- Sponge iron
Sponge iron is the product created when
iron ore is reduced to metalliciron , usually with some kind ofcarbon (charcoal , etc), at temperatures below themelting point of iron. This results in a spongy mass, sometimes called a "bloom", consisting of a mix of incandescentwrought iron andslag .Use of sponge iron
Sponge iron is not useful in itself, but can be processed to create
wrought iron . The sponge is removed from the furnace, called a "bloomery ", and repeatedly beaten with heavy hammers and folded over to remove the slag,oxidise any carbon or carbide andweld the iron together. This treatment usually creates wrought iron with about three percent slag and a fraction of a percent of other impurities. Further treatment may add controlled amounts of carbon, allowing various kinds of heat treatment (e.g. "steeling").Today, sponge iron is created by reducing iron ore without melting it. This makes for an energy-efficient feedstock for
specialty steel manufacturers which used to rely uponscrap metal .History
Producing sponge iron and then working it was the earliest method used to obtain iron in the
Middle East ,Egypt , andEurope , where it remained in use until at least the 16th century. There is some evidence that the bloomery method was also used inChina , but China had developedblast furnace s to obtainpig iron by 500 BC.The advantage of the bloomery technique is that iron can be obtained at a lower furnace temperature, only about 1,100°C or so. The disadvantage, relatively to using a blast furnace, is that only small quantities can be made at a time.
ee also
Direct Reduced Iron [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Direct_reduced_iron]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.