A method for making steel in an electric furnace, wherein a predetermined amount of liquid melt is fed into the electric furnace. The method comprises the steps of (a) continuously feeding a controlled flow of liquid melt into the furnace without interrupting the heating from the electric arc, (b) continuously injecting a refining gas into the furnace before the C and/or Si content of the metal bath reaches a predetermined value, until the end of the feeding process, and (c) pursuing the injection of refining gas after the predetermined amount of melt has been fed into the furnace, until the target value for the C and/or Si content of the metal bath has been reached.
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1. Method of producing steel in an electric furnace, comprising the following steps:
charging scrap into an electric furnace; melting the scrap by use of an electric arc; after a part of said scrap is molten, charging molten pig iron into the electric furnace continuously at a rate without interruption of heating by the electric arc providing a metal bath; and injecting refining gas into the furnace continuously at a rate during the charging of the pig iron, wherein the injection starts at a point when a quantity of pig iron is charged into the furnace and before a limit value of carbon and/or silicon concentration in the metal bath is reached, and ends with the end of charging is continued after charging with the planned quantity of pig iron until the target value of the concentration of carbon and/or silicon in the metal bath is reached.
13. Method of producing steel in an electric furnace, comprising the following steps:
providing an electric furnace having an electrode for heating a metal bath with an electric arc and a feed opening relating to the electrode for injection of refining gas; charging scrap into the furnace; melting the scrap by use of the electric arc; after a part of said scrap is molten, charging molten pig iron into the electric furnace continuously at a controlled rate without interruption of the heating by the electric arc; and after a predetermined quantity of pig iron is charged into the furnace, continuously injecting refining gas at an adjustable rate into one of the two quadrants of the furnace which are both opposite to the feed opening, in such a way that a vertical plane containing the direction of injection substantially intersects a vertical plane containing the direction of charging.
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This application is a national stage of PCT/EP97/03005, filed Jun. 10, 1997.
The present invention relates to a method of producing steel in an electric furnace by charging with molten pig iron.
A high proportion of steel scrap is recycled using electric furnaces such as arc furnaces. These furnaces make it possible to melt and re-use the steel scrap treated in this way in order to produce new steel products.
Some of the residual elements contained in the steel scrap such as copper, nickel, etc., cannot be separated from the steel and hence occur in the finished products. This means that the more the steel scrap is subjected to recycle operations, the greater the concentration of these residual elements. These elements cause problems for the production of certain products such as sheet steel, etc.
One way of reducing the concentration of residual elements in the steel obtained from steel scrap and of simultaneously improving the energy efficiency of the electric furnace consists in adding molten pig iron to the electric furnace. Now, because of the fairly high carbon and silicon content of the molten pig iron (typically 4.5% C and 0.6% Si), charging with molten pig iron leads to a considerable increase in the concentration of these elements in the metal bath. The result of this is a longer refining stage in the metal bath in order to reduce the carbon and silicon concentrations in the metal bath to target values, which are generally very low, e.g. for the carbon concentration the target value is between 0.05% and 0.1%.
To achieve this, traditional charging methods, after the charging with pig iron, inject a refining gas, oxygen for example, in order to reduce the carbon and silicon concentrations. With the concentrations of these elements being quite high, the rate at which oxygen is supplied must be moderated in order to avoid the disiliconising and decarburising reactions occurring too violently. In fact, in the presence of high carbon and silicon concentrations, the injected oxygen reacts very violently at the point of impact in the metal bath, leading locally to a very abrupt release of energy and of the reaction gas, such as CO for example. It is obvious that such a violent reaction is accompanied by splashes of steel and pig iron which risk fouling and damaging the cooling panels lining the inside of the furnace. Hence the need to reduce the rate at which oxygen is supplied in order to moderate the dynamics of the refining reaction.
However, due to the limited supply rate of oxygen during the refining, the latter operation takes quite a long time and, above a certain quantity of charged molten pig iron, it forms the limiting factor on the duration of a melting cycle in the furnace. In order to improve the performance of the arc furnace a regards its productivity, i.e. To reduce the duration of a melting cycle, it is therefore essential to reduce the duration of the refining in the metal bath.
The document EP-A-0 630 977 describes a process for the treatment of molten pig iron in a converter equipped with at least one electrode. It relates to a process in which the total amount of pig iron is charged into the converter before the electric arc is activated.
The object of the present invention is to propose a method of producing steel in an electric furnace by charging with molten pig iron which enables the duration of a melting cycle to be reduced.
In conformity with the invention, this objective is achieved by a method for producing steel in an electric furnace, in which a
The assumptions common to both methods of charging with molten pig iron are as follows:
capacity of the furnace: 100 t+20 t in the heel;
charging: 66 t steel scrap+44 t molten pig iron, or 40%;
maximum active furnace power; 60 MW;
carbon concentration in the pig iron 4.5%, in the steel scrap 0.5%.
In this example, only the carbon concentration in the metal bath is considered. The silicon concentration shows a behaviour essentially the same as that of the carbon concentration, except that the silicon oxidises before the carbon. As a result, after having reached the target value of the carbon concentration, the silicon is almost eliminated from the metal bath.
With a view to facilitating the comparison, a start is first made with the same maximum rate of oxygen supply for both methods, a rate which is of the order of 4000 m3/h and which corresponds to a decarburising rate of 60 kg carbon/min.
In the traditional method (FIG. 1), the electric furnace is first run at maximum power to melt a certain quantity of steel scrap. After ten minutes, the electric arc is once again switched off, the furnace cover is removed and the charging with molten pig iron is carried out for 5 minutes. After the charging, the furnace cover is replaced and the arc is switched on again. It should be noted that, because of the time required to open and close the furnace cover, a 5 minute charge means that the furnace is shut down for approximately 10 minutes.
During the charging with pig iron, the mass of molten metal and the carbon concentration in the metal bath increase linearly because of the charging rate, and at the end of the charging, the carbon concentration reaches a value of 3% (the silicon concentration amounts of 0.4%). It is mainly because of these very high silicon and carbon concentrations that the rate of oxygen supply must be limited during the refining to one of 4000 m3/h. During this refining, which begins after the cover has been closed, the carbon concentration is reduced at a substantially linear rate to end up at a value of less than 0.1%.
It should be noted that, because of the quantity of carbon being loaded with the pig iron and steel scrap and because of the limited oxygen supply rate, the decarburisation lasts for 38 minutes in all. Because it begins only 20 minutes after the beginning of the melting cycle, the whole melting cycle lasts for 58 minutes.
In the method according to the invention, illustrated with the help of
Moreover, the decarburisation, which requires 38 minutes for the same rate of 4000 m3/h, begins a little after the beginning of charging before the carbon concentration in the metal bath exceeds a value of 1.5%. Beginning the charging in this way, earlier than in the method of
In an optimised version of the continuous charging with pig iron, it is possible to adapt the rate of charging with pig iron to the maximum supply rate of the oxygen for decarburisation, so as to oxidise the carbon as it is supplied to the metal bath. In this way, it is possible to limit the carbon concentration to values below 0.5%. Because of this low carbon concentration, the maximum oxygen supply rate can be considerably increased so as to increase the decarburisation rate. For a pig iron with a carbon concentration of 4.5% the relation between the pig iron supply rate and the oxygen supply rate is then:
Such a method with early and optimised charging is represented by a broken line in
Roth, Jean-Luc, Denier, Guy, Kremer, André
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