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Iron & Steel Foundries | Melting & Casting | Refining | Heat
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Melting & Casting
Gases for Melting and Casting in Cast Iron and
Steel Foundries
Technologies include: oxygen fuel (oxy-fuel) and oxygen-enhanced
(air/oxy-fuel) combustion systems; nitrogen and argon blanketing
(shrouding / inerting); stirring using gases; and other industrial
gases applications. These offer significant financial benefits
for preheating, melting, holding and casting in cast iron and
steel foundries.
Offerings applicable to:
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JetBOx
Chemical Energy System for Closed-door EAFSteel making Overview
Brochure
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Electric Arc Furnace (EAF ) - Oxy-fuel Assisted
Melting
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The electric arc method of melting metal is inefficient until
a flat bath is achieved. By using a fuel-efficient oxy-fuel flame
at the beginning of the melting process, a greater overall melting
efficiency is achieved with a faster melt rate. Further temperature
homogeneity benefits can be achieved by using these burners to
direct thermal energy at cold spots caused by uneven energy distribution
from the electrode arcs. Additionally, the burners can be positioned
in front of the slag door to enable early, efficient oxygen lancing,
or over the tap hole area to promote quick, trouble-free tapping.
Electrical savings of 80kWh/tonne and 20% production increases
have been achieved.
Electric Arc Furnace (EAF) - Foaming Slag Practice
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Lances are hydraulically manipulated through the slag door to
inject oxygen, carbon and lime into the surface slag layer during
the electric arc melting process. This action decarburises the
melt and aids formation of an insulating foamy slag layer which
decreases heat loss from the melt surface and therefore reduces
energy costs.
Electric Arc Furnace (EAF) - Post-Combustion
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Oxygen is injected into the post-combustion zone of electric
arc furnaces to promote combustion of carbon monoxide inside the
furnace rather than in the off-gas handling system. This reaction
produces heat that is transferred to the charge, reducing energy
consumption (typical electrical savings of 10-20 kWh/tonne) and
increasing productivity by up to 4%. Additionally the post-combustion
injectors reduce loading on the EAF baghouse and improve environmental
compliance with respect to carbon monoxide.
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Induction Furnace - Molten Metal
Blanketing (MMB) |
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The melt surface is blanketed with argon or nitrogen in order
to produce an oxygen deficient atmosphere using a patented vortex
sprayer or swirl cone. This reduces oxidation and inclusions to
improve yield, productivity and reject rate.
A
datasheet on Rapidfire® MMB is available in pdf format
To get the ACROBAT®-READERT free, click here

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| Cupola - Oxygen-Enrichment |
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| Oxygen is introduced either into the air main or injected
directly through the tuyeres. Significant increases in melt rate
and reductions in coke and alloy additions can be achieved to enable
a lower cost per tonne. |
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| Iron Rotary Furnace - Oxy-fuel Combustion |
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Oxy-fuel combustion in rotary furnaces can offer significant
benefits over air fuel combustion including: reduced fuel consumption,
faster melt rates increasing furnace productivity, higher flame
stability hence greater burner flexibility and drastically reduced
exhaust gas flow rates to minimise expenditure on downstream filtration.
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| Rapidfire® Ladle - Preheating |
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Complete burner and control packages have been developed to efficiently
preheat ladles using non-water-cooled oxy-fuel burners. 70% fuel
savings and 50% reductions in heat-up rates are typical.
Ladle - REHeat® heating
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| Our patented technology (with Bethlehem Steel) for
chemically reheating steel by simultaneous injection of fuel (aluminium
and silicon) and oxygen achieves temperature gains of 5 to 8°C/min.
Subsequent stirring with inert gas ensures that steel cleanliness
is not adversely affected. This technique is used to reheat cold
ladles of metal to avoid expensive pourbacks and subsequent casting
interruptions. |
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Holding Furnace - Inerting |
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Using nitrogen to displace the oxygen in a holding furnace atmosphere
reduces the formation of oxides at the melt surface providing
a higher yield and improved quality.
Holding Furnace -Pressurising
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Nitrogen can be used to pressurise the holding furnace for greater
control during tapping.
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