The invention is related to a blast furnace for ironmaking production.
In blast furnaces, the conversion of the iron-containing charge (sinter, pellets and iron ore) to cast iron is conventionally carried out by reduction of the iron oxides by a reducing gas (in particular containing CO, H2 and N2), which is formed by combustion of coke at the tuyeres located in the bottom part of the blast furnace where air preheated to a temperature between 1000° C. and 1300° C., called hot blast, is injected.
In order to increase the productivity and reduce the costs, auxiliary fuels are also injected at the tuyeres, such as coal in pulverized form, fuel oil, natural gas or other fuels, combined with oxygen enrichment of the hot blast.
The gas recovered in the upper part of the blast furnace, called top gas, mainly consists of CO, CO2, H2 and N2 in respective proportions of 20-28% v, 17-25% v, 1-5% v and 48-55% v. These gases are generally used in other parts of the plant as fuel and/or in a power plant for electricity production. Blast furnaces are therefore significant producers of CO2.
In view of the considerable increase in the concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere since the beginning of the last century and the subsequent greenhouse effect, it is essential to reduce emissions of CO2 where it is produced in a large quantity, and therefore in particular at blast furnaces.
For this purpose, during the last 50 years, the consumption of reducing agents in the blast furnace has been reduced by half so that, at present, in blast furnaces of conventional configuration, the consumption of carbon has reached a low limit linked to the laws of thermodynamics.
One known way of additionally reducing CO2 emissions is to reintroduce top gases that are purified of CO2 and that are rich in CO into the blast furnace. The use of CO-rich gas as a reducing agent thus makes it possible to reduce the coke consumption and therefore the CO2 emissions. This injection may be done at two levels, at the classical tuyere level, in replacement of hot blast and in the reduction zone of the blast furnace, for example near the shaft-belly corner of the blast furnace and above (lower stack of the blast furnace). This kind of blast furnace is notably known as Top Gas Recycling Blast Furnace (TGRBF).
The second level of injection does not currently exist in blast furnaces, a new level of injection has thus to be created and it must not detrimentally impair the working of the blast furnace. For example, the injection of reducing gas must not disturb the flow of matter inside the blast furnace which is key for the productivity.
There is a need for a blast furnace having a reduced environmental impact with same or improved level of productivity than prior art blast furnaces.
The present invention provides a blast furnace comprising an external and an internal wall having a thickness Tint, an injection device for injecting the reducing gas through an injection outlet in an injection area, wherein the thickness Tint of the internal wall is substantially constant above and below the injection area, the injection outlet is aligned with the internal wall and the injection device is able to inject the reducing gas at a speed inferior to 120 m/s.
The blast furnace of the invention may also comprise the following optional characteristics considered separately or according to all possible technical combinations:
The invention is also related to an ironmaking method performed in a blast furnace according to the previous embodiments wherein the reducing gas contains part of top gas exhausted from the blast furnace during the ironmaking process. Said method may also comprise the following optional characteristics considered separately or according to all possible technical combinations:
Other characteristics and advantages of the invention will emerge clearly from the description of it that is given below by way of an indication and which is in no way restrictive, with reference to the appended figures in which:
Elements in the figures are for illustration only and may not have been drawn to scale.
In a preferred embodiment the reducing gas injection is performed at a height from the classical tuyere level corresponding to 20% and 70% of the working height H of the furnace. In a most preferred embodiment, the reducing gas injection is performed between 30% and 60% of the working height H of the furnace. The working height H of a blast furnace is the distance between the level of injection of hot blast through classical tuyeres and the zero level of charging, as illustrated in
In a preferred embodiment the reducing gas which is introduced into the shaft furnace is top gas exhausted from said furnace which is subjected to gas treatment so as to remove dust and get appropriate composition, pressure and temperature. This reducing gas contains preferentially between 65% v and 75% v of carbon monoxide CO, between 8% v and 15% v of hydrogen H2, between 1% v and 5% v of carbon dioxide CO2, remainder being mainly nitrogen N2.
It is preferentially injected at a temperature comprised between 850 and 1200° C.
The injection is performed through several injection devices 4, provided with injection outlets 6, around the circumference of the furnace, as illustrated in
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/IB2020/058570 | 9/15/2020 | WO |