Metals (May 2022)

Contribution of CO<sub>2</sub> Emissions from Basic Oxygen Steelmaking Process

  • Nirmal Madhavan,
  • Geoffrey Brooks,
  • M. Akbar Rhamdhani,
  • Adam Bordignon

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/met12050797
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 5
p. 797

Abstract

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The steelmaking process is an energy-intensive multi-stage process, and the step involving the conversion of molten iron to steel, commonly performed in a basic oxygen furnace (BOF), makes an important contribution to greenhouse gas generation. The effective utilization of energy is one of the major challenges in the process, as minor variations of operational parameters can have significant negative effects on the converter in terms of CO2 emissions. A recent study published by the same authors analyzed the BOF process by developing a general mass and energy balance model. The present study utilizes these models to quantify the contribution of global warming potential (GWP) from the BOF and analyses its sensitivity with the parameters such as hot metal composition, the temperature of hot metal, tapping temperature, scrap quantity, and levels of post-combustion. The term GWP in this study refers to the quantified CO2 values obtained by summing up the carbon dioxide associated with the production of CaO associated with the mass of flux and carbon dioxide generated from the off-gas (considering C in hot metal is completely oxidized to CO2). The results from the analysis indicates that for a tapping temperature increase from 1650 °C to 1683 °C, the percentage change in the global warming potential (GWP) was found to be approximately 1%. The study identified that increasing the scrap percentage in the feed would be the most effective approach to effectively utilizing chemical energy from the process and reduce CO2 emissions. However, increasing scrap above 30% of the total feed is likely to raise issues around: (a) the presence of residual elements in scrap affecting the quality of liquid steel, (b) the effective utilization of post-combustion heat within the furnace, and (c) the recovery of off-gas heat for scrap preheating (assuming no steam recovery from the off-gas system). If these issues could be addressed at the industrial level, a significant reduction in CO2 emissions from the BOF process could be achieved.

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