Minerals Beneficiation - Reduction Cracking in Briquetted Iron Ore Mixtures

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
H. E. N. Stone B. L. Daniell
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
4
File Size:
893 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1970

Abstract

This paper examines the cracking behavior on chemical reduction of three types of ore/oxide briquette mixtures. The complex sintering/hardening atmosphere was replaced by 100% oxygen and the blast furnace atmosphere by a 5/95 hydrogedsteam mixture which was used isothermally at 700°C for a constant, arbitrary time. Cracking has been assessed by measurement of reduction expansion or increase in specimen diameter as a result of chemical reduction and a subjective index based on appearance and friability. Oxidized briquettes of iron ore concentrate crack on reduction'-3 in a manner which parallels the degradation of sinter in the Linder test. In the present work, the cracking behavior on chemical reduction of three types of ore/oxide briquette mixture has been studied. Firstly, LD converter fume with additions of silica; secondly, Oxfordshire ore with ferric oxide; thirdly, ferric oxide with separate additions of silica, alumina and lime. Motivation for the first-mentioned experiments lay in the improvement of the fume as furnace feed; for the second, in assessing the tolerance of a finely divided ferric oxide as a base for low melting point additions. The third series provided additional information. In this work, the complex sintering/hardening atmosphere is replaced by 100% oxygen and the blast furnace atmosphere is replaced by a 5/95 hydrogen/ steam mixture used isothermally at 700°C for a constant arbitrary time. The particular reduction conditions were known from previous experience3 to be capable of disclosing any tendency to cracking. Cracking has been assessed by measurement of reduction expansion (i.e., increases in specimen diameter as a result of chemical reduction) and a subjective index based on appearance and friability. Generally
Citation

APA: H. E. N. Stone B. L. Daniell  (1970)  Minerals Beneficiation - Reduction Cracking in Briquetted Iron Ore Mixtures

MLA: H. E. N. Stone B. L. Daniell Minerals Beneficiation - Reduction Cracking in Briquetted Iron Ore Mixtures. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1970.

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