RI 3790 Sponge Iron - A Progress Report

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
R. S. Dean
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
32
File Size:
1985 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1945

Abstract

"INTRODUCTION The idea of direct steel is by no means new. Although the work of Bessemer and Siemens provided simple and effective moans for converting pig iron into steel and established the ""blast-furnace route"" as the almost universal method of producing steel, metallurgists have not ceased to dream of direct steel. By direct steel is meant any process by which iron oxide in ore is reduced to Iron of the same or greater purity than the final steel or wrought iron. That is, carbon or alloying elements would be added as needed, not reduced in unwanted quantities into the iron and then removed more or completely by refining (Bessemer or open hearth) only to be readded in desired quantities.In general, direct-steel processes are ""sponge-iron"" processes, because reducing iron oxide without simultaneously alloying the iron with carbon, phcophorus, sulfur, and silicon present in ore and fuel succeeds only if the temperature is below the melting point of the iron. Such solid iron formed by reduction of iron oxide at relatively low temperature is sponge iron, which is butlery and porous. When the reduction proceeds at the higher temperature at which the particles of metal can weld together or finally even melt to yield pellets or balls that do not have the porosity and low-density characteristic of sponge iron, the product might preferably be called simply ""direct iron."""
Citation

APA: R. S. Dean  (1945)  RI 3790 Sponge Iron - A Progress Report

MLA: R. S. Dean RI 3790 Sponge Iron - A Progress Report. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1945.

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