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Influence of Microstructure and Atomic-Scale Chemistry on Iron Ore Reduction with Hydrogen at 700°C

Authors :
Yan Ma
Jaber Rezaei Mianroodi
Dirk Vogel
Dierk Raabe
Michael Rohwerder
Isnaldi R. Souza Filho
Se-Ho Kim
Katja Angenendt
Ayman A. El-Zoka
Xue Zhang
Leigh T. Stephenson
Kevin Schweinar
Baptiste Gault
Source :
SSRN Electronic Journal.
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2020.

Abstract

With 1.85 billion tons produced per year, steel is the most important material class in terms of volume and environmental impact. While steel is a sustainability enabler, for instance through lightweight design, magnetic devices, and efficient turbines, its primary production is not. For 3000 years, iron has been reduced from ores using carbon. Today 2.1 tons CO2 are produced per ton of steel, causing 30% of the global CO2 emissions in the manufacturing sector, which translates to 6.5% of the global CO2 emissions. These numbers qualify iron- and steel-making as the largest single industrial greenhouse gas emission source. The envisaged future industrial route to mitigate these CO2 emissions targets green hydrogen as a reductant. Although this reaction has been studied for decades, its kinetics is not well understood, particularly during the wustite reduction step which is dramatically slower than the hematite reduction. Many rate-limiting factors of this reaction are set by the micro- and nanostructure as well as the local chemistry of the ores. Their quantification allows knowledge-driven ore preparation and process optimization to make the hydrogen-based reduction of iron ores commercially viable, enabling the required massive CO2 mitigation to ease global warming. Here, we report on a multi-scale structure and composition analysis of iron reduced from hematite with pure H2, reaching down to near-atomic scale.

Details

ISSN :
15565068
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
SSRN Electronic Journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5067cb32db90dd62bda88524f825e934
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3726295