Transactions of the Iron and Steel Institute of Japan
Online ISSN : 1881-1183
Print ISSN : 0021-1583
Experimental Model Study of the Physical Mechanisms Governing Blast Furnace Hearth Drainage
W.B.U. TANZILP. ZULLIJ. M. BURGESSW. V. PINCZEWSKI
Author information
JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

1984 Volume 24 Issue 3 Pages 197-205

Details
Abstract

Previous studies concerned with the drainage of the blast furnace hearth have assumed that the iron-slag interface remains horizontal and fixed at the level of the taphole during the outflow of the slag phase. As a consequence they have ignored the presence of the iron phase and its effect on the drainage characteristics of the slag phase.
In this study we examine the validity of the above assumption using a novel two-dimensional experimental drainage apparatus which allows a clear visualisation o f the drainage behaviour of two immiscible fluids. The results of the study suggest that in most cases the iron and slag phases may be expected to flow simultaneously from the taphole and that the iron-slag interface will not remain horizontal and fixed at the level of the taphole as has been previously assumed.
It is shown that the drainage process is characterised by a down-ward tilting of the gas-slag interface towards the taphole and a simultaneous downward tilting of the iron-slag interface away from the taphole. The experiments show that it is possible to drain the iron phase down to levels considerably below the level of the taphole. The volume of iron removed below the level of the taphole increases with increasing slag drainage rate. Calculations are presented which suggest that under actual blast furnace conditions this volume may be of the same order as the volume of residual slag remaining above the level of the taphole at the end of tapping.
Finally, it is concluded that existing predictions of slag residual ratio based on studies which have neglected the presence of the lower iron phase may lead to a serious underprediction of the residual ratio particularly at higher slag drainage rates.

Content from these authors
© The Iron and Steel Institute of Japan
Previous article Next article
feedback
Top