The Sintering Of Fine Iron-Bearing Materials By The The Sintering Of Fine Iron-Bearing Materials By The Dwight & Lloyd Process.

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 20
- File Size:
- 1398 KB
- Publication Date:
- May 1, 1912
Abstract
(New York Meeting, February, 1912). IN a paper before the Institute at Wilkes-Barre, Pa., June 1911,1 Mr. James Gayley discussed the application of this process to iron-bearing materials. The same author2 described the results of operations at the plant at Birdsboro, Pa. The purpose of the present paper is to present further discussion of some technical details involved in the operation of this plant, and of the theoretical and practical relations of this product to blast-furnace practice. Since Oct. 1, 1911, the Birdsboro plant has been in operation at the blast-furnace of the E. & G. Brooke Iron Co. The results have been highly satisfactory, although the material treated, being chiefly the flue-dust currently made by the furnace or taken from the accumulated stock-pile, was excessively high, and yet not uniform, in carbon, so that the desirable control or regularity of the amount of fuel in the mixture treated could not be maintained. Nothing could more forcibly demonstrate the flexibility of the process than the fact that, under these conditions, the sinter produced was, in all cases, of excellent quality. The Dwight & Lloyd process, as such, and its present highly-developed mechanical appliances were described by Mr. Gayley in the paper above mentioned. While the repetition of some particulars will be unavoidable in this paper, it will be confined to features bearing upon the metallurgical principles involved. According to the principle of the process, the finely-divided iron-bearing material to be sintered is intimately mixed with
Citation
APA:
(1912) The Sintering Of Fine Iron-Bearing Materials By The The Sintering Of Fine Iron-Bearing Materials By The Dwight & Lloyd Process.MLA: The Sintering Of Fine Iron-Bearing Materials By The The Sintering Of Fine Iron-Bearing Materials By The Dwight & Lloyd Process.. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1912.