The present invention generally relates to the field of cooling equipment for metallurgical furnaces such as blast furnaces. More precisely, the present invention concerns a method of manufacturing a stave cooler and a stave cooler manufactured with this method.
Stave coolers, also called “staves”, have been used in blast furnaces for decades. They are arranged inside the furnace between the furnace shell and the refractory lining for cooling the latter and for protecting the former from the considerable process temperatures inside the furnace. In a very common design, they consist of a thick massive metal slab with several internal coolant channels extending through the slab and being integral with the slab. Connection pipe-ends to the internal channels are arranged on the rear side of the stave and lead out in a sealed manner through the furnace shell. The cooling channels of a plurality of staves are connected in series to a cooling water circuit of the furnace by means of these connection pipe-ends which lead out of the furnace shell.
Until some years ago, most staves in blast furnaces were cast iron staves. There are different methods for manufacturing such cast iron staves. According to a first method, a mould for casting the massive stave body is provided with one or more sand cores for forming the internal coolant channels. Liquid cast iron is then poured into the mould. This method has the disadvantage that the mould sand is difficult to remove from the cooling channels and/or that the cooling channel in the cast iron is often not properly formed or not tight enough. In order to avoid the aforementioned disadvantages, it has been suggested to arrange preformed steel pipes in the mould and to pour the liquid cast iron around the steel pipes. However, these cast iron staves with steel pipes have not proved satisfactory. Indeed, due to carbon diffusion from the cast iron into the steel pipes during the pouring, the latter become brittle and may crack. To avoid carbon diffusion, the pipes are usually coated. Such a coating considerably reduces the heat transfer between the stave body and the pipes.
As an alternative to cast iron staves, copper staves have been developed.
Different production methods have been proposed for copper stave coolers. Initially, an attempt was made to produce copper staves also by casting in moulds, the internal coolant channels being formed by a sand core in the casting mould. However, this method has not proved to be effective in practice, because the cast copper plate bodies often have cavities and porosities, which have an extremely negative effect on the life of the plate bodies. The mould sand is difficult to remove from the channels and the channel is often not properly formed.
A cooling plate made from a forged or rolled copper slab is known from DE 2 907 511. The coolant channels are blind holes introduced by deep drilling the rolled copper slab. The blind bores are sealed off by welding in plugs. Then, connecting bores to the blind bores are drilled from the rear side of the plate body. Thereafter, connection pipe-ends for the coolant feed or coolant return are inserted into these connecting bores and welded to the stave body. With these cooling plates, the above-mentioned disadvantages related to casting are avoided. In particular, cavities and porosities in the plate body are virtually precluded. The above manufacturing method is however relatively expensive both in labour and material. Furthermore, due to considerable mechanical and thermal stress to which the stave cooler is exposed, the different welded connection joints are critical as regards fluid tightness. In addition, since the channels are integral with the stave body, there is only one level of separation between the coolant and the furnace interior, i.e. if the stave body cracks open, coolant will leak. A leakage of coolant fluid into the furnace however leads to a significant risk of explosion and should therefore be avoided at all cost.
An alternative design of a stave-like cooling contrivance has been proposed in U.S. Pat. No. 4,071,230. This contrivance comprises a metal plate serving to shield the furnace shell on the interior side and several coolant pipes linked to the plate and attached to the furnace shell with their connection pipe-ends. The metal plate is longer in vertical direction than wide in horizontal direction and, in order to take up thermal dilatation, consists of several separate blocks, each block being in turn wider horizontally than long vertically. Furthermore, each block is provided with a set of grooves of circular cross-section for accommodating the pipes on the side facing the furnace shell. The circular grooves are lined with a layer of heat conductor. Each separate block also comprises means for fastening the block to the pipes. The pipes in turn have fasteners welded thereto for attaching the cooling contrivance to the furnace shell. Although the stave cooler according to U.S. Pat. No. 4,071,230 avoids the use of welded connection joints on the coolant pipes within the furnace shell, both material and labour costs for manufacturing these stave coolers are still considerable.
Another design of a stave-like cooling arrangement has been proposed in U.S. Pat. No. 4,559,011. This cooling arrangement comprises several spaced apart cooling pipes arranged in a frame and interconnected by welding with metallic tie plates. The interconnected pipes and tie plates are embraced by a metallic frame. For compensating thermal expansion, the tie plates, the fins as well as the walls of the frame have expansion slots or clearances. Each tie plate or pipe may be provided with fins on the side facing the furnace interior. The frame is filled with refractory material on the side facing the furnace interior in order to protect the whole cooling arrangement. Besides the considerable labour cost related to producing the stave type coolers according to U.S. Pat. No. 4,559,011, their use entails a certain risk of a coolant leakage into the furnace. In fact, once the refractory material has degraded and uncovered the pipes, the cooling pipes are exposed to abrasive wear by furnace gases and charge material (burden) and may leak therefore.
Yet another design of a stave-like cooling panel for blast furnaces has been described in GB 2 377 008. This cooling panel comprises a metal backing plate, to which are secured on the side facing the furnace interior, several metal cooling pipes. Each pipe has at least one projecting fin that is integrally formed with the pipe. The backing plate is preferably made of steel, whereas the pipes with integral fin(s) are preferably made of copper. The pipes may be fixed to the plate with an interfacing pad, e.g. made of aluminium bronze material. Although requiring less parts and assembly steps than the previous designs, the cooling panel remains expensive due to the required custom made pipes. Furthermore, with the cooling panels according to GB 2 377 008, the cooling pipes may also happen to be exposed to abrasive wear and the resulting leakage risk.
The invention provides a method for manufacturing a stave cooler for a metallurgical furnace, which is cost effective and provides a reliable stave cooler.
The method of manufacturing a stave cooler for a metallurgical furnace according to the present invention comprises supplying a metal plate having an inward side for facing the inside of the furnace and an opposite outward side, supplying at least one coolant pipe and establishing a thermo-conductive contact between the coolant pipe and the metal plate. According to an important aspect of the invention, the method further comprises providing the coolant pipe with a flattened face and externally fixing the flattened face to the metal plate on the outward side for establishing the thermo-conductive contact.
By virtue of one or several external coolant pipes, the required thickness of the plate can be drastically reduced when compared to the slabs used in traditional staves. As a result, significant savings in material cost and stave cooler weight are achieved. Furthermore, the coolant pipes are protected from the furnace interior, and in particular from a potential impact of charge material (burden). By virtue of the flattened face of the coolant pipes, a sufficient thermal transfer surface and consequently sufficient heat transfer is warranted.
In a preferred embodiment, the step of establishing the thermo-conductive contact comprises joining the flattened face to the outward side by means of a diffusion bonding process. By creating a diffusion layer, i.e. material continuity, between the pipes and the plate, the thermal conductance between both parts, and hence the overall cooling efficiency, is enhanced. The required thermal transfer surface between the plate and the pipes is reduced. The preferred diffusion bonding process is either a diffusion welding (DFW) process or a diffusion brazing (DFB) process.
The step of externally fixing the flattened face to the metal plate advantageously comprises lateral welding, preferably stitch or spot welding, of the coolant pipe to the outward side. In the latter embodiment, its is further preferable that the method comprises correlating the parameters of the welds and the pipe wall thickness of the coolant pipe such that the inward portion of the pipe wall is preserved unaffected by the welds. Welding the pipes to the plate for achieving a strong and durable mechanical fixation is considered complementary to diffusion bonding for enhancing the thermo-conductive contact, but may be omitted in case the diffusion joint also provides sufficient mechanical fixation.
The method may beneficially comprise providing a receiving groove in the metal plate on the outward side for partially sinking in the coolant pipe. Furthermore, the method may comprise supplying a metal plate that has a curved lateral cross-section in the step of supplying a metal plate. Alternatively, when the step of supplying a metal plate comprises supplying a flat metal plate, the method may further comprise the step of metal-forming the flat metal plate into a metal plate having a curved lateral cross-section.
In a preferred embodiment, the method may further comprise the steps of: supplying a one-piece rectangular copper plate, which has an even inward side and an even outward side and an initial thickness in the range of 10-150 mm, preferably 25-100 mm, as metal plate; machining anchorage grooves into the inward side for anchoring a refractory layer to the inward side; and the step of fixing the flattened face of the coolant pipe directly onto the even outward side or into the receiving groove.
As will be understood, the invention also concerns the stave cooler manufactured with the above method. It will be understood that this stave cooler is particularly adapted to be used in a cooling system of a metallurgical furnace such as a blast furnace.
Preferred methods of manufacturing a stave cooler for a metallurgical furnace and preferred stave coolers manufactured with these methods will now be described, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
In these drawings, similar or identical elements will be identified by identical reference numerals throughout. Further details and advantages of the present invention will be apparent from the following detailed description.
As seen in
In accordance with the present invention, the stave cooler 10 is not designed with internal channels for the coolant that are integral to the plate (normally cooling water), but with the coolant pipes 14, that form the channel for the coolant, fixed externally to the metal plate 12 on the outward side 18 as seen in
As regards the manufacturing of the stave cooler 10, an efficient thermo-conductive contact needs to be established between the metal plate 12 and the coolant pipes 14. In order to establish this thermo-conductive contact in simple and cost-effective manner, the method of manufacturing comprises the step of providing each coolant pipe 14 with a flattened face 24 as seen in
As seen in
As seen in
As indicated above, the manufacturing method further comprises fixing the flattened face 24 of each coolant pipe 14 externally to the metal plate 12 and more precisely to the outward side 18 thereof. As shown in
In order to further improve the thermo-conductive contact between the metal plate 12 and the coolant pipes 14, i.e. between the flattened face 24 and the outward side 18, the manufacturing method preferably comprises the step of creating a diffusion layer 30 between the flattened face 24 and the outward side 18 by means of a diffusion bonding process. The diffusion layer 30 provides material continuity between the metal plate 12 and the flattened coolant pipes 14 and thereby warrants reliable and high thermal conductivity at their interface. In other words, the diffusion layer 30 represents a metal-to-metal joint which, by virtue of the used process, provides a continuous transition between the parent metal(s) without additional joining substance(s) forming the joint.
Depending on the material of the metal plate 12 and the coolant pipes 14, a filler material may or may not be used between the metal plate 12 and the coolant pipes 14 in order to provide the diffusion layer 30. When the respective materials are identical or similar, no filler material may be used. In the latter case the diffusion bonding process is considered diffusion welding (DFW). DWF is a solid-phase welding process which achieves coalescence of the adjacent surfaces by the application of pressure and elevated temperatures. Successful joining can be achieved at temperatures only slightly above half the melting temperature of the metals to be joined. Hence, the metallurgical properties of the metal parts to be joined remain substantially unaffected by the process. In case a filler material is used, the process is commonly called diffusion brazing (DFB). DFB is often used for joining dissimilar materials. Furthermore, DFB may be preferred over DFW because it has less stringent requirements on joint surface preparation and requires a lower pressure than that required for normal diffusion joining. It remains to be noted that creating the diffusion layers 30 by DFB or DFW is considered advantageous especially for a copper-cooper combination of the coolant pipes 14 and the metal plate 10 but not excluded for a steel-steel or other combination.
Further embodiments of finished stave coolers 10′, 10″ are shown in
The stave cooler 10′ shown in
Another embodiment of a stave cooler 10″ is shown in
Although not shown in the drawings, a stave cooler with the combined features of
Other aspects of the stave cooler 10′ of
Although not shown in the drawings, the metal plate 12 is normally provided with any suitable attachment contrivance for attaching the stave cooler 10 to the furnace shell.
Finally, some advantages resulting from the above described method remain to be recapitulated:
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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06112730.4 | Apr 2006 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP07/52680 | 3/21/2007 | WO | 00 | 10/13/2008 |