RI 3711 Increasing Pig Iron Output Through Improved Coke

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
L. D. Schmidt W. C. Schroeder A. C. Fieldner
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
63
File Size:
4589 KB
Publication Date:
May 1, 1943

Abstract

"INTRODUCTION The highly mechanized character of modern warfare makes steel the most vital raw material. The shortage of steel scrap in the United States is forcing the use of increased quantities of pig iron in steel manufacture, so that the rate of pig-iron output will continue to be the controlling factor in steel production. 5/ At the same time, the construction of new blast furnaces is limited both by time and the amount of strategic material available. Under such circumstances, every effort must be made to attain and then maintain maximum pig-iron output from the equipment now in use.When forcing a blast furnace to the ultimate in production the highest standards for quality and uniformity of the coke must be maintained. In view of these facts, the Bureau of Mines, in cooperation with the Office of the Solid Fuels Coordinator for War, is surveying the coke industry to study the various steps in producing coke of higher quality and greater uniformity. 6/ The engineers conducting the survey are visiting key men in coke-oven and blast-furnace organizations to determine, first, the major and most common problems in coke production and use; and, second, the best and quickest method for solving them. Various operators have made good progress in solving individual problems, and a Nation-wide exchange of information among them will make possible widespread adoption of the best practices. It is the purpose, of the survey and reports such as this preliminary one to facilitate such exchange of information. As an outgrowth of the survey, it was soon revealed that many operators could be helped by cooperation with various Government agencies, particularly to procure suitable coals, minor additions to equipment facilities, and tests on certain properties of coal or coke, or specific advice concerning the operation of various types of equipment. The machinery and organization necessary for securing this cooperation have been set up as a part of this work."
Citation

APA: L. D. Schmidt W. C. Schroeder A. C. Fieldner  (1943)  RI 3711 Increasing Pig Iron Output Through Improved Coke

MLA: L. D. Schmidt W. C. Schroeder A. C. Fieldner RI 3711 Increasing Pig Iron Output Through Improved Coke. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1943.

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