Atlantic City Paper - The Use of High Percentages of Mesabi Iron-Ores in Coke Blast-Furnace Practice (Discussion, p. 977)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
W. A. Barrows
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
7
File Size:
270 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1905

Abstract

Mesabi ores differ from all other soft hematite-ores of the Lake Superior region in having but little or 110 binder. When exposed to heat, instead of baking into lumpy masses as do the Gogebic, Menominee or Marquette fine ores, they are changed to a sandy powder; and the finer particles, having little or no tendency to adhere together in the furnace, are carried by the ascending gas-currents into the down-comers and gas-mains forming flue-dust of a fine gritty nature. The term " finer particles " is used in this paper to mean ore fine enough to pass through a sieve with 80 meshes to the linear inch. Ore coarser than this is not likely to be carried over except in case of a slip, or an explosion in the furnace. The higher the percentage of fine particles in an ore from this range, therefore, the greater the amount of dust likely to result from its use. This statement, however, does not hold good in case of fine ores from the other ranges, and ores from the older ranges, carrying as high as 20 per cent. of material fine enough to pass through a 100-mesh sieve, have been in successful use for years, and have left no records of their causing trouble in furnace-practice by dust, slips, or explosions, so common since the introduction of Mesabi ores. Mesabi ores containing less than 12 per cent. of material which will pass through an 80-mesh sieve are considered of good structure; from 12 to 18 per cent., fair structure; and more than 18 per cent., poor structure. It was at first supposed that all these fine particles were carried over when the charge was lowered into the furnace, or during a slip, but the presence of partly reduced iron oxides in the flue-dust, even when no slip has occurred, proves that a part of the dust at least must have been low enough in the
Citation

APA: W. A. Barrows  (1905)  Atlantic City Paper - The Use of High Percentages of Mesabi Iron-Ores in Coke Blast-Furnace Practice (Discussion, p. 977)

MLA: W. A. Barrows Atlantic City Paper - The Use of High Percentages of Mesabi Iron-Ores in Coke Blast-Furnace Practice (Discussion, p. 977). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1905.

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