Steel was sampled after calcium treatment at an industrial steel plant, and the inclusions identified by energy-dispersive X-ray microanalysis (EDX) on polished sections of the samples analysing the samples in a scanning electron microscope. The predicted fraction liquid in the inclusion was estimated from the ternary alumina-magnesia-lime phase diagram. Inclusions with higher CaO contents generally had lower MgO contents, indicating that the calcium wire is not the origin of the magnesium in the inclusions; this was also confirmed by wet chemical analysis of the calcium wire. Instead, it appears that magnesium-alumina spinel inclusions form during extended ladle contact after aluminium killing and before calcium treatment. While such spinels have been stated to cause poor castability clogging the submerged-entry nozzle, it is clear that calcium treatment successfully modifies the spinel inclusions to mixed alumina-lime-magnesia inclusions, where the magnesia content contributes substantially to liquefaction of the inclusions: for typical MgO contents of around 10%, the range of Ca:O ratios which yield liquid or partially liquid inclusions is extended substantially to lower Ca:O ratios.
Reference:
Pistorius, PC, Presoly, P, and Tshilombo, G. 2009. Magnesium: origin and role in calcium-treated inclusions. SOHN International Symposium, Advanced Processing of Metals and Materials: Principles, Technologies and Industrial Practice, Catamaran Resort San Diego, California, USA, pp 373-378
Pistorius, P., Presoly, P., & Tshilombo, G. (2009). Magnesium: origin and role in calcium-treated inclusions. http://hdl.handle.net/10204/4146
Pistorius, PC, P Presoly, and G Tshilombo. "Magnesium: origin and role in calcium-treated inclusions." (2009): http://hdl.handle.net/10204/4146
Pistorius P, Presoly P, Tshilombo G, Magnesium: origin and role in calcium-treated inclusions; 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/10204/4146 .
SOHN International Symposium, Advanced Processing of Metals and Materials: Principles, Technologies and Industrial Practice, Catamaran Resort San Diego, California, USA