IRSID Continuous Steelmaking Industrial Practice

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
A. Berthet
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
9
File Size:
416 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1972

Abstract

In the past two decades, of the successive steps leading from iron ore to finished steel, the production of liquid steel and its preparation for the casting operation has probably undergone the most drastic evolution. The reason for this is the development of oxygen converters (top blown and later on bottom blown) and UHP arc furnaces which are replacing the conventional processes such as the open hearth and basic Bessemer processes. These new processes have been great advances, but it would certainly be quite hazardous to assert that the situation will remain the same for the coming decades. In fact, with the advent of continuous steelmaking a new generation of processes has now arrived. The research and development programme at IRSID on continuous an a steelmaking began ten years ago has progressed systematically in the following stages : First a comparison was made on a small pilot scale of various techniques : for example, refining in a runner by top or bottom blowing, pulverizing the metal stream by oxygen, using the mixing effect of a vortex, etc. but for various reasons these processes proved unsatisfactory and were abandoned in favour of a method using the so -called "emulsion refining".
Citation

APA: A. Berthet  (1972)  IRSID Continuous Steelmaking Industrial Practice

MLA: A. Berthet IRSID Continuous Steelmaking Industrial Practice. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1972.

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