4.6 Article

Influence of Fuel Level on Properties, Productivity, and Mineralogy of Russian Vanadiferous Titanomagnetite Sinter

Journal

MATERIALS
Volume 14, Issue 21, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ma14216258

Keywords

sinter; mineralogical phases; metallurgical properties; blast furnace

Funding

  1. Programs of the National Natural Science Foundation of China [52074081, 51604065, 52174319, 51174051]
  2. Program of the Educational Commission of Liaoning Province of China [2019LNQN08]
  3. National Key Technology RD Program [2015BAB19B02]

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The study investigated the impact of fuel level on the sinter properties of vanadiferous titanomagnetite through sintering pot testing and various analyses. Results showed that as the fuel level increased from 3.5% to 6.0%, certain properties such as yield, productivity, and mineral composition exhibited an initial increase followed by a decrease. The optimal fuel level was determined to be 4.0% under current production conditions.
The influence of fuel level on Russian vanadiferous titanomagnetite sinter properties, productivity, and mineralogy are researched by sintering pot testing, metallographic microscopy, scanning electron microscopy analysis, and energy dispersive spectrometer (SEM-EDS) analysis. A comprehensive index is evaluated in conjunction with the same indexes and significance coefficient as that in the Panzhihua Iron and Steel Group. Results show that with the increasing fuel level from 3.5% to 6.0%, flame front speed, yield, tumbling test index (TI), and productivity, all first increase and then decrease. The low temperature reduction degradation index (RDI+3.15) and softening zone (Delta T) gradually increase while the RI and starting temperature of softening (T-10), and ending temperature of softening (T-40) decrease with increasing fuel levels from 3.5% to 6.0%. With the increase of fuel level from 3.5% to 6.0%, the content of FeO, SiO2, and MgO increase, while TiO2 shows a decrease. For the same increase in fuel level, the number of pores and calcium ferrite and hematite decrease but the silicate increases. In addition, in the fuel level range of 3.5% to 5.5%, magnetite correspondingly increases but then shows a drop after 5.5%. Moreover, when the fuel level increases to greater than 5.0%, FeOx and fayalite quickly increase and a small amount of metallic iron appears under the fuel level of 6.0%. Overall, the optimal fuel level under current production conditions and indicator selection is 4.0%.

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