VOD (vacuum oxygen decarburization) and VAD (vacuum arc degassing) are processes used to refine molten steel. VOD uses an oxygen lance under vacuum to lower carbon levels without over-oxidizing alloying elements. It produces steel with homogeneous structure, low inclusions, and low gas porosity. VAD operates in a single vacuum tank with argon stirring and electrodes. It achieves very low oxygen, hydrogen, and sulfur levels through temperature control, argon stirring, and the vacuum environment. Both processes are effective for producing clean, high-quality steels.
VOD (vacuum oxygen decarburization) and VAD (vacuum arc degassing) are processes used to refine molten steel. VOD uses an oxygen lance under vacuum to lower carbon levels without over-oxidizing alloying elements. It produces steel with homogeneous structure, low inclusions, and low gas porosity. VAD operates in a single vacuum tank with argon stirring and electrodes. It achieves very low oxygen, hydrogen, and sulfur levels through temperature control, argon stirring, and the vacuum environment. Both processes are effective for producing clean, high-quality steels.
VOD (vacuum oxygen decarburization) and VAD (vacuum arc degassing) are processes used to refine molten steel. VOD uses an oxygen lance under vacuum to lower carbon levels without over-oxidizing alloying elements. It produces steel with homogeneous structure, low inclusions, and low gas porosity. VAD operates in a single vacuum tank with argon stirring and electrodes. It achieves very low oxygen, hydrogen, and sulfur levels through temperature control, argon stirring, and the vacuum environment. Both processes are effective for producing clean, high-quality steels.
VOD (vacuum oxygen decarburization) and VAD (vacuum arc degassing) are processes used to refine molten steel. VOD uses an oxygen lance under vacuum to lower carbon levels without over-oxidizing alloying elements. It produces steel with homogeneous structure, low inclusions, and low gas porosity. VAD operates in a single vacuum tank with argon stirring and electrodes. It achieves very low oxygen, hydrogen, and sulfur levels through temperature control, argon stirring, and the vacuum environment. Both processes are effective for producing clean, high-quality steels.
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VOD
(Vacuum oxygen decarburization)
What is VOD?
The vacuum oxygen decarburizer (VOD), has an oxygen lance in
the centre of the tank lid to enhance carbon removal under vacuum. The VOD is often used to lower the carbon content of high-alloy steels without also overoxidizing such oxidizable alloying elements as chromium. This process is charecterized by:slag-free tapping at the melting furnace, application of ladles with sufficient freeboard, inert gas stirring through the ladle’s bottom by means of porous plugs, oxygen lance with high efficiency and minimised splashing. Here the vital player is the vacuum treatment which reduces carbon without reducing the alloying elements to a greater extent. Why vacuum treatment needed? Vacuum treatment of molten steel decreases the partial pressure of CO, bubbles of CO are formed in liquid state , float up and then they are removed. At this pressure oxidation of chromium is not feasible. Hence low carbon high alloy status is maintained. It also helps in removing hydrogen dissolved in liquid steel. Gaseous nitrogen and nitrogen inclusions are also removed. Movement of molten steel caused by CO bubble also helps in refining steel from non-metallic inclusions. Steels refined in vacuum are characterized by homogenous structure , low-content of non-metallic inclusion and low gas porosity. VOD design contd. The VOD system essentially consists of a vacuum tank,a ladle furnace with or without argon stirring , a lid with oxygen lancing facility. The ladle has a free board of about a metre to contain violent agitation of the bath during lancing. The charge is molten metal from arc furnace. The percentage of carbon in molten metal in VOD process is about 0.7%-0.8%. Argon stirring is required to faster the kinetics. VOD design contd. At the end of refining , The vacuum is broken and the bath is deoxidized with Al and Fe-Si. Desulphurization can be carried out by putting synthetic slag . Argon purging would also result in sulphur removal around 80%. Since many of the stainless steels are required to be vacuum treated to decrease the gas content , the vacuum system could easily be modified to incorporate oxygen lancing facility and there by VOD can be brought about for producing low carbon steels , without much extra investment. Final Composition and benefits
THE total VOD cycle lasts for 2 -2.5 hours.
Final sulphur content-0.01% & carbon content-0.02% Final chromium content-15-18%(recovery ~97%) Deep carbon removal Low loses of chromium in treatment of stainless steel Sulphur removal Precise alloying Temperature and chemical uniformity. Non-metallic inclusions removal VAD (Vacuum arc degassing) Schematic illustration of the use of separate ladle covers for reheating and degassing of 68 tonne heats at Atlas Specialty Steels. Schematic illustration of a VAD unit VAD process This is a single station unit in which the ladle sits in a vacuum tank and is stirred by inert gas through porous plug at the bottom with provision for heating through electrodes and alloying additions. After addition of lime in the molten steel ladle, arcing is carried out at 250 Torr – 300 Torr to raise the temperature & fuse the lime followed by short duration degassing, additions for chemistry adjustment and deep degassing to pressures as low as 1 Torr. Argon stirring is continued in all the operational steps and the adjustment of flow rate is done for varied operations carried out during processing. The heating rate is about 3ºC – 4 ºC/min and during heating, argon flow rate is kept on the lower side. VAD process cont.
In this system, under vacuum, carbon-oxygen reaction and carbon-Al2O3
reaction under the high temperature arc are of great help in achieving low oxygen content without any solid reaction product. Hydrogen levels as low as 1.5 ppm are achieved caused by intense mass transfer by argon and low partial pressure of hydrogen because of dilution of liberated carbon monoxide. The greatest advantage of this process is the high degree of de-sulphurisation as high as 80% for production of steels with sulphur levels as low as 0.005%. VAD is now a widely used method of producing clean steels in the world.