The invention is directed to an arrangement for maintaining the warmth of slabs which exit from a continuous casting installation and which can be transported on a roller table for further processing.
One of the greatest cost-driving factors in steel mills and continuous casting installations is the energy that is used for the most part to generate heat.
The great amount of energy used for melting is lost to the steel in the continuous casting installation for the sake of bringing about solidification. Following this process, an equally energy-intensive reheating is necessary in order to reach the required input temperature for the hot rolling process.
It is known from DE 43 33 717 to provide heatable warming hoods for the transporting of coils, these heatable warming hoods being connected to transverse transporting vehicles so as to form a constructional unit.
Further, it is also known from EP 648 552 B1 to provide movable conveyers for slabs comprising a movable bottom part with rollers arranged therein on which the slabs lie and an insulated hood which can be placed upon the bottom part.
It is the object of the invention to keep the slab as hot as possible by optimizing the balance of energy of the process between the continuous casting installation and the hot rolling mill so that the average caloric temperature is as high as possible. In so doing, as much heat as possible should be preserved up to the insertion of the slab into the rolling mill in order to minimize costs for reheating.
The above-stated object is met according to the invention by an arrangement for maintaining the warmth of slabs which exit from a continuous casting installation and which can be transported on a roller table for further processing. This arrangement is characterized by a supporting part for receiving a slab, which supporting part can be placed on the roller table and transported thereon, and an insulating box which can be placed upon the supporting part and which substantially encloses the latter.
The strand exits continuously from a continuous casting installation in the shape of a slab, for example, and is then separated into individual slabs or slab segments. The transporting is generally carried out on a roller table directly adjoining the roller guide of the strand guide. This also applies to the further transport when, for example, inline rolling is carried out downstream. The arrangement according to the invention is useful for preventing interim temperature losses.
According to the invention, either only two insulating boxes per strand are required for normal operation or, when using three insulating boxes per strand, for example, there is at least one “parking position” in which an insulating box allows another insulating box to pass.
Alternatively, it may be very advantageous to use insulating boxes directly as an intermediate storage provided the buffer period does not exceed several hours.
It is conceivable to provide the insulating boxes additionally with heating arrangements. This heating arrangement may be a burner or an electric resistance heater.
Another possibility consists in induction heating or intermediate insertion in a roller hearth furnace which assumes the task of preserving and homogenizing the temperature.
Transporting can also be carried out in this case with the insulating boxes which are charged immediately following the continuous casting installation and discharged immediately before the induction heating/roller hearth furnace combination.
Further, a transporting of packages, that is, stacked slabs, is also possible with the insulating boxes. An advantage of transporting in packages consists in that the furnace of the rolling mill can always be charged with a plurality of products simultaneously. The furnace need only be opened once for a plurality of products and need not be opened separately for each product so that appreciably less heat is lost.
The invention will be described more fully in the following with reference to the drawings.
The arrangement according to the invention for maintaining the warmth of slabs which exit from a continuous casting installation comprises an insulated supporting part 2 which receives a slab 3 and can be conveyed on a roller table 1 and an insulating box 4 in which the supporting part can be inserted. For this purpose, the insulating box is tunnel-shaped, that is, open in longitudinal direction and, therefore, in direction of the roller table, while the other side is closed. Accordingly, the supporting part 2 which has at one end a terminating wall whose dimensions correspond to the clearance opening of the insulating box can be inserted into the insulating box and closes it from this side.
In the embodiment form shown in the drawings, a lifting device is provided for the insulating box in order to allow the supporting part to be pushed or inserted into the insulating box. This lifting device comprises lifting cylinders 5 arranged alongside of and parallel to the roller table. The insulating box can be lifted slightly above the height of the roller table by these lifting cylinders 5 so that the supporting part can be conveyed farther on the roller table until it is situated below the insulating box.
The entire arrangement comprising the supporting part with the slab or slabs located thereon and the insulating box can then be conveyed farther on the roller table to the next work station.
The drawings do not show the construction of the insulating box which can be provided with heating devices and/or cooling devices.
During this placement, the supporting part lies on a roller table which can be raised and lowered so that a plurality of slabs can also be conveyed one on top of the other. This is shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2006 041 150.1 | Sep 2006 | DE | national |
10 2007 016 100.1 | Mar 2007 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/DE2007/001462 | 8/13/2007 | WO | 00 | 4/7/2009 |