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Air classification of blast furnace dust collected in a fabric filter for recycling to the sinter process
Institution:1. Department of Environmental Engineering Sciences, University of Florida, P.O. Box 116450, Gainesville, FL 32611, USA;2. Department of Civil & Coastal Engineering, University of Florida, P.O. Box 116580, Gainesville, FL 32611, USA;3. Florida Department of Transportation, State Materials Office, 5007 NE 39th Avenue, Gainesville, FL 32609, USA;4. Department of Occupational and Environmental Health, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Oklahoma City, OK 73126, USA;1. Biological and Chemical Processing Department, Idaho National Laboratory, United States;2. Biofuels and Renewable Energy Technology Department, Idaho National Laboratory, United States;3. Advanced Process and Decision Systems Department, Idaho National Laboratory, United States;1. Process Metallurgy Research Group, Faculty of Technology, University of Oulu, Finland;2. Mineral Processing and Agglomeration Lab, Central Metallurgical Research and Development Institute, Cairo, Egypt
Abstract:Totally dry cleaning has become a common technology for top gas cleaning in blast furnaces in recent years. A significant advantage of totally dry gas cleaning is that the dust collected is obtained as dry powder, thus simplifying the recycling of the dust in the sinter plant and avoiding aqueous emissions. The concentration of some heavy metals, especially zinc, in the collected dust is usually higher than the maximum tolerable concentration for recycling to the sinter process. Therefore, a process for separation of dust with a low level of contamination from the rest is necessary to make partial recycling possible. This is possible because the limited components are more volatile and accumulate in the finer dust fraction. In wet blast furnace top gas cleaning, hydrocyclones are well established for this separation. For the separation of dry powder from the dry dedusting process air classification can be used. Dust from the top gas of a blast furnace with a fabric filter for dry top gas cleaning was split into several size fractions using a laboratory air classifier. The concentration of Ca, Cd, Cl, Cu, Fe, K, Na, Pb and Zn was analysed for each particle class and the loss on ignition was determined. A strong dependence of the concentration on the particle size was found for the more volatile metals, whereas the Fe and Ca concentration and the loss on ignition were quite evenly distributed. With the calculated recovery–removal-functions the possible recycling rate can be estimated for a given removal rate for the limited components.
Keywords:Blast furnace dust  Recycling  Zinc  Classification
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