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Blast Furnace Operation Method

Abstract: According to one aspect of the present invention, provided is a blast furnace operation method characterized in that a high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas which contains at least 80 mol% of hydrogen gas, is blown from a tuyere under certain conditions such as: a condition in which the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is room temperature to 300 °C, and the blown amount of hydrogen gas in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is 200 Nm3/t to 500 Nm3/t; a condition in which the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is 300 °C to 600 °C, and the blown amount of hydrogen gas in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is at least 145 Nm3/t; or a condition in which the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is 600 °C to 900 °C, and the blown amount of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is at least 125 Nm3/t.

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Patent Information

Application #
Filing Date
20 June 2022
Publication Number
43/2022
Publication Type
INA
Invention Field
METALLURGY
Status
Email
mahua.ray@remfry.com
Parent Application
Patent Number
Legal Status
Grant Date
2024-07-11
Renewal Date

Applicants

NIPPON STEEL CORPORATION
6-1, Marunouchi 2-chome, Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo 1008071
JFE STEEL CORPORATION
2-3, Uchisaiwai-cho 2-chome, Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo 1000011
KABUSHIKI KAISHA KOBE SEIKO SHO (KOBE STEEL, LTD.)
2-4, Wakinohama-Kaigandori 2-chome, Chuo-ku, Kobe-shi, Hyogo 6518585
NIPPON STEEL ENGINEERING CO., LTD.
5-1, Osaki 1-chome, Shinagawa-ku, Tokyo 1418604

Inventors

1. SAKAI Hiroshi
c/o NIPPON STEEL CORPORATION, 6-1, Marunouchi 2-chome, Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo 1008071
2. NAKANO Kaoru
c/o NIPPON STEEL CORPORATION, 6-1, Marunouchi 2-chome, Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo 1008071

Specification

Title of Invention : Blast Furnace Operation Method
Technical field
[0001]
 The present invention relates to a method of operating a blast furnace.
 This application claims priority based on Japanese Patent Application No. 2019-216568 filed in Japan on November 29, 2019 and Japanese Patent Application No. 2020-092467 filed in Japan on May 27, 2020. The contents are hereby incorporated by reference.
Background technology
[0002]
 In the steel industry, the blast furnace process is the mainstream of the pig iron manufacturing process. In the blast furnace method, iron-based raw materials for blast furnaces (raw materials containing iron oxide, mainly sintered ore, hereinafter simply referred to as "iron-based raw materials") and coke are alternately and layeredly charged into the blast furnace from the top of the blast furnace. At the same time, hot air is blown into the blast furnace from the tuyeres at the bottom of the blast furnace. The hot air reacts with the pulverized coal blown together with the hot air and coke in the blast furnace to generate high-temperature reducing gas (here, mainly CO gas). That is, hot air gasifies coke and pulverized coal. The reducing gas rises in the blast furnace and reduces the iron-based raw material while heating it. The iron-based raw material is heated and reduced by the reducing gas while descending in the blast furnace. After that, the iron-based raw material melts and drips into the blast furnace while being further reduced by coke. The iron-based raw material is finally stored in the hearth as molten pig iron (pig iron) containing a little less than 5% by mass of carbon. Molten iron in the hearth is taken out from the tap hole and supplied to the next steelmaking process. Therefore, in the blast furnace method, carbonaceous materials such as coke and pulverized coal are used as reducing agents.
[0003]
 By the way, in recent years, the prevention of global warming has been called for, and the reduction of emissions of carbon dioxide (CO 2 gas), which is one of the greenhouse gases, has become a social issue. As mentioned above, the blast furnace process uses carbonaceous material as a reducing agent, so it generates a large amount of CO2 gas . Therefore, the steel industry has become one of the major industries in terms of CO2 gas emissions and must meet the social demands. Specifically, there is an urgent need to further reduce the reducing agent ratio (amount of reducing agent used per ton of hot metal) in blast furnace operation.
[0004]
 The reducing agent turns into heat in the furnace to raise the temperature of the charge, and it also serves to reduce the iron-based raw materials in the furnace. There is The reduction reaction in the furnace can be represented by various reaction formulas. Among these reduction reactions, the direct reduction reaction with coke (reaction formula: FeO+C⇒Fe+CO) is an endothermic reaction accompanied by a large endothermic reaction. Therefore, it is important to prevent this reaction from occurring as much as possible in order to reduce the reducing agent ratio. This direct reduction reaction is a reaction that occurs in the lower part of the blast furnace . It is possible to reduce the target ferrous raw materials.
[0005]
As a conventional technology for solving the above problems, for example, as disclosed in Patent Documents 1 to 6, reducing gas (H 2 gas, COG (Cokes Oven Gas), natural gas, city gas, etc.) is supplied  from the tuyere together with hot air . is known to improve the reducing gas potential in the furnace. When the reducing gas is a carbon-containing reducing gas (a reducing gas containing carbon atoms in the molecular structure of the gas, such as a hydrocarbon gas), the carbon atoms in the carbon-containing gas become CO gas in the blast furnace, reducing the iron-based raw material. do. When the reducing gas is hydrogen gas (H 2 gas), the hydrogen gas reduces the iron-based raw material. This makes it possible to reduce the amount of iron-based raw materials that are the target of the direct reduction reaction. In the following description, "carbon" and "hydrogen" mean carbon atoms and hydrogen atoms, respectively, unless otherwise specified.
prior art documents
patent literature
[0006]
Patent Document 1: Japanese Patent No. 6019893
Patent Document 2: Japanese Patent No. 5987773
Patent Document 3: Japanese Patent No. 5050706
Patent Document 4: Japanese Patent No. 5770124
Patent Document 5: Japan Patent No. 5315732
Patent Document 6: Japanese Patent No. 5851828
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
Problems to be Solved by the Invention
[0007]
 However, in the techniques disclosed in Patent Documents 1 to 6, the amount of reducing gas blown from the tuyere is small, and the effect of reducing CO 2 emissions is small.
[0008]
 Therefore, the present invention has been made in view of the above problems, and an object of the present invention is to blow a high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas as a reducing gas blown from a tuyere while maintaining stable blast furnace operation. To provide a new and improved method of operating a blast furnace, which can increase the load and further reduce CO2 emissions .
Means to solve problems
[0009]
 In order to solve the above problems, according to one aspect of the present invention, a high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas containing 80 mol% or more of hydrogen gas is blown at a temperature of room temperature or higher and 300 ° C. or lower, And the condition that the amount of hydrogen gas blown in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is 200 Nm 3 /t or more and 500 Nm 3 /t or less, the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is more than 300 ° C. and 600 ° C. or less, and , the condition that the amount of hydrogen gas blown in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is 145 Nm 3 /t or more, the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is more than 600 ° C. and 900 ° C. or less, and the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas The blowing amount of is 125 Nm /t or more , the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is higher than 900 ° C. and 1200 ° C. or less, and the blowing amount of hydrogen gas in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is 110 Nm 3 /t or more, or conditions where the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is over 1200 ° C. and the blowing amount of hydrogen gas in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is 100 Nm 3 /t or more and a method of operating a blast furnace characterized by blowing through the tuyeres.
[0010]
 Here, the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is normal temperature or more and 300° C. or less, and the amount of hydrogen gas blown in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is 200 Nm 3 /t or more and 300 Nm 3 /t or less, and good too.
[0011]
 Further, the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is higher than 300 ° C. and 600 ° C. or less, and the amount of hydrogen gas blown in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is 145 Nm 3 /t or more and 600 Nm 3 /t or less good too.
[0012]
 Also, the temperature in front of the tuyere may be 2050° C. or lower.
[0013]
 Also, the temperature in front of the tuyere may be higher than 2050°C and not higher than 2150°C.
[0014]
 Also, the temperature in front of the tuyere may be higher than 2150°C and not higher than 2250°C.
[0015]
 Moreover, the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas may be more than 600° C. and 1400° C. or less.
[0016]
 Moreover, when the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas exceeds 600° C., the amount of hydrogen gas blown in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas may be 1000 Nm 3 /t or less.
[0017]
 Further, when the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is over 600°C and the amount of hydrogen gas blown in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is 400 Nm 3 /t or more, the temperature before the tuyere is set to 2050°C. The following may be used.
[0018]
 According to another aspect of the present invention, the amount of hydrogen gas blown in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas and the carbon The injection amount - carbon consumption parameter correlation, which is the correlation with the carbon consumption parameter related to consumption, is obtained in advance for each pre-tuyere temperature, and hydrogen in high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas that reduces carbon consumption compared to current operation. A method of operating a blast furnace, characterized by determining a gas injection amount based on the injection amount-carbon consumption parameter correlation, and blowing a high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas from the tuyere at the determined injection amount. provided.
[0019]
 Further, the correlation between the amount of hydrogen gas blown into the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas and the carbon consumption parameter may be obtained for each blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas.
[0020]
 In addition, when the injection temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is a predetermined value, the injection amount, which is the correlation between the amount of hydrogen gas injected in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas and the amount of change in pressure loss with respect to the base operation- Preliminary calculation of pressure loss change amount correlation for each pre-tuyere temperature in high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas where carbon consumption is lower than current operation and pressure loss change is within a predetermined range may be determined based on the injection amount-carbon consumption parameter correlation and the injection amount-pressure loss change amount correlation.
[0021]
 In addition, when the injection temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is a predetermined value, the blowing is the correlation between the amount of hydrogen gas injected in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas and the amount of change in the furnace top gas temperature with respect to the base operation. The amount-top gas temperature change amount correlation is obtained in advance for each temperature before the tuyere, and the carbon consumption is reduced compared to the current operation, and the amount of change in the top gas temperature is within a predetermined range. The injection amount of hydrogen gas in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas may be determined based on the injection amount-carbon consumption parameter correlation and the injection amount-top gas temperature change amount correlation.
Effect of the invention
[0022]
 As described above, according to the above aspect of the present invention, the amount of high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas blown from the tuyere as a reducing gas is increased while maintaining stable blast furnace operation, and CO 2 emissions are further reduced. can be reduced.
Brief description of the drawing
[0023]
1 is a diagram for explaining the blowing temperature of a high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas; FIG.
2 is a graph showing the correlation between the amount of pure hydrogen gas blown at room temperature and the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption unit consumption for each pre-tuyere temperature Tf. FIG.
3 is a graph showing the correlation between the amount of pure hydrogen gas blown at 300° C. and the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption unit consumption for each pre-tuyere temperature Tf. FIG.
4 is a graph showing the correlation between the amount of pure hydrogen gas blown at 350° C. and the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption unit consumption. FIG.
5 is a graph showing the correlation between the amount of pure hydrogen gas blown at 600° C. and the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption unit consumption for each pre-tuyere temperature Tf. FIG.
6 is a graph showing the correlation between the amount of pure hydrogen gas blown at 650° C. and the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption unit consumption. FIG.
7 is a graph showing the correlation between the amount of pure hydrogen gas blown at 900° C. and the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption unit consumption for each pre-tuyere temperature Tf. FIG.
8 is a graph showing the correlation between the amount of pure hydrogen gas blown at 950° C. and the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption unit consumption. FIG.
9 is a graph showing the correlation between the amount of pure hydrogen gas blown at 1200° C. and the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption unit consumption for each pre-tuyere temperature Tf.
10 is a graph showing the correlation between the amount of pure hydrogen gas blown at 1250° C. and the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption unit consumption. [ Fig
. 11] Blowing amount of pure hydrogen gas at room temperature or 80 mol% H2 at room temperature 4 is a graph showing the correlation between the amount of hydrogen gas blown into the -20 mol % N 2 high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas and the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption unit consumption.
12 is a graph showing the correlation between the amount of pure hydrogen gas blown at room temperature and the amount of change in pressure loss for each pre-tuyere temperature Tf. FIG.
13 is a graph showing the correlation between the amount of pure hydrogen gas blown at room temperature and the amount of change in the furnace top gas temperature for each pre-tuyere temperature Tf. FIG.
14 is a graph showing the correlation between the amount of pure hydrogen gas blown at 1200° C. and the amount of change in pressure loss when the pre-tuyere temperature Tf reaches 2100° C. FIG.
FIG. 15 is a graph showing the correlation between the injection temperature of pure hydrogen gas and the injection amount of pure hydrogen gas required to make the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption unit consumption 10%.
16 is a graph showing the correlation between the injection temperature of pure hydrogen gas and the injection amount of pure hydrogen gas required to make the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption unit consumption 20%. FIG.
MODE FOR CARRYING OUT THE INVENTION
[0024]
 Preferred embodiments of the present invention will be described in detail below with reference to the accompanying drawings. In the present embodiment, a numerical range represented using "-" means a range including the numerical values ​​described before and after "-" as lower and upper limits. The "reducing agent ratio" is the total mass of reducing agents required to produce 1 ton of hot metal. Therefore, the reducing agent ratio is basically the total mass of coke and pulverized coal required to produce 1 ton of hot metal, and the mass of the carbon-containing reducing gas in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is included in the reducing agent ratio. are treated as impermissible. In addition, "carbon consumption basic unit (Input C)" is the carbon required to produce 1 ton of hot metal (that is, the amount of carbon consumed per 1 ton of hot metal). “Rate of reduction in carbon consumption intensity Input ΔC” means the rate of reduction in carbon consumption intensity relative to base operation, which is an operation in which high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is not blown. Input ΔC is given by the following formula, where A is Input C in a base operation in units of kg/t, and B is Input C in a certain operation in units of kg/t.
 Input ΔC=(A−B)/A×100 (%)
 Reduction rate of carbon consumption per unit The larger Input ΔC is, the more reducing material ratio is reduced, which in turn reduces CO 2 emissions.
[0025]
 <1. Findings of the Inventors> In
 order to solve the above problems, the inventors focused on a high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas as a reducing gas. Here, the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas in the present embodiment means a gas containing 80 mol% or more of hydrogen gas (mol% of hydrogen gas with respect to the total amount of all gases constituting the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas). . Pure hydrogen gas (gas having a hydrogen gas concentration of 100 mol %) is included in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas.
[0026]
 The present inventor focused on the injection amount of hydrogen gas in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas (hereinafter also simply referred to as the injection amount) and the injection temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas. The reduction reaction of the iron-based raw material with the hydrogen gas in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is an endothermic reaction. In order to compensate for the temperature drop due to the endothermic reaction, it is conceivable to raise the blowing temperature of the hydrogen gas. However, it is very difficult to grasp the amount of decrease in the temperature inside the furnace when a large amount of hydrogen gas in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is blown in, and the degree of heat compensation required according to the amount of decrease in the temperature inside the furnace. , and no detailed studies have been conducted so far. For the first time, the inventors of the present invention conducted a detailed study on the above matter. Specifically, grasping the reduction reaction rate at various gas compositions such as hydrogen gas and CO gas in high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas and various blowing temperatures of high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas, and reduction of these gases The influence of the furnace temperature, which changes with the heat of reaction, on the reduction reaction rate, and the influence of the gas composition, which changes due to the reduction reaction, on the reduction reaction rate were investigated. A grasp was made throughout the furnace. Such a study was carried out by conducting multiple tests on an actual blast furnace, using a test blast furnace level device, and using an experimental device that can simulate the adiabatic conditions and inject the gas inside the blast furnace under the conditions inside the blast furnace. Therefore, it is necessary to conduct an experiment or study using a simulation model. The inventors of the present invention conducted the above study using a simulation model, and as a result, found that there is an appropriate range of blowing amount for each blowing temperature.
 In other words, when the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is 600 ° C. or less, the reduction rate Input ΔC of the carbon consumption intensity is simply It does not increase, and when the injection amount increases to a certain extent, it relaxes and starts to decrease. Then, the amount of hydrogen gas injected into the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas when the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption unit consumption relaxes and starts to decrease varies depending on the injection temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas. On the other hand, when the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas exceeds 600° C., the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption intensity tends to increase as the blowing amount increases. When the amount of hydrogen gas injected into the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas increases to some extent, the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption unit becomes, for example, 7% or more. Therefore, by blowing into the blast furnace the amount of high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas determined according to the injection amount of hydrogen gas within this appropriate range, CO 2 emissions can be greatly reduced. For example, as shown in the examples described later, the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption intensity during the operation of the blast furnace can be 7% or more, and the CO 2 emission can be greatly reduced. The inventor of the present invention came up with the method for operating a blast furnace according to the present embodiment based on such knowledge. The present embodiment will be described in detail below.
[0027]
 <2. Composition of High-Concentration Hydrogen-Containing Gas>
 In the method of operating the blast furnace according to the present embodiment, the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is blown through the tuyeres. Therefore, first, the composition of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas will be described. A high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is a gas containing 80 mol % or more of hydrogen gas as described above. High-concentration hydrogen-containing gas includes pure hydrogen gas. The high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas includes gases other than hydrogen gas, such as the above-described carbon-containing reducing gas (e.g., hydrocarbon gas), CO gas, CO2 gas , H2O gas , N2 gas, and the like. good too. However, the total concentration of other gases is less than 20 mol %.
[0028]
 A gas in which the total concentration of other gases is 20 mol % or more is not included in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas in this embodiment. This is because when the concentration of other gases is 20 mol % or more, the reduction amount of CO 2 gas is greatly reduced. For example, among other gases, hydrocarbon gas, CO 2 gas, and H 2 O gas cause an endothermic reaction when decomposed at the tip of the tuyere, so the reduction efficiency in the blast furnace decreases. For this reason, the amount of iron-based raw materials reaching the lower part of the blast furnace without being reduced increases. Therefore, the amount of direct reduction reaction by coke increases. Therefore, more reducing agent is required to maintain the temperature in the blast furnace, which greatly reduces the amount of CO2 gas reduction . For example, when COG (coke oven gas) containing 50 mol % of hydrogen gas is blown into the blast furnace at a blowing amount of 600 Nm 3 /t, hydrogen gas is blown into the blast furnace at a blowing amount of 300 Nm 3 /t. The effect of reducing CO 2 emissions at this time is significantly inferior to when pure hydrogen gas is injected into the blast furnace at a rate of 300 Nm 3 /t, and a drastic reduction in CO 2 emissions (for example, carbon consumption source It does not lead to the unit reduction rate Input ΔC≧7%). In addition, as shown in the examples described later, in the case of pure hydrogen gas at room temperature, the amount of blowing is 300 Nm 3/t, the effect of reducing CO 2 emissions is maximized.
[0029]
 <3. Blast Furnace Operating Method>
 Next, a blast furnace operating method according to the present embodiment will be described. In the blast furnace operating method according to the present embodiment, first, the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is determined within the range of room temperature or higher.
[0030]
 Here, with reference to FIG. 1, the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas (hereinafter, this may be simply referred to as "blowing temperature") will be described. FIG. 1 is a diagram for explaining the blowing temperature. The temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is adjusted, for example, in a gas tank 3 equipped with a heater 5 . That is, after the gas containing high concentration hydrogen is heated by the heater 5 in the gas tank 3, or remains unheated at room temperature, the tuyere 2 for blowing hot air provided in the lower part of the blast furnace 1 sent to The high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas sent to the tuyeres 2 can be blown into the blast furnace 1 from the tuyeres 2 . Specifically, the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas sent to the tuyere 2 is mixed (merged) with the hot air generated in the hot blast furnace 4 and then blown into the blast furnace 1 from the tuyere 2 . The blowing temperature is the temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas just before it is mixed with the hot air when blown into the blast furnace 1 from the tuyeres 2 . In actual operation (actual furnace), for example, there is no temperature drop from the heater 5 that heats the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas until it is blown into the blast furnace 1, so the set temperature of the heater 5 can be the blowing temperature. . Although the temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas rises by mixing the hot air with the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas, the temperature at this time is not the blowing temperature in this embodiment. Moreover, in Patent Document 1, the blast temperature is described, but the blast temperature in Patent Document 1 is different from the blowing temperature in the present embodiment.
[0031]
As will be shown in the examples described later, CO 2 emissions can be greatly reduced  even when the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is not heated and is blown through the tuyeres at room temperature (see FIG. 2). FIG. 2 is a graph showing the correlation between the amount of pure hydrogen gas blown at room temperature and the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption unit consumption for each pre-tuyere temperature Tf. This graph is obtained by blast furnace operation simulation. Details will be described in Examples, but here, Kouji TAKATANI, Takanobu INADA, Yutaka UJISAWA, "Three-dimensional Dynamic Simulator for Blast Furnace", ISIJ International, Vol. 39 (1999), No. 1, p. 15-22, etc., a so-called "blast furnace mathematical model" was used. This blast furnace mathematical model roughly defines multiple meshes (small regions) by dividing the internal region of the blast furnace in the height direction, radial direction, and circumferential direction, and simulates the behavior of each mesh. be. The conditions of the simulation were the same as those of the examples described later. As shown in FIG. 2, when the amount of pure hydrogen gas at normal temperature is 200 to 500 Nm 3 /t, the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption intensity can be set to 7% or more, for example. . The reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption intensity is preferably 8% or more. In this embodiment, "ordinary temperature" means an unheated state, specifically at a temperature of 5°C or higher and 35°C or lower.
[0032]
 Details will be described later, but within the range where the injection temperature is above room temperature, the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption intensity for the same injection amount increases as the injection temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas increases (Fig. 2 to FIG. 10). FIG. 3 is a graph showing the correlation between the amount of pure hydrogen gas blown at 300° C. and the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption unit consumption for each pre-tuyere temperature Tf. FIG. 4 is a graph showing the correlation between the amount of pure hydrogen gas blown at 350° C. and the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption unit consumption. FIG. 5 is a graph showing the correlation between the amount of pure hydrogen gas blown at 600° C. and the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption unit consumption for each pre-tuyere temperature Tf. FIG. 6 is a graph showing the correlation between the amount of pure hydrogen gas blown at 650° C. and the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption unit consumption. FIG. 7 is a graph showing the correlation between the amount of pure hydrogen gas blown at 900° C. and the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption unit consumption for each pre-tuyere temperature Tf. FIG. 8 is a graph showing the correlation between the amount of pure hydrogen gas blown at 950° C. and the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption intensity. FIG. 9 is a graph showing the correlation between the amount of pure hydrogen gas blown at 1200° C. and the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption unit consumption for each pre-tuyere temperature Tf. FIG. 10 is a graph showing the correlation between the amount of pure hydrogen gas blown at 1250° C. and the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption unit consumption.
[0033]
 These graphs are obtained by the blast furnace operation simulation described above. Details will be described in Examples. It can be seen that the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption intensity in FIGS. 3 to 10 is higher than the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption intensity in FIG. The higher the injection temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas, the higher the sensible heat of the bosch gas (mixed gas of nitrogen gas, hydrogen gas, and CO gas) generated in the blast furnace, so more of the reducing gas is iron-based. It is thought that the raw material is reduced. That is, the reduction efficiency becomes higher. For this reason, it is considered that the higher the injection temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas, the larger the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption unit consumption. Therefore, from the viewpoint of increasing the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption intensity, it is preferable to increase the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas. Specifically, the blowing temperature is preferably determined within a range of over 300°C, more preferably within a range of over 600°C, and more preferably within a range of over 900°C.
[0034]
 However, in order to increase the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas to over 600° C., a large-scale facility modification may be required. Therefore, if it is difficult to blow the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas over 600°C with existing equipment, the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas should be determined within the range of room temperature to 600°C. good too. On the other hand, if the existing equipment (or by modifying the existing equipment) can blow the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas at a temperature of more than 600 ° C., the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas within the range of more than 600 ° C. may determine the blowing temperature of
[0035]
 Next, the blowing amount of hydrogen gas in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is determined. Here, the injection amount of hydrogen gas in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is the flow rate of the hydrogen gas in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas blown into the blast furnace from the tuyere per ton of hot metal, and the unit is Nm 3 / is t. When the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is pure hydrogen gas, the blowing amount of hydrogen gas in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is equal to the blowing amount of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas. When the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is a mixed gas containing other gases other than hydrogen gas, the amount of hydrogen gas injected in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is expressed in units of mol%. It is the amount obtained by multiplying the amount by the ratio of hydrogen gas. In actual operation, the value indicated by the flow meter provided at the outlet of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas supply source (e.g., gas tank) and the ratio of hydrogen gas in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas in units of mol% Calculate the injection amount of hydrogen gas in the contained gas.
[0036]
 In this embodiment, the blowing amount is determined depending on the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas. Specifically, when the blowing temperature is normal temperature to 300° C., the amount of hydrogen gas to be blown in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is determined within the range of 200 to 500 Nm 3 /t. On the other hand, when the blowing temperature is more than 300° C. and 600° C. or less, the blowing amount of hydrogen gas in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is determined within the range of 145 Nm 3 /t. When the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is higher than 600° C. and 900° C. or less, the blowing amount of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is determined within a range of 125 Nm 3 /t or more. When the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is higher than 900° C. and 1200° C. or less, the blowing amount of hydrogen gas in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is determined within a range of 110 Nm 3 /t or more. When the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas exceeds 1200° C., the blowing amount of hydrogen gas in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is determined within a range of 100 Nm 3 /t or more.
[0037]
 The reason why the blowing temperature is used in this way is that the suitable blowing amount slightly differs depending on the blowing temperature. In the following description, the case where the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is pure hydrogen gas will be described as an example. Even in the case where the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is blown, the correlation between the blowing temperature and the suitable blowing amount does not change.
[0038]
 As shown in Figures 2 and 3, when the injection temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is from room temperature to 300 ° C, the amount of hydrogen gas injected in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is increased from 0 in base operation. As it increases, the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption intensity increases. Then, when the amount of hydrogen gas blown in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas reaches about 300 Nm 3 /t, the reduction rate Input ΔC of the carbon consumption intensity peaks, and the blowing of hydrogen gas in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas If the input amount further increases, the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption intensity turns to decrease. Then, when the amount of hydrogen gas blown in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is a value within the range of 200 to 500 Nm 3 /t, the reduction rate Input ΔC of the carbon consumption intensity can be set to 7% or more. It becomes possible. In addition, when the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is pure hydrogen gas, the amount of hydrogen gas blown in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is the blowing amount of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas. When a gas other than gas is included, this value is the amount obtained by multiplying the amount of high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas blown by the ratio (mol %) of hydrogen gas.
[0039]
 The reduction reaction of iron-based raw materials with hydrogen gas (that is, the hydrogen reduction reaction) is an endothermic reaction. Therefore, when the amount of hydrogen gas blown into the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas exceeds 300 Nm 3 /t, many such endothermic reactions occur in the furnace, and the temperature in the furnace is considered to decrease. It is believed that such a decrease in the furnace temperature lowers the reduction efficiency of the reducing gas containing hydrogen gas. In order to prevent such reduction in reduction efficiency, it is necessary to increase the reducing agent ratio during operation. Therefore, when the amount of hydrogen gas injected into the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas exceeds 300 Nm 3 /t, the reduction rate Input ΔC of the carbon consumption unit consumption turns to decrease. Therefore, when the blowing temperature is normal temperature to 300° C., it is preferable to determine the blowing amount of hydrogen gas in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas within the range of 200 to 400 Nm 3 /t, more preferably 200 to 300 Nm 3 . It is more preferable to determine within the range of /t. In this case, it is possible to set the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption intensity to 8% or more.
[0040]
 As shown in FIGS. 4 and 5, even when the injection temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is higher than 300° C. and 600° C. or less, the amount of hydrogen gas injected in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is set to 0 Nm of the base operation. As the ratio is increased from 3 /t, the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption unit consumption increases. When the amount of hydrogen gas injected into the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is 145 Nm 3 /t or more, the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption unit consumption becomes 7% or more. When the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is 600° C., as shown in FIG . ΔC is saturated. When the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is 350 ° C., as shown in FIG . The rate of reduction Input ΔC of , reaches a peak, and when the amount of hydrogen gas injected into the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas further increases, the rate of reduction Input ΔC of the carbon consumption intensity begins to decrease.
 When the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is 350°C , the tuyere tip temperature Tf must be maintained at 2200°C when the amount of hydrogen gas injected in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas exceeds 600 Nm 3 /t. can be difficult. In conventional blast furnace operation, the pre-tuyere temperature Tf is often about 2200 ° C., and when it is difficult to maintain the pre-tuyere temperature Tf at 2200 ° C. will change the conditions.
[0041]
 The reason why the rate of reduction Input ΔC in the carbon consumption intensity turns to decrease when the injection temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is 350° C. is the same as described above. When the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is 600° C., the reduction rate Input ΔC of the carbon consumption intensity does not turn to decrease within the range of the blowing amount up to 700 Nm 3 /t. However, the effect of reducing the carbon consumption intensity saturates when the amount of hydrogen gas injected into the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is about 600 Nm 3 /t. When the blowing temperature is more than 350° C. and 600° C. or less, the sensible heat of the bosh gas is greater. Therefore, the effect of endothermic effects due to the hydrogen reduction reaction is reduced, so even if more hydrogen gas is blown in than in the above case, the temperature in the furnace is unlikely to drop. Therefore, even if a large amount of hydrogen gas is blown into the blast furnace, the temperature inside the blast furnace is unlikely to decrease, and thus the reduction efficiency is unlikely to decrease. For this reason, it is considered that the reduction rate Input ΔC of the carbon consumption intensity is saturated. Furthermore, when the amount of hydrogen gas injected into the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is 300 to 600 Nm 3 /t, the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption intensity becomes 10% or more.
[0042]
 As shown in FIGS. 6 and 7, even when the injection temperature is higher than 600° C. and 900° C. or lower, the amount of hydrogen gas injected in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is increased from 0 Nm 3 /t in the base operation. As it goes on, the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption intensity increases. When the amount of hydrogen gas injected into the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is within the range of 125 Nm 3 /t or more, the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption unit consumption becomes 7% or more. In particular, when the amount of hydrogen gas injected into the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is a value within the range of 180 Nm 3 /t or more, the reduction rate Input ΔC of the carbon consumption unit consumption becomes 10% or more. Furthermore, the rate of increase in the reduction rate Input △C of the carbon consumption rate (the reduction rate Input △ Although the amount of increase in C) decreases, the reduction rate Input ΔC of the carbon consumption intensity does not turn to decrease. This behavior is clearly different from the case where the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is 600° C. or lower. In addition, FIG. 7 shows the amount of hydrogen gas blown in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas (here, pure hydrogen gas) when the blowing temperature is 900 ° C. and the reduction ratio of the carbon consumption intensity Input △ Although it is a graph showing the correlation with C, the same tendency as in FIG. 7 was observed even when the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas was 650°C. For example, as shown in FIG. 6, when the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is 650° C. and the blowing amount of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is 125 Nm 3 /t or more, the reduction rate of the carbon consumption intensity Input ΔC was 7.0% or more.
[0043]
 As described above, since the reduction reaction by hydrogen gas is an endothermic reaction, when the amount of hydrogen gas blown into the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas increases to some extent, the reduction rate Input ΔC of the carbon consumption unit starts to decrease. However, if the injection temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas exceeds 600° C., the sensible heat of the bosh gas generated in the blast furnace becomes extremely high, so the reaction heat required for the reduction reaction can be covered. For this reason, even if the amount of hydrogen gas injected into the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas increases, the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption unit consumption does not turn to decrease, and is considered to continue to increase. Such behavior is observed when the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas exceeds 600°C. Therefore, from the viewpoint of further increasing the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption intensity, the upper limit of the amount of hydrogen gas to be injected into the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is not set. However, as the amount of hydrogen gas injected into the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas increases, the rate of increase in the reduction rate of carbon consumption intensity, Input △C, decreases. It is assumed that the effect will plateau. The blowing amount at this time is assumed to be approximately 1000 Nm 3 /t. Therefore, the amount of hydrogen gas blown into the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas may be 1000 Nm 3 /t or less.
[0044]
 As shown in FIGS. 8 and 9, even when the injection temperature is higher than 900° C. and 1200° C. or lower, the amount of hydrogen gas injected in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is increased from 0 Nm 3 /t in the base operation. As it goes on, the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption intensity increases. When the amount of hydrogen gas injected into the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is 110 Nm 3 /t or more, the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption unit consumption is 7% or more. In particular, when the amount of hydrogen gas injected into the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is a value within the range of 150 Nm 3 /t or more, the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption unit consumption becomes 10% or more. Furthermore, as in the case where the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is higher than 600 ° C. and 900 ° C. or less, the reduction rate of the carbon consumption intensity as the amount of hydrogen gas injected in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas increases. Although the increase rate of Input ΔC decreases, the reduction rate Input ΔC of the carbon consumption intensity does not turn to decrease. In addition, FIG. 9 shows the amount of hydrogen gas blown in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas (here, pure hydrogen gas) when the blowing temperature is 1200 ° C. and the reduction ratio of the carbon consumption unit input △ Although it is a graph showing the correlation with C, the same tendency as in FIG. 9 was observed even when the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas was 950°C. For example, as shown in FIG. 8, when the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is 950° C. and the blowing amount of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is 110 Nm 3 /t or more, the carbon consumption intensity reduction rate Input ΔC was 7.0% or more.
[0045]
 Therefore, from the viewpoint of further increasing the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption intensity, the upper limit of the amount of hydrogen gas to be injected into the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is not set. However, since it is assumed that the effect of reducing the carbon consumption intensity will peak when the amount of hydrogen gas injected in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is about 1000 Nm 3 /t, hydrogen in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas The amount of gas injected may be 1000 Nm 3 /t or less.
[0046]
 According to the blast furnace operation simulation, when the injection temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is 1200 ° C. and the amount of hydrogen gas injected in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is 800 Nm / t or more, pulverized coal blowing By reducing the coke ratio, it became possible to further reduce the carbon consumption intensity. Generally, in blast furnace operation, a reduction in the coke ratio leads to an increase in pressure loss, resulting in unstable operation. Here, the pressure loss is the pressure at the tip of the tuyere (before the tuyere), in other words, the difference between the pressure inside the furnace at the outlet of the tuyere and the pressure at the top of the furnace, excluding the pipe pressure loss from the blower to the tip of the tuyere. value. In actual operation, the pressure loss is measured by a pressure gauge installed on the furnace wall. However, as shown in FIG. 14, in blast furnace operation under high hydrogen concentration conditions like this embodiment, the gas viscosity and gas density in the furnace are greatly reduced, so the pressure loss when the coke ratio is reduced Concerns about the rise have been resolved, and the pressure loss is such that there is no problem with stable operation in actual operation. FIG. 14 is a graph showing the correlation between the amount of pure hydrogen gas injected at 1200° C. and the amount of change in pressure loss in the furnace when the temperature before the tuyere reaches 2100° C., obtained from a blast furnace operation simulation. It is something that can be done. The standard pressure loss in normal operation is about 85 kPa. According to FIG. 14, it can be seen that the pressure loss is less than 85 kPa under the operating conditions of this embodiment.
[0047]
 As shown in FIG. 10, even when the injection temperature exceeds 1200 ° C., increasing the amount of hydrogen gas injected in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas from 0 Nm 3 /t in the base operation reduces carbon consumption. The unit reduction rate Input ΔC is increased. When the amount of hydrogen gas injected into the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is in the range of 100 Nm 3 /t or more, the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption intensity becomes 7% or more. Furthermore, as in the case where the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is higher than 600 ° C. and 900 ° C. or less, the reduction rate of the carbon consumption intensity as the amount of hydrogen gas injected in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas increases. Although the increase rate of Input ΔC decreases, the reduction rate Input ΔC of the carbon consumption intensity does not turn to decrease. Therefore, from the viewpoint of further increasing the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption intensity, the upper limit of the amount of hydrogen gas to be injected into the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is not set. However, since it is assumed that the effect of reducing the carbon consumption intensity will peak when the amount of hydrogen gas injected in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is about 1000 Nm 3 /t, hydrogen in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas The amount of gas injected may be 1000 Nm 3 /t or less.
[0048]
 The upper limit of the blowing temperature is not particularly limited as long as the environment allows the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas to exceed 600°C. However, as shown in FIGS. 15 and 16, the effect of reducing the carbon consumption intensity is almost level off when the injection temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is in the range of over 1200.degree. C. to about 1400.degree. 15 and 16 show the correlation between the pure hydrogen gas blowing temperature and the pure hydrogen gas blowing amount required to set the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption unit consumption to 10% or 20%. It is a graph showing. The pre-tuyere temperature Tf was set to 2100°C. These graphs show the correlation between the pure hydrogen gas blowing temperature and the reduction ratio of the carbon consumption unit input ΔC of FIGS. It is arranged in the correlation of Therefore, the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas may be 1400° C. or lower. That is, the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas may be, for example, more than 600°C and 1400°C or less.
[0049]
 Next, a high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is blown through the tuyeres at the determined blowing temperature and blowing amount. As a result, the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption intensity can be set to, for example, 7% or more, and the amount of CO 2 emissions can be significantly reduced. The tuyeres into which the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is blown are, for example, tuyeres for blowing hot air provided in the lower part of the furnace. In the present embodiment, the explanation is given on the premise that the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is blown from the tuyeres for blowing hot air, but the tuyeres into which the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is blown are not limited to this. Another example of a tuyere is a so-called shaft tuyere provided on a shaft portion. The high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas may be blown into the blast furnace from either of these tuyeres, or may be blown into the blast furnace from both tuyeres. When the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is blown into the blast furnace from a plurality of tuyeres, the sum of the injection amounts of hydrogen gas in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas blown from each tuyere matches the blowing amount determined above.
[0050]
 By appropriately setting the hydrogen gas blowing temperature, blowing amount, tuyere pre-temperature Tf, etc. under the conditions of the present embodiment, it is possible to perform an operation in which the furnace top gas temperature is appropriately maintained. Therefore, preheating gas blowing and preheating of the furnace contents, which are performed to maintain the temperature of the furnace top gas, are unnecessary, but they may be performed separately.
[0051]
 <4. Modification>
 (4-1. Modification 1)
 Hereinafter, various modifications of the blast furnace operating method will be described. In Modification 1, the pre-tuyere temperature Tf is maintained at 2050° C. or lower. Here, the pre-tuyere temperature Tf is the temperature in the furnace at the tip of the tuyere inside the furnace, and is also referred to as the tuyere tip temperature Tf. In actual operation, the tuyere front temperature Tf is calculated as the tuyere tip theoretical combustion temperature according to Ram's formula described in Akitoshi Shigemi's Ironmaking Handbook (Jijin Shokan).
[0052]
 As shown in FIGS. 2, 3, 5, 7, and 9, the pre-tuyere temperature Tf is 2050° C. or less (2000° C. in FIGS. 2, 3, 5, 7, and 9). The reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption intensity in the case of is calculated when the pre-tuyere temperature Tf exceeds 2050°C (2100°C and 2200°C in FIGS. 2, 3, 5, 7 and 9 ) is greater than the rate of reduction of the carbon consumption intensity Input ΔC. Therefore, in Modification 1, the pre-tuyere temperature Tf is maintained at 2050° C. or less. This makes it possible to further increase the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption intensity. As shown in FIGS. 7 and 9, when the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas exceeds 600° C., when the amount of hydrogen gas blown in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is 400 Nm 3 /t or more , this tendency is conspicuous. Therefore, when the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is higher than 600° C. and the amount of hydrogen gas blown in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is 400 Nm 3 /t or more, the tuyere pre-temperature Tf is 2050° C. or less. may be
[0053]
 Here, since the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is lower than that of hot air, blowing the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas into the blast furnace lowers the tuyere pre-temperature Tf. In order to make the pre-tuyere temperature Tf a desired temperature, that is, to increase the pre-tuyere temperature Tf, it is necessary to increase the oxygen enrichment rate during operation. Here, the hot air blown into the blast furnace is gas containing air. The hot air may further contain moisture and enriched oxygen in addition to air. The oxygen enrichment rate is roughly the volume ratio of oxygen in the hot air to the total volume of the hot air, oxygen enrichment rate (%) = {(air flow rate (flow rate) [Nm 3 /min] ×0.21+oxygen enrichment amount [Nm 3 /min])/(air flow rate [Nm 3 /min]+oxygen enrichment amount [Nm 3 /min])}×100−21. In actual operation, the flow rate of enriched oxygen in units of Nm 3 /t and the flow rate of air in units of Nm 3 /t are maintained without changing the flow rate of oxygen, which is the total flow rate of the enriched oxygen in units of Nm 3 /t and the oxygen in the hot air . Adjust the oxygen enrichment rate by changing . This is to keep the tapping ratio (amount of iron per day per 1 m 3 of furnace internal volume ) as constant as possible. Therefore, when the oxygen enrichment increases, the flow rate of hot air decreases. As a result, the amount of bosh gas is reduced.
[0054]
 Therefore, the higher the pre-tuyere temperature Tf, the more the amount of bosh gas decreases. When the bosh gas amount decreases, the sensible heat of the bosh gas decreases. Therefore, the temperature in the furnace tends to decrease due to the heat absorption by the hydrogen reduction reaction. In order to prevent such a decrease in furnace temperature, it is necessary to operate with a high reducing agent ratio. Therefore, the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption intensity when the temperature Tf before the tuyere is 2050° C. or less is the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption intensity when the temperature Tf before the tuyere exceeds 2050° C. expected to be larger than C.
[0055]
 From the viewpoint of heat transfer to hot metal and combustibility of pulverized coal, the pre-tuyere temperature Tf is preferably 2000° C. or higher. However, if the reduction rate Input ΔC of the carbon consumption intensity is sufficiently large and the pulverized coal ratio (pulverized coal used per 1 ton of hot metal) can be sufficiently reduced, the temperature before the tuyere Tf is less than 2000 ° C. There may be. For example, even if the temperature Tf in front of the tuyere is less than 2000°C, the temperature Tf in front of the tuyere may be less than 2000°C if the reduction rate Input ΔC of the carbon consumption intensity can be maintained and stable operation is possible. In this regard, for example, as described above, when the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is 1200° C. and the amount of hydrogen gas blown in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is 800 Nm 3 /t or more, pulverized coal The injection amount becomes 0 (that is, the pulverized coal ratio is 0). In this case, there is no need to consider the combustion of pulverized coal, so even if the tuyere pre-temperature Tf is less than 2000° C., the reduction rate Input ΔC of the carbon consumption intensity can be maintained, and stable operation is possible. Therefore, the pre-tuyere temperature Tf can be less than 2000°C. That is, if the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is raised and the blowing amount is increased so that the pulverized coal blowing amount can be reduced to 0, the tuyere pre-temperature Tf may be set to less than 2000°C.
[0056]
 (4-2. Modification 2)
 In Modification 2, the pre-tuyere temperature Tf is maintained at more than 2050° C. and 2150° C. or less. According to Modification 1, the reduction rate Input ΔC of the carbon consumption intensity can be increased by setting the pre-tuyere temperature Tf to 2050° C. or less. On the other hand, if the pre-tuyere temperature Tf decreases, the combustion rate of pulverized coal may decrease. That is, when the pre-tuyere temperature Tf decreases, the pulverized coal becomes difficult to burn. If the pulverized coal is flame-retardant, or if the operation is performed with a higher pulverized coal ratio, the possibility that the pulverized coal combustion rate will decrease increases. When the combustion rate of pulverized coal decreases, the temperature in the furnace decreases, so it may be necessary to operate with a correspondingly increased reducing agent ratio. From such a point of view, in Modification 2, the pre-tuyere temperature Tf is maintained at more than 2050° C. and 2150° C. or less. As a result, the combustion rate of the pulverized coal can be maintained, and a decrease in the temperature inside the furnace can be suppressed.
[0057]
 (4-3. Modification 3)
 In Modification 3, the pre-tuyere temperature Tf is maintained above 2150°C. In conventional blast furnace operation, the pre-tuyere temperature Tf is often about 2200°C. Therefore, by setting the pre-tuyere temperature Tf to over 2150° C., the operation can be performed without significantly changing the operating conditions from the conventional blast furnace operation. From the viewpoint of protection of the tuyere equipment, etc., the pre-tuyere temperature Tf is preferably 2250° C. or less.
[0058]
 (4-4. Modification 4)
 As shown in FIGS. 2 to 10, the amount of hydrogen gas injected in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas and the reduction rate Input ΔC of the carbon consumption intensity are constant. There is a correlation of Therefore, in Modification 4, the injection amount-carbon consumption intensity reduction ratio correlation, which is the correlation between the injection amount of hydrogen gas in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas and the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption intensity, is obtained in advance. .
[0059]
 For example, a blast furnace operation simulation that reflects the current blast furnace operation including the injection temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is used to determine the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption intensity for each of several injection amounts. A specific method may be the same method as in the examples described later.
[0060]
 Next, on a plane where the horizontal axis is the amount of hydrogen gas blown into the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas in units of Nm / t , and the vertical axis is the reduction rate of the carbon consumption unit input ΔC (%), the above method is applied. Plot the obtained values. Next, the approximate curve of these plots is obtained by, for example, the method of least squares, and this approximate curve, more specifically, the relational expression showing the approximate curve can be used as the above-mentioned injection amount-carbon consumption intensity reduction ratio correlation. . It is preferable to obtain the blowing amount-carbon consumption rate reduction rate correlation for each pre-tuyere temperature Tf.
[0061]
 Next, the injection amount at which the carbon consumption intensity reduction ratio Input ΔC is larger than the current operation, that is, the injection amount at which the carbon consumption is reduced is the injection amount obtained above - the carbon consumption intensity reduction ratio. Determine based on correlation. Then, the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is blown through the tuyeres at the determined blowing amount. As a result, the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption intensity can be increased more reliably.
[0062]
 Here, it is preferable that the blowing amount-carbon consumption per unit reduction rate correlation be obtained in advance for each blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas. As a result, even when the blowing temperature fluctuates, it is possible to easily determine the desired amount of hydrogen gas to be blown in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas. That is, even when the blowing temperature fluctuates, it is possible to easily determine the blowing amount of hydrogen gas in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas at which the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption unit consumption increases.
[0063]
 (4-5. Modification 5) Fig. 12 shows the amount of pure hydrogen gas blown at room temperature in the
 unit Nm 3 /t and the pressure loss in the unit kPa for the base operation, which is an operation in which no high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is blown. is a graph showing the correlation with the amount of change in , for each pre-tuyere temperature Tf. This graph is obtained by blast furnace operation simulation. Details will be described in Examples. Here, the pressure loss is the pressure at the tip of the tuyere (before the tuyere), in other words, the difference between the pressure inside the furnace at the outlet of the tuyere and the pressure at the top of the furnace, excluding the pipe pressure loss from the blower to the tip of the tuyere. value. In actual operation, the pressure loss is measured by a pressure gauge installed on the furnace wall. The amount of change in pressure loss with respect to the base operation is the value obtained by subtracting the pressure loss during the base operation from the pressure loss during a certain operation. The pressure loss is preferably the same as the base operation or lower than the base operation from the viewpoint of blowing pressure restriction, blow-through prevention, and the like. Although FIG. 12 shows the above correlation when pure hydrogen gas at room temperature is used, the above correlation is also obtained when using a high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas other than pure hydrogen gas. Also, the above correlation can be obtained even if the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is higher than room temperature.
[0064]
 As is clear from FIG. 12, there is a certain correlation between the amount of hydrogen gas blown into the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas and the amount of change in pressure loss. For example, when the amount of hydrogen gas blown into the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is increased, the pre-tuyere temperature Tf decreases as described above. In order to obtain the desired pre-tuyere temperature, it is necessary to increase the oxygen enrichment rate during operation. In actual operation, the unit Nm 3 /t enriched oxygen flow rate and the air flow rate are changed without changing the oxygen flow rate, which is the total flow rate of the enriched oxygen in the unit Nm 3 /t and the oxygen in the hot air. By doing so, the oxygen enrichment rate is adjusted while the amount of tapped iron is kept at a predetermined amount. Therefore, when the oxygen enrichment increases, the flow rate of hot air decreases. As a result, the amount of bosh gas is reduced. In other words, when the pre-tuyere temperature Tf is low, the amount of bosh gas increases. As a result, pressure loss may increase compared to base operation. However, if the amount of hydrogen gas injected into the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas further increases, the gas viscosity and gas density of the in-furnace gas will decrease, and the pressure loss will decrease. A decrease in pressure loss due to a decrease in gas viscosity and gas density offsets an increase in pressure loss due to an increase in the amount of Bosh gas, resulting in a decrease in pressure loss.
[0065]
 In Modified Example 5, first, as in Modified Example 4, the blowing amount-carbon consumption intensity reduction ratio correlation is obtained in advance. Furthermore, the blowing amount-pressure loss change amount correlation, which is the correlation between the blowing amount and the amount of change in pressure loss with respect to the base operation, is obtained.
[0066]
 For example, the amount of change in pressure loss for each of several injection amounts is obtained by blast furnace operation simulations that reflect the current blast furnace operation including the injection temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas. A specific method may be the same method as in the examples described later.
[0067]
 Next, on a plane where the horizontal axis is the amount of hydrogen gas blown into the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas in the unit of Nm 3 /t, and the vertical axis is the amount of change in pressure loss, Δ pressure loss in the unit of kPa. Plot the value obtained by Then, approximate curves of these plots are obtained by, for example, the method of least squares, and this approximate curve (more specifically, the relational expression indicating the approximate curve) may be used as the blow amount-pressure loss change amount correlation described above. The blowing amount-pressure loss change amount correlation is preferably obtained for each pre-tuyere temperature Tf.
[0068]
 Next, the reduction rate Input ΔC of the carbon consumption unit becomes larger than the current operation, that is, the amount of injection that reduces the amount of carbon consumption and the amount of change in pressure loss is within a predetermined range. It is determined based on the amount-carbon consumption intensity reduction ratio correlation and the injection amount-pressure loss change amount correlation. Here, the predetermined range is, for example, approximately -50 to +5 kPa, but is not limited to this. Then, the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is blown through the tuyeres at the determined blowing amount. As a result, it is possible to more reliably increase the reduction rate Input ΔC of the carbon consumption intensity while keeping the amount of change in pressure loss within a predetermined range.
[0069]
 (4-6. Modified Example 6)
 Fig. 13 shows the correlation between the amount of pure hydrogen gas injected in the unit Nm 3 /t at room temperature and the amount of change in the furnace top gas temperature with respect to the base operation in the unit °C. It is a graph shown for each pre-temperature Tf. This graph is obtained by blast furnace operation simulation. Details will be described in Examples. Here, the top gas temperature is the temperature of the top gas (mainly CO 2 , N 2 , unreacted CO, etc.) discharged from the top of the blast furnace. measured by a thermometer. The amount of change in the top gas temperature with respect to the base operation is a value obtained by subtracting the top gas temperature during the base operation from the top gas temperature during a certain operation. The top gas temperature is preferably about the same as the base operation from the viewpoint of restrictions on the top equipment and operational efficiency, and as an example, it is preferably within the range of about ± 20 ° C. . Although FIG. 13 shows the above correlation when pure hydrogen gas at room temperature is used, the above correlation is also obtained when using a high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas other than pure hydrogen gas. Also, the above correlation can be obtained even if the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is higher than room temperature.
[0070]
 As is clear from FIG. 13, there is a certain correlation between the injection amount of hydrogen gas in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas and the amount of change in the furnace top gas temperature. For example, when the amount of hydrogen gas blown into the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is increased, the pre-tuyere temperature Tf decreases as described above. In order to set the pre-tuyere temperature Tf to a desired temperature, it is necessary to operate with an increased oxygen enrichment rate. In actual operation, the oxygen enrichment is adjusted by changing the air flow rate in Nm 3 /t while keeping the oxygen flow rate in Nm 3 / t unchanged . Therefore, when the oxygen enrichment increases, the flow rate of hot air decreases. As a result, the amount of bosh gas is reduced. In other words, when the pre-tuyere temperature Tf increases, the amount of bosh gas decreases. As a result, the heat flow ratio, which is expressed by (the heat capacity of the furnace charge that descends per unit time)/(the heat capacity of the bosh gas that rises per unit time), increases. As a result, the temperature of the in-furnace gas rising in the furnace tends to decrease, and as a result, the temperature of the furnace top gas tends to decrease. This may result in lower top gas temperatures compared to base operation. However, if the amount of hydrogen gas injected in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is further increased , the temperature in the furnace will decrease due to the endothermic reaction, and the reduction efficiency in the furnace will decrease, as described above, with the boundary of about 300 Nm 3 /t. begins to decline. In order to prevent such reduction in reduction efficiency, the reducing agent ratio is increased during operation. Furnace top gas temperature turns to increase.
[0071]
 In Modified Example 6, first, as in Modified Example 4, the blowing amount-carbon consumption intensity reduction ratio correlation is obtained in advance. Furthermore, the injection amount-top gas temperature change amount correlation, which is the correlation between the injection amount and the amount of change in the top gas temperature with respect to the base operation, is obtained.
[0072]
 For example, a blast furnace operation simulation that reflects the current blast furnace operation including the injection temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is used to determine the amount of change in the furnace top gas temperature for each of several injection amounts. A specific method may be the same method as in the examples described later.
[0073]
 Then, the horizontal axis is the amount of hydrogen gas blown into the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas in units of Nm 3 /t, and the vertical axis is the amount of change in the furnace top gas temperature in units of ° C. A plane with the furnace top gas temperature. Plot the values ​​obtained by the above method on the top. Next, an approximated curve of these plots is obtained, for example, by the method of least squares, and this approximated curve, more specifically, the relational expression showing the approximated curve may be used as the above-mentioned injection amount-top gas temperature change amount correlation. . It is preferable to obtain the blow amount-top gas temperature change amount correlation for each pre-tuyere temperature Tf.
[0074]
 Next, the reduction rate Input ΔC of the carbon consumption unit becomes larger than the current operation, that is, the injection amount that reduces the carbon consumption and makes the amount of change in the furnace top gas temperature within a predetermined range. It is determined based on the injection amount-carbon consumption rate reduction ratio correlation and the injection amount-top gas temperature change amount correlation. Here, the predetermined range is, for example, about -20°C to +20°C, but is not limited to this. Then, the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is blown through the tuyeres at the determined blowing amount. As a result, it is possible to more reliably increase the reduction rate Input ΔC of the carbon consumption intensity while keeping the amount of change in the furnace top gas temperature within a predetermined range.
[0075]
 Here, in Modified Examples 4 to 6, the parameter paired with the amount of hydrogen gas injected into the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is not necessarily limited to the reduction rate Input ΔC of the carbon consumption intensity. In other words, the parameter paired with the amount of hydrogen gas injected in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas may be any parameter relating to carbon consumption, that is, any carbon consumption parameter. This is because CO2 emissions can be reduced if carbon consumption is reduced . Examples of such a carbon consumption parameter include the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption unit consumption, the carbon consumption unit consumption, the reducing agent ratio, the reduction ratio of the reducing agent ratio, and the like. The reduction ratio of the reducing agent ratio is the reduction ratio of the reducing agent ratio with respect to the base operation, and is obtained in the same manner as the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption intensity.
[0076]
 Furthermore, modification 5 and modification 6 may be combined. As a result, the rate of reduction Input ΔC in the carbon consumption intensity can be increased more reliably while keeping the amount of change in pressure loss and the amount of change in furnace top gas temperature within the predetermined ranges.
Example
[0077]
 Next, an example of this embodiment will be described. In this example, by performing a blast furnace operation simulation, it was confirmed that the reduction rate Input ΔC of the carbon consumption intensity increases, that is, the amount of CO 2 emissions is reduced by the blast furnace operation method according to the present embodiment . .
[0078]
 <1. Example 1: Verification when the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is room temperature to 600 ° C>
 As described above, the amount of hydrogen gas blown in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas and the reduction ratio of the carbon consumption unit The correlation with Input ΔC shows different behavior with the blowing temperature of 600° C. as the boundary. Therefore, in Example 1, verification was performed in the case where the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas was 600° C. or lower.
[0079]
 <1-1. Models Used for Simulation and Calculation Conditions>
 For blast furnace operation simulation, Kouji TAKATANI, Takanobu INADA, Yutaka UJISAWA, "Three-dimensional Dynamic Simulator for Blast Furnace", ISIJ International, Vol. 39 (1999), No. 1, p. 15-22, etc., a so-called "blast furnace mathematical model" was used. This blast furnace mathematical model roughly defines multiple meshes (small regions) by dividing the internal region of the blast furnace in the height direction, radial direction, and circumferential direction, and simulates the behavior of each mesh. be.
[0080]
 In the blast furnace mathematical model, the injection amount of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is set as the amount of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas injected from the tuyeres. Of these, the amount of hydrogen gas to be blown in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is set as the amount obtained by multiplying the blowing amount of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas by the ratio of hydrogen gas in units of mol %. The blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is set as the temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas when blowing the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas from the tuyeres. The pre-tuyere temperature Tf is calculated as a result of considering the combustion heat of various gases, the sensible heat of blown air, the temperature of coke flowing into the tip of the tuyere (before the tuyere), the heat of various reactions, and the like. The pressure loss is calculated using the ergun formula as the pressure loss of the in-furnace packed bed. The furnace top gas temperature is calculated as the gas temperature in the outermost layer (uppermost layer) of the furnace contents.
[0081]
 Table 1 shows the calculation conditions. The coke ratio in Table 1 is the amount of coke used per ton of hot metal. In addition, Table 2 shows the specifications of the base operation in which no high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is blown. As shown in Tables 1 and 2, in this example, the pre-tuyere temperature Tf was set to 2000°C, 2100°C, or 2200°C. In addition, the amount of hydrogen gas blown into the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas was set to 0 to 600 Nm 3 /t. In addition, the air flow rate, oxygen enrichment rate, and PC (pulverized coal) injection rate were adjusted so that the tapping ratio and hot metal temperature were constant throughout the operation.
[0082]
[table 1]

[0083]
[Table 2]

[0084]
 Sintered ore was used as the iron-based raw material. The composition of the sintered ore was T—Fe: 58.5%, FeO: 7.5%, C/S: 1.9, and Al 2 O 3 : 1.7%. Moreover, as for coke, it was assumed that C: 87.2% and Ash: 12.6% were used. In addition, all of the above "%" represent "% by mass".
[0085]
 <1-2. Example 1-1: Case where the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas blowing temperature is normal temperature to 600 ° C. and the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is pure hydrogen gas>
 In Example 1-1, the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is blown Under the condition that the injection temperature is 600° C. or less, pure hydrogen gas is used as the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas, and the correlation between the injection amount of pure hydrogen gas and the reduction rate of the carbon consumption unit input ΔC is calculated. The results are shown in FIGS. 2-5.
[0086]
 As shown in FIGS. 2 to 5, when the blowing temperature is in the range of room temperature to 600° C., the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption unit does not simply increase as the blowing amount increases. , it was found that when the injection amount increases to some extent, it becomes saturated and then decreases. It was also found that the blowing amount at which the rate of reduction Input ΔC of the carbon consumption intensity is saturated and begins to decrease slightly varies depending on the blowing temperature. In other words, it was found that there is an appropriate range of blowing amount for each blowing temperature. The appropriate range is 200 to 500 Nm 3 /t when the blowing temperature is normal temperature to 300° C., and 145 Nm 3 /t or more when the blowing temperature is over 300° C. and 600° C. or less. became. In addition, as shown in FIGS. 4 and 5, the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption intensity does not simply increase with an increase in the blowing amount. It was found that the amount saturated at about 600 Nm 3 /t, and at a blowing temperature of 350° C., the blowing amount peaked at about 300 Nm 3 /t and started to decrease as the blowing amount increased. Then, when the blowing temperature is higher than 300°C and 600°C or lower, the blowing amount is 145 Nm 3/t or more, it became possible to set the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption intensity to 7% or more. Furthermore, as shown in FIGS. 2 to 5, the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption intensity for the same blowing amount differs depending on the pre-tuyere temperature Tf, and when the pre-tuyere temperature Tf is 2000° C. It turned out to be the largest. The reason why such a phenomenon is obtained is as described above.
[0087]
 Therefore, by blowing a high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas into the blast furnace according to the blast furnace operating method according to the present embodiment, it is possible to increase the reduction rate Input ΔC of the carbon consumption intensity, which in turn greatly reduces CO 2 emissions. can do.
[0088]
 <1-3. Example 1-2>
 In Example 1-2, it was confirmed that even if the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas contained a gas other than hydrogen gas, the same operation as in the case of pure hydrogen gas was possible. Specifically, an 80 mol % H 2 -20 mol % N 2 gas composed of 80 mol % hydrogen gas and 20 mol % nitrogen gas was assumed as the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas. Then, a blast furnace operation simulation was performed in the same manner as in Example 1 with the blowing temperature of 25°C and the tuyere pre-temperature Tf of 2100°C. The results are shown in FIG. FIG. 11 compares the calculation result of pure hydrogen gas (100 mol % H 2 gas) with the calculation result of 80 mol % H 2 -20 mol % N 2 gas. The horizontal axis of FIG. 11 represents the flow rate of the mixed gas converted to pure hydrogen gas, that is, the value obtained by multiplying the flow rate of 80 mol % H 2 -20 mol % N 2 gas by 80 mol %. As is clear from FIG. 11, 80 mol% H 2 -20 mol% N 2As for the gas, it was found that the appropriate range of the injection amount converted into pure hydrogen gas was the same as in the case of pure hydrogen gas, and only the effect was slightly reduced. Therefore, it was found that even if the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas contains a gas other than hydrogen gas, the same operation as in the case of pure hydrogen gas is possible. In addition, although the effect is slightly reduced, it was found that the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption intensity can also be increased.
[0089]
 <1-4. Example 1-3>
 In Example 1-3, pure hydrogen gas at room temperature was used as the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas, and the amount of change in pressure loss for each of several blowing amounts (pressure loss relative to base operation) was measured. amount of change) was obtained. The results are shown in FIG. As is clear from FIG. 12, it was found that there is a certain correlation between the amount of pure hydrogen gas blown and the amount of change in pressure loss. For example, it was found that when the tuyere pre-temperature Tf is low, the pressure loss may increase with respect to the base operation. However, the pressure loss decreased as the amount of pure hydrogen gas injected increased. More specifically, when the pre-tuyere temperature Tf was 2000° C. and the blowing amount was 100 to 150 Nm 3 /t, the pressure loss increased by about 10 to 20 kPa compared to the base operation. This was a value outside the predetermined range mentioned above. However, when the injection amount increased to 200 or more Nm 3 /t, the pressure loss became equal to or less than the value of the base operation. The reason why such a phenomenon occurs is as described above. Therefore, when the injection temperature is a predetermined value, the injection amount-pressure loss change amount correlation, which is the correlation between the amount of hydrogen gas injected in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas and the amount of change in pressure loss with respect to the base operation, is Blowing of hydrogen gas in a high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas, which is obtained in advance for each tuyere pre-temperature Tf, so that the carbon consumption is lower than that of the current operation, and the amount of change in pressure loss is within a predetermined range. By determining the injection amount based on the injection amount-carbon consumption parameter correlation and the injection amount-pressure loss change amount correlation, it is possible to suppress the increase in pressure loss and reduce carbon consumption while performing stable operation. It has been found that the unit reduction rate Input ΔC can be increased.
 When pure hydrogen gas at room temperature is used as the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas, and the injection amount is 200 Nm 3 /t or more and 500 Nm 3 /t or less, as shown in FIG. 12, the increase in pressure loss can be suppressed. , it is possible to increase the reduction rate Input ΔC of the carbon consumption intensity while performing stable operation. It was found that with pure hydrogen gas at room temperature or higher and 300° C. or lower, when the injection amount is increased to 200 Nm 3 /t, the pressure loss becomes equal to or lower than the value in the base operation. Similarly, when the amount of pure hydrogen blown above 300° C. and 600° C. or less is 145 Nm 3 /t or more, when the amount of pure hydrogen blown above 600° C. and 900° C. or less is 125 Nm 3 /t or more, the flow rate exceeds 900° C. Even when the amount of pure hydrogen blown at 1200° C. or lower is 110 Nm 3 /t or more, and when the amount of pure hydrogen blown at 1200° C. or higher is 100 Nm 3 /t or more , an increase in pressure loss can be suppressed and stable. It was found that the rate of reduction Input ΔC in the carbon consumption intensity can be increased while operating in a controlled manner.
[0090]
 Therefore, by blowing a high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas into the blast furnace according to the blast furnace operating method according to the present embodiment, the amount of change in pressure loss is set to a value within a predetermined range, and the reduction rate Input ΔC of the carbon consumption intensity is reduced. It turns out that you can make it bigger.
[0091]
 <1-5. Example 1-4>
 In Example 1-4, room-temperature pure hydrogen gas was used as the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas. Amount of change in top gas temperature) was obtained. The results are shown in FIG. As is clear from FIG. 13, it was found that there is a certain correlation between the amount of pure hydrogen gas injected and the amount of change in the furnace top gas temperature. For example, when the pre-tuyere temperature Tf increased, the top gas temperature decreased compared to the base operation. Specifically, when the tuyere front temperature Tf was 2100° C. and the blowing amount was 250 to 300 Nm 3 /t, the amount of change in the furnace top gas temperature was outside the above-described predetermined range. However, when the injection amount was reduced to 200 Nm 3 /t, the amount of change in the furnace top gas temperature became a value within the predetermined range. The reason why such a phenomenon occurs is as described above. Therefore, when emphasizing the efficiency of operation, etc., the injection amount may be adjusted in consideration of the correlation between the injection amount of pure hydrogen gas and the amount of change in the furnace top gas temperature. Therefore, when the injection temperature is a predetermined value, the injection amount - the top gas temperature A high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas in which the change amount correlation is obtained in advance for each temperature before the tuyere, and the amount of carbon consumption is reduced compared to the current operation, and the amount of change in the furnace top gas temperature is within a predetermined range. By determining the injection amount of hydrogen gas based on the injection amount-carbon consumption parameter correlation and the injection amount-top gas temperature change amount correlation, it is found that the decrease in the efficiency of operation can be suppressed. rice field.
[0092]
 <2. Example 2: Verification when Blowing Temperature of High-Concentration Hydrogen-Containing Gas Exceeds 600°C>
 In Example 2, verification was performed when the blowing temperature of high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas exceeds 600°C.
[0093]
 <2-1. Model and Calculation Conditions Used for Simulation>
 For the blast furnace operation simulation, the same blast furnace mathematical model as in Example 1 was used. Table 3 shows the calculation conditions. As shown in Table 3, the calculation conditions were almost the same as in Example 1, but the coke ratio was different from that in Example 1. That is, in Example 2, the coke ratio is constant at 300 kg/t when the pulverized coal injection amount is greater than 0 ton/h, and when the pulverized coal injection amount is 0 ton/h (that is, the pulverized coal ratio is 0) was changed. That is, when the pulverized coal injection amount was 0 ton/h, the furnace temperature was adjusted by the coke ratio.
[0094]
 As described above, when the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is increased and the blowing amount is increased, the pulverized coal blowing amount can be 0 ton/h. In this case, by reducing the coke ratio, it is possible to further reduce the carbon consumption intensity. In addition, the amount of hydrogen gas blown into the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas was set to 0 to 1000 Nm 3 /t. In addition, the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas was set to more than 600° C. and 1400° C. or less. The specifications of the base operation in which the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas was not blown were the same as in Example 1. Other conditions were the same as in Example 1. For example, the air flow rate, oxygen enrichment rate, and PC (pulverized coal) injection rate were adjusted so that the tapping ratio and hot metal temperature were constant throughout the operation. The sintered ore used in Example 1 was used as the iron-based raw material.
[0095]
[Table 3]

[0096]
 <2-2. Example 2-1: Case where the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is over 600°C and the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is pure hydrogen gas>
 In Example 2-1, the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is pure hydrogen As the gas, the correlation between the amount of pure hydrogen gas injected and the rate of reduction of the carbon consumption unit input ΔC was calculated. The results are shown in FIGS. 6-10.
[0097]
 As shown in FIGS. 6 to 10, when the amount of hydrogen gas injected in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is increased from 0 Nm 3 /t in the base operation, the reduction rate Input ΔC of the carbon consumption intensity increases. I understood it. Furthermore, the rate of increase in the reduction rate Input △C of the carbon consumption rate (the reduction rate Input △ Although the amount of increase in C) decreased, the reduction rate of the carbon consumption intensity Input ΔC did not turn to decrease. This behavior was clearly different from the case where the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas was 600° C. or lower.
[0098]
 Note that the range in which the reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption unit consumption is 7% or more varied depending on the injection temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas. Specifically, when the blowing temperature is more than 600° C. and 900° C. or less, when the amount of hydrogen gas blown in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is a value within the range of 125 Nm 3 /t or more, The reduction ratio Input ΔC of the carbon consumption intensity became 7% or more. Further, when the blowing temperature is higher than 900 ° C. and 1200 ° C. or lower, when the amount of hydrogen gas blown in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is a value within the range of 110 Nm / t or more, the carbon consumption source The unit reduction ratio Input ΔC became 7% or more. When the blowing temperature exceeds 1200 ° C., when the blowing amount of hydrogen gas in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is a value within the range of 100 Nm 3 /t or more, the reduction rate of the carbon consumption intensity Input ΔC became 7% or more.
[0099]
 <2-3. Other Tests>
 Tests similar to those of Examples 1-3 and 1-4 were performed with the pure hydrogen gas blowing temperature set to 900°C. As a result, even when the injection temperature of the pure hydrogen gas is 900° C., there is a certain correlation between the amount of pure hydrogen gas injected and the amount of change in pressure loss or the amount of change in the furnace top gas temperature. was confirmed.
[0100]
 Therefore, by blowing a high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas into the blast furnace according to the blast furnace operating method according to the present embodiment, the amount of change in the top gas temperature is set to a value within a predetermined range, and the reduction rate of the carbon consumption intensity Input △ C can be made large.
[0101]
 Although the preferred embodiments of the present invention have been described in detail above with reference to the accompanying drawings, the present invention is not limited to such examples. It is obvious that a person having ordinary knowledge in the technical field to which the present invention belongs can conceive of various modifications or modifications within the scope of the technical idea described in the claims. It is understood that these also naturally belong to the technical scope of the present invention.
The scope of the claims
[Claim 1]
 A high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas containing 80 mol % or more of hydrogen gas is injected at a
 temperature of room temperature or higher and 300 ° C. or lower, and the amount of hydrogen gas injected in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is 200 Nm 3 /t or more and 500 Nm 3 /t or less,
 the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is more than 300 ° C. and 600 ° C. or less, and the hydrogen gas in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is blown The condition is that the amount is 145 Nm 3 /t or more,
 the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is higher than 600 ° C. and 900 ° C. or less, and the blowing amount of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is 125 Nm 3 /t or more. A certain condition,
 the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is more than 900° C. and 1200° C. or less, and the blowing amount of hydrogen gas in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is 110 Nm 3 /t or more, or Blowing  from the tuyere under the condition that the blowing temperature of
 the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is over 1200 ° C. and the blowing amount of hydrogen gas in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is 100 Nm 3 /t or more.
A method of operating a blast furnace, characterized by:
[Claim 2]
 The blowing temperature is normal temperature or higher and 300° C. or lower, and the amount of hydrogen gas blown in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is 200 Nm 3 /t or higher and 300 Nm 3 /t or lower. 2. The method for operating a blast furnace according to 1.
[Claim 3]
 The blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is higher than 300° C. and 600° C. or less, and the blowing amount of hydrogen gas in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is 145 Nm 3 /t or more and 600 Nm 3 /t or less. The method of operating a blast furnace according to claim 1, characterized by:
[Claim 4]
 The method for operating a blast furnace according to any one of claims 1 to 3, characterized in that the pre-tuyere temperature is 2050°C or less.
[Claim 5]
 The method for operating a blast furnace according to any one of claims 1 to 3, characterized in that the temperature before the tuyere is over 2050°C and 2150°C or less.
[Claim 6]
 The method for operating a blast furnace according to any one of claims 1 to 3, characterized in that the temperature before the tuyere is higher than 2150°C and not higher than 2250°C.
[Claim 7]
 The method of operating a blast furnace according to claim 1, wherein the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is more than 600°C and 1400°C or less.
[Claim 8]
 2. When the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas exceeds 600° C., the blowing amount of hydrogen gas in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is set to 1000 Nm 3 /t or less, or 7. The method of operating a blast furnace according to 7.
[Claim 9]
 When the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is over 600 ° C. and the amount of hydrogen gas blown in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is 400 Nm /t or more , the temperature before the tuyere is 2050 ° C. 9. The method of operating a blast furnace according to claim 1, 7 or 8, characterized by:
[Claim 10]
 Correlation between the amount of hydrogen gas blown in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas and the carbon consumption parameter related to the carbon consumption when the blowing temperature of the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas containing 80 mol% or more of hydrogen gas is a predetermined value The injection amount-carbon consumption parameter correlation is obtained in advance for each pre-tuyere temperature, and
 the injection amount of hydrogen gas in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas that reduces the carbon consumption compared to the current operation is A method of operating a blast furnace, characterized in that the blowing amount is determined based on the carbon consumption parameter correlation, and the
 high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas is blown through the tuyere at the determined blowing amount.
[Claim 11]
 11. The method of operating a blast furnace according to claim 10, wherein the injection amount-carbon consumption parameter correlation is obtained for each of the injection temperatures.
[Claim 12]
 When the injection temperature is a predetermined value, the injection amount-pressure loss change amount correlation, which is the correlation between the injection amount of hydrogen gas in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas and the amount of change in pressure loss with respect to base operation, is calculated. Hydrogen gas in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas, which is obtained in advance for each temperature before the tuyere
 , and the carbon consumption is reduced compared to the current operation, and the amount of change in pressure loss is a value within a predetermined range. The method of operating a blast furnace according to claim 10 or 11, wherein the injection amount of is determined based on the injection amount-carbon consumption parameter correlation and the injection amount-pressure loss change amount correlation.
[Claim 13]
 Blowing amount - top gas temperature, which is the correlation between the amount of hydrogen gas injected in the high-concentration hydrogen-containing gas and the amount of change in the top gas temperature with respect to the base operation when the blowing temperature is a predetermined value A change amount correlation is obtained in advance for each pre-tuyere temperature
 , and the high-concentration hydrogen in which the carbon consumption is reduced compared to the current operation and the change amount of the top gas temperature is a value within a predetermined range. The amount of hydrogen gas injected in the contained gas is determined based on the injection amount-carbon consumption parameter correlation and the injection amount-top gas temperature change amount correlation. A method for operating a blast furnace according to any one of the items.

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# Name Date
1 202217035252-IntimationOfGrant11-07-2024.pdf 2024-07-11
1 202217035252.pdf 2022-06-20
2 202217035252-PatentCertificate11-07-2024.pdf 2024-07-11
2 202217035252-TRANSLATIOIN OF PRIOIRTY DOCUMENTS ETC. [20-06-2022(online)].pdf 2022-06-20
3 202217035252-Written submissions and relevant documents [10-07-2024(online)].pdf 2024-07-10
3 202217035252-STATEMENT OF UNDERTAKING (FORM 3) [20-06-2022(online)].pdf 2022-06-20
4 202217035252-REQUEST FOR EXAMINATION (FORM-18) [20-06-2022(online)].pdf 2022-06-20
4 202217035252-Correspondence to notify the Controller [24-06-2024(online)].pdf 2024-06-24
5 202217035252-US(14)-HearingNotice-(HearingDate-27-06-2024).pdf 2024-05-29
5 202217035252-PROOF OF RIGHT [20-06-2022(online)].pdf 2022-06-20
6 202217035252-Written submissions and relevant documents [30-04-2024(online)].pdf 2024-04-30
6 202217035252-PRIORITY DOCUMENTS [20-06-2022(online)].pdf 2022-06-20
7 202217035252-POWER OF AUTHORITY [20-06-2022(online)].pdf 2022-06-20
7 202217035252-Correspondence to notify the Controller [12-04-2024(online)].pdf 2024-04-12
8 202217035252-FORM-26 [12-04-2024(online)].pdf 2024-04-12
8 202217035252-FORM 18 [20-06-2022(online)].pdf 2022-06-20
9 202217035252-FORM 1 [20-06-2022(online)].pdf 2022-06-20
9 202217035252-US(14)-HearingNotice-(HearingDate-16-04-2024).pdf 2024-03-12
10 202217035252-ABSTRACT [10-03-2023(online)].pdf 2023-03-10
10 202217035252-DRAWINGS [20-06-2022(online)].pdf 2022-06-20
11 202217035252-CLAIMS [10-03-2023(online)].pdf 2023-03-10
11 202217035252-DECLARATION OF INVENTORSHIP (FORM 5) [20-06-2022(online)].pdf 2022-06-20
12 202217035252-COMPLETE SPECIFICATION [10-03-2023(online)].pdf 2023-03-10
12 202217035252-COMPLETE SPECIFICATION [20-06-2022(online)].pdf 2022-06-20
13 202217035252-DRAWING [10-03-2023(online)].pdf 2023-03-10
13 202217035252-FER.pdf 2022-11-10
14 202217035252-FER_SER_REPLY [10-03-2023(online)].pdf 2023-03-10
14 202217035252-FORM 3 [14-11-2022(online)].pdf 2022-11-14
15 202217035252-OTHERS [10-03-2023(online)].pdf 2023-03-10
15 202217035252-Verified English translation [06-02-2023(online)].pdf 2023-02-06
16 202217035252-OTHERS [10-03-2023(online)].pdf 2023-03-10
16 202217035252-Verified English translation [06-02-2023(online)].pdf 2023-02-06
17 202217035252-FORM 3 [14-11-2022(online)].pdf 2022-11-14
17 202217035252-FER_SER_REPLY [10-03-2023(online)].pdf 2023-03-10
18 202217035252-DRAWING [10-03-2023(online)].pdf 2023-03-10
18 202217035252-FER.pdf 2022-11-10
19 202217035252-COMPLETE SPECIFICATION [10-03-2023(online)].pdf 2023-03-10
19 202217035252-COMPLETE SPECIFICATION [20-06-2022(online)].pdf 2022-06-20
20 202217035252-CLAIMS [10-03-2023(online)].pdf 2023-03-10
20 202217035252-DECLARATION OF INVENTORSHIP (FORM 5) [20-06-2022(online)].pdf 2022-06-20
21 202217035252-ABSTRACT [10-03-2023(online)].pdf 2023-03-10
21 202217035252-DRAWINGS [20-06-2022(online)].pdf 2022-06-20
22 202217035252-FORM 1 [20-06-2022(online)].pdf 2022-06-20
22 202217035252-US(14)-HearingNotice-(HearingDate-16-04-2024).pdf 2024-03-12
23 202217035252-FORM 18 [20-06-2022(online)].pdf 2022-06-20
23 202217035252-FORM-26 [12-04-2024(online)].pdf 2024-04-12
24 202217035252-POWER OF AUTHORITY [20-06-2022(online)].pdf 2022-06-20
24 202217035252-Correspondence to notify the Controller [12-04-2024(online)].pdf 2024-04-12
25 202217035252-Written submissions and relevant documents [30-04-2024(online)].pdf 2024-04-30
25 202217035252-PRIORITY DOCUMENTS [20-06-2022(online)].pdf 2022-06-20
26 202217035252-US(14)-HearingNotice-(HearingDate-27-06-2024).pdf 2024-05-29
26 202217035252-PROOF OF RIGHT [20-06-2022(online)].pdf 2022-06-20
27 202217035252-REQUEST FOR EXAMINATION (FORM-18) [20-06-2022(online)].pdf 2022-06-20
27 202217035252-Correspondence to notify the Controller [24-06-2024(online)].pdf 2024-06-24
28 202217035252-Written submissions and relevant documents [10-07-2024(online)].pdf 2024-07-10
28 202217035252-STATEMENT OF UNDERTAKING (FORM 3) [20-06-2022(online)].pdf 2022-06-20
29 202217035252-TRANSLATIOIN OF PRIOIRTY DOCUMENTS ETC. [20-06-2022(online)].pdf 2022-06-20
29 202217035252-PatentCertificate11-07-2024.pdf 2024-07-11
30 202217035252.pdf 2022-06-20
30 202217035252-IntimationOfGrant11-07-2024.pdf 2024-07-11

Search Strategy

1 ptser51E_09-11-2022.pdf
1 ptser56AE_15-03-2023.pdf
2 ptser51E_09-11-2022.pdf
2 ptser56AE_15-03-2023.pdf

ERegister / Renewals

3rd: 09 Sep 2024

From 27/11/2022 - To 27/11/2023

4th: 09 Sep 2024

From 27/11/2023 - To 27/11/2024

5th: 09 Sep 2024

From 27/11/2024 - To 27/11/2025

6th: 13 Oct 2025

From 27/11/2025 - To 27/11/2026