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Types of Reheating Furnaces
Types of Reheating Furnaces
Batch type.
Continuous type, including pusher type, rotary-hearth type, walking-beam type,
walking-hearth type and roller-hearth type.
Batch furnaces
Batch furnaces are those in which the charged material remains in a fixed position on the
hearth until heated to rolling temperature. Continuous furnaces are those in which the
charged material moves through the furnace and is heated to rolling temperature as it
progresses through the furnace.
Batch furnaces are the older type; though they are capable of heating all grades and sizes of
steel, in practice, they are primarily used to heat relatively large billets, leaving small billets for
continuous furnaces.
Batch furnaces are fired with either gaseous or liquid fuel, with preheated or cold air for
combustion. The air may be preheated by either regenerators or recuperators. When the air is
preheated with regenerators, the furnace fires reversed from one end to the other. If the air is
preheated by recuperators, they are not reversed and firing is continuous from one or both
ends, depending upon the location of the gas outlet port. The steel to be heated in a batch
furnace commonly is charged and drawn through front doors by a charging machine. Batch
furnaces vary in size from those with hearths of less than a square metre (only a few square
feet), with a single access door, to those about 6 metres (20 feet) in depth by 15 metres (50
feet) long, with five or six doors.
Batch furnaces provide means for heating steels of various types and sizes. They can be
operated to heat steel to temperatures above 1315C (2400F) more satisfactorily than a
continuous furnace. If needed, they are suitable as a reservoir for holding hot steel directly
from the primary mill for later rolling in the finishing mills. Primary disadvantages exist in the
high capital investment per unit of production, low hearth area efficiency, high man-hours per
ton of heated steel, lack of flexibility, and limitation on length of pieces to be heated, etc.
Pusher-Type Furnaces
Continuous pusher-type furnaces were designed initially for heating billets and small bloom
sections. The hearths were relatively short in length and were sloped downward longitudinally
towards the discharge end to permit an easy movement of billets through the furnace.
Pushers were used to push forward the charge of cold billets.
Longer furnaces generally are constructed now. Some have hearths about 24.5 to 32 metres
(80 to 105 feet) long, with top and bottom firing, and contain preheating, heating and soaking
zones. Recuperators are utilized to provide waste-heat recovery. Multiple-zone furnace (e.g.
five-zone slab heating furnace) have been evolved from one-zone furnace in the early
designs. to the modern five-zone slab heating furnace.
The steel to be heated in a continuous furnace can be charged either from the end or through
a side door. In either case, the steel is moved through the furnace by pushing the last piece
charged with a pusher at the charging end. As each cold piece is pushed into the furnace
against the continuous line of material, a heated piece is removed. The heated piece is
discharged by several methods, such as through an end door by gravity upon a roller table
which feeds the mill, or pushed through a side door to the mill table by suitable manual or
mechanical means or withdrawn through the end door by a mechanical extractor.
Advantages of the pusher-type furnaces are collected as follows:
High production per dollar investment, high hearth area efficiency, and high
production per square foot of ground space occupied.
Low maintenance, ease in charging and drawing steel, less trouble from
temperature inequalities between each succeeding piece drawn.
Better means for controlling the rate of heating at all temperature levels. Gradual
rise in temperature permits charging all grades of cold steel without cooling furnace.
Can be built for any reasonable length of piece to be heated, resulting in higher mill
yield.
Rotary-hearth furnace
A distinctly different type of continuous reheating furnace is the rotary-hearth type, shown
schematically in Fig. 1. It is used frequently for heating rounds in tube mills and for heating
short lengths of blooms or billets for forging. The rotary-hearth type permits the external walls
and roof to remain stationary while the hearth section of the furnace revolves.
Rotary-hearth furnaces eliminate either the manual labor required for rolling rounds forward
on horizontal or moderately sloped hearths, or the disadvantages of excessively sloped
hearth in continuous furnaces. They have better means for controlling the rate of heating at all
temperature levels than batch-type furnaces.
However, high capital cost per unit of production, high space per unit ratio, and low hearth
area efficiency are expected with the otary-hearth furnaces. In addition, seals and wall
refractories at the hearth level need to be well maintained.
Walking-Beam Furnaces
The early design of walking beam furnaces used alloy steel walking beams that were exposed
directly to the heat of the furnace and were subject to heat corrosion, so it operated at
maximum temperatures of about 1065C (1950F), compared with reheating furnaces that must
heat steel to temperatures up to 1315C (2400F).
Today the walking beam may consist of water-cooled steel members topped with refractories
in such a manner that only the refractories are exposed directly to the heat of the furnace.
Alternatively, the beams and supports may be constructed of water-cooled tubular sections
(with "buttons" on the top surfaces to keep the hot steel from direct contact with the water-
cooled tubes). Walking beam furnaces are now used to reheat slabs, billets and blooms, etc.
Walking-beam furnaces can be designed for side or end charging and discharging. Either
hydraulic or mechanical methods can be used to actuate the beams. Cross firing with side-
wall burners above and below the stock being heated have been employed. In some furnaces
the stocks are heated with radiant-type burners in the furnace roof or in both the roof and
below the stock.
Pieces can be separated from one another on the hearth, so stickers are avoided.
Pile-ups and furnace retention time are reduced.
Furnace can be emptied easily from either end by activating the beam
mechanisms.
Skid marks are eliminated since there is no line contact with water-cooled skids.
Hearth wear and stock damage are minimized since there is no rubbing or friction
between the stock and the hearth.
By selecting the proper number of walking beams, better hearth utilization can be
obtained when charging mixed sizes.
The potential for the extension of overall furnace length to improve the utilization of
furnace waste gases and reduce fuel consumption. A similar advantage is not
available with other furnace types because of limitations on overall furnace length.
Walking-Hearth Furnaces
In a walkinghearth furnace, travel of the work through the heating chamber follows the same
general path as in the walking-beam furnace. The main difference in method of conveyance in
these two furnace types is that, in the walking-hearth furnace, the work rests on fixed
refractory piers. These piers extend through openings in the hearth and their tops are above
the hearth surface during the time when the work is stationary in the furnace. The furnace
gases can thus circulate between most of the bottom surface of the work and the hearth.
To advance the work toward the discharge end of the furnace, the hearth is raised vertically to
first contact the work and then raise it a short distance above the piers. The hearth then
moves forward a preset distance, stops, lowers the work onto its new position on the piers,
continues to descend to its lowest position and then moves backward to its starting position
toward the charging end of the furnace to await the next stroke.
In general, the same advantages and disadvantages of the walking-beam furnace apply to
walking-hearth furnaces.
For a batch-type furnace, it is preferred to preheat certain grades of alloy and high-carbon
steels in a supplementary furnace before the stock is transferred into the hotter furnaces. The
preheating zone of a continuous furnace makes this unnecessary.