Use of Oxyfuel Based In-Plant Recycling Of Dust and Sludge

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Joachim von Scheele
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
15
File Size:
2909 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2004

Abstract

An oxyfuel-based technology - OXYFINES - has been introduced for in-plant recycling. It provides fines, dust, sludge (without any drying-step) and other by-products arising in the steel and metal producing industries to be recycled directly back into existing processes or a separate unit on-site. Results from full-scale installation (20,000 tpy) for dust treatment, full-scale and pilot-scale trials with dry and wet materials in the steel and ferroalloy industries are presented. Processing rates at 3.5 t/h have been demonstrated. The product is agglomerates or lumpy pieces, the latter if the product has passed an all-liquid stage and thereafter been crushed. The technology does not only provide a solution to the problems connected to dust and sludge generated in metal production. It also turns these materials into a low-cost raw material useful for the production in question, thus replacing part of the raw material input in electric arc furnaces, blast furnaces, etc. Elements harmful to re-use of the processed dust or sludge, e.g., zinc and alkaline components in steel production, are removed as secondary dust, and material yield of main components for re-use is very high, about 98%. The paper reviews the concept, the results obtained and its status; its use for sludge recycling is emphasized.
Citation

APA: Joachim von Scheele  (2004)  Use of Oxyfuel Based In-Plant Recycling Of Dust and Sludge

MLA: Joachim von Scheele Use of Oxyfuel Based In-Plant Recycling Of Dust and Sludge. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2004.

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