The Iron Blast Furnace Theory and Practice - 35 Years Later

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
I. A. Cameron
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
12
File Size:
2234 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2014

Abstract

In 1979, John Peacey and William (Bill) Davenport published The Iron Blast Furnace Theory and Practice billed as "An up to date and comprehensive treatment of blast furnaces from fundamental principles to modern operations" (back cover). As a 1979 graduate of McGill University’s Metallurgical Engineering program, I belonged to the last "beta" student group which completed the prescribed blast furnace course work before The Iron Blast Furnace Theory and Practice was published. As my career developed, I become an international blast furnace consultant and have worked with blast furnace operators and raw material suppliers on 5 continents. The blast furnace is the dominate iron making process responsible for 70% of global steel production. Blast furnace engineers have implemented many improvements by manipulating the blast furnace process metallurgy using the principles presented by Peacey and Davenport to reduce coke consumption and increase oxygen usage and blast furnace productivity. This paper briefly summarizes some key principles presented by Peacey and Davenport (1979), describes process improvements made by blast furnace operators over the 35 years since The Iron Blast Furnace Theory and Practice was published and outlines important future developments in blast furnace technology.
Citation

APA: I. A. Cameron  (2014)  The Iron Blast Furnace Theory and Practice - 35 Years Later

MLA: I. A. Cameron The Iron Blast Furnace Theory and Practice - 35 Years Later. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2014.

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