Metallurgy is the study of physical and chemical behavior of metals and their alloys. The earliest evidence of metallurgy dates back 5000 years to ancient civilizations like ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia. Throughout history, metallurgy advanced with innovations like extracting copper and tin to make bronze around 3500 BC, and iron around 1200 BC. Metals are extracted from ores through processes like mining, crushing, concentration, and smelting, and shaped using techniques like casting, forging, rolling, and machining. The properties of metals can be modified through heat treatments and alloying with other elements.
The document discusses the principles of metallurgy and metal extraction processes. It defines metals, non-metals and metalloids based on their properties. The processes involved in metal extraction include mining, crushing, concentration, roasting, reduction and refining. Concentration methods separate the metal ore from gangue using techniques like gravity separation, magnetic separation or froth flotation. Reduction converts the metal oxide into pure metal using carbon or aluminothermic processes. Refining further purifies the metal using techniques like liquation, distillation, electrolysis or poling. Overall, the document provides an overview of the key concepts and steps involved in extracting and processing metals from their ores.
The document discusses key aspects of blast furnace design and operation, including:
1. Blast furnace productivity depends on optimal gas flow and smooth, rapid burden descent which requires an optimized furnace profile and lines.
2. Effluent gas from the furnace contains 20-30% CO by volume and is cleaned through three stages before use to reduce dust from 7-30 g/m3 to 0.01 g/m3.
3. Stoves are used to heat incoming blast with heat from cleaned furnace gas in a cyclic process, maintaining a steady, preheated blast supply to the furnace.
The document summarizes the basic oxygen furnace process. Molten pig iron and scrap are refined in a basic oxygen furnace by injecting high-purity oxygen. This reduces the carbon content and removes impurities. About 67% of the world's crude steel is produced using this process. Key aspects of the basic oxygen furnace include injection of oxygen through a lance to react with carbon and impurities, formation of slag to absorb impurities, and tapping of refined steel once processing is complete.
The document discusses the structure and properties of metallurgical slags. It states that slags comprise complex compounds of oxides from gangue minerals and sulphides that protect the metal melt. The structure and properties of slags, such as basicity and viscosity, are controlled by their composition. Network forming oxides like SiO2 form stable hexagonal networks, while network breaking oxides like CaO disrupt these networks. The fraction of ionic and covalent bonding in oxides determines their behavior in slags.
This document summarizes super alloys, including their properties, applications, classifications, microstructure, and heat treatment. Super alloys exhibit high strength and corrosion/oxidation resistance at high temperatures due to strengthening from solid solution strengthening and precipitation hardening. They are classified based on their primary metal (nickel, iron, cobalt) and are used in applications such as jet engines and gas turbines due to their high temperature capabilities. Their microstructure includes a gamma matrix and gamma prime precipitates that increase strength. Heat treatments are used to control the precipitates and carbides for optimal properties.
This document provides an overview of copper and its alloys. It discusses the extraction of copper from ores through pyrometallurgical and hydrometallurgical processes. Pyrometallurgical processes involve smelting copper sulfide concentrates to produce matte and blister copper, while electrolytic refining produces high purity copper. The document also classifies copper alloys and describes various wrought coppers including electrolytic tough-pitch copper, oxygen free copper, and deoxidized copper. Brasses, which are copper-zinc alloys, are discussed in detail, along with their microstructures.
The document is a presentation on pyrometallurgy given by Abraham Barry to Nathaniel Johnson. Pyrometallurgy uses thermal energy to extract and purify metals through processes like calcination, roasting, smelting, and refining. It discusses the key processes used in pyrometallurgy like calcination, which thermally decomposes materials below melting points, and roasting, which heats sulfide ores in air. It also covers the furnace types used like shaft, blast, muffle, and hearth furnaces.
This document discusses refractory systems used in iron making, specifically for blast furnaces. It defines refractory materials and their key properties, including melting point, porosity, bulk density, and thermal conductivity. Refractories are classified as acid, neutral, or basic depending on their chemical behavior. The document then describes the refractory linings used in different blast furnace regions, including the stack, hearth, and bosh. Carbon blocks and high-duty firebricks containing alumina are commonly used. Carbon linings provide benefits but also risks related to steam and gas formation. Failure can result from factors like carbon monoxide attack, temperatures, and slag/metal corrosion.
Aluminum is a lightweight metal that is widely used due to its properties and extraction process. It can be extracted from bauxite ore through the Bayer process, which involves dissolving the aluminum-containing minerals in sodium hydroxide to produce alumina, which is then electrolyzed to produce aluminum metal. Aluminum is commonly used in alloys to improve strength and is applied in transportation and construction due to its corrosion resistance, electrical conductivity, and high strength to weight ratio.
This document discusses the extractive metallurgy process for lead. It describes lead properties, history of lead use, health effects, lead ores and locations, ore dressing, size reduction, roasting, smelting, refining including the Parkes and Betts processes, and lead products and byproducts. The overall process involves extracting lead from its ore, reducing and refining it to remove impurities and produce a high purity lead product.
Ladle Metallurgy: Basics, Objectives and ProcessesElakkiya Mani
Worldwide steel production in 2019 reached 1869 million tons, with China as the largest producer at 996 million tons. India was the second largest steel producer at 111 million tons. Ladle metallurgy involves further refining of molten steel in a ladle after tapping from a converter or electric furnace. It allows for homogenization, deoxidation, desulfurization, and other processes. Key ladle metallurgy techniques include ladle furnace treatment, argon stirring, vacuum degassing, and alloy additions to adjust steel chemistry and properties.
1. Magnesium alloys are lightweight metals that are commonly used in applications that require strength and low weight, such as in aerospace and automotive components.
2. The major magnesium alloys include Mg-Al based alloys, Mg-Zn based alloys, and Mg-rare earth alloys. Mg-Al alloys like AZ31 and AZ61 provide good strength and ductility. Mg-Zn alloys like ZK51A offer high tensile strength.
3. Magnesium alloys can be joined using welding techniques like TIG welding and friction welding. They are easily die cast but require special considerations for corrosion resistance in engineering applications.
1) The document discusses various defects that can occur during steel ingot solidification such as pipe, columnar structure, blow holes, and segregation.
2) It provides remedies for preventing these defects, such as using a hot top feeder head to avoid pipe formation and soaking ingots to minimize segregation.
3) The document also covers the mechanisms of ingot solidification, describing how killed, rimmed, and semi-killed steels solidify into chill, columnar, and equiaxed zones within the ingot.
Heat treatment is used to alter the physical and mechanical properties of metals through controlled heating and cooling without changing the shape. It involves phase transformations during heating and cooling to modify the microstructure. Common heat treatments include annealing, which involves slowly cooling a heated metal to reduce hardness and increase ductility after cold working, and normalizing, which heats metal to above the critical temperature to dissolve carbides before air cooling. Recrystallization is an important annealing process where new strain-free grains nucleate and grow to replace the deformed microstructure.
Tool steels are high-quality alloy steels developed for shaping other materials. They contain carbon from 0.1-1.6% along with alloying elements like chromium, molybdenum, and vanadium. Tool steels offer better durability, strength, corrosion resistance, and temperature stability compared to other construction steels. They are used in applications involving forming, extrusion, and plastic molding. The document then discusses different types of tool steels categorized based on their intended use and hardening properties.
Phosphorus should be removed after silicon. Phosphorus forms brittle iron phosphide so must be removed during steelmaking. It can be effectively removed by employing a high basicity slag created by adding lime, which separates the Fe and P lines in an Ellingham diagram. Soda ash is a stronger base than lime but is too corrosive for practical use. Phosphorus removal is best at lower temperatures to prevent reversion, and is proportional to basicity, iron oxide, and inversely proportional to temperature.
This document provides information on the element titanium. It begins with a brief history of titanium's discovery. It then discusses titanium's physical properties, common ores that contain titanium like rutile and ilmenite, and the extraction processes developed by Kroll and Hunter to produce titanium metal. The document outlines some common titanium alloys produced by adding elements like aluminum and vanadium. Finally, it discusses applications of titanium in various industries like aerospace, medical implants, and automotive due to its high strength to weight ratio and corrosion resistance.
Nickel-based superalloys have good strength and oxidation resistance at high temperatures up to 550°C. They are heat resistant, strong, and corrosion and oxidation resistant at temperatures from 760-980°C. There are three types: nickel base, nickel-iron base, and cobalt base. The microstructure contains a γ (gamma) phase matrix and γ' (gamma prime) precipitate phase which are face centered cubic. Various carbide phases form on grain boundaries. Alloying elements like chromium, aluminum, and titanium provide solid solution strengthening and precipitation strengthening through the γ' phase. Superalloys are used in gas turbine engines, rockets, nuclear reactors, and other high-temperature applications.
This topic introduces the methods of irons, steels and cast irons production. It also describes the structure, properties and the usage of irons, steels and cast irons in the engineering field.
1) The document discusses different steelmaking processes including the Bessemer converter process, open hearth furnace process, and basic oxygen converter process.
2) The Bessemer converter process was the first major steelmaking technique but has been replaced by basic oxygen converters. It used hot metal and an oxygen blast to oxidize impurities.
3) The basic oxygen converter process is now the dominant steelmaking method. It uses a pear-shaped vessel, oxygen lancing, and produces steel in 40-60 minutes by oxidizing impurities into slag.
Metallurgy and its proospect BBA DU Financeneha0175120
This document provides an overview of metallurgy and its history. It discusses the extraction and processing of metals through techniques like mineral processing, pyrometallurgy, hydrometallurgy, and physical metallurgy. The history of metallurgy is traced from early use of gold and copper thousands of years ago to modern developments in steel production and welding. Key events highlighted include the development of bronze and iron working and innovations in the 18th-19th centuries that enabled large-scale steel production.
The document discusses the extraction of metals from their ores. It begins by describing where metals are found in nature based on their reactivity. Very reactive metals like calcium are found in the sea, while less reactive metals like aluminum and zinc are found as oxides and sulfides. The least reactive metals like gold and silver are found as free elements.
It then provides examples of metal ores found in Tanzania like copper, tin, iron, gold and uranium. The extraction process involves purifying the ore through processes like dressing, calcination and roasting. Metals are then extracted through electrolysis or chemical reduction. Common extraction methods for sodium, aluminum and iron are described. Finally, the document outlines some physical and chemical
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The document provides an overview of metallurgy and metal extraction processes. It discusses:
1) Different methods of metal extraction including pyrometallurgy (using heat), hydrometallurgy (using water), and electrometallurgy (using electricity).
2) Properties and applications of cast iron, which has 2-4.5% carbon content and is strong in compression.
3) The process of extracting iron from iron ore in a blast furnace, producing pig iron which can then be further processed to make wrought iron or steel.
Metals can be extracted from their ore through various processes depending on the reactivity of the metal. Less reactive metals can be manually separated from crushed ore, while more reactive metals require more energy-intensive processes like electrolysis or extraction in a blast furnace. In a blast furnace, ore, limestone flux and coke fuel are continuously fed into the top while hot air is blown into the bottom, allowing extraction of the metal in molten form from the bottom. Roasting is also used as a preliminary step, where sulfide ores are heated in air to transform the metal into an oxide and release sulfur dioxide gas. These processes can release toxic fumes and pollutants if not properly controlled.
Metals are an important class of elements that play an important part in our daily lives and the advancement of contemporary civilisation. Metals have been used by humans for millennia because of their extraordinary qualities like as strong electrical and thermal conductivity, malleability, ductility, and lustre. Metals have continually changed our environment and continue to be vital in numerous industries, from the earliest tools and weapons made during the Bronze Age to high-tech gadgets and towering skyscrapers of today. We will go deeper into the significance, types, qualities, applications, and future possibilities of metals in this presentation, as well as their long-term impact on our society and environment. Our adventure begins in the distant past, when early people discovered the transformational power of metals. Our forefathers discovered the secrets of metallurgy millennia ago, in the crucible of discovery. They recognised that heating certain rocks produced compounds with qualities unlike anything found in nature. The Bronze Age, typified by the fusing of copper and tin, was a watershed point in human history. It was the advent of metals as tools and weapons, ushering in an era of progress that would permanently alter the course of society.
The document discusses the history and uses of iron. It then describes the processes of extracting iron from iron ore and manufacturing steel. Iron has been used for over 4000 years, and was first extracted around 3000 BC in Egypt. It is strong yet malleable and is used for tools, weapons, infrastructure and machinery. Iron ore is smelted in blast furnaces and cupola furnaces to produce pig iron and cast iron. Steel is made by further processing pig iron in open hearth, basic oxygen or electric furnaces.
The document discusses the properties, extraction, and uses of metals such as iron and aluminum. It describes how iron is extracted through blast furnaces and converted to steel. Key steps include concentrating the ore, reducing iron oxides with carbon, and removing impurities. Aluminum extraction involves concentrating bauxite through the Bayer process, then electrolysis of aluminum oxide in cryolite. The environmental impacts of mining, processing, and transporting metals are also covered.
The document provides an overview of various materials including their classification, properties, and applications. It discusses the evolution of materials from the Stone Age to modern times. Key materials covered include metals, ceramics, polymers, composites, and smart materials such as shape memory alloys and optical fibers. Imperfections in crystalline structures are also summarized.
The document discusses dental casting alloys. It begins by introducing the major classes of materials used in dentistry - metals, ceramics, and polymers. Metals are further divided into dental amalgams, noble metal alloys containing gold, palladium, silver, and base metal alloys containing nickel or cobalt.
The document then discusses the history of metals in dentistry from ancient times to modern developments like porcelain fused to metal techniques. It also discusses how the price of gold led to new alloys replacing it with palladium or eliminating it entirely in the 1970s.
The rest of the document covers topics like alloy compositions, microstructure, physical properties, corrosion resistance, and the effects of noble metals like
This document provides an overview of metals and metal by-products. It discusses the extraction of metals from ores through processes like pyrometallurgy and hydrometallurgy. Various properties of metals are outlined, including physical properties like conductivity and mechanical properties like strength. Common metals like iron, steel, aluminum and tin are described in terms of their composition, production, properties and uses. Potential defects in metal structures like dislocations and corrosion are also mentioned.
This document provides an overview of metals and metal by-products. It discusses the extraction of metals from ores through processes like pyrometallurgy and hydrometallurgy. It then describes various physical and mechanical properties of metals like hardness, conductivity, strength. Ferrous metals like iron and steel are explained in detail, along with common alloys. Non-ferrous metals discussed include aluminium, noting its use in modern construction for properties like durability, design flexibility, and surface finish options.
Metals make up about 3/4 of all elements and have several defining properties, including high melting points, conductivity of heat and electricity, strength and hardness. Metals are obtained from ores through extraction processes involving chemical reactions at high temperatures. Iron and steel rust when exposed to water and oxygen, but salt and acid rain can accelerate the process. Different metals like aluminum, copper, gold, and steel are used for various applications based on their properties and costs. Alloys are mixtures of metals that can enhance properties like hardness. Common alloys include brass and bronze. Most metals can be recycled to recover their materials.
Metals are solid elements that are good conductors of heat and electricity. They can be classified as ferrous, which contain iron, or non-ferrous. Metals are rarely used in pure form and are often combined into alloys to improve properties. They are extracted through mining ores and smelting or electrolysis. Qualities like strength, malleability, and conductivity come from their molecular and crystalline structure. Common metals include iron, copper, aluminum, and alloys like steel, brass, and bronze. Each has distinct properties and applications.
The document provides an overview of the metal casting industry, including:
1. It defines metal casting as a process where liquid metal is poured into a mold and solidifies. It discusses the history of metal casting dating back 6000 years.
2. It describes different types of metals used in ancient Egypt like gold, silver, copper, tin, bronze, and iron. It also discusses the extraction process for iron.
3. It defines cast iron and describes common types like gray cast iron, white cast iron, malleable cast iron, and ductile cast iron.
4. It notes that castings are essential building blocks for modern industry, with over 90% of manufactured goods containing castings.
Metals can be summarized as follows:
1) Metals are malleable, ductile, good conductors of heat and electricity, and have high melting points.
2) Alloys are mixtures of metals that are stronger and harder than pure metals due to interfering atomic layers.
3) Metals are extracted from ores via chemical and thermal processes, with the most common being the extraction of iron in a blast furnace.
The document summarizes various properties and characteristics of metals. It discusses physical properties like strength, ductility and conductivity. It also covers chemical properties such as oxidation and toxicity. Metals are obtained through surface or underground mining. Common ferrous metals include iron, steel and cast iron. The document also describes some heavy metals like lead, tin, zinc and copper, as well as alloys like bronze and brass. It outlines techniques for shaping metals, including rolling, extrusion, forging, casting and powder metallurgy. Permanent joining is done through riveting, welding or adhesives, while temporary joins use nuts, bolts or other fasteners. Finishing techniques remove imperfections and protect surfaces.
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ii. describe the operation principles of selected unit operations and unit processes.
iii. describe metal extraction in general and the extractive metallurgy of iron, aluminium and copper in particular.
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The document discusses the extraction and purification processes of various metals like aluminum, copper, zinc, and iron. It explains that metals are usually found in earth's crust in the form of ores and have to be extracted through various metallurgical processes. These include steps like concentration, roasting, reduction of metal oxides, electrolysis, zone refining etc. It also provides examples of the uses of these purified metals in various applications and industries.
The document discusses the extraction and purification processes of various metals like aluminum, copper, zinc, and iron. It explains that metals are usually found in Earth's crust in the form of ores containing the metal combined with other elements. The extraction process involves steps like concentration, roasting, reduction with suitable reducing agents. Purification techniques mentioned include electrolysis, zone refining, and chromatography. The various uses of these metals in industries and daily life are also outlined.
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Test Bank For Principles Of Cost Accounting, 17th Edition Edward J. Vanderbeck Chapters 1 - 10, Complete
Test Bank For Principles Of Cost Accounting, 17th Edition Edward J. Vanderbeck Chapters 1 - 10, Complete
2. METALLURGY
Metallurgy is a domain of materials science
that studies the physical and chemical
behavior of metallic elements, their
intermetallic compounds, and their mixtures,
which are called alloys. It is also the
technology of metals: the way in which
science is applied to their practical use.
Metallurgy is distinguished from the craft of
metalworking.
3. HISTORY
The first evidence of human metallurgy dates from
the 5th and 6th millennium BC, and was found in the
archaeological sites of Majdanpek, Yarmovac and
Plocnik, all three in Serbia. To date, the earliest
copper smelting is found at the Belovode site, these
examples include a copper axe from 5500 BC
belonging to the Vinča culture. Other signs of human
metallurgy are found from the third millennium BC in
places like Palmela (Portugal), Cortes de
Navarra(Spain), and Stonehenge (United Kingdom).
However, as often happens with the study of
prehistoric times, the ultimate beginnings cannot be
clearly defined and new discoveries are continuous
and on-going.
4. Silver, copper, tin and meteoric iron can also be
found native, allowing a limited amount of
metalworking in early cultures. Egyptian weapons
made from meteoric iron in about 3000 BC were
highly prized as "Daggers from Heaven". However,
by learning to get copper and tin by heating rocks
and combining those two metals to make an alloy
called bronze, the technology of metallurgy began
about 3500 BC with the Bronze Age.
The extraction of iron from its ore into a workable
metal is much more difficult. It appears to have
been invented by the Hittites in about 1200 BC,
beginning the Iron Age. The secret of extracting and
working iron was a key factor in the success of the
Philistines.
5. Historical developments in ferrous metallurgy can
be found in a wide variety of past cultures and
civilizations. This includes the ancient and medieval
kingdoms and empires of the Middle East and Near
East, ancient Iran, ancient Egypt, ancient Nubia,
and Anatolia (Turkey),Ancient Nok, Carthage, the
Greeks and Romans of ancient Europe, medieval
Europe, ancient and medieval China, ancient and
medieval India, ancient and medieval Japan,
amongst others.
Many applications, practices, and devices
associated or involved in metallurgy were
established in ancient China, such as the
innovation of the blast furnace, cast iron, hydraulic-
powered trip hammers, and double acting piston
bellows.
6. EXTRACTION
Extractive metallurgy is the practice of removing
valuable metals from an ore and refining the extracted
raw metals into a purer form. In order to convert a metal
oxide or sulfide to a purer metal, the ore must be
reduced physically, chemically, or electrolytically.
Extractive metallurgists are interested in three primary
streams: feed, concentrate (valuable metal
oxide/sulfide), and tailings (waste). After mining, large
pieces of the ore feed are broken through crushing
and/or grinding in order to obtain particles small enough
where each particle is either mostly valuable or mostly
waste. Concentrating the particles of value in a form
supporting separation enables the desired metal to be
removed from waste products.
7. Mining may not be necessary if the ore body and
physical environment are conducive to leaching.
Leaching dissolves minerals in an ore body and
results in an enriched solution. The solution is
collected and processed to extract valuable
metals.
Ore bodies often contain more than one valuable
metal. Tailings of a previous process may be
used as a feed in another process to extract a
secondary product from the original ore.
Additionally, a concentrate may contain more
than one valuable metal. That concentrate would
then be processed to separate the valuable
metals into individual constituents.
8. ALLOYS
Common engineering metals include aluminium,
chromium, copper, iron, magnesium, nickel,
titanium and zinc. These are most often used as
alloys. Much effort has been placed on
understanding the iron-carbon alloy system, which
includes steels and cast irons.
Plain carbon steels are used in low cost, high
strength applications where weight and corrosion
are not a problem. Cast irons, including ductile iron
are also part of the iron-carbon system.
9. Stainless steel or galvanized steel are used where
resistance to corrosion is important. Aluminium
alloys and magnesium alloys are used for
applications where strength and lightness are
required.
Copper-nickel alloys (such as Monel) are used in
highly corrosive environments and for non-magnetic
applications. Nickel-based super alloys like Inconel
are used in high temperature applications such as
turbochargers, pressure vessel, and heat
exchangers. For extremely high temperatures,
single crystal alloys are used to minimize creep.
10. PRODUCTION
In production engineering, metallurgy is concerned
with the production of metallic components for use
in consumer or engineering products. This involves
the production of alloys, the shaping, the heat
treatment and the surface treatment of the product.
The task of the metallurgist is to achieve balance
between material properties such as cost, weight,
strength, toughness, hardness, corrosion, fatigue
resistance, and performance in temperature
extremes.
11. To achieve this goal, the operating environment
must be carefully considered. In a saltwater
environment, ferrous metals and some aluminium
alloys corrode quickly.
Metals exposed to cold or cryogenic conditions
may endure a ductile to brittle transition and lose
their toughness, becoming more brittle and prone to
cracking. Metals under continual cyclic loading can
suffer from metal fatigue. Metals under constant
stress at elevated temperatures can creep.
12. METALWORKING PROCESSES
Metals are shaped by processes such as:
casting – molten metal is poured into a shaped mold.
forging – a red-hot billet is hammered into shape.
flow forming
rolling – a billet is passed through successively narrower
rollers to create a sheet.
Laser cladding – metallic powder is blown through a
movable laser beam (e.g. mounted on a NC 5-axis
machine). The resulting melted metal reach a substrate
to form a melt pool. By moving the laser head, it is
possible to stack the tracks and build up a 3D piece.
13. extrusion – a hot and malleable metal is forced
under pressure through a die, which shapes it
before it cools.
sintering – a powdered metal is heated in a non-
oxidizing environment after being compressed into
a die.
Metalworking
machining – lathes, milling machines, and drills cut
the cold metal to shape.
fabrication – sheets of metal are cut
with guillotines or gas cutters and bent and welded
into structural shape.
14. Cold working processes, where the product’s shape
is altered by rolling, fabrication or other processes
while the product is cold, can increase the strength
of the product by a process called work hardening.
Work hardening creates microscopic defects in the
metal, which resist further changes of shape.
Various forms of casting exist in industry and
academia. These include sand casting, investment
casting (also called the "lost wax process"), die
casting and continuous casting.
15. HEAT TREATMENT
Metals can be heat treated to alter the properties of
strength, ductility, toughness, hardness or
resistance to corrosion. Common heat treatment
processes include annealing, precipitation
strengthening, quenching, and tempering.
The annealing process softens the metal by heating
it and then allowing it to cool very slowly, which gets
rid of stresses in the metal and makes the grain
structure large and soft-edged so that when the
metal is hit or stressed it dents or perhaps bends,
rather than breaking; it is also easier to sand, grind,
or cut annealed metal.
16. Quenching is the process of cooling a high-carbon
steel very quickly after you have heated it, thus
"freezing" the steel's molecules in the very hard
marten site form, which makes the metal harder.
There is a balance between hardness and
toughness in any steel, where the harder it is, the
less tough or impact-resistant it is, and the more
impact-resistant it is, the less hard it is.
Tempering relieves stresses in the metal that were
caused by the hardening process; tempering makes
the metal less hard while making it better able to
sustain impacts without breaking.
17. Often, mechanical and thermal treatments are
combined in what is known as thermo-mechanical
treatments for better properties and more efficient
processing of materials. These processes are
common to high alloy special steels, super alloys
and titanium alloys.
18. PLATING
Electroplating is a common surface-treatment
technique. It involves bonding a thin layer of
another metal such as gold, silver, chromium or
zinc to the surface of the product. It is used to
reduce corrosion as well as to improve the
product's aesthetic appearance.
19. THERMAL SPRAYING
Thermal spraying techniques are another popular
finishing option, and often have better high
temperature properties than electroplated coatings.
20. EXTRACTIVE METALLURGY
MINERAL ORES
An ore is a mineral deposit which can be profitably
exploited. It may contain three groups of minerals
namely:
1. valuable minerals of the metal which is being
sought
2. compounds of associated metals which may be of
secondary value
3. gangue minerals of minimum value.
21. Almost all metals are derived from mineral ores.
There are also ores that contain non-metals such
as sulphur. Generally, the valuable mineral in an
ore may be found in the form of native metal,
oxides, oxy-salts, sulphides or arsenides.
During mining, large open pits are excavated by
breaking the ore using explosives. Ores as mined
may be in large lumps and therefore, some size
reduction is done at the mine. The ore is shoveled
into trucks and transported to the factory. If the
mineral ore is found in waterbeds, mining is carried
out by dredging. For example, sand is dredged from
river beds.
22. ORE DRESSING
Before the ores are subjected to the main chemical
treatment steps, they are pre-treated by a series of
relatively cheap processes, mainly physical rather
than chemical in nature. These processes
constitute what is known as ore dressing. They are
meant to effect the concentration of the valuable
minerals and to render the enriched material into
the most suitable physical condition for subsequent
operations. Ore dressing may include:
23. Size Reduction to such a size as will release or
expose all valuable minerals.
Sorting to separate particles of ore minerals from
gangue (non-valuable) minerals or different ores
from one another.
Agglomeration may be carried out sometimes
before a roasting operation.
24. If the ores are rich in the valuable mineral, above
processes may not add value. Such ores can be
ground, sized and blended with other ores in order to
provide a homogeneous feed to say, a blast furnace
or reaction bed.
25. SIZE REDUCTION
Size reduction may be carried out by first crushing
the ore down to 7mm maximum followed by
grinding to smaller sizes. Jaw crushers can be used
deep in the mine to prepare the ore for
transportation to the surface e.g. using bucket
elevators.
26. SIZING
Screens are used to separate particles according to
size and may not affect the concentrations of the ore
minerals. Particles are separated into oversize and
undersize.
27. SORTING
The particles may be sorted by classification, flotation
or magnetic methods.
Classifiers
These are devices that separate particles
according to their different rates of travel under
gravity through a fluid medium such as water.
Particles of different densities, sizes and shapes have
different falling velocities. Classifiers include rake
classifiers and jigs.
28. FLOTATION
Flotation uses difference in surface properties of the
individual minerals. It is readily applied to very fine
concentrates and can distinguish ore mineral from
gangue, and also, one ore mineral from another.
29. MAGNETIC SEPARATION
Ferromagnetic magnetite or iron minerals which can
be chemically altered to produce magnetite may be
sorted out using a magnetic separator as described in
Unit 2.
30. ELECTROSTATIC SEPARATION
Minerals have a wide range of electrical
conductivity and can be distinguished by this
property. If several kinds of particles are given an
electrostatic charge and are then brought into
contact with an electrical conductor at earth
potential, the charge will leak away from good
conductors much more rapidly than from poor
conductors. While the charge remains, the particle
will cling to the conductor by electrostatic attraction
31. . The weakly conducting minerals will therefore
remain attached to the conductor longer than the
good conductors, so affording a means of
separating minerals whose conductivities differ
appreciably. Electrostatic separators operate on
thin layers of material. The principle is illustrated in
Fig. 3.1.
33. DEWATERING AND FILTRATION
After sorting and leaching, it is necessary to
separate the solid and liquid phases.
Coarse solids may be freed from most of their
moisture by draining. Slurries with particles which
can settle may be separated from the bulk of the
liquid by settling and subsequent decantation.
These dewatering methods may reduce moisture
content to 50%. The moisture content may be
reduced further by filtration and drying. If the
valuable ore is in the filtrate, it can be recovered by
evaporation followed by drying.
34. AGGLOMERATION
When a particle size of an ore or concentrate is too
small for use in a later stage of treatment e.g. in a
blast furnace, it must be reformed into lumps of
appropriate size and strength. This is done by any of
the following methods:
pelletizing
briquetting
sintering
35. BRIQUETTING
This is a mechanical process of agglomeration in
which the materials, after mixing with water and
necessary bonding agents are pressed or extruded
into brick or block form. These blocks are then dried
and hardened by heating. Use of hydraulic cement
allows hardening to be carried out cold. Briqueting is
not popular in mineral ore agglomeration.
36. SINTERING
Sintering involves diffusion of material between
particles. It is applied to the consolidation of
metallic and ceramic powder compacts which are
heated to temperatures approaching their melting
points to allow diffusion to take place at the points
of contact of particles so that they grow together to
form a rigid entity. The process can be envisaged
as a net migration of vacancies into the solid at the
highly curved energy surfaces near points of
contact and again at low energy areas away from
contact points
Sintering may be accompanied by a chemical
reaction.
37. EXTRACTION PROCESSES
So far we have been dealing with unit operations that
prepare the ore for chemical reactions used to extract
the valuable metal from the ore. Now we want to look
at extraction and refining of the metal.
38. CALCINATION
This is the thermal treatment of an ore to effect its
decomposition and the elimination of a volatile product,
usually carbon dioxide or water. The following are
calcinations reactions
Calcination may be carried out in rotating kilns using
counter current flow for efficient heat transfer.
39. ROASTING
Roasting involves chemical changes other than
decomposition, usually with furnace atmosphere. A
roast may effect calcinations and drying as shown
below.
2CuS + O2 Cu2S + SO2
(calcination)
Cu2S + O2 2Cu + SO2
(roasting)
40. SMELTING
This is essentially a smelting process in which the
components of the charge in the molten state
separate into two or more layers which may be slag,
matte, speiss or metal
matte: heavy sulphide material
slag: light oxide material
speiss: iron oxide, insoluble in matte, slag or metal;
it may contain elements
41. Smelting of metal involves reduction, usually by
carbon or coal or coke and may be performed in a
blast furnace or an electric furnace.
In the blast furnace, coke is burned into CO2 which
reacts further with the carbon to form CO. The
ascending gases pre-heat the solid charge
descending the stack and reduce metal oxides to
metal. This then is a process of drying followed by
calcination and roasting. The metal melts and the
slag forms gangue and flux.
Where fusion or reduction temperature is above
15000C, electric melting is most appropriately
applied.
42. REFINING
Electrolysis may be used for metal extraction and
metal refining. In fire refining, extracted metals are
brought into liquid state and their composition finally
adjusted. In some case, this may be simple
smelting to allow cathodically entrained hydrogen to
escape by diffusion. In other cases, impurities may
react to form compounds which are insoluble in the
molten state.
Converters are used for oxidizing impurities out of
blast furnace iron in steel-making and for oxidation
of sulphur from copper and nickel matte. Distillation
may also be applied in metal purification.
43. EXTRACTIVE METALLURGY OF IRON
Uses of iron
Iron is used in the forms shown below as material
of construction for
machines, plants, buildings, locomotives, ships, aut
omobiles, railway lines and for many other things.
All these forms are obtained from pig iron which is
first obtained from the iron ore.
44. a) White cast iron obtained when molten low silicon,
high manganese pig iron is rapidly cooled.
b) Grey pig iron which contain very small amounts of
carbon and other impurities but 1.2-3% slag
c) Steel which contain from 0.08 to 0.8% carbon
d) Hard steel which contain 0.8 to 1.5% carbon
e) Alloy or special steels which besides carbon
contain one or more metals such as Ni, Cr, W, V,
Mo, Mn.
45. RAW MATERIALS
The main raw materials for the manufacture of iron
and steel are iron ore and limestone or dolomite as
flux. Coking coal is used as fuel. The fuel serves
two purposes: to heat the furnace and to produce
CO which acts as the reducing agent. To make
special steels other materials such as nickel,
chromium, cobalt are added.
46. Iron ore deposits are found in India, China, Brazil,
Canada, Germany and United States of America.
The ores include red haematite (Fe2O3), the less
inferior brown hydrated haematite also known as
limonite (2Fe2O3.3H2O), the magnetic magnetite
(Fe3O4) which is black in colour and pyrites (FeS2).
The haematite is easily reduced. Magnetite
contains about 72% pure metal and it is reduced
with some difficulty.
47. REMOVAL OF IMPURITIES IN IRON ORE
The presence of impurities in the iron ore not only
reduce the iron content in the ore but also increase
production costs especially with regard to
consumption of flux and fuel.
If limonite is used, it is first dried before use. When
the ore contains large amounts of impurities,
appropriate ore dressing operations are carried out
on it. When the ore is obtained in small particles, it
is sintered into lumps.
48. The main impurities in iron ore are silica and
alumina. Silica and alumina in the presence of
limestone makes the ore self-fusing with less
production costs. At high temperatures of the blast
furnace, the flux reacts with alumina and silica to
form a complex of calcium-magnesium aluminium
silicate known as slag.
49. Sulphur and phosphorus are also found in iron ores
as impurities in the form of sulphides (FeS),
sulphates (CaSO4) and phosphates (Ca3(PO4)2 or
Fe3(PO4)2). Both sulphur and phosphorus, which
can also come from the fuel used, are not desired
in iron and steel manufacture. Normally steel
should not contain more than 0.05% sulphur and
0.05% phosphorus.
Sulphur can be removed in the blast furnace slag.
Phosphorus cannot be removed in the slag but
passes through to the pig iron where it is combined
with steel in the convertor. As a result, the ores are
sometimes classified as acid or basic ores
according to the amount of phosphorus present.
Acid ores contain less than 0.05% phosphorus
while basic ores has more than 0.05%.
50. A small amount of manganese is generally present
in iron ores. Manganese is advantageous for steel
production because it reduces the effect of sulphur
by forming manganese sulphide (MnS).
Sometimes, if manganese is absent from the ores,
it is added.
51. FUEL
Coke is the fuel used to melt the ore and also to
reduce the iron ore to metallic iron. Coke is
produced at the bottom of the blast furnace by
carbonization of coal i.e. burning of coal in the
absence of oxygen to remove volatile matter. Good
quality coke has about 80% carbon and 20% ash. It
is hard to prevent the formation of CO and its high
porosity provides large surface area for the
chemical reactions. It is consumed at the rate of
one ton per ton of pig iron.
52. MANUFACTURE OF PIG IRON
Pig iron is a direct product of smelting iron ore with
fluxes and fuel in a tall blast furnace. The oxygen is
introduced at the top of the furnace, blown or
blasted through bronze or copper nozzles over the
furnace materials in a number of symmetrically
placed tubes, called tuyeres. The air blast is
preheated to a temperature of about 7000C and
pressure of 2.5kg/cm2 using the hot exhaust gases
leaving the furnace at the top. Preheating greatly
increases the economy of steel production.
53. The molten iron and slag collect at the bottom of
the furnace while the gases escape from the top.
The slag layer floats over the heavier iron and is
periodically collected as dross and stored as waste
material that can be used for cement manufacture
or for making floor tiles
The pig iron is tapped and is either used to produce
cast iron, stored in pigs of sand bags or is taken for
steel production. To make cast iron, the molten
metal is poured into moulds of desired size and
shape. The metal gets cooled and solidifies taking
the desired shape.
54. Fig 3.2. Schematic diagram of a blast furnace showing the
temperatures at relative heights.
55. REACTIONS OF THE BLAST FURNACE
The temperature of the blast furnace progressively
rises up from top to bottom. The following reactions
take place at different zones:
Iron ore reduction:
Fe2O3 + CO CO2 + 2 Fe3O4
Fe3O4 + CO 3FeO + CO2
3FeO + 3CO 3Fe + 3CO2
57. SLAG FORMATION REACTIONS
Most of the sulphur passes into the slag as CaS and
MnS and only a small portion remains in the metal
as FeS and MnS.
58. EXTRACTIVE METALLURGY OF ALUMINIUM
Aluminum is the most abundant metal in earth and is
commercially extracted from bauxite ores in which it
occurs as hydrated aluminum oxide.
Extraction of aluminium from bauxite is carried out in three
stages:
Ore dressing: cleaning ore by means of separation of
the metal containing mineral from the waste (gangue).
Chemical treatment of bauxite for converting the
hydrated aluminium oxide to pure aluminum oxide.
Reduction of aluminium from aluminium oxide by
the electrolytic process.
Ore dressing may involve washing the ore, size
classification and leaching.
59. CHEMICAL TREATMENT OF BAUXITE
At this stage bauxite is crushed and ground to the
correct particle size for efficient extraction of the
alumina through digestion with hot sodium hydroxide
solution which dissolves the aluminum hydroxide,
forming a solution of sodium aluminate.
60. The residual impurities (oxides of silicon, iron,
titanium and aluminium i.e. SiO2, Fe2O3, TiO2, Al2O3).
These insoluble impurities are called “red mud” which
together with fine solid impurities, are separated from
the sodium aluminate solution by washing and
thickening. The solution is then seeded with
aluminum hydroxide from a previous batch in
precipitator tanks, where aluminum hydroxide
precipitates from the solution.
61. The aluminum hydroxide after separation from the
sodium hydroxide is converted into pure aluminum
oxide by heating to 1800F (1000ºC) in rotary kilns or
fluidized bed calciners.
62. REDUCTION OF ALUMINIUM FROM ALUMINIUM
OXIDE
Primary aluminum is produced by the electrolytic
reduction of the aluminum oxide. As aluminum oxide
is a very poor electricity conductor, its electrolysis is
carried out in a bath of molten cryolite (mineral,
containing sodium aluminum fluoride – Na3AlF6) as
shown in the schematic diagram below.
64. This technology is called Hall-Heroult process. The
electrolytic cell for aluminum production consists of a
pot with carbon lining The carbon lining is contained
in a steel shell with a thermal insulation of alumina or
insulating brick.. This carbon lining serves as the
negative electrode (cathode). Prebaked carbon
anodes are connected and suspended from the
current conductor (bus bar). The anodes are
immersed into the bath of molten cryolite at 915 to
950 oC.
65. The aluminum oxide is added to the cryolite and
dissolved in it. When electric current passes
between the anodes and the cathode through the
cryolite, aluminum oxide decomposes to metallic
aluminum deposited at the cathode and oxygen is
liberated at the anode. Oxygen from the alumina
dissolved in the bath combines with the bottom
surface of the carbon anode to form carbon dioxide.
66. Control of alumina concentration in the cells is
accomplished by a slight underfeeding. When the
alumina reaches a critical level, the cell goes on
anode effects caused by a limiting rate of diffusion of
alumina to the anode surfaces.
67. The cell voltage then rises and some fluorocarbons
are generated. A light bulb connected across the cell
lights up with increased cell voltage as a signal for the
operators to feed the cell with alumina and kill the
anode effect. Cells now run a day or longer between
anode effects.
The ratio of sodium fluoride to aluminium fluoride in
the cryolite bath changes over time and corrective
additions are added based on laboratory analyses.
68. In operation, cryolite freezes on the sidewalls of the
cells forming a "ledge" which protects the sidelining
from severe attack by aluminium and molten
cryolite. Cryolite also freezes over the top of the
bath and forms a "crust" to support a top layer of
alumina thermal insulation. Alumina is fed to the
bath through holes punched in the crust.
69. The carbon dioxide exits through holes in the crust
and is collected under the hoods. The carbon
dioxide and air leaking in is now ducted to dry
scrubbers which remove fluorides from the gas
stream. Fresh alumina contacting the gases
removes the hydrogen fluoride and evaporated
fluoride particulate. This alumina, fed to the cells,
returns fluoride to the cells. The hydrogen fluorides
comes from residual hydrocarbons in the anodes
and trace water in the alumina and air humidity
reacting with the fluoride bath.
70. The anodes are consumed in the process through
the reaction of carbon and oxygen. Replacements
are added at individual locations on a regular
schedule. The anode butts are sent back to the
anode plant to be ground and mixed into new
anode paste to be pressed and baked.
The molten aluminum is periodically tapped under
vacuum from the furnace into a crucible and cast
into ingots.
71. EXTRACTIVE METALLURGY OF COPPER
Copper is mostly extracted from ores containing
copper sulphides, copper oxides or copper
carbonates. Copper ores are generally poor and
contain between 1.5 and 5% copper. Therefore,
commercial extraction of copper involves several
dressing operations before the smelting stage.
72. The extraction of copper from its sulphide ores is
done by eliminating the gangue, iron, sulphur and
minor impurities by the following steps yielding the
shown % copper after each step:
74. CONCENTRATING
The purpose of concentration step is to separate
the copper mineral from the gangue. The ore is first
crushed and finely ground. It is made into slurry
with water and then fed into a froth flotation cell.
The ore particles are lifted up by air bubbles while
the gangues remain in the cell. The froth containing
the ore is thickened and filtered. The pulp is dried to
about 6% moisture.
75. ROASTING
The objective of roasting is to remove excess
sulphur. Thus, if the ore does not contain excess
sulphur, roasting may be omitted and the ore
directly smelted. Roasting is carried out in a
multiple hearth furnace or in a fluidized bed.
The dry pulp is fed into the roaster at 600 to 700 oC.
The burning of the sulphide ores supplies the heat
to maintain the temperature at which roasting takes
place. The reactions at the roaster are as follows.
76. The arsenic and antimony are volatiles and leave
with sulphur dioxide.
77. MATTE SMELTING
At this stage the concentrate is smelted in a furnace
to produce a mixture of copper and iron, called
matte.
Smelting is carried out at about 1350 oC. The rasted
ore is in powder form and cannot therefore be
smelted conveniently in a blast furnace. It is done in
a long reverberatory furnace heated by coal dust.
The following are the reactions that take place in
the furnace:
78. Cu2S and part of the FeS form the matte. The silicates
and oxides of iron are slagged. The gangue is absorbed
by the slag and removed.
79. BLISTER COPPER PRODUCTION
The object of the converter operation is to convert
matte into molten blister copper containing 96 to
98% copper and remove the iron rich slag
The operation is carried out in two stages each of
which has a distinctive flame colour. In the first
stage, air is blown through the matte until all the
slag is formed i.e. the total elimination of the FeS.
Silica is used to react with the oxide. The slag is
removed by tilting the converter. Air is again blown
through the matte and the Cu2S is converted to Cu.
The following are the reactions in the converter:
81. FIRE REFINING
The blister copper is fed into a furnace where some
of the Cu is oxidized into Cu2O which dissolves in
the molten copper. The oxide rapidly oxidizes the
impurities. SO2 passes out while other impurities
form dross on the surface. The dross is frequently
skimmed off to expose fresh surface for oxidation.
82. A pole of green wood is then thrust in and hydrogen
from the wood reduces the excess oxygen. Poling
is continued until proper surface characteristics of
the cooled samples are obtained. The product is
called tough pitch. It has good electrical
conductivity. It is cast into slabs.
83. ELECTROLYTIC REFINING.
Tough pitch copper is not fit for gas-welding until it
is deoxidized further. It is made into impure copper
anodes which are immersed in a 5 to 10% sulfuric
acid bath containing copper sulphate. Pure copper
foil serves as the cathode where copper deposits.
Cathodes produced as a result of the electrolytic
refining process contain 99.9% of copper which is
used for manufacturing copper and copper alloys
products.