Fundamental study for biomass char utilisation at sintering process in view of combustion property

- Organization:
- The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 7
- File Size:
- 1413 KB
- Publication Date:
- Nov 8, 2021
Abstract
The steel industry occupies 14 per cent of CO2 emissions in Japan, and the sintering process is one
of the major emitters. Since most of CO2 released from the sintering process comes from coke fine
combustion, replacement of coke fines with biomass char as bonding agent is a potential
countermeasure.
In order to explore the effective use of biomass char, we chose char made from Palm Kernel Shell
(PKS) as a sample.
First, the char’s combustion behaviour was examined with varying the char’s particle size by means
of admixing the char in alumina ball packed bed placed in an electric furnace. As a result, the finer
the PKS char the faster the burning rate and reaching a higher temperature compared to coke fine.
In addition, it is also concluded that the optimum size of PKS char was larger than coke fines.
Next, the effect of different heat profiles on sinter structure was examined by sintering tablet made
of chemical reagents. In this experiment, the chemical composition is designed based on sinter
composition. By this sintering test, even at high temperature, rapid cooling is effective to make fine
sinter matrix and fine pores, which has possibility for high sinter reducibility.
Based on these two experiments, using PKS char as a sinter fine source has the possibility to
improve sinter reducibility.
Citation
APA:
(2021) Fundamental study for biomass char utilisation at sintering process in view of combustion propertyMLA: Fundamental study for biomass char utilisation at sintering process in view of combustion property. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 2021.