Philadelphia, October 1876 Paper - Thoughts on the Thermo Curves of Blast Furnaces

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 25
- File Size:
- 1089 KB
- Publication Date:
Abstract
I wish to present to you a few thoughts on some of the phenomena and laws of iron smelting. Owing to the great complexity of the subject, to the great variety of points to be taken into consideration, many of which are very poorly understood, and to the meagreness and even conflictoriness of our information with regard to some of the most important laws which govern the subject, the fruits of such thoughts as I venture to offer you must be received as speculations, not as facts. Nevertheless, in discussing old phenomena from new standpoints, thus furnishing a metallurgical parallax, if I may say so, these theoretical speculations may have their value in helping to a clearer comprehension of the phenomena and laws we now know, and in suggesting new lines of inquiry. While an increase of height in blast furnaces is not always followed by increase in their power of production, experience proves that it tends to increase it; for while we have many cases of short furnaces producing more iron than longer ones, yet enormous productions, such as those of the Lucy and Isabella furnaces of Pittsburgh, and of the furnaces of Esch sur l'Alzette, in Luxembourg, have never been reached in short furnaces. We may safely infer that height is an element essential to great production, though of course not the only essential element, and that, in the case of high furnaces which are not capable of great production, some other essential element is wanting. Moreover, experience teaches that within limits increase of height tends to increase the producing power in a still higher ratio. Thus, in the Esch furnace, which is 19.8 meters (65 feet) high, 393 tonnes (or 387 gross tons) of 31 1/2 per cent. Ore
Citation
APA:
Philadelphia, October 1876 Paper - Thoughts on the Thermo Curves of Blast FurnacesMLA: Philadelphia, October 1876 Paper - Thoughts on the Thermo Curves of Blast Furnaces. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers,