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,
Spain. The actual furnace itself is inside the centre girderwork.
A
blast furnace is a type of
metallurgy furnace used for
smelting to produce metals, generally iron.
In a blast furnace, fuel and
ore are continuously supplied through the top of the furnace, while
air (sometimes with oxygen enrichment) is blown into the bottom of the chamber, so that the
chemical reactions take place throughout the furnace as the material moves downward. The end products are usually molten metal and slag phases tapped from the bottom, and flue gases exiting from the top of the furnace.
Blast furnaces are to be contrasted with air furnaces (such as reverberatory furnaces), which were naturally aspirated, usually by the convection of hot gases in a chimney flue. According to this broad definition, bloomery for iron,
blowing houses for
tin and
smelt mills for
lead would be classified as blast furnaces. However, the term has usually been limited to those used for smelting
iron ore to produce
pig iron, an intermediate material used in the production of commercial
iron and
steel.
Certain modern furnaces used for non-ferrous smelting processes are known as blast furnaces, and are particularly in the production of lead and copper. However this article (except its final section) will concentrate on furnaces for the production of pig iron.
History
Blast furnaces existed in
China from about the
5th century BC, and in the West from the High Middle Ages. They spread from the region around
Namur (province) in Belgium in the late
15th century, being introduced to England in 1491. The fuel used in these was invariably charcoal. The successful substitution of
coke (fuel) for
charcoal is widely attributed to Abraham Darby I in
1709. The efficiency of the process was further enhanced by the practice of preheating the blast, patented by
James Beaumont Neilson in 1828.
The blast furnace is to be distinguished from the bloomery in that the object of the blast furnace is to produce molten metal that can be tapped from the furnace, whereas the intention in the bloomery is to avoid it melting so that carbon does not become dissolved in the iron. Bloomeries were also artificially blown using
bellows, but the term 'blast furnace' is normally reserved for furnaces where iron (or other metal) are refined from ore.
The Ancient World
s, from the
Nong Shu, by
Wang Zhen (official), 1313 AD, during the
Yuan Dynasty of China.The oldest existent blast furnaces were built during the
Han Dynasty of
China in the 1st century BC. However, cast iron farm tools and weapons were widespread in China by the
5th century BC, while
3rd century BC iron smelters employed an average workforce of over two hundred men.Ebrey, Walthall, Palais (2006).
East Asia: A Cultural, Social, and Political History. Boston: Houghton-Mifflin Company. P. 30. These early furnaces had clay walls and used phosphorus-containing minerals as a flux (metallurgy). Early iron in China, Korea, and Japan, Donald B. Wagner, March 1993 Also, the effectiveness of the Chinese blast furnace was enhanced during this period by the engineer
Du Shi (circa
31 AD), who applied the power of waterwheels (hydraulics) to piston-
bellows in forging cast iron. Needham, Joseph (1986).
Science and Civilization in China: Volume 4, Physics and Physical Technology, Part 2, Mechanical Engineering. Taipei: Caves Books Ltd. P. 370.
While it was long thought that the Chinese developed the blast furnace and cast iron as their first method of iron production, Donald Wagner (the author of the above referenced study) has published a more recent paper The earliest use of iron in China, Donald B. Wagner, 1999 that supersedes some of the statements in the earlier work; the newer paper still places the date of the first cast iron artifacts at the 4th and 5th century BC, but also provides evidence of earlier bloomery furnace use, which migrated in from the west during the beginning of the Chinese
Bronze Age of the late
Longshan culture (2000 BC). He suggests that early blast furnace and cast iron production evolved from furnaces used to melt bronze. Certainly, though, iron was essential to military success by the time the State of Qin had unified China (221 BC). By the 11th century, the
Song Dynasty Chinese iron industry made a remarkable switch of resources from charcoal to bituminous coal in casting iron and steel, sparing thousands of acres of prime forest from felling.Ebrey, Walthall, Palais (2006).
East Asia: A Cultural, Social, and Political History. Boston: Houghton-Mifflin Company. P 158.
to make wrought iron from
pig iron, with the right illustration displaying men working a blast furnace, of smelting iron
ore producing pig iron, from the
Song Yingxing encyclopedia, 1637.In Europe, the iron was made in
bloomery by the Greeks, Celts, Ancient Rome, and Carthage in the ancient period; several examples have been found in France; and materials found in Tunisia suggest their use there as well as in Antioch during the
Hellenistic Greece. Though little is known of its use during the
Dark Ages, the process probably continued in use. The improved bloomery named
Catalan forge was invented in Catalonia,
Spain during the 8th century. Instead of using natural draught, it relied on bellows for pumping the air in. This enabled it to produce better quality iron and enlarge the capacity.
Medieval Europe
The oldest known blast furnaces in the West were built in Dürstel in
Switzerland, the Märkische
Sauerland in
Germany, and
Sweden at
Lapphyttan where the complex was active between
1150 and
1350. Archaeological Investigations on the Beginning of Blast Furnace-Technology in Central Europe At Noraskog in the Swedish county of Järnboås there have also been found traces of blast furnaces dated even earlier, possibly to around 1100.A. Wetterholm, 'Blast furnace studies in Nora bergslag ' (Örebro universitet 1999, Järn och Samhälle) ISBN 91-7668-204-8 These early blast furnaces, like the
Chinese history examples, were very inefficient compared to those used today. The iron from the Lapphyttan complex was used to produce balls of
wrought iron known as
Osmond irons, and these were traded internationally - a possible reference occurs in a treaty with
Novgorod from
1203 and several certain references in accounts of
England customs from the 1250s and 1320s. Other furnaces of the
13th century to 15th century have been identified in Westphalia.N. Bjökenstam, 'The Blast Furnace in Europe during the Middle Ages: part of a new system for producing wrought iron' in G. Magnusson,
The Importance of Ironmaking: Technological Innovation and Social Change I (Jernkontoret, Stockholm 1995), 143-53 and other papers in the same volume.
Knowledge of certain technological advances was transmitted as a result of the General Chapter of the
Cistercians monks, including the blast furnace, as the Cistercians are known to have been skilled
Metallurgy.Thomas Woods,
How the Catholic Church Built Western Civilization (2005), ISBN 0-89526-038-7; p 34 According to Jean Gimpel, their high level of industrial technology facilitated the diffusion of new techniques: "Every monastery had a model factory, often as large as the church and only several feet away, and waterpower drove the machinery of the various industries located on its floor." Iron ore deposits were often donated to the monks along with forges to extract the iron, and within time surpluses were being offered for sale. The Cistercians became the leading iron producers in
Champagne (province), France, from the mid-13th century to the 17th century,Jean Gimpel,
The Medieval Machine: The Industrial Revolution of the Middle Ages (New York: Penguin, 1976; London: Pimlico, 1992), p 67. also using the
phosphate-rich slag from their furnaces as an
Agriculture fertilizer.Woods, p 35
Archaeologists are still discovering the extent of Cistercian technology.Woods, p 36 At Laskill, an outstation of Rievaulx Abbey and the only medieval blast furnace so far identified in Great Britain, the slag produced was low in iron content.Woods, p 37 Slag from other furnaces of the time contained a substantial concentration of iron, whereas Laskill is believed to have produced
cast iron quite efficiently.R. W. Vernon, G. McDonnell and A. Schmidt, 'An integrated geophysical and analytical appraisal of early iron-working: three case studies'
Historical Metallurgy 31(2) (1998), 72-5 79David Derbyshire, 'Henry "Stamped Out Industrial Revolution"',
The Daily Telegraph (21 June 2002); cited by Woods. Its date is not yet clear, but it probably did not survive Henry VIII of England's Dissolution of the Monasteries in the late
1530s, as an agreement (immediately after that) concerning the 'smythes' with the
Earl of Rutland in 1541 refers to blooms.H. R. Schubert,
History of the British iron and steel industry from c. 450 BC to AD 1775 (Routledge, London 1957), 395-7. Nevertheless, the means by which the blast furnace spread in medieval Europe has not finally been determined.
Early modern blast furnaces: origin and spread
The direct ancestor of those used in France and England was in the
Namur (province) region in what is now
Belgium. From there, they spread first to the Pays de Bray on the eastern boundary of
Normandy and from there to the Weald of
Sussex, where the first furnace (called Queenstock) in
Buxted was built in about
1491, followed by one at
Newbridge in Ashdown Forest in
1496. They remained few in number until about 1530 but many were built in the following decades in the
Weald, where the iron industry perhaps reached its peak about
1590. Most of the pig iron from these furnaces was taken to
finery forges for the production of bar iron. B. Awty & C. Whittick (with P. Combes), 'The Lordship of Canterbury, iron-founding at Buxted, and the continental antecedents of cannon-founding in the Weald'
Sussex Archaeological Collections 140 (2004 for 2002), 71-81.
The first British furnaces outside the Weald were not built until the 1550s, but many were built in the remainder of that century and the following ones. The output of the industry probably peaked about 1620, and was followed by a slow decline until the early 18th century. This was apparently because it was more economic to import iron from
Sweden and elsewhere than to make it in some more remote British locations. Charcoal that was economically available to the industry was probably being consumed as fast as the wood to make it grew. P. W. King, 'The production and consumption of iron in early modern England and Wales'
Economic History Review LVIII(1), 1-33; G. Hammersley, 'The charcoal iron industry and its fuel 1540-1750' Economic History Review Ser. II, XXVI (1973), 593-613.
Coke blast furnaces
In 1709, at Coalbrookdale in Shropshire,
England,
Abraham Darby I began to fuel a blast furnace with
coke (fuel) instead of
charcoal. Coke iron was initially only used for foundry work, making pots and other cast iron goods. Foundry work was a minor branch of the industry, but his son built a new furnace at Horsehay (nearby), and began to supply the owners of
finery forges with coke pig iron for the production of bar iron. Coke pig iron was by this time cheaper to produce than charcoal pig iron. The use of a
coal-derived fuel in the iron industry was a key factor in the British
Industrial Revolution. A. Raistrick, A Dynasty of Ironfounders (1953; York 1989);C. K. Hyde, Technological Change and the British iron industry (Princeton 1977);B. Trinder,
The Industrial Revolution in Shropshire (Chichester 2000) Darby's 'old blast furnace' has been archaeologically excavated and can be seen in situ at Coalbrookdale as part of the Ironbridge Gorge Museums.
A further important development was the change to hot blast, patented by James Beaumont Neilson at
Wilsontown Ironworks in Scotland in 1828. This further reduced production costs. Within a few decades, the practice was to have a 'stove' as large as the furnace next to it into which the waste gas (containing CO) from the furnace was directed and burnt. The resultant heat was used to preheat the air blown into the furnace.* A. Birch, Economic History of the British Iron and Steel Industry , 181-9
- C. K. Hyde, Technological Change and the British iron industry (Princeton 1977)
Modern furnaces
The blast furnace remains an important part of modern iron production. Modern furnaces are highly efficient, including Cowper stoves to
hot blast the blast air and employ recovery systems to extract the heat from the hot gases exiting the furnace. Competition in industry drives higher production rates. The largest blast furnaces have a volume of 5500 m³ (190,000 cu ft), which could hold the water from 2 standard swimming pools and can produce around 80,000 tonnes of iron per week. This is a great increase from the typical 18th century furnaces, which averaged about 400 tons per year. Variations of the blast furnace, such as the Swedish electric blast furnace, have been developed in countries which have no native coal resources.
Modern process
from Cowper stoves
2. Melting zone (
bosh)
3. Reduction zone of ferrous oxide (
barrel)
4. Reduction zone of
ferric oxide (
stack)
5. Pre-heating zone (
throat)
6. Feed of Iron ore,
limestone, and
Coke (fuel) 7. Exhaust gases
8. Column of ore, coke and limestone
9. Removal of slag
10. Tapping of molten pig iron
11. Collection of waste gases
Modern furnaces are equipped with an array of supporting facilities to increase efficiency, such as ore storage yards where barges are unloaded. The raw materials are transferred to the stockhouse complex by ore bridges, or Hoppers and "
Railcar". Rail-mounted scale cars or computer controlled weigh hoppers weigh out the various raw materials to yield the desired hot metal and slag chemistry. A "skip car" powered by winches brings these to the top of the furnace. AISI
The ironmaking blast furnace itself is built in the form of a tall chimney-like structure lined with
refractory brick. Coke,
limestone flux (metallurgy), and iron ore (iron oxide) are charged into the top of the furnace in a precise filling order which helps control gas flow and the chemical reactions inside the furnace. Four "uptakes" allow the hot, dirty gas to exit the furnace dome, while "bleeder valves" protect the top of the furnace from sudden gas pressure surges. The coarse particles in the gas settle in the "dustcatcher" and are dumped into a railroad car or truck for disposal, while the gas itself flows through a
Venturi scrubber and a gas cooler to reduce the temperature of the cleaned gas.
The hot blast temperature can be from 900°C to 1300 °C (1600°F to 2300°F) depending on the stove design and condition. The hot blast is directed into the furnace through water-cooled copper nozzles called "tuyeres" near the base. The temperatures they deal with may be 2000 °C to 2300 °C (3600°F to 4200°F). Oil,
tar, natural gas, powdered coal and oxygen can also be injected into the furnace at tuyere level to combine with the coke to release additional energy which is necessary to increase productivity.
The "casthouse" at the bottom half of the furnace contains the bustle pipe, tuyeres and the equipment for casting the liquid iron and slag. Once a "taphole" is drilled through the refactory clay plug, liquid iron, and slag flow down a trough through a "skimmer" opening, separating the iron and slag. Modern, larger blast furnaces may have as many as four tapholes and two casthouses.
Chemistry
The main chemical reaction producing the molten iron is:
Iron2
Oxygen3 + 3
CarbonOxygen → 2Fe + 3CO2
Preheated blast air blown into the furnace reacts with the carbon in the form of coke to produce
carbon monoxide and heat. The carbon monoxide then reacts with the
iron oxide to produce molten iron and carbon dioxide. Hot carbon dioxide, unreacted carbon monoxide, and nitrogen from the air pass up through the furnace as fresh feed material travels down into the reaction zone. As the material travels downward, the counter-current gases both preheat the feed charge, decompose the limestone to
calcium oxide and carbon dioxide, and begin to reduce the iron oxides in the solid state. The main reaction controlling the gas atmosphere in the furnace is called the
Boudouard reaction:
C + O2 → CO2
CO2 + C → 2CO
The decomposition of limestone in the middle zones of the furnace proceeds according to the following reaction:
CaCO3 → CaO + CO2
The calcium oxide formed by decomposition reacts with various acidic impurities in the iron (notably silica), to form the slag which is essentially calcium silicate, CalciumSiliconOxygen3.
The "pig" iron produced by the blast furnace has a relatively high carbon content of around 4-5%, making it very brittle, and of little commercial use. Some pig iron is used to make cast iron. The majority of pig iron produced by blast furnaces undergoes further processing to reduce the carbon content and produce various grades of
steel used for tools and construction materials.
Although the efficiency of blast furnaces is constantly evolving, the chemical process inside the blast furnace remains the same. According to the American Iron and Steel Institute; "Blast furnaces will survive into the next millennium because the larger, efficient furnaces can produce hot metal at costs competitive with other iron making technologies." One of the biggest drawbacks of the blast furnaces is the inevitable carbon dioxide production as iron is reduced from iron oxides by carbon and there is no economical substitute - steelmaking is one of the major industrial contributors of the CO2 emissions in the world (see
Greenhouse gases).
Other Metals
Blast furnaces are used today to smelt lead from its oxide, after it has been desilvered.
See also
References
External links
- Science Aid: Blast Furnace How iron is extracted, for high school level
- Blast Furnace animation
- How a Blast Furnace works Illustrated.
- Precursors of the Blast Furnace
- Extensive picture gallery about all methods of making and shaping of iron and steel in North America and Europe. In German and English.
- Blast Furnace Museum Radwerk IV
- Schematic diagram of blast furnace and Cowper stove
- ironfurnaces.com - a free wiki dedicated to preserving the history and location of historic blast iron furnaces
,
Spain. The actual furnace itself is inside the centre girderwork.
A
blast furnace is a type of metallurgy furnace used for smelting to produce metals, generally iron.
In a blast furnace, fuel and ore are continuously supplied through the top of the furnace, while
air (sometimes with oxygen enrichment) is blown into the bottom of the chamber, so that the
chemical reactions take place throughout the furnace as the material moves downward. The end products are usually molten metal and
slag phases tapped from the bottom, and flue gases exiting from the top of the furnace.
Blast furnaces are to be contrasted with air furnaces (such as reverberatory furnaces), which were naturally aspirated, usually by the convection of hot gases in a chimney flue. According to this broad definition,
bloomery for iron,
blowing houses for tin and smelt mills for lead would be classified as blast furnaces. However, the term has usually been limited to those used for smelting iron ore to produce
pig iron, an intermediate material used in the production of commercial
iron and steel.
Certain modern furnaces used for non-ferrous smelting processes are known as blast furnaces, and are particularly in the production of
lead and
copper. However this article (except its final section) will concentrate on furnaces for the production of pig iron.
History
Blast furnaces existed in China from about the 5th century BC, and in the West from the High Middle Ages. They spread from the region around Namur (province) in Belgium in the late
15th century, being introduced to
England in
1491. The fuel used in these was invariably charcoal. The successful substitution of
coke (fuel) for charcoal is widely attributed to Abraham Darby I in
1709. The efficiency of the process was further enhanced by the practice of preheating the blast, patented by James Beaumont Neilson in
1828.
The blast furnace is to be distinguished from the bloomery in that the object of the blast furnace is to produce molten metal that can be tapped from the furnace, whereas the intention in the bloomery is to avoid it melting so that carbon does not become dissolved in the iron. Bloomeries were also artificially blown using bellows, but the term 'blast furnace' is normally reserved for furnaces where iron (or other metal) are refined from ore.
The Ancient World
s, from the
Nong Shu, by
Wang Zhen (official), 1313 AD, during the
Yuan Dynasty of China.The oldest existent blast furnaces were built during the Han Dynasty of
China in the 1st century BC. However,
cast iron farm tools and weapons were widespread in China by the
5th century BC, while
3rd century BC iron smelters employed an average workforce of over two hundred men.Ebrey, Walthall, Palais (2006).
East Asia: A Cultural, Social, and Political History. Boston: Houghton-Mifflin Company. P. 30. These early furnaces had
clay walls and used
phosphorus-containing minerals as a
flux (metallurgy). Early iron in China, Korea, and Japan, Donald B. Wagner, March 1993 Also, the effectiveness of the Chinese blast furnace was enhanced during this period by the engineer Du Shi (circa
31 AD), who applied the power of waterwheels (
hydraulics) to piston-
bellows in forging cast iron. Needham, Joseph (1986).
Science and Civilization in China: Volume 4, Physics and Physical Technology, Part 2, Mechanical Engineering. Taipei: Caves Books Ltd. P. 370.
While it was long thought that the Chinese developed the blast furnace and cast iron as their first method of iron production, Donald Wagner (the author of the above referenced study) has published a more recent paper The earliest use of iron in China, Donald B. Wagner, 1999 that supersedes some of the statements in the earlier work; the newer paper still places the date of the first cast iron artifacts at the 4th and 5th century BC, but also provides evidence of earlier bloomery furnace use, which migrated in from the west during the beginning of the Chinese Bronze Age of the late Longshan culture (2000 BC). He suggests that early blast furnace and cast iron production evolved from furnaces used to melt bronze. Certainly, though, iron was essential to military success by the time the State of Qin had unified China (221 BC). By the 11th century, the Song Dynasty Chinese iron industry made a remarkable switch of resources from
charcoal to
bituminous coal in casting iron and steel, sparing thousands of acres of prime
forest from felling.Ebrey, Walthall, Palais (2006).
East Asia: A Cultural, Social, and Political History. Boston: Houghton-Mifflin Company. P 158.
to make
wrought iron from
pig iron, with the right illustration displaying men working a blast furnace, of smelting iron
ore producing pig iron, from the
Song Yingxing encyclopedia, 1637.In Europe, the iron was made in
bloomery by the Greeks,
Celts,
Ancient Rome, and
Carthage in the ancient period; several examples have been found in France; and materials found in Tunisia suggest their use there as well as in Antioch during the Hellenistic Greece. Though little is known of its use during the
Dark Ages, the process probably continued in use. The improved bloomery named
Catalan forge was invented in Catalonia, Spain during the 8th century. Instead of using natural draught, it relied on bellows for pumping the air in. This enabled it to produce better quality iron and enlarge the capacity.
Medieval Europe
The oldest known blast furnaces in the West were built in Dürstel in
Switzerland, the Märkische Sauerland in Germany, and Sweden at Lapphyttan where the complex was active between 1150 and 1350. Archaeological Investigations on the Beginning of Blast Furnace-Technology in Central Europe At Noraskog in the Swedish county of Järnboås there have also been found traces of blast furnaces dated even earlier, possibly to around
1100.A. Wetterholm, 'Blast furnace studies in Nora bergslag ' (Örebro universitet 1999, Järn och Samhälle) ISBN 91-7668-204-8 These early blast furnaces, like the
Chinese history examples, were very inefficient compared to those used today. The iron from the Lapphyttan complex was used to produce balls of wrought iron known as
Osmond irons, and these were traded internationally - a possible reference occurs in a treaty with
Novgorod from 1203 and several certain references in accounts of
England customs from the 1250s and 1320s. Other furnaces of the
13th century to
15th century have been identified in Westphalia.N. Bjökenstam, 'The Blast Furnace in Europe during the Middle Ages: part of a new system for producing wrought iron' in G. Magnusson,
The Importance of Ironmaking: Technological Innovation and Social Change I (Jernkontoret, Stockholm 1995), 143-53 and other papers in the same volume.
Knowledge of certain technological advances was transmitted as a result of the General Chapter of the
Cistercians monks, including the blast furnace, as the Cistercians are known to have been skilled Metallurgy.Thomas Woods,
How the Catholic Church Built Western Civilization (2005), ISBN 0-89526-038-7; p 34 According to Jean Gimpel, their high level of industrial technology facilitated the diffusion of new techniques: "Every monastery had a model factory, often as large as the church and only several feet away, and waterpower drove the machinery of the various industries located on its floor." Iron ore deposits were often donated to the monks along with forges to extract the iron, and within time surpluses were being offered for sale. The Cistercians became the leading iron producers in Champagne (province),
France, from the mid-13th century to the 17th century,Jean Gimpel,
The Medieval Machine: The Industrial Revolution of the Middle Ages (New York: Penguin, 1976; London: Pimlico, 1992), p 67. also using the phosphate-rich slag from their furnaces as an Agriculture fertilizer.Woods, p 35
Archaeologists are still discovering the extent of Cistercian technology.Woods, p 36 At Laskill, an outstation of
Rievaulx Abbey and the only medieval blast furnace so far identified in
Great Britain, the slag produced was low in iron content.Woods, p 37 Slag from other furnaces of the time contained a substantial concentration of iron, whereas Laskill is believed to have produced
cast iron quite efficiently.R. W. Vernon, G. McDonnell and A. Schmidt, 'An integrated geophysical and analytical appraisal of early iron-working: three case studies'
Historical Metallurgy 31(2) (1998), 72-5 79David Derbyshire, 'Henry "Stamped Out Industrial Revolution"',
The Daily Telegraph (21 June 2002); cited by Woods. Its date is not yet clear, but it probably did not survive Henry VIII of England's
Dissolution of the Monasteries in the late
1530s, as an agreement (immediately after that) concerning the 'smythes' with the Earl of Rutland in
1541 refers to blooms.H. R. Schubert,
History of the British iron and steel industry from c. 450 BC to AD 1775 (Routledge, London 1957), 395-7. Nevertheless, the means by which the blast furnace spread in medieval Europe has not finally been determined.
Early modern blast furnaces: origin and spread
The direct ancestor of those used in France and England was in the
Namur (province) region in what is now Belgium. From there, they spread first to the
Pays de Bray on the eastern boundary of Normandy and from there to the Weald of Sussex, where the first furnace (called Queenstock) in Buxted was built in about 1491, followed by one at Newbridge in Ashdown Forest in
1496. They remained few in number until about 1530 but many were built in the following decades in the Weald, where the iron industry perhaps reached its peak about 1590. Most of the
pig iron from these furnaces was taken to finery forges for the production of bar iron. B. Awty & C. Whittick (with P. Combes), 'The Lordship of Canterbury, iron-founding at Buxted, and the continental antecedents of cannon-founding in the Weald'
Sussex Archaeological Collections 140 (2004 for 2002), 71-81.
The first British furnaces outside the Weald were not built until the 1550s, but many were built in the remainder of that century and the following ones. The output of the industry probably peaked about 1620, and was followed by a slow decline until the early 18th century. This was apparently because it was more economic to import iron from Sweden and elsewhere than to make it in some more remote British locations. Charcoal that was economically available to the industry was probably being consumed as fast as the wood to make it grew. P. W. King, 'The production and consumption of iron in early modern England and Wales'
Economic History Review LVIII(1), 1-33; G. Hammersley, 'The charcoal iron industry and its fuel 1540-1750' Economic History Review Ser. II, XXVI (1973), 593-613.
Coke blast furnaces
In
1709, at
Coalbrookdale in Shropshire,
England, Abraham Darby I began to fuel a blast furnace with
coke (fuel) instead of charcoal. Coke iron was initially only used for foundry work, making pots and other cast iron goods. Foundry work was a minor branch of the industry, but his son built a new furnace at Horsehay (nearby), and began to supply the owners of
finery forges with coke pig iron for the production of bar iron. Coke pig iron was by this time cheaper to produce than charcoal pig iron. The use of a
coal-derived fuel in the iron industry was a key factor in the British
Industrial Revolution. A. Raistrick, A Dynasty of Ironfounders (1953; York 1989);C. K. Hyde, Technological Change and the British iron industry (Princeton 1977);B. Trinder,
The Industrial Revolution in Shropshire (Chichester 2000) Darby's 'old blast furnace' has been archaeologically excavated and can be seen in situ at Coalbrookdale as part of the Ironbridge Gorge Museums.
A further important development was the change to
hot blast, patented by
James Beaumont Neilson at
Wilsontown Ironworks in Scotland in
1828. This further reduced production costs. Within a few decades, the practice was to have a 'stove' as large as the furnace next to it into which the waste gas (containing CO) from the furnace was directed and burnt. The resultant heat was used to preheat the air blown into the furnace.* A. Birch, Economic History of the British Iron and Steel Industry , 181-9
- C. K. Hyde, Technological Change and the British iron industry (Princeton 1977)
Modern furnaces
The blast furnace remains an important part of modern iron production. Modern furnaces are highly efficient, including Cowper stoves to hot blast the blast air and employ recovery systems to extract the heat from the hot gases exiting the furnace. Competition in industry drives higher production rates. The largest blast furnaces have a volume of 5500 m³ (190,000 cu ft), which could hold the water from 2 standard swimming pools and can produce around 80,000 tonnes of iron per week. This is a great increase from the typical 18th century furnaces, which averaged about 400 tons per year. Variations of the blast furnace, such as the Swedish electric blast furnace, have been developed in countries which have no native coal resources.
Modern process
from
Cowper stoves
2. Melting zone (
bosh)
3. Reduction zone of
ferrous oxide (
barrel)
4. Reduction zone of
ferric oxide (
stack)
5. Pre-heating zone (
throat)
6. Feed of
Iron ore,
limestone, and
Coke (fuel) 7. Exhaust gases
8. Column of ore, coke and limestone
9. Removal of slag
10. Tapping of molten
pig iron 11. Collection of waste gases
Modern furnaces are equipped with an array of supporting facilities to increase efficiency, such as ore storage yards where barges are unloaded. The raw materials are transferred to the stockhouse complex by ore bridges, or Hoppers and "
Railcar". Rail-mounted scale cars or computer controlled weigh hoppers weigh out the various raw materials to yield the desired hot metal and slag chemistry. A "
skip car" powered by
winches brings these to the top of the furnace. AISI
The ironmaking blast furnace itself is built in the form of a tall
chimney-like structure lined with
refractory brick. Coke, limestone
flux (metallurgy), and iron ore (iron oxide) are charged into the top of the furnace in a precise filling order which helps control gas flow and the chemical reactions inside the furnace. Four "uptakes" allow the hot, dirty gas to exit the furnace dome, while "bleeder valves" protect the top of the furnace from sudden gas pressure surges. The coarse particles in the gas settle in the "dustcatcher" and are dumped into a railroad car or truck for disposal, while the gas itself flows through a
Venturi scrubber and a gas cooler to reduce the temperature of the cleaned gas.
The hot blast temperature can be from 900°C to 1300 °C (1600°F to 2300°F) depending on the stove design and condition. The hot blast is directed into the furnace through water-cooled copper nozzles called "tuyeres" near the base. The temperatures they deal with may be 2000 °C to 2300 °C (3600°F to 4200°F).
Oil, tar, natural gas, powdered coal and
oxygen can also be injected into the furnace at tuyere level to combine with the coke to release additional energy which is necessary to increase productivity.
The "casthouse" at the bottom half of the furnace contains the bustle pipe, tuyeres and the equipment for casting the liquid iron and slag. Once a "taphole" is drilled through the refactory clay plug, liquid iron, and slag flow down a trough through a "skimmer" opening, separating the iron and slag. Modern, larger blast furnaces may have as many as four tapholes and two casthouses.
Chemistry
The main chemical reaction producing the molten iron is:
Iron2
Oxygen3 + 3CarbonOxygen → 2Fe + 3CO2
Preheated blast air blown into the furnace reacts with the carbon in the form of coke to produce
carbon monoxide and heat. The carbon monoxide then reacts with the
iron oxide to produce molten iron and
carbon dioxide. Hot carbon dioxide, unreacted carbon monoxide, and nitrogen from the air pass up through the furnace as fresh feed material travels down into the reaction zone. As the material travels downward, the counter-current gases both preheat the feed charge, decompose the limestone to calcium oxide and carbon dioxide, and begin to reduce the iron oxides in the solid state. The main reaction controlling the gas atmosphere in the furnace is called the
Boudouard reaction:
C + O2 → CO2
CO2 + C → 2CO
The decomposition of limestone in the middle zones of the furnace proceeds according to the following reaction:
CaCO3 → CaO + CO2
The calcium oxide formed by decomposition reacts with various acidic impurities in the iron (notably silica), to form the slag which is essentially
calcium silicate, CalciumSilicon
Oxygen3.
The "pig" iron produced by the blast furnace has a relatively high carbon content of around 4-5%, making it very
brittle, and of little commercial use. Some pig iron is used to make cast iron. The majority of pig iron produced by blast furnaces undergoes further processing to reduce the carbon content and produce various grades of steel used for tools and construction materials.
Although the efficiency of blast furnaces is constantly evolving, the chemical process inside the blast furnace remains the same. According to the
American Iron and Steel Institute; "Blast furnaces will survive into the next millennium because the larger, efficient furnaces can produce hot metal at costs competitive with other iron making technologies." One of the biggest drawbacks of the blast furnaces is the inevitable carbon dioxide production as iron is reduced from iron oxides by carbon and there is no economical substitute - steelmaking is one of the major industrial contributors of the CO2 emissions in the world (see
Greenhouse gases).
Other Metals
Blast furnaces are used today to smelt lead from its oxide, after it has been desilvered.
See also
- Extraction of iron
- Laskill
- :Category:Ironworks and steelworks in England, which covers ironworks of all kinds.
References
External links
- Science Aid: Blast Furnace How iron is extracted, for high school level
- Blast Furnace animation
- How a Blast Furnace works Illustrated.
- Precursors of the Blast Furnace
- Extensive picture gallery about all methods of making and shaping of iron and steel in North America and Europe. In German and English.
- Blast Furnace Museum Radwerk IV
- Schematic diagram of blast furnace and Cowper stove
- ironfurnaces.com - a free wiki dedicated to preserving the history and location of historic blast iron furnaces
BLAST FURNACE*****
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BBC - GCSE Bitesize - Chemistry | Usefulproducts rock | The blast ...
You need to be able to describe how iron is extracted in a blast furnace, including the raw materials, reactions, and the formation and uses of slag.
BBC - History - The Blast Furnace Animation
Play the animation, and see how coal was burnt to produce iron, a pioneering process that accelerated the Industrial Revolution.
Blast furnace - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A blast furnace is a type of metallurgical furnace used for smelting to produce metals, generally iron. In a blast furnace, fuel and ore are continuously supplied through the top ...
blast furnace
Blast_Furnace
Most common ore: Haematite: The Blast Furnace: Useful products: Iron and Steel: Iron usually occurs in the Earth's crust as a ore. The most common ore is haematite, which ...
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gcsescience.com 18 gcsescience.com. Extraction of Metals
The chemistry of steelmaking. Blast furnace.
Making iron How does the blast furnace work? The Blast Furnace is a large steel structure about 30 metres high. It is lined with refractory bricks
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