Technical Papers and Discussions - Sulphur in Ironmaking - Some Correlations between Variables Affecting Sulphur in Blast Furnace Iron (Metals Tech., September 1948, T.P. 2465)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
T. E. Brower B. M. Larsen
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
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13
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497 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1949

Abstract

THIS discussion is based on statistical manipulation and evaluation of operating data from several commercial blast furnaces which include rather wide variations in practice. We are concerned here mainly with the effect of manganese on sulphur elimination under operating conditions in commercial blast furnaces, but this effect can be outlined more clearly by including certain other variables such as silicon in iron and slag basicity, which are all in part interrelated. Real progress in understanding all of the smelting-zone reactions in this process requires more laboratory studies of slag-metal melts similar to those in the blast furnace, with careful control of oxygen pressure. Such experimental work is very difficult, however, and in the meantime, with the present scarcity of more fundamental data, such statistical trends and correlations as can be obtained from commercial furnace operating records may help in choosing laboratory test conditions as well as adding to our knowledge of operating procedures. We do not know just why the furnace data are apparently so irregular that statistical treatment of large numbers is needed to obtain accurate trends. It is partly caused, no doubt, by the many simultaneous variables present, but there are perhaps also such factors as: (I) the con- tinual swings up and down so characteristic of the process; (2) difficulty of accurate sampling of co-existing phases, as well as (3) the presence of both equilibrium and rate factors as a result of the fast driving of the process. In desulphurization, for example, the flow of thin layers of slag and metal over solid coke surfaces, plus the contact between droplets of iron falling through the slag layer in the hearth, would lead one to expect a close approach to equilibrium. On the other hand, most of the critical part of sulphur removal may occur in a short time and distance below the tuyeres with perhaps an accompanying decrease in oxygen pressure and the concurrent reduction of much of the silicon and manganese, so its degree of approach to equilibrium may be quite variable. Probable Chemistry of Desulphurization Since there is little evidence that sulphur atoms in the iron solution are aasociated to any appreciable extent in molecules such as MnS, the transfer from slag to metal and back again can be written:* (FeS) ? [FeS], [I] hence the following reactions seem most probable in the slag phase, (FeS) + (CaO) ? (CaS) + (FeO), [2] and, (FeS) + (MnO) ? (MnS) + (FeO). 131
Citation

APA: T. E. Brower B. M. Larsen  (1949)  Technical Papers and Discussions - Sulphur in Ironmaking - Some Correlations between Variables Affecting Sulphur in Blast Furnace Iron (Metals Tech., September 1948, T.P. 2465)

MLA: T. E. Brower B. M. Larsen Technical Papers and Discussions - Sulphur in Ironmaking - Some Correlations between Variables Affecting Sulphur in Blast Furnace Iron (Metals Tech., September 1948, T.P. 2465). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1949.

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