Steelmaking
YANG Yuzhong, ZHANG Hua, LIU Chengsong, WANG Yong, HUANG Lei, NI Hongwei
304 stainless steel is commonly deoxidized using ferrosilicon alloy in industrial practices. However, this ferrosilicon alloy often contains a certain amount of aluminum, leading to an increase in the Al2O3 content in inclusions and promoting the formation of spinel inclusions. In actual processes, calcium treatment is often carried out after deoxidation. Therefore, the influence of calcium treatment on rare earth elements needs to be considered during rare earth treatment. Industrial production experiments were conducted, and various techniques such as systematic sampling, SEM-EDS detection, and thermodynamic calculations were employed to investigate the effects of rare earth treatment, calcium treatment, and the combined calcium and rare earth treatment processes on inclusions in 304 stainless steel. A comparison was made with the process without alloying. Thermodynamic calculations were specifically analyzed to understand the impact of different calcium contents on the formation of rare earth inclusions Ce2O3 and Ce2O2S. The study findings demonstrate that under untreated conditions, rare earth (RE) treatment conditions, calcium (Ca) treatment conditions, and Ca treatment followed by RE treatment conditions, the typical inclusions in freshly refined steel are identified as Al2O3-SiO2-MnO(+MnS), (Ce,La)2O2S+(Ce,La)2O3-Al2O3-SiO2, Al2O3-SiO2-CaO, and (Ce,La)2O2S+(Ce, La)2O3-Al2O3-SiO2-CaO type inclusions, respectively. In continuous casting slab, typical inclusions comprise Al2O3-SiO2-CaO-MnO(+MnS) and MgO·Al2O3, (Ce,La)2O2S+(Al2O3)-SiO2-(Ce,La)2O3, Al2O3-SiO2-CaO-MgO(+MnS), and (Ce,La)2O2S+Al2O3-SiO2-CaO-(Ce,La)2O3 type inclusions. Following refinement, RE treatment significantly augments the density of inclusions, with minor impacts on the mean size of inclusions. In comparison to Ca treatment, Ca treatment followed by RE treatment marginally increases inclusion density with insignificant alterations in mean size. The size of inclusions post RE treatment predominantly inherits the parent inclusion size. From refinement to continuous casting billets, the inclusion density in Heats 1,Heats 2,Heats 3,Heats 4 decreases by 53.8%, 56.7%, 52.0%, and 31.1%, respectively, while the mean inclusion diameter increases by 29.3%, 23.3%, 56.1%, and 43.3%, respectively. Ca treatment exerts a notable influence on inclusion size. Both Ca treatment and RE treatment effectively diminish Al2O3 content in inclusions and forestall MgO·Al2O3 formation. Thermodynamic computations reveal that an escalation in Ca content suppresses the formation of Ce2O3 in RE inclusions within the steel melt, while the impact on Ce2O2S formation is minimal.