Patent classifications
F27D2009/0062
METHODS FOR MANUFACTURING HIGH HEAT FLUX REGIME COOLERS
High heat flux furnace cooler comprise CuNi pipe coils cast inside pours of high purity (99%-Wt) copper. The depth of front copper cover over the pipe coils in the hot face to manufacture into the casting is derived from a projection of the thermal and stress conditions existing at the cooler's end-of-campaign-life. CFD and/or FEA analyses and modeling is used for a trial-and-error zeroing in of the optimum geometries to employ in the original casting of CuNi pipe coils in high purity copper casting. Individual pipe coil positions to cast inside a copper casting mold are secured with devices that will not melt, cause thermal shear stresses, or be the source of contaminations or copper defects. Pipe bonding to the casting results because the differential coefficient of expansions of the pipes' and the casting's copper alloys involved do not exceed the yield strength of the casting copper during operational thermal cycling.
SHAFT FURNACE CONDITION MONITORING
A shaft furnace, in particular a blast furnace, includes a metal jacket defining the furnace outer wall and a protective layer protecting the inner surface of the outer wall. At least one condition monitoring probe is arranged inside within the protective layer to monitor the latter. The condition monitoring probe is connected to a wireless module arranged outside the outer wall to transmit condition monitoring data. The wireless module is located inside a casing mounted to the outer surface of the metal jacket. The condition monitoring probe includes one or more conductive loops positioned at predetermined depths below the front face of the cooling plate body, or of the refractory lining, so that wear of the body, resp. refractory, can be detected by a change of an electrical characteristic of the loop(s) due to abrasion.
Shaft furnace condition monitoring
A shaft furnace, in particular a blast furnace, includes a metal jacket defining the furnace outer wall and a protective layer protecting the inner surface of the outer wall. At least one condition monitoring probe is arranged inside within the protective layer to monitor the latter. The condition monitoring probe is connected to a wireless module arranged outside the outer wall to transmit condition monitoring data. The wireless module is located inside a casing mounted to the outer surface of the metal jacket. The condition monitoring probe includes one or more conductive loops positioned at predetermined depths below the front face of the cooling plate body, or of the refractory lining, so that wear of the body, resp. refractory, can be detected by a change of an electrical characteristic of the loop(s) due to abrasion.
METALLURGICAL FURNACE
The invention relates to a metallurgic furnace, in particular a metallurgic furnace for receiving a molten metal.
Stave cooler
A stave cooler for a furnace that always includes a liquid coolant piping cast inside. A stave cooler body includes a hot face and a backside and a liquid coolant piping cast inside between the hot face and the backside. A single steel collar on the backside of each stave is engineered to support the entire weight of the stave cooler. Any and every external connection of the liquid coolant piping are collected and routed together through the single steel collar. These stave coolers are limited to those mountable only from the inside of steel containment shells provided with a matching penetration. The single steel collar and a cover plate accommodate and provide a gas-tight seal by a continuous welding of the single steel collar to each steel containment shell.
Water pipe collection box and stave cooler support
A water pipe collection box and stave support for a cast copper stave cooler body panel that has disposed within it a circuit of water pipes with a number of loops each with an inlet end and an outlet end, and all such inlet ends and outlet ends clustered together in a single group that exits a backside of the copper stave cooler body panel. A cast copper stave cooler body panel that has disposed within a circuit of water pipes with a number of loops each with an inlet end and an outlet end, and all such inlet ends and outlet ends clustered together in a single group that exits a backside of the copper stave cooler body panel. A blast furnace having stave cooler body panels variously profiled to fit inside, and where each has disposed within it a circuit of water pipes with a number of loops each with an inlet end and an outlet end, and all such inlet ends and outlet ends are clustered together in a single group that exits a backside of each copper stave cooler body panel.
STAVE COOLER
A stave cooler for a furnace that always includes a liquid coolant piping cast inside. A stave cooler body includes a hot face and a backside and a liquid coolant piping cast inside between the hot face and the backside. A single steel collar on the backside of each stave is engineered to support the entire weight of the stave cooler. Any and every external connection of the liquid coolant piping are collected and routed together through the single steel collar. These stave coolers are limited to those mountable only from the inside of steel containment shells provided with a matching penetration. The single steel collar and a cover plate accommodate and provide a gas-tight seal by a continuous welding of the single steel collar to each steel containment shell.
SHAFT FURNACE CONDITION MONITORING
A shaft furnace, in particular a blast furnace, includes a metal jacket defining the furnace outer wall and a protective layer protecting the inner surface of the outer wall. At least one condition monitoring probe is arranged inside within the protective layer to monitor the latter. The condition monitoring probe is connected to a wireless module arranged outside the outer wall to transmit condition monitoring data. The wireless module is located inside a casing mounted to the outer surface of the metal jacket. The condition monitoring probe includes one or more conductive loops positioned at predetermined depths below the front face of the cooling plate body, or of the refractory lining, so that wear of the body, resp. refractory, can be detected by a change of an electrical characteristic of the loop(s) due to abrasion.
Method for stabilizing thermal conduction of block coolers with cast-in coolant pipes
Computer modelling methods and foundry methods for copper-nickel coolant pipes cast-in-copper coolers are combined. First, Computational Fluid Dynamics and/or Finite Element Analysis steps verify geometric computer aided design models and materials choices, point-by-point heat distribution, and heat flows. And second, casting steps to commit an acceptable last thickness iteration of a thermal buffer part in simulation to casting it in a foundry. In the foundry, casting conditions are empirically developed to yield all but slight, unclustered bonding imperfections at a concentric diffusion interface of the pipes and surrounding solidified casting that improve the thermal conductivity of furnace-block coolers that incorporate coolant pipes. The combined methods verify in simulation that operational thermal stresses at the pipe-casting interface stay in-bounds of material stress limits, and that the peak temperatures on the hot face do not rise above 450 C.
WATER PIPE COLLECTION BOX AND STAVE COOLER SUPPORT
A water pipe collection box and stave support for a cast copper stave cooler body panel that has disposed within it a circuit of water pipes with a number of loops each with an inlet end and an outlet end, and all such inlet ends and outlet ends clustered together in a single group that exits a backside of the copper stave cooler body panel. A cast copper stave cooler body panel that has disposed within a circuit of water pipes with a number of loops each with an inlet end and an outlet end, and all such inlet ends and outlet ends clustered together in a single group that exits a backside of the copper stave cooler body panel. A blast furnace having stave cooler body panels variously profiled to fit inside, and where each has disposed within it a circuit of water pipes with a number of loops each with an inlet end and an outlet end, and all such inlet ends and outlet ends are clustered together in a single group that exits a backside of each copper stave cooler body panel.