A Two-Stage Electric Arc-Electroslag Process for Continuous Steelmaking

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
R. H. Nafziger
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
5
File Size:
4110 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1977

Abstract

A novel process has been developed for preparing directly workable steel ingots from prereduced iron ore pellets by a two-stage process. The pellets are continuously charged into an electric arc furnace, where molten metal is separated from the gangue. The molten metal flows out of this furnace through a hollow nonconsumable graphite electrode immersed in a molten flux in an electroslag furnace. The molten metal solidifies on a continuously withdrawing base plate to form the ingot. A variety of standard carbon and alloy steel ingots . free of porosity , were produced using suitable decarburizers and ferroalloy additions. Some advantages of the two-stage process include: (a) consumable electrode fabrication is eliminated; (b ) no expensive deoxidizers are required; (c ) the uncontaminated electros lap flux can be reused; (d) energy consumption averages 25% less than in a conventional electric arc - electroslag operation ; and (e) the operation is continuous.
Citation

APA: R. H. Nafziger  (1977)  A Two-Stage Electric Arc-Electroslag Process for Continuous Steelmaking

MLA: R. H. Nafziger A Two-Stage Electric Arc-Electroslag Process for Continuous Steelmaking. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1977.

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