Pittsburg Paper - The Combustion-Temperature of Carbon and Its Relation to Blast-Furnace Operation

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Clarence P. Linville
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
12
File Size:
417 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1911

Abstract

It is recognized that, in all metallurgical operations, the greatest possible uniformity in all conditions is essential to the best results. It is the constant aim of metallurgists to secure this uniformity, and their success in this respect has been in many cases the cause of great advances in the metallurgical processes themselves. Of all such processes, the production of pig-iron in the modern blast-furnace is perhaps the most complex and the most difficult of control. Notwithstanding the great progress of recent years, there is still great difficulty in obtaining anything like uniform conditions and results in the manufacture of pig-iron. The reason is not far to seek. The ores vary in composition and physical properties, often carrying a varying amount of gangue material, unevenly distributed. The coke may vary in composition, cell-structure, moisture, hardness, and other properties. The blast, the weight of which far exceeds that of any other constituent, varies in its moisture-content and consequently in its chemical composition; and its temperature, by reason of the method of heating, is not uniform, but, besides varying from time to time with atmospheric and other outside conditions, has a maximum and minimum for every changing of stoves. Now, with regard to these variations, the modern demand for uniformity has been greatly aided. Chemical analysis has made it possible to select ores so that the composition of the charge can be kept fairly constant; coal may be obtained from a given field, and coked in the same kind of ovens under conditions which make the fuel practically uniform; the Gayley
Citation

APA: Clarence P. Linville  (1911)  Pittsburg Paper - The Combustion-Temperature of Carbon and Its Relation to Blast-Furnace Operation

MLA: Clarence P. Linville Pittsburg Paper - The Combustion-Temperature of Carbon and Its Relation to Blast-Furnace Operation. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1911.

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