In-Process Separation of Mill Scale from Oil at Steel Hot Rolling Mills

The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
Naiyang Ma
Organization:
The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
Pages:
7
File Size:
184 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2012

Abstract

"High oil concentration is one of the major barriers for recycling of mill scale of steel hot rolling mills. It is of vital importance to find cost-effective technologies of reducing oil concentration in mill scale in order to recycle the mill scale without causing detrimental effects on production and environment. This paper discusses in-process separation of mill scale from oil at steel hot rolling mills. Formation of mill scale and status of oily wastewater at hot rolling mills are reviewed in the first place. A mathematical model is then formulated to relate oil concentration in mill scale to physical properties of mill scale, chemical and physical properties of wastewater and interacting parameters between mill scale particles and wastewater. From this model, three approaches of in-process separation of mill scale from oil are derived: (1) avoiding contacts between mill scale particles and oily wastewater, and (2) maintaining low oil concentration in wastewater, and (3) collecting mill scale in upper streams of wastewater flows. In-process separation of mill scale from oil might have advantages of lower capital cost, lower operating cost and less additional environmental concerns, compared to other strategies of separating mill scale from oil.IntroductionHot rolling is an inevitable step in producing finished steel products. Figure 1 schematically shows a steel hot rolling process. Semi-finished steel products, slabs here, are reheated first, and then the reheated slabs are discharged from the furnaces and transported on hot rolling trains to descaling units for removing scale with pressurized water. After being descaled, the slabs are rolled by roughing mills. After treated with cropping and the second descaling, the slabs are finally rolled into finished products, coils here, by finishing mills."
Citation

APA: Naiyang Ma  (2012)  In-Process Separation of Mill Scale from Oil at Steel Hot Rolling Mills

MLA: Naiyang Ma In-Process Separation of Mill Scale from Oil at Steel Hot Rolling Mills. The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society, 2012.

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