Bubble Formation by Short Plunging Jet in a Continuous Casting Tundish

A short plunging jet technique was developed to produce small bubbles in continuous casting tundish, with argon sealing, in order to promote the removal of inclusions smaller than 50 μm. The liquid steel coming out of the ladle shroud is accelerated and vibrated by gravity, leading to gas entrainmen...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sheng Chang, Zheng Liu, Zongshu Zou, Lei Shao, Baokuan Li
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-11-01
Series:Metals
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2075-4701/10/12/1590
id doaj-8513c25006b947a88fe5fd8a480a85d2
record_format Article
spelling doaj-8513c25006b947a88fe5fd8a480a85d22020-11-28T00:04:54ZengMDPI AGMetals2075-47012020-11-01101590159010.3390/met10121590Bubble Formation by Short Plunging Jet in a Continuous Casting TundishSheng Chang0Zheng Liu1Zongshu Zou2Lei Shao3Baokuan Li4Key Laboratory for Ecological Metallurgy of Multimetallic Ores (Ministry of Education), Northeastern University, Shenyang 110819, ChinaSchool of Metallurgy, Northeastern University, Shenyang 110819, ChinaKey Laboratory for Ecological Metallurgy of Multimetallic Ores (Ministry of Education), Northeastern University, Shenyang 110819, ChinaKey Laboratory for Ecological Metallurgy of Multimetallic Ores (Ministry of Education), Northeastern University, Shenyang 110819, ChinaSchool of Metallurgy, Northeastern University, Shenyang 110819, ChinaA short plunging jet technique was developed to produce small bubbles in continuous casting tundish, with argon sealing, in order to promote the removal of inclusions smaller than 50 μm. The liquid steel coming out of the ladle shroud is accelerated and vibrated by gravity, leading to gas entrainment. This novel approach is free from bubbles growing along the nozzle surface due to the poor wetting condition, which is applicable to producing small bubbles in liquid steel. Water modeling was carried out to investigate the impact of the free-fall length on gas entrainment by a short plunging jet. The results show that gas can be entrained into the liquid bath with a free fall longer than 15 mm. Part of the entrained gas is separated from the gas sheath by the rough surface of the inflow stream, forming initial bubbles. These initial bubbles are further refined into small ones of 0.4~2.5 mm due to the turbulent flow in the pouring region. The cylindrical shield can effectively isolate the surface fluctuation caused by the short plunging jet; thereby, a stable slag layer in the tundish can be maintained during gas entrainment.https://www.mdpi.com/2075-4701/10/12/1590inclusion removalshort plunging jetgas entrainmentbubble formationcontinuous casting tundishslag–metal interface
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sheng Chang
Zheng Liu
Zongshu Zou
Lei Shao
Baokuan Li
spellingShingle Sheng Chang
Zheng Liu
Zongshu Zou
Lei Shao
Baokuan Li
Bubble Formation by Short Plunging Jet in a Continuous Casting Tundish
Metals
inclusion removal
short plunging jet
gas entrainment
bubble formation
continuous casting tundish
slag–metal interface
author_facet Sheng Chang
Zheng Liu
Zongshu Zou
Lei Shao
Baokuan Li
author_sort Sheng Chang
title Bubble Formation by Short Plunging Jet in a Continuous Casting Tundish
title_short Bubble Formation by Short Plunging Jet in a Continuous Casting Tundish
title_full Bubble Formation by Short Plunging Jet in a Continuous Casting Tundish
title_fullStr Bubble Formation by Short Plunging Jet in a Continuous Casting Tundish
title_full_unstemmed Bubble Formation by Short Plunging Jet in a Continuous Casting Tundish
title_sort bubble formation by short plunging jet in a continuous casting tundish
publisher MDPI AG
series Metals
issn 2075-4701
publishDate 2020-11-01
description A short plunging jet technique was developed to produce small bubbles in continuous casting tundish, with argon sealing, in order to promote the removal of inclusions smaller than 50 μm. The liquid steel coming out of the ladle shroud is accelerated and vibrated by gravity, leading to gas entrainment. This novel approach is free from bubbles growing along the nozzle surface due to the poor wetting condition, which is applicable to producing small bubbles in liquid steel. Water modeling was carried out to investigate the impact of the free-fall length on gas entrainment by a short plunging jet. The results show that gas can be entrained into the liquid bath with a free fall longer than 15 mm. Part of the entrained gas is separated from the gas sheath by the rough surface of the inflow stream, forming initial bubbles. These initial bubbles are further refined into small ones of 0.4~2.5 mm due to the turbulent flow in the pouring region. The cylindrical shield can effectively isolate the surface fluctuation caused by the short plunging jet; thereby, a stable slag layer in the tundish can be maintained during gas entrainment.
topic inclusion removal
short plunging jet
gas entrainment
bubble formation
continuous casting tundish
slag–metal interface
url https://www.mdpi.com/2075-4701/10/12/1590
work_keys_str_mv AT shengchang bubbleformationbyshortplungingjetinacontinuouscastingtundish
AT zhengliu bubbleformationbyshortplungingjetinacontinuouscastingtundish
AT zongshuzou bubbleformationbyshortplungingjetinacontinuouscastingtundish
AT leishao bubbleformationbyshortplungingjetinacontinuouscastingtundish
AT baokuanli bubbleformationbyshortplungingjetinacontinuouscastingtundish
_version_ 1724413164495306752