Abstract

Gas‐based direct reduction in a shaft furnace is the dominant process in the world for production of direct reduced iron. As fresh reducing gas passes through the iron ore burden, it is diluted by the gas emitted from the reacted iron ores which decreases the reduction potential of the reducing gas. Previous reduction experiments mostly used single pellet which could not examine this phenomenon. In this study, hematite pellets arranged in multiple layers inside a molybdenum basket are reduced isothermally at 1173–1273 K using 50% CO + 50% CO2% and 100% CO gases under flow rates of 0.2–5.0 NL min−1 to simulate the dilution of CO by CO2 in the shaft. It is discovered that the reduction of pellets in the basket is highly uneven even in pure CO atmosphere. Pellets in the middle layer are reduced ≈2 times less than the pellets in the top and bottom layers. The top side of a pellet is also less reduced than the bottom side facing the gas inlet. During melting of incompletely reduced pellets at 1873 K, intensive interaction between the unreduced iron oxides and the alumina crucible was observed. Thus, smelting of incompletely reduced iron could potentially shorten the refractory lifetime.

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