The Effect of Calcium Carbide Particle Size Distribution on the Kinetics of Hot Metal Desulphurization

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Abstract

The effects of particle size distribution on the kinetics of hot metal desulphurization were investigated by pilot-scale injection. Three different particle size distributions of calcium carbide were injected into 70 kg heats of carbon-saturated iron. The sulphur contents and oxygen activities were measured during the injection. The reaction in the plume during the injection could be described as a first-order, diffusion-controlled reaction, after an incubation period lasting between 20 and 40 sec. This rate constant was found to increase as the particle size decreased. A kinetic analysis based on mass transfer theory was performed considering the total particle size distribution of the calcium carbide. Through this analysis a new average size, directly related to the mass transfer behaviour, was developed. Comparison of the observed and theoretical dependencies of the first-order rate constant on the powder feed rate suggests that the fraction of particles in contact with the melt decreases as the particle size decreases. Finally, issues of scale-up and economic assessment are discussed. © 1994, The Iron and Steel Institute of Japan. All rights reserved.

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Coudure, J. M., & Irons, G. A. (1994). The Effect of Calcium Carbide Particle Size Distribution on the Kinetics of Hot Metal Desulphurization. ISIJ International, 34(2), 155–163. https://doi.org/10.2355/isijinternational.34.155

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