RI 3819 Reduction of Iron Ore in Clay & Steel Containers

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
J. P. Walker
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
32
File Size:
1851 KB
Publication Date:
Sep 1, 1945

Abstract

"INTRODUCTION Sponge iron has been made commercially since 1912 at a Swedish ceramic plant; and the product, known as Swedish disk-type nagger sponge iron, has an excellent reputation as a superior furnace feed wherever high-grade steels are made.The general procedure for making brickyard sponge iron was described frequent in Swedish technical journals before 1932 and at that time consisted in filling clay refractory containers, called saggers, with iron ore plus the necessary quantity of solid reducing agent and then firing in an ordinary ceramic kiln. Two types of sponge iron were made in this way: (1) An inferior, high-sulfur product obtained by mixing the ore and solid reducing agent; and (2) a high-grade, low-sulfur product made by filling the sagger with alternete layers of unmixed ore and reducer, yielding sintered disks of metallic iron particles.Swedish disk-type sponge iron of interest to the steel industry because it has a very low sulfur content, even when made by the use of low-grade, high-sulfur coals for reducing and firing. The Swedish product also contains little siliceous gangue residue and is almost phos¬phorus-free. To those features must be added the high metallic-iron content -90 to 96 percent - and freedom from even small amounts of the metals that are undesirable in steel making.The details essential for successful operation of this procedure are not known, especially as regards improvements said to have been made since 19;2. The Bureau of Mines therefore decided to determine some of these missing details, and this report records the results of the first set of experiments on the manufacture of brickyard or sagger sponge iron."
Citation

APA: J. P. Walker  (1945)  RI 3819 Reduction of Iron Ore in Clay & Steel Containers

MLA: J. P. Walker RI 3819 Reduction of Iron Ore in Clay & Steel Containers. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1945.

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