METHOD OF SMELTING STEEL AND METHOD OF PRODUCING STEEL
20260117332 ยท 2026-04-30
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
International classification
Abstract
A method is provided of smelting low-nitrogen steel in an electric arc furnace by suppressing entry of nitrogen from a furnace atmosphere into molten steel during smelting of ferrous raw material. The method comprises a step of melting ferrous raw material to smelt molten steel using an electric arc furnace, in which a nitrogen-free gas is supplied around a circumferential surface of an electrode of the electric furnace and from a base end toward a tip end of the electrode. Further, a method is provided of producing steel in which the molten steel is subjected to composition adjustment then cast.
Claims
1. A method of smelting steel comprising a step of melting a ferrous raw material using an electric arc furnace to smelt molten steel, wherein the step comprises supplying a nitrogen-free gas around a circumferential surface of an electrode of the electric arc furnace and from a base end toward a tip end of the electrode.
2. The method of smelting steel according to claim 1, wherein part or all of an outer circumferential surface of an arc at a tip of the electrode is covered by the gas, due to the supplying of the gas.
3. The method of smelting steel according to claim 1, wherein the supplying of the gas is stopped after the electrode is immersed in slag that forms on a surface of the molten steel.
4. The method of smelting steel according to claim 3, wherein a time point at which the electrode is immersed in the slag is detected via an optical camera inserted into the electric furnace.
5. The method of smelting steel according to claim 1, wherein the gas is at least one selected from the group consisting of inert gas, hydrogen, and hydrocarbon.
6. The method of smelting steel according to claim 1, wherein an oxygen gas corresponding to an increase in a carbon concentration in the molten steel is blown into the molten steel by a separate system from a system supplying the gas, in a case that the gas contains carbon.
7. A method of producing steel comprising adjusting a composition of the molten steel smelted by the method according to claim 1, and then casting the molten steel.
8. The method of smelting steel according to claim 2, wherein the supplying of the gas is stopped after the electrode is immersed in slag that forms on a surface of the molten steel.
9. The method of smelting steel according to claim 8, wherein a time point at which the electrode is immersed in the slag is detected via an optical camera inserted into the electric furnace.
10. The method of smelting steel according to claim 2, wherein the gas is at least one selected from the group consisting of inert gas, hydrogen, and hydrocarbon.
11. The method of smelting steel according to claim 2, wherein an oxygen gas corresponding to an increase in a carbon concentration in the molten steel is blown into the molten steel by a separate system from a system supplying the gas, in a case that the gas contains carbon.
12. A method of producing steel comprising adjusting a composition of the molten steel smelted by the method according to claim 2, and then casting the molten steel.
13. The method of smelting steel according to claim 3, wherein the gas is at least one selected from the group consisting of inert gas, hydrogen, and hydrocarbon.
14. The method of smelting steel according to claim 3, wherein an oxygen gas corresponding to an increase in a carbon concentration in the molten steel is blown into the molten steel by a separate system from a system supplying the gas, in a case that the gas contains carbon.
15. A method of producing steel comprising adjusting a composition of the molten steel smelted by the method according to claim 3, and then casting the molten steel.
16. The method of smelting steel according to claim 4, wherein the gas is at least one selected from the group consisting of inert gas, hydrogen, and hydrocarbon.
17. The method of smelting steel according to claim 4, wherein an oxygen gas corresponding to an increase in a carbon concentration in the molten steel is blown into the molten steel by a separate system from a system supplying the gas, in a case that the gas contains carbon.
18. A method of producing steel comprising adjusting a composition of the molten steel smelted by the method according to claim 4, and then casting the molten steel.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0030] In the accompanying drawings:
[0031]
[0032]
[0033]
[0034]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0035] A method of smelting steel according to the present embodiments is described below, with reference to the drawings. First, an electric arc furnace apparatus used to implement the method of smelting low-nitrogen steel according to the present embodiments is described, followed by a description of the method of smelting low-nitrogen steel according to the present embodiments.
[Electric Arc Furnace Apparatus]
[0036]
[0037] In
[0038] The electrode 3, or more than one of the electrodes 3, is normally disposed in the furnace body 1 so as to be movable in the vertical direction. By generating an arc discharge from the tip of the electrode 3 to heat the inside of the furnace, ferrous raw material charged in the furnace can be melted. Here, the tip of the electrode 3 is rounded in the drawing, but there are other shapes of electrode tip, such as a flat tip, and shape may also change depending on use conditions.
[0039] Further, the nozzle 6 for gas blowing, as illustrated in
[0040] When the tip of the electrode 3 is rounded, number of nozzles, and horizontal position and vertical position relative to the electrode 3 of the nozzle 6 for gas blowing are preferably determined so that the circumference of the electrode 3 is covered with a nitrogen-free gas (hereinafter also referred to simply as gas), preferably all around, at a line segment connecting the shoulder of the electrode tip, that is, the a-a line in
[0041] Further, the nozzle 6 for gas blowing is preferably configured to be movable up and down independently of the electrode 3 while disposed alongside the electrode 3. This configuration makes it possible to vary the position of the nozzle 6 for gas blowing relative to the electrode 3, which more effectively cuts off contact between the arc generated from the electrode 3 and the furnace atmosphere.
[0042] The drawings are schematic and may differ from actual implementation. Further, the present embodiments are examples of devices and methods for embodying the technical concept of the present disclosure, and configurations are not limited to the above and below descriptions. That is, various changes may be made to the technical concept of the present disclosure within the technical scope described in the claims.
[Method of Smelting Low-Nitrogen Steel]
[0043] The following is a description of a preferred example of the present embodiments of the method according to the present disclosure.
[0044] First, ferrous raw material is charged into an electric arc furnace. At this time, the inside of the furnace body 1 may be empty or may contain molten steel remaining from the previous processing. Here, in addition to iron scrap, reduced iron, hot metal, and pig iron may be used as ferrous raw material.
[0045] The electrode 3 and the nozzle 6 for gas blowing are then inserted into the furnace body 1, the electrode 3 is energized, and the gas is blown downward from the nozzle 6 for gas blowing to start the melting process. As indicated under 2) above, nitrogen in the furnace atmosphere is atomized when coming into contact with the arc generated by the electrode 3, resulting in increased nitrification in the molten steel. It is therefore essential to decrease the contact region between the arc and the furnace atmosphere to suppress nitrification in the molten steel.
[0046] Therefore, gas is blown between the arc and the furnace atmosphere to cut off contact between the two. When even a portion of the region that blocks contact between the arc and the furnace atmosphere exists, the effect of suppressing nitrification of molten steel can be expected. For example, as mentioned above, when gas is blown from the nozzles 8 or 9 for gas blowing disposed around the electrode 3 so as to surround the outer circumferential portion of the arc, it may not be possible to cover all of the arc outer circumferential surface with gas when the number of nozzles is small, when the nozzles are partially clogged, or similar. However, even in such cases, a portion of the outer circumferential surface of the arc is covered with gas, which provides an effect of suppressing nitrification compared to a case where no gas is blown. Of course, the more the contact blocking region is increased, the greater the effect of suppressing nitrification, and the effect of suppressing nitrification is maximized when the entire outer circumferential surface of the arc is covered by gas and all contact with the furnace atmosphere is cut off.
[0047] The region where the arc contacts the furnace atmosphere is below the tip of the electrode 3. Therefore, when the gas supply is realized so that part or all of the outer circumferential surface of the arc at the tip of the electrode 3 is covered, the gas will spread downward, and therefore the effects described above of contact blocking and suppressing nitrification are not decreased. Here, all of the outer circumferential surface of the arc at the tip of the electrode 3 is covered means that the entire circumference of the arc generated from the tip of the electrode 3 is surrounded by gas, as illustrated in the side view of the electrode 3 in
[0048] Here, the gas blowing supply is preferably carried out according to the following conditions. It is preferable to ensure that the average gas flow rate at the tip position of the electrode 3 is 5 m/s or more. When the average gas flow rate at the electrode tip position is less than 5 m/s, the gas may not reach the electrode tip due to conditions of molten steel, slag, and furnace atmosphere in the electric furnace, and the effect of cutting off the arc from the furnace atmosphere may be decreased.
[0049] The gas blown from the nozzle 6 for gas blowing is not particularly limited as long as the gas does not contain nitrogen. Examples include inert gases such as noble gases (argon, helium, etc.) and CO.sub.2, hydrogen, oxygen, CO, hydrocarbon gases (propane, methane, etc.), and the like. Considering effects on the furnace body 1 or the electrode 3 and reactions with the molten steel 4 or the slag 5, the gas is preferably mixed gas of one or more selected from the group consisting of inert gas, hydrogen gas, and hydrocarbon gas. In particular, hydrogen gas and hydrocarbon gases, like nitrogen as described under 2), may atomize in the arc and dissolve in the molten steel to a concentration higher than thermodynamic equilibrium, and the hydrogen concentration outside the arc may decrease to thermodynamic equilibrium, that is, dehydrogenation may occur. Dehydrogenation is accompanied by the generation of hydrogen gas bubbles in the molten steel, and therefore the hydrogen gas bubbles are also expected to have a denitrification effect.
[0050] Typically, the height of the electrode 3 can be changed according to the melt state of ferrous raw material, in which case it is preferable to raise or lower the nozzle 6 for gas blowing as well.
[0051] As the melting of the ferrous raw material progresses, the slag 5 is formed on the molten steel 4 by flux added to adjust the gangue component in the ferrous raw material and P, S, and other components in the molten steel 4. In order to stabilize the current flow, it is effective to cover the tip of the electrode 3 with the slag 5, so it is better to actively immerse the electrode 3 in the slag 5. Once the electrode 3 is immersed in the slag 5, the arc is no longer in direct contact with the furnace atmosphere, and therefore the gas supply from the nozzle 6 for gas blowing may be stopped. Although timing may be possible to determine to some extent by operator experience, for more accurate determination, the camera 7 for in-furnace observation is preferably disposed in the furnace body 1 for direct observation of the inside of the furnace to determine whether the electrode 3 is immersed in the slag 5. The camera 7 for in-furnace observation is not particularly limited as long as the camera 7 is one typically used for observing the inside of a furnace, and an optical camera is preferred.
[0052] After gas blowing is stopped, the nozzle for blowing gas is preferably raised to the furnace lid 2 to prevent blockage of the nozzle 6 for gas blowing due to splashing of molten iron and the like, and gas is preferably blown at a flow rate sufficient to prevent blockage.
[0053] When a gas containing carbon, such as a hydrocarbon, is used as the gas to be blown from the nozzle 6 for gas blowing, the carbon dissolves in the molten steel and the carbon concentration increases. At this time, oxygen gas from a different lance or nozzle (not illustrated) than the nozzle 6 for gas blowing disposed in the furnace body 1 is preferably injected or blown into the molten steel in an amount required to decarburize the increased carbon concentration described above (oxygen supply). The supply of oxygen gas can also be expected to promote denitrification with CO gas bubbles generated by the decarburization reaction.
[Method of Producing Steel]
[0054] The molten steel obtained by the method of smelting steel is subjected to casting after composition adjustment as required. Here, although the molten steel smelted by the method of smelting low-nitrogen steel according to the embodiment described above is a low-nitrogen molten steel, subsequent composition adjustment of the molten steel and casting of the molten steel are not particularly restricted and may be carried out according to conventional methods. Further, the method of producing steel according to the present embodiments uses low-nitrogen molten steel as steel casting material, and therefore can produce low-nitrogen steel.
[0055] That is, by using molten steel smelted by the method of smelting steel according to the present embodiments as a material for a steel product, a low-nitrogen steel product is obtainable. From this technical point of view, the applications of steel products made by the method of producing steel according to the present embodiments are not limited and can be appropriately used widely. Among the applications, particularly suitable are steel sheets produced by rolling and steel products produced from such steel sheets.
[0056] Although description has been provided with reference to the embodiments, the present disclosure is not limited to the embodiments described. Configurations and details of the present disclosure may be modified in various ways that are understandable to those skilled in the art and fall within the technical scope of the present disclosure.
Examples
[0057] Molten steel was produced by melting ferrous scrap in an electric arc furnace that had the following specifications. The specifications of the electric furnace are listed below. [0058] Furnace body: furnace diameter 7 m, furnace height 5 m [0059] Electrical power: 50 Hz AC [0060] Transformer capacity: 75 MVA [0061] Electrode diameter: 0.64 m [0062] Number of electrodes: 3
[0063] 130 tonnes of ferrous scrap and 25 kg/t of slag forming agent were charged into the electric furnace, and an arc was generated by the electrodes (upper graphite electrodes) to heat and melt the ferrous scrap. As the ferrous scrap, a composition of steel scrap: 90 mass % and cold iron: 10 mass % was used.
[0064] Ar was blown and supplied through the gas blowing nozzle from the start of the ferrous scrap melting (Examples 1 to 4). The inner diameter of the gas blowing nozzle was 3 mm, and the number of nozzles and the nozzle height (distance between nozzle tip and electrode tip) were set to the conditions listed in Table 1.
[0065] Further, the ratio of the region where the gas contacts the electrode to the total circumference of the electrode was calculated assuming that the gas blown and supplied spreads from the nozzle openings at a spray angle of 12. The ratio is listed in Table 1 as the coverage R of the outer circumferential surface of the arc at the electrode tip by the blown gas. The coverage can be calculated by the following Expressions (1) to (3). Expression (1) is an expression for determining the gas spread radius r according to
[0066] However, in Expression (3), R=1 when n4360. Further, r: gas spread radius, h: nozzle height, D: electrode diameter, n: number of nozzles, R: coverage.
[0067] During operation, an optical camera was used as an in-furnace observation camera to monitor the melt state, and upon confirmation that slag had formed after the scrap melted down, the electrode was lowered to be immersed in the slag. Further, a condition was implemented so that the gas supply was stopped after the electrode was immersed in the slag (Example 5). Further, conditions were implemented so that the blowing gas was hydrogen or propane gas (Examples 6 and 7).
[0068] Further, when propane gas was blown in, the yield of carbon in the molten steel when propane gas was blown in under the same conditions was confirmed in advance, and a condition was implemented in which oxygen gas in an amount sufficient to decarburize the retained carbon was injected from a separate lance (Example 8). In Table 1, such a condition is indicated as Yes under Oxygen supply.
[0069] Further, as a comparison, the test was also conducted under a condition without gas blowing (Comparative Example).
[0070] After all ferrous raw material was melted, current passage was continued until the temperature of the molten steel reached the target temperature. After the end of current passage, a sample of molten iron was taken and analyzed for nitrogen concentration in the steel. The nitrogen concentration in the steel after the end of current passage is listed in Table 1.
[0071] As indicated in Table 1, gas blowing to cut off the arc from the furnace atmosphere during electric furnace current passage resulted in suppression of an increase of nitrogen in the molten steel.
TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Molten steel Gas blowing Current temperature Number of Nozzle passage after current Flow nozzles height Coverage time passage rate n h R (min) ( C.) Gas (Nm.sup.3/min) (No.) (m) (%) Example 1 58 1630 Ar 3 6 0.8 50 Example 2 60 1634 Ar 3 6 1.0 63 Example 3 60 1634 Ar 4 8 1.0 84 Example 4 62 1631 Ar 4 8 1.3 100 Example 5 62 1627 Ar 4 8 1.3 100 Example 6 62 1626 Hydrogen 4 8 1.3 100 Example 7 60 1621 Propane 4 8 1.3 100 Example 8 65 1645 Propane 4 8 1.3 100 Comparative 59 1633 No Example Oxygen supply Concentration after Flow processing Gas blowing rate [C] [N] Blowing period (Nm.sup.3) (mass %) (mass ppm) Example 1 During current passage No 0.0510 38 Example 2 During current passage No 0.0500 36 Example 3 During current passage No 0.0500 35 Example 4 During current passage No 0.0470 29 Example 5 Up to electrode immersion No 0.0480 31 Example 6 During current passage No 0.0450 27 Example 7 During current passage No 0.1650 25 Example 8 Up to electrode immersion Yes 240 0.0440 22 Comparative No 0.0470 46 Example
INDUSTRIAL APPLICABILITY
[0072] According to the method of smelting low-nitrogen steel of the present disclosure, in an electric arc furnace, the arc is cut off from the furnace atmosphere with gas, thereby suppressing absorption of nitrogen into molten steel. The method of producing low-nitrogen steel can suppress nitrification of molten steel during electric arc furnace energization, and is therefore extremely applicable to industries such as steelmaking.
REFERENCE SIGNS LIST
[0073] 1 furnace body [0074] 2 furnace lid [0075] 3 electrode [0076] 4 molten steel [0077] 5 slag [0078] 6 nozzle for gas blowing [0079] 7 camera for in-furnace observation [0080] 8 nozzles for gas blowing in the form of narrow tubes [0081] 9 nozzle for gas blowing that is cylindrical