Method and apparatus for supplying blast to a blast furnace
09868998 ยท 2018-01-16
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
Y02P10/122
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
F27D2017/007
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F27D17/004
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Y02P10/25
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
International classification
Abstract
Apparatus for supplying blast to a blast furnace (1) having a plurality of hot blast stoves (4, 5, 6), each stove including a cold blast inlet, a fuel inlet, an air supply inlet, a hot blast outlet, and a waste gas outlet; a waste heat recovery unit (30) connected to a fuel supply, the stove fuel inlet and the cold blast inlet. The stove waste gas outlets are connected to the cold blast inlets, whereby stove waste gas from one stove (5) is supplied, via the waste heat recovery unit, as cold blast to another stove (4).
Claims
1. An apparatus for supplying blast to a blast furnace, the apparatus comprising: a plurality of hot blast stoves, each stove comprising a cold blast inlet, a fuel inlet, an air supply inlet, a hot blast outlet, and one or more waste gas outlets; a waste heat recovery unit connected to a fuel supply, connected to the stove waste gas outlets, directly connected to the stove fuel inlets and connected to the cold blast inlets; and a compressor connecting the stove waste gas outlets to the cold blast inlets, whereby stove waste gas from one stove is supplied, via the waste heat recovery unit and the compressor, as cold blast to another stove.
2. The apparatus according to claim 1, further comprising a waste gas vent between the waste heat recovery unit and the cold blast inlets.
3. The apparatus according to claim 1, further comprising a waste gas fan between the waste heat recovery unit and the cold blast inlets.
4. The apparatus according to claim 3, wherein the compressor is connected between the waste gas fan and the cold blast inlets.
5. The apparatus according to claim 3, further comprising a supply of oxygen between the waste gas fan and the stove air inlets.
6. A system comprising the apparatus according to claim 1, a blast furnace, and a connection between the blast furnace and the waste heat recovery unit configured to transfer recycled top gas from the blast furnace to the waste heat recovery unit.
7. An apparatus for supplying blast to a blast furnace, the apparatus comprising: a plurality of hot blast stoves, each stove comprising a cold blast inlet, a fuel inlet, an air supply inlet, a hot blast outlet, and one or more waste gas outlets; a waste heat recovery unit connected to a fuel supply, the stove waste gas outlets, the stove fuel inlets and the cold blast inlets; a compressor connecting the stove waste gas outlets to the cold blast inlets, whereby stove waste gas from one stove is supplied, via the waste heat recovery unit and the compressor, as cold blast to another stove; and a CO regenerator located and configured to regenerate CO from CO.sub.2 in the hot blast outlet of one of the stoves before the hot blast enters the blast furnace.
8. The apparatus according to claim 7, wherein the CO regenerator is positioned between the hot blast outlet of the one stove and the blast furnace.
9. A method of supplying blast to a blast furnace, comprising: extracting stove waste gas from a first hot blast stove; cooling the extracted waste gas in a waste heat recovery unit; and pressurising the cooled gas; supplying the cooled pressurised waste gas to a second hot blast stove as cold blast; heating the cold blast in the second stove and supplying the heated cold blast as hot blast to the blast furnace, wherein the waste heat recovery unit is directly connected to fuel inlets of the first hot blast stove and the second hot blast stove.
10. The method according to claim 9, further comprising separating the cooled waste gas into two streams; supplying oxygen to a first of the streams and supplying the oxygenated stream to a first stove air supply inlet as an air supply; and compressing a second one of the streams and supplying the second stream to a second stove as cold blast.
11. The method according to claim 9, further comprising regenerating CO from CO.sub.2 in the hot blast before the hot blast is supplied to and enters the blast furnace.
12. A method of supplying blast to a blast furnace, comprising: extracting stove waste gas from a first hot blast stove; cooling the extracted waste gas in a waste heat recovery unit; pressurising the cooled gas; supplying the cooled pressurised waste gas to a second hot blast stove as cold blast; heating the cold blast in the second stove and supplying the heated cold blast as hot blast to the blast furnace; and supplying cleaned top gas from the blast furnace to the waste heat recovery unit to heat the cleaned top gas in the waste heat recovery unit using the heat from cooling the stove waste gas; and supplying the heated cleaned top gas to a stove as fuel.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) An example of a method and apparatus according to the present invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
DESCRIPTION OF AN EMBODIMENT
(8) The present invention may use the waste gas from the stoves as an alternative source of hot blast for the blast furnace. By replacing traditional blast air with waste gas from the stove combustion process, which is readily available on site, nitrogen content in the top gas is reduced and the carbon dioxide content of the final gas exported from the blast furnace is increased, making it more suitable for carbon capture and storage, (carbon capture and sequestration). Oxygen may be added to the cold blast stream in order to burn coke in the furnace.
(9)
(10) The required materials, including iron ore and coke, are supplied from hoppers 2 in controlled amounts and in order, through weighing devices 3 in a stockhouse (not shown) to a charging mechanism 8 at the top of the furnace, for example via a conveyor belt 9. When a charge of material is released into the furnace 1 it falls downwards and undergoes various chemical reactions before reaching the bottom of the furnace. When the coke meets hot blast air 7 supplied from a position near to the bottom of the furnace, this generates heat. Iron and slag result from the various chemical reactions and are removed from the furnace by tapping the furnace and causing the iron 20 and slag 21 to flow over a dam (not shown) to separate the heavier molten iron from the molten slag and remove them separately for further processing away from the casthouse.
(11) The furnace 1 is provided with a furnace top valve 10 to close the furnace off from the charging mechanism and various offtakes 11 to direct the top gases resulting from the reactions in the furnace to a downcomer 19. Bleeder valves 13 are provided to allow top gases to vent from the blast furnace to protect the furnace top from sudden gas pressure changes. Top gases pass through the downcomer 19, a dustcatcher, or cyclone 14 and a venturi scrubber 15 to clean them of particulate matter. The cleaned blast furnace top gas, which may contain nitrogen, carbon dioxide and carbon monoxide, is used in the stove combustion process, with the combustion air 18 in the stove. The cleaned top gas is returned 22, 17 to the hot blast stoves 5, 6 for combustion in order to heat the stoves. A refractory lining of each stove on gas is heated by the combustion of the cleaned gas. The stove on blast receives air via a cold blast main 12 and this air takes up the heat from the refractory lining to produce hot blast 7, which is fed into the blast furnace 1, near to the bottom. In the process of heating the stoves, during the on gas phase, waste gases are generated. These waste gases are then vented through a chimney stack 34.
(12) In order to reduce the amount of waste gas vented to atmosphere and to use resources more efficiently, one embodiment of the present invention modifies the conventional blast furnace plant in a number of ways, as illustrated in
(13) The hot blast generated in this way contains nitrogen and carbon dioxide and may also be enriched with oxygen, but the blast has a higher carbon dioxide content and lower nitrogen content than using only air blast, so that the carbon dioxide content in the final export gas is higher and therefore more suitable for carbon capture, carbon sequestration. In addition, by starting with some carbon dioxide content in the blast gas, the amount of raw carbon required in the furnace reactions may be reduced. The carbon rich blast gas may also result in a stronger heating gas when the carbon dioxide rich top gas is reused for combustion, so the amount of enrichment gas may be reduced. In some cases, the proportion of hot blast which is created by this mechanism may be controlled and combined with air blast to obtain the desired properties of the blast gas. Some carbon dioxide may be bled off to chimney 34 via valve 32, as described above and existing cracking or carbon capture used to strip out carbon dioxide.
(14) A further embodiment using stove waste gas as blast is illustrated in
(15) A further feature which may be used in combination with the embodiments of the present invention shown in
(16) Coke may still need to be added into the furnace, as may oxygen, so regenerated CO is not a total replacement for coke at the Tuyere level. It may be desirable to control the level of oxygen before the furnace to prevent fires before the furnace. A few percent of CO.sub.2 may be left in the hot blast stream. Other than at start up, as described above, which may be for as much as a week, there is no need for the stoves waste gas 23 to be vented through the chimney 34, saving CO.sub.2 emissions. Although recycling of furnace top gas and regeneration of the CO from the stove waste gas is not 100% efficient, less new carbon is required on the furnace, so the Kg/tonne required in the production of iron is reduced.
(17) As illustrated in
(18) The use of stoves stove waste gas as blast and regeneration of CO are features which can be retro-fitted to sites with existing stoves by adding in waste heat recovery, a fan and a regeneration stage.
(19)
(20) In both figures, 41 is cold blast temperature in ? C.; 42 is stove waste gas temperature in ? C.; 43 is hot blast temperature in ? C.; 44 is blower input temperature; and 45 is blower output temperature. In