US3877684A - Continuous annealing furnace - Google Patents

Continuous annealing furnace Download PDF

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US3877684A
US3877684A US432246A US43224674A US3877684A US 3877684 A US3877684 A US 3877684A US 432246 A US432246 A US 432246A US 43224674 A US43224674 A US 43224674A US 3877684 A US3877684 A US 3877684A
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zone
strip
water
quenching
cooling zone
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US432246A
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Takao Kurihara
Nobuo Tanaka
Toru Yamagishi
Kazuhide Nakaoka
Kenzi Araki
Kozi Iwase
Haruo Kubotera
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JFE Engineering Corp
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Nippon Kokan Ltd
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    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C21METALLURGY OF IRON
    • C21DMODIFYING THE PHYSICAL STRUCTURE OF FERROUS METALS; GENERAL DEVICES FOR HEAT TREATMENT OF FERROUS OR NON-FERROUS METALS OR ALLOYS; MAKING METAL MALLEABLE, e.g. BY DECARBURISATION OR TEMPERING
    • C21D9/00Heat treatment, e.g. annealing, hardening, quenching or tempering, adapted for particular articles; Furnaces therefor
    • C21D9/52Heat treatment, e.g. annealing, hardening, quenching or tempering, adapted for particular articles; Furnaces therefor for wires; for strips ; for rods of unlimited length
    • C21D9/54Furnaces for treating strips or wire
    • C21D9/56Continuous furnaces for strip or wire
    • C21D9/573Continuous furnaces for strip or wire with cooling
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C21METALLURGY OF IRON
    • C21DMODIFYING THE PHYSICAL STRUCTURE OF FERROUS METALS; GENERAL DEVICES FOR HEAT TREATMENT OF FERROUS OR NON-FERROUS METALS OR ALLOYS; MAKING METAL MALLEABLE, e.g. BY DECARBURISATION OR TEMPERING
    • C21D9/00Heat treatment, e.g. annealing, hardening, quenching or tempering, adapted for particular articles; Furnaces therefor
    • C21D9/52Heat treatment, e.g. annealing, hardening, quenching or tempering, adapted for particular articles; Furnaces therefor for wires; for strips ; for rods of unlimited length
    • C21D9/54Furnaces for treating strips or wire
    • C21D9/56Continuous furnaces for strip or wire

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to improvements of a continuous annealing furnace comprising a recrystallization heating zone, a rapid cooling zone, a carbon precipitation treating zone and a final cooling zone, and more particularly, a new rapid zone divided into a gasjet cooling zone and water-quenching zone and an alternate path for the travelling steel strip is provided parallel with said water-quenching zone.
  • Continuous annealing art for cold rolled mild steel strip was developed for a mother steel of tinplating and has been used widely in the field.
  • Such a conventional art of continuous annealing usually comprises a recrystallization heating zone, a slow cooling zone, and the final cooling zone which offers an extremely short annealing time and uniform materials.
  • the art is defective in that the steel sheet after annealing was 1. hard,
  • the present invention has been developed to obtain the highest mechanical properties of steel sheet by a continuous annealing process with ease and stability.
  • the features of the present invention lie in the dividing of a rapid cooling zone following a carbon precipitation treating zone into a gas-jet cooling zone and a waterquenching zone and the providing of an alternate path for the travelling strip parallel with said water-quenching zone.
  • An object of the present invention is to provide improved continuous annealing facilities wherein passage of a travelling steel strip is changeable according to the required rapid cooling rate.
  • Another object of the present invention is to provide improved continuous annealing facilities capable of performing the most suitable heat cycle, including the required rapid cooling rate to obtain excellent mechanical properties.
  • FIG. I shows a fundamental structure of the continuous annealing furnace according to the present invention
  • FIG. 2 is a schematic view of the inner structure for the gas-jet cooling zone in FIG. 1;
  • FIG. 3 shows an outline of the water-quenching zone and an alternate path provided parallel with said zone in FIG. 1.
  • FIG. 1 A strip 1 is fed out of pay-off reel 2 and enters cleaning line 3. Although not shown, there are usually provided a cutter and a welder between said pay-off reel 2 and said cleaning line 3. In said cleaning line, such impurities as oils used in a cold reducing operation are removed from the strip 1.
  • the strip 1 is then made to pass through a looping tower 4 and goes into recrystallization heating zone 5.
  • the strip is heated up to 7 [0C. or thereabout and plastic strain caused by said cold reducing operation is removed therefrom.
  • the strip is then maintained at about the same temperature for a suitable period of time in order to encourage growth of recrystallized grains and solution of carbon from out of carbide in the steel.
  • the strip 1 then enters gas-jet cooling zone 6 which is one component of the present invention.
  • the strip in the said cooling zone is forcibly cooled down to the required temperature by the jet stream of atmospheric gas, at which time the waterquenching is started in the following stage.
  • the strip is cooled by the jet stream of the said atmospheric gas to a temperature of 500 to 600C. at which time said water-quenching is started.
  • a rate of above 200C./sec. is used for the travelling strip. Such a high rate quench will cause said strip to reach room temperature instantly.
  • the strip 1 is then processed through pickling, neutralizing, rinsing and drying and then is sent into carbon precipitation treatment zone 8. In this zone, said strip is reheated to a temperature of 400 to 500C.
  • the strip 1 thus processed enters final cooling zone 9 and is cooled down to room temperature and is subjected to a light reduction of about 1 percent by temper rolling stand 11 via a looping tower l and then finally coiled by the tension reel 12.
  • FIG. 2 one example of the inner structure of said gas-jet cooling zone 6 is illustratively shown in FIG. 2.
  • the strip I sent into said gas-jet cooling zone as it comes out of the recrystallization heating zone changes its direction by helper rools 13 and travels between gasjet headers 14.
  • the jet stream of atmospheric gas being jetted from a group of orifices 15, which is provided on said headers with an interval therebetween, cools the strip down to a predetermined temperature at which time the water-quenching is started.
  • the strip then enters the water-quenching zone 7 via seal rolls 16.
  • the atmospheric gas-jet being jetted to the strip 1 is exhausted out of the zone by duct pipe 17 and is cooled to about the room temperature by a gas cooler (not shown) and pressurized by a blower (not shown) and again introduced into the said headers 14.
  • dampers 18 provided at the inlet of the said headers 14, which act to control the gas flow. Control of the gas flow by the said dampers l8 will facilitate the control of cooling rate of said travelling strip 1.
  • the lower limit of the cooling rate by the atmospheric gasjet naturally is determined by the production efficiency as a continuous annealing line.
  • the upper limit thereof is automatically determined by the cooling efficiency of the atmospheric gas being used.
  • the scale of said continuous annealing time is determined by the distribution of time to the respective zones of said line while consideration is given to quality of materials.
  • the selection of an optimum cooling rate within such upper and lower limits may be arbitrarily made depending upon thickness of the travelling strip, by the control of the said dampers every time a need arises.
  • the present invention as heretofore explained, it is readily possible to obtain the heat cycle (as aforementioned) of the continuous annealing process which will impart the same degree of press formability as that obtained from the ordinary batch type annealing.
  • the temperature of the strip at the delivery side of said recrystallization heating zone is set up at 700C.
  • the temperature at the entry side of said water-quenching zone 7 is set up to 550C.: the difference between the temperatures is I50C.
  • annealing capacity of the employed continuous annealing furnace is 60 t/hr or thereabout and a strip of 0.8 mm thickness X 1,000 mm width was passed through the line, then the speed thereof is about 3 m/min.
  • the quenching system in the present invention comprises fundamentally a gas-jet cooling zone and a water-quenching zone.
  • a temperature of 500 to 600C. should be given as the best suited requirements for starting quenching.
  • the same degree of utility may not be expected of every thickness of annealing strips. That is to say, this is incomparably effective for a strip having more than about 0.6 mm thickness, but a strip with a thickness thinner than the above, i.e. one with 0.5 mm thickness, causes rapid appearances of defective shapes. Such defects as herein mentioned appear as a pocket-like shape and are confirmed to have been caused by the uneven quenching.
  • the present invention provides an alternate path parallel to a water-quenching zone through which the strip can be passed without going through said water quenching zone. Accordingly, the gas-jet cooling zone 6 and carbon precipitation treatment zone 8 are connected directly with each other. Such an example is shown in FIG. 3.
  • the travelling strip l at the delivery side of the gas-jet cooling zone 6 is changed in respect of its directions by helper rolls l9 and enters protective duct and then is sent to the carbon precipitation treatment zone 8 directly. Numerous experiments have confirmed that it is possible to obtain another optimum quenching rate of above C./sec, thus having eliminated any fears that this was not possible.
  • the temperature at which quenching is started should be selected from among the range of 650 to 850C. the case being different from the use of the said water-quenching zone. This temperature leads to the setting up of the recrystallization heating temperature and is easily realizable.
  • the treatment temperature of below 500C. and about 350C. are considered optimum. For instance, when said rapid cooling was to be started at 700C. and the temperature at the entry side of the carbon precipitation treatment zone 8 was to be made 490C., said rapid cooling range in said gas-jet cooling zone will be 210C.
  • a continuous annealing furnace for steel strip comprising a recrystallization heating zone, a rapid cooling zone, a carbon precipitation treating zone and a final cooling zone
  • improved facilities characterized in that said rapid cooling zone is divided into a gas-jet cooling zone and a water-quenching zone and an alternate path for said steel strip is provided parallel with said water-quenching zone such that the said strip may by-pass the said water quenching zone if necessary for a required rapid cooling rate.

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  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Thermal Sciences (AREA)
  • Crystallography & Structural Chemistry (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Materials Engineering (AREA)
  • Metallurgy (AREA)
  • Organic Chemistry (AREA)
  • Heat Treatment Of Strip Materials And Filament Materials (AREA)
  • Heat Treatment Of Sheet Steel (AREA)

Abstract

In a continuous annealing for steel strip furnace comprising recrystallization heating zone, rapid cooling zone, carbon precipitation treating zone and final cooling zone, improved facilities characterized in that said rapid cooling zone is divided into a gas-jet cooling zone and a water-quenching zone and an alternate path for said steel strip is provided parallel with said water quenching zone such that the said strip may bypass said water quenching zone if necessary for a required rapid cooling rate.

Description

United States Patent Kurihara et a1.
CONTINUOUS ANNEALING FURNACE Inventors: Takao Kurihara; Nobuo Tanaka,
both of Yokohama; Toru Yamagishi, Tokyo; Kazuhide Nakaoka, Yokohama; Kenzi Araki, Yokohama; Kozi lwase, Yokohama; Haruo Kubotera, Fukuyama, all of Japan Nippon Kokan Kabushiki Kaisha, Tokyo, Japan Filed: Jan. 10, 1974 Appl. No.: 432,246
Assignee:
Foreign Application Priority Data Jan. 11, 1973 Japan 48-5563 US. Cl 266/3 R; 148/156; 266/6 R;
' 432/59 Int. Cl C2ld 9/48 Field of Search 65/114; 134/65, 114;
[ Apr. 15, 1975 [56] References Cited UNITED STATES PATENTS 3,058,840 l0/l962 Kerr et a1 266/3 X 3,262,688 7/1966 Beggs 266/3 R 3,323,577 6/1967 Clumpner r. 266/3 R X 3,752,459 8/1973 Kawazoko et a] 266/3 R Primary Examiner-Roy Lake Assistant Examiner-Paul A. Bell Attorney, Agent, or Firm-Flynn & Frishauf [57] ABSTRACT pass said water quenching zone if necessary for a required rapid cooling rate.
3 Claims, 3 Drawing Figures PATENTED APR 1 5:915
T YF/ mama FEW:
Time (sec) mww o 1 9H m 1 CONTINUOUS ANNEALING FURNACE The present invention relates to improvements of a continuous annealing furnace comprising a recrystallization heating zone, a rapid cooling zone, a carbon precipitation treating zone and a final cooling zone, and more particularly, a new rapid zone divided into a gasjet cooling zone and water-quenching zone and an alternate path for the travelling steel strip is provided parallel with said water-quenching zone.
Continuous annealing art for cold rolled mild steel strip was developed for a mother steel of tinplating and has been used widely in the field. Such a conventional art of continuous annealing usually comprises a recrystallization heating zone, a slow cooling zone, and the final cooling zone which offers an extremely short annealing time and uniform materials. However, the art is defective in that the steel sheet after annealing was 1. hard,
2. had inferior strain aging property, and
3. had inferior formability.
These defects have previously been considered to be unavoidable. In other words, it was considered impossible to obtain a material suitable for press-forming. With this in mind, research was conducted for a process and an apparatus which would facilitate production of materials for press-forming while effectively maintaining the characteristics of continuous annealing. One example of the manifestation of such research was US. Pat. No. 2,832,711.
The art disclosed in the above US. Pat. No. 2,832.71 1 concerns a continuous annealing process for soft steel strips which passes the said strips through a furnace comprising a heating zone, a rapid cooling zone and a holding zone continuously. That is to say, the strips are heated to l,250 to l,300F. in the heating zone, rapidly cooled to below 1,000F. in the rapid cooling zone and then are maintained for at least 30 seconds within a temperature range of 800 to 1,000F. According to this art, it is true that such defects as above mentioned of the continuous annealing were removed to a considerable degree, but it is also true that these defects have not yet been overcome sufficiently when comparison is made of the steel sheets for commercial press forming purposes manufactured in accordance with the ordinary batch type annealing process. It is particularly known that the former is far inferior to the latter in respect of the yield point and press formability.
Applicants proposed the process disclosed in their copending US. patent application Ser. No. 373,744, filed June 26, 1973, in order to eliminate these defects. The art disclosed in the said application indicated that the above-mentioned defects could be eliminated at once if the starting temperature of rapid cooling after recrystallization heating and said cooling rate were selected to be within a specific range. More particularly, when said rapid cooling rate of 30C./sec. to 200C./sec. should be required, said starting temperature is selected from the range of 650 to 850C, while when said cooling rate of more than 200C./sec. is required said starting temperature is from 500 to 600C. Such a combination of the above heat cycle is selected mainly depending upon the thickness of steel strip. However, in a commercial scale plant, which is different from a pilot plant, these heating cycles are necessarily accompanied by various difficulties when being put into actual practice, which difficulties would not be apparent from experiments on said pilot plant. The present inventors have taken note of such difficulties and have made a successful development of an entirely novel continuous annealing system to realize the above annealing cycle.
Thus, the present invention has been developed to obtain the highest mechanical properties of steel sheet by a continuous annealing process with ease and stability. The features of the present invention lie in the dividing of a rapid cooling zone following a carbon precipitation treating zone into a gas-jet cooling zone and a waterquenching zone and the providing of an alternate path for the travelling strip parallel with said water-quenching zone.
An object of the present invention is to provide improved continuous annealing facilities wherein passage of a travelling steel strip is changeable according to the required rapid cooling rate.
Another object of the present invention is to provide improved continuous annealing facilities capable of performing the most suitable heat cycle, including the required rapid cooling rate to obtain excellent mechanical properties.
Other objects and advantages will be apparent from the following description and the accompanying drawings in which:
FIG. I shows a fundamental structure of the continuous annealing furnace according to the present invention;
FIG. 2 is a schematic view of the inner structure for the gas-jet cooling zone in FIG. 1;
FIG. 3 shows an outline of the water-quenching zone and an alternate path provided parallel with said zone in FIG. 1.
References being made to the attached drawings, the fundamental structure of the present invention and the heat cycles corresponding thereto are shown in FIG. 1. A strip 1 is fed out of pay-off reel 2 and enters cleaning line 3. Although not shown, there are usually provided a cutter and a welder between said pay-off reel 2 and said cleaning line 3. In said cleaning line, such impurities as oils used in a cold reducing operation are removed from the strip 1. The strip 1 is then made to pass through a looping tower 4 and goes into recrystallization heating zone 5. The strip is heated up to 7 [0C. or thereabout and plastic strain caused by said cold reducing operation is removed therefrom. The strip is then maintained at about the same temperature for a suitable period of time in order to encourage growth of recrystallized grains and solution of carbon from out of carbide in the steel. The strip 1 then enters gas-jet cooling zone 6 which is one component of the present invention. The strip in the said cooling zone is forcibly cooled down to the required temperature by the jet stream of atmospheric gas, at which time the waterquenching is started in the following stage. In this instance, the strip is cooled by the jet stream of the said atmospheric gas to a temperature of 500 to 600C. at which time said water-quenching is started. In said water-quenching zone 7, a rate of above 200C./sec. is used for the travelling strip. Such a high rate quench will cause said strip to reach room temperature instantly. The strip 1 is then processed through pickling, neutralizing, rinsing and drying and then is sent into carbon precipitation treatment zone 8. In this zone, said strip is reheated to a temperature of 400 to 500C.
and is held for a predetermined period of time, that is, more than 30 seconds at least within said temperature range. Said solute carbon by the above gas-jet cooling and water-quenching is precipitated during the said period. This brings about mechanical properties not inferior to those of the ordinary batch type annealing process although the process used is a continuous annealing process. The strip 1 thus processed enters final cooling zone 9 and is cooled down to room temperature and is subjected to a light reduction of about 1 percent by temper rolling stand 11 via a looping tower l and then finally coiled by the tension reel 12.
In the above continuous annealing system according to the present invention as has been explained in detail heretofore, one example of the inner structure of said gas-jet cooling zone 6 is illustratively shown in FIG. 2. The strip I sent into said gas-jet cooling zone as it comes out of the recrystallization heating zone changes its direction by helper rools 13 and travels between gasjet headers 14. The jet stream of atmospheric gas being jetted from a group of orifices 15, which is provided on said headers with an interval therebetween, cools the strip down to a predetermined temperature at which time the water-quenching is started. The strip then enters the water-quenching zone 7 via seal rolls 16. In such a gas-jet cooling system as mentioned above, the atmospheric gas-jet being jetted to the strip 1 is exhausted out of the zone by duct pipe 17 and is cooled to about the room temperature by a gas cooler (not shown) and pressurized by a blower (not shown) and again introduced into the said headers 14. In this case, there are dampers 18 provided at the inlet of the said headers 14, which act to control the gas flow. Control of the gas flow by the said dampers l8 will facilitate the control of cooling rate of said travelling strip 1. The lower limit of the cooling rate by the atmospheric gasjet naturally is determined by the production efficiency as a continuous annealing line. The upper limit thereof is automatically determined by the cooling efficiency of the atmospheric gas being used. At the same time, the scale of said continuous annealing time is determined by the distribution of time to the respective zones of said line while consideration is given to quality of materials. The selection of an optimum cooling rate within such upper and lower limits may be arbitrarily made depending upon thickness of the travelling strip, by the control of the said dampers every time a need arises.
With the present invention as heretofore explained, it is readily possible to obtain the heat cycle (as aforementioned) of the continuous annealing process which will impart the same degree of press formability as that obtained from the ordinary batch type annealing. For instance, when the temperature of the strip at the delivery side of said recrystallization heating zone is set up at 700C., the temperature at the entry side of said water-quenching zone 7 is set up to 550C.: the difference between the temperatures is I50C. When annealing capacity of the employed continuous annealing furnace is 60 t/hr or thereabout and a strip of 0.8 mm thickness X 1,000 mm width was passed through the line, then the speed thereof is about 3 m/min. Under these conditions the above-mentioned temperature difference of 150C. is to be cooled down by natural cooling and then there would .be. required an excessive length of said cooling zone, which would be elongated to at least 450 m of the strip length, between the said vrecrystallization heating and water-quenching zones. This is because the natural cooling rate is lC./sec at most. Naturally, the furnace having such a long cooling zone is extremely impractical. If an atmospheric gas having suitable cooling capacity was to be selected, then control of said cooling rate along with use of damper means 18 becomes quite easy, and utility 'of design, structure and operation of the said atmospheric gas cooling zone is far superior to that of the above-mentioned device. Even if an ordinary atmospheric gas was to be employed, there will be no difficulties to obtain a cooling rate of l5C./sec, while the strip length in the cooling zone as aforementioned will be only about 30 m long. It is, therefore, self-evident that the gasjet cooling zone to let the said strip stay becomes quite short. It is clear that the use of an atmospheric gas having more than 30C./sec cooling capacity, furthermore, will simplify said zone. The ease and stability in the cooling rate control in accordance with the present invention device promotes unparalleled utility in actual operations. For instance, not all the strips being passed through the continuous annealing furnace are the same in size. That is to say, coils of different thickness and widths are usually connected one after the other in actual operations. Even in such cases, there are no difficulties of the present invention in the controlling of said cooling rate. The same is true of the cases where the line speed changes occur during the time while the strip is travelling. In other words, it is possible to maintain the constant temperature at which the following waterquenching is started. It is needless to say that this will result in the uniformity and stability of the press formability of the steel sheets. The actual control of such a cooling rate is very easy. For instance, the temperature of a travelling strip is detected at a suitable point just before the water-quenching zone and the detected value is converted into electric signals, etc., so as to automatically adjust the degree of the damper opening. Such an adjusting mechanism exhibiting a high precision and stability is readily available in the market, which may be applied to the present invention without any difficulties.
The quenching system in the present invention comprises fundamentally a gas-jet cooling zone and a water-quenching zone. In order that the said system may have mechanical properties not inferior to the products manufactured by the batch annealing system, a temperature of 500 to 600C. should be given as the best suited requirements for starting quenching. However, it is also true that the same degree of utility may not be expected of every thickness of annealing strips. That is to say, this is incomparably effective for a strip having more than about 0.6 mm thickness, but a strip with a thickness thinner than the above, i.e. one with 0.5 mm thickness, causes rapid appearances of defective shapes. Such defects as herein mentioned appear as a pocket-like shape and are confirmed to have been caused by the uneven quenching. Naturally, such defective shapes need to be avoided. In the case of thin strip as mentioned above, the present invention provides an alternate path parallel to a water-quenching zone through which the strip can be passed without going through said water quenching zone. Accordingly, the gas-jet cooling zone 6 and carbon precipitation treatment zone 8 are connected directly with each other. Such an example is shown in FIG. 3. The travelling strip l at the delivery side of the gas-jet cooling zone 6 is changed in respect of its directions by helper rolls l9 and enters protective duct and then is sent to the carbon precipitation treatment zone 8 directly. Numerous experiments have confirmed that it is possible to obtain another optimum quenching rate of above C./sec, thus having eliminated any fears that this was not possible. This is because of the fact that said cooling rate is accelerated as the thickness is decreased and atmospheric gas having higher cooling capacity is employed. In this case, the temperature at which quenching is started should be selected from among the range of 650 to 850C. the case being different from the use of the said water-quenching zone. This temperature leads to the setting up of the recrystallization heating temperature and is easily realizable. In the carbon precipitation treatment zone (8), the treatment temperature of below 500C. and about 350C. are considered optimum. For instance, when said rapid cooling was to be started at 700C. and the temperature at the entry side of the carbon precipitation treatment zone 8 was to be made 490C., said rapid cooling range in said gas-jet cooling zone will be 210C. Such lowering of temperatures of the travelling strip is quite easily obtained because of the above-mentioned reasons and its control is also freely performed by the automatic adjustment of said dampers 18. When the gas-jet cooling zone and the carbon precipitation treatment zone were directly connected in a way as aforementioned, there is no chance for the travelling strip to be cooled down to the room temperature as is the case with the use of water-quenching zone, since the control of the rapid cooling rate in said gas-jet cooling zone is so easy as had been explained heretofore. Accordingly, said required temperature in the carbon precipitation treatment zone is stably held without the need of reheating, and only the slow cooling or the holding of at least above 30 seconds from 490 to 350C. remains to be performed. It goes without saying that this is also easily practiced. Thus, the stable production of thin strip of less than about 0.5 mm with excellent properties comparable to those of the steel sheets produced by the ordinary batch type annealing process without giving rise to defective shapes becomes possible with ease.
In the present invention, as has been explained, it is possible to use such cooling mechanisms as a water jacket system or a gas jacket system in place of the gasjet cooling zone following the recrystallization heating zone. However, each of these systems is confirmed to present considerable difficulties in their cooling capacity or temperature control. Therefore, it is recommended that a direct cooling mechanism by the jetting of atmospheric gas is the best in the present invention.
We claim:
1. In a continuous annealing furnace for steel strip comprising a recrystallization heating zone, a rapid cooling zone, a carbon precipitation treating zone and a final cooling zone, improved facilities characterized in that said rapid cooling zone is divided into a gas-jet cooling zone and a water-quenching zone and an alternate path for said steel strip is provided parallel with said water-quenching zone such that the said strip may by-pass the said water quenching zone if necessary for a required rapid cooling rate.
2. Improved facilities as set forth in claim 1 whereir when the thickness of said travelling strip is more thar about 0.6mm, said gas-jet cooling zone and then saic water-quenching zone are employed as said rapid cool ing zone.
3. Improved facilities as set forth in claim I whereir when the thickness of said travelling strip is less that about 0.5mm, only said gas-jet cooling zone is em ployed as said rapid cooling zone and said zone is con nected directly to said following carbon precipitatior treating zone through said alternate path provided par allel with said water-quenching zone.

Claims (3)

1. In a continuous annealing furnace for steel strip comprising a recrystallization heating zone, a rapid cooling zone, a carbon precipitation treating zone and a final cooling zone, improved facilities characterized in that said rapid cooling zone is divided into a gas-jet cooling zone and a water-quenching zone and an alternate path for said steel strip is provided parallel with said water-quenching zone such that the said strip may bypass the said water quenching zone if necessary for a required rapid cooling rate.
2. Improved facilities as set forth in claim 1 wherein when the thickness of said travelling strip is more than about 0.6mm, said gas-jet cooling zone and then said water-quenching zone are employed as said rapid cooling zone.
3. Improved facilities as set forth in claim 1 wherein when the thickness of said travelling strip is less than about 0.5mm, only said gas-jet cooling zone is employed as said rapid cooling zone and said zone is connected directly to said following carbon precipitation treating zone through said alternate path provided parallel with said water-quenching zone.
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US3950192A (en) * 1974-10-30 1976-04-13 Monsanto Company Continuous carburizing method
US4065329A (en) * 1975-01-17 1977-12-27 Centre De Recherches Metallurgiques-Centrum Voor Research In De Metallurgie Continuous heat treatment of cold rolled steel strip
DE2822430A1 (en) * 1977-05-24 1978-12-07 Centre Rech Metallurgique PROCESS FOR CONTINUOUS HEAT TREATMENT
EP0031012A1 (en) * 1979-10-31 1981-07-01 Kawasaki Steel Corporation Steel strip continuous annealing apparatus
US4358093A (en) * 1979-10-31 1982-11-09 Kawasaki Steel Corporation Steel strip continuous annealing furnace
US4363471A (en) * 1979-10-31 1982-12-14 Kawasaki Steel Corporation Steel strip continuous annealing apparatus
US4374682A (en) * 1979-02-02 1983-02-22 Nippon Steel Corporation Process for producing deep-drawing cold rolled steel strips by short-time continuous annealing
US4455136A (en) * 1981-06-29 1984-06-19 Chugai Ro Co., Ltd. Floating equipment and floating-type heat treating furnace for striplike works
US4501553A (en) * 1981-06-29 1985-02-26 Chugai Ro Co., Ltd. Floating equipment and floating-type heat treating furnace for striplike works
US4618379A (en) * 1982-09-21 1986-10-21 Roberto Bruno Method for the continuous annealing of steel strips
WO2010049600A1 (en) * 2008-10-31 2010-05-06 Siemens Vai Metals Technologies Sas Furnace for a continuously-running steel strip thermal processing plant, and associated method

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JPS52144331A (en) * 1976-05-28 1977-12-01 Nippon Kokan Kk Continuous annealing device
CA1137394A (en) * 1979-12-05 1982-12-14 Hajime Nitto Process for continuously annealing a cold-rolled low carbon steel strip
US4417720A (en) * 1979-12-12 1983-11-29 Centre De Recherches Metallurgiques Continuous heat treatment plant for steel sheet
CA1152870A (en) * 1979-12-24 1983-08-30 Hiromitsu Naito Process for continuously annealing of a cold rolled steel strip
DE3114412C1 (en) * 1981-04-09 1989-03-16 Klöckner-Werke AG, 4100 Duisburg Plant for the continuous treatment of thin sheet
DE102015001438A1 (en) 2015-02-04 2016-08-18 Bernhard Engl Flexible heat treatment plant for metallic strip
DE102016011047A1 (en) 2016-09-13 2018-03-15 Sms Group Gmbh Flexible heat treatment plant for metallic strip in horizontal construction

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US3058840A (en) * 1959-04-16 1962-10-16 Electric Furnace Co Induction strip heating apparatus
US3262688A (en) * 1965-06-03 1966-07-26 Midland Ross Corp Jet convection heat transfer
US3323577A (en) * 1965-05-05 1967-06-06 Olin Mathieson Process for cooling metal
US3752459A (en) * 1969-12-16 1973-08-14 Nippon Kokan Kk Continuous annealing facilities for drawing steel strip

Patent Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3058840A (en) * 1959-04-16 1962-10-16 Electric Furnace Co Induction strip heating apparatus
US3323577A (en) * 1965-05-05 1967-06-06 Olin Mathieson Process for cooling metal
US3262688A (en) * 1965-06-03 1966-07-26 Midland Ross Corp Jet convection heat transfer
US3752459A (en) * 1969-12-16 1973-08-14 Nippon Kokan Kk Continuous annealing facilities for drawing steel strip

Cited By (11)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3950192A (en) * 1974-10-30 1976-04-13 Monsanto Company Continuous carburizing method
US4065329A (en) * 1975-01-17 1977-12-27 Centre De Recherches Metallurgiques-Centrum Voor Research In De Metallurgie Continuous heat treatment of cold rolled steel strip
DE2822430A1 (en) * 1977-05-24 1978-12-07 Centre Rech Metallurgique PROCESS FOR CONTINUOUS HEAT TREATMENT
US4374682A (en) * 1979-02-02 1983-02-22 Nippon Steel Corporation Process for producing deep-drawing cold rolled steel strips by short-time continuous annealing
EP0031012A1 (en) * 1979-10-31 1981-07-01 Kawasaki Steel Corporation Steel strip continuous annealing apparatus
US4358093A (en) * 1979-10-31 1982-11-09 Kawasaki Steel Corporation Steel strip continuous annealing furnace
US4363471A (en) * 1979-10-31 1982-12-14 Kawasaki Steel Corporation Steel strip continuous annealing apparatus
US4455136A (en) * 1981-06-29 1984-06-19 Chugai Ro Co., Ltd. Floating equipment and floating-type heat treating furnace for striplike works
US4501553A (en) * 1981-06-29 1985-02-26 Chugai Ro Co., Ltd. Floating equipment and floating-type heat treating furnace for striplike works
US4618379A (en) * 1982-09-21 1986-10-21 Roberto Bruno Method for the continuous annealing of steel strips
WO2010049600A1 (en) * 2008-10-31 2010-05-06 Siemens Vai Metals Technologies Sas Furnace for a continuously-running steel strip thermal processing plant, and associated method

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
ES422145A1 (en) 1976-04-16
FR2213983B1 (en) 1978-12-08
NL155052B (en) 1977-11-15
JPS535607B2 (en) 1978-03-01
FR2213983A1 (en) 1974-08-09
NL7400325A (en) 1974-07-15
DE2401381A1 (en) 1974-07-25
DE2401381C3 (en) 1978-05-18
BE809624A (en) 1974-05-02
GB1435651A (en) 1976-05-12
DE2401381B2 (en) 1975-02-20
JPS4993206A (en) 1974-09-05

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