Abstract
The iron ore blend for sintering depends to a great extent on ore properties. It is hard to determine the final sinter reducibility from the reducibility and ratio of single iron ores in a mixture. For production cost reduction, optimised blending ratios were designed according to ore prices and properties (microstructure, crystal water decomposition, assimilation ability, liquid phase fluidity), ensuring nearly identical chemical composition as the mixture used in actual sintering. Sinter pot tests were conducted to determine the optimum mix. The results indicate that properties of iron ores vary greatly, which should be considered for the design of ore blending ratio. The total content of the two Australian ores tested should not exceed 45%. The cost of sintering process could be further reduced together with an improvement of economic and technical indices, only by ratio adjustment of present ores.
Acknowledgements
This study was carried out as a part of the research project named ‘Fundamental Research on the New Technology of Super-thick Bed Load Reduction Sintering’ of the Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC; grant no. 51174023). Financial support from NSFC is gratefully acknowledged.