Abstract

The major issue in stainless steelmaking is the difficulty of oxidising carbon from molten steel without also oxidising large proportions of expensive chromium. This can, however, be achieved by reducing the partial pressure of the gaseous product of carbon oxidation, carbon monoxide, by dilution with argon. Modern stainless steelmaking is dominated by duplex processes which prepare a high carbon melt in an electric arc furnace, and then decarburise it in an argon–oxygen decarburisation (AOD) converter. In this work, the thermodynamic basis of preferential carbon oxidation by dilution of oxygen with argon is discussed, together with a review of AOD practice. The AOD process was simulated using computational thermodynamics software to illustrate the way in which it can achieve very low carbon levels in the molten steel bath without excessive co-oxidation of chromium. The slag reduction stage using ferrosilicon additions was also modelled and shown to be able to recover almost all oxidised chromium from the slag, limited only by the accompanying increase in the silicon content of the steel. The models, although simple and easy to develop, correctly predicted all trends in output variables as input parameters were changed and often matched plant data very well. The models provide a valuable learning tool for those interested in pyrometallurgical processing in general, and stainless steelmaking in particular.

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