Relating Reported Carbon Dioxide Emissions to Iron and Steelmaking Process Details

The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
Chris P. Pistorius
Organization:
The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
Pages:
8
File Size:
174 KB
Publication Date:

Abstract

Over the past few decades the carbon intensity of ironmaking and steelmaking has been reduced considerably through improved efficiency in blast furnace ironmaking, partial replacement of coke with less carbon-intensive fuels, and increased use of scrap and direct-reduced iron in steelmaking. To evaluate possible further reductions in carbon intensity accurate process information is needed. A preliminary test of the fidelity of publicly reported data as a source of process information is reported here. The sources are industry roundups of electric furnace furnace steelmaking and blast furnace ironmaking (published by the Association for Iron and Steelmaking Technology), and data recorded by the Environmental Protection Agency under the US Greenhouse Gas Reporting Program. From a comparison for an integrated steelmaking plant and an electric furnace furnace plant, it appears that the values from the two data sources are consistent. The comparison does rely on process details such as the quantitative relationship between injected oxygen and carbon emissions in electric furnace steelmaking.
Citation

APA: Chris P. Pistorius  Relating Reported Carbon Dioxide Emissions to Iron and Steelmaking Process Details

MLA: Chris P. Pistorius Relating Reported Carbon Dioxide Emissions to Iron and Steelmaking Process Details. The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society,

Export
Purchase this Article for $25.00

Create a Guest account to purchase this file
- or -
Log in to your existing Guest account