Feeding Blast-Furnaces to Save Coke

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
F. E. Lathe
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
5
File Size:
1346 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1925

Abstract

The method of feeding blast-furnaces to be described below is simply the application of well-known principles, and an attempt to carry that application to its logical conclusion. It does not involve radical changes in equipment, nor does it require unusual skill on the part of the furnaceman. In fact, much of its value lies in its very simplicity. Before giving details of the method it will be well to consider briefly the conditions under which it was used at the Nickelton plant of the British America Nickel Corporation, in the Sudbury district, before that plant closed down. The Sudbury nickel ore consists chiefly of pentlandite, chalcopyrite and pyrrhotite in a gangue of norite or greenstone. The proportions of sulphide and gangue vary widely in different mines, the former constituting about 45 per cent of the total in the British America sorted ore. The gangue is fairly uniform in analysis, carrying about 55 per cent Si02, 18 per cent A120 3, 13 per cent FeO and smaller quantities of CaO, MgO, Na20 and K20. The ore has been frequently described as refractory, a word which seems suitable when one considers the many unsuccessful attempts to smelt it pyritically, as well as the high percentage of coke normally used at all the plants in the district.
Citation

APA: F. E. Lathe  (1925)  Feeding Blast-Furnaces to Save Coke

MLA: F. E. Lathe Feeding Blast-Furnaces to Save Coke. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1925.

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