A Brief Summary of the Development of the Sponge Iron Process

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Edward P. Barrett
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
9
File Size:
2341 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1925

Abstract

Iron ore, when subjected to reducing gases at a temperature suitable for reduction of the oxide but not high enough to melt the ore or metal formed, is converted into metallic iron. The product, being the original piece of iron oxide minus its oxygen, is sponge-like in appearance when viewed under a magnifying glass, and hence is called 'sponge iron. Sponge iron was probably the form in which some of the first iron was recovered from the ores. As early as the eighth century the Catlan forge developed into a low shaft furnace known as the high bloomary, in which iron was produced in the form of a pasty mass. These furnaces were increased in height, and with increased temperatures came the production of liquid cast-iron, at first undesirable because of lack of knowledge of methods for working it. In 1340 the first true blast-furnace was built iri Belgium. Some castings were made, but the greater part of the iron was converted into wroughtiron blooms by a crude puddling process. Charcoal was the universal fuel until the latter part of the seventeenth century, when coke was first used in England. Larger scale developments of methods of refining pig-iron followed. In I 885 Bessemer built his first converter in England, and within a few years the Siemen' s regenerative open-hearth furnace was developed, also in England, to produce steel. Then followed the enormous expansion in the metallurgy of iron. The idea of a direct process for the production of iron and steel has persisted during all of this time.
Citation

APA: Edward P. Barrett  (1925)  A Brief Summary of the Development of the Sponge Iron Process

MLA: Edward P. Barrett A Brief Summary of the Development of the Sponge Iron Process. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1925.

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