basic iron
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
Noun: - Pig iron containing a high percentage of phosphorus: A type of crude iron produced in a blast furnace, characterized by a high phosphorus content. This specific composition requires a particular steelmaking process to remove the phosphorus.
Usage
- This term is a technical compound noun used primarily in metallurgy and industrial contexts to specify a raw material input for steel production.
- It functions as a countable noun (e.g., , ).
Examples
- The steel plant imported a large shipment of basic iron for its new furnace.
- The Bessemer process was adapted to handle basic iron by using a basic lining to remove phosphorus.
- Not all pig iron is suitable for that converter; we need basic iron specifically.
Advanced Usage
- The term is often used in contrast to other types of pig iron, such as or .
- It is intrinsically linked to historical and modern , like the (also known as the Thomas process) or the .
Variants and Related Words
- Pig iron: The general term for the crude, high-carbon iron product from a blast furnace, which is refined to make steel or wrought iron. is a subtype of pig iron.
- Basic steel: The steel produced from basic iron using a process with a basic (e.g., limestone or dolomite) lining or slag to remove impurities like phosphorus.
Synonyms
- Thomas iron: (Historical/contextual) Named after Sidney Gilchrist Thomas, who invented the basic process to dephosphorize this type of iron. This synonym is specific to the historical Bessemer context.
Notes on Meaning
- The "basic" in basic iron refers not to a simplicity or fundamental nature, but to the (alkaline) chemical nature of the slag required to remove its phosphorus during steelmaking. It is defined by its chemical composition and its corresponding required processing method.
Noun
- pig iron containing a high percentage of phosphorus; used in making steel by a process that removes the phosphorus