Canadian Paper - Desulfurizing Power of Iron Blast-furnace Slags (with Discussion)

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 29
- File Size:
- 963 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1923
Abstract
This investigation was undertaken to determine the quality of different iron blast-furnace slags as desulfurizing agents, and the possibility of using, in the blast furnace, materials of higher sulfur content than is now common. The solution of the problem would render possible the use of higher sulfur iron ores for pig iron and cokes containing more sulfur than now employed, and the economic manufacture of irons and steels of lower sulfur content. It is generally assumed that the sulfur that reaches the lower part of the iron blast furnace is removed from the pig iron by combining with lime to form calcium sulfide. Most of the sulfur introduced with the charge is in combination with iron or manganese or, perhaps in the coke, as a carbon compound.1 The iron and manganese sulfides are more soluble in the iron than is calcium sulfide, and as the latter is generally said to to be more soluble in the slag than the iron and manganese sulfides, this greater solubility of calcium sulfide in the slag tends to free the metal from sulfur. This greater solubility of the calcium sulfide is used not only to reduce the sulfur contents of the pig iron in the blast furnace, but by this means also low-sulfur steels are produced in the open-hearth and electric furnaces. The reaction2 FeS + CaO + CO = Fe + CaS + CO2 requires a high temperature and strongly reducing conditions in the presence of lime. The constitution of blast-furnace slags, first studied scientifically by Vogt13 indicated certain ranges of composition of the slag in which a
Citation
APA:
(1923) Canadian Paper - Desulfurizing Power of Iron Blast-furnace Slags (with Discussion)MLA: Canadian Paper - Desulfurizing Power of Iron Blast-furnace Slags (with Discussion). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1923.