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Iron carbide, 1.28

Pig-iron or cast iron contains impurities, chiefly carbon (up to 5 ). free or combined as iron carbides. These impurities, some of which form interstitial compounds (p. I I3i with the iron, make it hard and brittle, and it melts fairly sharply at temperatures between 1400 and 1500 K pure iron becomes soft before it melts (at 1812 K). Hence cast iron cannot be forged or welded. [Pg.391]

Iron carbide process Iron-carbon alloys Iron castings... [Pg.524]

Fig. 1. Iron—carbon phase diagram, where a is the body-centered cubic (bcc) a-iron, y is the face-centered cubic y-iron, and Fe C is iron carbide(3 l)... Fig. 1. Iron—carbon phase diagram, where a is the body-centered cubic (bcc) a-iron, y is the face-centered cubic y-iron, and Fe C is iron carbide(3 l)...
The carbon content of DRI depends primarily on the direct reduction process used and the way the process is operated. Carbon content can be adjusted within limits by operating changes within the DR process. Most steelmakers prefer slightly more carbon than is required to balance the remaining FeO in the DRI. DRI from gas-based processes typically contains 1 to 2.5% carbon, mostly in the form of cementite [12169-32-3] Fe C. DRI containing approximately 6 to 7% carbon in the form of cementite is called iron carbide. DRI from coal-based, rotary-kiln processes contains very low (ca 0.5%) levels of carbon. [Pg.425]

DR Processes Under Development. The 1990s have seen continuous evolution of direct reduction technology. Short-term development work is focusing on direct reduction processes that can use lower cost iron oxide fines as a feed material. Use of fines can represent a 20 30/1 (20%) savings in DRI production cost compared to use of pehets or lump ore. Some examples of these processes include FASTMET, Iron Carbide, CIRCOFER, and an improved version of the EIOR process. [Pg.431]

The iron carbide process is alow temperature, gas-based, fluidized-bed process. Sized iron oxide fines (0.1—1.0 mm) are preheated in cyclones or a rotary kiln to 500°C and reduced to iron carbide in a single-stage, fluidized-bed reactor system at about 590°C in a process gas consisting primarily of methane, hydrogen, and some carbon monoxide. Reduction time is up to 18 hours owing to the low reduction temperature and slow rate of carburization. The product has the consistency of sand, is very britde, and contains approximately 6% carbon, mostly in the form of Ee C. [Pg.431]

HTS catalyst consists mainly of magnetite crystals stabilized using chromium oxide. Phosphoms, arsenic, and sulfur are poisons to the catalyst. Low reformer steam to carbon ratios give rise to conditions favoring the formation of iron carbides which catalyze the synthesis of hydrocarbons by the Fisher-Tropsch reaction. Modified iron and iron-free HTS catalysts have been developed to avoid these problems (49,50) and allow operation at steam to carbon ratios as low as 2.7. Kinetic and equiUbrium data for the water gas shift reaction are available in reference 51. [Pg.348]

Pig iron and iron and steel scrap are the sources of iron for steelmaking in basic-oxygen furnaces. Electric furnaces have rehed on iron and steel scrap, although newer iron sources such as direct-reduced iron (DRI), iron carbide, and even pig iron are becoming both desirable and available (see Iron bydirectreduction). In basic-oxygen furnaces, the pig iron is used in the molten state as obtained from the blast furnace in this form, pig iron is referred to as hot metal. [Pg.374]

Methods exist to make impure iron direcdy from ore, ie, to make DRI without first reducing the ore in the blast furnace to make pig iron which has to be purified in a second step. These processes, generally referred to as direct-reduction processes, are employed where natural gas is readily available for the reduction (see also Ironbydirectreduction). Carbonization of iron ore to make iron carbide as an alternative source of iron units is in its infancy as of the mid-1990s but may grow. [Pg.374]

The physical and mechanical properties of steel depend on its microstmcture, that is, the nature, distribution, and amounts of its metaHographic constituents as distinct from its chemical composition. The amount and distribution of iron and iron carbide determine most of the properties, although most plain carbon steels also contain manganese, siUcon, phosphoms, sulfur, oxygen, and traces of nitrogen, hydrogen, and other chemical elements such as aluminum and copper. These elements may modify, to a certain extent, the main effects of iron and iron carbide, but the influence of iron carbide always predominates. This is tme even of medium alloy steels, which may contain considerable amounts of nickel, chromium, and molybdenum. [Pg.384]

Cementite, the term for iron carbide in steel, is the form in which carbon appears in steels. It has the formula Fe C, and thus consists of 6.67 wt % carbon and the balance iron. Cementite is very hard and britde. As the hardest constituent of plain carbon steel, it scratches glass and feldspar, but not quart2. It exhibits about two-thirds the induction of pure iron in a strong magnetic field, but has a much lower Curie temperature. [Pg.384]

Fig. 16. Iron—iron carbide phase diagram (1). See text. Fig. 16. Iron—iron carbide phase diagram (1). See text.
Carbides of the Iron Group Metals. The carbides of iron, nickel, cobalt, and manganese have lower melting points, lower hardness, and different stmctures than the hard metallic materials. Nonetheless, these carbides, particularly iron carbide and the double carbides with other transition metals, are of great technical importance as hardening components of alloy steels and cast iron. [Pg.453]

The iron—carbon system contains the orthorhombic iron carbide (3 1) [12011 -67-5] which melts congmendy and represents the cementite in... [Pg.453]

Iron carbide (3 1), Fe C mol wt 179.56 carbon 6.69 wt % density 7.64 g/cm mp 1650°C is obtained from high carbon iron melts as a dark gray air-sensitive powder by anodic isolation with hydrochloric acid. In the microstmcture of steels, cementite appears in the form of etch-resistant grain borders, needles, or lamellae. Fe C powder cannot be sintered with binder metals to produce cemented carbides because Fe C reacts with the binder phase. The hard components in alloy steels, such as chromium steels, are double carbides of the formulas (Cr,Fe)23Cg, (Fe,Cr)2C3, or (Fe,Cr)3C2, that derive from the binary chromium carbides, and can also contain tungsten or molybdenum. These double carbides are related to Tj-carbides, ternary compounds of the general formula M M C where M = iron metal M = refractory transition metal. [Pg.453]


See other pages where Iron carbide, 1.28 is mentioned: [Pg.222]    [Pg.1959]    [Pg.273]    [Pg.524]    [Pg.524]    [Pg.524]    [Pg.524]    [Pg.524]    [Pg.524]    [Pg.524]    [Pg.526]    [Pg.422]    [Pg.422]    [Pg.211]    [Pg.236]    [Pg.538]    [Pg.539]    [Pg.379]    [Pg.385]    [Pg.385]    [Pg.385]    [Pg.263]    [Pg.439]    [Pg.439]    [Pg.439]    [Pg.439]    [Pg.439]    [Pg.439]    [Pg.453]    [Pg.2443]    [Pg.376]    [Pg.394]    [Pg.397]    [Pg.140]    [Pg.56]    [Pg.85]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.20 , Pg.118 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.379 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.379 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.379 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.20 , Pg.118 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.189 , Pg.193 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.134 ]




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