Metallurgical wastes landfills in Poland significantly grew during last four decades. Landfilled wastes are characterised by iron content at range 30-50% and zinc content about 2-3%. Therefore wastes are not interesting for the zinc smelter, on the other hand, even such low zinc content in ironmaking burden causes problem with a shaft furnace operation. So, the wastes are valuable for ironmaking due to the high iron content, provided that zinc will be removed from them. The article describes the general ways of dealing with zinc containing metallurgical wastes. In detail, the semi-industrial research conducted on sinter pot set of Stanislaw Staszic Institute for Ferrous Metallurgy is presented. The study determined the conditions under which obtained three benefits: landfilled sludge utilisation, raw materials substitution and zinc recovery.
The paper shows the use of novel modelling techniques adapted from ironmaking in the pyrometallurgical process of zinc production. Firstly, regarding the purpose to determine the boundary conditions of reduction processes taking part in the working volume of an Imperial Smelting Furnace (ISF), a deep thermochemical analysis was conducted. On this basis and using Ramm’s principles of direct and indirect reduction optimal share, the fuel rate minimization model was built. The model’s leading role is minimizing coke consumption in the ISF while maintaining the thermal state of the furnace at the correct level. In addition, the proposed presentation of the ISF thermal state shows in a unified way all the shortcomings in the correct process operation. Verification in real conditions on the ISF in Miasteczko Śląskie shows that model implementation can bring tangible benefits. Coke savings can reach over 30 kg per tonne of raw zinc.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.