The invention concerns a roller hearth furnace for heating and/or temperature equalization of continuously cast products, especially those made of steel or steel materials, which are cut to lengths that fit the furnace and are then conveyed into and out of the furnace through the furnace chamber on rollers, and a method for using the roller hearth furnace upstream of a hot strip finishing train, in which the hot strip is subjected, among other operations, to rolling, cooling, and coiling into coils in a coiling station.
Roller hearth furnaces of this type are very long and are associated with thermal losses. In addition, due to the long time the continuously cast products lie on the rollers, these roller hearth furnaces cause impressions on the underside of the products as a result of scale caked on the product, and this later leads, during the rolling process, to reduced quality of the rolled product, especially rolled strip.
A roller hearth furnace of this type installed upstream of a hot strip finishing train is described, for example, in DE 44 11 216 A1. This furnace has stationary and traveling hearths, on whose refractory lining the pieces of material to be heated are laid. Sloping depressions are incorporated in the refractory lining to cause the pieces of material to be heated from below and to help remove scale. The scale is removed through travel grooves between the hearths and through scale drop shafts.
In the case of hearths formed by rollers, although the removal of scale is more favorable when the spaces between the rollers are short, residual pieces of scale are pressed into the strand material by the weight of heavy continuously cast products, such as cut lengths of slab, and cause the aforementioned surface defects, which, as described above, persist in the finished product. A traveling hearth equipped with rollers is disclosed, for example, by EP 0 361 057 B1. However, a design of this type results in an extremely complicated structure as a roller hearth and traveling hearth system comprising conveying rollers, which are supported outside the furnace chamber and can be moved into and out of spaces of the traveling hearth through openings in the side walls of the furnace. This results in large heat losses and low thermal efficiency.
Roller hearth furnaces for heating and/or temperature equalization of continuously cast products are known from the documents IT 1 236 130 B, EP 0 264 459 A1, EP 0 353 487 A1, WO 94/18 514 A and DE 35 25 457 A1. These roller hearth furnaces do not allow any change in the thermal efficiency.
The objective of the invention is to improve the conventional roller hearth furnace in such a way that it can be shortened, and the entire plant, consisting of a continuous casting installation and a hot strip finishing train (e.g., a CSP, i.e., a compact strip production, plant), can be shortened, and at the same time better thermal efficiency and thus energy savings can be realized. At the same time, it is desired that fewer damaging impressions be made on the underside of the continuously cast product.
In accordance with the invention, this objective is achieved with a roller hearth furnace which the first row of rollers and/or the second row of rollers each form a heating zone. This results in improved thermal efficiency and promotes energy savings. The slabs can be more strongly heated when necessary. This leads to an expansion of the product spectrum of the casting and rolling plant.
Another embodiment for improving the temperature level consists in providing the buffer zone with an additional heating zone that can be turned on and/or a holding zone.
In accordance with another feature of the invention, the lifting elements can consist of walking beams.
In accordance with another aspect of the invention, a method for using a roller hearth furnace of this type in the continuous casting of liquid metals, especially liquid steel materials, into slabs or flat, thin strands, so-called thin slabs, which after heating and/or temperature equalization in the roller hearth furnace, are descaled, cut to length, rolled into hot strip in a hot strip finishing train, cooled, and coiled into coils in a coiling station, is characterized by the fact that in a multiple-strand casting installation, a common roller hearth furnace or a separate roller hearth furnace for each strand, each having an entry side and a discharge side, which consist of parallel rows of rollers, and a buffer zone, which lies between them and consists of lifting elements, is provided for the common downstream process route. The advantages are shortening of the entire plant and energy savings and thus improved thermal efficiency and mechanical improvements.
In accordance with another embodiment (second alternative), it is proposed that the discharge side of a common roller hearth furnace for a twin-strand casting installation be placed in the line of the downstream process route in such a way that there is a mirror-image position of two entry sides with identical rows of rollers and a central discharge side with one row of rollers. The downstream hot strip finishing train can thus be supplied with cut lengths of the cast strand at shorter intervals.
A third alternative provides that a multiple-strand casting installation with a separate roller hearth furnace for each strand has a transverse conveyor that operationally connects both roller hearth furnaces after the discharge side and before the downstream process route. This makes it possible for a cut length to be delivered to the downstream process route from both casting installations of a twin-strand casting installation.
The invention also contemplates a conventional roller hearth furnace positioned upstream of a one-strand or multiple-strand continuous casting installation, which furnace can be further used in such a way that, in addition to a roller hearth furnace with an entry and discharge side and a buffer zone of lifting elements lying between them, a roller hearth furnace operating parallel in the longitudinal direction is provided, and that the roller hearth furnaces are connected to another roller hearth furnace, which is connected to the downstream process route and has an entry side, a parallel discharge side, and a buffer zone of lifting elements arranged between them (fourth alternative).
Finally, it is provided that the process route consists of a compact strip production (CSP) installation comprising a hot strip finishing train with seven rolling stands.
The drawings show specific embodiments of the invention, which are explained in greater detail below.
The roller hearth furnace 1 (
The cut lengths 10 are conveyed (
Analogously to the entry side 11, a second row of rollers 15, which likewise consists of rollers 13a of this type, is arranged on the discharge side 14. The continuously cast products leave the row of rollers 15 on the discharge side 14 in the longitudinal direction 12. A buffer zone 16, which consists of lifting elements 17, which are not shown in detail, is formed between the first row of rollers 13 and the second row of rollers 15. The lifting elements 17 effect the transverse conveyance of the continuously cast product 2 in arrow direction 18. The first row of rollers 13, which runs in longitudinal direction 12, and/or the second row of rollers 15 forms a heating zone 19 that consists of standard heating devices, such as gas burners, induction heaters, and the like. An additional heating zone 19 that can be turned on and/or a holding zone can be provided in the buffer zone 16. The lifting elements 17 consist of standard walking beams 17a.
The shears 9 are followed by a roller hearth furnace 1 for each cast strand, and various alternative embodiments of the arrangement of said furnace are provided. In the example shown in
After the rolling stock has been rolled into thin hot strip 24, the metal strip is cooled in a cooling line 25 to steel strip with the appropriate microstructure and then coiled into coils 27 in a coiling station 26. The process route 28 of the rolling operation is the same in this respect in all of the specific embodiments of
According to
According to
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2006 005 635 | Feb 2006 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2006/012164 | 12/18/2006 | WO | 00 | 1/12/2009 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2007/090455 | 8/16/2007 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20090298001 A1 | Dec 2009 | US |