RI 4569 Relative Reducibility Of Some Iron Oxide Materials

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 25
- File Size:
- 4648 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1949
Abstract
Differences in the reducibility of iron oxide materials have been recognized for a long time. Limonites are deoxidized more readily than hematites, and unaltered magnetites are the most difficult to deoxidize. Sinters are found between hematites and magnetites and vary considerably in reducibility, depending on the sintering practice followed and on the degree of fusion of the product. The increased activity in the beneficiation of taconite recently has made available a new blast-furnace raw material, namely, iron oxide pellets made from magnetic taconite concentrate. Many of the data in this paper apply to these pellets, or glomerules, as they were called when this method of agglomerating iron ores was first considered. To clarify the terms applied to iron oxide materials in this paper, the following definitions are given. Agglomeration is the general term applied to all methods of compacting or consolidating fine iron oxide materials. Sinter is the product from a Dwight-Lloyd or Greenawalt sintering machine. Pellets are formed by balling fine, moist oxide in a rotating drum at room temperature, followed by heating in a shaft furnace to a temperature below that of incipient fusion to develop a permanent bond. Nodules are formed by heating the iron oxide material to incipient fusion in a rotary kiln. Briquets are formed in a mold under pressure, with or without the addition of a binder, and burned to develop a permanent bond.
Citation
APA:
(1949) RI 4569 Relative Reducibility Of Some Iron Oxide MaterialsMLA: RI 4569 Relative Reducibility Of Some Iron Oxide Materials. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1949.