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Hydrogen-based direct reduction of industrial iron...
Journal article

Hydrogen-based direct reduction of industrial iron ore pellets: An X-ray computed tomography analysis of porosity and crack evolution

Abstract

Hydrogen-based ironmaking is a promising pathway for steel decarbonization, the performance of which hinges on understanding gas transport mechanisms within dynamic pellet microstructures. Conventional characterization methods conflate pores and cracks into single void fraction, obscuring their distinct evolution and transport impacts. This study employs multiscale characterization combining X-ray computed tomography, scanning electron microscopy, and deep learning to separately quantify pore and crack network evolution. Two industrial pellet grades are analyzed at successive stages obtained from hydrogen reduction experiments conducted at 800 °C and 1000 °C. Results reveal substantial porosity increases through fine pore formation. Reduction at 800 °C promotes pore nucleation producing fine-scale porosity, while 1000 °C drives coarsening through pore coalescence and structural weakening. Crack development varies dramatically with temperature, where 1000 °C generates severe, interconnected networks with >70% percolating connectivity, whereas 800 °C results in much less extensive cracking and lower coarse-void connectivity (≈40%). These findings provide a quantitative microstructural basis for assessing gas-access pathways and cracking susceptibility during H2 reduction.

Authors

Zakeri A; Coley KS; Mohammadpour P; Tafaghodi L

Journal

International Journal of Hydrogen Energy, Vol. 231, ,

Publisher

Elsevier

Publication Date

May 6, 2026

DOI

10.1016/j.ijhydene.2026.154846

ISSN

0360-3199

Labels

Fields of Research (FoR)

Sustainable Development Goals (SDG)

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