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Steelmaking
Process
Steelmaking
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Iron ore, limestone
and coke (made from coal) are combined in the blast furnace and
heated to temperatures of over 3000° F by blasts of hot air. Once
in a molten state, the hot air removes oxygen and other properties
to produce iron.
Steel used to
be made in open-hearth furnaces, where regenerative heating of gases,
alternately reversed to raise the temperature, melted the iron and
scrap while removing impurities to form steel. The combination of
blast furnace and open hearth once represented the major means of
producing steel in Ohio, but these have largely been replaced by
the basic oxygen furnace and the electric arc furnace.
At the basic
oxygen furnace (BOF), an oxygen lance blows pure oxygen into a mixture
of molten iron and scrap, combining the oxygen with carbon to reduce
impurities. The BOF is the most efficient process for large-scale
conversion of iron to steel, being able to produce as much steel
in an hour as the open hearth would produce in eight hours. However,
the BOF cannot utilize as much scrap as the electric arc furnace.
At the electric
arc furnace (EAF), scrap is the principal raw material. Three carbon
electrodes are lowered into the furnace until they meet the cold
scrap. Electric arcs produce intense heat, transforming the scrap
into molten steel.
A ladle metallurgy
center, where the steel's composition is analyzed, enables the properties
of the steel to be fine-tuned and customized to customer and government
specifications. This enables the steel produced by modern Ohio mills
to be the most efficiently and precisely made, high-quality product
available in the world.
Steel destined
for plate, sheet, coil, bars or welded pipe and tubing is produced
on a continuous caster, then hot rolled. The continuous caster eliminates
the necessity of pouring liquid steel into ingots and eliminates
the formerly used soaking pit and blooming mill steps, and thus
is much faster than older methods. The caster can literally accept
pours on a continuous basis, limited only by the melting capacity
and the speed of the roll apron.
After being
hot rolled, the steel can be sold as "hot bands" or continue to
the cold rolling operation for more demanding applications. It may
be heat treated or receive a corrosive-resistant coating, or be
welded into pipe or tubing for mechanical and other applications.
Steel for bar
is cast into blooms or billets, then hot rolled into many kinds
of cross sections. Further processing may include cold drawing -
required for sophisticated automotive and aerospace applications.
Seamless tubing for applications like oil wells and steam boilers
is produced from billets that are first pierced and then drawn over
a mandrel to reach the desired diameter and wall thickness.
In the last
decade, the term mini-mill has become common in the steel industry.
There is no separate SIC code for mini-mills - they are grouped
with the primary producers. However, they do not make iron into
steel, as do the integrated mills, but rather melt steel scrap in
electric arc furnaces as their source of product.
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