Thus, based on the phase composition, the examined dust from dry gas cleaning systems represents a mixture of forsterite (up to 30 vol.%), spinel (up to 15 vol.%), and a complex glassy phase (up to 40 vol.%).
The resulting briquettes were subjected to forced drying at 120 °C for 3 h.
In addition to the strength characteristics of dry briquettes, the hot strength of the agglomerated raw material is of particular significance. This characteristic indicates the behavior of the briquettes under thermal stress, which they experience during the smelting process in furnaces. The lower the hot strength, the higher the risk of premature briquette failure, leading to dust emissions or disruption of the smelting process.
The prepared briquettes were placed in a Nabertherm TR420 drying oven and dried for 2 h at 120 °C (starting from the temperature rise). After drying, the briquettes (in a vertical position) were placed in a Nabertherm N7/H muffle furnace preheated to 1050 °C. A steel load of a rectangular cross-section (referred to as the load) was carefully placed on top of the briquettes. The load on each briquette was calculated to be 0.52 kg/cm2, so the load on one briquette was 1.63 kg, and on two briquettes, 3.26 kg.
Subsection
The visual inspection of the briquettes did not reveal any cracks throughout their height, including the end faces. Briquettes from both variants also retained their original height, indicating their high resistance to thermal deformation under load at temperatures up to 1050 °C. This temperature corresponds to the temperature range of the upper layers of the charge in ferroalloy furnaces.
To model the behavior of the briquettes in the middle and lower layers of the charge (in the temperature range of 1100–1600 °C), further experiments were conducted to determine the degree of softening (shrinkage) of the experimental briquettes.
The experiments were conducted in a high-temperature Tammann furnace (schematic in
Figure 9), where a refractory crucible with a briquette was loaded. A special cylindrical refractory weight was placed on top of the briquette.
The internal diameter of the crucible is slightly larger than the diameter of the load pressing on the briquette. For more precise temperature control during the experiment, a slit was made inside the crucible, where a thermocouple was installed, ensuring that the thermocouple does not interfere with the free movement of the load. At the initial stage, the end of the thermocouple is positioned at the middle of the briquette’s height. The briquette was heated at a rate of 6–8 °C per minute from room temperature, with temperature being recorded at 1 mm shrinkage intervals.
The results of the tests to determine the thermoplastic characteristics of the briquettes are presented as a dependence of softening degree (shrinkage) on temperature in
Figure 10.
Up to a temperature of 1400 °C, no changes were observed. After that, a gradual shrinkage of the briquettes was noted with increasing temperature. For briquette No. 3, when the maximum temperature in the crucible reached 1550 °C, the shrinkage level was 8%, while for briquette No. 4, the shrinkage reached 16%. A further temperature increase to 1600 °C led to the partial melting of the briquettes.
It is possible that the exceptionally high thermoplastic properties of the briquettes are related to the presence of PSG, which contains refractory phases such as forsterite and spinel. These phases serve as a kind of refractory framework for the briquettes. Typically, the initial signs of melting for pure AD occur within the temperature range of 1400–1450 °C. In our case, this range shifts to 1550 °C, ensuring the sufficient gas permeability of the charge column at temperatures close to melting. However, these findings require further investigation on an enlarged laboratory scale under conditions as close as possible to industrial operations.
The next batch of briquettes was also heated to 1050 °C, but without the load. After 20 min of heating, the briquettes were carefully removed from the furnace using special tongs and placed (while still hot) into the RB-1000 testing press to measure the hot splitting strength (
Figure 11). The strength measurement results are presented below in
Table 8.
The data in
Table 8 show that both briquette variants exhibit a significantly higher hot splitting strength than the required parameters.
Next, to evaluate the influence of DGD and the binder on the chemical composition of the final product, laboratory experiments were conducted to smelt high-carbon ferrochrome from the two aforementioned briquette variants.
The experiments were conducted in a Nabertherm LHT 08/17 indirect heating high-temperature furnace. The briquette charge weight was 400 g for each variant. The briquettes were weighed and placed in an alumina crucible. The crucible with the material was then placed in the furnace and heated to 1720 °C. Once the liquid melt was observed, the sample was held at this temperature for 20 min. The total duration of one experiment, including temperature ramp-up and holding time, was 3 h.
After the holding time, the furnace power was turned off, and after 2–2.5 h of cooling, the crucible with the smelted products was removed and separated, with the ingot, slag, and crucible material being separated.
Figure 12 and
Figure 13 show images of the metal ingots and slag obtained from the agglomerated material. These images reveal that, during the experiments, the briquettes fused into a solid ingot.
The metal ingots were clean, with no traces of slag or crucible material adhering to their surface. The fracture across the entire height of the ingot revealed homogeneous metal, with no signs of unmelted material. The ingot structure was dense, without distinct pores or blowholes typical for HC FeCr.
Table 9 presents the data on the mass of the initial and final products of the performed smelting experiments.
The obtained metal corresponded in chemical composition to high-carbon ferrochrome grade HC FeCr800.
Table 10 and
Table 11 present the chemical compositions of the metal in comparison with standard HC FeCr (according to ISO 5448 [
23]) and the slag (compared to industrial samples).
Typically, in the crushing sections of high-carbon ferrochrome (HCFeCr), the aspirated dust is a mixture of dust from the crushing of various grades—FeCr800, FeCr850, and FeCr900. The production of FeCr800 alloy during remelting may be explained by the increased oxidation of fine particulate material, which led to a reduction in the carbon concentration in the metal due to the release of CO from the carbides during remelting.
On the other hand, the reduction in the carbon content in the final alloy may be caused by the refining process, where carbon is removed from the raw material (AD) by Cr2O3, SiO2, and FeO oxides present in the DGD composition.
The chemical composition of the slags obtained during experimental smelting does not differ significantly from the classical slags formed during the production of HC FeCr in industrial conditions.
The experiments on smelting HC FeCr from briquetted material allowed for the production of ferrochrome that meets the requirements for finished products according to the standard [
23] used at domestic enterprises. The levels of harmful impurities, such as S and P, are below the allowable limits. The chromium oxide content is also below the range of Cr
2O
3 content found in industrial slags.
The slag multiplicity is in the range of 0,01–0,02 compared to 0,5 in the classical remelting of AD in bulk with slag addition. That is, the use of briquettes made from a mixture of AD and PSG, when potentially combined with technologies, will not lead to an increase in slag multiplicity and, consequently, the loss of the main element in the form of metal droplets with slag.
Overall, the briquetting technology for AD tested on a laboratory scale, with the inclusion of PSG dust in the mixture and the use of polymer-based binder, based on the study of the physicochemical properties of these materials, demonstrated the feasibility of producing standard grades of ferrochrome. The addition of PSG dust to AD in a 4:1 ratio, with a polymer binder consumption of 3% (of the dry mixture weight), allows the production of briquettes with high-strength characteristics sufficient for further metallurgical processing.