Utilization Of Iron-Bearing Dusts In Iron Ore Sintering By Composite Agglomeration Process

The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
Bin Xu Xiao Kang Chen Liu Yuanbo Zhang Guanghui Li Tao Jiang
Organization:
The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
Pages:
8
File Size:
684 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2015

Abstract

Iron-bearing dusts, containing valuable constituents such as Fe, CaO, MgO, C, etc., are generally utilized as raw material in iron ore sintering. However, the dusts characterized by low granulating and refractory performances always lead to negative effects on sintering indexes. As we know, the innovative process named composite agglomeration process (CAP) has a series of advantages compared to traditional sintering process (TSP). In CAP, part or all of the iron-bearing dusts is made into green pellets with 5-15mm in diameter, while the rest of iron-bearing dusts and all of the other fine ores is granulated after mixing with fuels, fluxes and return fines. Compared with TSP, CAP could increase the ratio of iron-bearing dusts from 5% to over 20%. Meanwhile, the yield, ISO tumbler index and productivity reached 75.82%, 65.13% and 1.531t·m-2·h -1, respectively.
Citation

APA: Bin Xu Xiao Kang Chen Liu Yuanbo Zhang Guanghui Li Tao Jiang  (2015)  Utilization Of Iron-Bearing Dusts In Iron Ore Sintering By Composite Agglomeration Process

MLA: Bin Xu Xiao Kang Chen Liu Yuanbo Zhang Guanghui Li Tao Jiang Utilization Of Iron-Bearing Dusts In Iron Ore Sintering By Composite Agglomeration Process. The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society, 2015.

Export
Purchase this Article for $25.00

Create a Guest account to purchase this file
- or -
Log in to your existing Guest account