World Steel in Figures 2018
World Steel in Figures 2018
World Steel in Figures 2018
Steelmaking based
on inductive melting
Global production of steel has experienced rapid growth for a prolonged time. Over the last ten years alone,
annual production rose from 851 Mt/a in 2001 to 1,417 Mt/a in 2010, much of this being attributable to growth in
China. The percentage of electric steel produced with electric arc furnaces as the traditional melting unit around
the world (without China, an exceptional case with 90 % oxygen steel) is around 45 %, and this percentage
is growing. After the development of induction technology with inverter outputs of over 40 MW for crucible
furnaces with capacities of more than 65 t, the induction furnace offers itself as an alternative electric melting unit
for small mini-mills. Apart from saving the costs of electrodes and the low requirements on the electricity grid,
the main benefits offered by induction furnaces are the high yield from the feed materials and low pollution of
the environment and workplaces. The low metal losses becomes an economic factor, particularly when stainless
steels are produced; although promising results have also been obtained in recent times for the inductive
melting of carbon steels.
S
teel is the most important industrial material for [4]. Corresponding to these processes, a differentiation is
producing goods and plants by a long way, as can made between oxygen steel and electric steel.
be seen from the quantities of the main materi- The electric steel process is characterized by its flexibil-
als produced across the world as depicted in Fig. 1 ity and, in the case of smaller steelmaking units (so-called
[1]. Fig. 2 shows the rapid, on-going development of mini-mills with 300 to 1,200 kt/a) its cost effectiveness.
world steel production since 1950 which, according to A further factor is the lower environmental pollution, in
Ameling's estimates made in 2006, would reach some that less dust, CO2, NOx and slag is produced compared
1,500 Mt/a in 2010. The crude steel produced each year to the oxygen process [5]. The relative, absolute growth in
in the various regions during last 10 years is depicted in electric steelmaking across the world, with the exception
Fig. 3. This clearly shows that this annual tonnage - at
1,417 Mt/a - was almost achieved, despite the collapse
in 2008/2009. The main reason for this is the astonishing
growth in China, where the annual tonnage of 152 Mt in
2001 increased more than fourfold to 627 Mt in 2010 [2].
Steel production processes are characterized by a high
recycling rate of steel scrap. This lies between 85 and
90 % in industry and for automobiles, and at 50 % in the
private sector [3]. As the ratio of scrap used as the raw
material for producing steel is 40 to 45 %, it is nowadays
almost on equal terms with iron ore. Fig. 4 shows the
processes used to produce steel in diagrammatic form,
the two main processes used to produce well over 90 %
of all steel can be seen on the far left and far right. These
are namely the lines "blast furnace/oxygen-converter" Fig. 1: Global production of the most important materials
which primarily uses ore as the raw material, and the 1970/2006, in Mt/a [1]
"electric arc furnace" with scrap as the main input basis
Characteristic
features of induction
furnaces
There are two main types of induc-
tion furnaces used in industry, namely
the induction channel furnace and the
induction crucible furnace. Channel fur-
naces nowadays only have subordinate Fig. 5: Electric steel production from 2001 to 2010 [2]
significance as equipment for melting
ferrous materials, so that what follows
refers to crucible furnaces. Fig. 8 con-
tains a diagram of such an induction
melting system. Its main components
are the power supply unit (with trans-
former, inverter and capacitor bank), the
crucible furnace itself, the charging sys-
tem, the cooling systems for the power
supply and furnace coil, the fume extrac-
tion equipment and the process control
system [7].
tion in a simple manner. The available power can thus be ■ High mechanical and chemical resistance in order to
fully used practically for every state of the melting stock withstand the loading caused by the bath agitation.
in the crucible, i.e. over the complete melting period, by These requirements are fulfilled for the inductive melting
variable current, voltage and frequency. These demon- of cast iron by quartzite dry masses. Quartzite, however,
strate the main advantages of an inverter power sup- is unsuitable for producing steel melts due to its inad-
ply compared to a conventional line frequency furnace, equate thermal and chemical resistance. Spinel-forming
which only works economically in heel operation at a dry masses on MgO and Al2O3 basis are the lining materi-
rigid line frequency. The variable and higher frequency als preferred for this purpose. They are characterized by a
of the coil current in the oscillation circuit with the vari- high temperature application limit of over 1,750 °C, whilst
able current and voltage enables the MF furnace to be at the same time having a favorable thermal stability and
operated in charging mode, i.e. without heel with solid a low infiltration tendency.
feed materials, without forfeiting anything in the melt- The latter named feature is based primarily on the for-
ing performance, and it can be equipped with a power mation of spinel whilst the applied mass is being sintered:
input many times as great, yet at the same capacity [9]. The formation of the spinel (MgO•Al2O3), consisting of
This, then, is the essential progress made compared to magnesite and corundum, is associated with an increase
the situation in the 1970s, when efforts to deploy the line in volume of 7.9 %. This not only compensates the shrink-
frequency induction furnace for steelmaking met with age which occurs from around 1,200 °C during sintering
little or no success [10]. without such reactions, but also leads to an additional
densification in the sintered layer [12].
Operating behavior and environmental
compatibility Deployment of induction
The principle of direct energy transmission, as described furnaces in steel mills
above, produces a high yield from the feed materials with Induction technology has now been developed to the
lower levels of dust emission. Noise levels are kept within extent that it is possible to generate connected loads of
admissible limits below 85 to 83 dB(A), firstly because the over 40 MW per inverter and specific power between 600
noisy power supply components (choke, inverter, capaci- and 800 kW/t of furnace capacity. These developments
tor bank) are installed in enclosed rooms and, secondly, fulfill the prerequisites for deploying induction crucible
the call for lower noise emissions is taken
into account in the furnace construction
with the furnace casing and platform being Table 1: Characteristic features of electric arc and induction furnaces (source: ABP)
acoustically insulated [11]. The low levels of
heat released into the surroundings also Feature Electric Arc Furnace Induction Furnace
make the induction furnace a melting unit
which is friendly to the workplace. Operation costs:
• Electrical energy 500 kWh/t 540 kWh/t
Refractory lining • Refractory 4 kg/t 3.5 kg/t
As a rule, crucible furnaces are lined with • Electrodes 2.5 kg/t none
powdery dry masses. These are sintered • Oxygen 15 Nm³/t none
in the furnace into a monolithic, although • Slag builder 25 kg/t none
elastic crucible. The induction process Melting:
thereby places particular requirements on • Melt losses • 7 to 10 % • 1 to 2 %
the refractory lining: • Alloying • Not exact • Simple and exact
■ Lowest possible wall thickness in order
Metallurgical work:
to keep the expenditure for the capacitor
• Decarburizing
bank to compensate the reactive power Possible by oxygen Restricted by refractory
• Desulphurizing
low and electrical efficiency high. blowing and slag reaction wear
• Dephosphurizing
■ Metal may not be allowed to penetrate
the refractory wall. This is because mate- Environment conditions:
rials conducting electricity in the furnace • Dust 5 to 10 kg/t approx. 1 kg/t
refractory are inductively heated up, so • Noise 90 to 120 dB(A) 83 to 85 dB(A)
that the penetrating metal melt does not • Slag 60 to 70 kg/t 10 to 15 kg/t
stand still, but rather penetrates through
• High load • Low load
to the coil, thereby causing a short circuit Electrical supply net
• Flicker disturbances • No flicker disturbances
or even a molten metal break-through.
furnaces in steel works in two fields: Firstly, the induction service life is not impaired. When considering the chemi-
furnace as the melting unit for mini-mills with an annual cal composition of the metallic feed materials, it should
production of 100,000 to 900,000 t/a is now an alternative be noted that the induction furnace is suitable for adding
to the electric arc furnace. Secondly, it is suitable for melt- agents, i.e. alloys, at any time thanks to the characteristic
ing the ferroalloys for adding to the ladle in liquid form bath agitation. However, it is not very good for removing
when making stainless steel. components, such as carbon through oxygen treatment.
This is to be discussed in more detail later.
The induction furnace as an alternative melting The inductive bath agitation also represents a benefit
unit to the electric arc furnace for melting direct reduced iron. Melting performance is
Table 1 compares the main features of electric arc and nevertheless limited by the boiling process to remove the
induction furnaces for melting steel in mini-mills. Accord- residual oxygen (which is associated with the formation
ing to this, an induction furnace has the following eco- of flames and splashes of molten metal) and by severe
nomic/technical benefits, these resulting from the inter- slag formation which requires special action.
plays described in the foregoing section.
■ Low requirements on the electricity grid; also suitable Design of an induction melting system for
for power supplied by generators driven by diesel or producing construction steel billets
gas In electric steelmaking, it has long since been regarded
■ Little expenditure for environmental compatibility and as making economic sense to perform metallurgical work
clean workplaces not in the melting furnace itself, but rather in down-
■ High yield from the metallic feed materials, above all stream equipment, such as a ladle furnace, oxygen con-
the alloying agents verter or vacuum plant [13]. The process of producing the
■ No electrode costs melt is thus characterized by the three stations "melting,
■ Relatively low investment costs and small space treatment, casting", whereby it is assumed here that
requirement the molten metal is poured by continuous casting. The
■ Largely automatic operation in a simple manner. sequence is then determined by the requirements of
One drawback is the sensitivity of the refractory lining inthe continuous casting plant which, as a rule, is fed con-
an induction furnace, this being characterized by a mini- tinuously with liquid steel via a tundish from a ladle posi-
mal wall thickness and the risk of cracks forming leading tioned above which is emptied through the base. After a
to operational stoppages. Induction furnaces also place pouring time of 40 to max 70 min, the ladle is exchanged
more stringent requirements on the quality of the scrap in 3 to 5 min. During this time, there is sufficient melt
metal than electric arc furnaces. These firstly concern available from the tundish, so that up to 30 sequential
the geometric dimensions which need to be adjusted to charges can be poured without interruption. The tundish
the relatively small surface/volume ratio of the crucible is then exchanged and other maintenance work is per-
furnace: the pieces of scrap metal should not be longer formed, this generally taking around two hours per day.
than half the crucible diameter. The non-metallic con- Melting operations thus face the task of providing a
tents need to be kept in bounds to ensure that the ratio ready-to-pour, liquid charge in a 40 to 65 minute cycle
of slag does not become too great and that the refractory for a period of up to 22 h/day. The design of an induction
melting system suitable for this purpose
is described in the following example
Table 2: Design data for an induction melting installation for the production of construc-
[14]. 300,000 t of construction steel billets
tion steel billets [14]
are to be produced per annum in the fol-
lowing composition:
Annual billet production 300.000 t/a
Working days per year (22 days maintenance, 0.15 - 0.3 % C; 0.6 - 1.6 % Mn; 0.15 - 0.5 %
310 d/a S; P and S < 0.04 %.
23 days standstill at 93.7 % availability)
waiting for new refractory to be installed (Figure 10). Production of different types of steel
The connected load per furnace is calculated from the The induction furnace is suitable for producing different
aforesaid cycle time of 65 min; after subtracting 15 min types of steel, from simple construction steel through
for finishing, tapping and first charging, 50 min therefore to high-alloyed special steels. Differing requirements are
remain as melting time. This results in the following thereby placed on both the treatment equipment and
equation for furnace power P: on the melting process, as the following examples show.
When smelting construction steel on the basis of scrap
P = 560 kWh/t • 23 t • 60 min/h / 50 min ≈ 16,000 kW. with a suitable chemical composition, the melt is finished
in the induction furnace without subsequent treatment
The refractory service life is 70 to 100 charges, or 3.2 to and is fed directly to the continuous casting plant [15]. In
4.5 days given 22 charges per day of production. It takes the majority of cases, however, the quality of the scrap
around 1½ days to install new refractory, including sin- metal available requires that a ladle furnace is placed
tering. So even if the refractory service life per furnace is in-between. This desulferizes and deoxidizes the melt,
only three days, two furnaces running in melting mode adjusts its composition and temperature, cleans it with
ensure that on-going melting operations continue with argon bubbles and subsequently finishes it ready for
a reserve furnace on stand-by waiting for new refractory. casting (Fig. 10). In this respect, dephosphorizing and
The two parallel running 23 t melting furnaces then melt decarburizing are an additional task, one performed by
a 46 t charge in 65 min cycles. The melt is then taken for the melting unit "electric arc furnace" by oxygen blowing
treatment in the ladle furnace and from there on to the during the melting process. It is recognized that this is not
continuous casting plant, as shown in Fig. 10. possible in an induction furnace due to the inadmissibly