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Investigation on the Chemical and Thermal Behavior of Recycling Agglomerates from EAF by-Products.

Authors :
Willms, Thomas
Echterhof, Thomas
Steinlechner, Stefan
Aula, Matti
Abdelrahim, Ahmed
Fabritius, Timo
Mombelli, Davide
Mapelli, Carlo
Preiss, Stefan
Source :
Applied Sciences (2076-3417); 11/15/2020, Vol. 10 Issue 22, p8309, 14p
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Featured Application: The aim of this investigation is a simple and easily adaptable agglomeration process for the different quantities and qualities of EAF by-products. The costs and need of disposal for these by-products will be omitted if internal, on-site recycling is possible. In addition to the blast furnace converter route, electric steel production in the electric arc furnace (EAF) is one of the two main production routes for crude steel. In 2019, the global share of crude steel produced via the electric steel route was 28%, which in numbers is 517 million metric tons of crude steel. The production and processing of steel leads to the output of a variety of by-products, such as dusts, fines, sludges and scales. At the moment, 10–67% of these by-products are landfilled and not recycled. These by-products contain metal oxides and minerals including iron oxide, zinc oxide, magnesia or alumina. Apart from the wasted valuable materials, the restriction of landfill space and stricter environmental laws are additional motivations to avoid landfill. The aim of the Fines2EAF project, funded by the European Research Fund for Coal and Steel, is to develop a low-cost and flexible solution for the recycling of fines, dusts, slags and scales from electric steel production. During this project, an easy, on-site solution for the agglomeration of fine by-products from steel production has to be developed from lab scale to pilot production for industrial tests in steel plants. The solution is based on the stamp press as the central element of the agglomeration process. The stamp press provides the benefit of being easily adapted to different raw materials and different pressing parameters, such as pressing-force and -speed, or mold geometry. Further benefits are that the stamp press process requires less binding material than the pelletizing process, and that no drying process is required as is the case with the pelletizing process. Before advancing the agglomeration of by-products via stamp press to an industrial scale, different material recipes are produced in lab-scale experiments and the finished agglomerates are tested for their use as secondary raw materials in the EAF. Therefore, the tests focus on the chemical and thermal behavior of the agglomerates. Chemical behavior, volatilization and reduction behavior of the agglomerates were investigated by differential thermogravimetric analysis combined with mass spectroscopy (TGA-MS). In addition, two melts with different agglomerates are carried out in a technical-scale electric arc furnace to increase the sample size. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20763417
Volume :
10
Issue :
22
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Applied Sciences (2076-3417)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
147274595
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/app10228309