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Tecnored Ironmaking Process
Tecnored Ironmaking Process
INTRODUCTION
The Tecnored furnace may also be used for the melting of metallic charges, including loose turnings and borings and hard to melt
scrap at a lower melting cost than in conventional processes, supplying hot metal to electric steel shops, reducing power consumption
and increasing productivity. The conversion of low met DRI into liquid pig iron, promoting final reduction of oxides and slagging off
the gangue contained in DRI, is also a highly cost effective application for productivity increase and cost reduction in DRI based
electric steel shops.
The successful completion of the pilot plant stage of the development of the Tecnored process has paved the way for the construction
of industrial scale facilities for both virgin iron units plants, as well as plants for recycling mining and steel mill wastes. The
operation of a full scale modular slice of the industrial furnace proved to be a novel and very beneficial method to develop this
metallurgical process and the fundamental furnace design parameters required for the first operating facility during the course of the
development over 100 separate operating test runs were made producing in excess of 1000 tons of high quality blast furnace type
hot metal. Figure 2 shows the modular furnace during tapping.
Design
The furnace has been designed for a daily production of 250 tons of pig iron. The principal intent of the IDP is, initially, to
demonstrate viability of the design of the furnace and the process for a given period and then expand the annual production to supply
100% of the cold pig iron used in Villaress electric arc furnace (EAF). Therefore, based on the modular nature of the process, the
layout of the plant has already been planned to allow further expansion of the installed capacity, by simply increasing the length of the
furnace and replicating the peripherals whenever (Figure 3).
A feasibility study of the modifications required in the melt shop to transfer hot metal from the Tecnored furnace straight to the EAF
shall be done in due course, targeting to boost the crude steel production besides lowering the kWh per ton of steel produced.
Still on the design, the ancillary equipment is based on typical Brasilian mini blast furnace operations, the principal advantages of this
approach being, cost control and the ability to source all major components in Brazil.
Tuyeres
IDP Future
Furnace Expansion
The site selected to build the IDP is an area located adjacent to the largest Aos Villaress engineering steel plant, in the city of
Pindamonhangaba, state of So Paulo, Brazil. Figure 4 shows the site location.
TECNORED
PLANT SITE
Aos Villares
Plant
Mixer
Figure 7 - Mixer
Figure 9 Tecnored furnace
Construction
The start of construction has been delayed by the stringent environmental process required by the state of Sao Paulo, it is anticipated
that once the final permit has been granted that construction will be completed in a relatively short period of time, 120 days, largely
due to the decision to take advantage of the environmental permit delay and preassemble all major components.
Start-up
Start-up is currently scheduled for late July 2006.
FOCUS OF FUTURE DEVELOPMENT
Raw materials
One of the major focuses of future developments shall be the continuous improvement of non-conventional raw material usage,
individually or in different blends. The idea is to further increase the portfolio of suitable iron and carbon units, defining limits of
utilization, modifications required in the equipment, therefore, optimizing the flexibility of the technology.
For instance, studies have been made in the last few months on briquette properties when using ore mine tailings as the primary Fe
source with different reductants, binders and fluxes. Large deposits of such materials are available in mining countries with additional
tailings being created every day. These materials are generally high in Fe content, typically >60% with no current use in the industry,
this leads to very sound economic advantages transforming what is currently a waste product of minimal value into hot metal with
blast furnace iron like properties.
Additionally, new sources of solid fuels shall be tested, individually or in blends, in the industrial furnace after being pre-approved in
the Tecnored furnace simulator, as shown in Figure 11.
MOISTURE CONTENT
Figure 11 Rank of coals tested in the pilot plant and/or in the process simulator
Biomass fuels
During the pilot plant development stage charcoal fines generated in the production of charcoal for the mini BF market in Brazil, have
been extensively used as reductant in the pellets/briquettes with very good behavior. The target now is to develop the biomass
version of the technology by using fines of other types of fast growing biomasses (carbonized grass, corn-cobs, etc) as reductant and
chips or briquettes as fuel.
Biomass use further improves the sound economic advantages of the Tecnored process due to the availability of carbon credits to the
operator and dismissal of use of expensive fossil fuels. Brazil while not being a coal producer is very rich in biomass options for fuels.
Tests are scheduled using a variety of materials including grass based
Reactor design
The next phase of furnace development will be focused around a new pilot furnace to be constructed as a first priority after the start-up
of the IDP. The plan is intended to evaluate whether the process will benefit from being operated at different operational conditions
not tested in the first pilot plant, e.g. increased pressure, and how to modify the design of the furnace to accommodate these changes.
In addition, continued development and understanding of the process is expected to contribute to the future development of other
Tecnored based processes, keeping the competitiveness of the technology.
Other developments
The construction of a new pilot plant shall permit, besides the continuous improvement of the current Tecnored technologies, the
development of new versions of the process, already identified but not discussed for obvious reasons.
POTENTIAL MARKETS
Once the first industrial furnace is continuously operating, new projects shall be announced in different locations. Many of these
projects are already in the feasibility studies phase, allowing immediate implementation soon after the performance approval of the
IDP furnace.
The overall concept is to produce low cost iron in strategic locations where raw materials are available and ship the product to end-
users worldwide, for direct use or in the liquid form after remelting in a Tecnored melter.
RUSSIA
USA
CHINA
INDIA
BRAZIL
CONCLUSIONS
The start-up of the IDP is currently scheduled for July 2006. This first industrial plant of Tecnored (IDP) shall demonstrate not only
the process itself but also the possibility of steelmakers investing in ironmaking facilities on a small scale and in a phased approach. In
addition, after the successful operation of this plant, a new pilot plant will be built on a high priority where new versions of the
technology will be developed, different raw materials can be tested and changes can be simulated, among a number of other
possibilities.
We look forward to presenting the first results and an update plan of the future developments in the near future.
REFERENCES
1. M. Contrucci, Tecnored Process Industrial Plant in Construction, Beyond the blast furnace, Atlanta, USA, June 2000.
2. J. C. DAbreu; J. H. Noldin Jr.; K. M. Martins; D. R. Araujo, Kinetics and Morphological Assessment of Self-Reducing
Briquettes of Hematite and Magnetite Ores, ScanMet-II 2nd International Conference on Process Development in Iron and
Steelmaking, Lule, Sweden, 2004.
3. J. H. Noldin Jr.; J. C. DAbreu; H. M. Kohler; R. N. Rodrigues Filho; K. M. Martins, A Kinetic Study of a Self-Reducing
Briquette Aiming the New Ironmaking Technologies, COM 2002 41st Conference of Metallurgists, Montreal, Quebec, Canada,
August 2002
4. J. H. Noldin Jr.; J. C. DAbreu; K. M. Martins, Kinetics and Morphological Studies of a Carbon Composite Briquette Aiming the
Emergent Ironmaking Technologies, 132nd TMS Annual Meeting - Yazawa International Symposium, San Diego, CA, USA,
March 2003.
5. C. Takano; M. B. Mouro; J. C. DAbreu; J. H. Noldin Jr., Physical and Chemical Behavior of Self-Reducing Agglomerates,.
International Workshop on Science and Technology of Ironmaking, Japan, 2003.
6. J. H. Noldin Jr.; M. A. Contrucci; J. C. DAbreu; K. Meijer, Tecnored Process - Low Cost Pig Iron Production, Scrap Substitutes
and Alternative Ironmaking IV, Baltimore, MD, USA, October 2004.
7. J. C. DAbreu; H. M. Kohler; J. H. Noldin Jr., Reduction Simulation of a Descending Self-Reducing Pellet in the Upper Shaft of
the Tecnored Furnace, 5th Japan-Brazil Symposium on Dust Processing-Energy-Environment in Metallurgical Industries, Vitria,
ES, Brazil, September 2004.
8. J. H. Noldin Jr.; M. A. G. Bentes; J. C. DAbreu; L. A. Rossi; A. B. Leite, Recycling of CST By-Products by Tecnored
Ironmaking, 2nd International Meeting on Ironmaking Environment and wastes recycling session, Vitria, ES, Brazil,
September 2004
9. J. H. Noldin Jr.; M. A. Contrucci; J. C. DAbreu; N. Jacomini, Fuel Flexibility in the Tecnored Process, 2nd International
Meeting on Ironmaking Environment and wastes recycling session, Vitria, ES, Brazil, September 2004
10. M A Contrucci; P C Costa; E Marcheze; J H Noldin, Jr, J C DAbreu, T Cellissen; I J. Cox; K Meijer, TECNORED The First
Full Scale Furnace AIST,, Charlotte, NC USA, May 2005