Technical Viability of Biocoke from Mixtures Coal-Wood Charcoal for Use in Ironmaking

The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
Marcelo Breda Mourao Cesar Yuji Narita Marcio Toshio Tanaka Cyro Takano
Organization:
The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
Pages:
6
File Size:
253 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2013

Abstract

"The concerns in questions related to the environmental impact in the steelmaking industries caused mainly on the gas emissions such as the dioxide carbon are due to its raw material such as the coal, a fossil and non renewable resource. The purpose of this paper is to replace from 10% to 50% of the coal used in cokemaking by mixing it with a renewable source (wood charcoal). The powder (- 325 mesh) from both raw materials (coal and wood charcoal) were mixed in order to obtain a briquette that was then heat treated at 1100°C to obtain the biocoke. Results of usual analysis (coke reactivity index, coke strength after reaction and cold crushing strength test) were employed to compare to regular coke briquettes. It was found that biocoke with different amounts of wood charcoal present features enabling it to be used in some ore reductionprocesses.1. IntroductionThe iron and steelmaking industry is a heavy emitter of carbon dioxide; according to the World Steel Association, 6.5% of global emissions of this greenhouse gas is due to the production of ferrous materials [ 1]. This is due to the fact that the fuel and reductant employed in the blast furnace is metallurgical coke, obtained from fossil coal. There are some projects aiming to reduce or even eliminate the emission of fossil GHG in the iron and steelmaking process [2]. Most of them propose the capture and storage of the gas (CCS) [3], a technology not yet proven. Other studies point out that the coke consumption in the blast furnace could be reduced by using high reactivity coke; this could lead to lower temperatures in the thermal reserve zone of the blast furnace and consequently less fuel rate in the furnace.The use of biomass in the iron ore reduction process is known as an environmentally accepted solution, as biomass does not release already fossilized carbon."
Citation

APA: Marcelo Breda Mourao Cesar Yuji Narita Marcio Toshio Tanaka Cyro Takano  (2013)  Technical Viability of Biocoke from Mixtures Coal-Wood Charcoal for Use in Ironmaking

MLA: Marcelo Breda Mourao Cesar Yuji Narita Marcio Toshio Tanaka Cyro Takano Technical Viability of Biocoke from Mixtures Coal-Wood Charcoal for Use in Ironmaking. The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society, 2013.

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