Coking Coal Selection, Cokemaking Practice, And The Effects On Blast Furnace And Steel Plant Operations At Inland Steel

- Organization:
- Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
- Pages:
- 14
- File Size:
- 504 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1980
Abstract
The importance of coal as a major source of energy used by the steel industry has been increasing due to the gradual changeover from steel- making by the open hearth process to steelmaking by the basic oxygen process. Since the production of steel by the BOF process increases the demand for hot metal, there is a growing need to ensure the supply of coke required for the production of hot metal. Coal used for cokemaking has become, therefore, an increasingly important raw material for the steel industry in recent years. Our current projections indicate that coal will be the source of 71% of the total energy requirements of Inland Steel Company in 1985. As a result of the energy shortages of the last few years, various conservation programs have been initiated by the steel industry to reduce the consumption rate of fuel. The efforts to conserve energy have been successful to a great extent due to the rapid advances made in the technology of ironmaking that facilitated gradual reductions in the quantity of coke used per ton of hot metal produced in the blast furnaces. The decrease in the consumption rate of coke was made possible by the use of improved raw materials, such as iron ore pellets and fluxed agglomerates, the operation with high blast temperatures, the injection of auxiliary fuels, and the enrichment of the blast with oxygen. It is expected that additional reductions in the fuel consumption rate will be possible in the ironmaking operations of the large blast furnaces that are being equipped with facilities for proper burden distribution and for operation with higher blast temperatures at high top pressure. The purpose of this paper is to show the effects of coke quality on the production of BOF steel. The importance of coke quality will be pointed out by discussing the effects of the physical strength of coke on both the blast furnace productivity and the steelmaking operations of an integrated steel plant, such as Inland Stee1 Company.
Citation
APA:
(1980) Coking Coal Selection, Cokemaking Practice, And The Effects On Blast Furnace And Steel Plant Operations At Inland SteelMLA: Coking Coal Selection, Cokemaking Practice, And The Effects On Blast Furnace And Steel Plant Operations At Inland Steel. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1980.