A blast furnace is a large, vertical shaft furnace that’s used to heat and reduce iron ore into hot metal. It’s a complex industrial reactor that involves many materials and over 30 reactions and phase changes. 

Here’s how a blast furnace works: 

  • Materials

    Iron ore, coke, and limestone are fed into the top of the furnace in alternating layers. 

  • Heat

    Hot air is blown into the bottom of the furnace through pipes called tuyeres. The coke combusts, producing heat and carbon monoxide gas. 

  • Reactions

    The heat melts the charge, and the carbon monoxide removes oxygen from the iron ore, producing hot metal. The limestone reacts to remove sulfur from the iron. 

  • Products

    The end products are molten metal and slag that are tapped from the bottom, and waste gases that exit from the top. 

Blast furnaces are the most energy-intensive step in the steelmaking process, generating large quantities of carbon dioxide. 

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