Litcius/Paper detail

Vibration‐Based Monitoring of Gas‐Stirring Intensity in Vacuum Tank Degassing

Mika Pylvänäinen, Ville‐Valtteri Visuri, Juhani Nissilä, Jouni Laurila, Konsta Karioja, Seppo Ollila, Timo Fabritius, Toni Liedes

2020steel research international11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Liquid steel is typically stirred in a vacuum tank using argon gas injection to achieve a homogeneous composition and high‐purity steel. The aim of this work is to study the effect of vessel vibration on the operational state monitoring of the gas stirring in a vacuum tank degasser. Following an extensive analysis of vibration features, the root mean square (RMS) of vertical velocity is found to be the best feature for the measurement of the stirring intensity caused by the volumetric gas injection rate into the ladle. Smoothing is conducted using a centered median filter with a window length of 21 s. In this work, the operational state monitoring of gas stirring is described using a ladle responsiveness value (LRV). This describes the ability of a ladle to generate the maximum amount of vibration with the minimum amount of argon gas. The LRV summarized for each ladle reveals significant differences between them. Correspondingly, a rolling ladle responsiveness value (rLRV) is used for online monitoring of possible gas leakages. The rLRV can also be used for the online monitoring of the stirring efficiency and as its comparison with the overall efficiency of a specific ladle or all ladles.

Topics & Concepts

LadleArgonMaterials scienceIntensity (physics)Work (physics)VibrationMechanical engineeringMetallurgyEngineeringAcousticsChemistryOpticsOrganic chemistryPhysicsMetallurgical Processes and ThermodynamicsMineral Processing and GrindingCorrosion Behavior and Inhibition