Effect Of Temperature And Basicity Upon Equilibria Of Liquid Steel And Basic Oxidizing Slags

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Eric R. Jette O. B. Ellis John Chipman
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
9
File Size:
388 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1941

Abstract

IN the study of the chemical reactions occurring in the open-hearth furnace, it is frequently assumed that a condition of equilibrium between slag and metal is attained. In order to test this assumption it is necessary to have dependable operating data as well as an exact knowledge of the equilibrium state. Considerable progress has already been made in the study of slag-metal equilibria, notably in the earlier work of Herty1 and of Oberhoffer and Schenck2 and in the more recent researches of Krings and Schackmann3 and of Koerber and Oelsen.4 None of these investigators, however, have employed basic slags comparable to those encountered in basic open-hearth practice, so that up to the present time our only information regarding the equilibria of these slags is based upon observations drawn from steelmaking practice in which there is little assurance that actual equilibrium was attained. The original plan of this investigation was to secure simultaneous slag and metal samples at intervals during the making of an open-hearth heat, recording the heat history in detail and obtaining complete analyses of slag and metal, then to bring these slag samples into equilibrium with liquid iron in the laboratory induction furnace and thus to determine directly whether or not the observed relationships in the open hearth represent conditions approaching equilibrium. This plan was only partly successful. While slags were obtained from the open hearth under satisfactorily recorded conditions and these were remelted in the laboratory under equilibrium conditions, changes in slag composition, which accompanied the remelting operation, were so great that the final slag from the induction furnace bore little resemblance to its open-hearth parent and the direct comparison was therefore abandoned. The results, however, lie within a range of slag composition that is of interest in the making of low-carbon steel. As far as we are aware, they represent the first published laboratory study of equilibria involving slags that contain all the constituents of basic open-hearth slag. EXPERIMENTAL HEATS The first set of measurements on slagmetal equilibrium was made in the Research Laboratories of the American Rolling Mill Co. at Middletown, Ohio. This will be known as series A. The second set was made in the Metallurgical Research Laboratories at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and will be referred to as series B. Series A.-The induction furnace used has been described.5 Approximately I kg. of a special ingot iron containing less than
Citation

APA: Eric R. Jette O. B. Ellis John Chipman  (1941)  Effect Of Temperature And Basicity Upon Equilibria Of Liquid Steel And Basic Oxidizing Slags

MLA: Eric R. Jette O. B. Ellis John Chipman Effect Of Temperature And Basicity Upon Equilibria Of Liquid Steel And Basic Oxidizing Slags. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1941.

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