Iron Making Process at New Zealand Steel
Iron Making Process at New Zealand Steel
Iron Making Process at New Zealand Steel
Ironsand
MHF Slag
(PC)
Cogeneration
Cogeneration Surge
Hopper
Fet 58 – 59%
TiO2 8%
SiO2 1.8 – 3.0%
Particle size 50 – 250 µm
Primary Concentrate (PC) notes
• PC is the only iron ore source used at Glenbrook
• NZS uses approx 1.2Mt/a PC sourced from Waikato North Head
• PC is a titanomagnetitie (TiO2.Fe3O4) mineral sand
• The Fe content is 58 - 59.5%. It has a relatively high gangue load compared to traditional iron ore sources for
blast furnaces.
• It is not suitable as a sole ore source for blast furnace ironmaking due to the high melting point of the gangue
components in particular the TiO2
• Like most ore deposits the Waikato North Head (WNH) mine site is not homogenous, the raw sand is laid down in
different strata with varying magnetic content
• This then gives rise to variation in the PC grade (%Fe) and the composition of the gangue
• There is no blending between mining and processing in iron making, there are various stock piles with some
mixing but there is no method to produce a controlled blend, this results in variation in the gangue load through
the iron making process
• The PC is the primary source of phosphorous in the process (in fact all, with small two exceptions)
• PC also contains slimes, the bulk is removed at WNH, however, slimes are also transported and attritioned down
the slurry pipeline and must be controlled and disposed of onsite
• The PC is the source of accretion in the kilns; as loose boulder accretion, wall accretion (protective) and ring
accretion (throughput restricting)
• The gangue from the PC makes up 75-80% of the melter slag
Coal with Limestone and KOBM Slag
• Purpose
–Dry raw materials
–Devolatilise coal
–Preheat for kiln (600C)
–Offgas to electric power co-generation
–No reduction
–No calcination
Feed Bins
Coal PC
The Multi-Hearth Furnaces…
Weigh Feeders
Conveyor
Gas Seal
Valves
Zones
Offgas to Cogen
Rabble Arms
1. Drying
Dust
Cyclone
Burner
Air
Supply Feed to Kiln 2. Combustion
Rotary Shaft
Air cooled
MHF Notes
• Primary function is to char the coal
• Increases the productivity (throughput) of the kiln by removing a significant off gas load (moisture and coal
volatiles) – this is a huge benefit compared to like kiln operations without a MHF
• However, a MHF introduces additional complexity and maintenance issues
– It is difficult to maintain the ideal temperature profile
– Can only really measure the gas space temp rather than the solids/bed temp. The gas space based TCs are
susceptible to accretion which then reads lower than actual gas space temp
– MHF is very susceptible to uneven gas flow distribution as drop holes get blocked
– The air addition can also be uneven due to the relatively low flow/pressure distribution around the air ring main
– The air addition is through ports, it is not a controlled burner which ratios fuel to air
– Uneven and high temperatures can thermally and mechanically stress the rabble arms
– Uneven and high temperatures cause accretion formation within the MHF, this can restrict flow or break away
and put mechanical stress on rabble arms that lead to breakage
– There are a lot of connections within the MHF between the central shaft and the rabble arms (12 x 4 = 48)
which all have the potential for uncontrolled air leakage into the MHF that results in burning in undesirable
areas
– The off-gas is a dirty, low calorific gas, while this is combustible it can be difficult to sustain and monitor the
flame in the afterburner. Changes in coal type can have a significant effect on the volume and CV of the off-
gas.
– MHF off-gas capacity can be throughput limiting for the operation
Rotary Kilns
Startup
Burner
Dust Drop-
Out Box Drive units Grizzly
Support Rollers
Volumetric Hopper
To Water Treatment
Hot Container Accretions
Transport
Overall, what happens?
Feeds: (all but air are dried and preheated to 600ºC)
• Ironsand (titanomagnetite, plus gangue) Key
• Coal char (10%VM) Fe3O4 = Magnetite
• Limestone FeO = Wüstite
• Air (from 9 SAFs)
CaCO3 = Limestone
Process:
CaO = Lime
• Retention time (12 h at 30 t/h PC feed; 8 h at 38 t/h)
• Temperatures (solids: up to 1000ºC; gases: up to 1500ºC)
Product (Reduced Primary Concentrate and Char, RPCC):
• Sponge iron (RPC) with unreduced FeO and gangue
• Char and ash
• Lime (with absorbed S, etc)
• Accretions
• Off gases (N2, CO, CO2) Electricity (Kiln Cogen)
Kiln Notes
What’s needed for reduction of ironsand to metallic iron?
HEAT
• To raise the temperature to achieve sufficient speed of reaction
(14 h at 600ºC, 10 min at 1400ºC)
• To maintain reaction temperature, i.e. compensate for endothermic
reactions
REDUCTANT
• In this case, CO gas is the reductant (not char directly)
The main reactions…
Bed Reactions
Overall reduction reaction…
0.7 Fe3O4 + 0.3 Fe2TiO4 + 1.7 C = 2.7 Fe + 1.7 CO2 + 0.3 TiO2
__________________________________
1200 70
Gas
Temperature (C)
Oxidising Zones
O2 + CO = CO2
Reducing Zone
Key
1. Gas to bed (R & Conv)
2. Gas to wall (R & Conv)
2 3. Wall to bed (R)
3 4. Wall to wall (R)
1 5. Wall to bed (Cond)
6. Shell heat loss (Conv)
R = radiation
Conv = convection
Cond = conduction
5
How the Kilns process magnifies raw
Carbon in Carbon
Coal (FC) After Kiln materials variability….
Variability
KILN %C VARIABILITY
12
10
8
%C in RPCC
Safety
4 Margin
2
OSE - Kiln Accretion Min %C
0
60 65 70 75 80 85 90
% Metallisation
THE MELTER PROCESS
What it’s like inside the Melters… Electrically smelt Kiln
product to produce
hot metal and slag
INFORMATION
Size:
26m x 8m
Electrodes:
6 x Söderberg
Power:
42 MW
Feed:
RPCC, 700ºC
Iron:
3.2 - 3.5% C,1490ºC
Slag:
1530 – 1550ºC
Production:
Iron: 1000t/day
Melter Layout…..
Load cells on RPCC bins Electrode
RPCC Transfer container
Iron
Slag
Ladle
Bowl
Melter Roof and Launders Layout
Launder
s
Iron Ladles
Slag
bowl
S
Mudgun
E W Rock drill and Mudgun
carriage
N Explosion
hatch
Melter inspections…
Normal
Open
Closed
Melter chemistry…
Reduction of remaining FeO in RPCC by C (char)
FeO + C (char) = Fe + CO (melter gas) Highly Endothermic
Carburisation of the iron
Fe + C (char) = Fe (2.8~3.5%C)
More
Reduction of metalloids… electrical
power
SiO2 + 2C = Si + 2CO
TiO2 + 2C = Ti + 2CO, etc
Consumption of excess char
Fe3O4(PC) + 4C = 3Fe + 4CO Highly Endothermic
Slag-metal equilibrium
• High slag basicity (CaO/SiO2) removes S and Si from the metal
Hot Metal Quality and Melter Control Levers…
• char load
C • oxidation state
>3.0
• slag basicity
Control Levers:
• Electrical Power (CRUNCH) Si • oxidation state
0.25 • slag basicity
• Oxidation state (PC addition)
• Slag Basicity (limestone)
Ti • oxidation state
0.30
• S load (coal)
S • slag basicity
<0.035
Mn • temperature
0.45
Determined
V principally by Temp
0.49 1490
raw materials • throughput
P Super • oxidation state
<0.06
180
Carbon Transfer
into Iron… Char
Slag
2. By reduction
of FeO in slag (FeO) + C(s) = Fe(l, sat 5%) + CO(g)
Iron
Droplets
Carbon Transfer
from Iron…
By contact with
basic slag (FeO) + [C] = Fe(l) + CO(g)
(SiO2) + 2[C] = [Si] + 2CO(g)
(TiO2) + 2[C] = [Ti] + 2CO(g)
(MnO) + [C] = [Mn] + CO(g)
(V2O3) + 3[C] = 2[V] + 3CO(g)
(P2O5) + 5[C] = 2[P] + 5CO(g)
Lessons on hot metal carbon…
谢谢