WO2013084067A2 - A sustainable process for the co-generation of pig iron and electric energy using wood as fuel - Google Patents
A sustainable process for the co-generation of pig iron and electric energy using wood as fuel Download PDFInfo
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- WO2013084067A2 WO2013084067A2 PCT/IB2012/002908 IB2012002908W WO2013084067A2 WO 2013084067 A2 WO2013084067 A2 WO 2013084067A2 IB 2012002908 W IB2012002908 W IB 2012002908W WO 2013084067 A2 WO2013084067 A2 WO 2013084067A2
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- Prior art keywords
- wood
- energy
- smelting
- plant
- iron
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Classifications
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- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
- C21—METALLURGY OF IRON
- C21B—MANUFACTURE OF IRON OR STEEL
- C21B5/00—Making pig-iron in the blast furnace
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- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
- C21—METALLURGY OF IRON
- C21B—MANUFACTURE OF IRON OR STEEL
- C21B5/00—Making pig-iron in the blast furnace
- C21B5/06—Making pig-iron in the blast furnace using top gas in the blast furnace process
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- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
- C21—METALLURGY OF IRON
- C21B—MANUFACTURE OF IRON OR STEEL
- C21B7/00—Blast furnaces
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- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
- C21—METALLURGY OF IRON
- C21B—MANUFACTURE OF IRON OR STEEL
- C21B2100/00—Handling of exhaust gases produced during the manufacture of iron or steel
- C21B2100/60—Process control or energy utilisation in the manufacture of iron or steel
- C21B2100/62—Energy conversion other than by heat exchange, e.g. by use of exhaust gas in energy production
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- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
- C21—METALLURGY OF IRON
- C21B—MANUFACTURE OF IRON OR STEEL
- C21B2100/00—Handling of exhaust gases produced during the manufacture of iron or steel
- C21B2100/60—Process control or energy utilisation in the manufacture of iron or steel
- C21B2100/66—Heat exchange
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- Y—GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
- Y02—TECHNOLOGIES OR APPLICATIONS FOR MITIGATION OR ADAPTATION AGAINST CLIMATE CHANGE
- Y02E—REDUCTION OF GREENHOUSE GAS [GHG] EMISSIONS, RELATED TO ENERGY GENERATION, TRANSMISSION OR DISTRIBUTION
- Y02E50/00—Technologies for the production of fuel of non-fossil origin
- Y02E50/30—Fuel from waste, e.g. synthetic alcohol or diesel
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- Y—GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
- Y02—TECHNOLOGIES OR APPLICATIONS FOR MITIGATION OR ADAPTATION AGAINST CLIMATE CHANGE
- Y02P—CLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION TECHNOLOGIES IN THE PRODUCTION OR PROCESSING OF GOODS
- Y02P10/00—Technologies related to metal processing
- Y02P10/25—Process efficiency
Definitions
- Pig iron is an alloy of Iron and Carbon that is used as raw material for the production of steel. Selected species of wood are transformed into pieces of uniform and predetermined size such as chips (but not only this shape) that are dried to less than 10% Moisture Content and classified by size in a wood drying and classifying line so that only dry coarse particles are charged into the blast furnace. The large amount of water evaporated in the wood drying process may be recycled to reduce the amount of fresh water used in the process. The dry wood is heated inside the furnace with hot spent gas in order to initiate the exothermic carbonization process.
- the burned volatiles produce sufficient heat energy that makes possible the installation of a power generation plant to supply the power requirements of the blast furnace equipment and to produce an excess that can be used in other plant facilities and/or sold to the local power company for distribution.
- the invention increases the material yield of the overall process, improves the quality of the pig iron, reduces operating costs, minimizes CO and CO2 emissions and other pollution problems associated with charcoal production, because the carbonization process takes place inside the furnace where all carbon particles are burned and exhaust gases can be managed at will.
- a cleaner environment reduces health risks, investments in pollution control equipment and maintenance costs.
- the invention can also be applied in other fields where charcoal is the fuel of choice.
- An even further step may be the installation of a downstream steel producing plant that will function not only with the pig iron supplied by the smelting plant but also, in total or in part, with the excess energy produced.
- the essence of the invention is the need to recuperate the energy that is normally lost in the traditional charcoal making process and eliminate the pollution associated with charcoal production and its use.
- This energy, as well as many volatiles and fine charcoal particles that are pollutants, are normally vented and thus lost into the atmosphere.
- the generated energy is sufficient to smelt iron ore and/or iron bearing materials and will produce an excess that can be sold to the grid, or to use it, in other plant activities or as stated above, in a steel producing plant.
- a much greater efficiency will also be obtained from the transportation point of view if the plant is sited near wood-supplying forests.
- Our invention deals with: energy efficiency, energy production, use of a renewable source of energy, pig iron quality, materials efficiency, transportation efficiency, water recuperation, decrease of atmospheric pollutants and environment- friendliness in general (health included) among others.
- the present invention relates to the design of interactions among all of these parts in order to integrate them into one industrial system to obtain the most effective and efficient process for the co-generation of pig iron and electric energy.
- the implementation of this invention will greatly contribute to the solution of the major problems confronting the steel industry and will make viable many pig iron and steel mill projects which are presently at a standstill due to the lack of a domestic source of coal and/or electric energy. Below, under the title: "INVENTION BENEFITS”, we describe these more thoroughly to better define the project, both in its uniqueness and inventive step.
- This patent shows a method of using biomass in a blast furnace, as a substitute for pulverized coal, thus increasing the flammability and heating value of the biomass to about the same level as those of the pulverized coal and capable of using conventional pulverized coal blowing equipment by enhancing the air transportability.
- a method for using biomass in a blast furnace is used, the method being characterized in that: biomass (A) is dried by distillation to manufacture biomass coal (D), the biomass coal (D) is pulverized together with coal (B); and the pulverized powder is blown from a tuyere (15) as an auxiliary reducing material in a blast furnace (14). It is preferably that the biomass (A) is dried by distillation at 450°C or higher for 30 minutes or longer to manufacture the biomass coal.
- this patent while using biomass in the blast furnace, has a completely different purpose: first it is intended to substitute pulverized coal. But regarding the wood used in the blast furnace, the purpose here seems to be to distill such wood and turn it into biomass coal, and then the biomass coal is pulverized together with coal. Wood is either distilled to form coal, and the pulverized powder is blown from a tuyere as an auxiliary reducing material in a blast furnace. Furthermore, it establishes that it is preferable to have the biomass dried by distillation at 450°C or higher for more than 30 minutes. All of these wood conditioning processes take place outside the blast furnace.
- a process for producing molten iron where an inert gas is blown into a molten iron layer in an iron bath type melting furnace through bottom blown tuyeres provided in a hearth bottom thereof to stir the molten iron layer, a carbon material, an additive flux, and solid reduced iron obtained by heating reduction of carbon composite.
- Iron oxide briquettes are charged into the above mentioned furnace, and top blowing of an oxygen- containing gas is performed through a top blown lance provided for the melting furnace, so that the solid reduced iron is melted by combustion heat obtained by combusting the carbon material and/or carbon in molten iron to form iron.
- the carbon material is charged so as to form a carbon material suspension slag layer which is formed of slag generated when the solid reduced iron on the molten iron layer is melted into molten iron and further so as to form a carbon material covering layer made of only the carbon material on the carbon material suspension slag layer, and the molten iron and the slag accumulated in the melting furnace are discharged through a tap-hole provided at a lower portion of a furnace side of the melting furnace.
- This invention relates to the smelting of ore and more particularly a composition and method for the production of metallic iron form iron ore.
- a mass of material formed from a mixture of iron ore particles and particles of a reductant that is either a biomass material in particulate form or a plastic resinous material in particulate form is used.
- the reductant can also be a mixture of biomass material and resin in any proportions.
- It also a new method for smelting iron from its ore which comprises subdividing the ore into particles of a selected size, mixing the subdivided ore particles with particles of a biomass material or particles of a plastic resinous material or with mixtures thereof, forming a mass of the mixture into at least one body with a shape that is suited for smelting in a furnace and exposing it to sufficient heat to bring the iron therein to smelting temperature within the furnace to thereby produce metallic iron directly from the ore.
- This patent attempts to solve the problem of providing a solid fuel for a vertical scrap-melting furnace, which controls the reactivity of charcoal wood and can effectively use the burning energy for melting iron scrap, and to provide a method for operating the vertical scrap-melting furnace.
- the solution provided is to use solid fuel which is improved charcoal wood to be used in the vertical scrap-melting furnace 1 ; and is prepared by coating the surface of charcoal wood with an iron-making dust while using sodium silicate as a binder, so as to control the reactivity of the charcoal wood.
- the operation method includes using the above solid fuel as a main heat source, when producing molten pig iron for steel-making by charging the scrap iron as a main iron source and the charcoal wood as the main heat source into the vertical scrap-melting furnace provided with a blowing tuyere 2 in a lower part of the furnace, from the furnace top, and melting the scrap iron.
- This patent relates to a foundry iron producing process starting form scrap and/or scrap steel. In particular, it is directed to a process of producing foundry iron in a submerged arc furnace using scrap iron or scrap steel as the primary metal sources.
- a submerged arc furnace produces foundry iron from scrap iron and steel sources where little or no slag is produced.
- Scrap iron or steel is fed into the submerged arc furnace with a source of silica and a carbonaceous reducing agent.
- the scrap iron and steel is melted while simultaneously smelting the silica in the presence of the carbonaceous reducing agent.
- the amount of the silica source and carbonaceous reducing agent are added in an amount to selectively control the silicon and carbon content of the resulting foundry iron.
- This patent relates to a submerged arc furnace, not to a blast furnace. Its sources for metal are scrap iron and/or scrap steel. Thus, as in the previous case, it does not need a substantial proportion of reducing of carburizing agents, and its energy source is electricity. It does not consider a substantial production of electric energy.
- iron ore For the direct production of iron and steel, iron ore, together with sufficient wood or peat charcoal for starting the reaction and with scrap steel or pig iron, is heated in a high-pressure gas-fired furnace which is in communication with a chamber containing carbonaceous matter heated by electricity to a temperature sufficient for the reduction of the carbon dioxide into carbon monoxide.
- a method and apparatus for the direct reduction of iron ore are disclosed.
- a mixture of iron ore, solid carbonaceous fuel and, if sulfur is present, calcined limestone or dolomite, are used.
- the carbonaceous material can be cellulosic material (wood waste, paper, particularly municipal trash, garbage, etc.), charcoal, or coal (preferably sub- bituminous coal or lignite).
- the above feed is continuously charged into a gasification and initial reduction zone of a shaft furnace which is partitioned partially from the remainder of the furnace. Oxygen and hot steam are introduced into the upper portion of the said zone. Partial combustion or pyrolisis of the fuel and reaction with steam take place, producing reducing gas which initiates reduction of the iron ore.
- This patent uses many fuels, among them carbonaceous material which may be wood waste; it uses a shaft furnace and a steam upper injector. It does not use wood as its only source for energy, or its only reduction and carburizing agent. Furthermore, it does not consider a surplus energy production of a previous drying of the wood.
- Biofuels i.e. preferably fuel wood and/or peat is in the final reduction brought into direct contact with the iron containing material in its solid state.
- Biofuels have very different properties compared to reducing agents on the basis of fossil fuels primarily coal and develop rapidly a reactive reduction gas at a comparatively low temperature.
- the new raw iron process is carried out with the iron containing material in its solid state of aggregation in different kinds of fluidized bed reactors in different system configurations. Comment - similar comments to the previous ones are valid for this patent. Furthermore, it does not consider cogeneration.
- the blast for a furnace A for reducing iron ores is supplied through tuyeres a from a conduit m leading from a gas producer or "furnace" B containing fuel. Wood, coal, turf, &c. are fed through a funnel E into the upper chamber of this producer above a valve d, and, when carbonized, it is dropped through this valve into the lower chamber. Distillation products of the fuel pass off by pipes g, and are used for heating purposes. Liquid fuel may be supplied by burners to the producer B.
- the blast from hot air chambers is directed by valves to either, or both, the producer B and a furnace D in which the iron is converted into steel.
- Lime, alkalis, iron or manganese ore, and carbon are introduced into the producer B and conduit m to arrest sulphur and carbon.
- the producer B may have several compartments, and the upper chamber may be heated exteriorly or interiorly by the distillation products or the gases escaping from the top of the furnace. Comment - This invention uses wood, coal, turf, carbon, and it even considers liquid fuel. It has two reaction chambers plus the blast furnace D. It does not consider the use of wood as its only fuel, reductant and carburizing agent. It does not even mention the cogeneration of electric energy.
- the basic raw materials charged ("the burden") into the blast furnace for the production of Pig iron are: iron supplied by iron ore, sinter, iron ore pellets or other iron containing materials, fluxes (normally dolomite and/or limestone) to form the slag, a fuel to melt the charge, a reducing agent to remove oxygen from the iron containing material and a carburizing agent to contribute the amount of the element carbon to meet the desired composition of the pig iron.
- Coke is normally the preferred fuel since it is also a reducing and a carburizing agent. Coke is produced with coal from coal mines but, in countries that do not have coal mines, coke is replaced by charcoal, which is produced from wood.
- This invention addresses the problems and solutions of blast furnace operations.
- a blast furnace produces pig iron as part of a steel mill or it can also be an independent facility, such as a foundry.
- the pig iron is produced as a molten or as a solid product cast in molds.
- the elemental analysis of pig iron for steel production is approximately: 3.0% to 4.5% Carbon, 0.20% to 1.5% Manganese, 1.0% to 2.5%% Silicon, under 0.1 % Sulphur, under 1 % Phosphorous and the balance is Iron.
- This invention uses wood as the substitute for charcoal in the production of pig iron in order to: a) Produce high quality pig iron with higher yields and at lower cost b) Generate electric energy in excess of that required for the blast furnace operation, and
- This invention resolves the main problems confronting the steel industry.
- Pig iron Production with Charcoal is produced by heating wood in an atmosphere low in Oxygen. Ideally, wood is supplied from renewable plantations to avoid deforestation. As an example, in Brazil, Eucalyptus is one of the preferred species planted to produce charcoal for the steel industry. The wood is harvested after about seven years of growth and then, it is transferred to large charcoal producing plants or distributed among hundreds of small charcoal producers that, in turn, supply the charcoal to the Blast furnace facility. The charcoal production process generates CO and CO2 gas that, together with the fine particles that are lost to the ground and to the atmosphere produce air and water pollution. Charcoal storage at the charcoal production facility, transportation to the blast furnace, storage and handling at the blast furnace plant create a serious ground and atmospheric pollution problem that eventually may contaminate the water.
- Charcoal pieces tend to be fragile and may collapse due to erosion and to the weight of the charge above them during the descending movement. This creates fine particles that may reduce the permeability of the charge and eventually are blown out of the furnace before they are burned, lowering the material yield of the process and increasing pollution.
- a batch process produces a charcoal of non-uniform size and quality and with a significant process loss because all wood pieces do not have a similar heat treating history.
- part of the wood is burned in order to generate the heat required for the carbonization process thus reducing the wood-to-carbon yield.
- Blast Furnace operation is treated as an independent process that aims, among other objectives, to obtain high energy efficiency by maintaining low temperature of the exhaust gases, at around 100°C.
- the amount of wood charged in the blast furnace is calculated in direct relation to the Fixed Carbon content required by the pig iron process. Let's assume an operation requiring 600 kilos of charcoal with 75% of Fixed Carbon or 450 kilos of Fixed Carbon per ton of pig iron produced. Also assume that the Fixed Carbon content of the wood specie being used is 20% Fixed Carbon at 0% Moisture Content (M.C.). The amount of dry wood required to replace the charcoal charge will be 2,250 kilos
- the operator can now decide the optimum level of Fixed Carbon content based on the cost of energy, wood and pig iron instead of always aiming at the highest level of Fixed Carbon content of the charcoal. In effect, the operator can adjust the particle size, the carbonizing temperature and the duration of the pyrolisis process to affect the Fixed Carbon content of the charcoal produced inside the furnace. See Tables below.
- the process recuperates the energy contained in the wood volatiles which are burnt in a combustion chamber to generate heat for all the processes related to the blast furnace and the excess can be converted into electric energy, as examples, in a standard steam generating plant, or in a gas driven motor facility.
- the thermal energy generated from the combustion of the recuperated wood volatiles is sufficient to heat the "hot blast” at the desired temperature and to create a "hot gas loop" of burnt exhaust gases that is fed at the top of the blast furnace to carbonize the wood at the optimum pre-determined temperature.
- the furnace operates with a "hot top” rather than the traditional "cold top” in order to optimize the larger system of which it is an essential part. This is a distinct feature of our proposal.
- the "hot loop" may be designed to heat gas ducts to avoid tar condensation and reducing maintenance problems.
- the present invention relates to the design of interactions among the above mentioned four industrial processes to integrate them into one system for the co-generation of pig iron and electric energy in the most effective and efficient way (Figs. 1 and 2).
- the objective is to optimize the new system in order to solve the above mentioned problems that confront the steel industry, instead of optimizing each of the four production subsystems independently of each other.
- the heat generated by the combustion of carbon at the bottom of the charge rises through the burden and contributes to maintain, together with the "hot loop", a hot top temperature around the optimum level for that particular wood specie and particle size, in order to produce charcoal with the predetermined optimum Fixed Carbon content.
- This high top temperature promotes the start of reducing reactions at a higher point inside the blast furnace thus increasing furnace efficiency and offsetting the transitory reduction of its working volume caused by the larger wood charge.
- the large amount of wood charged into the furnace acts as a filter that increases the residence time of the fine particles produced during the carbonization process and increases the probability of being burned inside the furnace. Therefore, mainly ashes that are not trapped by the slag will be blown out of the furnace. All of the distilled products (volatiles) from the wood carbonization process are available to be burned outside the blast furnace in order to generate heat energy. Under these operating conditions, burning heat treated wood is more efficient than burning charcoal because the permeability of the charge to the passage of gases is maintained at optimum levels and the process yield is increased.
- Power generation is a function of pig iron production as well as the amount of wood charged in the furnace, its %M.C. and its %fixed carbon content. Therefore, economic business performance will depend, among other items, on the market value of pig iron, wood and electric energy. Tables 7 and 8 provide guidance to an operator in deciding the best combination of these three variables in order to optimize the economic results of the business.
- the pig iron facility may specify species of trees (better one or two species of high energy density wood) from renewable plantations to be purchased as fuel and may be produced at several locations (better within a short distance from the blast furnace site).
- species of trees better one or two species of high energy density wood
- the quality variations among wood shipments of the same species will be minimal and as a consequence, the quality of pig iron will be practically a constant.
- the administrative costs of purchasing from a few wood sources are irrelevant when compared to the purchase of charcoal from hundreds of different small producers who may use many different species of wood thus introducing additional variables to the blast furnace process. Wood processing does not generate pollution whereas the transport, storage and handling of charcoal are highly pollutant.
- the wood drying operation allows the recuperation of the evaporated water since it is trapped in the moist hot air exiting the drying station.
- Wood with 50% MC dried to 10% MC evaporates water which represents approximately 45% of the weight of the moist wood. This is a relevant amount of water that is totally lost in the charcoal production process and can be recuperated adopting the present invention thus minimizing the use of water in the industrial process.
- the co-generation process operates as follows: a) Wood (better high energy density hardwood), with or without bark (better without bark to avoid fines, to have uniform combustion and to avoid refractory deterioration) is sent to the blast furnace site to produce, as an example, a certain particle size such as chips (but not only this shape), to be dried and heat treated at the wood drying station and classified with cyclones. Only coarse dry particles are charged into the blast furnace to be used as the fuel, as the reducing and as the carburizing agent while the fine dry particles are fed into the combustion chamber as additional fuel.
- the amount of wood charged into the blast furnace must be approximately 3.75 (75%/20%) times greater than the amount of charcoal to have similar operating conditions as with charcoal.
- the fixed carbon assures the melting of the charge, the reduction of the iron ore, and the contribution of the element carbon to the composition of the pig iron produced.
- a fraction of the hot gases exiting the combustion chamber is sent to heat exchanger "A” to heat the air coming from heat exchanger "B” to the predetermined temperature of the combustion air ("Hot Blast").
- the balance of hot gases is divided so that a part goes to generate, for example, steam and electric energy and another part becomes the "hot loop" that is fed at the top part of the blast furnace to maintain the ideal carbonization temperature and, in case of need, to heat gas ducts to prevent hydrocarbon condensation.
- the steam generator heats water coming from both heat exchangers "C” and the condenser and produces superheated steam that is sent to the turbine.
- the bulk of the super- heated steam produced by the steam generator is used to generate electric energy in a conventional line.
- a small fraction of the lower pressure super-heated steam from the turbine may be sent to the condenser to heat fresh air that may be sent to the mixing chamber.
- the mixing chambers receives, in addition, in this example, exhaust gases from the bank of cyclones after heat exchanger "B" that contribute gas volume, temperature and a low oxygen composition to minimize fire hazards inside the dryer.
- fresh air may be also sent to the mixing chamber to obtain the required volume of gases at a temperature of about 150 °C to dry and heat treat the wood inside the drying apparatus.
- the water contained in the hot moist air leaving the drying process may be recuperated (not shown in Fig. 1) and sent, in this example, to the steam generator or cooling towers in order to reduce the need for fresh water in the system.
- Hot gases from heat exchanger "B” are passed through a battery of cyclones to remove the "ashes” and then, they are sent to the wood drying station as indicated above and/or vented to the atmosphere and/or sent to a gas processing plant (not shown in fig.1 ).
- the invention generates many benefits for the operation of a blast furnace and some of them solve the main problems confronting the steel industry as shown in the following list:
- Dry wood instead of charcoal, is a better fuel for a blast furnace operation because it minimizes pollution and generates energy in excess of what is required to operate the blast furnace equipment.
- the quality of the pig iron produced is improved since the fuel, the reducing agent and the carburizing agent are basically a constant) Water may be recuperated from the moist hot air as it exits the wood drying station thus diminishing the use of fresh water for the process.
- Atmospheric contamination is reduced to a minimum since practically all emissions are contained inside the furnace and can be managed at will.
- Atmospheric and ground contamination (and eventually, water contamination) caused by transportation is reduced by avoiding the production and handling of charcoal.
- a clean environment reduces health hazards and improves the quality of life of workers and of the surrounding community.
- the real world is the litmus test of theories. There are many iron ore projects around the world that have been stopped due to the lack of a local source of coking coal and/or insufficient supply of electric energy. In this case, we will describe a 3 billion dollars project that was not advanced due to the lack of coking coal and energy in its vicinity. Such a problem would not have existed if our invention had been implemented. Furthermore, our invention would have provided enough energy not only for the iron smelting plant, but also for other plant facilities and/or for sale to the local power company for distribution.
- Iron ore concentrate would then be exported to world markets and the water returned to the mine site. Opposition to the pipeline continues on many fronts and in particular, due to the lack of electric energy to move the iron ore to port, the lack of added value to the iron ore concentrate and the potential environmental damage caused by contaminated water from the pipeline and from open pit mining. As a consequence, the project is at a standstill. Ample information backing our assertions is found in the press and a cursory internet search would immediately produce the desired results.
- This invention would solve all of these problems and the project could move forward as the first step to develop an integrated steel industry in the country.
- a growing forestry industry in Brazil that is capable of supplying wood to an existing paper pulp plant, a second pulp plant that is being built, and to serve the needs of the local wood industry as well as export markets.
- the forested area represents less than 10% of the country's area and there is plenty of room for growth to support a project such as Aratiri.
- Selected species of Eucalyptus or other high energy density species would be acquired locally and/or be planted in the vicinity of the iron ore deposits and processed as indicated in this document to replace imported mineral coal or coke.
- This invention allows the development of a truly sustainable and vertically integrated "green" steel industry in countries having abundant iron ore reserves and a suitable climate and abundant land for the development of a forestry industry with efficient wood species to be used as blast furnace fuel.
- This project could entail, in itself, its own energy plantations development program with consequent development over a wide rural area and with a minimum of environmental impact.
- Wood preparation a) As results from our pilot plant experiments, wood (better high energy density hardwoods) should normally be debarked and sized to improve the efficiency of the combustion, reduction and carburizing processes as well as the life of the blast furnace top refractory lining. Successful melting of a steel products charge, in the prototype built for this purpose, was attained with small as well as large pieces of hardwood (eucalyptus Camaldulensis), up to 10" long, with and without bark. Combustion is a surface process; therefore, it is best to define in laboratory tests the right size of the wood pieces in combination with the iron containing material (lump ore, sinter, iron ore pellets, or others) used in order to enhance the efficiency of the melting process. Small pieces of metallic scrap (turnings, bolts, nuts, short bars, etc.) can also be added to the mineral charge, even though they have a melting temperature which is higher than that of iron ore because the flame temperature of dry wood is capable of melting carbon steels.
- Cyclones will be required to separate the fine particles of dry wood which are sent to the combustion chamber to be used as additional fuel. Only coarse dry wood pieces (better hardwood to support the weight of the burden without collapsing and to occupy less furnace volume) are sent to the blast furnace to preserve optimum permeability conditions to enhance gas passage through the burden to accelerate chemical reactions and increase the efficiency of pig iron production.
- Wood storage and handling equipment will be required to efficiently move the wood from storage through the different stages of the process.
- a mixing chamber that may receive a combination of fresh air, hot air, and exhaust gases in different proportions to deliver drying gases to the dryer in the specified volume, temperature, moisture and oxygen content.
- Energy Generation a) A separate combustion chamber is required to burn the volatiles distilled at the top of the blast furnace.
- a steam generator and a complete energy generation plant with heat exchanger "C" to preheat water to feed the steam generator are required to generate electric energy and distribute it to the plant and to the grid.
- the example includes a condenser that takes a portion of steam from the turbine to preheat fresh air and send it to the mixing chamber as part of the drying gases.
- the example also includes heat exchangers "A" and "B” to preheat the air blast with hot gases from the combustion chamber and the steam generator.
- Water recuperation a) Water can be recuperated by condensing the moist hot air leaving the cyclones of the wood drying station and sending it, as in the example, to the cooling towers or to heat exchanger "C" to reduce the amount of fresh water used in the system. This process is not included in Fig. 1.
- gas handling equipment Numerous fans, dampers and auxiliary equipment will be required to manage the flow of air and gases for the system
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Abstract
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Priority Applications (2)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| BR112014013405A BR112014013405A2 (en) | 2011-12-05 | 2012-11-26 | sustainable process joint casting and power production, sustainable cogeneration process, casting process, cogeneration plant or foundry only plant |
| US14/362,828 US20140306386A1 (en) | 2011-12-05 | 2012-11-26 | Sustainable process for the co-generation of pig iron and electric energy using wood as fuel |
Applications Claiming Priority (2)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| US201161566874P | 2011-12-05 | 2011-12-05 | |
| US61/566,874 | 2011-12-05 |
Publications (2)
| Publication Number | Publication Date |
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| WO2013084067A2 true WO2013084067A2 (en) | 2013-06-13 |
| WO2013084067A3 WO2013084067A3 (en) | 2013-12-27 |
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| Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
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| PCT/IB2012/002908 Ceased WO2013084067A2 (en) | 2011-12-05 | 2012-11-26 | A sustainable process for the co-generation of pig iron and electric energy using wood as fuel |
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| Country | Link |
|---|---|
| US (1) | US20140306386A1 (en) |
| AR (1) | AR089099A1 (en) |
| BR (1) | BR112014013405A2 (en) |
| UY (1) | UY34481A (en) |
| WO (1) | WO2013084067A2 (en) |
Cited By (1)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| WO2019233934A1 (en) * | 2018-06-07 | 2019-12-12 | Thyssenkrupp Ag | Plant complex for producing steel and a method for operating the plant complex |
Families Citing this family (4)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| DE102013009993A1 (en) * | 2013-06-14 | 2014-12-18 | CCP Technology GmbH | Blast furnace and method for operating a blast furnace |
| WO2018151693A1 (en) * | 2017-02-15 | 2018-08-23 | Polkar Orman Ürünleri̇ Ve Enerji̇ A.Ş | Green mdf production technique from sustainable source and energy |
| WO2018229520A1 (en) | 2017-06-16 | 2018-12-20 | Arcelormittal | Operating method of an iron making installation and associated operating installation |
| EP4556549A1 (en) | 2023-11-20 | 2025-05-21 | voestalpine Stahl Donawitz GmbH | Reducing agent in powder form, its use and method for producing said reducing agent from biomass |
Family Cites Families (14)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US580427A (en) * | 1897-04-13 | Hungary | ||
| US788330A (en) * | 1904-04-15 | 1905-04-25 | Thomas J Curran | Apparatus for the treatment of ores. |
| US1755845A (en) * | 1925-06-08 | 1930-04-22 | Frederick T Snyder | Process of and apparatus for smelting ores and recovering by-products therefrom |
| US2301973A (en) * | 1940-10-04 | 1942-11-17 | Lawrence E Riddle | Method of firing blast furnaces |
| US3203684A (en) * | 1960-10-10 | 1965-08-31 | Bailey Inv S Inc | Solid fuel furnace |
| GB1076846A (en) * | 1962-11-16 | 1967-07-26 | Yawata Iron & Steel Co | Process of making up highly reduced baked briquette from finely divided iron ore |
| US3928677A (en) * | 1972-12-08 | 1975-12-23 | Firewood Inc | Process of treating wood |
| JPH09202909A (en) * | 1996-01-26 | 1997-08-05 | Nippon Steel Corp | Smelting reduction equipment and operating method |
| KR20010074502A (en) * | 1998-05-29 | 2001-08-04 | 추후보정 | Sustainable steelmaking by intensified direct reduction of iron oxide and solid waste minimisation |
| US20020148716A1 (en) * | 2001-02-06 | 2002-10-17 | Murcia Philippe R. | Portable kiln for making charcoal from forestry wood waste |
| US7413590B2 (en) * | 2006-01-11 | 2008-08-19 | Heritage Environmental Services, Llc | Use of an induction furnace for the production of iron from ore |
| US7632330B2 (en) * | 2006-03-13 | 2009-12-15 | Michigan Technological University | Production of iron using environmentally-benign renewable or recycled reducing agents |
| CA2687755C (en) * | 2007-09-04 | 2013-03-12 | Cardero Resource Corporation | Direct smelting of zinc bearing compounds to produce metallic zinc |
| AT507525B1 (en) * | 2008-10-23 | 2010-09-15 | Siemens Vai Metals Tech Gmbh | METHOD AND DEVICE FOR OPERATING A MELT REDUCTION PROCESS |
-
2012
- 2012-11-26 WO PCT/IB2012/002908 patent/WO2013084067A2/en not_active Ceased
- 2012-11-26 US US14/362,828 patent/US20140306386A1/en not_active Abandoned
- 2012-11-26 BR BR112014013405A patent/BR112014013405A2/en not_active IP Right Cessation
- 2012-11-30 UY UY0001034481A patent/UY34481A/en not_active Application Discontinuation
- 2012-12-05 AR ARP120104574A patent/AR089099A1/en unknown
Cited By (1)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| WO2019233934A1 (en) * | 2018-06-07 | 2019-12-12 | Thyssenkrupp Ag | Plant complex for producing steel and a method for operating the plant complex |
Also Published As
| Publication number | Publication date |
|---|---|
| AR089099A1 (en) | 2014-07-30 |
| WO2013084067A3 (en) | 2013-12-27 |
| BR112014013405A2 (en) | 2017-06-13 |
| UY34481A (en) | 2013-06-28 |
| US20140306386A1 (en) | 2014-10-16 |
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