This disclosure relates to a method of operating a blast furnace that makes it possible to increase productivity and reduce unit consumption of reducing agent by increasing combustion temperature as a result of injecting a solid reducing agent such as pulverized coal, and a flammable reducing agent such as LNG (liquefied natural gas), from a blast furnace tuyere.
In recent years, global warming due to an increase in the amount of emission of carbon dioxide is a problem. Even in the steel industry, reducing the amount of emitted CO2 is an important issue. Therefore, in recent operations of blast furnaces, low reducing agent rate (low RAR) operations are greatly encouraged. (The reducing agent rate is the total amount of reducing agent injected from a tuyere and coke charged from the top of a furnace, per 1 ton of pig iron that is manufactured). In a blast furnace, coke and pulverized coal injected from a tuyere are primarily used as reducing agents. To achieve a low reducing agent rate and, thus, suppress the amount of emission of carbon dioxide, it is effective to replace, for example, coke with a reducing agent having a high hydrogen content such as waste plastic, LNG, and heavy oil. Japanese Unexamined Patent Application Publication No. 2006-291251 discusses that, when two or more lances that inject reducing agents from a tuyere are used and a flammable reducing agent such as LNG, and a solid reducing agent such as pulverized coal, are injected from different lances, the lances are disposed so that an extension line of a lance that injects the flammable reducing agent and an extension line of a lance that injects the solid reducing agent do not cross each other. According to Japanese Unexamined Patent Application Publication No. 11-241109, when a lance that supplies a reducing gas is disposed in front of, that is, closer to a blast furnace side by 50 to 10 mm in a injecting direction than a lance that supplies a solid reducing agent such as pulverized coal, pressure loss at an end of a tuyere and a blow pipe is reduced so that stability of a furnace condition is increased.
Although, compared to a conventional method of injecting only pulverized coal from a tuyere, the method of operating a blast furnace in Japanese Unexamined Patent Application Publication No. 2006-291251 has the effect of increasing combustion temperature and reducing a unit consumption of reducing agent, it can be further improved. In the method of operating a blast furnace in the Japanese Unexamined Patent Application Publication No. 11-241109, since the reducing gas is not sufficiently preheated/its temperature is not sufficiently raised, the effect of raising the temperature of pulverized coal due to the formation of a combustion field is small, and oxygen at a point where the pulverized coal is ignited and starts burning is consumed, as a result of which the combustion of the pulverized coal may be hindered.
It could therefore be helpful to provide a method of operating a blast furnace that makes it possible to further increase combustion temperature and reduce unit consumption of reducing agents.
We thus provide a method of operating a blast furnace, comprising:
It is desirable that the position of the end of the lance that injects the flammable reducing agent be situated closer to the near side in the injecting direction by 10 to 30 mm than the position of the end of the lance that injects the solid reducing agent.
It is desirable that an outlet flow velocity at the lance that injects the solid reducing agent and an outlet flow velocity at the lance that injects the flammable reducing agent be 20 to 120 m/sec.
It is desirable that the lance that injects the solid reducing agent be a double wall lance, the solid reducing agent be injected from an inner tube of the double wall lance, a combustion-supporting gas be injected from an outer tube of the double wall lance, and the flammable reducing agent be injected from a single wall lance. It is desirable to use oxygen-enriched air having an oxygen concentration of 50% or higher as the combustion-supporting gas.
It is desirable that an outlet flow velocity at the outer tube that injects the combustion-supporting gas of the double wall lance and an outlet flow velocity at the single wall lance that injects the flammable reducing agent be 20 to 120 m/sec.
It is desirable that the solid reducing agent be pulverized coal.
It is desirable that the pulverized coal, serving as the solid reducing agent, be mixed with waste plastic, refuse derived reducing agent, organic resource, or discarded material.
It is desirable that, with a proportion of the pulverized coal, serving as the solid reducing agent, being 80 mass % or higher, the waste plastic, the refuse derived reducing agent, the organic resource, or the discarded material be used to mix with the pulverized coal.
It is desirable that the flammable reducing agent be LNG, shale gas, town gas, hydrogen, converter gas, blast-furnace gas, or coke-oven gas.
As a consequence, when the flows of the flammable reducing agent and the solid reducing agent injected from different lances overlap each other and the flammable reducing agent contacts the combustion-supporting gas and undergoes combustion earlier, explosive diffusion occurs and the temperature of the solid reducing agent is drastically increased. This makes it possible to drastically increase the combustion temperature and, thus, to reduce a unit consumption of the reducing agent.
When the position of an end of a lance that injects a flammable reducing agent is situated closer to the near side in the injecting direction by 10 to 30 mm than the position of an end of a lance that injects a solid reducing agent, the effect of raising the temperature of solid reducing agent particles is increased and combustion temperature is further increased.
When the outlet flow velocity at the lance that injects a solid reducing agent and the outlet flow velocity at the lance that injects a flammable reducing agent are 20 to 120 m/sec, deformation of the lances caused by a rise in temperature can be prevented from occurring.
Next, a method of operating a blast furnace is described with reference to the drawings.
On the basis of such knowledge, a combustion experiment was conducted using a combustion experimental device shown in
In the combustion experiment, two types of lances, a single wall lance and a double wall lance, were used for the lance 4. Diffusibility, combustion state of unburned char, combustion position, and combustion temperature were measured using a two-color thermometer from a viewing window for the following cases. These cases are where only pulverized coal was injected using a single wall lance, the case in which a double wall lance was used to inject pulverized coal from an inner tube of the double wall lance and LNG was injected from an outer tube of the double wall lance, and the case in which LNG was injected from the inner tube of the double wall lance and pulverized coal was injected from the outer tube of the double wall lance. As is well known, a two color thermometer is a radiation thermometer that measures temperature by making use of heat radiation (movement of electromagnetic waves from a high-temperature object to a low-temperature object). The two color thermometer is a wavelength distribution type in which temperature is determined by measuring a change in a wavelength distribution temperature while focusing on a shift of the wavelength distribution towards shorter wavelengths as the temperature increases. Since, in particular, the two color thermometer obtains a wavelength distribution, it measures radiant energy in two wavelengths and measures the temperature from the ratio. The combustion state of unburned char was determined by collecting the unburned char with a probe at a position of 150 mm and 300 mm from an end of the lance 14 at the blow pipe 12 of the experimental furnace 11, performing resin embedding, polishing, and then measuring the void ratio in the char by image analysis.
The pulverized coal contained 77.8% of fixed carbon (FC), 13.6% of volatile matter (VM), and 8.6% of ash. The injecting condition was 29.8 kg/h (equivalent to 100 kg per 1 t of molten iron). The condition for injecting LNG was 3.6 kg/h (equivalent to 5 Nm3/h, 100 kg per 1 t of molten iron). The blowing conditions were: blowing temperature=1200° C., flow rate=300 Nm3/h, flow velocity=70 m/s, and O2 enrichment+5.5 (oxygen concentration of 26.5%, enrichment of 5.5% with respect to oxygen concentration of 21% in air). In a system of transporting powder, that is, pulverized coal with a small amount of gas (high-concentration transport), the solid-gas ratio is 10 to 25 kg/Nm3, whereas, in a system of transporting it with a large amount of gas (low-concentration transport), the solid-gas ratio is 5 to 10 kg/Nm3. Air may be used for the transport gas.
In evaluating the experimental results, evaluations were made for the case in which pulverized coal was injected from an inner tube of a double wall lance and LNG was injected from an outer tube and the case in which LNG was injected from the inner tube of the double wall lance and pulverized coal was injected from the outer tube. The evaluations were performed with reference to the combustion temperature, the combustion position, the combustion state of unburned char, and diffusibility (primarily pulverized coal) in the case in which only pulverized coal was injected from a single tube. In the evaluations, results that were about the same as those of the case in which only pulverized coal was injected are indicated by a triangle, results that showed slight improvements compared to the results of the case in which only pulverized coal was injected are indicated by a circle, and results that showed considerable improvements compared to the results of the case in which only pulverized coal was injected are indicated by a double circle.
In contrast, when LNG is injected from the inner tube of the double wall lance and pulverized coal is injected from the outer tube, improvements are made regarding the combustion temperature and the combustion state of the unburned char and considerable improvements are made regarding diffusibility, whereas there are no changes seen regarding the combustion position. This is thought to be because, although it takes time to diffuse O2 up to the inner-side LNG via an outer-side pulverized coal region, if the inner-side flammable LNG undergoes combustion, explosive diffusion occurs so that the pulverized coal is heated by the combustion heat of LNG and the combustion temperature is also increased, as a result of which the combustion state of the unburnt char is also improved.
From the experimental results, we believe that, if LNG in the air blast is caused to undergo combustion earlier and pulverized coal is injected into the air blast thereafter, combustion efficiency is further increased. Therefore, using the above-described combustion experimental device, the position of an end of a lance that injects LNG was changed in a injecting direction with respect to the position of an end of a lance that injects pulverized coal in a blow pipe at a tuyere, to measure the distance to an ignition point from the end of the lance that injects pulverized coal. The measurement results are shown in
As is clear from
In contrast, as shown in
A double wall lance in which an inner tube and an outer tube are concentrically disposed may be used for the lance that injects pulverized coal. In this case, pulverized coal is injected from the inner tube and oxygen is injected from the outer tube. Since, as mentioned above, oxygen is consumed by the combustion of LNG, if a flow of pulverized coal and a flow of oxygen are injected so that the flow of oxygen is positioned at the outer side of the flow of pulverized coal, it is possible to provide oxygen required for combustion of pulverized coal. The case in which the lance that injects pulverized coal uses a double wall lance is the same as the case in which a single wall lance is used. The distance to the ignition point when, in the injecting direction, the position of the end of the lance that injects LNG is equivalent to the position of the end of the lance that injects pulverized coal or the distance to the ignition point when it is situated closer to the near side in the injecting direction, that is, the ignition time is reduced. We believe this is because, since LNG that is supplied earlier or at the same time tends to undergo combustion than pulverized coal, the LNG undergoes combustion earlier so that combustion heat of the LNG heats the pulverized coal, as a result of which combustion efficiency is increased and combustion temperature is also increased. Therefore, pulverized coal is injected from the inner tube of the double wall lance, oxygen, that is, combustion-supporting gas, is injected from the outer tube, LNG is injected from the single wall lance, and the position of the end of the double wall lance that injects pulverized coal is situated closer to the near side in the injecting direction by more than 0 to 50 mm than the position of the end of the single wall lance that injects LNG. On the basis of how it is expressed in the figure, it is, more desirably, −10 to −30 mm.
As the combustion temperature increases as described above, a lance tends to be exposed to high temperatures. The lance is, for example, a stainless steel tube. Obviously, although the lance is subjected to water cooling that uses what is called a water jacket, it cannot cover locations up to ends of the lance. In particular, we found that end portions of the lance that cannot be reached by water cooling are deformed by heat. When the lance is deformed, that is, is bent, pulverized coal and LNG cannot be injected to a desired portion, and replacement of the lance, which is a consumable, is hindered. In addition, the flow of pulverized coal may change and strike the tuyere, in which case the tuyere may become damaged. When the lance is bent and clogged and, as a result, gas no longer flows through the lance, the lance is eroded, in which case the blow pipe may become damaged. If the lance is deformed or worn, it is no longer possible to ensure a combustion temperature such as that mentioned above and, therefore, a unit consumption of reducing agent also cannot be reduced.
To cool a lance that cannot be water-cooled, the lance can only be cooled by heat dissipation using gas that is supplied to its interior. We believe that, if the lance itself is cooled by heat-dissipation to the gas that flows in the interior thereof, the flow velocity of the gas influences the temperature of the lance. Therefore, we measured the temperature of the surface of a lance by variously changing the flow velocity of the gas injected from the lance. In an experiment, using a double wall lance, O2 was injected from an outer tube of the double wall lance and pulverized coal was injected from an inner tube, and the gas flow velocity was adjusted by changing the supply amount of O2 injected from the outer tube. The O2 may be oxygen-enriched air. Oxygen-enriched air of 2% or more, or, desirably, of 10% or more is used. By using oxygen-enriched air, combustibility of pulverized coal, in addition to cooling, is enhanced. The measurement results are shown in
As the outer tube of the double wall lance, a steel tube, called a 20A schedule 5S tube, was used. As the inner tube of the double wall lance, a steel tube, called a 15A schedule 90 tube, was used, and the temperature of the surface of the lance was measured by variously changing the total flow velocity of N2 and O2 injected from the outer tube. “15A” and “20A” refer to the outside diameters of steel tubes that are specified in JIS G 3459. 15A corresponds to an outside diameter of 21.7 mm, and 20A corresponds to an outside diameter of 27.2 mm. “Schedule” refers to wall thickness of steel tubes specified in JIS G 3459. 20A schedule 5S corresponds to a wall thickness of 1.65 mm, and 15A schedule 90 corresponds to a wall thickness of 3.70 mm. In addition to stainless steel, ordinary steel may be used. The outside diameter of a steel tube in this case is specified in JIS G 3452, and the wall thickness thereof is specified in JIS G 3454.
As shown by the alternate long and two short dashes line in
In contrast, if the outlet flow velocity at the outer tube of the double wall lance exceeds 120 m/sec, this is not practical from the viewpoint of operation costs of a facility. Therefore, the upper limit of the outlet flow velocity at the outer tube of the double wall lance is 120 m/sec. As a result, since the same actions occur at end portions of single wall lances that cannot be similarly reached by water cooling, the outlet flow velocity at the single wall lance is also 20 to 120 m/sec. Since heat load on a single wall lance is less than that on a double wall lance, the outlet flow velocity is set at 20 m/sec or higher as necessary.
Although, in the example, the average particle diameter of pulverized coal is 10 to 100 μm, when combustibility is to be ensured and supply from a lance and suppliability to a lance are considered, it is desirably 20 to 50 μm. When the average particle diameter of pulverized coal is less than 20 μm, the combustibility is excellent. However, the lance tends to be clogged when the pulverized coal is transported (gas is transported). When it exceeds 50 μm, the combustibility of pulverized coal may be reduced.
The solid reducing agent to be injected may primarily contain pulverized coal with waste plastic, refuse derived fuel (RDF), organic resource (biomass), or discarded material mixed therewith. When a mixture is used, it is desirable that the ratio of pulverized coal with respect to the whole solid reducing agent be 80 mass % or higher. That is, the heat quantities resulting from reactions of pulverized coal differ from those resulting from reactions of, for example, waste plastic, refuse derived fuel (RDF), organic resource (biomass), and discarded material. Therefore, if the ratios with which they are used approach each other, combustion tends to be uneven, as a result of which operation tends to become unstable. In addition, compared to pulverized coal, the heat quantities resulting from combustion reactions of, for example, waste plastic, refuse derived fuel (RDF), organic resource (biomass), and discarded material are low. Therefore, when they are injected in large amounts, the substitution efficiency with respect to the solid reducing agent fed from the top of the furnace is reduced. Consequently, it is desirable that the proportion of pulverized coal be 80 mass % or higher.
Waste plastic, refuse derived fuel (RDF), organic resource (biomass), and discarded material may be mixed with pulverized coal as granules that are not more than 6 mm, desirably, not more than 3 mm. The proportion with respect to pulverized coal is such that they are mixable with the pulverized coal by causing them to merge with the pulverized coal pneumatically transported by transport gas. They may be used by being previously mixed with pulverized coal.
Further, although, in the example, a description is given using LNG as a flammable reducing agent, it is also possible to use town gas. As flammable reducing agents other than town gas and LNG, in addition to propane gas and hydrogen, converter gas, blast-furnace gas, and coke-oven gas, generated at steel mills, may be used. Shale gas may be used as an equivalent to LNG. Shale gas is a natural gas extracted from shale layers. Since shale gas is produced at places that are not existing gas fields, shale gas is called unconventional natural gas.
Accordingly, in the method of operating a blast furnace according to the example, when two or more lances that inject reducing agents from the tuyere are used and the position of an end of a lance that injects LNG (flammable reducing agent) is equivalent to or is situated closer to the near side in the injecting direction than the position of an end of a lance that injects pulverized coal (solid reducing agent), the LNG (flammable reducing agent) contacts O2 and undergoes combustion earlier so that explosive diffusion occurs and the temperature of the pulverized coal (solid reducing agent) is drastically increased. This makes it possible to drastically increase the combustion temperature and, thus, to reduce the unit consumption of reducing agent.
When the position of an end of a lance that injects LNG (flammable reducing agent) is situated closer to the near side in the injecting direction by 10 to 30 mm than the position of an end of a lance that injects pulverized coal (solid reducing agent), the effect of raising the temperature of pulverized coal (solid reducing agent particles) is increased and combustion temperature is further increased.
When the outlet flow velocity of gas that is injected from a lance is 20 to 120 m/sec, deformation of the lance caused by a rise in temperature can be prevented from occurring.
Although, in the example, two lances that inject reducing agents are used, any number of lances may be used as long as the number of lances is two or more. In addition, double wall lances may be used for the lances. If double wall lances are used, a combustion-supporting gas such as oxygen, and a flammable reducing agent may be injected. What is required is that the lances be disposed so that an axial line that extends from an end of the lance that injects a flammable reducing agent and is that of this lance and an axial line that extends from an end of the lance that injects a solid reducing agent and is that of this lance cross each other so that main flows of the flammable reducing agent and the solid reducing agent that are injected overlap each other and so that the position of the end of the lance that injects a flammable reducing agent is equivalent to or is situated closer to the near side in the injecting direction than the position of the end of the lance that injects a solid reducing agent.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2011-156956 | Jul 2011 | JP | national |
2011-156959 | Jul 2011 | JP | national |
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PCT/JP2012/004463 | 7/11/2012 | WO | 00 | 1/24/2014 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2013/011661 | 1/24/2013 | WO | A |
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