Numerical Simulation of Combustion Phenomena in a Flash Smelting Furnace Considering Collisions of Concentrate Particles

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Y. Mori T. Miura H. Aoki
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
11
File Size:
814 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2007

Abstract

In a flash smelting furnace, easily combustible concentrate particles excessively oxidized and melt. The excessively oxidized molten particles then collide with less oxidized solid ones to create uniform oxidized molten particles. This collision phenomenon plays a very important role in achieving high smelting performance. The authors developed a mathematical model describing above combustion phenomena. This model incorporated fluid flow, heat and mass transfer, chemical reactions and collisions of concentrate particles. Both gas flow and particle motion were calculated using the Eulerian method. Copper concentrate was assumed to consist of chalcopyrite(CuFeS2). Considered in the concentrate reactions were the decomposition of CuFeS2, and the oxidation of the resulting sulfur(S) and pyrrhotite(FeS) to produce magnetite(Fe30 4) and sulfur dioxide(S02). Moreover a reaction due to concentrate particle collisions, in which Fe304 in the excessively oxidized molten particle reacts with FeS in the less oxidized particle, was also considered. The particle collisions were assumed to occur according to a collision probability rule obtained by computational experiments. Particle growth in diameter was described as a change in the volume fractions of particle phases. When applied to a commercial flash smelting furnace, this model reproduced the particle growth and component transfer as observed in the actual furnace.
Citation

APA: Y. Mori T. Miura H. Aoki  (2007)  Numerical Simulation of Combustion Phenomena in a Flash Smelting Furnace Considering Collisions of Concentrate Particles

MLA: Y. Mori T. Miura H. Aoki Numerical Simulation of Combustion Phenomena in a Flash Smelting Furnace Considering Collisions of Concentrate Particles. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2007.

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