[0001] The present invention relates to a method for blowing oxidizing gases into molten
metal located in a reaction vessel having tuyères below the metal bath surface.
[0002] Progressive metallurgical methods for metal production mainly use oxygen as a refining
agent today, particularly if this refining gas is fed to the smelt below the metal
bath surface. This procedure has become more and more common in nonferrous metallurgy.
For example, oxygen tuyères below the bath surface are used in the QSL reactor for
lead production that has recently become known. Similar process variants are also
part of industrial practice in copper production.
[0003] However oxygen refining has acquired outstanding importance in steel production.
Along with the various LD processes for steelmaking in a converter, oxygen tuyères
below the iron bath surface are now also employed in the other important steelmaking
aggregate, the electric-arc furnace, to improve the economy of this process. In the
bottom-blowing converter the large-scale use of pure oxygen began in 1968 with the
method known as OBM or Q-BOP. German patent no. 15 83 968 is the first protective
right to describe the OBM method.
[0004] Further developments in this field followed, the combination-blowing KMS converter
being the current, very versatile and optimal solution for steel production. In this
method the scrap smelting capacity can be controlled within wide limits by the addition
of carbonaceous fuels, and the thermic efficiency of these fuels is considerably increased
by the afterburning of the reaction gases and retransfer of the resulting heat. This
increase of the energy turnovers in converters is protected by German patent no. 28
38 983.
[0005] A step toward improved operation of the process in the bottom- or combination-blowing
converter has been taken for the top-blowing or LD method by purging the bottom with
inert gas. The relatively small amounts of purging gas used (mainly nitrogen and argon)
are replaced by oxygen in the LET process. In this process about 5 Nm³ oxygen per
ton of steel is blown into the smelt through two to four bottom tuyères below the
bath surface, and the essential refining oxygen fraction is fed to the iron bath by
the water-cooled oxygen top-blowing lance, as customary in an LD converter.
[0006] In steelmaking in an electric-arc furnace the KES method, as described e.g. in German
patent no. 36 29 055, has recently gained acceptance in several mills. In this method
for increasing the energy supply in electric-arc furnaces oxygen or oxygenous gases
are blown into the upper area of the furnace for afterburning the reaction gases,
and oxidizing gases (mainly oxygen) are fed to the smelt through the tuyères disposed
in the bottom. Simultaneously solids such as slag forming agents and carbonaceous
fuels can be passed into the smelt via hollow electrodes. This method increases the
economy in particular by saving electric energy. This protective right also proposes
operating the tuyères below the bath surface at increased pressure up to 60 bars from
case to case.
[0007] In the methods stated hitherto the oxygen is supplied below the bath surface through
so-called OBM tuyères, i.e. oxygen tuyères jacketed with hydrocarbons for their protection.
These tuyères normally comprise two concentric pipes with oxygen flowing through the
central pipe, and hydrocarbons, for example natural gas, methane, propane, butane
or light fuel oil, flowing through the annular gap. When this tuyère is used minimal
rates of wear of the bottom lining and tuyères of 1.5 mm per batch, corresponding
to approximately 5 mm per hour of blowing time, can be reached under favorable operating
conditions as stated for example in German patent no. 34 03 490, "A method for installing
a converter bottom".
[0008] Alongside the successful large-scale use of OBM tuyères, i.e. tuyères through which
oxygen jacketed by a gaseous or liquid hydrocarbon passes into the smelt below the
metal bath surface, there was previously no lack of attempts to pass oxygen into molten
metal without a tuyère protecting medium. For example U.S. patent no. 2,333,654, filed
in 1940, describes a method and apparatus for steelmaking wherein oxygen is blown
into the molten metal through a positively cooled tuyère in a Bessemer converter or
similar refining vessel. The tuyère is made of a material with high thermal conductivity
and has a water cooling system with water flowing at high speed onto the underside
of the tuyères so that a layer of solidified metal forms on the tuyère surface for
tuyère protection. This method has never entered into steelmaking practice, probably
because the risk of leaks and bursts in the tuyère water cooling system and resulting
water vapor explosions was considered too great.
[0009] U.S. patent no. 2,855,293, filed in 1955, relates to a further method and apparatus
for treating molten metal with oxygen. The method is characterized in that oxygen
with a pressure over 28 bars (400 pounds per square inch) is used to obtain a limited
cooling effect at the tip of the tuyère so that the tuyère material does not melt.
The application of the method and apparatus is bound to a number of requirements.
The most important conditions are an oxygen pressure between 28 bars and 70 bars (400
to 1000 pounds per square inch), a jet and tuyère area between 0.003 to 0.03 square
inches, corresponding to an inside pipe diameter of 1.5 mm to 5 mm, and a pipe wall
thickness of at least 4.8 mm. Under these conditions and with a proper refractory
material for the tuyère surroundings one can reach a minimal rate of wear of 0.27
inches/min, corresponding to 6.86 mm/min or 411 mm/h. These rates of wear based on
the wall thickness of a modern bottom-blowing converter lead to operating times of
less than 10 batches, while customary comparable bottom durabilities today are over
1000 batches.
[0010] The method described in this U.S. patent for passing oxygen into the smelt below
the metal bath surface at a pressure between 28 bars and 70 bars has not been applied
in steelmaking or metal extraction. Instead the same inventors recommended blowing
oxygen into a molten metal bath only together with one or more gaseous hydrocarbons
in French patent no. 14 50 718, filed in 1965.
[0011] As described above, this method of jacketing the oxygen with hydrocarbons has become
accepted in metallurgical processes for metal production and leads to satisfactory
results in particular with respect to the rates of wear of the tuyères used and the
resulting high economy. But there are also disadvantages. Mainly in steelmaking the
relatively high hydrogen contents from the tuyère protecting medium impair the finished
molten steel. Also, complicated controlling installations are necessary for reasons
of safety, for example to keep the pressure of the hydrocarbons lower than the oxygen
pressure so that the hydrocarbons do not overflow into the oxygen pipes and cause
undesirable deflagrations and fires in the feed system. Finally a considerable proportion
of the hydrocarbons for tuyère protection is lost as vagrant medium in the converter
bottom and leads to undesirable flame formation outside the converter, e.g. in the
area of the piping on the converter bottom.
[0012] The invention is accordingly based on the problem of reliably passing oxygen into
molten metal below the bath surface without a jacket of hydrocarbons or other additional
tuyère protecting media and obtaining comparable rates of wear of the pass-in system
and the surrounding refractory lining as are known from OBM tuyères.
[0013] The object of the invention is a method for blowing oxidizing gases into molten metal
located in a reaction vessel having tuyères below the metal bath surface, characterized
in that the oxidizing gases, in particular oxygen, are blown into the molten metal
from these tuyères and fed to the tuyères at an inlet pressure between 85 bars and
170 bars, preferably between 90 bars and 120 bars.
[0014] These measures cause the tuyères to burn back together with the surrounding refractory
material uniformly at a rate of wear of less than 30 mm/h of blowing time. No undesirable
substances need be fed to the molten metal. Reliable process control and an improved,
high overall economy of the method are ensured.
[0015] The inventive method can be used in steelmaking in a converter, an electric-arc furnace
and other suitable vessels (ladles, vacuum systems) for carrying out a refining process,
in coal gasification in an iron bath, in the smelting reduction of metal ores and
in the production of nonferrous metals.
[0016] The invention is based on the finding that the resistance of tuyères to premature
burning back increases over-proportionately only as of a pressure stage of at least
85 bars for the passed-in oxidizing gas, in particular oxygen. This finding is surprising
because in known methods for blowing oxygen into molten metal relatively high burn-off
rates for the tuyères have hitherto been detected in the pressure range between 28
bars and 70 bars and in exceptional cases up to 80 bars, which somewhat decreased
at increasing pressure but still have values of about 40 cm/h of blowing time in favorable
cases. The constant slight decrease in the tuyère burn-off rate at increasing oxygen
pressure is only explainable in the prior art by the Joules-Thomson effect, which
causes cooling on the tip of the tuyère when the highly compressed gas emerges and
expands.
[0017] It is all the more surprising that an overproportionate, clear reduction of tuyère
burn-off occurs according to the invention at a pressure of at least 85 bars. This
tuyère burn-off found is less than 3 cm/h of blowing time and is thus in the same
order of magnitude as with OBM tuyères in which the oxygen is jacketed by hydrocarbons.
[0018] According to the invention the oxygen is conducted, before entering the tuyères,
through supply pipes having a clearly greater free cross section than the tuyère in
order to minimize the pressure losses in these feed pipes. It has been shown that
the full oxygen pressure of at least 85 bars, preferably 90 bars, must be present
at the inlet of the tuyère, i.e. its back or cold side, to ensure maximum flow rates
within the tuyère itself. It is also within the scope of the invention to give the
tuyères a conic form, i.e. a cross section tapering toward the tuyère mouth. Instead
of a conic design the tuyères can also have several steps worked into the inside diameter.
These measures for tapering the inside diameter of the tuyère toward the tip are always
expedient when the lower limit of the stated pressure range of at least 85 bars is
present, i.e. if no higher oxygen pressure is available. The preferred design of the
tuyère for the inventive method is a tubular tuyère body with a uniform inside diameter
which is supplied with oxygen in the pressure range of 90 bars to 120 bars.
[0019] Other tuyère areas departing from the circular shape can of course also be used,
for example oval, slotlike and any desired polygonal shapes.
[0020] According to the invention the oxygen is fed to the tuyères at temperatures of -5°C
to 50°C, preferably about 10°C to 30°C. At this temperature the oxygen is thus present
at the inlets of the tuyères. The density of the oxygen in the supply pipes and accordingly
at the inlets of the tuyères is between 120 g/dm³ and 240 g/dm³, preferably between
130 g/dm³ and 170 g/dm³. The advantageous low rates of wear of the tuyères can be
reached by the inventive method with the stated values for the density of the oxygen.
[0021] The unforeseeable great reduction in the tuyère burnoff rate when passing oxygen
into molten metal as soon as the pressure range of about 85 bars is exceeded according
to the invention cannot be explained by the Joules-Thomson effect, i.e. the gas expansion
at the tip of the tuyère. Instead, more exact physicochemical tests have shown that
the gas expansion hardly leads to cooling of the surroundings in this pressure range.
Similar conditions also result for the calculation of the cooling effect through the
hydrocarbon jacket of the oxygen in OBM tuyères. The cracking energy of the hydrocarbons
is compensated almost completely by combustion of the carbon to CO, resulting in an
approximately heat-neutral behavior of the hydrocarbon gases when passing into an
iron smelt. While the effect of the hydrocarbon jacket is today regarded more as a
retardation of the reaction by the hydrocarbons or their cracking products when oxygen
is passed into an iron smelt, there is only a very vague interpretation of the surprising
finding of an above-average reduction of wear when oxygen is blown in at pressures
over 85 bars. The reaction zone of the oxygen with the molten metal is probably shifted
forward to the tuyère mouth as of this pressure level by the high flow rate of the
oxygen in the tuyère feed pipe and the expansion at the tip of the tuyère, alongside
the expected cooling effects. The distance between the tuyère mouth and the area in
front of it with maximum reaction density between oxygen and e.g. the iron smelt and
thus the iron oxide formation - FeO - is large enough to clearly reduce the reactive
effect of this high-temperature zone on the tip of the tuyère. It is conceivable that
as the oxygen blowing pressure increases a reaction distance slowly forms here as
described between the tip of the tuyère and the main reaction zone. But this reaction
distance only has measurable effects on the burn-off rate of the oxygen tuyère as
of a certain pressure level. Although these explanations may appear speculative at
first they are compatible with previous findings in this field. By comparison, the
ignition zone of a Bunsen burner is e.g. also shifted forward as the gas pressure
increases.
[0022] The tuyères used may normally be usual commercial pipes. The dimensions of the tuyères
vary in accordance with their application. No narrow limits are given by the inventive
method here. For example the length of the tuyère is about 1 m and its inside diameter
6 mm when installed in the bottom of a steelmaking converter. The tuyère is made from
a usual commercial copper pipe with a wall thickness of 3 mm. Inside tuyère diameters
of about 1 mm to about 20 mm have proven suitable. Oxygen tuyères with an inside diameter
of 2 to 6 mm are preferably used.
[0023] When selecting the material one should give preference to materials which do not
ignite in the presence of oxygen and then possibly burn back in uncontrolled fashion,
as for example unalloyed steel pipes behave. Copper, copper alloys and stainless or
high-alloy steel pipes are accordingly recommendable. In special cases ceramic pipes,
in particular multilayer ceramic pipes, have proven useful as oxygen tuyères. These
multilayer ceramic pipes involve at least two and up to five concentrically fitting
pipes of the same or different materials, for example corundum, mullite, spinel, magnesite,
which can also be glued together. These adhesive layers can improve the material properties,
such as resistance to change of temperature, thermal conductivity and breaking strength.
Combinations of ceramic and metal pipes can likewise be used as oxygen tuyères.
[0024] The tuyères can be installed in the refractory lining of the refining vessel below
the metal bath surface by inserting the tuyère and fixing it in the center of a prefabricated
tuyère channel having an inside diameter 1 mm to 20 mm greater than the outside diameter
of the tuyère. The remaining annular gap is filled with a ceramic casting compound,
or one preferably uses a tuyère shake-in compound which is compressed better than
a normal casting compound through the vibration of the tuyère when poured into the
free annular gap. After installation of the tuyères their mouths are flush with the
surrounding refractory material, or the tuyère pipes protrude slightly. No beehive-like
bulges of refractory material containing the oxygen pass-in pipe are necessary as
described in the prior art.
[0025] When the inventive method was applied in a combination-blowing oxygen converter for
steelmaking there were considerable advantages for the production sequence in comparison
to the use of OBM tuyères. In steel finery by the known method the bottom of the converter
with a capacity of 65 t contains eight tuyères with an inside diameter for the central
oxygen pass-in pipe of 24 mm. Surrounding the oxygen pass-in pipe is an annular gap
with a width of 1 mm through which about 10% natural gas based on the oxygen throughput
flows for tuyère protection. About 60% of the total amount of oxygen is passed into
the iron smelt below the bath surface through these bottom tuyères. The flow rate
is about 12,000 Nm³/h at a mean O₂ pressure of 10 bars.
[0026] If the inventive method is applied these relatively elaborate OBM tuyères can be
replaced by the same number of simple oxygen tuyères comprising pipes with an inside
diameter of 7 mm. At an oxygen inlet pressure in these tuyères of 120 bars the same
amount of oxygen can be blown into the iron bath. The blowing behavior of the converter
proves to be extremely quiet when operated by the inventive method. The feared phenomena
of so-called blow-throughs or an increased boiling motion involving great splashes
cannot be observed. Since the rates of wear of the oxygen tuyères and the total converter
bottom are about 6 mm/h of blowing time they are within the range of bottom wear when
OBM tuyères are used. For steelmaking operation remarkable economic advantages already
result from the saving of amounts of natural gas and the clearly reduced hydrogen
contents in the finished steel. Furthermore the tuyères are less expensive, and the
relatively elaborate installations for controlling the tuyère protecting medium can
be omitted.
[0027] The following table shows comparable data and results of prior art methods and the
process according to the invention. U.S. patent no. 2,855,293, which deals with the
treatment of molten metal with oxygen, states under the title "Refractory" in col.
8 from line 20 wear figures for two different refractory materials, namely acidic
grog and basic magnesite, which are found in col. 1 of the table. Col. 2 of this table
shows the wear of the refractory materials together with known OBM tuyères. In this
process a tuyère protecting medium is used, natural gas in the case shown, in an amount
of 10% based on the oxygen throughput. The data on refractory consumption are found
in German patent no. 34 03 490. These figures are intended to show the wear values
and thus lifetimes to be expected for the refractory lining in the large-scale methods
in use today, but with the described disadvantages resulting from the hydrocarbon
jacket for the oxygen passed into molten metal below the bath surface.
| Tuyère dimensions |
Prior art |
Invention |
| |
U.S. patent 2,855,293 |
German patent 34 03 490 |
|
| Inside diameter (mm) |
1.6 |
24 |
7 |
| Outside diameter (mm) |
3.2 |
34/42 |
13 |
| Oxygen pressure |
|
|
|
| Minimum (bars) |
28 |
6 |
90 |
| Maximum (bars) |
70 |
16 |
120 |
| Refr.mat./Tuyère wear |
|
|
|
| Minimum rate (mm/h) |
Grog 411 |
MgO+C 5 |
MgO+C 6 |
| Maximum rate (mm/h) |
MgO 3048 |
MgO 10 |
MgO 30 |
| T.p.medium natural gas |
|
|
|
| based on O₂ (%) |
- |
10 |
- |
| Comparable data and results of prior art methods and inventive method |
| |
[0028] Col. 3 of the table shows the corresponding data for the inventive method. Comparison
of the values in columns 1 and 3 of this table, which both relate to oxygen blowing
without an additional medium into molten metal below the bath surface, makes it clear
how great the unforeseeable decrease in wear for the tuyères and surrounding refractory
material is when the oxygen is blown into the smelt through the tuyères at a pressure
of more than 85 bars. The stated minimum wear of the refractory materials and tuyères
in the inventive method is smaller by a factor of 68.5 and the maximum wear by a factor
of even 100 as compared to the known process described in the U.S. patent. The hitherto
inexplicable effect responsible for this unexpectedly clear reduction of wear in the
tuyères when the pressure is increased over 85 bars must be left open here. Possible
interpretations have been offered above in this description of the invention.
[0029] The method according to the invention can be easily adapted to the operating conditions
in reaction vessels for refining molten metal. Among other things, it can replace
the inert gas purging means below the bath surface in the relatively large LD converters.
It is within the scope of the invention to modify the method for blowing oxidizing
gases into molten metal and utilize its advantages by skillful adaptation to existing
metallurgical processes. As long as one uses oxidizing gases, in particular oxygen,
in the pressure range between 85 bars and 170 bars one is within the scope of the
invention.
1. A method for blowing oxidizing gases into molten metal located in a reaction vessel
having tuyères below the metal bath surface, characterized in that the oxidizing gases are blown into the molten metal from these tuyères
and fed to the tuyères at an inlet pressure between 85 bars and 170 bars.
2. The method of claim 1, characterized in that the oxidizing gas is oxygen.
3. The method of claim 1 or 3, characterized in that the inlet pressure is between 90 bars and 120 bars.
4. The method of any of claims 1 to 3, characterized in that the oxygen is fed to the tuyères at a temperature between -5°C and 50°C.
5. The method of claim 4, characterized in that the temperature is between 10°C and 30°C.
6. The method of any of claims 1 to 5, characterized in that the oxygen is fed to the tuyères with a density between 120 g/dm³ and 240
g/dm³.
7. The method of claim 6, characterized in that the density is between 150 g/dm³ and 170 g/dm³.
8. The method of any of claims 1 to 7, characterized in that the free cross section of the oxygen tuyères is designed to taper from the
inlet side toward the tip of the tuyère.