The invention relates to a furnace slag door, comprising at least one panel which is moveable, in a mounted state of the slag door, from an opened position, in which the panel is remote from a corresponding slag discharge opening within the furnace wall to a closed position, in which the panel covers at least part of said slag discharge opening. The invention further comprises a corresponding furnace equipped with such slag door. The furnace is, in particular, an electric arc furnace (EAF) but may be as well of another type.
As far the following description refers to any directions such as top, bottom, left, right, outside, inside etc. these refer to a regular melting position of a furnace equipped with a slag door (as shown in the figures).
The closed position describes a position of the respective panel, when said panel covers at least part of the corresponding slag discharge opening. In the opened position the panel is remote from this opening, so that slag and/or any other materials may be drawn off the furnace interior via said opening.
A slag door of the generic type mentioned is known i.a. from WO 2010/094584 A1. The slag door comprises two panels, an upper panel and a lower panel. While the upper panel is only forwarded from its opened to its closed position the lower panel may be further pushed through the slag discharge opening into the furnace and pulled back again. This is achieved by support means for the lower panel which follow a lever parallelogram. This additional movement of the lower panel allows slag scraping along corresponding surface areas next to the slag discharge opening. Because of the hinged movement of the lower panel its scraping path is limited with respect to its length and effectiveness.
It is an object of the invention to provide a slag door and a corresponding furnace presenting improvements in closing, opening and use of said slag door for scraping any slag or other materials around a corresponding slag discharge opening.
The invention is based on the proposal to provide a slag door which allows an optimized scraping of slag and other materials which was deposited within the slag discharge opening and any areas in the vicinity of this opening. This is achieved by a telescopic slide-out structure which allows a corresponding panel (especially the lower panel of a multi part slag door) to be moved easily, along a long distance and alternating from its closed position into the furnace interior and back again, thereby contacting the corresponding bottom part of the opening and/or any furnace surfaces placed next to it.
This telescopic arrangement further allows to retract the respective panel not only up to its position closing the slag discharge opening but to a place (position) further ahead, that means to a position, where at least the lower edge of the panel being arranged outside the slag discharge opening, thereby allowing further contact of at least the lower edge of the panel to scrape any slag and/or other materials along corresponding surface sections in front of the opening.
At the same time the alternative movement by said telescopic slide-out allows reproducible and quick actions to free all areas in front, along and behind said slag discharge opening from any materials, mainly slag or scrap.
In its most general embodiment the invention provides a furnace slag door, comprising:
Depending on the size of the slag discharge opening it may be advantageous to provide a multi-part slag door.
According to one embodiment such a multi panel slag door may comprise:
The movement (path) of said upper panel may by vertically or inclined with respect to a vertical plane, or a combination of a vertical and/or inclined and/or horizontal movement. It is possible to move the upper panel only along an inclined moving path from the opened into the closed position, for example along corresponding rails.
According to one embodiment the slag door provides a lower panel which, in the mounted state of the slag door, is moveable along a path, inclined with respect to the vertical plane, from the opened position to the closed position. In this case the lower panel follows only one movement direction. Again, similar to the movement path of the upper panel, this movement of the lower panel may as well be a combination of a vertical and/or inclined and/or horizontal movement, the latter especially for movement of the lower panel toward the slag discharge opening or into the slag discharge opening. The same is true if the slag door comprises only one panel.
An inclined path for movement of the lower panel may be parallel to the path along which the upper panel (and/or any other panel) being moved between the positions mentioned. This design is especially advantageous when the respective panels are commonly moved between their respective closed and opened positions (strokes). This common move may be achieved by a mechanical link between the respective supports of the panels. The panels may be guided along rail-like guiding means (arranged with a distance to each other at lateral ends of the panels) between these positions. Connecting bars and/or supports may serve to arrange the respective panel(s).
Corresponding movement direction and guiding means may be used in an embodiment with only one panel.
The guidance (movement) between closed and opened position of at least one panel may be achieved by hydraulic actuator means, especially hydraulic piston-/cylinder combinations.
A (further) hydraulic actuator may also be used to push the panel, used for scraping purposes, from its closed position into the furnace interior and/or to pull it back again, including further pulling/pushing into a position outside the slag discharge opening. In other words: The telescopic slide-out, to which this panel is mounted, may be moved as well by hydraulic actuator means. This additional movement is typically independent from any movement of any further panel between respective closed and opened positions. This additional movement is responsible for the scraping action which is carried out by this panel.
The scraping action may be further improved by additional scraping means at the circumference of the panel, especially along its lower edge, next to the surface to be cleaned. This scraping means may be discrete teeth, pins or the like as well as traverse bars with a corresponding profiled scraping edge.
The telescopic slide-out arrangement may be realized in different embodiments allowing the corresponding panel to be moved, when it reached its position right in front or within the slag discharge opening (the closed position), in a general horizontal movement into the furnace interior and back again. The term “horizontal movement” includes all patterns by which the panel is directed from a position in front of the slag discharge opening or a position within the slag discharge opening into a position behind the slag discharge opening and vice versa. Insofar it may be designed in such a way that a corresponding longitudinal movement of the panel may be effected along at least one of the following patterns: wavelike, saw tooth like, involute like, zigzag, linear, dredger like. These non-linear movements are all summerized under the term “horizontal movement”.
Such “linear and/or non-linear” movement has the advantage that the lower panel may be used effectively to scrape all slag and/or other solid and viscous materials deposited along the corresponding motion (way of movement) of the panel. It may further follow any irregularities of the surface of such deposits and provide a “cleaned” surface after it has been moved at least once in the way described. It becomes clear from the task of this scraping panel (besides its function to close the slag discharge opening in its closed position) that an alternating movement improves this function, i.e. that the lower panel may be moved in an alternating fashion several times between a forwarded and a retracted position. During its way into the furnace and back again its may be agitated by only one pattern, for example the wave-like pattern or by several patterns of the type mentioned.
Insofar the movement of the lower panel may be characterized by at least two subsequent patterns.
The telescopic suspension of the scraping panel may be realized, according to one embodiment of the invention, in a part of a panel support which part extends mostly horizontally (when the slag door is in its mounted state). This part can comprise a guide rail, hollow bar or the like, cooperating with a corresponding piston, bar or the like, to which the panel is mounted (at its end) and along which a corresponding actuator, for example a piston-/cylinder means and corresponding bearings is arranged to move the associated panel in the desired way. In order to achieve the respective pattern the support to which the panel is mounted, may be guided along corresponding guiding means, for example corresponding slits (for example wavelike slits) in the side walls of said bar/rail. The panel can (further) be attached to the piston of a piston/cylinder unit by a cardan joint or similar connecting means allowing the desired non-linear movement.
The term telescopic slide-out further includes other constructions/layouts and/or other actuator means by which a corresponding “horizontal” and alternating movement of the scraping panel may be achieved. The telescopic slide-outs are generally independent from any other movement means for said panels, especially those for transferring the panels from their opened position into their closed position.
While the scraping panel is moved from its opened position (so called “opening stroke”) to its closed position (so called “home position”) in a linear way its scraping movement typically follows any of the patterns mentioned.
The telescopic slide out allows to move the corresponding panel in a predetermined fashion during its scraping action and thus to adapt the panel movement to any individual construction, design and local situation. It further allows to predetermine any desired shape of a final surface of those areas, along which the scraping panel has been moved.
In a two panel embodiment the upper panel may be moved by the same means from its opened into its closed position as used for the lower panel. Both may be moved commonly or independently from each other.
The invention further provides a furnace, especially an EAF, comprising
At least one panel may be dimensioned such that a gap remains between an outer periphery of the respective panel and a corresponding outer frame portion of the discharge opening when the respective panel is in its “closed position”, also called “home position”. That means that the panel(s) not necessarily close the slag discharge opening hermetically, although it (they) may do so. Any clearance between the respective slag door panel and the corresponding frame of the slag discharge opening (the tunnel-like opening in the furnace wall) does not influence the function of the EAF negatively as the metal melt is always arranged in the lower shell of the furnace, i.e. below the bottom of the slag discharge opening. In contrary: Any clearance secures an unrestricted (unhindered) movability of the slag door.
The upper panel of the multi-part slag door may be arranged, in its closed position, such that its lower edge lies within the tunnel space defined by the slag discharge opening, while its upper edge lies outside of said tunnel space, i.e. the upper panel is inclined, for example by up to 15 degrees with respect to an imaginary vertical plane, but a vertical arrangement is as well possible (meaning 0 degrees with respect to said imaginary vertical plane).
Further features of the invention may be apparent from the sub-claims and the other applications documents, including the figures and corresponding explanations.
In the attached drawings the following is shown schematically:
a: a 3-dimensional view of a slag discharge area of an electric arc furnace and its associated slag door in its opened position
b: a side view according to
All Figures show a partly view onto that part of an electric arc furnace 10, comprising a so called slag discharge opening 12, which may be closed (partly or completely) by a corresponding slag door 20.
They further show part of a lower shell 14 and an upper shell 16 of said electric arc furnace. While the lower shell 14 is lined with a refractory material (either bricks or a monolithic lining) the upper shell 16 is characterized by cooling panels. As said refractory lining of that part of the furnace, comprising a metal melt, and the upwardly extending cooling panels (which serve as a barrier against slag and onto which a solidified slag layer is built up during processing of the furnace) belong to common prior art these features are not further shown and described.
The same is true with respect to any corresponding opening in the furnace to charge metal and the design of the slag discharge opening 12, forming a tunnel-like opening within the upper shell 16. Said discharge opening 12 is limited by a bottom portion 12b, provided by the upper end of the lower shell 14 and/or a corresponding metal/slag layer formed thereon, two frame portions 12l,r extending perpendicularly from said bottom portion 12b and a top portion 12t opposite to bottom portion 12b.
During melting, i.e. especially when scrap is melted in the electric arc furnace 10, slag door 20 predominantly is arranged in a position called “home position” shown in
Slag door 20 comprises an upper panel 22 (made of water cooled pipe sections 22p) and a lower panel 24. Upper panel 22 is mounted by levers 22s to a rod 26, extending between supports 28a,28b guided along rail-like guiding bars 30a, 30b, which bars 30a,30b are inclined (arrow I in
A further bracket 34 serves to pivotally fasten a cylinder 38 of a hydraulic piston-/cylinder unit, the piston of which is marked by numeral 38b and pivotally secured at its upper free end to an arm 40, which carries, at its opposite end, support 28a (fixed to support 28a).
A first part 41 of a support 42 for lower panel 24 is pivotally fastened onto said rod 26 (between levers 22s) and extends downwardly with a part 42a into a second part 42b of said support 42, which second part 42b extends mostly horizontally. This lower end 42a of part 41 is slidably guided within said second part 42b, which provides a U like cross section with an upper opening of smaller width than in an associated inner section. The lower end 42a of upper part 41 is shaped correspondingly to allow the desired alternating sliding movement. The lower panel 24 is mounted at the inner free end of part 42b (
This movement of lower panel 24 serves to scrape any slag, metal/slag mixtures and/or other substances from the corresponding inner wall portions of said electric arc furnace 10 and/or the tunnel area, formed by the slag discharge opening 12 and/or any surfaces in front of the slag discharge opening 12.
As these formations of mostly solid material have in most cases an irregular shape the invention provides for a lower panel 24 able to move not only in a substantially linear direction into the furnace 10 and back again but along totally different patterns.
For this purpose the guiding means for scraping movement of the lower panel 24 are adapted accordingly as described in the general part above.
According to one embodiment the said hydraulic actuator for the lower panel may be hingedly secured by a cardan joint, which allows lower panel 24 to follow any wavelike or other non-linear movement on its way into furnace 10 and back again.
In other words: lower panel 24 is part of a telescopic slide-out, allowing to push to lower panel 24 through the slag discharge opening 12 into the associated electric arc furnace 10 an pull it back again up to a position outside slag discharge opening 12. On its way lower panel 24 may contact the corresponding bottom part 12b of slag discharge opening 12 and/or any associated surface areas on both sides of this opening 12.
For scrapping purposes the invention provides additional scraping means especially at the lower edge of lower panel 24, i.a. shaped as teeth, shaped as a comb, a rake, a brush or the like, symbolized by reference numeral 24s.
The motion of the scraping panel (in the embodiment according to the Figures: the lower panel 24) may be supported by a further movement of the guiding means to which the upper panel 22 and/or the first part 42a of the lower panel are mounted, for example a tilting movement (arrow T in
As may be seen from
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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11 001 332.3 | Feb 2011 | EP | regional |