Microwave Steelmaking 67
Makarand writes "Researchers at the Michigan Technological University are working on a
low-cost
steelmaking process which uses microwaves to heat iron ore instead of conventional heating.
Their steelmaking facility was made of magnetrons from six household microwaves wired together and an electric arc furnace. When fed iron oxide and coal, the microwave energy could reduce the iron ore to iron within minutes and the electric
arc furnace smelted the iron and coal into steel. The steel industry is taking a closer
look at this new process which could cut steel production costs by upto 50%."
Science can do anything! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Science can do anything! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Science can do anything! (Score:2)
Re:Science can do anything! (Score:3, Informative)
Effect to consumers? (Score:1, Interesting)
For america lets hope not (Score:1, Interesting)
Oh and with lousy workers I mean that americans will keep on insisting on being paid more then a starving wage and refuse to do double shifts. The rotters.
Re:For america lets hope not (Score:4, Insightful)
The inventor, Jiann-Yang (Jim) Hwang, came from Taiwan to the U.S. to pursue his graduate studies. (Here's his resume [mtu.edu].) He graduates from Purdue with a Ph.D., and 20 years later, he's a professor of materials science at Michigan Technological University, and is adding to the collective innovating efforts of our nation.
Personally, I'm all for smart, hard-working people immigrating to the U.S. and staying here. All those temp workers in the technical industry who have come over here from India? All those people from Ecuador who are willing to work like dogs in the restaurant industry? All those people from Eastern Europe who are filled with the entrepreneurial sprit? Don't give them visas, make them citizens!
Good news, if it works (Score:4, Insightful)
You see, free trade can do good things for the average worker. Though to be fair "good things" in this case means fewer steelworkers will lose their jobs instead of all of them. Still, it's improvement, and who knows? If our costs really drop by 50%, demand very well could increase enough to justify keeping all the old workers around.
(I didn't really have anything to say, but the only other posts with scores higher than zero were... Well, if you've been on Slashdot for more than five minutes, you know what they were like.)
Re:Good news, if it works (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Good news, if it works (Score:4, Interesting)
Not nessicarly. Most third world countries don't have reliable power. If you have molten iron, and the power goes out, you have to empty everything fast, because once it solidifies it will crack the containers when you try to remove it. (as it cools it contracts, when you melt it, it expands. think frozen water)
Remember too that energy is cheap in the US. I doupt any third world country really has a major advantage there. Perhaps Iceland, with all their geo-thermo, they have already locked up aluminium, but are they third world?
There are a lot of issues. If you want a custom shape from your supplier it is much easier to get it from one in your town than a third world nation. If your factory is automatied enough, labor costs aren't significant anyway, (it is all skilled labor which you would have to import to the third world country) so what is the point in moving.
Most of the "japanese" car manufactors have factorys in the US. You can have a profitable manufactoring company in the US, if you run it right.
Re:Good news, if it works (Score:1)
As for molten iron, I'd bet that as it cools off and solidifies it will contract.
Re:Good news, if it works (Score:4, Interesting)
Right, unfortunatly water is a strange thing, acting very different from most other materials. It hits the minimun density at about 4 degrees C. That is it contracts as it cools until it gets 4, then it starts expanding.
Iron does in fact contract when it solidifies. As it contracts it pulls more and more iron (okay a very tiny amount more) in. When you heat something containing solid iron, that iron needs to go someplace. Heat from the bottom of a container, and the bottom will melt first, and expand, but there is solid iron above it, so something has to give. Often that is the container.
Re:Good news, if it works (Score:1)
Thanks for the clarification about how something contracting could blow a container... it wasn't clear in your earlier message you were talking about closed containers as such.
Re:Good news, if it works (Score:1, Interesting)
The fact is, building a steel mill is a bigger endeavor than building a power plant. If you build a steel mill, you can
Re:Good news, if it works (Score:2)
Re:Good news, if it works (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Good news, if it works (Score:3, Informative)
In order to make iron, iron ore and coal (well, coke actually) are dropped in layers in an operating blast furnace. The coke burns in the furnace and as a consequence reduces the iron ore to iron, as well as supplying enough heat to keep the contents of the bottom of the furnace molten.
So, you need coal to make coke to make iron... to make steel and such.
Bad Things happen if the blast furnace runs out of coke, Very Bad Things in fact, so these pretty much r
Re:Good news, if it works (Score:3, Informative)
What they do is to have a bunch of huge electromagnets and pulse them rapidly. This causes the electrons in the container to jitter producing the heat needed. It was all very interesting, and molten aluminum is one of the most beautiful thins I have aver seen.
Power plants (Score:2)
I remember because there were some labour unions upset that they were doing this.
I don't know what the problem is, getting sent home full pay because the company could make an even more profit due to the NIMBY attitude of California.
That's funny. (Score:2)
Because, with water, the density of it as a solid is less than the density of it as a liquid. That's why freezing water in something will cause the little peak hill in the middle, or shatter the container from the extra pressure. It's also why ice floats.
So, frozen water contracts when it melts and expands when it freezes -- the opposite of what you're trying to get to
Re:Good news, if it works (Score:2)
You are incorrect sir; water and it's frozen form ice are the exception to the rule in this case.
Water is at its densest at 4 degrees Celsius; below that, the dimagnetic structure of the molecules comes into play to form six-sided crystals that are actually less dense than the energetic but non-magnetically aligned water.
This is why ice floats in water, instead of sinking. It's also why ponds don't freeze solid in the winter, a
Sadly Companies are Greedy (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Sadly Companies are Greedy (Score:2)
Re:Sadly Companies are Greedy (Score:2)
Productivity (Score:2)
Re:Good news, if it works (Score:1)
Re:Good news, if it works (Score:1)
imagine if Toshiba or Honda or some other such industrial giant were to take these and make a portable steel-mill system the size of a porta-loo? feed it ore and whatever, get steel wire.
even having low-grade steel for embedding into locally produced cement could make a world of difference to tribes of thirsty people.
hell, i give it a year before someone takes this technique and puts a 'FAQ/How-To' style site together for the rec.hobby.steelwo
Re:Good news, if it works (Score:2)
Just because it was invented in Michigan doesn't limit its use to the US. Some other big steelmaking countries have also a lot of power
Bah! (Score:3, Informative)
Do you have any idea on the multiple steps needed to make any particular alloy of steel?
No?
Do you know how to check the ore for sulfur?
How about too much Phophorus?
No again?
Do you know when and why to add lime?
Hmmmm????
Lets try an easy one: What are the alloying elements in 4140 Steel? No looking it up online, after all, this is unskilled knowledge!!!!!
How about the time and temperature schedule for heat treating 6061 alloy Aluminium to the T5 State???
So, you have no knowledge about
Re:Bah! (Score:1)
Re:Good news, if it works (Score:3, Interesting)
Bzzt wrong. You see, in $under-industrialized-nation the workers will work for $0.50 an hour in this Microwave Steel Foundry. Just like they do in the current foundries.
Your assertion that reducing costs "here" will keep jobs "here..
Re:Efficieny (Score:5, Interesting)
If you bursh up on your thermodynamics you will notice that simple fuels (say coal) cannot reach 50% efficency). Iron melts close to the flame tempature of some fuels. Run the calculations of efficency, and 50% looks really good.
Of course real industry uses electric a lot. However resisance (ohms law), while in theory 100% efficent has downsides. The heating elements are fragil, and that is assuming you can find one that doesn't melt at less than the tempature of liquid iron. Typically carbon arc furances are used, which means you replace carbon rods once in a while.
Induction heating is common in industry. I'm not sure where, or for what purposes, but I know it is used. I don't know how it compares to this process.
Re:Efficieny (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Efficieny (Score:1)
Something doesn't add up here.
My liege? (Score:5, Funny)
I'm glad somebody finally hit that research button. I can't make any more villagers.
Re:My liege? (Score:1)
since no one else jumped on this one (Score:3, Funny)
finished rehab?
Hehe! (Score:1)
Re:Hehe! (Score:2, Interesting)
Implications for other planets? (Score:4, Interesting)
The idea being, of course, that you feed rock and electricity in one end of a smallish box and get steel out the other. Would this be useful for making a base on the moon or mars? Huh?
Re:Implications for other planets? (Score:2)
You almost had me there.
Re:Implications for other planets? (Score:2)
Most of which is based on "Creation Science".
Re:Implications for other planets? (Score:1)
The problem with off-world steel production could be oxigen. You need oxigen to reduce the amount of carbon (from around 5% to 0.06%-2%) in the iron.
Re:Implications for other planets? (Score:2)
Once you've got the iron from the dirt and carbon from the air, this new do-hicky seems like it'll take care of the res
Re: (Score:1)
I read the article and I'm confused... (Score:5, Interesting)
I seem to recall that you have to blow hot air or oxygen through the melt to burn out excess carbon to convert the pig iron to steel. Maybe he hasn't gotten that far developing the process.
If indeed he has found a way to go from ore straight to steel, this is a pretty valuable process. There just isn't enough information to tell.
Re:I read the article and I'm confused... (Score:3, Informative)
Sounds like he did, (IANAMetallurgist), although you are right, the article is really vague. Amusing how two adjacent sentences refer to adding "iron oxide" and "iron ore", which are completely different.
Re:I read the article and I'm confused... (Score:4, Interesting)
However, most people are not very interested in mild steel by the ton. They want manufactured goods, and there things change. The hardness, toughness and high melting point of steel make it relatively expensive to manufacture. So much so that it's not really worth re-cycling iron scrap in small quantities---the raw material is so cheap that the processing and transportation costs make it uneconomic. It's easy to re-cycle beer cans though---just melt them at (relatively) low temperature and you have your raw material back for much less than it costs to process bauxite.
Plastics, despite the high raw material cost are typically extremely cheap to manufacture (though often expensive to recycle for various reasons).
So, if you can halve the cost of making mild steel, or even the cost of making pig iron, that's not going to add up to a lot of saving on the cost of your new car. It won't even halve the cost of the product leaving the steel factory's gates, since that product is , AFAIK, not 'raw' steel, but some form of at least partially manufactured product such as steel plate at the very least.
Why do we recycle tin cans? (Score:2)
We are supposed to recycle -- under penalty of law, but the most serious penalty I have seen is that the city workers are "empowered" to slap a bright orange stickers on piles of cardboard left by students at the U during moving day if they didn't bundle such piles to the sa
Re:Why do we recycle tin cans? (Score:2)
Re:I read the article and I'm confused... (Score:2)
Yeah, that's sort-of right (within my limited understanding of the process). One of the problems with blowing air or O2 through the tuyeres is accretion. Do you know what a pneumatic puncher is and how it works?
Did they see sparks when the microware was on (Score:1)
Mine produces sparks when I put aluminum foil in the appliance and turn it on.
Disclaimer:
Kids, don't try this at home!!!
Oh Yeah Great (Score:4, Funny)
Not Exactly New (Score:4, Interesting)
Alaska Bugs Sweat Gold Nuggets [alaska-freegold.com]
ok... we found another way to do this... (Score:1)
I would not really call this progress; if they would run this contraption on solar power or a penlite battery, it would be worth mentioning...
Morc