CA2030686C - Direct-arc electric furnace fed with controlled current and method to feed a direct-arc furnace with controlled current - Google Patents

Direct-arc electric furnace fed with controlled current and method to feed a direct-arc furnace with controlled current

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Publication number
CA2030686C
CA2030686C CA002030686A CA2030686A CA2030686C CA 2030686 C CA2030686 C CA 2030686C CA 002030686 A CA002030686 A CA 002030686A CA 2030686 A CA2030686 A CA 2030686A CA 2030686 C CA2030686 C CA 2030686C
Authority
CA
Canada
Prior art keywords
furnace
arc
current
control assembly
inductor
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Fee Related
Application number
CA002030686A
Other languages
French (fr)
Other versions
CA2030686A1 (en
Inventor
Gianni Gensini
Luciano Morello
Giovanni Coassin
Riccardo Fragiacomo
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Danieli and C Officine Meccaniche SpA
Original Assignee
Danieli and C Officine Meccaniche SpA
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Priority claimed from IT08352089A external-priority patent/IT1236363B/en
Application filed by Danieli and C Officine Meccaniche SpA filed Critical Danieli and C Officine Meccaniche SpA
Publication of CA2030686A1 publication Critical patent/CA2030686A1/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of CA2030686C publication Critical patent/CA2030686C/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Fee Related legal-status Critical Current

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Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H05ELECTRIC TECHNIQUES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • H05BELECTRIC HEATING; ELECTRIC LIGHT SOURCES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; CIRCUIT ARRANGEMENTS FOR ELECTRIC LIGHT SOURCES, IN GENERAL
    • H05B7/00Heating by electric discharge
    • H05B7/02Details
    • H05B7/144Power supplies specially adapted for heating by electric discharge; Automatic control of power, e.g. by positioning of electrodes
    • H05B7/148Automatic control of power
    • H05B7/156Automatic control of power by hydraulic or pneumatic means for positioning of electrodes
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y02TECHNOLOGIES OR APPLICATIONS FOR MITIGATION OR ADAPTATION AGAINST CLIMATE CHANGE
    • Y02PCLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION TECHNOLOGIES IN THE PRODUCTION OR PROCESSING OF GOODS
    • Y02P10/00Technologies related to metal processing
    • Y02P10/25Process efficiency

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Power Engineering (AREA)
  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Plasma & Fusion (AREA)
  • Vertical, Hearth, Or Arc Furnaces (AREA)
  • Discharge Heating (AREA)
  • Control Of Electrical Variables (AREA)

Abstract

Method to feed a three-phase direct-arc electric furnace with controlled current and also a three-phase electric furnace thus fed for the smelting of metals and advantageously but not essentially for iron-based alloys, the furnace comprising means (GI) for regulation of the length of the arc by means of action on the height of the electrodes, the mains supply of the furnace including at least one medium voltage line and a transformer to serve the arc furnace, an element to regulate the arc current being comprised in each phase in the segment connecting the medium voltage line and the transformer and consisting of at least one inductor (L1), a thyristor-controlled valve (T) or alternatively a regulation element consisting of a saturable reactor being included in parallel with at least part of the inductor, one or the other of these regulation elements cooperating with a device (S1) to measure the intensity of the arc current and with an assembly (GC) that controls the arc current of the furnace by means of action on the overall value of the equivalent series reactance.

Description

1 "DIRECT-ARC EhECTRIC FURNACE FED WITH CONTROLhED
2 CURRENT AND METHOD TO FEED A DIRECT-ARC FURNACE WITS
3 CONTROhLED CURRENT"
This invention concerns a three-phase direct-arc electric 6 furnace fed with a controlled current and also a method to 7 feed with controlled current a three-phase direct-arc 8 furnace.
g This invention is applied to three-phase electric arc furnaces for the smelting of metals and iron and alloys 11 thereof in particular.
12 Direct-arc electric furnaces are mainly used at the 13 present time for the smelting and re-smelting of steel and 14 are almost all three-phase furnaces.
During the last twenty years the power of each furnace has 16 increased considerably, passing from unit powers of 16 MW
17 and 20 MVA to powers greater than 85 MW and 120 MVA.
18 These high powers entail for the supply network great 19 problems of disturbances in the voltage (flicker) as well as considerable phase shifts due to the inductive loads.
21 To correct the phase differences due to these inductive 22 loads and reduce the voltage fluctuations the modern 23 compensation technology makes use of variable compensators 24 of reactive power, which are operated with controlled diodes.
26 The principle of regulation is shown in Fig.1 and is as 27 follows.
28 Three inductors are placed in parallel connection with the 29 three-phase medium-voltage line, which is the supply point of the strongly inductive loads of the furnace: these 31 inductors are supplied by means of thyristors T, the firing 32 angle of which is controlled on the basis of the current 33 detected by the device SI.

_ 2030f ~~
1 This regulation system keeps constant and balanced at zero 2 the total reactive power employed by the furnace, the 3 inductors L1 and L2 and the batteries of power-factor
4 corrective capacitors CR, Which are all connected to the medium voltage supply line.
6 The batteries of power-factor corrective capacitors CR
7 with the addition of suitable inductors are made to perform S also the function of filtration of the harmonics generated 9 by the furnace and by the compensation system.
Instead, the active power of the furnace arcs is regulated 11 by changing the height of the electrodes by means of 12 suitable hydraulic assemblies GI, by trying to keep the 13 resistances of the arcs constant.
14 To overcome the difficulties and some of the shortcomings Which this indirect type of regulation of the absorbed 16 current entails, direct-current furnaces have recently been 17 produced, and with this type there is one single electrode 18 and the return of the current is entrusted to the shell of 19 the furnace.
The supply current of the arc is provided by a 21 rectification assembly made of controlled diodes or ' 22 thyristors. This system involves two substantial drawbacks.
23 On the one hand there is the difficulty of obtaining the 29 return route of the current, while on the other hand there is a strong' generation of harmonics of an odd number by the 26 rectification system.
27 To obviate these serious drawbacks of both types of arc 28 furnace, the present applicant has designed, tested and 29 embodied the present invention, which has as its objective the preset purpose.
31 The direct-arc electric furnace fed with controlled 32 current and the method to feed with controlled current a 33 direct-arc furnace are set forth and characterized in the 1 respective main claims, whereas the dependent claims 2 describe variants of the idea of the solution.
3 According to the invention the control mechanism acts 9 directly on the arc current of the furnace so as to determine the operating point and reduce disturbances. This 6 is in contrast with the state of the art, which lets the 7 current in the furnace evolve freely and be controlled only 8 by the hydraulic system regulating the length of the arc, 9 while /the anti-flicker control system thereafter seeks to regularise the situation towards the mains supply side.
11 Whereas the present three-phase arc furnaces are usually 12 connected to a compensation system which works independently 13 and in parallel connection with the furnace, the three arcs 19 of the furnace according to this invention are fed by imparting to each arc a first basic current restricted by a 16 first inductor L1 according to one idea of the solution.
17 A second current is superimposed on this first current by 18 a second inductor L2; the second current is operated and 19 regulated by means of a thyristor T by a transfer function, which takes into account the operating state of the arc by 21 analysing the value and/or the initial slope or trend of 22 that first basic current.
23 According to a variant, besides the analysis of this value 29 and/or initial slope the state of the electrical magnitudes in question at various points in the plant and in particular 26 the position of the tap changer under load of the 27 transformer are also analysed.
28 According to a variant of the idea of the solution a 29 saturable reactor RS may be suitably employed instead of the inductors L1 and L2 and thyri,stor T.
31 According to the invention the power-factor corrective 32 capacitors, which also operate as filters for the 33 absorption of the harmonics generated by the furnace in 2~3~6~~

1 relation to the mains supply network, are placed in parallel 2 connection on the medium voltage bus bar in a manner fully 3 analogous to the one that takes place in the state of the 4 art, but have much less high values of capacity.
With reference to the attached figures, which are given as 6 a non-restrictive example, Fig.l shows the state of the art.
7 Fig.2 shows the invention and enables the difference of 8 the invention from the state of the art to be understood, 9 while ~Figs.3 and 4 show variants of the idea of the solution.
' 11 Let us now look in detail at the state of the art and the 12 content of the invention.
13 The invention differs from the state of the art in the 14 zone between the medium voltage line and the furnace transformer.
16 In Fig.l the inductor L1 has the purpose of optimising and 17 making more flexible by an exact choice of its value the 18 operating point of the furnace with reference to the usable 19 transferred power, to the length of the arc, to the current intensity and to the radiation index.
21 The dimensioning of the inductor L1 is carried out by 22 determining an operating point that balances the contrasting 23 requirements of ensuring an adequate transfer of power and 29 an arc current high enough for the technological requirements of the smelting process and, at the same time, 26 of limiting the peaks of current in the event of a short , 27 circuit of the electrodes.
28 The choice of the inductor L1 affects indirectly the arc 29 heat radiation, which must vary between a minimum value imposed by considerations of efficiency of production and a 31 maximum value imposed by restrictions of the wear on the 32 refractory lining and by observing the relative safety 33 limits.

~43~~~~
- 5 -1 It is then important to compensate the reactive power of 2 an inductive type absorbed by the furnace.
3 The necessary reactive capacitive compensation power is 4 obtained by connecting in parallel to the medium voltage line a fixed bank of power-factor corrective capacitors CR
6 (usually star-connected with neutral insulated or earthed)
7 and a variable inductance obtained with a fixed inductor L2
8 and a thyristor-operated valve T (inductor controlled by
9 thyristors). The connection for the inductors L2 is the triangle connection.
11 Inductors LF are also provided to act as a filter and are 12 placed in series to the thyristors T and capacitors CR.
13 The need for a variable compensation is justified not so 14 much by the requirement of obtaining at the supply point an average power factor greater than that imposed by the power 16 supply authority but rather by the possibility of 17 compensating very quickly the peaks of absorbed reactive 18 power which are responsible for the disturbance of a flicker 19 type in the supply mains network.
The dimensioning of the bank of capacitors CR and the 21 inductor L2 is carried out according to the maximum reactive 22 power required by the furnace (equal to the furnace short 23 circuit power) corrected by a coefficient greater than 1 due 24 to the incomplete compensation of the compensation assembly described (CR+L2+T).
26 Inductors LF are also provided which have the task of a 27 filter and are positioned in series to the thyristors T and 28 capacitors CR.
29 Measurement of the reactive currents absorbed by each supply phase of the furnace is carried out for each phase by 31 a device S1, which generates the signal of feed-back of the 32 control system of the arc current.
33 At all times the capacitive current absorbed by the banks 20~~~~~

1 of capacitors CR must be balanced with the inductive 2 currents absorbed by the furnace and by the inductor L2 3 controlled by the thyristors T.
4 A second regulation device referenced with GI in the figure concerns the geometry of the electric circuit that 6 controls the arc resistance.
7 Known, adequate servo-mechanisms GI of a hydraulic type, 8 for instance, arrange to move the electrodes vertically with 9 the purpose of keeping the impedance of the furnace constant.
11 Mechanical regulation obviously has time constants 12 distinctly slower than the electrical type regulation 13 described above and is therefore less effective with regard 14 to the effects of electrical disturbances.
Turning next to the invention shown summarily in the 16 diagram of Fig.2, we find that the inductor L1 performs the 17 same function as the analogous component included in the 18 state of the art shown in Fig. 1.
19 The variable inductor is obtained with a fixed inductor L2 and a thyristor-operated valve T and is positioned in 21 parallel to the inductor Ll,thus providing a variable 22 inductance located in series with the furnace mains supply.
23 The device S1 measures the intensity of the current 24 absorbed by the arc and sends a signal that drives the control system of the thyristors T.
26 It is possible in this way to keep the current absorbed by 27 the furnace constant within broad limits and thus obtain a 28 controlled current supply.
29 Variations in the arc impedance are compensated by opposing variations of impedance of the equivalent inductor 31 placed in series and consisting of the parallel between L1 32 and L2.
33 If, for instance, the arc tends to die out, the inductance ~~3~68~
1 is reduced to increase the flow of current.
2 If, instead, the electrodes are short-circuited by the 3 scrap being smelted, the inductance of the inductor is 4 brought up to the maximum value so as to limit the resulting voltage drop in the supply network, that is to say, there is 6 a tendency to correct the cause of the disturbances in the 7 supply network rather than correct their consequences with a 8 static variable compensator, as instead takes place in the 9 state of the art.
The automatic control of the equivalent series inductance, 11 depending on the arc current, therefore forms the innovatory 12 aspect of the configuration shown.
13 The control now illustrated can cooperate also with 14 hydraulic regulation GI of the length of the arc.
Although the two types of control have as their purpose 16 the maintenance of a constant impedance in the furnace side, 17 yet they entail some differences. The geometric regulation 18 GI which affects the position of the electrodes may change, 19 by acting on the length of the arc, only the resistive part of the impedance, whereas the electrical regulation of the 21 equivalent series inductance (parallel between L1 and L2) w) 22 changes the reactive part directly and, by taking action on 23 the arc current, acts also on the equivalent resistance.
29 Moreover, the time constants are very different since in one case actions of a mechanical type are implicated, 26 whereas in the ether case merely electrical actions are 27 involved.
28 Regulation of the equivalent series reactance, being 29 carried out phase by phase, enables also the imbalance of impedance inherent in the geometry of the secondary circuit 31 of the furnace (from the outputs of the furnace transformer 32 to the arcs) to be corrected and the currents in the three 33 phases to be kept constant, thus overcoming the so-called 2~3a~~
_$_ 1 "cold phase" and "wild phase" problems.
2 The inductors controlled by means of thyristors T in the 3 state of the art and in the art here proposed are actuated 4 according to the signals coming from the monitor S1, these signals being processed by a control assembly GC.
6 This control assembly GC in the art here proposed can also 7 receive signals which reflect variations in the other 8 electrical magnitudes in various parts of the circuit. Thus 9 it can receive signals, for instance by means of a transformer TV, of measurement from the medium voltage line:
11 it can receive signals, for instance, of the position of the 12 electrodes through the control GC; it can also receive 13 signals from other sources, for instance the position of the 14 commutator under load of the transformer and other setting signals.
16 Moreover, the control assembly GC prevents saturation of 17 the inductors by eliminating the continuous component of 18 currents passing through the same.
19 Power-factor corrective capacitors CR are connected to the medium voltage line and have the task of correcting the 21 power factor of the reactive component of the power absorbed 22 by the furnace within the limits set by the authority which 23 supplies electrical power.
24 As can be seen in the figures 1 and 2, the configuration according to the invention provides for the same components 26 as those already comprised in the normal configuration, but 27 these components are employed functionally in a different 28 way.
29 The different use of the components with a resulting different dimensioning entails some substantial 31 constructional savings.
32 The comparison of the two solutions can be carried out 33 with an equal active power supplied to the furnace and with 1 equal disturbances of a flicker type generated in the supply 2 mains.
3 The inductor L1, although having a greater reactance, is 4 normally charged in the present invention only by part of the operating current of the furnace. Its dimensioning as 6 regards power, and therefore as regards cost, is about 30 7 to 40% of that required in the configuration of Fig.1 when 8 a safety factor due to short-circuit overlaads is taken into 9 account.
The power-factor corrective capacitors CR too show a ~,' 11 considerable reduction. In fact, in the case of Fig.l the 12 reactive capacitive power is dimensioned, as we have already 13 noted, at a greater value than the short-circuit power at 14 the electrodes. In the case of Fig.2 it is only necessary to correct the power factor of a part of the reactive power 16 absorbed by the furnace at the operating point. The 17 resulting reduction is about 70 to 800.
18 The value of the inductor L2 controlled by the valve 19 operated by thyristors T could be taken as being nil at a theoretical level so as to permit the maximum range of 21 regulation of the furnace series reactance.
22 Technological reasons linked to the smelting process and 23 to the embodiment of the valve T entail, if a precautionary 29 factor is applied,a reduction of about 80 to 90% as compared to the embodiment of Fig. 1.
26 The valve T itself, being dimensioned according to the 27 invention at lower voltages and less high currents, shows a 2$ reduction in dimensioning by a factor of about 40 to 50%.
29 This value is obtained by calculating the product of the maximum voltage applied to the valve T multiplied by the 31 maximum current which passes through it.
32 Besides the constructional savings achieved on the 33 components it is necessary to take into account an - to - 20~Q~~~
1 improvement in the working costs, this improvement being due 2 substantially to the reduced electrical variability of the 3 arc.
4 In fact, the increased stability of the current and its uniformity in the three phases achieve a greater efficiency 6 of the production process, less wear of the electrodes and 7 refractory lining and smaller electrodynamic stresses in the 8 event of short circuits.
9 ~ Since the idea at the base of the invention is the automatic control of the reactance in series to the circuit 11 of the furnace side, it is possible to pick out some 12 variants which achieve this control in a different way.
13 A first variant shown in Fig.3a provides for elimination 14 of the inductor L2 but retention of the valve operated by thyristors T: as we saw earlier, the inclusion of the 16 inductor L2 is not substantial and, in fact, is due to 17 technological reasons.
18 Fig.3b shows another variant which provides for regulation 19 of a non-continuous type but in steps. From the inductor L1 are branched some intermediate tappings the activation of 21 which is entrusted to thyristor-controlled switches. This 22 variant makes a simpler control possible but does not permit 23 fine regulation of the furnace-side impedance and therefore 24 of the phase current.
Fig.4 shows a variant that provides for use of the 26 saturable reactor RS instead of L1, L2 and T.
27 The saturable reactor, excited by a suitable, constant 28 direct current supplied by the control circuit GC, has the 29 characteristic of providing a low reactance value for small values of current, lower than the nominal current IN of the 31 furnace, and a high reactance value at higher currents.
32 In this way is obtained the effect of restricting 33 considerably the extent of overcurrents and therefore of _ 11 _ 2~3~~8~
1 voltage flicker.
2 This solution has the merit of not requiring a complicated 3 control system GC; in fact, when the direct current 4 corresponding to the IN of the operating point of the furnace has been set, the saturable reactor limits the 6 overcurrents automatically.
7 The control circuit GC fixes the current of excitation of 8 the saturable reactor according to the operating point of 9 the furnace.
To obtain this function, the regulator GC is interfaced 11 with the regulator of the height of the electrodes GI and 12 with the tap changer of voltage under load of the furnace 13 transformer.
14 According to a variant the regulator GC not only makes reference to signals coming from the regulator GI but also 16 analyses the state of the electrical magnitudes involved at 17 various points in the plant.

Claims (20)

1 - Method to feed with controlled current a three-phase direct-arc electric furnace for smelting of metals, and advantageously but not essentially for iron-based alloys, the furnace comprising means (GI) for the geometric regulation of the height of the electrodes, the mains supply of the furnace including at least one medium voltage line and a transformer to serve the arc furnace, an element to regulate the arc current being comprised in each phase in the segment connecting the medium voltage line and the transformer and including at least one inductor (L1) and a device (S1) to measure the intensity of current absorbed by the arc, the method being characterized in that a control assembly (GC) acts directly on the arc current of the furnace and varies the overall value of the equivalent series reactance.
2 - Method as claimed in Claim 1, in which the overall value of the equivalent series reactance is varied by arranging in parallel to the first inductor (L1) a second inductor (L2) controlled by thyristors (T) (Fig.2).
3 - Method as claimed in Claim 1, in which the overall value of the equivalent series reactance is varied by, bypassing the first inductor (L1) by means of thyristors (T) (Fig.3a).
4 - Method as claimed in Claim 1, in which the overall value of the equivalent series reactance is varied in steps by connecting or disconnecting parts of the first inductor (L1) by means of thyristors (T) and intermediate tappings (Fig.3b).
- Method as claimed in Claim 1, in which the element to regulate the arc current consists of a saturable reactor (RS), the reactance of which is varied by acting on the continuous polarisation current (Fig.4).
6 - Method as claimed in Claim 5, in which the variation of the equivalent series reactance upon variation of the furnace current is intrinsic to the behaviour of the saturable reactor excited by a constant direct current supplied by the control assembly (GG).
7 - Method as claimed in any claim hereinbefore, in which the control assembly (GC) analyses the state of at least some of the other electrical magnitudes involved (voltage transformer, setting signals, etc.).
8 - Method as claimed in any claim he reinbefore, in which the control assembly (GC) analyses and takes into account the state of the tap changer under load of the transformer.
9 - Method as claimed in any claim hereinbefore, in which the control assembly (GC) analyses also the initial slope (trend) of the arc current.
- Method as claimed in any claim he reinbefore, in which the control assembly (GC) analyses also the state of the hydraulic system (GI) that controls the position of the electrodes.
11 - Method as claimed in any claim hereinbefore, in which the control assembly (GC) determines compensation of the electrical imbalances between the phases.
12 - Method as claimed in any claim hereinbefore, in which the control assembly (GC) prevents saturation of the inductors by eliminating the continuous component of the currents which pass through the same.
13 - Three-phase direct-arc electric furnace fed with controlled current and intended advantageously but not essentially for iron-based alloys, the furnace comprising means (GI) for regulation of the length of the arc by means of action on the height of the electrodes, the mains supply of the furnace including at least one medium voltage line and a transformer to serve the arc furnace, a device to regulate the arc current being comprised in each phase in the segment connecting the medium voltage line and the transformer and including a first inductor (L1) and a device (S1) to measure the intensity of current absorbed by the arc, the furnace being characterized in that at least one thyristor-controlled valve (T) is comprised in parallel with at least part of the first inductor (L1).
14 - Electric furnace as claimed in Claim 13, which comprises a second inductor (L2) in series with the thyristor-controlled valve (T).
15 - Electric furnace as claimed in Claim 13, in which the device to regulate the arc current comprises at least one saturable reactor (RS).
16 - Electric furnace as claimed in any of Claims 13 to 15 inclusive, in which the thyristor-controlled valve (T) is governed by a control assembly (GC).
17 - Electric furnace as claimed in Claim 15, in which the saturable reactor is governed by a control assembly (GC).
18 - Electric furnace as claimed in any of Claims 13 to 17 inclusive, in which the control assembly (GC) processes signals of electrical magnitudes (S1, TV, setting signals, etc.).
19 - Electric furnace as claimed in any of Claims 13 to 18 inclusive, in which the control assembly (GC) is connected to the tap changer under load of the transformer.
20 - Electric furnace as claimed in any of Claims 13 to 19 inclusive, in which the control assembly (GC) processes signals of mechanical magnitudes (GI) too.
CA002030686A 1989-11-30 1990-11-23 Direct-arc electric furnace fed with controlled current and method to feed a direct-arc furnace with controlled current Expired - Fee Related CA2030686C (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (4)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
IT83520A/89 1989-11-30
IT08352089A IT1236363B (en) 1989-11-30 1989-11-30 DIRECT CURRENT ELECTRIC ARC OVEN AND CONTROLLED CURRENT SUPPLY PROCEDURE OF A DIRECT ARC ARC OVEN
EP90116833A EP0429774A1 (en) 1989-11-30 1990-09-03 Direct-arc electric furnace fed with controlled current and method to feed a direct-arc furnace with controlled current
EP90116833.6 1990-09-03

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
CA2030686A1 CA2030686A1 (en) 1991-05-31
CA2030686C true CA2030686C (en) 1999-10-05

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Country Status (4)

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CN (2) CN1057658C (en)
AU (1) AU641195B2 (en)
BR (1) BR9006066A (en)
CA (1) CA2030686C (en)

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SE501025C2 (en) * 1993-03-18 1994-10-24 Asea Brown Boveri Oven
MXPA02008941A (en) * 2000-03-14 2003-02-10 Thomson Licensing Sa System and method for providing recording function when no program information is available.
CA2988355C (en) 2015-06-05 2018-08-07 Hatch Ltd. Flicker control for electric arc furnace
CN105158540B (en) * 2015-08-11 2018-04-24 南京师范大学 A kind of arc current evaluation method using electric arc inductance correction factor
CN106931796B (en) * 2017-03-14 2019-01-22 四方继保(武汉)软件有限公司 Based on the electrodes in mine hot stove control method for calculating electrode payload resistance in furnace
IT201800004847A1 (en) * 2018-04-24 2019-10-24 METHOD OF MELTING IN AN ELECTRIC ARC OVEN AND RELATED EQUIPMENT
CN109000481B (en) * 2018-09-21 2023-07-25 大连重工机电设备成套有限公司 Variable direct current flows back to Lu Tiege gold ore deposit hot stove
CN111864735B (en) * 2020-07-22 2024-04-16 安徽交通职业技术学院 Switching compensation system

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US2632862A (en) * 1950-05-02 1953-03-24 Westinghouse Electric Corp Regulating system

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Publication number Publication date
CN1057658C (en) 2000-10-18
CA2030686A1 (en) 1991-05-31
CN1290118A (en) 2001-04-04
AU6696590A (en) 1991-06-06
CN1052585A (en) 1991-06-26
AU641195B2 (en) 1993-09-16
BR9006066A (en) 1991-09-24

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