Home
Scholarly Works
Interfacial area in pyrometallurgical reactor...
Conference

Interfacial area in pyrometallurgical reactor design

Abstract

Increasing interfacial area through gas injection is one of the main methods for accelerating reaction between slag, metals, and gases in modern pyrometallurgical reactors. In slag-metal reactors, the generation of a large number of metal droplets into the slag phase through high gas velocity has a much larger effect on the overall kinetics compared to the enhanced mass transfer through mixing. Top blowing technology generates large interfacial areas (>300 m2/tonne) through high impingement gas velocity at short distances between the exit of the injection lance and the metal-slag interface. Phase separation may become a limit at the case of very high interfacial areas, though there is still only limited understanding of the trajectories of metal droplets in slag-metal-gas emulsions.

Authors

Brooks GA; Subagyo

Volume

1

Pagination

pp. 965-974

Publication Date

October 16, 2003

Conference proceedings

Yazawa International Symposium Metallurgical and Materials Processing Principles and Techologies Materials Processing Fundamentals and New Technologies

Contact the Experts team