The present invention relates to a process and related plant for the manufacturing of steel strips.
In the steel industry it is known the need, being however present in every industrial field, for using manufacturing methods involving lower investment and production costs. It is known as well that in the last years manufacturing methods based on the so-called “thin slab” technologies have had a remarkable development and success in this direction of cost reduction, above all under the energetic aspect. Three fundamental types of manufacturing processes and related plants, accomplishing such a technology, can be distinguished, namely a first type which does not provide for solution of continuity between the continuous casting step and the rolling one, a second type wherein said two steps are separated, thereby with a solution of continuity providing for the use of a Steckel rolling mill, and finally a third type, again with solution of continuity, as shown in
With reference to said
It should be noted that the tunnel furnace 5 is characterized, as it is known, by a length of about 200 m and by a typical residence time of the slab inside thereof comprised between 20 and 40 min at a speed as indicated above. Of course, a continuous casting speed higher than 5 m/min requires a tunnel furnace length even greater than 200 m in order to heat the slab and make its temperature uniform. For example, with a speed of 7 m/min at the outlet of the continuous casting, the tunnel furnace should have a length of about 300 m if maintaining a residence time of the slab in the furnace greater than 40 min is not desired. By further increasing the casting speed, still for the same residence duration in the furnace, this should have an even greater length, hardly feasible both from a technical and an economical point of view.
Still with reference to
The transverse temperature profile of the slab, immediately upstream of the first rolling stand, has been represented by the detail marked by reference number 7. The diagram of
In fact, according to the related prior art of this type of technology, it has been so far believed that the product at the outlet of the continuous casting 2, having a temperature profile as shown in the diagram of detail 6, relative to a slab cross-section at the inlet of the furnace 5, i.e. with a surface temperature of about 1100° C. and of about 1250° C. at the core (i.e. the apex of the diagram), should undergo a process of complete temperature homogenization. The trend has always been to homogenize such temperature as much as possible, especially throughout the cross-section of the slab, before entering the finishing rolling mill. In fact, it has been always thought that by making the temperature uniform between surface and core of the product, the advantage of a homogeneous fiber elongation could be obtained, in order to show the same strain resistance by substantially having the same temperature. On the basis of such a constant technical prejudice, it has been always tried to have a temperature difference being lower than 20° C. between surface and core of the product, as above indicated with reference to detail 7, in order to have a homogeneous fiber elongation, until now considered necessary for the achievement of a good quality of the final product.
On the other hand, as seen above, the temperature uniformity characteristic of the slabs does not allow building plants with the high casting speeds, which would be theoretically possible to achieve (up to values of 12 m/min due to the present technology development), and thereby with very high productivities, due to the inadmissible length the furnace should have.
On the other hand it would be desirable to have furnaces of reduced length between continuous casting and rolling mill in order to obtain space saving and reduction of investments, resulting in a higher average temperature of the product, involving a lower total power of the stands for the same strip thickness, as highlighted in the diagram of
In fact, thus overcoming a widespread prejudice of the prior art, it has been found that with a temperature in the middle of the cross-section of the slab being higher than 100-200° C. with respect to the surface temperature, maintained at about 1100° C., a lower rolling pressure Kf is required in order to obtain the same final thickness of the strip, because the average rolling temperature is increased, without otherwise worsening the product quality.
It has been also found that such temperature conditions are not prejudicial for the final rolling product quality, when the following conditions are met: the cast product shows a sufficiently high “mass flow” value (i.e. the amount of steel flowing in the time unit at the outlet of the continuous casting), with an outlet speed >5 m/min after having undergone a process of liquid core reduction or “soft reduction,” in particular according to the teachings of EP 0603330 in the name of the same applicant, in order to guarantee the so-called “central sanity” characteristic of the cast slab and to have a higher temperature at the core, and thereby also a higher average temperature in the rolling step.
It is therefore an object of the present invention to provide a process for the manufacturing of steel strips with solution of continuity allowing the maximum possible reduction with the minimum separating strength and therefore requiring a reduced total power of the rolling stands with a consequent energy saving for a given strip thickness at the outlet of the rolling mill.
Another object of the present invention is to provide a process of the above-mentioned type being able to achieve, with a limited furnace length, very high productivities as a consequence of a high casting speed.
Broadly, the present invention relates to a plant for production of steel strips from thin slabs having thickness comprised between 45 and 110 mm coming from continuous casting. The plant comprises a shear cutting a casting product, which is formed with a solution of continuity, into the slabs, a multiple stand finishing rolling mill located downstream of the shear with a distance between the outlet of the continuous casting and the inlet to the rolling mill being not greater than 100 m, at least one heating furnace located downstream of the shear and upstream of the multiple stand finishing rolling mill, and a descaler arranged between the at least one furnace and the rolling mill. One of the at least one furnace is an induction furnace which has a sufficiently low working frequency to heat a core of the slab and to substantially maintain a same temperature difference between an inside and an outside of the slab from an end of the induction furnace to an inlet of a first rolling stand of the finishing rolling mill. Also, an average temperature of each slab is higher than a surface temperature of each slab, which is equal to or higher than 1100° C., and the average temperature at the core is at least 100° C. higher than the surface temperature of each slab.
The plant can further comprise a second furnace, which is a tunnel furnace that is heated by gas.
Alternatively, the plant can have only one furnace and the furnace is an induction type furnace. Further, the plant can have intermediate cooling and/or heating means among the rolling mill stands.
The plant can further comprise a temperature maintaining tunnel in combination with the induction furnace, upstream and/or downstream thereof, which have a length to keep a total distance between the continuous casting and the finishing rolling mill not greater than 100 m, suitable for limiting the thermal losses. The tunnel can be formed by roller tables that have insulating panels. The tunnel can also have gas burners and/or electrical resistors. Moreover, the induction furnace can be placed immediately upstream of the descaler. Alternatively, the induction furnace can be placed immediately downstream of the shear.
Characteristics of the present invention will become evident from the following detailed description of a preferred embodiment thereof, given by way of non-limiting example with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
a is a diagram showing the trend of the rolling pressure required as a function of the average temperature of the material to be rolled;
With reference to
The slab is still cut down in pieces, typically having a length of 40 m, by means of the shear 3, according to the weight of the final coil desired, and enters a traditional tunnel furnace 25 (gas heated), but being of a limited length, having the purpose of maintaining the thin slab 24 in temperature by heating the same. Therefrom it passes, through the descaler 8, into a finishing rolling mill 29 from which comes out, upon its rolling, on a roller table 15 in order to be coiled by means of one or two reels 16, as already seen according to
Differing from the plant of
Inside furnace 25 two slabs 24 and 24.2 are represented of which the first one is still connected to the continuous casting before being cut by shear 3 and the second one is already drawn by the finishing rolling mill 29 through the descaler 8, and thereby is already in the rolling step. The dotted line 24.1, intermediate between the two slabs, instead represents the space available for a further slab, serving as a “lung” in case of jamming of the rolling mill, if the slab thickness at the outlet and the weight of the coil desired allow to have slabs of length <30 m, given the above-mentioned limits of overall furnace length. Each slab, after the shear 3 cut, is accelerated and transferred to the central part of the furnace until it reaches the entering speed of the finishing rolling mill, equal to about 15-20 m/min, in order to reduce the residence time in the furnace itself as much as possible, which will be able to be even lower than 10 minutes instead of the 20-40 min foreseen for a plant according to the prior art shown in
As previously stated, it should be noted that anyway the distance between the outlet from the continuous casting 21 and the finishing rolling mill 29 will not be greater than about 100 m, with the further consequent advantage of having a more compact plant requiring a reduced space also with high speeds at the outlet of the continuous casting. In such a way the average temperature of the product will be higher than the surface temperature, being higher of at least 100° C. at the core with respect to the external surface. From the diagram of
It should be noted that, by using the above-mentioned higher temperature of the “mass flow,” greater reductions can be achieved, in particular in the first rolling stands, allowing to obtain thinner thicknesses with the same or a lower number of stands with respect to the prior art. In
On the contrary, according to the present invention, the induction furnace 35 of
Before entering the induction furnace 35, the thin slab 32 coming from the continuous casting 31, passes anyway, after the shear 3, into a temperature maintaining and possible heating tunnel 36, which limits thermal losses.
It should be noted that the induction furnace 35, differently from what is shown in
Cooling systems or possibly intermediate heating systems, not shown in the drawing, can be provided for among the stands of the finishing rolling mill 29 or 39, being inserted between one stand and another according to the rolling speed and to the steel type to be rolled.
Finally, the present invention can also be used in order to carry out processes and related plants with two casting lines supplying the same rolling mill 29 or 39.
This application is a divisional application of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/102,493, filed Apr. 14, 2008, which in turn claims priority of PCT Application Serial No. PCT/IT2005/000754 filed Dec. 22, 2005. The disclosures of these applications are incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 12102493 | Apr 2008 | US |
Child | 13218093 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/IT2005/000754 | Dec 2005 | US |
Child | 12102493 | US |