
Making Steel in a Bessemer Converter — Mass Steel by Blowing Air Through Iron
Crucible steel was superb but slow, made a few kilograms at a time. In 1856 Henry Bessemer found a way to make steel by the tonne in about twenty minutes, and the price of steel collapsed from a luxury to a commodity. Rails, ships, bridges, and the first steel-framed buildings all became possible almost overnight.
His method sounds reckless: blow cold air straight up through a vessel of molten pig iron. The oxygen in the blast burns out the silicon, manganese, and carbon that make pig iron brittle — and because those reactions give off enormous heat, the metal does not cool but actually gets hotter, staying liquid with no added fuel. A volcano of flame and sparks roars from the converter's mouth while the carbon burns away.
The trick is knowing when to stop. The operator reads the flame, and the instant the carbon is gone, halts the blow and adds back a precise dose of carbon-rich spiegeleisen to hit the exact steel he wants. Tilt, pour, and there is a ladle of molten steel where minutes before there was crude pig iron.
Hazardous content
Ang blueprint na ito ay naglalaman ng mga mapanganib na proseso. Mag-log in at i-enable ang mapanganib na nilalaman sa iyong account settings upang makita ang step-by-step na mga tagubilin.
Kaugnay na Blueprint
Ang mga blueprint na ito ay nagbabahagi ng kaalaman — mga teknik, materyales, o prinsipyo
CC0 Pampublikong Domain
Ang blueprint na ito ay inilabas sa ilalim ng CC0. Malaya kang kumopya, magbago, mamahagi, at gumamit nang walang pahintulot.
Suportahan ang Maker sa pamamagitan ng pagbili ng mga produkto sa kanilang Blueprint Komisyon ng Maker itinakda ng mga Vendor, o lumikha ng bagong bersyon ng Blueprint na ito at isama bilang koneksyon sa iyong Blueprint upang ibahagi ang kita.