Beneficiation

Beneficiation, removal of worthless particles from pulverized metal ore.

Ores

Iron ores occur in igneous, metamorphic (transformed), or sedimentary rocks in a variety of geologic environments. Most are sedimentary, but many have been changed by weathering, and so their precise origin is difficult to determine. The most widely distributed iron-bearing minerals are oxides, and iron ores consist mainly of hematite (Fe2O3), which is red; magnetite (Fe3O4), which is black; limonite or bog-iron ore (2Fe2O3·3H2O), which is brown; and siderite (FeCO3), which is pale brown. Hematite and magnetite are by far the most common types of ore.

Pure magnetite contains 72.4 percent iron, hematite 69.9 percent, limonite 59.8 percent, and siderite 48.2 percent, but, since these minerals never occur alone, the metal content of real ores is lower. Deposits with less than 30 percent iron are commercially unattractive, and, although some ores contain as much as 66 percent iron, there are many in the 50–60 percent range. An ore’s quality is also influenced by its other constituents, which are collectively known as gangue. Silica (SiO2) and phosphorus-bearing compounds (usually reported as P2O5) are especially important because they affect the composition of the metal and pose extra problems in steelmaking.

China, Brazil, Australia, Russia, and Ukraine are the five biggest producers of iron ore, but significant amounts are also mined in India, the United States, Canada, and Kazakhstan. Together, these nine countries produce 80 percent of the world’s iron ore. Brazil, Australia, Canada, and India export the most, although Sweden, Liberia, Venezuela, Mauritania, and South Africa also sell large amounts. Japan, the European Union, and the United States are the major importers.

Mining And Concentrating

Most iron ores are extracted by surface mining. Some underground mines do exist, but, wherever possible, surface mining is preferred because it is cheaper.

Lumps and fines

Crushing

As-mined iron ore contains lumps of varying size, the biggest being more than 1 metre (40 inches) across and the smallest about 1 millimetre (0.04 inch). The blast furnace, however, requires lumps between 7 and 25 millimetres, so the ore must be crushed to reduce the maximum particle size. Crushed ore is divided into various fractions by passing it over sieves through which undersized material falls. In this way, lump or rubble ore (7 to 25 millimetres in size) is separated from the fines (less than 7 millimetres). If the lump ore is of the appropriate quality, it can be charged to the blast furnace without any further processing. Fines, however, must first be agglomerated, which means reforming them into lumps of suitable size by a process called sintering.

Sintering

Iron ore sintering consists of heating a layer of fines until partial melting occurs and individual ore particles fuse together. For this purpose, a traveling-grate machine is used, and the burning of fine coke (known as coke breeze) within the ore generates the necessary heat. Before being delivered to the sinter machine, the ore mixture is moistened to cause fine particles to stick to larger ones, and then the appropriate amount of coke is added. Initially, coke on the upper surface of the bed is ignited when the mixture passes under burners in an ignition hood, but thereafter its combustion is maintained by air drawn through the bed of materials by a suction fan, so that by the time the sinter reaches the end of the machine it has completely fused. The grate on which the sinter mix rests consists of a series of cast-iron bars with narrow spaces between them to allow the air through. After cooling, the sinter is broken up and screened to yield blast-furnace feed and an undersize fraction that is recycled. Modern sinter plants are capable of producing up to 25,000 tons per day. Sintering machines are usually measured by hearth area; the biggest machines are 5 metres (16 feet) wide by 120 metres long, and the effective hearth area is 600 square metres (6,500 square feet).

Concentrates

Upgrading

Crushing and screening are straightforward mechanical operations that do not alter an ore’s composition, but some ores need to be upgraded before smelting. Concentration refers to the methods of producing ore fractions richer in iron and lower in silica than the original material. Most processes rely on density differences to separate light minerals from heavier ones, so the ore is crushed and ground to release the ore minerals from the gangue. Magnetic techniques also are used.

The upgraded ore, or concentrate, is in the form of a very fine powder that is physically unsuitable for blast furnace use. It has a much smaller particle size than ore fines and cannot be agglomerated by sintering. Instead, concentrates must be agglomerated by pelletizing, a process that originated in Sweden and Germany about 1912–13 but was adapted in the 1940s to deal with low-grade taconite ores found in the Mesabi Range of Minnesota, U.S.

Pelletizing

First, moistened concentrates are fed to a rotating drum or an inclined disc, the tumbling action of which produces soft, spherical agglomerates. These “green” balls are then dried and hardened by firing in air to a temperature in the range of 1,250° to 1,340° C (2,300° to 2,440° F). Finally, they are slowly cooled. Finished pellets are round and have diameters of 10 to 15 millimetres, making them almost the ideal shape for the blast furnace.

The earliest kind of firing equipment was the shaft furnace. This was followed by the grate-kiln and the traveling grate, which together account for more than 90 percent of world pellet output. In shaft furnaces the charge moves down by gravity and is heated by a counterflow of hot combustion gases, but the grate-kiln system combines a horizontal traveling grate with a rotating kiln and a cooler so that drying, firing, and cooling are performed separately. In the traveling-grate process, pellets are charged at one end and dried, preheated, fired, and cooled as they are carried through successive sections of the equipment before exiting at the other end. Traveling grates and grate-kilns have similar capacities, and up to five million tons of pellets can be made in one unit annually.

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