rate of three to six kilograms per ton of steel, depending on the
type of operation.