[0001] The invention relates to a unique process for manufacturing graphite electrodes for
electric arc furnace applications and the unique electrodes resulting from the practice
of the process.
[0002] Premium petroleum cokes are used extensively in the manufacture of electrodes for
steelmaking with electric arc furnaces. The cost of such cokes is increasing very
rapidly, however, and this could markedly affect the future growth of the use of electric
arc furnaces and thus the market for electric arc electrodes. Less costly carbonaceous
materials, such as anthracite coal, bituminous coal, lignites, so-called No. 2 and
No. 3 cokes, etc., have been tested in the production of electrodes intended for use
in electric arc furnaces but the properties of the resulting electrodes are sufficiently
inferior when compared to electrodes made from premium petroleum coke that they have
been unacceptable for use in electric furnaces. Efforts to upgrade the properties
of electrodes made from other than wholly petroleum coke as the carbonaceous source
material to acceptable levels have been unsuccessful to date.
[0003] The principal object of this invention is to provide a method for manufacturing electrodes
acceptable for use in electric arc furnaces in which the starting carbonaceous source
material is not necessarily entirely premium grade petroleum coke.
[0004] This invention resides in subjecting a carbonaceous source material, other than premium
petroleum coke,-and preferably anthracite coal, to the action of elemental boron or
a boron compound, preferably boron carbide (B
4C), whereby the highly disordered structure of the anthracite coal is transformed
into one that is very graphitic in an otherwise conventional electrode manufacturing
process.
[0005] The single figure of the drawing is a graph illustrating the improvement in oxidation
resistance of electrodes employing in their manufacture boronated anthracite coal
as compared to electrodes employing non-boronated anthracite coal.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0006] In the practice of the invention particles of a non-petroleum coke carbonaceous material
are mixed together with the conventional pitch binder and lubricants, and to this
mixture is added elemental boron or a boron containing compound. Acceptable carbonaceous
source materials other than anthracite coal are bituminous coal, lignites and No.
2 and No. 3 cokes. Preferably the boron source is one which does not release a gaseous
by-product when it is to be reacted with the carbonaceous material at the graphitization
step in the manufacturing process. Such boron sources are elemental boron, boron carbide
(B
4C), silicon tetraboride (B
4Si) and iron boride (FeB). It should also be appreciated that the boron material can
be incorporated with the carbonaceous material during calcination and in this procedure
the boron compound may be an oxide such as boric acid (H
3B0
3) or boric oxide (B
20
3) since the gaseous by-product formed would have no effect on the structural integrity
of the finished electrode.
EXAMPLE
[0007] Six-inch diameter coarse-grain anthracite coal electrodes were formed by extrusion.
The anthracite coal was calcined at 2200°C prior to crushing and sizing. The coal
particles, pitch, lubricants, and B
4C additions to the mixes are indicated in Table I. The control mix had no boron, whereas
the mix for the boronated stock was formulated to produce a finished product having
approximately three weight percent boron.

[0008] The B
4 C was Carborundum Company Technical Grade 325/F, containing seventy-two percent boron
and a maximum particle size of 44µm. The B
4C and flour were blended in a ribbon blender for one hour prior to mixing with the
other additions in a sigma-bladed heated mixer. A mix temperature of 158°C was achieved.
The mix was then cooled to 110°C.and extruded at 105°C. Extrusion pressures varied
between 390 and 500 psi for the control and between 400 and 800 psi for the boronated
mix. The higher extrusion pressure for the boron-containing mix indicates that insufficient
binder was present, which should probably be detremental to physical properties, especially
strength. However, in spite of this, as shown in Table II, the boronated electrode
had significantly higher strength than the control electrode.. Eight billets measuring
six inches diameter by eighteen inches long were formed from each mix.
[0009] The billets were packed with coke packing in saggers and baked at 2°C/hour to 500°C,
at 10°C/hour to 900°C and held for approximately ten hours at the latter temperature.
[0010] Baked billets were then impregnated with Ashland 240 petroleum pitch. The procedure
entailed preheating the billets in an autoclave to 225°C and evacuating the chamber
thereafter for one-half to one hour. The pitch was heated to 250°C and introduced
and the system pressurized to 100 psi. The impregnated billets were packed in coke
packing and rebaked at 10°C/hour to 750°C and held for twenty-hours at the latter
temperature.
[0011] The graphitization process consisted of heating inductively at a rate of 200°C/hour
to 2000°C and at 400°C/hour to the final temperature of 3000°C. Hold time at 3000°C
was one hour. During graphitization and cooling the stock is protected from oxidation
by coke packing.
[0012] Properties obtained on the control and boronated anthracite coal specimens are shown
in Table II. With the exception of the CTE, all properties were measured on I"xl"x6"
specimens cut in the extrusion direction (WG) and normal to the extrusion direction
(AG). The data are averages of nine AG and eleven WG specimens. The CTE data are essentially
room temperature values and these measurements were made on 0.25"x0.75"x6" bars.

[0013] The data in Table II indicate the boronated material has properties superior to those
for the control in both billet directions. The WG CTE and WG resistivity for the boronated
coal are significant improvements.
[0014] In addition to the foregoing advantages imparted by the employment of boronated anthracite
coal over nonboronated anthracite coal, an electrode made with boronated anthracite
coal exhibits exceptional resistance to oxidation. This is an important characteristic
for electrodes which must perform satisfactorily in the exacting environment of an
electric arc furnace.
[0015] It appears that, uniquely, boron causes the anthracite coal or other carbonaceous
stock to retain its impurities; even after graphitization.
[0016] The principal impurities in anthracite coal are compounds of iron, silicon, aluminum,
and titanium, and they equate to approximately ten percent ash. Most naturally occurring
carbonaceous materials have as impurities similar kinds of elements in varying levels.
The vaporization of these materials during graphitization results in lower density,
poorer structure and properties. The presence of boron has been observed to prevent
their vaporization. Impurities in the boronated carbonaceous stock provide excellent
protection against oxidation. This phenomenon is clearly shown as explained below
in the single figure of the drawing. The data illustrated in this graph was generated
as follows:
One-inch cubes of the control and-boronated anthracite coal stock were heated four
hours in still air at temperatures between 800° and 1600°C. Material (carbon + ash)
was weighed at the end of this time and the results are expressed as percent remaining
in the figure. The oxide coating developed in the coal specimens is a very small percentage
(2-5 percent) of the remaining mass. Even at 1600°C, a substantial portion of the
remaining material is carbon. At 1200°C, the control is almost completely oxidized,
whereas approximately sixty percent carbon is retained in the boronated specimen.
Accordingly, consumption will be much less for a boronated anthracite coal electrode
exposed to electric arc furnace conditions than it would be for the unboronated counterpart.
[0017] The range of the amount of boron content to be added to the carbonaceous mix to be
extruded into the finished electrode is between 0.1 and 5 percent by weight of the
graphitized product, with about three percent being the preferred level of boron addition.
[0018] The properties of the boronated anthracite coal stock of the above example when compared
to a graphite electrode made from premium petroleum coke are shown below in Table
III.

[0019] As will be appreciated the properties of the electrodes of the invention compare
very favorably with those that are available from conventional processing using premium
petroleum coke.
[0020] Finally, it should also be appreciated that new, and lower cost electrodes suitable
for use in electrical arc furnaces will also be achieved in those instances where
the non-petroleum coke carbonaceous stock material which has been subjected to boronation
replaces only a portion of the petroleum coke stock material rather than replacing
it entirely.
1. An extruded electrode suitable for use in an electric arc steel melting furnace
characterised by comprising a graphitized boronated carbonaceous material other than
petroleum coke.
2. An extruded electrode suitable for use in an electric arc steel melting furnace
as claimed in claim 1, characterised by comprising graphitized petroleum coke together
with a graphitized boronated carbonaceous material other than petroleum coke.
3. An electrode as claimed in claim 1 or 2, characterised in that the graphitized
boronated carbonaceous material is derived from a material selected from the group
consisting of anthracite coal, bituminous coal, lignites and No.2 and No.3 cokes.
4. The electrode of claims 1, 2 or 3, characterised in that the source of the boron
is selected from the group consisting of elemental boron, B4C, B4Si, FeB, H3B03 and B203.
5. An extruded electrode as claimed in any of claims 1 to 4, characterised in that
it comprises graphitized boronated anthracite coal, wherein the source of boron is
boron carbide.
6. An electrode as claimed in claim 5, wherein said boron is present in a range of
from 0.1 to 5.0 weight percent of the electrode.
7. An electrode as claimed in claim 6, wherein said boron is present in the amount
of about 3 weight percent of the electrode.
8. A method of making an electrode suitable for use in an electric arc steel melting
furnace which comprises hot mixing calcined anthracite coal particles, pitch, lubricants
and boron carbide, such that boron is present in the amount of about 3 weight percent
of the electrode, extruding said mix into an electrode form and heating said shaped
electrode to graphitizing temperatures.