An Improved Sintering Process To Overcome Environmental Problems In The Sinter Plants - Introduction To Sintering

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Thomas E. Ban
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
23
File Size:
657 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1975

Abstract

The continuous sintering process was invented more than 60 years ago by two metallurgists, Arthur S. Dwight and Richard L. Lloyd, who saw a need for automation in mineral processing. Their specific objective was to beneficiate copper ore by desulfurizing and agglomerating it for copper blast furnace smelting at the Cananea plant in Mexico1. Since their early development the process expanded widely in scope, size, and application. The current worldwide sintering applications exceed 250 million tons per year for agglomerating ores of lead, manganese, zinc, and iron. Sintering is also widely used for production of sintered lightweight aggregate from clays, shales, and fly ash. The continuous sintering process took on wide expansion during the 1960's in foreign countries. Plants for production of approximately 135 million tons per year were built in these countries for sintering iron ore fines as shipped from new iron ore projects of Canada, Liberia, India, Brazil, and Australia. This expansion represented construction of approximately 80 new sintering plants, some as large as 15 thousand tons per day production on a single large sintering machine. Sized self-fluxing or highly fluxed sinter has become recognized as a premium blast furnace charge and has enabled blast furnaces of Japan and Europe to produce upwards of 10,000 tons of metal per day with coke rates less than 1,000 pounds per ton of metal. This coke requirement is practically 50 percent of the ordinary rates achieved during the early 1950's when the peak blast furnace production was less than 113 of the current records.
Citation

APA: Thomas E. Ban  (1975)  An Improved Sintering Process To Overcome Environmental Problems In The Sinter Plants - Introduction To Sintering

MLA: Thomas E. Ban An Improved Sintering Process To Overcome Environmental Problems In The Sinter Plants - Introduction To Sintering. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1975.

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