Direct reduction

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New Zealand Steel steel complex, fed by direct reduction rotary furnaces (SL/RN process) (capacity 650,000 t/year). Glenbrook Steel Mill, Auckland, New Zealand, 12 April 2008.jpg
New Zealand Steel steel complex, fed by direct reduction rotary furnaces (SL/RN process) (capacity 650,000 t/year).

In the iron and steel industry, direct reduction is a set of processes for obtaining iron from iron ore, by reducing iron oxides without melting the metal. The resulting product is pre-reduced iron ore.

Contents

Historically, direct reduction was used to obtain a burr in a low furnace. At the beginning of the 20th century, this process was abandoned in favor of the blast furnace, which produces iron in two stages (reduction-melting to produce cast iron, followed by refining in a converter).

However, various processes were developed in the course of the 20th century and, since the 1970s, the production of pre-reduced iron ore has undergone remarkable industrial development, notably with the rise of the Midrex process. Designed to replace the blast furnace, these processes have so far only proved profitable in certain economic contexts, which still limits this sector to less than 5% of world steel production.

History

Bloomery

Historically, the reduction of iron ore without smelting is the oldest process for obtaining steel. Low-temperature furnaces, unable to reach the melting temperatures of iron alloys, produce a burr, a heterogeneous agglomerate of metallic iron more or less impregnated with carbon, gangue, and charcoal. This process was gradually succeeded, from the 1st century in China and the 13th century in Europe, by the blast furnace, which simultaneously reduces and melts iron. [3]

Elaborate low furnaces, such as the tatara or the Catalan forge, survived until the early 19th century. [1] Compared with the indirect process (reduction-melting in the blast furnace, followed by cast-iron refining), these processes only survived when they enjoyed at least one of the following two advantages:

Modern direct reduction

Percentage of world steel production accounted for by different steelmaking processes. Evolution convertisseurs.svg
Percentage of world steel production accounted for by different steelmaking processes.

More advanced direct reduction processes were developed at the beginning of the 20th century, when it became possible to smelt pre-reduced ores using the Martin-Siemens process or the electric arc furnace. Based on this technical and economic model, a number of processes were industrialized before World War II (the Krupp-Renn process adopted by the Shōwa Steel Works, the Chenot process, [1] etc.). They remained confidential, however, and their profitability was generally debated. [2]

Modern direct reduction processes, based on the use of natural gas instead of coal, were studied intensively in the 1950s. [nb 2] On December 5, 1957, the Mexican company Hylsa started up the first industrial production unit of this type in Monterrey, with the pre-reduced ore obtained destined for smelting in an electric arc furnace. [nb 3] [4] As the production of pre-reduced ore with natural gas was economically viable, several plants were built in the late 1960s. As a cheap supply of natural gas [nb 4] was essential to their profitability, most plants were located in countries with gas deposits, in Latin America (where many were developed) and in the Middle East. [5]

In 1970, worldwide production of pre-reduced iron ore reached 790,000 tonnes. The processes then in operation were the HYL process (680,000 tonnes produced), an SL/RN unit, a Purofer unit, and the first plant to use the Midrex process. [4]

Although profitable and innovative, the processes invented did not ultimately prove to be a technological revolution capable of supplanting the traditional blast furnace-based process. [3] However, the quantity of steel produced from pre-reduced materials grew steadily, outstripping world steel production:

Pre-reduced iron ore briquettes. Hot-briquetted iron Coin.JPG
Pre-reduced iron ore briquettes.

Packaging of pre-reduced iron ore is evenly divided between sponge iron and briquettes. Sponges are a highly porous metallic product, close to the original ore but highly pyrophoric, which limits their transport. They are therefore often subjected to hot compaction, which improves both product density and handling safety. [9] In 2012, 45% of prereducts were transformed into briquettes in this way. [8]

Chemical reactions

Iron oxide reduction

Iron oxides are reduced in the following sequence: [10]

     Fe2O3  →    Fe3O4     →   FeO [nb 7] → Fe

   hematitemagnetite →   wustite   → iron

Each transition from one oxide to the next is due to two simultaneous high-temperature reduction reactions by carbon monoxide CO or dihydrogen H2:

Main reduction reactions [11]
TemperatureCarbon monoxide reductionHydrogen reduction
900 °C < T < 1 000 °C3 Fe2O3 + CO → 2 Fe3O4 + CO2

Fe3O4 + CO → 3 FeO + CO2

3 Fe2O3 + H2 → 2 Fe3O4 + H2O

Fe3O4 + H2 → 3 FeO + H2O

1 000 °C < T < 1 050 °CFeO + CO → Fe + CO2FeO + H2 → Fe + H2O

These temperatures differ from those predicted by the Ellingham diagram. [nb 8] In reality, there is a coupling between carbon monoxide reduction and dihydrogen, [nb 9] so that these reactions work together, with hydrogen significantly improving the efficiency of CO reduction.

Reducing gas production

Coal-fired processes

In coal-fired processes, part of the fuel is first burnt to heat the charge. The product of this combustion is CO2. When the temperature reaches 1,000 °C, the CO2 [11] reacts with the unburned carbon to create CO: [12]

           CO2 + C ⇌ 2 CO          when T > 1 000 °C (Boudouard reaction)

The production of H2 cannot be achieved by the thermal decomposition of water, as the temperatures involved are too low. Hydrogen is in fact produced along with carbon monoxide by the reaction:

           H2O + C → H2 + CO          when T > 1 000 °C

These two reducing gas production reactions, which consume 172.45 and 131.4 kJ/mol [13] respectively, are highly endothermic and operate by limiting charge heating.

Natural gas processes

The reducing atmosphere, rich in CO and H2, can be created from the high-temperature cracking of natural gas at around 1100-1150 °C, in the presence of oxidized gases (H2O and CO2) from ore reduction reactors.

         CH4 + CO2 → 2 CO + H2

          CH4 + H2O → CO + 3 H2

The system that generates the reducing gases is called a "reformer". In the Midrex process, it consists of tubes heated by the combustion of a portion (around a third) of the gas from the reactor.

Procedures

Plants for the production of pre-reduced iron ore are known as direct reduction plants. The principle involves exposing iron ore to the reducing action of a high-temperature gas (around 1000 °C). This gas is composed of carbon monoxide and dihydrogen, the proportions of which depend on the production process.

Generally speaking, there are two main types [nb 10] of processes: [11]

Another way of classifying processes is to distinguish between those where the reducing gases are produced in specific facilities separate from the reduction reactor - which characterizes most processes using natural gas - and those where the gases are produced inside the fusion reactor: coal-fired processes generally fall into this category. [12] However, many "gas-fired" processes can be fed by gasification units producing a reducing gas from coal. [14]

In addition, since the melting stage is necessary to obtain alloys, reduction-melting processes have been developed which, like blast furnaces, produce a more or less carburized liquid metal. Finally, many more or less experimental processes have been developed. [12]

Direct reduction processes

Bold indicates technically and commercially proven processes (i.e. operating viably in several economic contexts) [15]

Natural gasCoal
TanksCyclicHYL I (the oldest industrial direct reduction process using natural gas [16] ) and HYL II Retorts (some processes of secondary importance, surviving only in specialized production)
ContinuousMidrex (2/3 of the world's pre-reduced production [16] [8] )

HYL III (competing process with Midrex)

Variants of natural gas processes, where gas can be synthesized from coal in an additional unit.
Fluidized bedsMany recent developments (FINMET, CIRCORED...) but limited industrial applications [17] [18]
Rotating furnaceRotary hearthOccasionally used as a supplement to coalMany processes developed in the 1990s without commercial success
Rotary drumsKrupp-Renn (developed in the 1930s, 38 furnaces in 1945 [19] )

SL/RN (developed in 1964, 45% of pre-reduced coal production in 1997 [20] )

A number of other efficient but more confidential processes succeeded SL/RN: Kawasaki and Koho, [21] Krupp-CODIR [22]

Tank processes

In these processes, iron ore is brought into contact with reducing gases produced and heated by a separate plant in a closed enclosure. As a result, these processes are naturally suited to the use of natural gas.

Cyclic processes

In these processes, the ore is fed into a tank, where it remains until it is completely reduced. The vessel is then emptied of its pre-reduced ore, and filled with another charge of untreated ore. These processes can therefore be easily extrapolated from laboratory experiments. What's more, their principle, based on batch production, facilitates process control.

Natural gas processes

In natural gas cyclic processes, a unit produces hot reducing gas, which is injected into the reactor. To ensure continuous operation of the unit converting natural gas into reducing gas, several tanks are operated in parallel and with a time lag.

The best-known of this type is HYL I and its improved variant, HYL II. This is the oldest industrial direct gas reduction process, developed in Mexico in 1957 by the Hylsa company. [16]

Retorts

These are exclusively coal-fired processes, with the reducing gases generated inside the reduction vessel. The ore is charged with coal into a closed container. This is then heated until the oxygen present in the ore combines with the carbon before being discharged, mainly in the form of CO or CO2. This production of gas by heating a solid material means that the reactor belongs to the retort category.

The principle is an ancient one: in northern China, the shortage of charcoal led to the development of processes using hard coal before the 4th century. To avoid any contact between iron and sulfur, the brittle element provided by coal, China developed a process that involved placing iron ore in batteries of elongated tubular crucibles and covering them with a mass of coal, which was then burned. [23] This process survived into the 20th century. [24]

More recently, other historic processes have come to the fore, such as that of Adrien Chenot, operational in the 1850s in a number of plants in France and Spain. Successive improvements by Blair, Yutes, Renton, and Verdié [1] are not significant. [2] [25] Among the processes developed is the HOGANAS process, perfected in 1908. Three small units are still operational (as of 2010). Not very productive, it is limited to the production of powdered iron, but as it is slow and operates in closed retorts, it easily achieves the purities required by powder metallurgy. [26]

Other retort processes were developed, such as KINGLOR-METOR, perfected in 1973. Two small units were built in 1978 (closed) and 1981 [12] (probably closed [27] ).

Continuous processes

Lebeddinskv GOK-1 unit at Gubkin (Russia): HYL process started up in 1999, capacity 0.9 Mt/year. GBZh-1 - panoramio.jpg
Lebeddinskv GOK-1 unit at Gubkin (Russia): HYL process started up in 1999, capacity 0.9 Mt/year.

Based on the principle of counter-current piston flow, these processes are the closest to the blast furnace or, more accurately, the stückofen. Hot reducing gases are obtained from natural gas, in a separate unit from the shaft, and injected at the bottom of the shaft, while the ore is charged at the top. The pre-reduced materials are extracted hot, but in solid form, from the bottom of the shaft. This similarity to a blast furnace without its crucible made it one of the first processes explored by metallurgists, but the failures of the German Gurlt in 1857, and the French Eugène Chenot (son of Adrien) around 1862, led to the conclusion that "the reduction of iron ore [...] is therefore [not] possible in large quantities by gas alone". [4]

Developed in the 1970s, the Midrex process is the best example of a continuous direct reduction process. As much a technical success as a commercial one, since 1980 it has accounted for around two-thirds of the world's production of pre-reduced materials. Its similarity to the blast furnace means that it shares some of its advantages, such as high production capacity, and some disadvantages, such as the relative difficulty of controlling several simultaneous reactions in a single reactor (since the nature of the product changes considerably as it travels through the vessel). The strategy of selling turnkey units, combined with a cautious increase in production capacity, has given this process good financial [nb 11] and technical visibility... compared with the often dashed hopes of competing processes. [8] [16]

Its direct competitor, the HYL III process, is the result of a research effort by the Tenova Group (de), heir to the Mexican Hylsa pioneers. Accounting for almost 20% of pre-reduced product production, it differs from the Midrex process in that it features an in-house reforming unit for the production of reducing gases. [28]

Other processes have been developed based on this continuous reactor principle. Some, like ULCORED, [29] are still at the study stage. Most have only been developed in a single country, or by a single company. Others were failures, such as the NSC process, of which a single plant was built in 1984 and converted to HYL III in 1993, [30] ARMCO (a single unit [31] commissioned in 1963 [32] and shut down in 1982 [33] ) or PUROFER (3 units operational from 1970 to 1979, [12] small-scale production resumed in 1988). [33]

Coal-fired processes are variants of natural gas processes, where the gas can be synthesized from coal in an additional unit. Among these variants, the MXCOL, of which one unit has been operational since 1999 [14] and two are under construction, is a Midrex fed by a coal gasification unit. [34] Technically mature but more complex, they are at a disadvantage compared with equivalent gas-fired processes, which require slightly less investment. [35]

Diagram of the Midrex process, which accounts for two-thirds of the world's pre-reduced iron ore production. Midrex Process diagram.svg
Diagram of the Midrex process, which accounts for two-thirds of the world's pre-reduced iron ore production.

Fluidized beds

Simplified diagram of a fluidized bed reactor. Fluidized Bed Reactor Graphic-fr.svg
Simplified diagram of a fluidized bed reactor.

Given that direct reduction is a chemical exchange between gas and solid, the fluidization of ore by reducing gases is an attractive line of research. However, the changing nature of the constituents, combined with the high temperature and the difficulty of controlling the fluidization phenomenon, make its adoption singularly difficult.

Many processes have been developed on this principle. Some have been technical failures, such as the HIB (a single plant [36] commissioned in 1972, converted to the Midrex in 1981 [37] ) or economic failures, such as the FIOR process (a single plant commissioned in 1976, mothballed since 2001, [33] the forerunner of FINMET). [17]

Developed in 1991 from the FIOR process, the FINMET process seems more mature, but its expansion has not materialized (two plants were built, [17] and only one was in operation as of 2014 [38] ). The CIRCORED process, also recent, [39] is similarly stagnant (just one plant built, commissioned in 1999, mothballed in 2012 [8] ), despite its adaptability to coal (CIRCOFER process, no industrial production). [18]

Rotating furnace processes

Rotation of the reduction furnace may be a design choice intended to circulate the ore through the furnace. It can also play an active part in the chemical reaction by ensuring mixing between the reactants present. Rotary hearth processes, where the ore rests on a fixed bed and travels through a tunnel, fall into the first category. Rotary kiln processes, where the ore is mixed with coal at high temperature, constitute the second category.

Rotary hearth

These processes consist of an annular furnace in which iron ore mixed with coal is circulated. Hot reducing gases flow over, and sometimes through, the charge. The ore is deposited on a tray, or carts, rotating slowly in the furnace. After one rotation, the ore is reduced; it is then discharged and replaced by oxidized ore.

A number of processes have been developed based on this principle. In the 1970s-1980s, the INMETCO process demonstrated only the validity of the idea, with no industrial application. [40] The MAUMEE (or DryIron) process came to fruition in the US with the construction of two small industrial units in the 1990s. [41] Similarly, in Europe, a consortium of Benelux steelmakers developed the COMET process in the laboratory from 1996 to 1998. Despite the consortium's withdrawal from the research program in 1998, a single industrial demonstrator was extrapolated from it, the SIDCOMET, which was discontinued in 2002. [42] RedIron, whose only operational unit was inaugurated in Italy in 2010, [43] also benefits from this research. Japan has adopted the FASTMET process, with the commissioning of three units dedicated to the recovery of iron-rich powders, [44] and is proposing an improved version, the ITmk3 process, with one unit in operation in the United States. [45]

Schematic diagram of a direct reduction process on a rotating hearth, the ITmk3 process. ITmk3 Process diagram.svg
Schematic diagram of a direct reduction process on a rotating hearth, the ITmk3 process.

This non-exhaustive list shows that, despite the keen interest shown by steelmakers in developed countries during the 1990s, none of these processes met with commercial success.

Rotary drums

View of the 6 rotary furnaces at the Essen-Borbeck direct reduction plant, circa 1964. Krupp-Renn Furnaces Essen-Borbeck.png
View of the 6 rotary furnaces at the Essen-Borbeck direct reduction plant, circa 1964.

These processes involve high-temperature blending of iron ore and coal powder, with a little limestone to reduce the acidity of the ore. Processes such as Carl Wilhelm Siemens', [46] based on the use of a short drum, [47] first appeared at the end of the 19th century. The tool used then evolved into a long tubular rotary kiln, inspired by those used in cement works, as in the Basset process, developed in the 1930s. [48]

A process of historic importance is the Krupp-Renn. Developed in the 1930s, there were as many as 38 furnaces in 1945 which, although they only had a capacity of 1 Mt/year at the time, were installed all over the world. [19] This process was improved [nb 12] and inspired the German Krupp-CODIR [49] furnaces and the Japanese Kawasaki [50] and Koho processes. Both Japanese processes integrate a pelletizing unit for steel by-products upstream of the rotary furnaces. Two units of each process were built between 1968 (Kawasaki) and 1975 (Koho). [21]

Schematic diagram of a direct reduction process in a rotating drum, the Krupp-Renn process. Krupp-Renn Process diagram.svg
Schematic diagram of a direct reduction process in a rotating drum, the Krupp-Renn process.

The ACCAR process, developed in the late 1960s and used confidentially until 1987, [8] uses a mixture of 80% coal and 20% oil or gas: the hydrocarbons, although more expensive, enrich the reducing gas with hydrogen. [11] The German Krupp-CODIR process, operational since 1974, has had little more success: only three units have been commissioned. [22] Finally, Indian steelmakers are behind the SIIL, Popurri, Jindal, TDR and OSIL processes, which are simply variants [nb 13] developed to meet specific technical and economic constraints. [11]

Other processes, built on the same principle, failed to develop, such as the Strategic-Udy, [19] consisting of a single plant commissioned in 1963 and shut down in 1964. [37]

The SL/RN process, developed in 1964, dominated coal-fired processes in 2013. In 1997, it accounted for 45% of pre-reduced coal production. [20] In 2012, however, production capacity for this process had fallen to just 1.8 Mt/year, out of a total of 17.06 Mt attributed to coal-fired processes. [nb 14] [8]

Direct reduction processes using rotating drums [51]
Procedes de reduction directe par tambour rotatif.svg
123a3b45
Consistency of the product obtainedsolidpastysol. (clinker)

liq. (cast iron)

Ideal iron content (%)30-6030-6055-6325-4550-67
Ore granulometry (mm)< 20< 20< 105-25 [nb 15] < 5< 0,2
Charge basicity (CaO/Al2O3)any0,32,8-3,0
Max. temperature (°C)600-900900-11001200-13001400-1500
Reduction (% O2 removed from Fe2O3)12 %20-70>90100
Process examples Air Liquide Highveld

Udy Larco

RNSL/RN

Krupp

Krupp-

Renn

Basset

Reduction-melting processes

As the smelting stage is necessary to obtain alloys and shape the product, direct reduction processes are frequently combined with downstream smelting facilities.

Most pre-reduced iron ore is smelted in electric furnaces: in 2003, 49 of the 50 Mt produced went into electric furnaces. [52] Process integration is generally highly advanced, to take advantage of the high temperature (over 600 °C) of the prereduct from the direct reduction reactor. [28]

One idea is to carry out the entire reduction-melting process in the arc furnace installed downstream of the reduction plant. Several plasma processes operating above 1530 °C have been devised and sometimes tested. Furnaces can be either non-transferred arc (Plasmasmelt, Plasmared) or transferred arc (ELRED, EPP, SSP, The Toronto System, falling plasma film reactor). All these processes share the electric furnace's advantage of low investment cost, and its disadvantage of using an expensive energy source. In the case of direct reduction, this disadvantage is outweighed by the fact that a great deal of heat is required, both for the reduction process and because of the gangue to be melted.

An alternative to the electric furnace is to melt the pre-reduction with a fuel. The cupola furnace is ideally suited to this task, but since one reason for the existence of direct reduction processes is the non-use of coke, other melting furnaces have emerged. The COREX process, in operation since 1987, consists of a direct-reduction shaft reactor feeding a blast furnace crucible, in which the pre-reduced ore is brought to a liquid smelting state, consuming only coal. This process also produces a hot reducing gas, which can be valorized in a Midrex-type unit. [53] An equivalent to COREX, based on the FINMET fluidized bed instead of the Midrex vessel, is the Korean FINEX process (a contraction of FINMET and COREX). [54] Both processes are in industrial operation at several plants around the world. [38]

Last but not least, a number of reduction-melting furnaces in the same reactor have been studied, but have not yet led to industrial development. For example, the ISARNA [29] process and its derivative HISARNA (a combination of the ISARNA and HISMELT processes [55] ), is a cyclonic reactor that performs melting before reduction. [29] These processes have culminated in an industrial demonstrator tested in the Netherlands since 2011. [55] Similarly, Japanese steelmakers joined forces in the 1990s to develop the DIOS process which, like many reduction-fusion processes, is similar to oxygen converters. [56] The TECNORED process, studied in Brazil, [57] also performs reduction-melting in the same vessel, but is more akin to a blast furnace modified to adapt to any type of solid fuel. [58] Of all the processes of this type that have been developed, a single ISASMELT-type industrial unit built in Australia, with a capacity of 0.8 Mt/year, [59] operated from 2005 to 2008 [60] before being dismantled and shipped to China, where it was restarted in 2016. [61]

Economic importance

Controlling capital and material requirements

In the US, where the Midrex process was first developed, direct reduction was seen in the 1960s as a way of breathing new life into electric steelmaking. The techno-economic model of the mini-mill, based on flexibility and reduced plant size, was threatened by a shortage of scrap metal, and a consequent rise in its price. With the same shortage affecting metallurgical coke, a return to the blast furnace route did not seem an attractive solution. [19]

Direct reduction is theoretically well-suited to the use of ores that are less compatible with blast furnaces (such as fine ores that clog furnaces), which are less expensive. It also requires less capital, making it a viable alternative to the two tried-and-tested methods of electric furnaces and blast furnaces. [19]

Comparative economic and technical performance of some reduction or reduction/melting processes (2010 data) [62]
Blast furnace with coal inj.HIsmeltCOREXMidrexHYL IIIElectric furnace
Input products9 % pellets / 91% agglomerate 100 % ore fines50 % pellets / 50% agglomerate100 % pellets100 % mineral pre-reduced
Output product Pig iron Pig iron / reducing gasPre-reduced iron oreUnalloyed molten steel
Production capacity (kt/year) [8] 300 to 4,200≈ 800300 to 1,500400 to 1,700500 to 1,100
Investment cost (€2010/(Mt/year)) [nb 16] 273428200194191108
CO2 produced (tCO2/t)1,51,572,90,650,530,058
Coke requirement (GJ/t) [nb 17] 9,303,10
Coal requirement (GJ/t) [nb 18] 6,2014,76270
Electricity requirement (kWh/t)138174,890135,4104,2697,7
Natural gas requirement (GJ/t) [nb 19] 01,68010,890,09
Gas production (GJ/t)3,25

(blast furnace gas)

010,9

(COREX gas)

0

The comparative table shows that the diversity of processes is also justified by the need for quality materials. The coking plant that feeds a battery of blast furnaces is just as expensive as the blast furnace and requires a specific quality of coal. [62] [63] Conversely, many direct-reduction processes are disadvantaged by the costly transformation of ore into pellets: these cost on average 70% more than raw ore. [64] Finally, gas requirements can significantly increase investment costs: gas produced by a COREX is remarkably well-suited to feeding a Midrex unit, [53] but the attraction of the low investment then fades. [65]

The benefits of direct fuel reduction

Although gas handling and processing are far more economical than converting coal into coke (not to mention the associated constraints, such as bulk handling, high sensitivity of coking plants to production fluctuations, environmental impact, etc.), replacing coke with natural gas only makes direct reduction attractive to steelmakers with cheap gas resources. This point is essential, as European steelmakers pointed out in 1998:

"There's no secret: to be competitive, direct reduction requires natural gas at $2 per gigajoule, half the European price." - L'Usine nouvelle , September 1998, La réduction directe passe au charbon.

This explains the development of certain reduction-melting processes which, because of the high temperatures involved, have a surplus of reducing gas. Reduction-melting processes such as the COREX, capable of feeding an ancillary Midrex direct [52] reduction unit, or the Tecnored, are justified by their ability to produce CO-rich gas despite their higher investment cost. [62] In addition, coke oven gas is an essential co-product in the energy strategy of a steel complex: the absence of a coke oven must therefore be compensated for by higher natural gas consumption for downstream tools, notably hot rolling and annealing furnaces.

The worldwide distribution of direct reduction plants is therefore directly correlated with the availability of natural gas and ore. In 2007, the breakdown was as follows: [52]

China, a country with gigantic needs and a deficit of scrap metal, and Europe, lacking competitive ore and fuels, have never invested massively in these processes, remaining faithful to the blast furnace route. The United States, meanwhile, has always had a few units, but since 2012, the exploitation of shale gas has given a new impetus to natural gas processes. [66]

However, because direct reduction uses much more hydrogen as a reducing agent than blast furnaces (which is very clear for natural gas processes), it produces much less CO2, a greenhouse gas. [62] This advantage has motivated the development of ULCOS processes in developed countries, such as HISARNA, ULCORED, and others. The emergence of mature gas treatment technologies, such as pressure swing adsorption or amine gas treating, has also rekindled the interest of researchers. [29] In addition to reducing CO2 emissions, pure hydrogen processes such as Hybrit are being actively studied with a view to decarbonizing the steel industry. [67]

Notes

  1. It is essential to distinguish between production capacity and actual production. In fact, many plants have never reached their theoretical production capacity, and many others are used on an episodic basis, when economic conditions make their operation profitable.
  2. Between 1950 and 1975, 1,200 patents were registered, 100 processes were analyzed and 12 essential principles were tested5. In 2014, Stanley Santos counted 70 direct reduction process developments and 45 reduction-melting processes ... a very underestimated figure if we remember that in 1890, Marion Howe already cited, as an example, 35 direct reduction processes.
  3. This unit inaugurates the HYL I process. With an initial capacity of 75,000 tonnes per year, it produced pre-reduced ore until 1991.
  4. In 2006, 92% of pre-reduced ore came from processes using natural gas. However, since 2010, this proportion has fallen to 75%.
  5. It is essential to distinguish between production capacity and actual production. In fact, many plants have never reached their theoretical production capacity, and many others are used on an episodic basis, when economic conditions make their operation profitable.
  6. Variants of the Midrex and HYL processes were not given specific names, as the companies marketing them were keen to reassure customers of the technological maturity of their processes. Conversely, Indian steelmakers modifying their rotary furnaces were keen to emphasize their - very relative - originality.
  7. Wustite is actually a non-stoichiometric compound with a variable oxidation rate. Metallurgists generally use the formula FeO1.0356
  8. According to the diagram, CO reduction begins at lower temperatures: for hematite and magnetite, it starts at 690°C, for wustite at 830°C. As for reduction by H2, hematite reduction starts as early as 630°C, while magnetite reduction requires 1,050°C and wustite reduction over 1,500°C (melting temperature of iron).
  9. More specifically, hydrogen promotes reduction by carbon monoxide through the following reactions : Fe3O4 + H2 → 3 FeO + H2O H2O + CO → H2 + CO2 or : Fe3O4 + CO → 3 FeO + CO2 As well as: FeO + H2 → Fe + H2O H2O + CO → H2 + CO2 or : FeO + CO → Fe + CO2
  10. While distinguishing gas-fired processes from coal-fired processes is a common approach, there are of course other possible breakdowns, such as those based on temperature, the conditioning of the ore prior to reduction, the product obtained, and so on.
  11. Variants of the Midrex and HYL processes were not given specific names, as the companies marketing them were keen to reassure customers of the technological maturity of their processes. Conversely, Indian steelmakers modifying their rotary furnaces were keen to emphasize their - very relative - originality.
  12. One of the advantages of the Krupp-Renn process lies in its ability to treat siliceous ores, without the need to reduce the acidity of the gangue by the costly addition of lime. But an acid gangue is not very fusible, which hinders iron reduction and results in a poor-quality pre-reduction. An expensive and partial solution is to operate at higher temperatures.
  13. Variants of the Midrex and HYL processes were not given specific names, as the companies marketing them were keen to reassure customers of the technological maturity of their processes. Conversely, Indian steelmakers modifying their rotary furnaces were keen to emphasize their - very relative - originality.
  14. It is essential to distinguish between production capacity and actual production. In fact, many plants have never reached their theoretical production capacity, and many others are used on an episodic basis, when economic conditions make their operation profitable.
  15. For ilmenite and ferruginous sands: grain size 0.05 to 0.5 mm.
  16. With 1 $2000≈1.34 €2010, if we assume an exchange rate of 1 $2000≈1.07 €2000 and an inflation rate of 1 €2000≈1.23 €2010
  17. With 1 tonne of coke equivalent to 27.920 GJ, 1 tonne of coal equivalent to 25.911 GJ53, 1,000 Nm3 or 800 kg of natural gas equivalent to 36
  18. With 1 tonne of coke equivalent to 27.920 GJ, 1 tonne of coal equivalent to 25.911 GJ53, 1,000 Nm3 or 800 kg of natural gas equivalent to 36
  19. With 1 tonne of coke equivalent to 27.920 GJ, 1 tonne of coal equivalent to 25.911 GJ53, 1,000 Nm3 or 800 kg of natural gas equivalent to 36

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Smelting is a process of applying heat and a chemical reducing agent to an ore to extract a desired base metal product. It is a form of extractive metallurgy that is used to obtain many metals such as iron, copper, silver, tin, lead and zinc. Smelting uses heat and a chemical reducing agent to decompose the ore, driving off other elements as gases or slag and leaving the metal behind. The reducing agent is commonly a fossil fuel source of carbon, such as carbon monoxide from incomplete combustion of coke—or, in earlier times, of charcoal. The oxygen in the ore binds to carbon at high temperatures as the chemical potential energy of the bonds in carbon dioxide is lower than that of the bonds in the ore.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Steelmaking</span> Process for producing steel from iron ore and scrap

Steelmaking is the process of producing steel from iron ore and/or scrap. In steelmaking, impurities such as nitrogen, silicon, phosphorus, sulfur and excess carbon are removed from the sourced iron, and alloying elements such as manganese, nickel, chromium, carbon and vanadium are added to produce different grades of steel.

Syngas, or synthesis gas, is a mixture of hydrogen and carbon monoxide, in various ratios. The gas often contains some carbon dioxide and methane. It is principally used for producing ammonia or methanol. Syngas is combustible and can be used as a fuel. Historically, it has been used as a replacement for gasoline, when gasoline supply has been limited; for example, wood gas was used to power cars in Europe during WWII.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Blast furnace</span> Type of furnace used for smelting to produce industrial metals

A blast furnace is a type of metallurgical furnace used for smelting to produce industrial metals, generally pig iron, but also others such as lead or copper. Blast refers to the combustion air being supplied above atmospheric pressure.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Industrial processes</span> Process of producing goods

Industrial processes are procedures involving chemical, physical, electrical, or mechanical steps to aid in the manufacturing of an item or items, usually carried out on a very large scale. Industrial processes are the key components of heavy industry.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Steel mill</span> Plant for steelmaking

A steel mill or steelworks is an industrial plant for the manufacture of steel. It may be an integrated steel works carrying out all steps of steelmaking from smelting iron ore to rolled product, but may also be a plant where steel semi-finished casting products are made from molten pig iron or from scrap.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bloomery</span> Type of furnace once used widely for smelting iron from its oxides

A bloomery is a type of metallurgical furnace once used widely for smelting iron from its oxides. The bloomery was the earliest form of smelter capable of smelting iron. Bloomeries produce a porous mass of iron and slag called a bloom. The mix of slag and iron in the bloom, termed sponge iron, is usually consolidated and further forged into wrought iron. Blast furnaces, which produce pig iron, have largely superseded bloomeries.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ironworks</span> Building or site where iron is smelted

An ironworks or iron works is an industrial plant where iron is smelted and where heavy iron and steel products are made. The term is both singular and plural, i.e. the singular of ironworks is ironworks.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Direct reduced iron</span> Newly mined and refined type of metal

Direct reduced iron (DRI), also called sponge iron, is produced from the direct reduction of iron ore into iron by a reducing gas which either contains elemental carbon or hydrogen. When hydrogen is used as the reducing gas there are no greenhouse gases produced. Many ores are suitable for direct reduction.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Saldanha Steel</span> South African steel company

Saldanha Steel was a South African steel company originally formed as a partnership between Iscor Limited and the Industrial Development Corporation (IDC). Saldanha Steel is now part of ArcelorMittal South Africa, which in turn is part of global steel company ArcelorMittal. The mill was shutdown and mothballed in 2020 resulting in the loss of 1500 jobs.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mobarakeh Steel Company</span> Iranian steel manufacturing corporation

Mobarakeh Steel Company is a private Iranian steel company, located 65 km south west of Esfahan, near the city of Mobarakeh, Esfahan Province, Iran. It is the largest steel maker of MENA region, and one of the largest industrial complexes operating in Iran. It was commissioned after the Iranian Revolution in 1979 and initiated operations during 1993. It underwent major revamping during year 2000, and is scheduled for a second and third revamping in 2009–2010, bringing the total steel output to 7,200,000 metric tons per year. The company owns the successful football club, Sepahan. In 2022, a parliamentary report indicated corruption of $3 billion, leading to the company being suspended from the Tehran stock exchange.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Cornwall Iron Furnace</span> Historic district in Pennsylvania, United States

Cornwall Iron Furnace is a designated National Historic Landmark that is administered by the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission in Cornwall, Lebanon County, Pennsylvania in the United States. The furnace was a leading Pennsylvania iron producer from 1742 until it was shut down in 1883. The furnaces, support buildings and surrounding community have been preserved as a historical site and museum, providing a glimpse into Lebanon County's industrial past. The site is the only intact charcoal-burning iron blast furnace in its original plantation in the western hemisphere. Established by Peter Grubb in 1742, Cornwall Furnace was operated during the Revolution by his sons Curtis and Peter Jr. who were major arms providers to George Washington. Robert Coleman acquired Cornwall Furnace after the Revolution and became Pennsylvania's first millionaire. Ownership of the furnace and its surroundings was transferred to the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in 1932.

The HIsarna ironmaking process is a direct reduced iron process for iron making in which iron ore is processed almost directly into liquid iron (pig iron). The process combines two process units, the Cyclone Converter Furnace (CCF) for ore melting and pre-reduction and a Smelting Reduction Vessel (SRV) where the final reduction stage to liquid iron takes place. The process does not require the manufacturing of iron ore agglomerates such as pellets and sinter, nor the production of coke, which are necessary for the blast furnace process. Without these steps, the HIsarna process is more energy-efficient and has a lower carbon footprint than traditional ironmaking processes. In 2018 Tata Steel announced it has demonstrated that more than 50% CO2 emission reduction is possible with HIsarna technology, without the need for carbon capture technology.

The Corex Process is a smelting reduction process created by Primetals as a more environmentally friendly alternative to the blast furnace. Presently, the majority of steel production is through the blast furnace which has to rely on coking coal. That is coal which has been cooked in order to remove impurities so that it is superior to coal. The blast furnace requires a sinter plant in order to prepare the iron ore for reduction. Unlike the blast furnace, smelting reduction processes are typical smaller and use coal and oxygen directly to reduce iron ore into a usable product. Smelting reduction processes come in two basic varieties, two-stage or single-stage. In a single-stage system the iron ore is both reduced and melted in the same container. In a two-stage process, like Corex, the ore is reduced in one shaft and melted and purified in another. Plants using the Corex process have been put use in areas such as South Africa, India, and China. First COREX process was installed in 1988 at South Africa.

In 2022, the United States was the world’s third-largest producer of raw steel, and the sixth-largest producer of pig iron. The industry produced 29 million metric tons of pig iron and 88 million tons of steel. Most iron and steel in the United States is now made from iron and steel scrap, rather than iron ore. The United States is also a major importer of iron and steel, as well as iron and steel products.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Metallurgical furnace</span> Device used to heat, melt, or otherwise process metals

A metallurgical furnace, often simply referred to as a furnace when the context is known, is an industrial furnace used to heat, melt, or otherwise process metals. Furnaces have been a central piece of equipment throughout the history of metallurgy; processing metals with heat is even its own engineering specialty known as pyrometallurgy.

Adrien C. B. Chenot was a French engineer best known for his inventions in metallurgy as well as his research on manufactured gases. He is notably the inventor of one of the first modern methods of direct reduction of iron ore, based on the use of coal reacting with the ore in retorts. He exhibited the first samples of pre-reduced iron ore at the Lisbon Universal Exhibition of 1849, and was awarded the "Grandes Medailles d'Or" at the Paris Universal Exposition of 1855.

Direct reduction is the fraction of iron oxide reduction that occurs in a blast furnace due to the presence of coke carbon, while the remainder - indirect reduction - consists mainly of carbon monoxide from coke combustion.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Krupp–Renn Process</span> A direct reduction steelmaking process used from the 1930s to the 1970s.

The Krupp–Renn process was a direct reduction steelmaking process used from the 1930s to the 1970s. It used a rotary furnace and was one of the few technically and commercially successful direct reduction processes in the world, acting as an alternative to blast furnaces due to their coke consumption. The Krupp-Renn process consumed mainly hard coal and had the unique characteristic of partially melting the charge. This method is beneficial for processing low-quality or non-melting ores, as their waste material forms a protective layer that can be easily separated from the iron. It generates Luppen, nodules of pre-reduced iron ore, which can be easily melted down.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Agglomerate (Steel industry)</span> Steel Industry agglomerate

Agglomerate is a material composed of iron oxides and gangue, roasted and sintered in an agglomeration plant. This product is obtained by burning coal previously mixed with iron ore and oxides. This conditioning of iron ore optimizes its use in the blast furnace.

References

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See also

Bibliography