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Extensive Definition
A steel mill (British
English and Australian
English steelworks) is an industrial plant for the manufacture
of steel.
Steel is an alloy of iron and carbon. It is produced in a
two-stage process. First, iron ore is
reduced or smelted with coke and
limestone in a
blast
furnace, producing molten iron which is either cast into
pig iron
or carried to the next stage as molten iron. In the second stage,
known as steelmaking, impurities such
as sulfur, phosphorus, and excess
carbon are removed and
alloying elements such
as manganese, nickel, chromium and vanadium added to produce the
exact steel required. In the late 20th Century
the world's largest steel mill was located in Barrow-in-Furness,
UK .
Steel mills turn molten steel into blooms,
ingots, slabs and sheet through casting, hot rolling
and cold
rolling.
Integrated mill
An integrated steel mill has all the functions
for primary steel production:
The principal raw materials for an integrated
mill are iron ore, limestone, and coal (or coke). These materials
are charged in batches into a blast
furnace where the iron compounds in the ore give up excess
oxygen and become liquid iron. At intervals of a few hours, the
accumulated liquid iron is tapped from the blast furnace and either
cast into pig iron or
directed to other vessels for further steelmaking operations.
Historically the Bessemer
process was a major advancement in the production of economical
steel, but it has now been entirely replaced by other processes
such as the basic
oxygen furnace.
Molten steel is cast into large blocks called
"blooms". During the casting process various methods are used, such
as addition of aluminum, so that impurities in
the steel float to the surface where they can be cut off the
finished bloom.
Because of the energy cost and structural stress
associated with heating and cooling a blast furnace, typically
these primary steelmaking vessels will operate on a continuous
production campaign of several years duration. Even during periods
of low steel demand, it may not be feasible to let the blast
furnace grow cold, though some adjustment of the production rate is
possible.
Integrated mills are large facilities that are
typically only economical to build in 2,000,000 ton per year annual
capacity and up. Final products made by an integrated plant are
usually large structural sections, heavy plate, strip, wire rod,
railway
rails, and occasionally long
products such as bars and
pipe.
A major environmental hazard associated with
integrated steel mills is the pollution produced in the manufacture
of coke, which
is an essential intermediate product in the reduction of iron ore
in a blast furnace.
Integrated mills may also adopt some of the
processes used in mini-mills, such as arc furnaces and direct
casting, to reduce production costs.
World integrated steel production capacity is at
or close to world demand, so competition between suppliers results
in only the most efficient producers remaining viable. However, due
to the large employment of integrated plants, often governments
will financially assist an obsolescent facility rather than take
the risk of having thousands of workers thrown out of jobs. Such
measures result in products then sold in international trade lead
to allegations of dumping.
Mini mills
A mini-mill is traditionally a secondary steel
producer; however, Nucor (one of the
world's largest steel producers), as well as one of its
competitors, Commercial Metals Company (CMC) use mini-mills
exclusively. Usually it obtains most of its iron from scrap steel, recycled from used
automobiles and equipment or byproducts of manufacturing. Direct
reduced iron (DRI) is sometimes used
with scrap, to help maintain desired chemistry of the steel, though
usually DRI is too expensive to use as the primary raw steelmaking
material. A typical mini-mill will have an electric
arc furnace for scrap melting, a ladle furnace or vacuum
furnace for precision control of chemistry, a strip or billet
continuous
caster for converting molten steel to solid form, a reheat
furnace and a rolling mill.
Originally the mini-mill concept was adapted to
production of bar products only, such as concrete reinforcing bar, flats, angles,
channels, pipe, and light rails. Since the late 1980s, successful
introduction of the direct strip casting process has made mini-mill
production of strip feasible. Often a mini-mill will be constructed
in an area with no other steel production, to take advantage of
local resources and lower-cost labour. Mini-mill plants may
specialize, for example, making coils of rod for wire-drawing
use, or pipe, or in special sections for transportation and
agriculture.
Capacities of mini-mills vary; some plants may
make as much as 3,000,000 tons per year, a typical size is in the
range 200,000 to 400,000 tons per year, and some old or specialty
plants may make as little as 50,000 tons per year of finished
product. Nucor
Corporation, for example, annually produces around 9,100,000
tons of sheet steel from its 4 sheet mills, 6,700,000 tons of bar
steel from its 10 bar mills and 2,100,000 tons of plate steel from
its 2 plate mills.
Since the electric arc furnace can be easily
started and stopped on a regular basis, mini-mills can follow the
market demand for their products easily, operating on 24 hour
schedules when demand is high and cutting back production when
sales are lower.
References
Further reading
McGannon, Harold E. editor (1971). The Making, Shaping and Treating of Steel: Ninth Edition. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania: United States Steel CorporationSee also
- Rolling mill
- Rolling (metalworking)
- hot rolling
- cold rolling
- foundry
- Gerdau
- Krupp
- List of steel producers
- Nucor
- Columbia Rolling Mill
- Tredegar Iron Works
- Atlanta Rolling Mill
- Bethlehem Steel Corporation
- Carnegie Steel Company
- U.S. Steel
- Mittal Steel Company
- BlueScope Steel
- Jersey Shore Steel
- Funtley
- AK Steel
- Morgan Park (Duluth)
External links
- Stahlseite Extensive picture gallery about all methods of making and shaping of iron and steel in North America and Europe. In German and English.
- http://myweb.tiscali.co.uk/clydebridge History of steelworks in Scotland.
- Information on scrap feed materials for minimills.
steelworks in French: Aciérie
steelworks in Italian: Centro siderurgico
steelworks in Polish: Hutnictwo
steelworks in Slovak: Oceliareň
steelworks in Swedish: Stålverk
steelworks in Chinese: 煉鋼廠
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
blacksmith shop, bleachworks, bloomery, bottling works,
brassworks, copperworks, dye works,
forge, foundry, furnace, gasworks, glassworks, ironworks, metalworks, paper works,
printworks, saltworks, scrapworks, smelter, smithery, smithy, soapworks, starchworks, steel mill,
stithy, tileworks, tryworks, tubeworks, waterworks, wireworks, works