Dolomite in the Steel Industry

- Organization:
- The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 30
- File Size:
- 938 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1951
Abstract
The use of dolomite as a refractory began in England about 1870 when the basic Bessemer process for the removal of phosphorus from steel was developed by Thomas and Gilchrist.Knowledge of dolomite as a refractory in this country goes back to the early part of this century, at the time when the Hoskins Brothers took over the Lithgow Iron and Steel Works from W. Sandford. The practice then was toimport burned dolomite in casks from England. It is reported that much of the material was powdered when received, but was still serviceable. The earliest. used sources of local stone were in the Bathurst and Mudgee areas of New South Wales, and these dolomites were first used raw. Later, dolomite was burned in cupolas at Havilah near Mudgee, coke being obtained from the South Coast of New South Wales. This plant supplied burned dolomite to the Lithgow steel plant, later to the Australil1n Iron and Steel plant at Port Kembla, and also to the electric steel furnaces at Newcastle, Sydney and Melbourne until the plant was closed down in 1946.The Broken Hill Proprietary Company first obtained its dolomite from George's Plains near Bathurst (this was, really a magnesium limestone) and later from Mount Knowles, a deposit near Mudgee, which was eventually taken over by the CO:plpany in 1918. In 1936 Australian.Iron and Steel acquired from the Southern Portland Cement Company a deposit at Mount Fairy in the Federal...
Citation
APA:
(1951) Dolomite in the Steel IndustryMLA: Dolomite in the Steel Industry. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1951.