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The kinetics of dephosphorization of...
Journal article

The kinetics of dephosphorization of carbon-saturated iron using an oxidizing slag

Abstract

The kinetics of dephosphorization of carbon-saturated iron by oxidizing slags were studied at 1330 °C. Nine slag compositions were investigated in the systems CaO-Fe2O3-SiO2-CaF2 and CaO-Fe2O3-SiO2-CaCl2. Increasing Fe2O3 up to 50 pct was found to increase the rate and extent of dephosphorization, whereas further increases were found to decrease the rate and extent of dephosphorization. This was explained in terms of two competing effects on the driving force, where increased levels of iron oxide increase the oxygen potential for dephosphorization, hence the driving force, but simultaneously dilute the basic components in the slag, lowering the driving force for dephosphorization. CaF2 and CaCl2 were found to decrease the rate and extent of dephosphorization at levels higher than 12 pct. The rate of dephosphorization was found to be first order with respect to phosphorous in the metal and was controlled by mass transport in the slag. The oxygen potential at the slag/metal interface was controlled by the FeO activity in the slag. When the kinetic results were analyzed to take account of different driving forces, Fe2O3, CaF2 and CaCl2 were all found to increase the mass transfer coefficient of phosphorous in the slag, and a quantitative relationship has been demonstrated between these mass transfer coefficients and the slag viscosity for each system studied.

Authors

Monaghan BJ; Pomfret RJ; Coley KS

Journal

Metallurgical and Materials Transactions B, Vol. 29, No. 1, pp. 111–118

Publisher

Springer Nature

Publication Date

January 1, 1998

DOI

10.1007/s11663-998-0013-2

ISSN

1073-5615

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