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  2. Blast furnace - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blast_furnace

    The tuyeres are used to implement a hot blast, which is used to increase the efficiency of the blast furnace. The hot blast is directed into the furnace through water-cooled copper nozzles called tuyeres near the base. The hot blast temperature can be from 900 to 1,300 °C (1,650 to 2,370 °F) depending on the stove design and condition.

  3. Hot blast - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hot_blast

    Hot blast allowed the use of anthracite in iron smelting. It also allowed use of lower quality coal because less fuel meant proportionately less sulfur and ash. [11]At the time the process was invented, good coking coal was only available in sufficient quantities in Great Britain and western Germany, [12] so iron furnaces in the US were using charcoal.

  4. Category:Blast furnaces - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Blast_furnaces

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  5. Cupola furnace - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cupola_furnace

    During the Han dynasty (202 BC – 220 AD), most, if not all, iron smelted in the blast furnace was remelted in a cupola furnace; it was designed so that a cold blast injected at the bottom traveled through tuyere pipes across the top where the charge (i.e. of charcoal and scrap or pig iron) was dumped, the air becoming a hot blast before ...

  6. Ilfracombe Iron Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ilfracombe_Iron_Company

    The furnace had provision for conversion to recycle the off-gases to heat the blast, [7] although no stoves to heat the blast were ever built. [7] [26] This suggests another probable reason for its failure; a furnace and blower possibly sized for hot-blast operation, but used as a cold-blast furnace.

  7. List of preserved historic blast furnaces - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_preserved_historic...

    The furnace remained in use until the 19th century and now forms part of the Ironbridge Gorge Museum Trust's Museum of Iron. IGMT: Madeley Wood or Bedlam: Two blast furnaces standing beside the road near river Severn, built in 1756 by Madeley Wood Company, and taken over by the Coalbrookdale Company in 1776. Further furnaces were built in the ...

  8. Productivity-improving technologies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Productivity-improving...

    In 1780, before the introduction of hot blast in 1829, it required seven times as much coke as the weight of the product pig iron. [84] The hundredweight of coke per short ton of pig iron was 35 in 1900, falling to 13 in 1950. By 1970 the most efficient blast furnaces used 10 hundredweight of coke per short ton of pig iron. [27]

  9. Oxford Furnace - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oxford_Furnace

    Oxford Furnace is a historic blast furnace on Washington Avenue, near the intersection with Belvidere Avenue, in Oxford, Oxford Township, Warren County, New Jersey. The furnace was built by Jonathan Robeson (c. 1695–1766) in 1741 and produced its first pig iron in 1743. [ 3 ]

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