Utilisation of energy sources other than coke in the sintering process

- Organization:
- The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 15
- File Size:
- 5962 KB
- Publication Date:
- Nov 8, 2021
Abstract
Following the Paris Agreement adopted in 2015 and the SDGs, reduction of CO2 emissions has been
taken up as an issue worldwide, and the steel industry, which has a particularly large emission, is
required to significantly reduce it. Most of the CO2 generated in the steel industry is generated from
the ironmaking process, due to the use of coke and its raw material coal in the ironmaking process.
JFE Steel Corporation has been considering the use of hydrocarbon-based gaseous fuels and liquid
fuels as a partial alternative to coke breeze used in the sintering process since 2006, immediately
after the Kyoto Protocol came into effect in 2005. In a laboratory study, a pot test was used to
investigate the effect of the type of fuel, its amount and its injection method on the heat pattern in
sinter bed. As a result, the authors developed a technology, in which a predetermined amount of gas
fuel or liquid fuel was injected from the surface of sintering bed to extend the holding time of 1200°C
or higher at which liquid phase sintering occurs in the layer, to improve the sinter strength while
reducing the amount of coke breeze. The authors succeeded in putting this technology to practical
use using hydrocarbon-based gas fuel in 2009 and achieved a maximum annual reduction of
60 000 tons of CO2 per sintering machine.
In this report, the authors introduce the results of laboratory studies on the use of various energy
sources, the practical application of the technology for injecting hydrocarbon-based gaseous fuel
into the sintering machine, and the operational results.
Citation
APA:
(2021) Utilisation of energy sources other than coke in the sintering processMLA: Utilisation of energy sources other than coke in the sintering process. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 2021.