RI 3095 Smelting in the Lead Blast Furnace Handling Rich Charges: VIII. The Gases from the Top of The Furnace

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 22
- File Size:
- 5611 KB
- Publication Date:
- Apr 1, 1931
Abstract
"This paper is the eighth; of a series on smelting in the lead blast furnace, and the third' of a group on the modifications brought about by the introduction of rich charges.ACKN0WLEDGMENTSThe data that appear in these articles were obtained through the courtesy of the operators of the Bunker Hill smelter at Kellogg, Idaho. The authors take this opportunity to express their appreciation to Stanley A. Easton, the vice-president and general manager, Frank M. Smith, smelter director, and to A. F. Beasley, the smelter superintendent, and his staff.INTR0DUCTI0NIt has been noted that the gases issuing from the top6 of the charges in the International Smelting Co.'s furnaces at Tooele, Utah, were very similar in composition to the gases from the top of the iron blast furnace, as they contained about 26 per cent of CO and 12 per cent of C02, the rest of the constituents being mainly nitrogen with a very little hydrogen and oxygen. It has been seen that where the column of coke was sufficiently high, the production of C0 gas to carry out the reduction of lead ores was accomplished in about the same manner as in a gas producer. In some cases, there was a little oxygen in the ""top gas"" -- usually not over a few tenths of a per cent, but at times amounting to several per cent. The presence of this gas was attributed to irregularities in operation that permitted air to come up through the tuybres to the surface without meeting any coke that was incandescent. Only a hundredth of a per cent or so of sulphurous oxides was present in the gases issuing from the top of the furnace."
Citation
APA:
(1931) RI 3095 Smelting in the Lead Blast Furnace Handling Rich Charges: VIII. The Gases from the Top of The FurnaceMLA: RI 3095 Smelting in the Lead Blast Furnace Handling Rich Charges: VIII. The Gases from the Top of The Furnace. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1931.