AL U MIN IU M 1/ 2 Special: aluminium Smelting induStry emirates global aluminium – a new global player rusal well on the way to meet current and future challenges alumina feed control enhancements 90. Volume © EGA January / February 2014 Fives Solios improved anode baking at alro smelter Volume 90 · January / February 2014 International Journal for Industry, Research and Application Fata Hunter: Building the future for aluminium flat rolled products 1/2 Compact Type Remelt Plant State-of-the-art Scrap Recycling Leading technology in the aluminum casthouse There are many benefits in one-stop-shopping of industrial goods. At Hertwich Engineering we provide customer oriented service throughout the project duration and service life of equipment. We design and build plants to meet both, our own stringent standards and individual customers specifications. Based on many years of experience, we cover the full range of equipment in a modern aluminum casthouse. Compact Type Remelt Plant Q Q Q Q Major benefits Hertwich Engineering is well-known for leading edge technology. Our valued customers deserve to get the best value for money. Commitment to innovation, solid engineering and own R&D are instrumental for staying ahead with continuous improvements and new products. Q Q Q Most efficient installation for recycling of inhouse and purchased scrap One single fully automated process, starting with charging of scrap and finishing with homogenized billets, ready for extruding or forging Lowest labor costs, one to two operators per shift only Special design for remelting scrap contaminated with paint, plastic or oil, also with chip melting system available Optionally equipped with vertical DC caster Capacity 2,000 to 30,000 tons/year More than 25 plants installed HERTWICHE NGINEERINGGM BH Weinbergerstrasse 6 5280 Braunau, Austria Phone: +43 7722 806-0 Fax: +43 7722 806-122 E-mail: info@hertwich.com Internet: www.hertwich.com editorial Volker Karow Chefredakteur Editor in Chief aluminiumpreise – talsohle in Sicht? aluminium prices – is the low-point in sight? ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 Die wirtschaftlichen Aussichten sind so schlecht nicht, die Weltwirtschaft könnte dieses Jahr wieder deutlicher Fahrt aufnehmen: Die Konjunktur in den USA erholt sich, nicht zuletzt aufgrund günstiger Energiepreise, Europa windet sich aus der Rezession, China dürfte angesichts der eingeleiteten Strukturreformen einen Gang zulegen und auch Japans Wirtschaft könnte dank einer expansiven Geld- und Fiskalpolitik zum globalen Wachstum beitragen. Dies alles sind gute Voraussetzungen, um den Abwärtstrend bei den Preisen von Industriemetallen zu stoppen und vielleicht sogar zu drehen. Vielleicht. Für die Produzenten von Hüttenaluminium verlief 2013 alles andere als zufriedenstellend. An der Londoner Metallbörse LME stürzte das Leichtmetall ab: Der Preisverfall betrug fast 16 Prozent, zum Jahresende lagen die Notierungen bei 1.764 Dollar (Kassa) je Tonne. Unterboten wurde dieses Niveau letztmals vor mehr als vier Jahren, und zwar im Juli 2009 mit 1.693 Dollar. Bis Ende April 2011 ging es dann mehr oder weniger stetig aufwärts bis auf 2.772 Dollar, bevor eine Talfahrt einsetzte, die bis heute anhält. Die hohen Prämien auf Aluminium von derzeit mehr als 200 Dollar lindern den Preisverfall ein wenig. Die jüngste Insolvenz einer Aluminiumhütte in den Niederlanden zeigt jedoch, dass die Luft zum Atmen angesichts des anhaltend niedrigen Preisniveaus dünner wird, und nicht nur in Europa mit seinen vergleichsweise hohen Strompreisen. Auch in den USA musste 2013 ein Hüttenproduzent Insolvenz anmelden. Die meisten internationalen Konzerne haben unrentable Hütten geschlossen oder zumindest Produktionskürzungen vorgenommen. Neue Hütten werden, von China abgesehen, weltweit nur in der Golfregion errichtet. Dies spiegelt eine langfristige Umstrukturierung der Branche wider, die sich auch fortsetzten wird, wenn sich die Aluminiumpreise wieder erholen. Der Aufbau einer breiten industriellen Basis dank preiswerter Energie ist die treibende Kraft am Golf, um sich von Energieexporten unabhängiger zu machen. Die im Laufe dieses Jahres neu hoch laufenden Produktionskapazitäten in Abu Dhabi und Saudi-Arabien von mehr als einer Million Tonnen Aluminium im Jahr sind jedoch ein limitierender Faktor für die Erholung der Aluminiumpreise. Und auch die strengeren LME-Lagerhausregeln, die die langen Wartezeiten bei der Auslieferung von Metall ab April verkürzen sollen, werden eher Ab- statt Auftrieb bei den Preisen generieren. Das ist zwar gut für Händler und Verarbeiter, nicht aber für Produzenten. Economic prospects are not so bad and this year the world’s economy could well gain momentum: trade in the USA is recovering, not least thanks to less burdensome energy prices, Europe is struggling out of recession, in view of the structural reforms introduced China could move up a gear, and Japan’s economy too, which already showed surprisingly positive signs in 2013, could also contribute to global growth thanks to expansive monetary and fiscal policies. All this bodes well for bringing an end to the downward trend in the prices of industrial metals, and perhaps even reversing it. Perhaps! For producers of primary aluminium last year was anything but satisfactory. On the London Metal Exchange LME the light metal collapsed: the drop in price amounted to almost 16 percent and at the end of the year quotes stood at 1,764 dollars (spot) a tonne. The last time that level was seen, was more than four years ago in July 2009, with 1,693 dollars. Until the end of April 2011 the price then rose steadily to 2,772 dollars before a decline set in, which has persisted until now. The high aluminium premiums, currently more than 200 dollars, are abating the price fall, but only slightly. However, the recent insolvency of an aluminium smelter in the Netherlands shows that the persistently low price level is making it harder to draw breath, and this not just in Europe with its comparatively high cost of energy. In the United States too, one primary metal producer had to declare insolvency in 2013. Most international aluminium groups have shut down unprofitable smelters or at least implemented production cuts. Other than in China, new smelters are only being built in the Gulf region. This reflects a long-term restructuring of the industry which will continue even if aluminium prices recover again. The creation of a broad industrial base supported by cheaper energy is the driving force in the Gulf, with a view to making the region less dependent on energy exports. However, new production capacities coming on stream in Abu Dhabi and Saudi Arabia in the course of this year, of more than a million tonnes of aluminium a year, are a limiting factor for the recovery of aluminium prices. And besides, the stricter LME warehouse regulations, which are intended to curtail long waiting times for the delivery of metals from next April, are more likely to drive prices down than up. That, of course, is good for traders and processors – but not for producers! i N H a lt editorial A l umi n i u mp re i s e – Ta l s o h l e i n Si ch t ? A l umi n i u m p ri c e s – i s t h e l ow-p o i n t i n s i gh t ? ................................... a Kt U e l l e S • N e W S i N B r i e F S t romi n t e n s i ve Bra n ch e n h a l t e n E EG -Au s gl e i ch s re ge l u n g fü r re ch t e n s ............................................... 6 18 Tr i m e t ü b e rn i mmt Al u mi n i u mwe rke i n Fra n k re i ch ............................... 6 DVS mi t n e u e m Ha u p t ge s ch ä ft s fü h re r .............................................. 6 B e u t h Po cke t : E u ro p ä i s ch e Al u mi n i u mwe rk st o ffe ............................... 6 O ma n Al u mi n i u m R o l l i n g o ffi c i a l l y o p e n e d i n So h a r ........................... 7 A mt e k In di a a c qu i re s K ü p p e r ......................................................... 7 M e ta l l u rgy Li t ma s h , Tu b e R u s s i a , Al u mi n i u m/ N o n -Fe rro u s vo m 3 . b i s 6 . Ju n i 2 014 i n Mo s k a u : R us s i s ch e r Ma rk t a t t ra k t i v fü r de u t s ch e Au s rü st e r .............................. 8 S M S me l de t n i e dri ge n Au ft ra gs e i n ga n g ............................................ 8 26 E uro p e a n a l u mi n i u m b e ve ra ge c a n re c yc l i n g o n re c o rd h i gh ................ 9 A l umi n i u m-Ve rp a ck u n gs re c yc l i n g i n De u t s ch l a n d we i t e r ve rbesser t ....... 9 A l c o a t o c l o s e Ma s s e n a E a st s me l t e r .............................................. 10 Wagst a ff ma n u fa c t u re s 1,0 0 0 th b i l l e t c a st i n g s yst e m .......................... 10 N ow re c yc l e d i n N o rway: Dri n k c a n s ge t a s h o rt e r t ri p t o t heir n e w l i fe • Ma’a de n -Al c o a re st a rt s p o t l i n e • Al de l fi l e s f o r b a n k ru p t c y ............................................................................ 10 WirtSCHaFt • eCoNoMiCS A l um i n i u mp re i s e ......................................................................... 12 46 Pro du k t i o n s da t e n de r de u t s ch e n Al u mi n i u mi n du st ri e ......................... 14 Hyd ro ‘s Ca p i t a l Ma rke t s Day 2 013 : Li ft i n g t h e b a r ............................ 16 Fo rd u n ve i l s 2 015 F-15 0 p i ck u p t ru ck • N ove l i s fu rt h e r e x p an di n g gl o b a l a u t o mo t i ve a l u mi n i u m c a p a c i t y • Al c o a c o mp l e t e s U SD3 0 0 m a u t o mo t i ve e x p a n s i o n i n Iowa • C o nst e l l i u m t o i n ve st €2 0 0 m i n E u ro p e a n a u t o mo t i ve c a p a city ...... 18/19 Emi ra t e s Gl o b a l Al u mi n i u m – Bu i l di n g a n e w gl o b a l p l aye r ............... 20 A rab a l 2 013 : Al u mi n i u m down st re a m o p e ra t i o n s – A cha l l e n ge fo r t h e Gu l f c o u n t ri e s ................................................ 22 52 Emi ra t e s E x t ru s i o n Fa c t o ry t o i n ve st i n n e w p ro du c t i o n l i n e .............. 2 alUMiNiUMHÜtteNiNdUStrie latest News a l U M i N i U M S M e lt i N G i N d U S t r Y www.alu-web.de TM S 2 014 e x p l o re s i n n ova t i o n i n t h e a l u mi n i u m i n du st ry .................. 24 Dub a l l ow e n e rgy a l u mi n i u m e l e c t ro l ys i s c e l l de s i gn a n d o peration .....26 4 ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 CoNteNtS Al st om : Modu l ar d e s i g n g i ve s f l e x i b l e g a s t re a t me n t ....................... 28 Al u m i n a f eed c o n t ro l e n h an c e me n t s . . . . . . . ........................................2 M a sch i nen f a br i k E i r i ch – A t e ch n o l o g y p i o n e e r i s 15 0 ye a rs yo u n g ......6 K öl l e m a n n : H i g h - t e mp e ra t ure p re h e a t e r s f or pi t ch w i t h h i g h e r m e l t i n g p o i n t . . . . . . . . ........................................8 F i ve s S ol i os i m p rove d an o d e b a ki n g a t A l ro s me l t e r ..........................8 N ewe st M H D -Val d i s c e l l st a b i l i t y st ud i e s . ........................................42 64 The B e rger t h i rd g e n e ra t i o n o f s p e c i a l s m e l t e r ve h i c l e s .....................44 R u sa l we l l on t h e way t o m e e t c ur re n t a nd fu t u re ch a l l e n ge s .............46 EC L con t i n u e s t o i n n ovat e an d t h i n ks ah e a d i n e n gi n e e ri n g ...............49 Al t ek : N ew dro s s p re s s d i re c t l y t e st e d aga i n st t h e i n e r t g as d ro s s c o o l e r . . . . . . . . . . ........................................52 M e t a l l i c f oa m re d uc e s e l e c t r i c a l c o n t ac t res i st a n c e ...........................56 t e CH N o lo G i e • t e CH N o lo GY Al u m i n i u m scrap p ro c e s s i n g f l i e s h i g h w i th b ri qu e t t i n g t e ch n o l o gy......60 68 Ce ra m i c wel di n g o f f ur n ac e re f ra c t o r i e s . . ........................................62 Fa t a H u n t e r : Bui l d i n g t h e f ut ure f o r al umi n i u m fl a t ro l l e d p ro du c t s .....64 St a C a st project – R ai s i n g t h e b a r f o r E U a l u mi n i u m c a st i n gs ..............67 Di e ca st er M RT e x p a n d s t o d o ub l e p ro d uc t i o n c a p a c i t y .....................68 Fou n dr y i nvest me n t s f ur t h e r i mp rove qual i t y c a st i n g s o l u t i o n s ............70 Speci a l coa t i n g i mp rove s s e r vi c e l i f e o f d i e s .................................... 71 a N W e N d U N G • a P P l i C at i o N Eu ropea n A l u m i n i um Co n g re s s 2 013 : S t i l l gre a t p ot e n t i a l f or a l umi n i um i n c ar ma n uf ac t uri n g ..................................72 C o M Pa N Y N e W S W o r l d W i d e Al u m i n i u m sme l t i n g i n d ust r y . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ....................................... 75 B a u x i t e a n d a l um i n a ac t i vi t i e s . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ........................................76 R ecycl i n g a n d s e c o n d a r y s me l t i n g . . . . . . . . . . ........................................77 Al u m i n i u m sem i s . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ........................................78 Su ppl i e r s . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ........................................79 O n t h e m ove .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ........................................80 d o C U M e N tat i o N Pa t en t e . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ........................................ 81 Vor scha u • P re vi e w . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ........................................98 Im pre ssu m • I mp r i n t . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ........................................98 inserenten dieser ausgabe list of advertisers Buss AG, Switzerland 41 Buss ChemTech AG, Switzerland 27 Dubai Aluminium, UAE 15 Emirates Aluminium, UAE 13 Fata Hunter SpA, Italy 100 35 Fives Solios, France Fizeta Srl, Italy 17 FLSmidth Hamburg GmbH, Germany 39 Gautschi Engineering GmbH, Switzerland 37 Glama Maschinenbau GmbH, Germany 29 Hertwich Engineering GmbH, Austria 2 H+H H errmann + Hieber GmbH, Germany 6, 61, 78 Innovatherm Prof. Dr. Leisenberg GmbH & Co. KG, Germany 25 Inotherm Industrieofen- und Wärmetechnik GmbH, Germany 34 Messe Düsseldorf GmbH, Germany 7 R&D Carbon Ltd, Switzerland 31 Riedhammer GmbH, Germany 33 TMS Minerals, Metals & Materials Society, USA Wagstaff Inc. USA 99 11 l i e F e r V e r Z e i C H N i S • S U P P l i e r S d i r e C t o r Y .............84 ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 5 Aktuelles stromintensive Branchen halten eeG-Ausgleichsregelung für rechtens Die Energieintensiven Industrien in Deutschland (EID) zeigen sich nach Eröffnung des EEG-Beihilfeverfahrens durch die EU-Kommission zuversichtlich, dass die „Besondere Ausgleichsregelung für stromintensive Unternehmen“ Bestand haben wird. EID-Sprecher Utz Tillmann sagte, die Entlastungen seien für Deutschland volkswirtschaftlich lebensnotwendig und stellten aus Sicht der Branchen juristisch keine Beihilfe dar. Tillmann, der auch Hauptgeschäftsführer des Verbandes der Chemischen Industrie ist, sagte: „Anders als die Kommission sehen wir in der Entlastung für sehr energieintensive Unternehmen beim EEG keine Wettbewerbsverzerrung. Die Regelung gleicht im Gegenteil nur die massiven Wettbewerbsnachteile aus, die eine volle EEG-Belastung nach sich ziehen würde. Wir sind uns mit der Bundesregierung einig, dass die Besondere Ausgleichsregelung weiter notwendig und angemessen ist und der beihilferechtlichen Prüfung Stand halten wird.“ Der Präsident der WirtschaftsVereinigung Metalle, Oliver Bell, erwartet von der EUKommission eine ergebnisoffene Beihilfeprü- fung, „die nicht nur formaljuristische, sondern auch wirtschaftspolitische Aspekte berücksichtigt“. Nationale oder europäische Sonderwege in der Energie- und Umweltpolitik lösten grundsätzlich den Bedarf nach Entlastungen für das produzierende Gewerbe aus, solange andere Marktteilnehmer den zusätzlichen Belastungen nicht unterliegen und ihre Produkte billiger anbieten können. trimet übernimmt Aluminiumwerke in Frankreich Die Trimet Aluminium SE hat von Rio Tinto Alcan zwei Aluminiumwerke in Frankreich übernommen. Trimet hatte im vergangenen Sommer ein verbindliches Angebot zur Übernahme und Fortführung der beiden Produktionsstätten in Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne und Castelsarrasin abgegeben. Im Dezember hat die EU-Kommission die Akquisition abschließend genehmigt. An der Trimet France SAS hält der französische Energieversorger EdF eine Minderheitsbeteiligung. Das Werk in Saint-Jean de Maurienne produziert Primäraluminium, das in Castelsarrasin zu hochwertigem Aluminiumdraht verarbeitet wird – einem Vorprodukt zur Herstellung von Stromleitungen in der Ener- Intralogistik-Lösungen neu im Internet unter www.herrmannhieber.de giewirtschaft und zu Verbindungselementen in der Automobilindustrie. Mit dem Einstieg in dieses Produktsegment erweitert Trimet sein Produktportfolio und führt den Wachstumskurs der vergangenen Jahre fort. Martin Iffert, Vorstandsvorsitzender der Trimet Aluminium, erklärte: „Bei der weiterverarbeitenden Industrie in Europa besteht ein großer Bedarf an Aluminiumdraht. Als Anbieter komplexer Legierungen und maßgeschneiderter Lösungen stärken wir mit dieser Produktgruppe auch langfristig unsere Kernkompetenz als Spezialitätenanbieter.“ DVs mit neuem Hauptgeschäftsführer Seit Anfang 2014 ist Roland Boecking (52) neuer Hauptgeschäftsführer des Deutschen Verbandes für Schweißen und verwandte Verfahren e. V. (DVS ). Beuth Pocket: europäische Aluminiumwerkstoffe Die Europäische Normung hat auch auf den Werkstoff Aluminium bezogen zu großen Veränderungen geführt. In relativ kurzer Zeit wurden die nationalen Normen durch europäische Normen ersetzt und die neuen europäischen Werkstoffbezeichnungen eingeführt. Hier hat die erste Auflage des Beuth Pocket „Europäische Aluminiumwerkstoffe“ wertvolle Dienste geleistet. Nachdem die DIN-EN-Umstellung weitgehend abgeschlossen ist und in den Normen vermehrt europäische Werkstoffe ersetzt, modifiziert oder gestrichen wurden, stehen neue Aspekte und Fragestellungen im Vordergrund. Die jetzt verfügbare zweite Auflage berücksichtigt daher auch neue Schwerpunkte: • Umschlüsselung früherer DIN-Werkstoffbezeichnungen zu heutigen DIN-EN-Werkstoff bezeichnungen • Ersatz bislang verwendeter DIN-Werkstoffe durch Werkstoffe nach DIN EN • Ermittlung, in welcher Norm ein Werkstoff einer bestimmten Bezeichnung beschrieben ist bzw. war • Aufklärung über die Aktualität eines speziellen Werkstoffs • Bedeutung einer zunächst nicht bekannten Werkstoffbezeichnung • Feststellung der Korrektheit einer Werkstoffbezeichnung • Erkundung von Normen für eine spezifische Anwendung. Dieses einfach anzuwendende Pocket ist sehr anwenderorientiert gestaltet, zum Beispiel bei den neuen Tabellen zur Halbzeugnormung. Neu hinzugekommen ist eine ausführliche Einführung in den Werkstoff Aluminium. Das Pocket ist zweisprachig deutsch-englisch aufgebaut und kann auch als E-Book beim Beuth Verlag bestellt werden. Beuth Pocket Hans-Werner Wenglorz, Europäische Aluminiumwerkstoffe / Vergleich EN mit DIN. 2. überarbeitete und erweiterte Auflage 2014. 336 S., Format 21 x 10,5 cm. Brosch. 32,00 Euro. ISBN 978-3-410-21368-0. ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 Oman Aluminium Rolling officially opened in sohar In mid-December the Oman Aluminium Rolling Company (OARC) was officially inaugurated at the company’s headquarters in Sohar Industrial Estate by Mohammed Hamad Al Rumhy, Oman’s Minister of Oil and Gas. The project is a milestone in the Omani industrial sector and will bring numerous benefits to the national economy. “We join the best 7 – 11 April 2014 Düsseldorf, Germany International Wire and Cable Trade Fair International Tube and Pipe Trade Fair © Fata Hunter Meeting point: wire 2014 and Tube 2014 in Düsseldorf! Cold rolling mill from Fata Hunter installed at OARC plant also aspire to become a world-leader in rolled aluminium production following our plans to export processed aluminium to different countries overseas,” said OARC chairman Hilal Al Kharusi. Full plant operations will be reached in the course of the first quarter. The project provides more than 300 direct jobs for the residents of Sohar, and contributes to a large number of downstream and investment opportunities to meet the ongoing needs of the plant. With a total cost of 148 million rials (USD385m), the OARC plant is one of the largest projects in the aluminium processing industry at the Sohar Industrial Area. The annual production capacity of the plant is 140,000 tonnes of aluminium sheet which is to be sold in the local markets and exported all over the world. The plant is located next to the Sohar Aluminium to which OARC signed a long-term contract in order to receive primary aluminium directly from the plant. OARC is owned by Takamul Investment Company and equipped with cutting-edge technology. A technical description of the plant is given on pp 64-67. join the best – welcome to the world’s leading trade fair for the tube, wire and cable industry! Those who wish to find comprehensive information about the latest innovations both in wire and tube manufacturing and processing need look no further. It can all be found here at the world’s most important exhibitions. A focal point of wire 2014: The growing importance of copper wires in automotive engineering, in telecommunication or electronics. Special focal point at Tube 2014: Plastic tubes. A special area is reserved for them, because the question of materials is becoming more and more important. An important fixed date in your calendar – your visit to wire 2014 and to Tube 2014 in Düsseldorf! Amtek India acquires küpper Amtek India Ltd, India’s largest iron casting company, has signed a contract to acquire the Küpper Group. Küpper is a long established supplier of machined castings to the automotive industry, with four manufacturing facilities in Germany and one in Hungary. The business comprises iron foundries, aluminium die casting, machining and assembly operations. The product portfolio includes turbo charger castings, turbo housings, transmission parts, suspension and steering parts. 2013 revenues are estimated to be around 200 million euros. Küpper is a market leader in turbo charger machined castings. It supplies components to a wide range of customers, primarily in the automotive sector. End markets include passenger cars as well as commercial vehicles. Top customers for Küpper include BMW, Daimler, Nissan, Renault and Volkswagen. ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 www.wire.de www.tube.de Messe Düsseldorf GmbH P.O. Box 10 10 06 _ 40001 Düsseldorf _ Germany _ Tel. + 49 (0)2 11/45 60-01 Fax + 49 (0)2 11/45 60-6 68 www.messe-duesseldorf.de Aktuelles Metallurgy Litmash, Tube Russia, Aluminium/Non-Ferrous vom 3. bis 6. Juni 2014 in Moskau Russischer Markt attraktiv für deutsche Ausrüster © Messe Düsseldorf Die 14. Metallurgy Litmash, Tube Russia, sischer und ausländischer Unternehmen in men eine ideale Plattform zur Präsentation Aluminium/Non-Ferrous 2014 knüpft an die die Modernisierung oder den Neubau von ihrer Produkte und Neuheiten. Mit dieser Entscheidung unterstützt das erfolgreiche Veranstaltung vom Juni 2013 Produktionslinien im Land wachsen stetig. BMWi weiterhin die Aktivitäten deutscher an. Vom 3. bis 6. Juni 2014 wird die Messe Gerade deutsche Hersteller sind als LiefeFirmen zur Sicherung und Erschließung von erneut auf dem Moskauer Messegelände Ex- ranten und Investoren gefragt. Für die MetalMarktanteilen im Ausland und erkennt gleichpocentre an den Start gehen. Das Messetrio lurgy Litmash, Tube Russia, Aluminium/Nonzeitig die Bedeutung der von der Messe Düsbestätigte einmal mehr seine Leitfunktion als Ferrous bedeutet das, dass auch die Nachfrage wichtigste Handels- und Kontaktseldorf veranstalteten Fachmessen plattform für die Metallurgie-, und im russischen Markt an. Somit werden auch 2014 deutsche UnterRohrbranche in Russland und den nehmen im Rahmen von Gemeinangrenzenden Staaten. Im verschaftspräsentationen zu attrakgangenen Jahr kamen insgesamt tiven Konditionen an der Messe 330 Aussteller und 10.850 Besuteilnehmen können, um in einem cher aus 51 Ländern nach Moskau, der wichtigsten Wachstumsmärkte davon waren 95 Prozent Fachbesupräsent zu sein und Geschäftskoncher und mehr als zwei Drittel aus takte aufbauen zu können. dem oberen und mittleren ManageDie Metallurgy Litmash, Tube ment. Der Anteil der GießereitechRussia und Aluminium/Non-Fernik-Besucher stieg im Vergleich zum rous 2014 wird unter anderem unVorjahr deutlich. terstützt vom Verband Deutscher Die Messe macht deutlich, dass Maschinen- und Anlagenbau, von Russland und die benachbarten der European Metallurgical EquipNationen zu den wachstumsstarken Im Jahr 2013 kamen 330 Aussteller und 10.850 Besucher nach Moskau ment Association, von der European Regionen der Welt gehören. Der Committee of Industrial Furnace and Heating russische Markt für Maschinen und Anlagen nach qualitativen Angeboten internationaler Equipment Associations und von Cemafon, ist lukrativ: Es wird prognostiziert, dass sich Hersteller wächst. die Nachfrage nach Maschinen zur MetallbeDas Bundesministerium für Wirtschaft und der European Foundry Equipment Suppliers arbeitung in Russland bis 2016 verdreifachen Technologie (BMWi) beteiligt sich auch 2014 Association. Weitere Informationen finden sich unter und ein Volumen von 2,5 Mrd. Euro im Jahr offiziell wieder an den Moskauer Veranstalerreichen wird. Die Investitionstätigkeit rus- tungen und gibt damit deutschen Unterneh- www.metallurgy-tube-russia.com Der Anlagenbauer SMS group vermeldet für das Geschäftsjahr 2013 einen Auftragseingang unterhalb der Erwartungen. Das Vorsteuerergebnis wird unter dem des Vorjahres liegen, und zwar „deutlich“. Der Sprecher der SMS Holding, Joachim Schönbeck, begründet diese Entwicklung mit einer zurückhaltenden Investitionstätigkeit potenzieller Kunden aufgrund geringerer Kapazitätsauslastung und anhaltend hoher Rohstoffpreise. Wie SMS weiter mitteilte, wird daran gearbeitet, die Herstellkosten durch fertigungsoptimierte Konstruktionen und eine höhere Effizienz im Engineering sowie in der Fertigung und Logistik weiter zu senken. Die Qualitätsfertigung der anspruchsvollsten Maschinen- und Anlagenkomponenten soll jedoch weiterhin in Deutschland erfolgen. Dazu wurde in den letzten Jahren erheblich in die Mo- dernisierung der Betriebe in Hilchenbach und Mönchengladbach investiert. Parallel dazu sind jedoch auch die Werkstattkapazitäten in China ausgeweitet worden. Hier geht es vor allem um einen besseren Kundenservice vor Ort und den Bau von Maschinen, die speziell für den chinesischen Markt konstruiert sind. Gleiches gilt für den indischen Markt, wo zurzeit eine weitere Werkstatt errichtet wird, die dieses Jahr in Betrieb genommen werden soll. Eine steigende Nachfrage, auch im chinesischen Markt, sieht SMS bei umwelttechnischen Lösungen. Dies gelte auch für kleine Modernisierungsvorhaben mit kurzen Amortisationszeiten. einen Auftrag vermelden, der die Lieferung eines hoch modernen X-Roll-Kaltwalzwerks für das Alcoa-Werk bei Knoxville, Tennessee, betrifft. Mit der neuen Anlage soll der stark wachsende Bedarf an Aluminiumblechen auf dem Automobilmarkt bedient werden. Der Auftrag schließt die Lieferung der Elektrik und Automation sowie eines Multi-Plate-Filters für die Walzölreinigung und eines AirwashSystems zur Abluftreinigung ein. © SMS Siemag sMs meldet niedrigen Auftragseingang Alcoa bestellt kaltwalzwerk Die Walzwerksparte von SMS konnte jüngst im Dezember Kaltwalzwerk von SMS Siemag ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 News IN BRIeF european aluminium beverage can recycling on record high © EAA European aluminium beverage can recycling rates in 2011 The overall recycling rate for used aluminium beverage cans in the EU 27 and EFTA countries increased by 2.4 percentage points to a new record level of 68% in 2011. If the collection of cans in the remaining European countries and Turkey is included, this means that more than 25 billion cans are recycled in Europe annually. This represents a total amount of 365,000 tonnes of recycled aluminium, avoiding three million tonnes of greenhouse gas emissions. The European Aluminium Association (EAA) is confident that the aluminium beverage can recycling rate will further increase towards the voluntary targets set by the industry for 2015 (75%) and 2020 (80%). However, in order to achieve these ambitious levels, it is important for the full value chain involved in the recycling of cans to continue to invest in existing and additional collection and sorting facilities. Extended producer responsibility schemes should recognise the scrap value of well-sorted aluminium packaging fractions and, together with the local authorities responsible for the collection of various packaging (and household) waste streams, should use modern sorting technologies such as advanced eddy current separators. Equally important is the role of the consumers, who are willing to sort a ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 limited number of packaging items provided that the various national collection and sorting systems in place are accessible and easy to use. Aluminium-Verpackungsrecycling in Deutschland weiter verbessert Das Recycling von Aluminiumverpackungen in Deutschland hat auf hohem Niveau weiter zugelegt und 2012 einen neuen Höchstwert erreicht. Von den im Markt eingesetzten 93.800 Tonnen Aluverpackungen wurden 83.500 Tonnen stofflich verwertet. Dies entspricht einer Recyclingrate von 89 Prozent, wie die Gesellschaft für Verpackungsmarktforschung (GVM) in einer aktuellen Studie ermittelt hat. „Die hohen Recyclingraten belegen, dass wir in Deutschland über ein hervorragend funktionierendes Verpackungsrecycling verfügen. Die gelbe Tonne ist etabliert und erfolgreich. Moderne Trenntechnologie wie effiziente Wirbelstromabscheider werden flächendeckend eingesetzt. Es bietet sich an, dieses System als sogenannte Wertstofftonne auch für andere gebrauchte Produkte aus Metall zu öffnen“, kommentiert Hans-Jürgen Schmidt, Geschäftsführer der Deutsche Aluminium Verpackung Recycling Consistent sorting instructions are instrumental in obtaining less polluted fractions, which can be subsequently easily recycled. Awareness programmes such as the ‘Every Can Counts’ campaign originally developed by the aluminium industry in conjunction with the can-makers in the UK, but now implemented in seven other countries, are helpful when it comes to focusing in particular on the need to also collect and recycle the ‘out-ofhome’ cans consumed at the workplace and at festivals and sport events. In view of the upcoming revision of the EU Packaging and Packaging Waste Directive, the EAA stresses the need for more ambitious household packaging recycling goals, including the gradual phasing-out of landfill of all recyclables such as aluminium (and other metal) packaging. Additional recovery of metals from the bottom ashes of waste incinerators are a useful but ‘second best’ option. Preference should be given to separate collection of the metal packaging fraction. EAA urges the authorities to improve the transparency of national and European packaging recovery data, and recommends that actual recycling be reported (instead of collection for recycling). GmbH (DAVR) mit Sitz in Grevenbroich, die Verwertungszahlen. Die GVM ermittelt jährlich das Aufkommen und die Verwertung von Verpackungsabfällen in Deutschland – auch im Auftrag des Umweltbundesamtes. Die Verwertungsmengen der verschiedenen dualen Systeme sowie die Rückführung gebrauchter Verpackungen über sonstige Organisationen und Erfassungswege werden berücksichtigt. Basierend auf den erreichten Verwertungsraten betragen die jährlichen Einsparungen von Treibhausgasen nach Berechnungen der DAVR mehr als 390.000 Tonnen CO2-Äquivalente. Aufwendungen für Sammlung, Aufbereitung und Recycling sowie auftretende Materialverluste wurden berücksichtigt. Das entspricht dem gesamten Treibstoffverbrauch von über 13.000 in 2013 neu zugelassenen Autos auf Deutschlands Straßen über deren komplette Lebensdauer alleine aus dem Recycling von gebrauchten Aluminiumverpackungen. Basis der Berechnungen sind Verbrauchsdaten des Kraftfahrbundesamtes sowie die 2013 aktualisierten Ökobilanzdaten für Aluminium. News IN BRIeF Recycling of used Norwegian drink cans will soon be even more environmentally friendly. The recycling process is moving from France to Hydro in Holmestrand. Norwegians are exemplary in returning cans for recycling, and close to half a billion beer and soda cans were collected and recycled in 2013. Now the collection company Norsk Resirk has entered into an agreement with Hydro to recycle the cans at Hydro’s recycling plant in Holmestrand instead of by a company in France. The agreement means a much shorter and more environmentally friendly transport distance for more than 6,200 tpy of aluminium. Hydro recycles 60,000 tpy of aluminium in Holmestrand. This metal has previously been used in everything from car parts to printing plates in newspaper production. Now drink cans will be added to the mix. Resirk and Hydro will work together to further increase the recovery of aluminium and find the most environmentally friendly transport solutions. Ma’aden-Alcoa restarts potline Saudi Arabian Mining Company (Ma’aden) restarted one of the two potlines at its new aluminium smelter in Saudi Arabia at the end of 2013. The USD10.8 billion aluminium smelter at Ras al-Khair, a joint venture between Ma’aden Alcoa, halted one of its potlines in mid-October after a period of pot instability. The meanwhile restarted potline is expected to reach full production during the second quarter of 2014. The two lines have a combined production capacity of 740,000 tonnes a year. Aldel files for bankruptcy Aluminium Delfzijl BV (Adel) filed for bankruptcy in December. The smelter has been struggling with high electricity rates and low aluminium prices. Aldel is a primary aluminium smelter in The Netherlands employing 300 people and another 300 contractor employees. The production capacitiy amounts to 170,000 tonnes a year of which 50,000 tonnes are produced by remelting and recycling. 10 Alcoa to close Massena east smelter Alcoa will permanently close the remaining two potlines at its Massena East smelter in New York by March this year. The potlines are no longer competitive, says the company. One of three potlines at the facility was permanently closed in August last year. The closure will reduce Alcoa’s smelting capacity by 84,000 tpy. The Massena West facility will continue to operate. Alcoa’s review of its primary metals operations is consistent with the company’s 2016 goal of lowering its position on the world aluminium production cost curve to the 38th percentile, and the alumina cost curve to the 21st percentile. In 2013, the company met its goal of lowering its cost position in both aluminium smelting and alumina refining, having reached the 43rd percentile on the global aluminium cost curve, and 27th percentile on the global alumina cost curve. These shifts represent an 8 point movement and 3 point movement, respectively, since 2010. Including the two potlines at Massena East, Alcoa has announced closures or curtailments representing 361,000 tpy of the 460,000 tpy placed under review in May of 2013. Once the Massena East potline closure is complete, Alcoa will have total smelting operating capacity of 3,950,000 tpy, with some 655,000 tpy of capacity idle. Total restructuring-related charges for the first quarter of 2014 associated with the above closure are expected to be between USD6070m after-tax, of which 40% is non-cash. wagstaff manufactures 1,000th billet casting system In spring 2014, Wagstaff Inc. of Spokane, facilities equals about 160,000 tonnes a year. WA, will commission its 1,000th billet casting Ecology, safety, and employee satisfaction are system. The system will be delivered to the topics that carry significant weight with Quido Steinacher Group from Austria – the largest Nachbaur and his team. “We do want to furprivately owned aluminium remelt producer ther establish our reputation as a clean industrial company and continue to distinguish ourin Europe. The multi-strand casting system, equipped selves as an exemplary employer,” he says. Wagstaff has supplied billet casting systems with Wagstaff’s AirSlip billet casting technolto producers in 51 countries since that first ogy, will operate at the ‘Speedline’ facility in cast on Serial 1 in 1980. Since then, new techSchlins, Austria. This remelt casthouse was nologies have been developed to cast billets erected in 2008 as a green site facility folfaster, safer and more efficiently while streamlowing strict environmental protection and lining processes with the AutoCast product energy-saving guidelines. Speedline installed line. Casting stations have been installed to Wagstaff’s ShurCast and AutoCast systems produce between 2and 160-strands, ranging at that time, along with multiple Wagstaff billet in diameter from 60 to more than 600 mm, casting systems. “With the most recent expansion step and in cooperation with Wagstaff, the latter using the newest Wagstaff ARC billet we will maintain our technological edge,” casting technology. Wagstaff is a 67-year-old manufacturing says Speedline managing company that provides customised, director Quido advanced aluminium diNachbaur. rect-chill (DC) The solidiSpeedline ficaaluminium tion foundry is techconsidered nology to Europe’s most Airslip billet mould table rolling ingot modern remeltwith AutoFlo controll system ing facility. Since and extrusion billet its opening five years ago, it has continued to producers worldwide. The company offers invest in increased energy efficiency – while casting machines, mould systems, process significantly increasing productivity. In addi- automation, rolling ingot and extrusion biltion to the Speedline output, the Steinacher let tooling, auxiliary equipment, and onsite Group owns AGN (Aluminium Gießerei technical service support to all sizes of DC Nachrodt), a VDC casting facility in Nachrodt, aluminium casting operations in 58 countries Germany. Total billet production of the two around the world. taff ags ©W Now recycled in Norway: Drink cans get a shorter trip to their new life ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 Al Casting Confidence Built on innovation and refined through experience, Wagstaff billet and ingot casting technologies are a gateway to profitability. Casthouses around the world rely on the history, experience, and service offered by Wagstaff to foster confidence within the casting operation. That confidence is valuable and necessary to produce product high quality cast products for rolling, extrusion, and forging. The Leader in Direct Chill Casting Technology › Casting Machines › Automation › Rolling Ingot Casting Systems › Metal Level Control › Billet Casting Systems › Worldwide Service and Support To find out how your operation can increase casting confidence Call +1 509 922 1404 | www.wagstaff.com wIRtscHAFt Aluminium im Monatsrückblick Ein Service der TRIMET Aluminium SE Anfang Dezember des vergangenen Jahres fiel die LME-3M-Notierung für High Grade Aluminium auf das niedrigste Niveau seit Juli 2009. Am 3. Dezember rutschte der 3M-Preis bis auf $1.740/t ab. Über das gesamte Kalenderjahr gesehen, gab der 3M-Peis um $400/t nach. Zuletzt wurde der Preis vor allem von Verkäufen seitens der Fonds gedrückt, da diese ein Zurückfahren der lockeren Geldpolitik in den USA als nachteilig für die Rohstoffnachfrage sehen. Damit folgt die LME-Notierung einem gänzlich gegensätzlichen Trend zur physischen Prämie. Diese konnte entgegen der Erwartungen wieder anziehen. Trotz der Entscheidung der LME, die Lagerhausregeln im 2. Quartal 2014 zu ändern, scheint die Attraktivität der Bestandsfinanzierung ungebrochen, was die Verfügbarkeit im Markt einschränkt und das Prämienniveau anhebt. Auf- bzw. Abschlag für 3-Monatstermin Letzten 6 Durchschnittswerte LME Dezember November Oktober September August Juli 2013 2013 2013 2013 2013 2013 33,44 Euro 34,06 Euro 34,56 Euro 35,54 Euro 36,34 Euro 33,88 Euro 50 0 –50 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 Aluminium High Grade, Kasse Letzten 6 Durchschnittswerte LME Dezember November Oktober September August Juli 2013 2013 2013 2013 2013 2013 1.268,18 Euro 1.296,56 Euro 1.328,78 Euro 1.318,33 Euro 1.363,21 Euro 1.351,17 Euro 2.500 2.000 1.500 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 1.000 Aluminium Lagerbestände Letzten 6 Monatsendwerte LME Dezember November Oktober September August Juni 2013 2013 2013 2013 2013 2013 5.458.075 t. 5.470.425 t. 5.375.725 t. 5.381.000 t. 5.400.350 t. 5.435.600 t. 6.000 5.000 4.000 3.000 2.000 1.000 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 0 Alle Angaben auf dieser Seite sind unverbindlich. Quelle: TRIMET Aluminium SE – aktuelle LME-Werte unter www.trimet.de oder per TRIMET App auf das iPhone. 12 ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 wIRtscHAFt Produktionsdaten der deutschen Aluminiumindustrie Primäraluminium Sekundäraluminium Walzprodukte > 0,2 mm Press- & Ziehprodukte** Produktion (in 1.000 t) +/in % * Produktion (in 1.000 t) +/in % * Produktion (in 1.000 t) +/in % * Produktion (in 1.000 t) +/in % * Nov 34,2 -2,9 53,4 -6,4 152,9 0,1 42,5 -20,1 Dez 35,1 -2,1 43,4 -7,0 117,2 7,4 23,3 -22,8 Jan 13 35,4 0,3 52,2 -3,5 159,3 9,5 42,8 -7,6 Feb 33,8 4,4 52,6 -5,3 158,9 6,5 44,3 -7,2 Mär 39,9 17,0 54,4 -5,0 163,1 -1,7 45,5 -9,8 Apr 40,3 20,2 53,9 1,0 173,1 17,6 48,7 8,2 Mai 42,3 23,1 51,5 -5,1 163,2 1,5 45,3 -7,4 Juni 41,7 26,2 51,1 -6,3 162,9 1,2 48,4 -1,4 Juli 43,3 24,4 52,0 -7,1 164,4 -1,2 48,3 2,9 Aug 43,1 23,4 45,4 -3,8 159,8 -0,9 46,3 3,2 Sep 41,9 24,7 49,9 -5,1 161,4 -1,9 47,2 5,8 Okt 43,5 23,8 48,0 -10,0 171,8 5,7 49,5 7,3 Nov 42,9 25,6 46,2 -13,4 165,6 8,3 45,4 6,9 * gegenüber dem Vorjahresmonat, ** Stangen, Profile, Rohre; Mitteilung des Gesamtverbandes der Aluminiumindustrie (GDA), Düsseldorf Primäraluminium walzprodukte > 0,2 mm 14 sekundäraluminium Press- und Ziehprodukte ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 Economics Hydro’s Capital Markets Day in early December was focused on the improvement measures being implemented throughout the company’s value chain from bauxite to rolled products. Primary Metal has established a new programme for its joint-venture smelters and is concluding its USD300/t programme, while Bauxite and Alumina has reconfirmed the overall 2015 improvement targets for its ‘From B to A’ programme which is aimed at delivering NOK1 billion. “We are already seeing our efforts and actions paying off, lifting the average production for the first two months of the fourth quarter at Alunorte to an annualised level of 5.6 million tonnes,” said Hydro president and chief executive Svein Richard Brandtzæg. The Primary Metal division has now delivered the USD300/t improvement programme, thus strengthening the competitive position and the viability of Hydro’s fully owned Norwegian smelters. Hydro has also established a programme for its joint-venture smelters, targeting average improvements equivalent to USD180/t to be delivered by the end of 2016. Rolled Products is continuing its drive to become a global leader within innovation. The market for rolled products is gaining momentum from substitution, where the penetration in automotive is generating solid demand growth. Energy has successfully delivered several growth projects which improved operational performance, and increased precipitation has lifted normal production in Energy from 9.5 16 © Hydro Hydro‘s capital markets Day 2013: Lifting the bar Casthouse products at Hydro, based on 2012 production and Hydro’s equity share to 10.0 TWh a year. Energy continues to support the other business areas in sourcing of energy, as in the process leading up to the signing earlier this year of a new power contract for the joint-venture smelter Slovalco. “In a cyclical business such as aluminium, it is highly important to maintain a financial robustness to meet the low point of the cycle from a position of strength and flexibility. The current price level for many of our products remains challenging, and does not generate sustainable returns. “The aluminium price is weighing on both Bauxite and Alumina and Primary Metal, although strong premiums offset some of the effect in Primary, showing how important our ability to maintain a solid financial position has been over the last years,” said Mr Brandtzæg. He estimates world aluminium demand outside China to grow 2% in 2013 and 2-4% in 2014. Aluminium fundamentals remain promising due to the metal’s many positive qualities, including its light weight and recyclability, and the global aluminium market is expected to show solid long-term growth of 4-6% annually over the next ten years. While energy-intensive to produce the first time, aluminium’s strong user-phase qualities and ability to be infinitely recycled without any quality degradation makes aluminium the material of choice for a wide range of products and applications from a climate perspective. Hydro aims to become climate neutral from a life-cycle perspective by 2020, based on production-phase energy-efficiency improvements, user-phase benefits and increased recycling capacity to bring more metal back to the loop. Hydro’s European production in 2013 (ex. wire rod and smelter production at Neuss) was: extrusion ingot – 338,000 tonnes (remelt) and 525,000 tonnes (primary); foundry alloys – 242,000 tonnes; sheet ingot – 320,000 tonnes. ■ ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 Economics Ford unveils 2015 F-150 truck Doug Scott, Truck Group marketing manager, says the 2015 Ford F-150 has raised the bar with toughness, smartness and capability. And what’s more: the new F-150 is equipped with an all-new highstrength aluminium alloy body. “The backbone of the truck, the frame is still high-strength steel, but the entire tophead, if you will, the front-end, the cab, box, the doors, everything again from a body perspective, all the supporting structure is military-grade, high-strength aluminium alloy,” he stresses. These special aluminium alloys, already used in aerospace, commercial transportation and other industries, make the new truck’s body lighter, stronger and more resistant to dents. By utilising these new structural materials the truck will weigh 700 lbs (318 kg) less, thereby improving handling and efficiency. By taking 700 lbs out of the vehicle, that weight can be reinvested in more payload, helping the truck tow and haul more, accelerate and stop faster, and operate more effi- © Ford Long awaited, now unveiled: at the Detroit Motor Show, Ford Motor Co. has officially introduced its all-new F-150, the reinvention of America’s favourite pickup truck. The all-new Ford F-150 pickup truck ciently. A choice of four engines provides unmatched power, including an all-new 2.7-litre EcoBoost engine with standard Auto Start/ Stop technology. The 2015 Ford F-150 will go on sale in the fourth-quarter of this year. The F-150 is the best-selling Ford model (763,000 units in 2013) and has been the best-selling vehicle in the US for decades. The monthly production of this model exceeds the yearly sales of US cars with an aluminium body. Aluminium will become “the material of choice” at Ford, CEO Alan Mulally said at the Detroit Show. “Over time, you’ll see more and more aluminium across our product line.” The US market for aluminium sheet, which stood at less than 100.000 tonnes in 2012, is expected to hit 450.000 tonnes this year, and then to double from there by 2020, according to industry analysts. This conceivable development is driven by the need for reducing fuel consumption. US government standards mandate that carmakers must increase corporate average fuel economy to 54.5 miles per gallon (4.3 l/100 km) by 2025, up from 35.5 mpg (6.6 l/100 km) by 2016. See also our EAC Congress report (pp 7274) on Automotive Aluminium Application. novelis further expanding global automotive aluminium capacity The two new lines will each have a capacity of 120,000 tpy. The latest expansions are in response to the rising global demand from carmakers for aluminium sheet, which the company expects to grow by more than 30% a year through the end of the decade. When the new lines are commissioned in late 2015, Novelis’ global automotive sheet capacity will reach 900,000 tpy, a three-fold increase from just a year ago. With the addition of these two new lines, the company has invested nearly 18 USD550 million to expand its global automotive capacity in the last two years alone. Novelis is investing around the world to boost its automotive finishing capabilities. In addition to the two new lines announced now, two new finishing lines were recently commis- © Novelis Novelis has recently announced it will invest an additional USD205 million to further expand its global manufacturing operations serving the rapidly growing automotive market. The company will build new finishing lines at its plants in Oswego, New York, and Nachterstedt, Germany, dedicated to the production of aluminium automotive sheet. Coil storage at the Novelis plant in Oswego ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 Economics sioned at the Oswego plant in New York. A new plant is under construction in Changzhou, China, which is expected to start production in mid-2014. Further, the company certified automotive production at its Göttingen plant in Germany that complements the existing automotive facilities in Kingston, Ontario, in Sierre, Switzerland, and Nachterstedt, Germany. Both expansions will further the ongoing development of the company’s closed-loop business model. Today, as much as 50% of automotive sheet sold to carmakers is left over after a manufacturing plant stamps out automotive parts. Novelis is working with its customers to return this material for recycling. Investments at a glance: The company will invest USD120 million to install a third aluminium automotive sheet finishing line at its Oswego plant. In addition, the Novelis will expand its recycling operations for automotive scrap, while also making other system and facility upgrades. This new investment will increase the company’s North American automotive sheet capacity to more than 400,000 tonnes in just two years. When complete, the Oswego facility will devote 80% of its total capacity to serving the automotive market. Novelis will invest USD85 million to install a new automotive sheet finishing line at Nachterstedt. This expansion will increase the aluminium automotive sheet capacity in Europe to almost 350,000 tonnes. The expansion will also enhance the developing closedloop model between the recycling operations in Latchford, UK, and what will be the world’s largest aluminium recycling centre, a USD250 million project at Nachterstedt expected to be ready in late 2014. ■ Alcoa has completed a USD300 million expansion at its Davenport plant in Iowa dedicated to supplying aluminium sheet to the automotive industry. Alcoa made the announcement as the Detroit Auto Show which displayed a number of vehicles featuring large increases in aluminium content. According to automakers, demand for aluminium to produce vehicles – already the second-most-used material used to make cars today – is expected to nearly double by 2025. “2014 marks the beginning of dramatic growth for aluminium in the auto sector,” commented Alcoa chairman and chief executive, Klaus Kleinfeld. “Automakers are increasingly choosing aluminium as a cost-effective way to improve the performance, safety, durability and fuel efficiency of their vehicles. Our project in Iowa is the first of three capacity expansions we have underway to meet this growing demand.” In addition to its expansion in Iowa – for which long-term supply agreements have been secured – Alcoa is adding automotive capacity at the Tennessee plant, which is scheduled to be complete in mid-2015, and at its joint venture rolling mill in Saudi Arabia, to be complete by the end of this year. © Alcoa Alcoa completes UsD300m automotive expansion in iowa Automotive sheet production at the Alcoa Davenport plant Alcoa is investing about USD670 million in the three expansions. Alcoa innovations are enabling the increased use of aluminium in the automotive sector. The company’s pre-treatment bonding technology, known as Alcoa 951, enables more durable bonding of aluminium components in vehicles, can reduce spot weld points and results in lower manufacturing costs. Alcoa has licensed the Alcoa 951 technology at the request of car manufacturers to make it available across the industry. ■ constellium to invest €200m in European automotive capacity Constellium plans to invest up to €200 million over the next three years to further grow its Body-in-White (BiW) business in Europe. In a first step the company will increase the production capacity at Neuf-Brisach, France, and start BiW production at Singen, Germany, by revamping its continuous annealing line. By 2016, Constellium expects to add up to 40,000 tpy to its current capacity with the first BiW ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 coils produced in Singen as early as mid-2014. In a second step a new continuous annealing and conversion line is planned in Europe with a capacity of 100,000 tpy. Commissioning is scheduled for the second half of 2016. Already today Constellium offers a portfolio of aluminium rolled products to the automotive industry, to meet customers’ requirements in terms of surface quality, strength, crash and formability for BiW applications like hoods, doors, roofs and structural parts of cars. “Constellium expects to benefit from strong market growth as the integration of aluminium components continues to expand not only in premium vehicles but in the highvolume car segment,” commented Laurent Musy, president of the Automotive Rolled Products business unit. ■ 19 tEcHnoLogiE Panorama view of the Emal smelter Emirates global Aluminium – Building a new global player The status of the Middle East aluminium industry – already a rapidly growing hub in the global sector – is set to be unequivocally strengthened through the advent in early 2014 of a new major player. The latest addition to the leaders’ pack is Emirates Global Aluminium (EGA) – a jointly held, equal-ownership company whose formation was announced mid2013 by shareholders Mubadala Development Company of Abu Dhabi and the Investment Corporation of Dubai; and into which Dubai Aluminium Dubal) and Emirates Aluminium Emal) have been integrated as operating subsidiaries. class reduction cell technologies developed in-house at Dubal and deployed at Emal. The latter attributes underscore EGA’s ongoing commitment to the legacy of sustainability already entrenched at Dubal and Emal – specifically a determination to protect the environment, invest in the wellbeing and development of employees, contribute meaningfully to the community and deliver a lasting contribution Several facts underscore EGA’s leadership assertions. For starters, the combined annual production of Dubal and Emal (2013 sales: 1.865m tonnes) accounts for 50% of the total primary aluminium production within the Gulf Cooperation Council region, making EGA the largest primary aluminium producer in the Middle East. Second, EGA’s production capacity set to reach 2.4 million tpy by mid2014, such that the company is destined to become the fifth largest aluminium producer in the world. Moreover, the United Arab Emirates (UAE) will be the world’s fourth largest primary aluminium producing country. Then there is the proven Dubal-Emal track record for exceptional and even benchmark performances in environment, health and safety matters; not to mention the premium purity, high quality products produced by both smelter complexes and the advanced best-in- to the UAE and global economies. Indeed, both Dubal and Emal are renowned for maximising the health and safety of people and the surrounding community, reducing operational environmental impact and investing in social and economic development. With its first metal having been tapped in 1979, Dubal celebrates its 35th anniversary in 2014. Currently ranked as one of the world’s largest single-site aluminium smelters, the Dubal complex in Jebel Ali, Dubai, comprises a 1 million tpy smelter, a 2,350 MW power station (at 30 °C), a large carbon plant, extensive casting operations (more than 1.2m tpy), a water desalination plant, dock and other facilities. A quality-focused, customer-centred and innovation-drive organisation, Dubal holds ISO 9001, ISO 14001, ISO/TS 16949, ISO/IEC 20000-1, ISO/IEC 27001, ISO 29990, ISO 50001 and OHSAS 18001 certification. 20 Dubal also has investments in bauxite/alumina development projects in Brazil and Cameroon; and in a calciner plant in China. A relatively new smelter development, Emal is designed to become one of the world’s largest single-site aluminium smelters. The Emal complex at Al Taweelah, Abu Dhabi, has been built in two phases. Phase I, which was fully commissioned by the end of 2010, is the world’s largest greenfield smelter development and currently has a smelter capacity of 800,000 tpy. Commissioning of Phase II, which comprises the world’s longest single potline (1.7 km long) and has a design capacity of 520,000 tpy, began mid-September 2013. Full ramp-up is scheduled for completion by end-2014. Once fully operational, Emal will have an annual hot metal production capacity of 1.3 million tpy. Emal holds ISO 9001 accreditation and Nebosh certification in Occupational Health and Safety. The combined Dubal-Emal portfolio comprises high quality aluminium products made in four main forms: foundry alloy (automotive applications), billet (construction, industrial, transportation and automotive forging), high purity aluminium (electronics and aerospace), and sheet ingot (packaging, lithographic sheets and the automotive industry). Busbars and anode bars are also made for the electrolytic process used to produce primary aluminium from alumina. Over 350 customers are served in at least 64 countries, predominantly in Asia, Europe, Mena region and the Americas. Dubal’s in-house developed, proprietary reduction cell technologies, DX technology ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 tEcHnoLogy © Emal © Dubal and DX+ technology (operating at 385 kA and 450 kA respectively), currently rank among the best reduction technologies available. DX technology has already been installed at industrial scale at Dubal (40 cells) and Emal Phase I (756 cells) while DX+ has been installed at Emal Phase II (444 cells). DX+ technology has also been selected by Aluminium Bahrain (Alba) for its Line 6 Bankable Feasibility study. While the formation of EGA is undeniably a major development for the global aluminium industry, it also marks a historic mile- stone in the UAE. This is the first time in the country’s 42-year history that two Emirati government entities from two different emirates have come together to build an Emirati company. It is a development that not only builds on the solid foundations laid by Dubal and Emal, but also reflects the UAE’s longterm industrial strategy which aims to diversify its economy away from dependence on its oil-rich reserves while stimulating job creation. EGA currently provides direct employment to approximately 7,200 people, with the creation of a further 2,000 direct employ- ment opportunities projected by 2020. The UAE-based EGA also owns Guinea Alumina Corporation (GAC), a project to develop an alumina refinery and associated bauxite mine. Established in 2007, GAC was formerly jointly-owned by Mubadala Development Company and Dubal. In addition, EGA owns a stake in Cameroon Alumina Limited, a joint-venture project established in 2008 to develop a bauxite mine and alumina refinery, and has plans for significant local growth and international expansion. ■ Aerial view of the Dubal site ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 21 Economics Arab International Aluminium Conference – Arabal 2013 Aluminium downstream operations – a challenge for the gulf countries B. Rieth, meerbusch In the opening addresses to the conference it was stressed that in the long term the oil and gas producing countries cannot continue only exporting their abundant energy resources in the form of primary aluminium. Rather, the common aim is to extend the entire value chain beyond aluminium production and into processing, in order to free the economies of those countries from dependence upon the abundantly available, but ultimately finite sources of oil and gas. Whereas in earlier Arabal conferences new extension plans for aluminium smelters were always being announced, today the GCC States can look back proudly on what has been achieved: in 2013 six smelters produced at least four million tonnes of primary aluminium, corresponding to approx. 7% of world production. By the middle of 2014 a further one million tonnes will be coming on stream due to the commissioning of Emal’s third potline – three months ahead of the original deadline – and the final commissioning of the Ma’aden 740,000-tonne smelter. Further expansion plans, although not yet 22 confirmed, exist at Alba in Bahrain and at Qatalum. At Alba the further extension depends on the result of a feasibility study, which should become available in 2014. As regards any extension at Qatalum, however, the investors currently consider that at present the overall economic prerequisites are not in place. At any rate, in the Gulf it is assumed that with a compound average growth rate of the primary aluminium production of about 6%, the region will achieve a proportion of 10-13% of world production by 2020. Apart from China, the Gulf States see themselves as the only growth region for primary aluminium. In the Gulf a threat to growth is regarded as the further development of the price of aluminium, which could also be influenced ple, mention was made of extrusion billets and extruded profiles, the consequence of surplus capacities in China. Extruded products, above all for the building sector, and aluminium cables will still account for the largest proportion of locally produced downstream production. When from 2015 onwards the rolling mills of Ma’aden-Alcoa, besides already existing plants in Bahrain and Oman, are producing at full capacity, aluminium flat-rolled products as well will be strongly represented in the Gulf region. The discussions concluded that there was no more room in the region for yet another large flat-rolling mill. Within the GCC countries the United Arab Emirates regard themselves as the pioneer of aluminium production. This claim is supported by the fact that Dubai Aluminium (Dubal) is one of the oldest aluminium producers in the Gulf. With its DX and DX+ technology developed over 20 years Dubal has developed processes of its own which are highly costefficient and are even being offered to other smelters. With the merger of the two smelters Dubal and Emal planned for 2014, to form ‘Emirates Global Aluminium’ with a production capacity of 2,380,000 tonnes, not only is one of the world’s largest primary aluminium producers being created, but also the UAE will provide almost half the total capacity of the GCC States. Building an effective downstream industry remains a major challenge © Emal The 17th Arabal Conference at the same time marked the 30th anniversary of the most important aluminium event in the Arab world, which has taken place regularly since 1983. Organised by this year’s host, Emirates Aluminium (Emal), at the beginning of November it brought more than 500 participants to the St. Regis Hotel in Abu Dhabi. The conference was combined with an exhibition which, with 40 companies showing, had more exhibitors than the year before. In six sessions many and diverse themes were dealt with, such as the global economy and its challenges; investment projects in the Gulf countries; warehousing, financing deals and the future of metal exchanges; the aluminium price and its development; the casthouse product mix and downstream initiatives in the Mena region; and environmental drivers. The event was rounded off by a pre-conference workshop on Dubal’s advanced DX+ smelting technology and a site tour to the Emal smelter. Emal CEO Saeed Fadhel Al Mazrooei at his welcome speech to the Arabal delegates by the evolution of the gas price: cheap gas produced by fracking could make for a new market situation worldwide. Another uncertainty for the GCC producers is still China’s future export behaviour. Here, however, less importance is ascribed to exports of smelted aluminium than to those of semis. For exam- Another major challenge in the Gulf region remains building an effective downstream industry. Although responsible for 10% of the global primary metal output, the Gulf produces only 3% of downstream products. An important discussion point at the Conference turned around the point that the success and high proportion achieved by the region in the production of primary aluminium should not disguise the fact that this production step accounts for the smallest proportion of added value in the rest of the value chain and therefore contributes only inadequately to the ambitious aim of enlarging the nonoil sector, which also includes tourism in the UAE, to 60% of the GDP. Thus, aluminium ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 Economics mid- and downstream products bring profits higher by a factor of about a 1.7 to 2.5 compared with primary aluminium. Those who participated in the discussions all agreed that small and medium-sized enterprises must be created in order to enlarge the downstream sector. It is true that in the GCC countries there are already around 30 such companies. internationally successful manufacturers of rolled and extruded products and aluminium cables have settled in the vicinity of Alba. The same can be seen in Oman, where Sohar Aluminium is supplying a recently commissioned flat-rolling mill and a cable plant. In Oman at present, about 60% of the primary aluminium produced goes for local further processing. © ALUMINIUM Aluminium smelter capacity in the GCC countries in 2013/14 Their comparatively small consumption of primary aluminium does in fact correspond to the present needs of the local markets, but as a result around 80% of the primary aluminium produced in the Gulf has until now been exported, about three-quarters of it to Europe. The declared aim is to persuade more investors, from abroad as well, to establish interests in the environment of the smelters. Besides the cost advantages from the use of cheap energy and the most modern smelter technology, investors enjoy generous government subsidies in terms of infrastructure and legislation (long-term exemption from taxes). However, the discussion also brought out that it is not enough to produce finished aluminium products locally. Although these can be exported, they should also find a buoyant local market for their use. Positive examples of this are the new Alcoa-Ma’aden flat-rolling mills in Saudi Arabia, which are to begin operating in 2014 and 2015. Can sheet will then be supplied, among others, to United Arab Can in Dammam, Saudi Arabia, where it will be processed into beverage cans. The second Alcoa-Ma’aden rolling plant should supply automobile strip, e. g. for the planned Jaguar Land Rover facility in Saudi Arabia. Previous successes in the creation of a further-processing aluminium industry have all been based on the formation of clusters in the environment of smelters. This began more than 30 years ago in Bahrain, where meanwhile ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 The concept of an aluminium cluster is also based on the further processing of part of the 1.3 million tonnes which Emal will be producing in the future. The backbone of the aluminium cluster created on the site of Kizad (Khalifa Industrial Zone Abu Dhabi) (see also ALUMINIUM 9/2013, p. 381) is the sotermed Hot Metal Road, by way of which the further processors are supplied with liquid metal. This saves transport and storage costs for smelter semis, energy costs for remelting, Emirates Extrusion Factory to invest in new production line Emirates Extrusion Factory has announced plans to invest in a new production line at its aluminium extrusion plant in Techno Park, Dubai. The new facility, to be complete by mid-2014, will increase production capacity to 6,000 tonnes a year. The investment amounts to AED13m. The company has also unveiled plans to aggressively target the export markets in the wake of burgeoning construction activity across Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Oman, Yemen and Africa. The company currently exports 60-70 percent of its production to various countries across the Middle East and Africa. The aluminium extrusion market in the UAE is estimated to be in excess of 175,000 tonnes a and enables just-in-time logistics. Thanks to such advantages those responsible at Kizad can already point to some contracts with partners from the extrusion industry, the recycling of scrap from smelter casthouses, and aluminium cables. As a further challenge for the enlargement of local value addition, at the Conference the extension of local scrap utilisation was mentioned. Owing to the substantial lack of recycling plants and the small number of processing businesses, the scrap produced is mainly exported and therefore unable to add to any increase of local value addition. Alba has now made a start with the commissioning of a melting furnace in which scrap from customers as well will be recycled. At present the region exports about three-quarters of its end-of-life scrap amounting to 500,000 tonnes a year, to India and Europe. The dross recovery situation is more favourable: of the 71,000 tonnes of dross produced by the local smelters, some 25,000 tonnes are recovered. To reinforce the downstream industry, those responsible in the UAE are pursuing other plans. For example, the smelter technology competence available should be applied in joint ventures with aluminium producers in the Magreb zone. Like energy-rich Algeria, these are even closer to the European market. Author Dipl._Ing. Bernhard Rieth is a marketing specialist and freelance technical journalist. As proprietor of Marketing Xpertise Rieth in Meerbusch, Germany, he advises equipment partners of the NF metals semis industry on marketing-related matters. year, which amounts to 35 percent of the total Gulf Cooperation Council demand, growing at a compounded annual rate of eight to nine percent between 2011 and 2017. Emirates Extrusion Factory – a subsidiary of Masharie LLC, which is the private equity arm of Dubai Investments PJSC – was established in 1993 in Ajman, United Arab Emirates. Alba: new production record in 2013 Aluminium Bahrain (Alba) produced 912,700 tonnes of primary aluminium in 2013, a record high compared to the 890,217 tonnes produced in the previous year. For 2014 the company strives to top the result by further improving plant reliability. 23 A L U M I N I U M S M E LT I N G I N D U S T R Y TMS 2014 explores innovation in the aluminium industry A highlight of the light metals programme for TMS 2014 is the Aluminium Keynote Session on Monday, 17 February, from 8:30am to 12:30pm titled Innovation in the Alumina and Primary Aluminium Industries – How Will We Move on to the Next S Curve? The session will share the perspectives of leading experts on what it will take to reach the critical mass of research and development required to achieve breakthroughs in environmental and energy efficiency performance. Speakers and topics scheduled at press time include: • Barry Welch, Professor Emeritus, Universities of New South Wales (Australia and Auckland, New Zealand), director of Welbank Consulting Ltd and recipient of TMS’s Alexander Scott Distinguished Service Award for 2014, will discuss possible options for aluminium smelter performance enhancement. His presentation will highlight how the emphasis on good smelting technology fundamentals has declined, yet numerous opportunities exist for economic and performance enhancements. • Gerald I. D. Roach, Alcoa World Alumina (retired), will review improvements within the Bayer industry, and look at whether there is 24 potential for significant innovation to move the Bayer process on to a new ‘S’ curve. • Mark P. Taylor, director, Chemical and Materials Engineering Department, New Zealand Product Accelerator, University of Auckland, examines the role of external research groups in undertaking and fostering innovation within the aluminium industry. His talk will drill down into the process of innovation in industry, and look at some specific examples where external research groups have contributed to successful innovation. • Martin Segatz, manager, Strategic Technology Programme, Hydro Aluminium Deutschland, will look at how Hydro’s aspiration to become a technology leader in key areas of its vertically integrated aluminium business has been the driving force to establish a durable network of intense cooperative research relationships with preferred academic and industrial partners. • Alton Tabereaux, Alcoa (retired), a USbased consultant, leads two discussions. The first will focus on innovation and the evolution of aluminium smelting technology in North America since the creation of Alcoa 125 years ago. His second presentation outlines Rio Tinto’s Mine of the ‘Future’ programme, which aims to create value by finding better ways to mine through new technologies. The session wraps up with a panel discussion and a chance for audience members to ask questions of the presenters. Networking opportunities Starting with TMS 2014, a few impactful adjustments to session scheduling will make it easier for attendees to take advantage of the many activities, functions and events that the TMS Annual Meeting has to offer. This includes being able to spend more time exploring how concepts discussed in the session rooms can be implemented in an industry setting at the TMS 2014 Exhibition. TMS will open the Exhibition on Monday, 17 February, with the president’s Welcoming Reception, as well as host a Happy Hour event on Tuesday, 18 February. Another popular networking event geared to the interests of the light metals community is the TMS Light Metals Division Luncheon, taking place on Wednesday, 19 February. This year’s luncheon speaker is William Joost, technology development manager, Lightweight Materials, Vehicle Technologies Office, US Department of Energy, who will discuss Connecting the Science and Engineering of Vehicle Weight Reduction. innovatherm 06/2013 Aluminium keynote session View into the exhibition hall at TMS 2013 Continuing education TMS 2014 attendees from the aluminium industry can get a head start on their learning by attending one of the workshops, tutorials and short courses being offered on Sunday, 16 February. Programme selections include: • Furnace Systems Technology Workshop • Grain Refinement of Aluminium and Magnesium Alloys: Theory and Practice • Pot Ventilation and Dry Scrubbing Operations for Aluminium Smelters • Proper Anode Baking Furnace Operations: How and Why • Theory of Constraints: Tools and Tactics for Creating Business Value in Aluminium Smelters and Other Process Industries For additional information and programming updates on TMS 2014 and to make registration and housing arrangements, visit the conference website at www.tms.org/tms2014. ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 216 x 303 TMS 2014 has already set a record, with the most-ever abstracts submitted for a TMS Annual Meeting, and is on track to break several more. Nearly 4,000 presentations are now scheduled within 385 sessions and nearly 70 symposia. The Light Metals Technical Track is particularly strong as representatives from the world’s largest producers and research organisations gather to discuss breaking developments, evolving challenges and new opportunities. TMS 2014 symposia of particular interest to the aluminium industry include: • Alumina and Bauxite • Aluminium Alloys: Development, Characterisation and Applications • Aluminium Processing • Aluminium Reduction Technology • Cast Shop for Aluminium Production • Deformation, Damage, and Fracture of Light Metals and Alloys III • Light-Metal Matrix (Nano)-Composites • Electrode Technology for Aluminium Production. © TMS The Minerals, Metals & Materials Society (TMS) 143rd Annual Meeting and Exhibition (TMS 2014) will be taking place from 16 to 20 February in San Diego. Integrated Technology Firing and Fume Treatment for Anode Baking Furnaces ProBake Advanced Firing Systems Lowest energy consumption Total pitch burn Higher quality consistency innovatherm 06/2013 ProClean Fume Treatment Technology Higher adsorbtion ratios Lower emissions Higher reliability Your Sustainable Partner ddilisa@innovatherm.de www.innovatherm.de 216 x 303 One Design · One Technology · One Company A L U M I N I U M S M E LT I N G I N D U S T R Y Dubal low energy aluminium electrolysis cell design and operation A. Zarouni and M. Reverdy, Dubai Aluminium Table 1: KPIs of Dubal low energy cells KPI Unit D18+ Demo Cells June 2012 to Oct 2013 Amperage Current efficiency Metal production Volts per cell DC specific energy Fe Si Anode effect frequency Anode effect duration PFC emissions, CO2 equivalent* kA % kg/pot-day V kWh/kgAl % % AE/pot-day s 202.5 95.0 1550 4.04 12.67 0.045 0.021 0.016 21.6 385.0 94.8 2940 4.05 12.74 0.044 0.027 0.041 4.5 440 95 3367 3.97 12.44 < 0.05 < 0.03 < 0.05 Not specified kg/tAl 8 3 Not specified DX Low Energy July 2013 to Oct 2013 DX+ Ultra Design Criteria at 440 kA *Calculated as in [6], using Tier 2 Method and SAR (Second Assessment Report) 26 creasing the cell length to allow for two more anodes and cathode blocks, and replacing centre pseudo point breaker / feeders by four point breaker / feeders with bath sensing [5]. The photo shows the seven D18+ cells in a D18 potline. Table 1 gives key performance indicators of five D18+ cells still operating at D18 amperage. In the table, the two end cells of the group of seven are excluded, because they are in a transition zone between D18 and D18+ cells, such that their busbars are not representative of complete D18+ design. The performance of the D18+ cells has now exceeded the original design targets. Further voltage and energy consumption decrease may be possible at increased amperage, which is not possible at present because the demonstration cells have no amperage booster. © Dubal In recent years, Dubal has focused on reducing energy consumption of aluminium electrolysis cells. Large industrial scale DX cell technology in the Emal Potlines 1 and 2 obtained the lowest energy consumption in 2011, when they operated at 350 kA and achieved net DC energy consumption of 13.05 kWh/kgAl [1]. This came quite close to the world class of low energy consumption cells, which are in the range of 12-13 kWh/kgAl [2, 3]. Emal Potline 1 and 2 results at 350 kA were obtained on normal cells not specifically designed for low energy con- Completed seven D18+ test cells in a D18 potline sumption but rather for high cell productivity, which was a more important DX cell with copper inserts was started up in economic objective. Therefore, in 2012, the Dubal Potline 8 in March 2013. DX+ Ultra amperage was increased to 380 kA with con- cell design is ready for demonstration. Also, sequent energy consumption increase to 13.37 several voltage reduction initiatives have been implemented on DX+ demonstration and kWh/kgAl (average for Jan to Oct 2013). In order to prepare for future energy DX+ industrial cells [4]. cost increases and to offer cell technology to clients in high energy cost countries, Dubal D18+ demonstration cells embarked on a journey to design low energy consumption cells without compromising cell The objectives behind modernising the D18 productivity. This involved reducing anode, cells through new technology are to reduce cathode and busbar voltage drop, as well as the specific energy consumption to less than only moderately decreasing of anode-to-cath- 12.9 kWh/kgAl, to reduce the anode effect freode distance for low energy operation. Sev- quency to below 0.10 per cell and day, and to eral low energy cells have been designed for allow for a possible further amperage increase industrial trials: D18+, DX Low Energy and of 40 kA. The most important design changes DX+ Ultra. Seven D18+ cells were built and from D18 to D18+ cells were: changing the successfully started up in March 2012. One two end anode risers to four side risers, in- DX Low Energy cell Cathode voltage drop, for example, can be lowered by introducing copper inserts in the collector bars. Dubal uses its own design of copper inserts which have proven the claimed benefits during industrial trials. One DX copper insert cell was started up in Dubal Potline 8 in March 2013. In copper insert cells, modifications to the lining compensate for the increased effective thermal conductivity of the collector bars. This was necessary to maintain thermal balance and, more importantly, to keep isotherms at the desired place and avoid cold cathode blocks. Additionally, longer four-stub anodes with higher slots were introduced and, to keep good thermal balance, anode cover thickness was increased to 20 cm, and the air circulation around the cathode shell and the cell exhaust flow rate were decreased. The key performance indicators of this cell technology are given in Table 1. Further reduction of net specific energy consumption to 12.6 kWh/kgAl is planned. DX+ Ultra cells DX+ Ultra low energy cells evolved from DX+ technology. Five DX+ demonstration cells ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 SPECIAL A L U M I N I U M S M E LT I N G I N D U S T R Y were started at Dubal in July and August 2010, and 444 DX+ cells are currently being started up in Enmal Potline 3 [1]. Based on the operation of DX+ demonstration cells and on the reduction of the busbar and cathode voltage drops in the industrial cells, the industrial version in Emal Potline 3 is expected to operate at 4.17 V with a net energy consumption of 13.08 kWh/kgAl [4]. DX+ Ultra incorporates several additional voltage drop reduction initiatives shown in Table 2. The most important ones will come from collector bar copper inserts (80 mV) and busbar redesign with split anode risers (80 mV). With all voltage drop reduction initiatives, the overall net cell voltage is expected to be 3.97 V and net energy consumption 12.44 kWh/kgAl at 440 kA. The design amperage range for DX+ Ultra is 440470 kA. Table 1 gives also a few other design parameters. 4. M. Bastaki et al., Dubal Cell Voltage Drop Initiatives Towards Low Energy High Amperage Cells, Light Metals TMS 2014. 5. S. Akhmetov et al., D18+: Potline Modernisation at Dubal, Light Metals TMS 2013, 561-565. 6. A. A. Zarouni et al., DX+ an Optimized Version of DX Technology, Light Metals TMS 2012, 697-702. Authors Abdulla Zarouni is senior manager Technology Development at Dubal. Michel Reverdy is Technology Transfer manager at Dubal. Table 2: Summary of the DX+ and DX+ Ultra electrical parameters with voltage drop initiatives Initiatives DX+ DX+ DX+ Demo Cells Industrial Ultra Longer anodes (Stage 1: +25 mm) • • • Reduced ACD • • • Higher saw cut anode slots Larger collector bar cross-sections Larger busbar cross-sections Copper inserts Busbar redesign New cathode flexible design Longer anodes (Stage 2: +20 mm) Larger stub diameter Deeper stub holes • – – – – – – – – • • • – – – – – – • • • • • • • • • Conclusions Dubal has designed several low energy cells. The successful test and validation of the D18+ cell technology has proven that it is both technically and practically possible to update and replace the low energy consumption cell technology within an existing operating potline. In DX cells, the cathode collector bar copper inserts have been successfully demonstrated and can be used to convert DX potlines in Dubal and Emal to low energy cells on relining basis. DX+ Ultra cells will be Dubal’s future technology with energy consumption lower than 12.5 kWh/kgAl. SUCCESS IS BASED ON COLLABORATION USE BCT TECHNOLOGY TO INCREASE Profit Productivity References Reliability 1. M. Reverdy et al., Advancements of Dubal High Amperage Reduction Cell Technologies, Light Metals TMS 2013, 553556. 2. P. Thibeault et al., Rio Tinto Alcan AP4X Low Energy Cell Development, Light Metals TMS 2013, 543-547. 3. D. Zhou, X. Yang and W. Liu, Development and Application of SAMI’s Low Voltage Energy-Saving Technology, Light Metals TMS 2012, 607-612. Flexibility ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 See us at TMS 2014 17th - 19th February Booth 407 BCT Preheater BCT Paste Kneader BCT Cooler Anode Press Green Anode Plant Pitch Melting Plant Coke Processing Plant HTM Plant We maintain proactive cooperation to fulfil your requirements in order to build your project successfully. We are your responsible partner with the realisation of entire anode plants from raw material to formed anodes, as well as the supply of key equipment. We are committed to excellence to ensure your reliable and efficient plant performance. Whenever, wherever supported by our service team. BUSS ChemTech AG | Hohenrainstrasse 12A | 4133 Pratteln 1 | Switzerland Tel. +41 (0) 618 256 462 | Fax +41 (0) 618 256 737 | info@buss-ct.com www.buss-ct.com 27 A L U M I N I U M S M E LT I N G I N D U S T R Y Modular design gives flexible gas treatment B. Herrlander, Alstom Power Global primary aluminium production capacity is expected to rise by 50% over the current level within the next couple of years, and to reach over 70 million tpy by 2020, thus matching the forecast 5-6% annual demand growth. This growth is mainly driven by automotive and building industries. Smelters respond to this demand with new cost-effective technologies, deploying higher amperage, and reaching higher specific production. These smelter technologies call for modern and efficient emissions abatement systems, including optional energy recovery. However, today’s uncertain primary aluminium market also needs flexibility in investment, for instance to be able to gradually increase smelter capacity without adding a complete new potline. In response to these demands Alstom is introducing a novel range of efficient modular emissions abatement systems. These include optional energy recovery, which is particularly suitable for these new smelter technologies. The traditional gas treatment centre As specific pot production is boosted, often the pot gas temperature increases. Higher pot gas temperature challenges the Gas Treatment Centre (GTC) HF removal efficiency. Fluoride emissions from the GTC shows a sharp rise when the pot gas temperature exceeds 100 °C. New high-amperage pots typically increase the summer maximum gas temperature from 140 up to 180 °C, making it even more difficult to meet new, low-emission limits. For this reason the gas temperature should be adjusted for optimal emissions abatement. A number of smelters without proper temperature adjustment have already experienced problems staying in compliance during the summer. The traditional way of cooling high temperature pot gas is by bleeding-in ambient air to achieve an acceptable gas treatment temperature (110-115 °C). However, with an ambient temperature of up to 50 °C, this method may require 30% more GTC capacity as well as fan power. Also, the additional filter bags increase maintenance costs. Installing a heat exchanger is an alternative solution that not only reduces the size of the GTC, but also makes large savings in fan power and reduces total HF emissions. In addition, 28 the value of the recovered heat energy alone can often justify the added investment cost of the heat exchanger. The extracted heat energy may find uses for example in district heating, desalination of sea water, driving a heat pump for air conditioning, or it could produce electricity through an organic Rankine cycle. In the event, not all of the heat energy is used, and the remainder is let to the atmosphere through dump heat exchangers. However, fouling from scale formation has been the main reason for the failure of heat exchangers in this application. Pot gas tends to build deposits (scaling) on steel surfaces, predominantly when gas impacts vertically on these surfaces. To virtually eliminate the fouling, Alstom has developed a new series of fire tube heat exchangers (HEX) guiding the gas parallell to the surface. The HEX may be arranged in the ducting between the pots and the GTC, or else integrated into it (IHEX). The dust-laden hot gas feeds into several parallel straight tubes immersed in water that cools the outside of the tubes. The water flows counter currently to the pot gas from bottom to top when the HEX is arranged vertically, and consequently the gas is cooled as it flows through the HEX tubes from top to bottom. The counter-current flows achieve optimum cooling at reduced cost. With this type of heat exchanger it has been able to control the fouling, and the thickness of deposits is maintained in a stable, thin, self-cleaning state. The ‘Abart’ is a two stage counter current GTC process, even though the stages internally operate in co-current mode. This principle reduces the effects of moderate variations in upstream conditions, such as fluoride concentration as well as alumina flow and quality. The operating mode is as follows. Fresh alumina is injected into the gas in the filter stage, downstream of the patented reactor where the pot off gases enter the Abart. The high-capacity fresh alumina is therefore used at the tail end of the process, where the fluoride concentration is low. This dramatically increases the ‘driving force’ for fluoride adsorption by the alumina, resulting in a stable, low emission level. The alumina from the filter is lead to the reactor, where it is blended into the recycled alumina. Sulphur dioxide emission from pots are also increasing, since the sulphur content in the petroleum coke used for anode production is going up typically to 3-5%. Thus there is an increasing need for reducing sulphur dioxide emissions to comply with the emissions limit values on many smelters. Such limits are already enforced in Scandinavia and in parts of North America. New smelters starting up in Qatar and Abu Dhabi will have sulphur dioxide abatement systems. There are several processes available for sulphur dioxide removal. Inland aluminium smelters may use alkali solutions, e. g. sodium hydroxide, while coastal based smelters preferably deploy seawater. The sulphur dioxide is transformed into sulphate in the scrubber process. Spent sodium hydroxide has to be taken care of. On the other hand sulphate is a harmless and natural constituent of seawater. Depending on recipient conditions and on local regulations, the effluent may require aeration to speed up a return to normal pH value and eliminate chemical oxygen demand before the seawater is delivered back to the sea. Both seawater and alkali processes are extremely efficient, typically removing in excess of 99% of the sulphur dioxide. The ‘Alfeed’ pot feed system brings the fluoride-enriched alumina from Abart back to the pots, thus replacing traditional crane filling systems. The Alfeed system is a horizontal transport and distribution system based on a supply-on-demand concept. It employs two different sets of boiling bed fluidisation air slides. The main one is located alongside the potroom building, and the other is on the pot superstructure. Today’s GTC demands more and more space and is traditionally laid out in the courtyard between potlines. The space available often restricts how the different components may be arranged. Primary alumina silo, ducts, dry scrubber, fans, stack, secondary silo including air lift and pot feed system, and sometimes wet scrubbers for sulphur dioxide abatement, these all demand footprint. In addition, the ducting leading the gas from the pots to the GTC calls for efficient fluid dynamics design to minimise pressure drop. Over many years Alstom has been working to reduce the footprint of the total installation in an energy efficient and a cost effective manner. The introduction of the Decentralised Dedicated Scrubber (DDS) concept changed the thinking of incremental growth. This compact design integrates all components like silos, dry scrubber, fan, optional sulphur dioxide scrubber and stack into one unit capable of serving ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 SPECIAL up to six pots. This enables an easy incremental growth of a smelter line. The DDS is one version of the novel Abart compact GTC based on the Abart-C module. The modular gas treatment centre Alstom is now taking the next development step by introducing the Centralised Dedicated Scrubber (CDS) built on the Abart-C module. The Abart-C is an extremely compact and efficient multi-pollutant control system with incomparable footprint. It offers flexibility beyond comparison. Emission requirements are readily met at reduced power consumption. Abart-C is a further development of the well-proven Abart GTC. The Abart-C module optionally integrates a heat exchanger (IHEX) for temperature control of ingoing pot gas. The IHEX ensures steady operation even at high inlet temperature. An integrated primary alumina silo large enough for one to two days of operation is included in Abart-C. It can be refilled quickly in case of stoppages. If it needs more than two days of storage, the integrated silo can easily be extended. A L U M I N I U M S M E LT I N G I N D U S T R Y Fig. 1 compares the alumina flow of a traditional GTC with that of the Abart-C module. The Abart-C module thus integrates silos, heat exchanger, HF abatement, fan, SO2 scrubber and stack into one unit. A close connection with pots improves pot gas collection and simplifies the spent alumina distribution back to pots. The Abart-C features an improved gas flow control, which optimises the filtration velocity and contributes to improved robustness. This allows about 5% higher gas flow rate compared with the standard Abart. The Abart-C module shows a pressure drop saving of about 250 Pa in the inlet / outlet fan ducting. In addition the Abart-C standard fan efficiency is more than 85% compared with typically only 70% for a traditional fan arrangement on the ground. Also, the traditional common Fig. 1: Alumina flue schematics of a traditional GTC versus DDS/CDS with integrated primary and enriched silo GLAMA Maschinenbau GmbH Hornstraße 19 D- 45964 Gladbeck / Germany phone + 49 (0) 2043 9738 0 fax + 49 (0) 2043 9738 50 email: info@glama.de web: www.glama.de A L U M I N I U M S M E LT I N G I N D U S T R Y One example of a double-line configuration of the CDS Abart-C is shown Model Type Silo SO2 scrubber Fan Stack Footprint (%) in Fig 3. Standard On the Six scrubbers Six fans on One on each Single line 100 The Abart-C footprint may vary Abart GTC ground on the ground the ground scrubber considerably depending on the deSingle line of Integrated 32 scrubbers on 32 fans on top 32 stacks on top Abart CDS A1 22 Abart-C modules into Abart-C top of Abart-C of Abart-C of each scrubber gree of integration of components, as Double line of Integrated 32 scrubbers on 32 fans on top 32 stacks on top been discussed above. A more comAbart CDS A1 25 Abart-C modules into Abart-C top of Abart-C of Abart-C of each scrubber prehensive footprint comparison of Double line of On the Eight scrubbers 32 fans on top One on each Abart CDS B1 47 the CDS with and without SO2 scrubAbart-C modules ground on the ground of Abart-C scrubber ber is shown in the tables 1 and 2. Depending on the degree of integraTable 2: Footprint comparison without SO2 scrubber tion and plant layout, the footprint saving goes Model Type Silo Fan Stack Footprint (%) from 75 to 36%. Table 1: Footprint comparison with SO2 scrubber Standard Abart GTC Single line On the ground Six fans on the ground One for each fan 100 Conclusion Abart CDS A2 Single line of Integrated Abart-C modules into Abart-C 32 fans on top of Abart-C One for each fan 30 Abart CDS B2 Double line of On the ground Abart-C modules 32 fans on top of Abart-C One common 64 fan arrangements (e. g. 4-6 fans) typically oversize each fan as much as 33% to handle the increased flow during N-1 operation. This is not necessary with the Abart–CDS concept, since the large number of smaller fans in the Abart-C modules (e. g. 30 fans) are running during normal operation. This ensures correct operation in case one fan is out of operation. Thus the CDS installed fan motor power can be reduced by 20% compared to the traditional GTC. The fully integrated Abart-C module is shown in Fig. 2. The Abart-C module is flexible and easily adjusted to customer preferences. The basic version integrates all components to fully benefit from the compact design with incomparable footprint. However, as customer preferences may call for alternatives, the Abart-C flexibility is here demonstrated through some examples. For instance, the alumina silo integrated in the filter in the basic version may be put as a standalone. As ingoing pot gas temperature gets higher an IHEX is recommended to control the GTC operation temperature and thereby secure optimal performance. In case a SO2 scrubber is needed it may be integrated into the penthouse or traditionally be put as stand-alone. The clean gas may optionally be led to multiple stacks, which can be integrated into the filter, or to one common stack. Finally Alfeed will transport the spent alumina back to the pots. The Abart-C module can feed directly into the Alfeed, eliminating the need for a separate enriched silo. However, alternatively Alfeed can, in a traditional way, be fed from an enriched silo. The basic design of Abart-C is extremely adaptable with regard to transport and local site conditions. Components of this modular based design are preferably assembled in a workshop and delivered directly to site. Typical components are hopper, reactor, inlet duct, filter top, fan / motor assembly, SO2 absorber and IHEX. Due to narrow tolerances, filter tops are always fabricated as complete components in a workshop. Modules are preassembled in lay-down area from panels delivered from the workshop. This is much faster and easier compared with work on site. This modular design and improved constructability gives shorter erection time and secures an early start-up. The novel Abart CDS technology built on Abart-C modules offers a number of advantages over the traditional GTC. For instance, the installed fan motor power may be reduced by 20%. Shorter ducting contributes to lower pressure loss, further reducing power consumption. The novel Abart CDS technology built on Abart-C modules gives a footprint reduction of up to 75%. The Abart-C most compact version integrates silos, optional HEX, dry scrubber, fan, optional sulphur dioxide scrubber and stack into one unit. It offers an efficient multi-pollutant control system able to meet emission requirements at reduced power consumption. The design of Abart-C is extremely adaptable to local site conditions, and the modules or components are easily transported to site. To keep up quality and speed during commissioning as well as start-up, workshop fabrication will be used to the greatest possible extent. Author Bo Herrlander is the global marketing manager Industry & Power of Alstom Power, Växjö, Sweden. Fig. 3: CDS Abart-C double line with SO2 scrubber Fig. 2: Abart-C 30 ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 A L U M I N I U M S M E LT I N G I N D U S T R Y Alumina feed control enhancements M. C. Schneller, Istanbul Multiple studies over the years have contributed much to the understanding of key factors in alumina dissolution, and have so enabled the development of improved alumina feeding strategies. At the electrolysis cell level, fast alumina dissolution is highly desirable. The features which determine alumina dissolution rates include bath superheat levels, bath solubility limits imposed by bath ratio, amount of bath, bath flow / agitation for dissolution and distribution away from point feeder locations, point feeder shot mass and discharge rate, alumina pre-heat levels, and alumina type. Whenever there are persistent levels of undissolved alumina, especially as agglomerates sinking in the bath, production efficiencies are compromised. Several control methodologies are primarily based on the pseudo-resistance slope during the underfeed or no feed phase of the feed cycle Over the years, sustained efforts to enhance these underfeed / overfeed methodologies have produced significant improvements in both production efficiencies and environmental performance. There has been a sustained drive to decrease point feeder shot mass to small amounts of approximately 1 kg. A recent development describes a flow sensor for point-fed alumina [1]. Installed as part of the point feeder, this on-line sensor predicts maximum alumina dissolution rates, which can be used to optimise feed control parameters at any given time. The properties of a point feeder’s discharge can change quickly and for unpredictable lengths of time, and sometimes remain unnoticed. A point feeder pipe modification to slow the delivery of alumina has produced promising potline test results [2]. It is abundantly clear that efforts to improve alumina feed control continue to pay dividends. Whenever a shot of point fed alumina initially contacts bath, it cannot dissolve instantly within the restricted confines of the inter-electrode mixing zone. The creeping increase in amperage has made alumina dissolution more difficult because of the attendant decrease in inter-electrode gap and total bath volume. A varying fraction of a point fed alumina shot quickly dissolves upon initial bath contact in the inter-electrode mixing zone. The remaining fraction of mostly bath encapsulated, undissolved alumina then disperses by bulk bath flow, and subsequently dissolves more slowly, especially if it forms alumina agglom- erates. During the recovery period following fast alumina feed, there is frequently more undissolved alumina dispersed in the bath. A portion of this undissolved alumina can settle onto the bath / metal interface and, depending on circumstances, further sink to form cathode sludge [3]. An illuminating potline study reported pot voltage increases that can occur during an overfeed period compared to a subsequent underfeed period at the same alumina content. This voltage increase is not the result of any change in anode-cathode distance [4]. This study describes what is labelled as the ‘hysteresis effect’, wherein pot voltage can decrease as much as 100 mV or even more just after the switch from overfeeding to underfeeding. It was hypothesized that this decrease corresponds to the dissolution of an alumina layer which forms at the bath / metal interface during the overfeed phase. Commencing with the underfeed phase, there can be a time span when the rate of electrolytic removal of dissolved alumina approximately balances the dissolution of accumulated alumina at the bath / metal interface. The hysteresis effect disappeared when feed rates approached steady state (90-115%). In-situ ore feed logic employs neither extended alumina overfeeding nor underfeeding. Rather, ore is fed at near steady-state rates to maintain a targeted alumina concentration. This new idea suggests that the cell voltage could decrease significantly if the hysteresis effect could be eliminated. Undissolved alumina accumulations at the bath / metal interface are detrimental to current efficiency. It is reasonable to expect that any accumulation of electrically resistant alumina at the bath / metal interface would cause localised excessive heating, and so accelerate loss of aluminium from the metal surface into the bulk electro- lyte. Any alumina that sinks below the bath / metal interface produces cathode muck in different locations. Horizontal cathode current components are the result of localised muck piles, thereby promoting metal pad oscillatory surface waves. In situ ore feed The recent promotion of in situ ore feed logic represents a new approach that avoids extended and excessive alumina overfeeding [5, 6]. Scheduled, periodic in situ measurements track the dissolved alumina concentration against voltage during several minutes of no alumina feeding. These measurements provide the key data to subsequent track alumina levels with confidence over a span of several hours. Near steady state ore feed rates, lasting several hours at a time, are slightly adjusted every five minutes or so to maintain a targeted alumina concentration by selecting a PID algorithm uniquely appropriate for this type of feed control. The targeted alumina concentration can be selected by a combining pot performance metrics with dissolution-related alumina properties. The predicted voltage variable (VP) has been recommended to replace the pseudo-resistance variable (RP) for a number of reasons [5, 6]. The value for any computed RP is easily demonstrated to be sensitive to the choice of extrapolated voltage (Vext). This number cannot be accurately measured in real time. Hence the choice of Vext by necessity defaults to an assumed constant value. However, the actual value of Vext is dependent upon the dissolved alumina concentration [7]. The relative RP error induced by this default assumption is not insignificant. However, the relative VP error is vanishingly small as will be illustrated. A simulated raw, unfiltered, and noisy pot Fig. 1: Rp vs. Time (% Al2O3 varied from 2.60 to 2.45 during 5 minutes of no ore feed) A Th an R C 32 ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 SPECIAL voltage/amperage data set (1 Hz sampling rate) was generated. Pot voltages were made dependent upon the actual values of Vext as determined by the alumina concentration during a 5 minute, no feed period. The Vext value corresponding to a given alumina concentration was estimated using Fig. 2 in a published Haupin paper [7]. Comparative computations of RP and VP were performed using both the actual values and a constant default value for Vext as shown in Figs 1 and 2. Comparing these, it is not difficult to observe a large variation in both RP divergent values and RP slopes in Fig. 1, compared to Fig. 2 with a relatively A L U M I N I U M S M E LT I N G I N D U S T R Y much smaller variation in both VP non-divergent values and VP slopes. The sensitivity of the RP slope can be significantly depressed when using a constant value of Vext, but not so for VP. The sensitivity of VP slopes, regardless of Vext selection, is expected to provide reasonably accurate in situ alumina predictions, subject mostly to variations in molten bath mass. An estimate of a pot’s bath mass is used to adjust the VP slope accordingly. Whenever ore feed is briefly turned off for an in situ alumina concentration measurement, there may be a time span before detecting the expected, consequent increase in VP. In fact pot voltage may even initially decrease, due to accumulated alumina at the bath / metal interface as previously described. Two different time spans can be measured: (1) span during which VP consistently decreases immediately after ore feed is turned off; and (2) span during which VP consistently increases after any VP decrease in (1) when the VP positive slope corresponds to reaching the targeted alumina concentration. These time spans can be used to adjust the alumina concentration target. During time span (1) we also measure the difference between the relative voltage minimum and the voltage at the time when the ore feed was turned off. This difference can also be used to adjust the target alumina concentration. This information from the time span and voltage decrease is an indicator of undissolved alumina at the bath / metal interface. Continuous ore feed directed into anode slots The advent of slotted anodes has produced enhanced pot performance by more efficiently Fig. 2: Vp vs. Time (% Al2O3 varied from 2.60 to 2.45 during 5 minutes of no ore feed) ANODE BAKING FACILITIES The Riedhammer anode baking facility is a key component in a modern anode production plant. Our plants offer many advantages such as: )HEUXDU\ %RRWK Customised design Excellent anode quality Extended furnace lifetime Low energy consumption High productivity Flexible equipment supply Safe operation RIEDHAMMER CARBON BAKING TECHNOLOGY RIEDHAMMER GmbH Klingenhofstraße 72 90411 Nürnberg Phone: +49 911 5218 0 Fax: +49 911 5218 231 www.riedhammer.de A L U M I N I U M S M E LT I N G I N D U S T R Y channelling anode off-gases away from the working anode surface. It may now prove advantageous to investigate feeding alumina continuously into anode slots at variable rates. The steady-state consumption rate depends mostly upon amperage and number of slotted anodes. This rate is not expected to be greater Advertisement than about 5 g/s. Ore would be directed into a small hole that is drilled from the top of each anode into one of the slots [8]. Continuous ore feed through slotted anodes the following advantages: • Alumina dissolves virtually instantaneously as the mostly separate alumina grains make bath contact. • Variations in alumina fines content should not greatly impact the expected fast dissolution of these particles within the slot before they are swept into the bulk bath. • It is highly unlikely that alumina raft or agglomerate formation would occur. For much of the anode cycle, alumina exiting from the slot hole would make initial contact with turbulent anode gas. This interaction would distribute alumina throughout a portion of the slot and pre-heat the alumina before it contacts bath, thus promoting fast dissolution. The turbulent liquid bath within a slot has a high exchange rate, suggesting that excessive alumina enrichment in this region would not occur [9]. Localised alumina depletion at any anode surface can cause minor PFC emissions at this site [10]. More uniform continuous ore feed delivery centred on an anode slot is expected to decrease the low-level PFC generation under non- anode effect conditions (NAE-PFC). It has been reported that 70% of all PFC emissions in China are attributable to low volt- age operation vis-à-vis 22% from the more limited data for smelters outside of China [11]. A simple gate valve mechanism with a controllable orifice is one possible design which could achieve anode slot centred, continuous ore feed. Since this type of valve is susceptible to plugging by non-alumina particles, alumina delivered to the ore hopper needs to be effectively screened to remove problematic large particles such as hard grey scale, etc. Other possible valve mechanisms, such as variable speed rotary valves, suffer more wear due to their constantly moving parts, and so may prove more costly to maintain than some type of controllable gate valve whose orifice is only periodically adjusted in small amounts. Flexible, small-diameter feeding tubes (about 12 mm or less inner diameter) could exit below the control valve assembly that is located at the bottom of the ore hopper, and they would direct gravity-fed ore into the anode slots. Since the distance between the ore hopper and the anode top varies, two concentric flexible tubes, wherein a smooth portion of one tube slides within a smooth portion of the other, maintain an unbroken connection. Tube flexion would allow temporary displacement of the feeder tubes during carbon setting operations. It is possible to design a single geared actuator to simultaneously operate all valves corresponding to the number of anodes in a pot. It is recommended that a quick disconnect valve assembly be designed so that a defective valve can be rapidly replaced. Continuous alumina ore feeding into anode slots in a distributed manner, as outlined above, should enable further creep increase of line current, since much of the inter-electrode space presently dictated by point feeders would not be necessary. The consequent decrease in bath volume would tax point fed alumina delivery, but not slot continuous fed alumina delivery, especially if in situ ore feed logic were deployed in tandem. At present it is not known whether occasional bath splashes contacting the anode slot exit hole would freeze, thereby plugging the hole itself. This could prove problematic for newly set, cold anodes. When the anode surface at the exit hole becomes sufficiently Suppliers Directory – for your benefit On pages 84 to 97, leading equipment suppliers to the aluminium industry present their product portfolios and ranges of services. Take advantage of this useful information. 34 hot, bath splashes can reasonably be expected not to adhere to and freeze onto the carbon surface. In any case, this potential bath plugging problem could possibly be solved by an automated delivery of scheduled, short, compressed air blasts directed into each anode hole to dislodge any frozen bath plug that might have formed. A different approach could utilise small-diameter breaker rods. For distributed alumina delivered continuously into a slot of each anode, the result should be maximally uniform bath alumina distribution, and minimally undissolved bath alumina formation. W Conclusion In situ alumina feed control, and distributed continuous anode slot feeding, are new ideas which, either separately or in combination, could produce significant improvements in smelter production efficiencies as well as decreased NAE-PFC formation. References [1] J. Tessier, G. Tarcy, E. Batista, X. Wang, Towards On-line Monitoring of Alumina Properties at a Pot Level, Light Metals 2012, ed. C. Suarez, pp.633638. [2] J. Tessier, G. Tarcy, E. Batista, X. Wang. Improvement of Alumina Dissolution Rate Through Alumina Feeder Pipe Modification, Light Metals 2013, ed. B. Sadler, pp. 713-717. [3] R. Keller, Alumina Dissolution and Sludge Formation Revisited, Light Metals 2005, ed. H. Kvande, pp. 147-150. [4] H. Kvande, B. Moxnes, J. Skaar, P. Solli, PseudoResistance Curves for Aluminium Cell Control – Alumina Dissolution and Cell Dynamics, Light Metals 1997, ed. R. Huglen, pp. 403-409. [5] M. Schneller, In Situ Alumina Feed Control, JOM, 61 (2009) 11, pp. 26 -29. [6] M. Schneller, In Situ Aluminum Cell Control, Light Metals 2010, ed. J. Johnson, pp. 563–568. [7] W. Haupin, Interpreting the Components of Cell Voltage, Light Metals 1998, ed. B. Welch, pp. 531–537. [8] M. Schneller, Characteristics of In Situ Alumina PID Feed Control, Light Metals 2012, ed. C. Suarez, pp. 627-632. [9] M. Cooksey, CSIRO, (private communication). [10] J. Thonstad, S. Rolseth, R. Keller, On the Mechanism Behind Low Voltage FC Emissions, Light Metals 2013, ed. B. Sadler, pp. 883–885. [11] J. Marks, C. Bayliss, GHG Measurement and Inventory for Aluminum Production, Light Metals 2012, ed. C. Carlos, pp. 805–808. Author Michael C. Schneller has 16 years of working experience in the aluminium smelting industry, including six years as an independent consultant. ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 Q fr B S e o th T C d fo F w What about the compliance of your Anode Baking Furnace? Qatalum selected Fives Solios’ solutions for its Anode Baking Furnace to comply with the highest standards in terms of safety and emissions Qatalum is operating one of the most efficient and most environmentallyfriendly aluminium smelters in the world. By implementing the best available technology in terms of Firing & Control Systems and Fume Treatment Centers on the Anode Baking Furnaces, Qatalum ensures that the operation of its furnaces is safe and that the stack emissions of condensed and volatile tars, dust and hydrogen fluoride are kept under the most stringent environmental levels. Thanks to its long experience both in Firing & Control Systems and Fume Treatment Centers, Fives Solios offers additional synergies as part of an integrated FCS/FTC design to further improve emissions, OPEX, working and safety conditions for a more reliable Anode Baking Furnace. Fives Solios, designing today the plants of the future www.fivesgroup.com Driving progress A L U M I N I U M S M E LT I N G I N D U S T R Y Eirich – a technology pioneer is 150 years young B. Hohl, Maschinenfabrik Gustav Eirich © Eirich Eirich has successfully pioneered new processes and launched new machines in its core markets for many decades. Simple mechanical mixers have evolved in many fields of application into multifunctional machines capable of combining several processes such as mixing, cooling, kneading, heating, pelletising, drying, blunging, etc. in one machine. Working on the principle ‘first write the score, then select the right musical instrument’, the company develops made-to-measure solutions tailored perfectly to its customers’ requirements. The processing methods applied in the many industries which use the products provide inspiration for innovative transfer to other sectors. Back in his day, entrepreneur Gustav Eirich started his business with a mill workshop servicing the small hydro powered grain mills being situated in the area around his residence. The first mixers were made in 1903. The development of the planetary mixer in 1906 opened the door to ceramic applications. The main © Fives Solios Recently, Maschinenfabrik Gustav Eirich celebrated the 150th anniversary of its founding in 1863. Eirich is a family-run enterprise which enjoys the full support of its employees and, in the words of the managing directors, has remained young at heart for 150 years. These two factors have been highly instrumental in the success and the long tradition of this company. ‘Technology leadership’ is one of the top priorities of company policy. Anode plant at Sohar Aluminium, using all-intensive paste preparation product at that time was refractory bricks. When the counterflow mixer was developed, followed by the intensive mixer, access was open to virtually all areas of ceramics and to the production of carbon pastes as well. Over the decades Eirich has repeatedly played a part in the introduction of new, more efficient methods of production through its developments. Today the company has machines available for numerous processes in many different industries. Looking deeper in the ceramic field, we find Eirich technologies from the modern roof tile to the carbon anode and from the graphite electrode sector to hightech ceramics. The innovative Eirich intensive mixing system of the latest generation has machines designed for large throughput rates and highly intensive mixing. Maximum availability, low maintenance and extremely short servicing times guarantee optimum economic efficiency. There is a 3-pronged approach to research and development at Eirich, the main sources of innovation with projects for specific customers, The new Eirich R28/R33 generation of carbon paste mixers 36 in-house developments based on experience, and collaboration with universities, research institutes and industrial partners. Expenditure on R&D is well above the sector average at Eirich. The company’s own museum is now open as well. This traces its industrial history from its humble beginnings as a mill workshop right through to its current standing as a global mechanical engineering enterprise. Being young also means going out into the world. Over the past few decades the company has built up an international network of distribution, production and after-sales service companies in keeping with its belief in the importance of local presence. Today Eirich has sites in France, Russia, Ukraine, USA, Brazil, South Africa, India, China and Japan. Some of the foreign companies also have their own portfolio of complementary products, offering additional potential for the future within the group of companies. In line with the slogan ‘If it says Eirich on the label then it‘s Eirich inside the box’, there is a great vertical range of manufacture at all the production companies in the Eirich Group. This is how quality and reliability are guaranteed regardless of which site processes the order. The group is a wholly family-owned enterprise. With some 1,500 employees and sales revenues of around 200 million euros, it is one of the largest suppliers in the world in ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 SPECIAL this sector. Substantial domestic and foreign investment underlines the dynamic growth of the enterprise. Eirich in the carbon industry Eirich has been building machines and complete plants for the carbon industry for more than 40 years. More and more renowned manufacturers of carbon products all over the world use the Eirich equipment. The company stands for long-term cooperation with and support for our customers worldwide. The flexibility of its equipment enables Eirich to serve each of the following sectors: Carbon anodes for primary aluminium smelting: Thanks to a long-standing collaboration with several renowned primary smelters and international engineering companies, Eirich has successfully developed the high performance anode paste cooler as well as the Eirich Mixing Cascade (EMC) for the allintensive preparation of anode paste up to 60 t/h in one single line, at lowest cost and highest efficiency. Today, more than 50% of the world’s prebake anode paste is prepared in plants hav- A L U M I N I U M S M E LT I N G I N D U S T R Y ing at least one Eirich mixer, with a growing number of customers preferring the all-intensive EMC solution. Throughput capacities of up to 60 t/h in one single line make it possible to significantly reduce capex and opex. Carbon paste for metallurgical purposes: Numerous well-known manufacturers of graphite electrodes, cathode blocks and metallurgical paste have been convinced of our technology for a long time. Our high performance batch preparation system, being available at capacities of approx. 4-18 t/h per line, combines the advantages of both direct electric resistance heating and intensive mixing to realise high throughput per line at maximum homogeneity. Carbon and graphite specialties: Eirich intensive-mixed carbon paste is used for a big variety of carbon specialties, from carbon fibre composites for brake disks to vibrocompac-*ted and isostatically moulded graphite materials. All greenfield smelters recently established in the Gulf area as well as in India are using Eirich equipment for anode paste making, partly in the form of intensive anode paste coolers, most of them however in the more advanced EMC version. The ‘all-Eirich-made’ anodes are showing perfect behaviour in the high amperage pots of all smelters where they are used. Two more EMC systems are currently in the commissioning phase in India. The new R28 / R33 mixer generation stands for reduced capex and increased performance compared to the today’s equipment. It mainly serves the throughput capacity range of 45-60 t/h. The double rotor mixing system can be equipped with up to 450 kW rotor drive power which makes it possible to further increase the specific mixing energy. The first R28 EMC will be operational in a brownfield smelter in Canada early this year. Author References and outlook Up to now Eirich have delivered over220 machines to the carbon industry worldwide. Berthold Hohl is manager Carbon Technology at Maschinenfabrik Gustav Eirich GmbH & Co. KG, based in Hardheim, Germany. A L U M I N I U M S M E LT I N G I N D U S T R Y High-temperature preheaters for pitch with higher melting point Matthias Ginster, Köllemann GmbH mately 300 kW per screw shaft. Temperatures up to 450 °C are possible. To improve overall efficiency, the new approach uses existing Köllemann preheaters as before to achieve temperatures of 180-220 °C together with a downstream high-temperature preheater that provides the extra boost needed to achieve temperature required for the new types of pitch. Like Köllemann’s existing equipment, there are no moving parts inside the screw shafts: the energy is distributed to the shaft © n an llem Kö Köllemann GmbH from Germany, a wellestablished supplier of coke preheaters for the global primary aluminium industry, is responding to the more stringent demands that are expected to be imposed on the production of anodes in future. New environmental guidelines for the use of pitch in this field will mean it will no longer be possible to use the standard pitch currently used. Over the last two years, the company has therefore developed special machinery to allow pitch with a significantly higher melting point to be processed safely and reliably. Preheaters currently use thermal oil as the heat source, and this flows through the screw flights, the housing and the main shaft; it is capable of reaching temperatures of 300-350 °C. The new development offers a high-temperature preheating screw. Heat generation is via electrically heated pipes inside the shaft that are capable of supplying approxi- from the outside via a special contact-ring system. One benefit of the new system is that it is possible to upgrade existing plants at minimum cost by installing the high-temperature screw between the existing preheater and the extruder. The new preheater is still under development. Köllemann is interested in collaborating with potential customers to bring the system to market readiness. Contact details along with further information about the company and its products can be found at www.koellemann.de. Author Matthias Ginster is head of the project department at Köllemann GmbH in Adenau, Germany. A detailed report on Köllemann was published in ALUMINIUM 9/2013, pp. 56-58. High-temperature preheating screw shaft Fives Solios improved anode baking at Alro smelter P. Mahieu, Solios Carbone burned tar deposit in the exhaust ducts. In parallel to a programme of refractory refurbishment, Alro decided to upgrade the firing control technology which has been operating for eight years. Fives Solios proposed its process control expertise and up-to-date technology to upgrade the existing firing control system. © Fives Solios Alro group, the largest aluminium producer in Central and Eastern Europe, has implemented a programme to improve energy efficiency at its Romanian operations. Inside the carbon area, the investment focused on two anode baking furnaces with the purpose of reducing gas consumption and preventing non- Overview of refractory conditions in anode baking furnace 4 38 Advanced software along with CO analysers was installed for better combustion control. A port sealing ramp and low pressure drop dampers improve the operating conditions of the furnaces. Additionally, baking profile adjustments, based on CO information and thermal gradients balance, have resulted in a sustainable reduction of the energy consumption and in improved combustion of the volatile compounds, while maintaining a consistent anode quality. Firing equipment revamping Both furnaces suffered from lack of draught capacity due to excessive pressure losses in the ring main and flue walls. The pressure losses are due to deposits of tar in the main duct and to air ingress through refractory walls, mainly through head wall and flue wall interfaces. The available exhaust draught pressure was very low despite FTC (fume treatment centre) fans running at nominal capacity. In the heating zone, though set points are timely and properly addressed, all the injectors of the first and the second heating ramp were running at their maximum authorised power, but gas temperature remains below expectation, with no more margins to act on. The main explanation for this is lack of oxygen to properly burn the injected gas. Corrective actions were taken on the furnace and on the equipment to minimise the ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 SPECIAL Flexible exhaust leg with dual flap damper draught, Fives Solios proposes new equipment, associated with the latest process control achievements, as follows: • Install new flexible ducts and dual flap dampers on the exhaust ramp, to replace the existing metallic fume ducts and butterfly valves. • Add Fives Solios state-of-the-art port sealing ramp (PSR), which is equipped with air-blown patented inflatable sealing membranes. The proposed inflatable shut-off gates will make a tighter seal and than conventional folding shut-off gates (expandable dampers) because the inflatable membrane perfectly fits the deformed inner surface of the ageing flue wall port. • Install the latest Port sealing ramp generation of Fives Solios gas injectors. This new injector improves mixing of combustion air with combustion reactants. The aspiration of non-reactive mass into the main gas jet increases flame length and peak flame temperature, and consequently distributes heat better inside the flue wall. ➝ Higher performance with MÖLLER® alumina handling systems Through its MÖLLER® technologies, FLSmidth specializes in the design, engineering, procurement, erection and commissioning of pneumatic material handling systems for turnkey projects and components for the alumina Industry. For more than 75 years the MÖLLER brand has stood for high quality standard systems with more than 5.000 references worldwide. MÖLLER alumina handling systems - High performance, high efficiency. Visit us at TMS 2014 in San Diego, CA, USA, in Booth #415 FLSmidth Hamburg GmbH sHaderslebener Str. 7 s25421 Pinneberg, Germany Tel: +49 4101 788-0 s hamburg@flsmidth.com www.flsmidth.com © DUBAL pressure loss and to take full advantage of the draft available at the main ring in order to restore an acceptable pressure profile all across the furnaces. To increase the available A L U M I N I U M S M E LT I N G I N D U S T R Y A L U M I N I U M S M E LT I N G I N D U S T R Y • Install advanced control software, including combustion control algorithms. This patented solution uses carbon monoxide measurement as indicator of incomplete gas and pitch combustion so as to prevent the circulation and deposit of non-burned volatiles. CO level comparison between Initial (I) and modified (M) baking profiles Principle of combustion characterisation by the CO control software module 40 Baking process adjustment Following the revamping of firing equipment and upgrade of the control system, Fives Solios’ efforts focused on optimising the baking process. The strategy for improving baking conditions was deployed in two phases: • A first phase involves setting the firing curve to reach optimal overall system performance in the standard operation condition of the furnace. • A second phase activates the CO monitoring module to automatically adjust the gas quantity injected according to the air available in the flue wall when it is not possible to reach standard conditions. The firing parameters were adjusted by comparing the thermal gradients in the preheating and heating zones so as to balance the fuel to air ratio. In the preheating zone the flue wall temperature profile directly influences both the draft pressure and the fume flow rate. In the heated sections, the quantity of gas injected also depends on the temperature settings. Thus, balancing the thermal demand between the preheating and heating zones helps to balance the fuel to air ratio in a flue wall line. The new baking curve profile obtained following this method immediately improved combustion quality. In parallel we activated the automatic control module, dedicated to reducing non-burned residue. This new control software proposed by Fives Solios overcomes the problems of combustion in bent or blocked flue walls. This is important because during the revamping project, less than 20% of flue walls were rebuilt and the original flue walls had achieved more than 90 bake cycles. The CO monitoring module, coupled with one CO analyser per fire, continuously displays the CO content and alerts the operator in case of incomplete combustion. The module includes an automatic identification system which detects any bad combustion in the flue wall(s). In case a high CO content in the exhaust fumes results from fuel flooding, fume flow disturbance, shifted pitch volatile area, or other baking deviation phenomena, then the CO monitoring module automatically searches for the affected flue wall. Then it manages the appropriate corrective actions through the process control system by modifying the quantity of fuel injected or by increasing the volume of blown air, within predefined limits, in order to maintain baking quality. This innovative method of identification is based on comparing CO content after a brief, total stoppage of fuel injection for the pre-selected Combustion residues in exhaust pipe before and after upgrade ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 SPECIAL A L U M I N I U M S M E LT I N G I N D U S T R Y Conclusion Improving anode baking process efficiency and operation conditions in ageing furnaces is a challenge for aluminium producers. Except the refurbishment of flue wall refractory, the key factor for such improvement is the combustion quality. This objective was met at Alro thanks to the implementation of the most advanced technologies, such as: • Inflatable port sealing to limit air ingress • Advanced software for automatic control of CO content • New generation of gas injectors The improvements recorded concern not only a saving in natural gas consumption but also less non-burned residue and reduced maintenance costs, as well as extended lifetime of refractory bricks. Fives Solios has demonstrated the performances of its advanced firing and control system solutions both in terms of operational and environmental benefits. Author Pierre Mahieu is process engineer at Solios Carbone, based in Givors. WWW.BUSSCORP.COM flue walls, using stoichiometry criteria. This method is safe as it is a comparison by default (fuel injection stoppage instead of excess fuel injection). It is also ‘non destructive’ for the process as it acts for a very short time period, thanks to accurate CO measurement with a fast response time. The CO module has shown its great capability firstly to identify which flue wall line suffers bad combustion, and secondly to reduce the global CO content and consequently the emission of unburned residues. This baking programme adjustment and the CO monitoring software activation achieved a decrease of more than 30% in the CO content of the exhaust fume, reflecting a major improvement in combustion quality and in the thermal efficiency of the baking process. Improving combustion quality, which corresponds to optimising of the overall thermal efficiency, achieved and exceeded the contractual performance. The natural gas consumption is 2.1 GJ/tba in baking furnace No. 1 and 2.2 GJ/ tba in furnace No. 4, representing a decrease of energy consumption by more than 15%. Reducing combustion residue also represents an indirect cost saving thanks to: • Lower costs for equipment cleaning and maintenance • Lower risks linked with the deposition of pitch in the exhaust pipes • Increased lifetime of furnace refractory (a reducing atmosphere typically accelerates corrosion of refractory material by alkalis). Two years after the implementation of the revamping solutions, Alro’s baking furnaces maintain stable performances with an average gas consumption less than 2.2 GJ/tba. The non-burned residue and tar deposits are significantly lower. The new equipment installed and particularly the PSR inflatable membranes have proved their excellent resistance to process conditions in continous operation, with an average lifetime higher than six months. ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 The leading Mixing Technology for Anode Pastes For over 50 years BUSS KE and CP series Kneaders have been the benchmark for reliable, cost-effective compounding of anode pastes. Now we go one step further. A L U M I N I U M S M E LT I N G I N D U S T R Y Newest MHD-Valdis cell stability studies Fig. 2 Fig. 1 This year at the TMS 2014, the authors will show how the cathode surface geometry influences the metal pad current density and the cell stability. This study [1] analyses cell stability using a MHD-Valdis code version which does not take into account the impact of the cathode surface geometry on the cathode surface current density. Also this year at the TMS, the second author will present a new version of the MHD-Valdis code that does take cathode surface geometry into account [2]. The first cell stability study presented here is a repetition of the study presented in [1] on the impact of transversal ridges on the cell stability using that new code version. In 2005, the first author presented the cell heat balance study of a virtual 740 kA cell [3]. One year later, the authors presented the cell stability study of that same 740 kA cell [4]. That cell used an innovative magnetic compensation scheme that ensured its MHD stability. The authors claimed at the time that they cannot foresee any thermo-electric, thermo-mechanic or MHD related issue that would limit the size of a cell. Since that time, many 400+ kA full size smelters have been built in China, Russia and UAE, and the AP60 demonstration smelter has started its operation in Canada. Since a 740 kA cell no longer seems farfetched, the second cell stability study pre- 42 sented here is the one of a virtual 1500 kA cell. This is to reiterate the point that as far as MHD cell stability is concerned, there is no foreseeable limit to the size on an aluminium electrolysis cell. Study of the impact of transversal ridges on cell stability A cathode surface with transversal ridges is a design now very popular in China [5]. It has proved to much reduce specific energy consumption, as presented in [6]. This energy economy results from greatly reducing the ACD, which suggests that cells with transversal ridges are more stable than cells with a flat cathode surface. Yet the cell analysis studies presented in [7] and [1] do not confirm that interpretation of the observed facts. The study presented in [7] neglected the impact of the cathode surface geometry on the cathode surface current density. The study presented in [1] did account for that effect, but not very accurately, as it had to Fig. 3 © GeniSim M. Dupuis, Jonquière; V. Bojarevics, Greenwich impose the effect of the cathode surface geometry on the cathode surface current density. The new cell stability study presented here uses the most recent version of the MHDValdis code. This takes fully into account all the impact of the transversal ridges on the MHD behaviour of the cell [2]. Fig. 1 presents the metal pad current density solutions comparing the case of a flat cathode surface (top) with that of the cathode surface with transversal ridges (bottom). The geometry of the cathode surface ridges is presented in Fig. 2. It can be seen that the mesh is not quite fine enough to perfectly capture ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 SPECIAL A L U M I N I U M S M E LT I N G I N D U S T R Y Fig. 4 the geometry of the ridges or the extra longitudinal currents (JX) they generate (see [1] for more details). Fig. 3 compares the steady-state metal pad flow field solutions. The presence of the ridges slows down the metal flow, but not significantly. Fig. 4 compares the steady-state bathmetal interface deformation solutions. Again, the presence of the ridges is only barely affecting the shape of the interface deformation. The previously presented results demonstrated that the presence of the transversal ridges only marginally affects the steady-state solution, adding some flow resistance to the cathode surface. This in turn slows down the metal recirculation flow, which is good for cell stability, but it also introduces some longitudinal horizontal current, which is bad for cell stability. Only the full non-linear transient cell stability analysis can tell us what is the impact of those transversal ridges on the cell stability, and the only practical tool to carry-up such a non-linear transient cell stability analysis is MHD-Valdis. Fig. 5 presents the comparison of the transient cell stability analysis results. The results indicate that the addition of transversal ridges, while keeping the same metal pad height hence reducing the mass of metal, slightly decreases the cell stability. So this new cell stability study confirms the results of the previous ones, that adding transversal ridges has only a marginal effect of the cell stability, and that that marginal effect can be detrimen- ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 tal if the mass of metal is not kept the same. See [1] for an alternative explanation as for where the observed gain of cell stability is coming from. Study of the cell stability of a 1,500 kA aluminium electrolysis cell Fig. 5 The 1,500 kA cell of this study is twice the size of the 740 kA in [3, 4], which itself was 50% bigger than the 500 kA cell retrofitted into a 600 kA cell in [8]. That 50 metres long cell has 72 cathodes blocks, 144 anodes and 18 risers. Each riser feeds the current coming from four cathodes blocks to eight anodes. In principle, the 740 kA cell could be retrofitted into a 890 kA cell; so 1,500 kA is well within reach of a cell having twice that size. Fig. 6 presents the BZ component of the magnetic field obtained by passing 1,500 kA into a 50 metres long cell fed through 18 risers and using a very efficient magnetic compensa- tion scheme. Since the magnetic compensation scheme is 100% scalable, it works equally well on any cell size, as this 1,500 kA cell example demonstrates. Fig. 7 presents the resulting metal pad flow field solution, while Fig. 8 presents the steadystate bath-metal interface deformation. Notice the upstream / downstream symmetry of Fig. 6 43 A L U M I N I U M S M E LT I N G I N D U S T R Y Fig. 8 Fig. 7 the bath-metal interface deformation, which also results from the magnetic compensation scheme used. The transient cell stability analysis predicts that this 1,500 kA cell, having essentially no existing BZ gradient in the long (X) direction of the cell, will be extremely stable, as Fig. 8 shows. Any organisation interested in patenting the busbar compensation scheme used in that study in partnership with GeniSim Inc. can contact the first author. Conclusions The authors hope that these demonstration studies highlight the value of using mature state-of-the-art mathematical models like MHD-Valdis to carry out such MHD cell stabil- Fig. 9 ity studies. MHD-Valdis, used by the majority of the groups actively developing high amperage cell technology today, is available to the whole aluminium industry through GeniSim Inc. Light Metals, TMS, (2012), 601-606. [7] V. Bojarevics, MHD of Aluminium Cells with the Effect of Channels and Cathode Perturbation Elements, Light Metals, TMS, (2013), 609-614. [8] M. Dupuis and V. Bojarevis, Retrofit of a 500 kA Cell Design Into a 600 kA Cell Design, ALUMINIUM, 87 (2011) 1-2, 52-55. References [1] M. Dupuis and V. Bojarevics, Influence of the Cathode Surface Geometry on the Metal Pad Current Density, Light Metals, TMS, 2014, to be published. [2] V. Bojarevics and S. Sira, MHD Stability for Irregular and Disturbed Aluminium Reduction Cells, Light Metals, TMS, (2014), to be published. [3] M. Dupuis, Thermo-Electric Design of a 740 kA Cell, Is There a Size Limit, ALUMINIUM 81 (2005) 4, 324-327. [4] M. Dupuis, V. Bojarevics and D. Richard, MHD and Pot Mechanical Design of a 740 kA Cell ALUMINIUM 82 (2006) 5, 442446. [5] N. Feng et al., Research and Application of Energy Saving Technology for Aluminum Reduction in China, Light Metals, TMS, (2012), 563-568. [6] J. Zhou et al., Depth Analysis and Potential Exploitation of Energy-Saving and Consumption-Reduction of Aluminum Reduction Pot, Authors Dr. Marc Dupuis is a consultant specialised in the applications of mathematical modelling for the aluminium industry since 1994, the year when he founded his own consulting company GeniSim Inc (www.genisim.com). Before that, he graduated with a Ph.D. in chemical engineering from Laval University in Quebec City in 1984, and then worked ten years as a research engineer for Alcan International. His main research interests are the development of mathematical models of the Hall-Héroult cell dealing with the thermo-electric, thermo-mechanic, electro-magnetic and hydrodynamic aspects of the problem. He was also involved in the design of experimental high amperage cells and in the retrofit of many existing cell technologies. Dr. Valdis Bojarevics is Reader in magnetohydrodynamics at the University of Greenwich (UK). He specialises in the numerical modelling of various electrometallurgical applications involving complex interactions of the fluid flow, thermal and electrical fields, melting front and free surface dynamics. He has been involved in numerous industrial consulting projects. The Berger third generation of special smelter vehicles Brochot team, Tremblay-en-France Safety, costs, design and environment: The Berger third generation vehicle is now available on the market. The use of specialised vehicles is very common in the aluminium industry. However, aluminium smelters must work in a very competitive environment and try to reduce their operating costs to a minimum. Brochot, recognised as an innovative manufacturing company, decided to develop its third generation of vehicle for 44 today’s challenges. The company has 36 years of experience in the vehicle market, and its vehicles last; that makes Brochot a reference within the aluminium market. This longevity and sturdiness is linked to the careful choice of the main components and to the company’s profound expertise. The new ‘Berger’ vehicles provide the aluminium industry with a most reliable and flexible vehicle. Besides meeting the requirements of the smelters, the new vehicles offer an outstanding comfort and safety for operators. To achieve this excellent result, Brochot developed the vehicle in partnership with the users and also with Laval University of Quebec for the ergonomy of the seat. This approach really makes a difference. Let’s take an inside look into the new generation vehicle. Design basis: Brochot’s vehicle design combines state-of-the-art technology and er- ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 SPECIAL commands related to the vehicle. The operator drives the vehicle using the joystick located on the right armrest. The joystick controls left and right movement of the vehicle. Each armrest is fully adjustable in height, and the right armrest also provides additional settings. A control panel with built-in alarms controlls the main parameters of the vehicle. The drive axle is a critical component of the drive system. This component benefits from particular attention to ensure its reliability. In fact, the new generation of vehicle will use a reinforced driving axle with a safety factor over 4.6. Moreover, a temperature sensor transmits a signal to the control system to provide an additional information to the maintenance department. Electrical and control system: An in-depth study of the electrical layout has minimised the wiring harness. The control system uses microcontrollers and modules which are connected using state-of-the-art network at each location, and a control box which includes fuses and relays. The system uses three micro-controllers: one installed in the cabin, one in the tractor unit and the third one in the trailer. All keyboards, as well as the control panel, also use the same communication network. This communication tool greatly simplified the control system, and so will bring significant economies in vehicle maintenance. The new generation vehicle is equipped with a four-cylinder diesel engine. While the engine is adequately powered for its specified duty and is suitable for heavy-duty operation and tough climatic conditions, its four cylinders will also offer the lowest diesel consumption on the market. This engine combines proven full-authority electronic controls with the reliable performance of the world’s most successful and durable engine designs. The design includes low-maintenance fuel filters and also meets international regulations for air filtration, exhaust and sound proofing system. The air filter is suitable for the hot and dusty conditions near electrolysis potlines. The engine is mounted on springs to reduce the transmission of vibration. The steering of the vehicle uses a unique hydraulic pivot. The pivot has been substantially reinforced with oversized ball joints to minimise the maintenance. A positive-pressure greasing system allows for easy replacement © Brochot gonomics to ensure smoothness of operation, comfort and safety of the driver. The tractor unit design is exactly the same for an anode transport vehicle or a ladle transport vehicle. This allows for trailer exchangeability in a maximum of two hours (using appropriate tools) and minimises the inventory of spare parts. We also highlight the long-standing experience of Brochot / Berger in developing vehicle instrumentation and controls. In particular we have specially programmed microprocessors A L U M I N I U M S M E LT I N G I N D U S T R Y which enable maintenance teams to retrieve all necessary information. A new adapted cabin: The cabin has been completely redesigned to provide maximum visibility for the operator. Their comfort derives from a suspended cabin cushioned by air springs, as well as from the adjustable air suspension seat with driver weight adjustment. The cabin is pressurised and has an air conditioning system with a capacity of 45,000 btu (British thermal units). Driving the vehicle is much easier thanks to the 180° swivelling operator ‘statio’ equipped with all necessary driving and safety functions. The system operates with a double pedal system (front and back) in order to minimise maintenance within a smaller pivoting station. The seat rotation comes with a simplified and reliable brake. Safety above all: The safety aspect is also of major importance: new stairs and guardrails provide more secure access for the operator; there is also one safety exit on each side in case of difficulty. The cabin is sound proof with a noise level below 70 dB(A). Another important detail: the operator sits in the centre of the cabin for easy driving. The seat and control system is more friendly than the previous design. All accessories and controls of the vehicle are readily available close to the operator in the armrests. Left and right armrests are equipped with the different ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 of specific components. An end of stroke encoder improves the safety by monitoring the position of the pivot at all times, while also monitoring the pressure of the direction cylinder. Special development: An important new feature is the telematics and data logging system. This system can acquire a wide range of data from the vehicle. The system transmits the information every minute to a website via mobile phone to indicate the status of the vehicle operation and maintenance periods. Data examples are: • Engine RPM • Hours of operational use • Hours of use for the engine • Oil pressure • Hydraulic pressure, etc. The system transfers alarms with dates and event occurrences to ease diagnostic and follow-up. The system also monitors shocks on the new generation vehicle. It verifies acceleration and deceleration using a control module which checks the different values of deceleration or shock in the three axes of the vehicle. The system thus provides a lot of useful information to the data logger, and so helps maintenance as well as operation. What will the future be for aluminium smelter vehicles? Is a fully electric vehicle a dream? What’s the ideal solution? Handling system vehicle? Other means? What should definitely happen is that designers must work along with the end users to create the best solutions and to pursue innovation. New components and new technologies are constantly arriving in the marketplace. Our designers keep in touch with these developments so that we can maintain our technological lead and can continue to provide innovative and optimised solutions. ■ 45 © Rusal A L U M I N I U M S M E LT I N G I N D U S T R Y Potroom of Khakass Aluminium Smelter Improving cost position, production efficiency and environmental footprint Rusal well on the way to meet current and future challenges Victor Mann, R&D director, Rusal In the past ten years, the global market has witnessed the strongest upturn in industrial commodities since the 1970s. Opinion is divided on the nature of this development. Some believe it has been a super-cycle, i. e. a long-term, yet temporary upward trend; others suggest that it is a permanent feature, i. e. a global reindustrialisation that has been largely attributed to the phenomenal growth of the Chinese economy. Anyway, it is absolutely clear that the trend – whatever was behind it – has vanished. While some researchers maintain that the commodity super-cycle is taking a break or has even come to an end, others see it as a crisis-triggered downward price trend that started after a decade of investments in new production and expansion projects. In terms of aluminium, while consumption is strong, prices are now well below their previous high levels. Responding to the weak market environment, the aluminium sector in 2013 took steps towards bringing the industry back on track. With massive production cutbacks announced by industry leaders and 46 optimisation programmes adjusted to comply with the weak environment, 2013 seems to mark a turning point for the global aluminium market. Russian aluminium flagship UC Rusal has also revised its business strategy by putting emphasis on cost cutting, greater production efficiency and improving its environmental footprint with minimal capex. Aluminium – made in Siberia Rusal is a completely vertically integrated aluminium company with assets right through the production process – from bauxite and nepheline ore mines to aluminium smelters and foil mills. In 2012, its total aluminium output was 4.173 million tonnes. Rusal’s primary business is geographically split into two divisions (Aluminium Division East, ADE, comprising seven smelters; and Aluminium Division West, ADW, comprising eight smelters). Twelve of the company’s fifteen aluminium plants are located in Russia with two of them, the Bratsk and Krasnoyarsk smelters, accounting for nearly half of Rusal’s aluminium production. The company’s core asset base is located in Siberia accounting for nearly 85% of its total aluminium output in 2012. Rusal enjoys a number of competitive advantages, such as sustainably long-term raw material supply and its location in Siberia, which provides access to renewable hydro energy and helps to maintain its position among the leading companies on the aluminium cost curve. But for all these natural advantages, it is the shift in business strategy that is key to overcoming the ongoing industry-wide crisis. In response to the poor market climate, Rusal has announced production cuts in an effort to improve its cost position in the industry. Thus, production has been mothballed at the Volgograd, Urals and Volkhov aluminium smelters, as well as at the first phase of the Novokuznetsk smelter and at Alscon in Nigeria. In addition, aluminium production has been mothballed at the Bogoslovsk potrooms 2, 3, 4, 5 (No. 1 was shut down in 2011) and at the Nadvoitsy potrooms 1, 2 ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 SPECIAL (No. 3 was shut down in 2012). Output cuts in 2013 at the above-mentioned facilities will amount to 247,009 tonnes, and will result in an output decrease of 516,062 tonnes in 2014. Thanks to various measures taken by Rusal, such as amperage reduction, the production volume at the Sayanogorsk, Irkutsk, Novokuznetsk (second phase) and Khakass aluminium smelters has decreased. Output reduction in 2013 at these smelters amounted to 77,724 tonnes with an expected effect of 131,442 tonnes in 2014. As a result of the output reduction programme, Rusal has already cut aluminium production by 324,733 tonnes, or 8% of the 2012 production volume, with a future effect of 647,504 tonnes, or 15% of the 2012 production volume in 2014. These measures have allowed the company to realise savings of USD40/t in the cash cost of aluminium. Although production cuts are an important part of Rusal’s business strategy, to improve its operational performance the company increasingly relies on R&D, focusing primarily on smaller projects with a payback period of less than one year with major efforts being concentrated on environmental initiatives (EcoSoderberg, the recycling of production waste), expanding VAP output and the management of smelters capacities (through reduction of amperage and flexible re-launch of pots). EcoSoderberg technology – ‘second life’ of aluminium giants The crisis that hit the global economy back in 2008 has led to many companies not only eliminating wasteful programmes, but also introducing greater efficiency and innovation. EcoSoderberg-related automatic hopper-type alumina feeding system at Krasnoyarsk Aluminium Smelter ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 A L U M I N I U M S M E LT I N G I N D U S T R Y Metal tapping at Khakass Aluminium Smelter As the primary aluminium facilities – Krasnoyarsk, Bratsk, Novokuznetsk, Irkutsk and Volgograd smelters – were designed and commissioned in the middle of the 20th century, Rusal has decided to put emphasis on its environmental overhaul and developed a technological package that is reasonably expected to become the key driver of the company’s technological progress in the years to come – EcoSoderberg. The technology enhancements discovered have proved efficient both environmentally (through reduction of hazardous emissions, e. g. the fluoride emissions are cut by 75%) and economically (through a 7% cut in anode consumption and a more than 30% cut in fluoride aluminium consumption). Although the solution offered is not as ecologically effective as the baked anodes technology (BAT), it seems to be entirely appropriate in the circumstances given that switching Rusal smelters to BAT would not have been economically feasible. The reason is that transition to modern baked anode technology at a high amperage requires a complete overhaul of a smelter, whereas transition to baked anode technology without changing building structures requires high capital costs and is cost-effective only if own baked anode production is established. Naturally, the EcoSoderberg technology proved to be the best option on the table. History of the EcoSoderberg development: EcoSoderberg is based on the traditional Soderberg technology that was proposed in the 1920s by Norwegian researchers and was adopted by the Russian metallurgists. Currently, the Soderberg technology is used at several Rusal facilities, namely at the Krasnoyarsk, Bratsk, Novokuznetsk, Irkutsk and Volgograd smelters. In the 2000s the Engineering and Technological Centre of Rusal (ETC) was tasked to develop a technology that enables, with a minimal capital cost (no more than USD500/ tAl), the Soderberg top-worked cells to be upgraded in order to enable pollutant emissions to match the level of modern prebaked anode technology. The ETC team determined the following core components of a new technology: • A system of cell cover, exhaust gas afterburning and evacuation that provides a high efficiency (at least 96%) • Anode paste with a reduced content of binder, which is based on the principles of the technology of colloidal anode paste • Mechanisation of work in order to reduce the time of depressurisation • Upgraded cathodes designed by using modern materials and technical solutions, which enables the metal level to be reduced, the current efficiency to be increased and the specific power consumption to be reduced • Automatic cell feeding (with alumina or alumina and aluminium fluoride) • A control system that provides ‘intelligent’ cell control in terms of feeding, forecasting the anode effects, controlling the heat balance, 47 A L U M I N I U M S M E LT I N G I N D U S T R Y and diagnosing the process conditions • Dry gas treatment. The first experimental EcoSoderberg cells were installed in potroom No. 5 of Krasnoyarsk Aluminium Smelter (20 cells), and in potroom No. 9 (2 cells). After obtaining consistent results for the experimental group of cells, the management adopted environmental improvements for four potrooms (No. 3, 4, 5, 6) of KrAZ in the period from 2010 to 2014. In the period from 2013 to 2019, all the Soderberg cells of KrAZ (Krasnoyarsk), BrAZ (Bratsk) and, partly, of NkAZ (Novokuznetsk) are planned to switch to the EcoSoderberg technology. The EcoSoderberg operation results show that the transition of Rusal’s Soderberg smelters to the ecological Soderberg technology will allow emissions of fluorinated compounds to be reduced by more than three times and of tars by more than two times, as well as cut down the specific consumption of pitch in the production of anode paste by 30 kg and of aluminium fluoride by 1-1.5 kg/tAl. between the anode and wall and the gas manifold section with modifications in the design of the sections (hatches to perform measurements and for metal tapping are added) and improvement of the automatic control of the anode shell position, eliminating the destruction of cryolite-alumina crust during any period of the cell operation, including such operations as metal tapping and anode effect quenching. Currently, the EcoSoderberg technology uses a four-dome gas evacuation system. To develop the gas evacuation system, methods of mathematical modelling and testing of prototypes on the cells were used. The design was developed with the participation of the Siberian Federal University (Krasnoyarsk). Work is under way to optimise the design of the gas evacuation system for the EcoSoderberg cells in order to reduce the operational costs and facilitate installation and maintenance, reduce the weight of the structure and improve CO and tar afterburning. In order to ensure a stable volume of gas evacuation from the cells, the modernisation more than twofold drop in the emissions of resinous substances from the anode surface. In addition to environmental benefits, a smaller proportion of pitch content in the anode paste ensures the cost-effectiveness of its application. Conclusion: The environmental and economic effectiveness of introducing the EcoSoderberg technology, a unique development of Rusal’s scientists, has been confirmed through various tests and is firmly expected to give a prolonged, ‘second life’ to such world giants for the production of primary aluminium as KrAZ, BrAZ, and NkAZ smelters. Inert anode technology In addition to EcoSoderberg projects Rusal is continuing to develop new technologies relating to inert anodes with the potential to radically reshape the global industry. Once introduced, they will enable Rusal to completely eliminate any greenhouse gas and polyaromatic hydrocarbon emissions. On top of that, they can ensure a more than 10% cut in operational costs through reducing anode and energy consumption and a cut of over 30% in investment costs of greenfield projects. Rusal has succeeded in developing an inert anode to produce 99.5% purity aluminium. The technology has come through rig testing (in the inert anode 3,000 amp pilot prototype cell) and is now being tested at the production site. Value-added products Rusal is increasing production of high-margin value-added products System of cell cover, afterburner and exhaust gas evacuation: The key differences of the EcoSoderberg cells from the traditional design, which enable emissions to be reduced to acceptable levels, consist in the following modifications in the gas manifold and afterburner system: • Replacing the traditional burner by a burner-free gas duct, and arranging anode gas afterburning in the space under the gas manifold of the cell and in the domes of pipelines of the gas evacuation system • Increase of the overlapping area in the space 48 of the under-potroom gas duct design using gas duct pulse compressed air purging systems was carried out, which allows gas velocities to be increased and eliminates dead zones. The pulse purging control is integrated into the process control system of gas treatment centres. Anode paste with reduced binder content: In order to ensure the environmental performance, the EcoSoderberg technology uses anode paste which contains less pitch than ordinary and dry paste. A substantial reduction in tar emissions is achieved due to lack of free pitch on the anode surface, which ensures a Developing new technologies is an important element of Rusal’s R&D strategy, but not the only one. With LME aluminium trading near four-year lows, and production costs and energy prices rising across the board, a business strategy focused on value-added products (VAPs) is central to the company’s strategy to increase margins. Through improvements to its smelters loated in the European part of Russia, the Urals and Siberia, Rusal is working towards increasing the production of high-margin VAPs (slabs, sheet, ingot, wire rod, foundry alloys and billets) by up to 50% of the total production volume. In 2012, Rusal completed eight major VAP projects that helped to boost production of primary foundry alloys, rolling slabs and billets by 92,000, 49,0000 and 8,000 tonnes a year, respectively. The company put special emphasis on increasing the share of alloys in its total output by a number of effective solutions at its major production facilities: ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 SPECIAL • Casthouse 3 at BrAZ modernised two of its 70-tonne holding furnaces that has helped to increase the production of foundry alloys for the automotive sector. • The installation of a fine PDBF-100 filter on casting machine No. 4 at KrAZ increased its productivity, ensuring compliance with strict customer specification requirements for 3xxx foil and lithographic quality slabs. • The installation of new casting tables at NkAZ has boosted the 6xxx billets output by 18,000 tonnes a year. In total the company’s capacity for the production of value-added products went up by 118,000 tonnes a year in 2012, its VAP output rose by 9%, while VAP share in the total production volume reached 39%. Starting in 2013, six projects related to the production of slabs, billets and wire rod are currently being implemented with a total budget of USD107.8 million. Those will enable Rusal to increase rolling slabs and billets output at Sayanogorsk Aluminium Smelter by 120,000 and 15,000 tonnes a year respectively, while the wire rod production at the Irkutsk aluminium smelter is expected to rise by 14,000 tonnes a year. In the third quarter of 2013, Rusal’s share of VAP reached the second quarter’s record A L U M I N I U M S M E LT I N G I N D U S T R Y mechanical properties of goods, i. e. strength and conductivity, and to extend the company’s product range. Thus, in September 2013 Rusal signed an MoU with state-owned development bank Vnesheconombank (VEB) to convert its lossmaking aluminium smelters to the production of vehicle components as well as rolled and cable products. Final remarks Dry gas treatment plant at Novokuznetsk Aluminium Smelter high of 43% of total output (partially offsetting the declining LME price), against 18% in 2009 before the launch of the updated VAP programme. The aim is to reach 55% in 2016. In parallel, Rusal is continuing to develop new alloy production technologies and solutions to radically improve the physical and Today the global aluminium industry is at a crossroads, with an obvious need for a responsible approach to overcome inefficient and unprofitable production. With technological innovation leading the race, smelting rationalisation together with capacity optimisation may switch on a light in the aluminium tunnel and help to create a healthy environment for the aluminium market. While demand remains strong for aluminium, Rusal believes that the sustainability of the industry relies on industry players who take a uniform and disciplined approach with a focus on the customer at the forefront. Rusal is taking a lead in confronting the current negative market environment and will continue to further improve business efficiency. ■ ECL continues to innovate and thinks ahead in engineering A.-G. Hequet, Ronchin Since its inception in Lille, France, in 1947, ECL has become a world leader in providing key equipment to primary aluminium smelters. ECL is part of the Rio Tinto Alcan group and its products are used in the reduction and carbon areas of the smelter. The product range includes pot tending machines, cranes and transfer equipment for the reduction lines, specialised cranes, complete anode rodding shop, and metal and bath handling systems as well as a wide range of products and services for the carbon sector including green and baked anode handling equipment. The involvement of ECL does not end with the conception, production, erection and commissioning of its products. The company offers also supporting services including training, technical assistance and the provision of spare parts, on-site maintenance management, equipment audits, refurbishment and upgrades. The machines are adaptable to all the ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 reduction technologies used in today’s smelters. To be closer to its customers in more than 150 plants located worldwide, ECL set up seven subsidiaries around the world, namely in Canada, Australia, Middle East, South Africa, Mozambique, India, and China. The advantages of having offices close to its main customers are obvious. ECL provides fast and efficient services on a 24 / 7 basis. Customers benefit from on-site after-sales services, refurbishment or upgrade services, technical support and maintenance. Reduction: ECL prides itself on being entirely dedicated to the manufacture of equipment specifically for the primary aluminium industry. The company’s flagship product is the pot tending machine (PTM). More than 1,150 units have been sold in more than fifty years since 1962. Each model is adaptable to all the reduction technologies used and is designed to each smelter’s specifications. The ECL cranes benefit from many patented or patent pending innovations. Pot equipment is a significant part of the total, with more than 15,000 pots equipped by ECL worldwide. It includes anode raising beam mechanisms, anode jacking frames, crust breaking and feeding devices, J hooks and fixings, anode clamps and sealing jaws. Carbon: ECL offers equipment for the whole carbon sector, from single machines to turnkey rodding shops for all types of anodes, including the building. 190 furnace tending assemblies, 28 anode rodding shops and 15 anode handling and storage shops have been installed around the world. As already mentioned, the company provides an exhaustive range of services, either from the main base in Ronchin, France or through its subsidiaries. Improve tapping operation through the innovative regulation system ECL is also renowned for the introduction of innovative concepts to the industry. Amongst 49 A L U M I N I U M S M E LT I N G I N D U S T R Y reduce equipment maintenance costs; and to produce high quality aluminium in a safe environment. The solution of the regulation system presented here meets all these criteria. It took as its starting point that a significant amount of electrolytic bath – typically 15 kg per tonne of molten aluminium – was sucked during tapping operation due to a lack of flow rate control. This contamination has negative effects, notably for metal casting and especially for the quality of certain aluminium alloys requiring low sodium concentration. Tapping equipment is soiled faster, and metal treatments before casting requires more effort and costs. Also, the more electrolytic bath is sucked in with the metal, the more the tapping tube and the crucible will be soiled, eroded and even blocked. The crucible therefore needs cleaning much more frequently. Schematic diagram of the aluminium tapping operation ... To avoid such effects, we are working in close collaboration with Rio Tinto Alcan in order to develop a system described in patent and based on components available off the shelf to controls and regulates of the flow rate of aluminium sucked from the pot. It uses loop control and signal processing in PLC which controls a valve on the compressed air supply. It has performed 200 tapping operations in Alma’s plant resulting to ensure the efficiency and reliability of the solution, and it also yields significant benefits such as fewer equipment cleaning cycles and better metal casting. Criteria for a development strategy: Here is the aim, whatever is the product: to produce more by combining quality, rapidity, costsavings and safety. The engineering department of equipment suppliers such as ECL works hard to meet these expectations. Their aim is to provide the smelters both with solutions which save money, in particular with energy-saving equipment, or solutions which 50 © ECL recent technological advances, we should underline the regulation system to improve quality of the metal sucked during the tapping operation. One of the objectives throughout the whole process of primary aluminium production is to deliver a metal free from impurities. The tapping operation consists of sucking liquid aluminium from the pot into a crucible through a tapping tube, and it remains an operation requiring precautionary measures. On one hand, the operator has to correctly insert the tapping tube into the electrolytic cell at the lower part of the metal pad; and on the other hand, the volumetric flow during tapping is difficult to regulate. If the flow is excessive, it can result in bath being sucked with the metal. Bath adjunctions have many negative effects both on electrolytic cell operation and equipment soiling but above all on metal casting. The regulation system must also adapt to the technical developments of the electrolytic process, particularly with the new standard of low anode-cathode-distance (ACD) pots. Decreasing the ACD lowers the voltage and energy requirements of the cell (cost-savings) but weakens the stability of the process, especially during tapping operation. That’s why regulation and control of the metal flow rate helps to avoid bath fluctuations and so helps to stabilise of the process. The objective of the regulation system is clear: to limit the siphoning off of electrolytic bath during the tapping operation, and so to minimise contamination effects. This helps smelters in their daily efforts to produce more, cheaper and faster. Context: As a reminder of the aluminium production process: many different operations on the electrolysis cells are essential to produce metal in the pots. These operations can be grouped into two categories: operations related to anode changing and operations re- lated to tapping. A tapping operation consists of drawing liquid metal from an electrolytic cell and filling a crucible with a predefined mass of metal. The mass of metal to be siphoned is pre-defined in accordance with standard operating procedures, and it will depend on the production levels of the electrolytic cell and on minimum metal levels required to maintain a cell in operation. When it comes to conducting a tapping operation, several aspects have to be taken into account in order to limit bath siphoning and to reach a suitable level of molten aluminium. Tapping metal from an operating electrolytic cell usually employs a crucible embarked on the pot tending machine. The first important step is to insert the tapping tube into the electrolytic cell at the right depth in the metal: Not too deeply, nor above the metal where the bath is. In the first case, we can observe • an excessive radial flow speed due to the reduced liquid flow cross section with consequent erosion of the cathode. This excessive metal speed could also create a powerful vortex resulting in more bath entrainment. • a risk of suxking up sludge with the liquid aluminium. In the second case, the bath will be sucked by vortex effect. When the tapping tube is well positioned, the crucible is put under vacuum, usually by using a Venturi air injector, whereby the metal is aspired through the tube. The air flow through the air ejector can be controlled manually using a valve on the compressed air supply. To resume, a good tapping operation depends on the right immersion depth of the tube (Operations conducted carefully and diligently) and the flow rate control (good and stable target flow rate). In practice, the operator needs very light touch so as not to overshoot the target metal flow rate. Consequently a stable metal flow is rarely, if ever, obtained, and very large fluctuations can be observed during tapping of a bunch of cells. There are many factors which can cause the variations in flow rate. These include for example: • the position of the crucible relative to the metal / bath interface • any obstructions limiting free flow of metal into the tube, such as surface level variations on the cathode surface, or lumps of solidified bath • variations in air temperature during tapping • variations in how well the tapping crucible is sealed • variations in air pressure supply • crusting of tube from bath entrainment movements of the metal in the pot, etc. ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 SPECIAL Thus it is difficult to manually control the fine adjustment in vacuum to maintain an ideal metal flow rate. Therefore ECL designed, set up and tested in Alma’s plant a system based on the automatic control of the flow rate to reach the target metal flow rate. Basically the system comprises a control unit with control loops and signal processing in PLC. This adjusts the compressed air valve in the air ejector, and hence the vacuum pressure, depending on the headspace in the crucible and on the weight gain of the crucible during tapping. This system allows the metal to be siphoned into the crucible at a pre-determined target flow rate. The system consists of • an air ejector coupled to a source of compressed air and adjusted according to the headspace in the crucible • a vacuum transducer fitted on the cover of the crucible, in communication with the headspace, connected to the control unit showing actual vacuum pressure changes • a valve assembly operated by an actuator responsive to an electric current-to-pressure converter which is coupled to the control unit. The valve actuator receives information from the control unit to determine the flow through the outlet of the valve assembly. It will open or close the compressed air supply as needed. • a dedicated algorithm which filters noise A L U M I N I U M S M E LT I N G I N D U S T R Y from the weight signal and from the vacuum level to reach a stable target • control units connected with the weighing unit in order to receive weight measurements and to continuously calculate the flow rate of liquid being drawn in the crucible. The control unit adjusts then simultaneously the flow rate of the compressed air flowing through the regulating valve in order to reach the target flow rate. The control unit includes a programmable logic controller (PLC). This PLC is directly connected with the main compressed air directional valve so as to open the valve when a tapping operation begins and to close it again when the target mass of metal has been siphoned into the crucible. Advantages of the solution: More than 200 tapping operations have been performed with the regulation system at Alma’s plant. Outcomes are clear: the system maintains an ideal metal flow rate and maximises productivity without compromising quality. The less bath is siphoned with the metal, the less the tapping tube is soiled or blocked and the less it requires being cleaned or changed. The less the bath is siphoned, the easier the metal is to process in the casthouse. Consequently we can expect a decreased frequency off relining the crucible brickwork. All those quantifiable advantages will help the smelter to save money on maintenance costs and on spare parts costs while also decreasing the cost of the liquid aluminium treatment. Casting operations will be made easier and the quality of metal sucked will generate less waste. The solution that might be called ‘self-adaptive’ allows an adaptation to the variable parameters such as the tightness of the crucible, the soiling of the tube or the air pressure supply. It should also be mentioned that reducing cleaning cycle time of the crucible will improve safety, and operators will be less exposed to potential accident due to tube handling. The solution, whether we are talking about a greenfield or brownfield project, is adaptable to any smelter configurations using the AP Technology. The system can be integrated directly in the automatic system of the pot tending machine or installed in the tapping beam of the crucible. Conclusion: The regulation system is selfadaptive. It requires no action and/or adjustment from the operator. The system provides transparency and combines good process quality and fast potline operation. Author Anne-Gaëlle Hequet is external communication manager at ECL, based in Ronchin, France. ... and the real process ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 51 A L U M I N I U M S M E LT I N G I N D U S T R Y New dross press directly tested against the inert gas dross cooler A. M. Peel and J. Herbert, Altek Dross is an inevitable by-product of melting aluminium and it can typically account for between 1-5% by weight of a facility’s total production. When skimmed from a furnace, dross can contain up to 80% of metallic aluminium [1] which, if neglected, can diminish quickly through oxidation and be forever lost from the metal stream. A number of different technologies have been developed over the years to improve both the economic and environmental aspects of handling dross [1-5]. Each technology has advantages and disadvantages, but generally, to be successful, the equipment must have the following characteristics: • The technology has to be safe. Older technologies cooled with water, which while efficient, has inherent safety risks. • The system should have minimal impact on the casthouse, and must not interfere with the day-to-day operations. The technology should be easy to use and require minimal maintenance. • The system should be environmentally sound and meet all local environmental standards. • The system should maximise the amount of metal that can be recovered. Recovered metal will come in two forms: metal that is captured at the generator’s facility, and metal that can be recovered at a secondary processor. Over- 52 Principles of dross press © Altek Casthouses worldwide need to cool dross and while preventing valuable metal units within it from oxidising away. The main two technologies they use for this are the dross press and the inert gas cooler. Over the past decade the dross press has become the most used dross cooling technology within new primary aluminium smelter casthouses. As an example, the six primary aluminium smelter casthouses located in the Middle East together use 24 dross presses for cooling their drosses. This paper presents a recent, rigorous study at a US billet casting facility to directly compare the operational results of these two technologies. Over a period of four months, dross from the same furnace was processed simultaneously and in parallel by both methods. Both in-house drain and secondary metal recoveries (through a tilt rotary furnace) were measured and reported separately in the study, and this study addresses both economic and environmental / facility issues. Fig. 1: Typical inert gas dross cooling system [6] all metal recovery (in-house plus secondary) is important; however, it is preferable to recover more metal in-house since the alloyed metal has more value when returned to the melting furnace with the same alloy. • The system should be capable of handling a wide variety of dross types including white, black and heavily thermiting dross. Two technologies generally considered to meet the above criteria and which are used worldwide are the dross press and the inertgas cooler. Principles of inert gas cooler The dross press was developed and introduced to the aluminium industry by Altek in the mid-1990s. Today’s dross press technology bears little resemblance to the early systems, and has evolved over the years to meet the demands of the modern casthouse and conform to recent environmental legislation. The dross press is based on the principle that a liquid placed under pressure will separate from a solid and flow to the areas of least pressure. The press system consists of a steel frame, hydraulic unit, a pressing head and a skim pan set. Dross is skimmed into cast alloy steel dross pans that are designed to both cool dross and maximise the metal drain. After the skimming operation, the pans are transferred into the press and the head is slowly lowered into the dross, squeezing trapped metal into the sow mould under the skim pan. This drained metal is the same alloy as that of the metal being processed in the furnace, and can be charged immediately back into the furnace in the form of an ingot if desired [7]. While both the above technologies are well established, recently, Altek has made significant improvements to its dross press by amalgamating the Altek and Tardis technologies. These improvements made the dross press more effective on a wide variety of dross types and also make the system more user-friendly and robust. A great deal of published information and data details the results and merits of each The inert gas dross cooler (IGDC) was developed by Alcan in the mid-1980s. The basic principal involves skimming the dross into compartmentalised cast steel or ductile iron pans. These pans may contain drainage holes to allow molten metal to drain into a collecting pan below. Once skimmed, the pan is transferred as quickly as possible into a cooling station which consists of a base together with a hood, which is lowered to provide a seal once the pan is placed inside. Once the hood is sealed the chamber is purged with an inert gas such as argon for several minutes, so displacing the air inside. The pan is kept in the inert chamber for typically 4-7 hours until the temperature of the dross falls below 400 °C, which the manufacturer considers to be the temperature below which thermiting will cease [1]. Fig. 2: Dross press head and pan set combination ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 SPECIAL A L U M I N I U M S M E LT I N G I N D U S T R Y Fig. 3: Latest generation Tardis II Model 500 dross press technology at individual facilities; however, no reliable published data exists to the two technologies operating side by side. Altek recently had the opportunity to participate in a four-month side-by-side comparison of both technologies at a US billet casting facility. During this rigorous study, dross from the same furnace was simultaneously processed in parallel through each technology. The study recorded both in-house drain and secondary metal recoveries (through a tilt rotary furnace), and it considers both economic and environmental/facility issues. Trial facility and dross press installation The company sponsoring the study operates a very efficient billet remelt facility in the USA. Accurate data collection would be an important part of the study, and the facility already had experience with operators recording the weights of dross pans as part of their standard working practices. The facility operates a single stationary 130,000 lb (60 t) melting / holding furnace which generates approx. 4,800,000 lbs (2,177 t) of dross per year. The company has successfully operated several inert gas cooling hoods for many years and was happy with their performance. Based on the size of furnace and on the amount of dross generated per skimming, Fig. 4: Simultaneous skimming into both dross pan types ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 Fig. 5: Dross pan being placed in the inert gas cooler Altek selected its Tardis Generation II model 500 machine, and also supplied several cast alloy steel dross pans with a capacity of approx. 700 kg. The dross press was equipped with many of the latest design features, including the latest generation of air-cooled press head, a hydraulically operated guillotine door and an updated PLC and HMI control system. The updated controls incorporated a pressure feedback system for more efficient and consistent pressing (replacing timers in previous dross press systems). The Altek dross press was fully assembled and tested prior to shipping to the test site. The system was shipped pre-assembled as much as possible so as to minimise installation and commissioning times. The system does not require any special foundations, and it can stand on a standard casthouse concrete floor. This made installation extremely quick and inexpensive. Testing protocol Dross is by nature a variable material and many factors can affect its properties and metal recovery from it at a particular facility. Previous studies conducted by Altek have shown that furnace operators alone can have a significant effect on the amount and consistency and of metal recovered from dross, and it is important that any comparative study takes this into account [8]. In order to conduct the most reliable and accurate comparative study, Altek and the facility management met to discuss how such a test should be conducted. The following procedures were adopted: • During each furnace skimming, the dross was skimmed simultaneously into the pans supplied for each technology (see Fig. 4). • Once skimmed, the inert gas cooler pan(s) were placed in the hood(s) and left to cool under the inert atmosphere. Simultaneously, Fig. 6: Dross pan being placed in the dross press the dross press pan(s) were processed through the dross press system (see Figs 5 and 6). • Once processed through the respective technology, every dross pan was weighed to establish the weight of dross as well as the amount of metal captured in the drain pan below. • When cooled, the dross from each technology was placed in separate dross bunkers in order that the secondary recovery could be determined at the dross processor. • The dross was shipped to a separate facility where it was processed in a tilting rotary furnace. The secondary facility was aware that a comparative study was being conducted, and so the loads of dross were segregated accordingly. Results The dross press was well received by the operators, and its fully automatic features enabled the operators to easily incorporate its use into their other casthouse activities. The average time to press each pan of dross was approximately six minutes. Once pressed, the dross was allowed to cool in the pan for a further one hour before being dumped into the appropriate dross bunker. In comparison, the average time taken to process the dross through the inert gas coolers was six hours before it was cool enough to be removed. ➝ 53 A L U M I N I U M S M E LT I N G I N D U S T R Y In-house metal recovery (metal drain) The amount of dross in each skim pan was weighed along with the metal drain collected in the drain pan below. To account for differences in the amounts of material processed through each system, the metal recovery is expressed as a percentage of dross skimmed in each pan as per Formula 1 (see further below). In house recovery data was collated each week as shown in Fig. 7. The chart shows that the dross press consistently provides a higher in-house recovery. Averaging the 16 weeks of data shows that the dross press provided approximately double the amount of in-house metal recovery compared to the inert gas cooling system as shown in Fig. 8. Maximising in-house recovery is typically the priority of any casthouse, since the alloyed metal is worth considerably more than the off-spec recycled secondary ingot (RSI) received back from the dross processor. Maximising in-house recovery will also reduce transportation costs and tolling fees charged by the secondary processor. Fig. 7 shows that the in-house metal drain varies considerably from week to week. While the reasons for this were not investigated as part of this study, the lower recoveries experienced at the beginning of the study coincided with the furnace electromagnetic pump being off-line. Applying a trend line to each data series shows a consistent difference in recoveries between the two technologies. The similarity between the two trend lines indicate that the casthouse operations (operator practices, charge material, equipment, etc.) had an equal affect on both technologies. The authors also believe that the similarities are an indication of accuracy in the data. Applying a linear trend line to each data series also reveals that throughout the study, the inert gas cooler recovery remains very constant while there is a slight improvement (2-3%) in the amount of metal recovered with the dross press. The authors suspect that this is due to the operators gaining experience using the dross press system, and expect that over time this gain would level off. Secondary metal recovery As described above, the dross processed through each system was segregated and sent off site to a secondary dross processor, who reported monthly on recovery data on each batch. Initially, we had hoped to correFig. 7: Comparison of in-house metal recovery by week late the in-house and secondary recoveries by week; however, it was not possible to segregate the dross in this manner and instead, the recoveries were recorded by the date each load was shipped, as shown in Fig. 10. As with the in-house recovery, secondary recoveries varied significantly over the 16 weeks. Again, we believe this is associated with the functionality of the electromagnetic pump, as well as with differences in the furnace charge materials. The secondary recovery data was averaged over the entire trial as shown in Fig. 10. The results show the inert gas cooler provided a higher secondary recovery compared to the dross press with a difference of 1.4% at the end of the trial. Fig. 12 shows the combined overall metal recoveries (in-house and secondary) for both technologies. On completion of the four-month trial, the dross press provided approximately 3%-points improvement in overall metal recovered. Economic comparison Ultimately, the goal of any dross processing technology is to minimise metal units lost through oxidation. Even a small change in recovery can have a significant effect on the bottom line of the business. Economic return on investment models will vary depending on geographic location of the facility as well as on the current metal pricing, local tariffs, transportation, and secondary dross processing fees. In order to determine the economic effect the dross press would provide if installed permanently at the trial facility, the above recoveries were extrapolated over a 12-month period. The following assumptions were also used as part of the economic model: Value of Midwest Premium: USD0.95/lb Value of metal recovered in-house: USD0.92/lb Value of RSI: USD0.82/lb Dross tolling charge: USD0.12/lb Fig. 8: Average compassion of in-house metal recovery Formula 1: In-House % Recovery = 54 Total Metal Weight ___________________________________ 100 (Total Dross Weight + Total Metal Weight ) * Fig. 9: In-house recovery trend lines ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 SPECIAL A L U M I N I U M S M E LT I N G I N D U S T R Y Fig. 10: Secondary recovery by ship date Fig. 12: Overall metal recoveries Value of metal recovered from inert gas cooling system In-house recovery: 4,800,000 lb x 8.77% x USD0.92 = USD387,283 Secondary recovery: Tolling charge: 4,379,040 lb x USD0.12 = (USD525,485) 4,379,040 lb x 54.8% x USD0.82 = USD1,967,765 Total value of metal: USD1,829,563 Value of metal from dross press system In-house recovery: 4,800,000 lb x 17.76% x USD0.92 = USD784,282 Secondary recovery: Tolling charge: 3,947,520 lb x USD0.12 = (USD473,702) 3,947,520 lb x 53.4% x USD0.82 = USD1,728,540 Total Value of Metal: $2,039,120 Based on the above comparison and assumptions, the dross press provided annualised savings of approx. USD210,000 per year. It should also be noted that the inert gas cooler requires a continual supply of inert gas (Argon or similar) which can cost several thousand dollars per month. This additional cost has not been included in the above economic model. Fig. 11: Average of secondary recovery ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 Summary Both technologies functioned well throughout the trial and provided metal recoveries in line with what is expected from a facility operating with good furnace practices. Both technologies easily meet current environmental legislation and neither process agitates the dross, which can cause fines and additional emissions that are inherent with other dross processing technologies such as rotary coolers and dross stirring systems. The dross press and the inert gas cooler are both designed to be scalable to match the size of the facility and its dross generation. For the inert gas cooling technology, more capacity implies can mean larger facilities, which would require many cooling stations taking up a great deal of floor space. This is in contrast to the dross press, where a single machine can handle multiple dross pans in a relatively short period of time. Thus, another advantage of the dross press is that it needs far fewer dross pans. Also, the press does not require the use of costly inert gasses. Instead, the dross press utilises the plating action or aluminium skin, which encapsulates the dross during the pressing sequence, to protect the dross from further oxidation. An example of the plating action can be seen in Fig. 13. The data collected over the 4-month trial indicates that the dross press provides both higher in-house and higher overall metal recoveries compared to the inert gas cooler. Even for a relatively small operation, this can equate to several hundred thousand dollars a year in savings. Very little thermiting was observed throughout Fig. 13: Plating action generated by pressing the trial. It is expected that a facility that routinely generates hot or thermiting dross would experience greater benefit from using the dross press compared to the inert gas cooler. The relatively rapid press cooling times would significantly reduce the oxidation of metal units, so improving secondary recoveries. References [1] M. B. Taylor and D. Gagnon, The Inert Gas Cooler (IGDC), Light Metals 1995, TMS, pp. 819-827 [2] J.J. Crane, J. P. McMahon, H. Spoel, MFS-15 Dross Cooler Installed at Alcan Aluminium Corp., Oswego, New York Light Metals 1985 TMS, [3] O.H. Perry, The Development of the Modern dross press Light Metals 2000, TMS pp. 675-678 [4] O. H. Perry, The Development of the Modern dross press, ALUMINIUM,76 (2000)1-2, pp. 37-39 [5] H.J. Roth and D. M. Collins, (2007) The Art of Dross Management – Maximizing Dross Values and Minimizing Dross Generation, TMS 2008 [6] Pictures from Stas website www.stas.com [7] J. Herbert and A. Peel, Preserving Metal Units Utilizing the Latest Generation Aluminium dross press, 2011. [8] D. J Roth, Some Like it Hot (Presented at TMS Conference, New Orleans, LA USA, 12 Feb. 2001) Authors Alan M. Peel is with Altek LLC, based in Castle Donnington, UK. James Herbert is with Altek LLC, based in Exton, Pennsylvania USA. 55 A L U M I N I U M S M E LT I N G I N D U S T R Y Metallic foam reduces electrical contact resistance Electrical contacts are found at many locations in an aluminium plant. Bolted interfaces in transformers, rectifiers, breakers, shunts, busbar connections, risers on the electrolysis cell and collector bar to busbar joints all show electrical resistance. The use of a specific metallic foam reduces by more than 80% the electrical resistance of the contact. This paper presents measurements of Cu/Al and Al/Al contact resistances under various conditions of pressure, temperature and atmosphere and discusses non-linear effects such a decrease in electrical resistance with an increase in current density and temperature. A number of industrial applications are introduced which can save energy, reduce maintenance, and improve contact lifetime and reliability. Energy is an increasing cost for the industry, and effort should be put into saving energy when possible. This paper presents a new solution to the reduction, in fact almost suppression, of electrical contact resistance. Contact resistance is due to surface effects and it takes Fig. 4 56 © Kan-nak R. von Kaenel and J. Antille, Kan-nak Ltd; M. Pillet and M. Lindeboom, AMC Etec Ltd Fig. 1 place at all bolted interfaces between two conductors. In an aluminium smelter, bolted interfaces are found at many locations including transformers, rectifiers and connections from bus bars to electrolysis cell. The contact resistance leads to a temperature increase due to Joule heat which may degrade the contact over time. It is common to machine or clean contacts, or to use contact grease to avoid oxidation. However, no surface is absolutely flat, and the electrical contact never takes place over the full surface. Moreover, aluminium and copper surfaces are always covered by a thin layer of oxide. The oxide layer is a very poor electrical conducFig. 3 tor and it increases the electrical contact resistance. This paper explains the concepts underlying the realisation of a new material that reduces to a minimum the contact resistance and represents a number of specific applications and test measurements. The issues related to electrical contact between two Fig. 2 surfaces have been known for a long time. A good review on the subject is given in [1]. It is well-known that “different metals have a place in this electrochemical series: the aim when building any metal structure is to try and ensure that metals that are in intimate contact with each other are similar in terms of their electrical potential. Here are some examples of the electrochemical potential for some commonly used metals” [2]: Zinc = -1.11 V Aluminium = -0.86 V Steel = -0.68 V Stainless steel = -0.61 V Copper = -0.43 V Nowadays copper is often replaced by aluminium in electrical circuits due to its lower cost and good physical properties. However, connecting aluminium to copper appears to be very critical [3]. Ecocontact foam In order to improve the conductivity of the electrical contact, a metallic foam named ‘Ecocontact’ was developed with the objective of introducing an interface impermeable to gas and liquids, and which creates as many electrical contacts as possible between the two surfaces. The foam together with much harder materials such as nickel. The harder materials are intended to break through the oxide layer. The metallic foam is protected by a series of patents [4]. Fig. 1 shows a piece of metallic foam magnified 105 times. The foam is porous but has a very low permeability. The initial thickness of a foam plate is 1.6 mm. The thickness reduces to 0.2 mm when the foam is pressed between two contact surfaces making a perfectly tight joint. In order to assess the permeability of the material, ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 SPECIAL A L U M I N I U M S M E LT I N G I N D U S T R Y Fig. 6 samples were subjected to two ISO standard tests, CEI 68.2.30 and CEI 68.2.11. In the first the contact resistance was monitored during two consecutive cycles at 55 °C with 95% humidity; in the second it was tested in a Fig. 5 salt mist. Fig. 2 shows the setup used for the tests. The results are displayed in Fig. 3 and prove that neither of the environments has any effect on the contact resistance. The voltage remains 0.5 mV for all samples and in both environments. The test is supposed to simulate 20 years of use in a normal atmosphere. The foam was devised in such a way as to realise as many electrical bonds as possible between the two surfaces. This was achieved Fig. 7 Fig.: 8 by using some hard metallic species which are able to break through the oxide layer and penetrate into the pure copper and / or aluminium. Since the foam contains a significant fraction of silver, its electrochemical potential is very low, resulting in a voltage lower than 1 mV. Micro-welding allows for the diffusion of the hard species into interface layers. The dependence of the contact resistance Fig. 9 Fig. 10 Fig. 11 ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 on pressure with and without metallic foam was investigated. Fig. 4 shows that the contact pressure required to minimise the contact resistance with the metallic foam is about one third of the pressure needed without foam. The lowest voltage that could be achieved by a perfectly clean contact without metallic foam was 3 mV. Using the metallic foam, the voltage was reduced by a factor 10 at a pressure approximately three times lower. It is also to be noted that the voltage remains at its minimum when the pressure is released down to 0.5 x 107 N/m2. This can be explained by the elasticity of the foam (its thickness returns to 0.8 mm at zero pressure) which ensures that the electrical bonds remain active. As a result the improved electrical contact is fully stable over time. Fig. 5 illustrates the concept of micro electrical bonds between the metallic foam and a contact surface. Since the number of bonds is very large, the electrical resistance is accordingly low. This is further illustrated by the calculation of the electrical field over a region scattered with small areas of insulating material. The electrical current (1 A/mm2 at the upper boundary) bypasses the insulated areas, resulting in a higher electrical field at the edge of the insulating material. This is the well-known ‘fringe’ effect, which is equivalent to an increase in electrical resistance. By contrast, the metallic foam fills up the insulating gaps and creates hundreds of electrical bonds, thereby suppressing the over-voltage as shown in Fig. 7. An interesting behaviour of the metallic foam is that an increase in temperature, or in other words, a larger agitation at the microscopic level, helps to create more electrical bonds between the two conducting surfaces. As a result, the contact voltage decreases when the temperature increases. This negative correlation is a remarkable property, since the temperature dependence is generally positive for all types of metallic electrical contacts. The following experiment demonstrates this behaviour: a 1,000 A current was imposed on a 10 x 10 cm copper-to-copper bolted connection. The voltage was measured before and after the insertion of metallic foam. A constant torque of 7 kg∙m was applied to the bolt in both cases. Fig. 8 presents the setup and the points between which the voltage was measured. Fig. 9 shows the implementation of the metallic foam. After 57 A L U M I N I U M S M E LT I N G I N D U S T R Y Applications Fig. 12 Fig. 14 Fig. 15 Fig. 16 58 some time, the current was increased from 1,000 to 10,000 A. As a result, the conductor heated up. When the temperature reached 220 °C, the current was reduced to 1 kA and the contact was cooled down drastically by pouring cold water as shown in Fig. 13 Fig. 10. Fig. 11 shows the temperature and contact voltage as a function of time. Five stages can be distinguished: 1) The current is 1,000 A and the Cu/Cu contact is not treated. The contact voltage loss is 140 mV. 2) The metallic foam is inserted and the current is kept at 1,000 A. It is equivalent to a current density of 10 A/cm2 at the contact. The contact voltage decreases by 97.6% to 3.6 mV. 3) The current is increased to 10,000 A, overheating the conductors. The contact voltage immediately jumps to 39 mV in proportion to the current increase. But then while the temperature increases, the contact resistance considerably decreases. When the temperature reaches 220 °C, the contact voltage is down to 9 mV. 4) The current is dropped to 1,000 A. The contact voltage reduces to 0.8 mV. Obviously the higher temperatures have increased the number of electrical bonds between the two conducting surfaces. 5) The contact is quickly cooled down to room temperature with cold water. The contact voltage is not affected and remains at 0.8 mV. Copper-aluminium plate: The first application concerns the electrical contact between a copper ‘diamond’-shaped plate welded onto the aluminium beam of an electrolysis cell. Fig. 12 shows the beam and the copper plate used to accommodate the anode rods. The thermography suggests that the contact resistance between the copper plate and the beam is rather high. In fact the voltage varies from 10 mV to almost 200 mV in the worst case. Fig. 13 shows where the voltage was measured and Fig. 14 depicts the metallic foam inserted between the aluminium beam and the copper plate. The contact voltage decreases to less than 1 mV. In fact the result does not depend on the initial voltage and always decreases to less than 1 mV (Fig. 15). The electrical current after implementation of the metallic foam was found to be lower. However, this is not related to the contact but to the anode setting. In order to minimise the implementation cost, a study on the origin of the over-voltage was performed. Fig. 16 shows that most of the current flows through the lower part of the copper plate. The surface of metallic foam to be applied in order to save 95% of the contact voltage was computed (Fig. 17). Reducing the applied surface of metallic foam has a negligible impact on the contact voltage (less than 1 mV) whereas the economic impact is significant. It shows the importance of understanding where the current is flowing in order to design an efficient electrical contact. The potential energy saving of this application is easy to determine. The average voltage loss is around 30 mV, the average current is 80 kA and there are 2,200 cells. This represents 2.4 kW per cell or 46 GWh per year. High voltage transformer: Connections to an ERDF 75 MW transformer were another application studied. The situation was critical due to hot spots at the transformer connections. Fig. 18 shows pictures of the transformer and of the overheated connections. The highest measured temperature was 140 °C. This is not acceptable since a further temperature increase could damage the contact. The high voltage bars were analysed and Fig. 17 ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 SPECIAL A L U M I N I U M S M E LT I N G I N D U S T R Y Fig. 18 Current kA 40 40 60 Before mV 58 54 42 °C 120 140 131 After implementation of the metallic foam on 30% of the surface mV 2 3 6 °C 107 117 100 Table 1 foam is more than 80% with only 30% of the contact surface covered with it. Conclusions the metallic foam applied at the three bolted connections shown in Fig. 19. The electrical resistance along the conductor is shown before and after insertion of the metallic foam. The resistance decreased by more than 90%. As a result, the temperature reduced to approximately 80 °C, which corresponds to the transformer temperature. The electrical resistance also slightly decreased in the conductor between two bolted contacts due to the lower temperatures. In this example the reliability of the installation was the most important benefit, although 5 GWh per year could also be saved. The intervention took less than an hour. Aluminium-aluminium bolted busbars: The last application that is highlighted is an aluminium-aluminium bolted interface which is common in aluminium smelters. Fig. 20 shows horizontal bolted interfaces between aluminium busbars. A number of contact voltages were measured. Table 1 presents typical voltage values for different currents. The table speaks for itself. The efficiency of the metallic Fig. 19 ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 The metallic foam has demonstrated new interesting features such as: • The lowest electrical contact resistance at any torque for Cu/Al and Al/Al interfaces – Without cleaning – Without machining – Without surface treatment • Energy saving – Minimum 80% reduction of contact losses • Contact lifetime, stability and reliability improvement – Enclosed or tough environments – Reduction of maintenance survey effort – Lower temperature for same current intensity – Capacity to take overloads. Acknowledgement The authors would like to give many thanks to J.C. Delvallet for the important contribution of EDF (Electricité de France) in the development and the validation of the metallic foam in numerous installations. This led to a partnership contract between AMC-Etec and the ERDF Group. Many thanks are also given to Anvar (Agence Nationale de Valorisation de la Recherche, France), the governmental French institution who gave important support during the five years of development of the metallic foam. References [1] Copper in Electrical Contacts, CDA Publication 23, July 1997, Revised December 1980, Edited version of an original script commissioned by Copper Development Association from H W Turner and C Turner of ERA Technology Ltd., Leatherhead, Surrey, Copper Development Association [2]Jeremy Arris, Corrosion Copper and Aluminum Boat design.net, 05-03-2011 [3]Electrical performance of aluminium/copper bolted joints Published in: Generation, Transmission and Distribution, IEE Proceedings C Volume: 129, Issue 4, July 1982, pp 177-184, ISSN: 0143-7046 [4]Ecocontact® first patents are EP 1602153 and Fr 2 962 856Q-B1 Authors René von Kaenel received his diploma of physicist from The Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Lausanne (EPFL) with a specialisation in plasma physics before working for ICL in London and specialising in computer science. In 1981 he joined Alusuisse and became the head of the modelling activities for smelting technology. In 2000, he received the title of Electrolysis director in the new Alcan organisation and further supervised Alcan’s modelling activities. Since 1981 he has participated in many smelter modernisation projects, all over the world, leading to large productivity increases. He has published many articles on electrolysis cells, casting processes and inert anode technology. In 2004 he created Kan-nak Ltd, a specialised company for the optimisation of processes, in particular the Hall-Héroult process. Dr. Jacques Antille obtained a degree in Physics at the University of Lausanne in 1978 and his PhD at the European Centre of Nuclear Research (CERN) in 1984. Soon after he joined Alusuisse Technology and Management Ltd and worked on modelling projects of the Hall-Héroult process and casting processes. In 2004 he joined Kan-nak S.A. where he leads the magnetohydrodynamic studies to optimise the electrolysis process, as well as all measurement techniques. Michel Pillet graduated as a mechanical and electrotechnical engineer. Expert in power electrotechnics, he was the CEO of Fouillet SA in 1986 and De Nora SA in 1991. In 2003, he created and became President of AMC Etec SAS, a company specialised in the energetic optimisation of the electro-intensive circuits process and applied a patent titled Ecocontact. Matthieu Lindeboom is an electro-technical engineer. He’s an Econcontact expert and product manager at AMC Etec since 2005. Fig. 20 59 technology g. tucholski, Ruf company The aerospace industry depends on precision aluminium components created by a vast network of manufacturers to help power the innovations that drive it forward. This critical part of the supply chain generates tonnes upon tonnes of scrap as it produces a myriad assortment of parts that range from minuscule, custom-machined gears to large-scale, moulded aircraft structures. Regardless of their size or function, all of these parts need to adhere to extremely tight tolerances to ensure proper safety and performance. This means that, at every stage of production, they are continually checked and rechecked for quality, which often leads to repeated grindings and turnings as they are fine-tuned. As a result, the aluminium scrap created throughout the manufacturing and finishing processes is as varied as the components themselves. Bulky chips and lubricant-drenched turnings are collected during initial manufacturing operations that often involve turning, milling and drilling, and different thicknesses of grinding and filing particulate swarf go hand-in-hand with high-detail industrial finishing. All of this variation in the type and quality of aluminium scrap makes it difficult for producers and scrap processors to efficiently and effectively manage. That is where briquetting technology comes in. This article looks at briquetting technology (with a focus on Ruf briquetting systems) and the benefits it offers to those tasked with finding smart solutions for scrap management. And because real-world results are what matter most, we will also review how briquetting has helped a large scrap collection operation that specialises in supporting the aerospace manufacturing supply chain. Squeezing value from scrap – by using briquetting technology To put it simply: briquetting is a process that compresses metal scrap such as chips, turnings and shavings into very compact, easy-to-manage cylindrical or rectangular blocks called briquettes (also referred to by some as pucks). These briquettes have densities and resale 60 © Ruf Aluminium scrap processing flies high with briquetting technology values comparable to those of solid metals, and better yet, the scrap used to make them can be wet or dry. In the case of aerospace manufacturing, this makes briquetting a very effective way to deal with the wide variety and quality of scrap created by production and finishing operations. To go a step further, briquetting machines such as Ruf systems make it possible to reclaim expensive cutting fluids so they can be reused or recycled along with the aluminium swarf they came with. They can even transform grinding sludge into saleable scrap. Briquetting has been around for more than 50 years, and during that time, the technology that powers it and the benefits of using it have evolved tremendously. A prime example of how far briquetting has come is the contrast between the old-style machines and today’s systems. It used to be that briquetters were big, noisy and inefficient. Now, briquetting systems made by manufacturers such as Ruf are engineered specifically to run reliably and efficiently while delivering better production rates with less horsepower. Innovative hydraulic designs and smaller footprints make these machines easier to integrate into existing operations and have made them quieter than ever before. As briquetting systems continue to advance, so do the benefits they bring to scrap producers and scrap processors. Briquetting boosts the bottom lines of everyone involved in scrap disposition and recycling by adding value to the waste stream. For a relatively small investment, briquetting enables them to deliver a higher-quality product to mills more efficiently – reducing energy, labour and transportation costs while increasing revenue. Benefits of briquetting aluminium scrap Quality control: Briquettes provide levels of quality control that are not possible with loose chips and swarf. By compressing loose materials into dense briquettes, excess fluids and other contaminants are forced out. This creates a more homogenous product that reduces the amount of oxidation and makes it more desirable to foundries and other resale outlets. This makes the scrap more marketable, saleable and profitable. In addition to the scrap metal itself, if enough waste lubricant or other fluids can be extracted and collected from batches of loose swarf from a particular source, it may be possible to re-sell them to the original supplier or other processors and manufacturers that have a need for them. Flexibility: Because many modern briquetting systems can accept scrap in practically any pre-processed form of wet or dry swarf – including chips, turnings, filings, shreds and shavings – they offer extreme flexibility that is critical to their value proposition. As you can imagine, this flexibility is a welcome benefit for an industry like aerospace where so many different forms of aluminium scrap are produced. The ability to simply use one method of disposition for all kinds of scrap allows for leaner operations and wider profit margins. Increased resale value: A by-product of the superior quality of briquetted aluminium scrap is increased resale values. Because the mills and foundries that re-purpose scrap can do it more efficiently and profitably when they start with a product that is purer and easier to melt, many of them are willing to pay a premium for it. Aluminium scrap in briquette form saves these companies money because they do not have to go to the same trouble and expense to transport, store and melt it as they would with loose scrap. In addition, aluminium briquettes closely mimic the properties of solid aluminium so they can be placed directly into furnaces without the special preparations required for loose materials prior to charging. Combine these benefits with ancillary advantages such as significantly reduced losses to oxidation and collections of filter dust in furnaces, and it is no wonder why briquettes are so attractive to buyers on the open market. ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 technology Storage and logistics: Transforming tonnes of loose scrap into easy-to-manage aluminium briquettes goes a long way toward making it easier to store and transport. In fact, briquetting can reduce the volume of scrap by 20:1. Imagine the possibilities and savings associated with reducing the space, time and handling requirements of scrap by twenty times! Condensing the volume of aluminium scrap so significantly means that loads being shipped to market are denser and more valuable; reaching the weight maximums for over the road (OTR) trucks. Plus, since chemicals and contaminants found in lubricants are forced out during the briquetting process, there is no need to incur the costs of safeguarding against potentially negative environmental impacts during shipping, processing and storage. It all adds up to more robust profitability. Energy, maintenance and labour savings: Cost savings associated with energy usage, maintenance and labour are part and parcel of today’s most popular briquetting systems, including those manufactured by Ruf. These systems are engineered to be energy efficient and are built for the long haul. In the case of Ruf briquetting systems, they are all cus- tomised to user specifications. Each one can process scrap on a 24-hour per day basis with very low wear and maintenance costs over a lifetime of usage and with the largest model producing over 2 t/h. And because they can briquette as much loose scrap as larger, more energy-intensive machines with less horsepower and smaller footprints, the utility savings can be very significant. Ruf briquetting systems can be set up to run automatically, 24 hours a day, with little or no human oversight. This means that manpower can be used in more productive ways ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 than merely babysitting scrap processing. This reliable, automatic operation reduces labour costs while giving personnel more time for innovation and other activities that can help drive businesses forward. Summing it up: Briquetting is a cost-effective method for handling and preparing loose aluminium scrap (practically any kind of metal scrap, really) for resale to mills and foundries. It adds measurable value to the waste stream and creates a higher-quality product that is comparable to solid scrap. Briquetting allows users to go from carts and scrap bins full of messy bits and pieces to pallets of neatly stacked, more marketable briquettes. how A to Z Metals is taking aerospace scrap processing to new heights In 2013, A to Z Metals upgraded its briquetting capacity by installing a custom Ruf hydraulic system at its five-acre processing centre. The briquetting operations are housed in a 50,000 sqft (5,000 m2) under-roof facility and are powered by the new Ruf machine as well as an older legacy casting system made by another manufacturer. Long Beach Industrial Metals (LBI) is a subsidiary of A to Z Metals Recycling Inc. and part of the AllMet Group, and currently running all the briquetting operations. “With our Ruf Briquetter, LBI produces 120,000 lbs (54 t) per day. We are producing a 6 pound (2.4 kg) aluminium briquette every 6.7 seconds from aluminium scrap from our aerospace clients, and that’s only running the hydraulic pressure at 50 percent of its capacity,” said company representative David Gomes. “The Ruf Briquetter allows A to Z Metals to efficiently process a mixture of scrap – lightly packed fluffy turnings along with dense, heavy aluminium that caused problems with our legacy system. With our other system, the light stuff wouldn’t briquette correctly. With the Ruf machines, it doesn’t matter what state the scrap in the aluminium charge bin is in.” Intralogistik-Lösungen neu im Internet unter www.herrmannhieber.de The automation of the briquetting operation with a Ruf system has helped LBI achieve new levels of profitability because it can run a ‘silent’ night shift that works without the oversight of operators. Gomes says that the Ruf Briquetter has improved output between 500 and 800 pounds per hour (225-360 kg/h) over the legacy machines. “It doesn’t take up a lot of space and it out performs the other systems we’ve seen. On top of that, it’s more efficient and cheaper to operate.” LBI is a part of the AllMet Group, one of the top industrial recycling service providers in southern California. Because LBI deals with aerospace manufacturers that produce parts for some of the biggest names in the industry, it needs to collect and process large amounts of aluminium scrap in ways that do not impede project timetables – it is an important part of the industry’s supply chain. According to Gomes, the increased capacity and reliability delivered by the Ruf Briquetting system allows them to market shorter collection intervals to clients. This has, in turn allowed the company to penetrate further into the aerospace industry. And because the briquettes it produces are of such high quality, A to Z has found increased success in marketing them to buyers overseas. “This briquetter is a great addition to our business. It has already given us a big boost in efficiency and profitability, and once we begin recycling the fluids we reclaim during the briquetting process, we’ll introduce another revenue stream that will help us diversify and keep growing into the future – beyond the aerospace industry. We are extremely pleased with the Ruf system and are discussing adding two more systems in the near future,” concluded Gomes. Author Greg Tucholski is president of the Ruf company, based in North Olmsted, Ohio, USA. 61 technology ceramic welding of furnace refractories Complementary technologies extend lining service life – and boost productivity Furnace refractories used for thermal processing in the aluminium industry – whether for primary, foundry or secondary melting and holding, or for heattreatment – must withstand arduous thermal conditions and severe mechanical demands during operation. However, a variety of refractory repair techniques and materials is available to extend the service life of furnace linings and, in turn, boost plant productivity. cooled lances. Many different lance sizes and configurations can be employed to reach damaged areas in various positions inside the furnace or vessel. The oxygen rich stream of powder contacts the hot furnace refractory lining where the metals oxidise in a highly exothermic reaction. Sufficient heat is produced, between 1 600 and 2 200 °C (2 912-3 992 °F), through the combustion of the metals to melt the surface area of the refractory particles in the mixture as well as the surface of the damaged refractory lining. This reaction creates a very similar weld mass compared to the substrate refractory being restored, resulting in an effective and durable bond. The key benefit of using ceramic welding is that it is performed while the furnace or vessel is at or near operating temperature and there One such technique is ceramic welding – an innovative hot refractory repair method that is used to repair the inside hot face of any furnace refractory at operating temperature, in most cases with minimal disruption to production. It has proven to be a cost-effective and long-lasting solution for furnaces, including in the aluminium industry. Ceramic welding enables metal producers to restore furnace linings to the original integrity of the refractory located in high wear areas, while avoiding furnace downtime. Repair and maintenance programmes can be devised by companies such as Fusetech in the USA and international outfit Fosbel. In conjunction with plant management and furnace operators, a total solution can be engineered aimed at optimising production, lowering maintenance and energy costs, and also reducing emis- Furnace refractory lining repair in progress sions. While ceramic welding is best employed is no need for shut down or cooling. The end as a preventive maintenance tool, it can also result is minimal or zero loss of production. address large scale catastrophic repairs, thus Facing the potentially huge cost of even a parproviding an economic alternative to extend tial rebuild or re-line, ceramic welding offers furnace life and prevent unscheduled furnace an economical and attractive alternative route down time. for extending furnace refractory life. the process Materials The ceramic welding process was developed and originally designed for the in situ repair of glass furnaces. In 1979 the technology was replicated as a method to repair coke oven walls in the steel industry, and since then the process has evolved to include other industries, not least aluminium. Ceramic welding is applied during furnace operation by discharging a dry mixture of refractory aggregate and oxidising media together through specially designed water- Refractory restoration via ceramic welding can be achieved at operating temperature on a wide range of equipment types, including melting and holding and heat-treatment furnaces. Any refractory type can be matched with a ceramic welding material, so that the properties of the weld repair are matched to the original refractory. A range of such materials has been developed – specifically designed for compatibility with a variety of refractories 62 used in non-ferrous furnace linings, including 60%, 70% and 80% alumina, magnesia, magnesia-chrome, fireclay and others. In most instances, the process has no effect on melt chemistry. complementary services In addition to ceramic welding, a wide range of innovative and complementary refractory maintenance and hot repair services are available to furnace users. For example, these include in situ inspections, condition monitoring, gunning, furnace rebricking, refractory rebuilding, and high emissivity ceramic coatings. For example, hot inspection services offered by Fosbel are based on leading edge equipment and techniques to view and document refractory damage in all areas of the furnace without interruption to production. Dedicated equipment and expertise enables visual inspection of areas or actions that may not be visible through normal ‘line of sight’ procedures. Realtime observations allow the user to focus on any area of interest, while capturing all the data on video or still images. The reports provide valuable information on the state of a furnace at a specific point in time, and allow for easy comparison with subsequent images. Information of this type enables efficient historical records to be reviewed and updated over the campaign life of the furnace. Some typical applications include inspection of firing characteristics of burners, furnace walls and roofs, and also batch melting characteristics. Fosbel’s Lancescope system provides realtime, close-up or wide angle views of virtually any area of a furnace or rotary kiln. The system uses a state-of-the-art digital camera equipment, which provides clear, detailed images of problem areas up to 1 650 °C (3 000 °F). The system can be inserted into openings as small as 7 cm (2.75 in), and reach up to 10.7 m (35 ft). In cooler applications the system provides illumination via a fibre optic light source for maximum clarity. Successful ceramic welding repair, Fosbel says, are possible in the transition zone of the oven chamber as the Lancescope can be employed ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 It‘s a pure waste of time ... if you make do with anything less! for close up viewing of the repair area. Fosbel also makes use of state-of-the-art infra-red technology to inspect furnaces from their exterior to identify potential problems before they become critical. Results can be seen instantly, while a documented report provides a baseline for measuring rates of change. mal shock damage from heatcycling. Also, the materials adhere to old refractory better than with the mechanical bonds achieved by using low cement repair materials. Additionally, their non-wetting binder withstands high temperatures, reducing reaction to aluminium and corundum build up. All the very latest information in a single publication, 10 times a year, excellently researched, direct from the source! high emissivity coatings It is common in the aluminium industry to use radiant heat during all or part of a melt cycle to transform solid aluminium shapes such as ingots, sows and T-bars to the molten state. The rate of heat transferred into or out of an object by thermal radiation is governed by, among other factors, the surface emissivity of the object, defined by its absorption coefficient. Aluminium has a very low absorption coefficient, Gunning repairs offer operational and productivity benefits resulting in inefficient radiant heat transfer during melting. However, it is gunning possible to improve the absorption coefficient Also to complement ceramic weld repair op- of aluminium shapes – easily and significantly – erations, various gunning procedures present thereby increasing melt rates, and reducing another hot refractory repair option that can energy consumption and oxidation. For this application, Pyrotek produces a be coordinated to meet operational needs. A dedicated coating medium, which offers these range of companies, such as Fosbel provide a process benefits for customers in melting procomprehensive gunning service, including the duction. Pyrocoat FM-W is graphite-based, use of its Fosgun gunning materials range denon-reflective, energy absorbing coating that veloped for numerous applications. The repair is applied to the surface of aluminium prior is carried out by trained technicians utilising to melting, typically in a dry hearth furnace. proven techniques resulting, it is claimed, in This coating reduces the reflectivity of the a dense, smooth repair with documented lonaluminium, thereby increasing the absorpgevity and durability. Another leading company supplying a tion of radiant heat into the aluminium. Nonrange of dedicated gunning repair materials in coated aluminium naturally reflects heat from its refractory portfolio is Spokane, Washing- its bright surface, taking longer to melt than ton-based Pyrotek Inc. The company’s Pyro- aluminium coated with Pyrocoat FM-W. The fast and Pyrogun products, which comprise a prime purpose of the coating is to provide a unique phosphate-bonded alumina-based re- means of decreasing the melt time. Pyrotek reports that it has conducted labofractory castable, deliver cost-effective refractory repairs effected with cast-in-place gun- ratory and field trials, which demonstrate the ning techniques. Applications include furnace effects of employing its special coating to the roofs, walls, belly bands, doors, lintels, sills metal charge to obtain increased surface emisand jambs, charge wells and pouring systems. sivity in the melting process. Typical melting These materials cut production costs compared times, Pyrotek claims, are cut by 50% by with alternative media. They deliver a faster coating the aluminium with Pyrocoat FM-W. dry-out: repairs cure in hours against days for Boosting the melt rate delivers many advantages, including increased productivity, deconventional low cement castables. Resistance to explosive spalling allows fast- creased energy usage and overall production er heat up, saving days of furnace downtime costs. For most melting operations, a faster melt rate results in reduced bath pick up of compared to using low-cement castables. Pyrogun and Pyrofast’s flexible phosphate inclusions in the molten metal. Ken Stanford, contributing editor bonding provides elasticity that resists ther- ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 Test it now! YES, regular I would like to receive information on the latest trends and technologies! Please send me a sample copy at no obligation. I wish to subscribe to INTERNATIONAL ALUMINIUM JOURNAL The subscription price is EUR 297.00 a year incl. p&p and VAT (Outside Europe: US$ 393.00). INTERNATIONAL ALUMINIUM JOURNAL is published monthly with double editions in January/February and in July/August. Subscriptions are initially valid for a year. Company Name, first name Street, No. Postcode, town Tel. Fax Email Q The subscription price is to be paid by credit card: Q VISA Q American Express Q Euro-/Mastercard Number Cardholder Valid until Q The price is to be debited from our account (only possible within Germany) Bank Bank code Account no Q The price will be remitted on receipt of the invoice Date Signature Subscription service vertrieb@giesel.de Fax +49 (0)511 7304-233 © Fata technology View of the OARC hot rolling mill Building the future for aluminium flat rolled products A. tropeano and e. Romano, Fata ePc Fata EPC is a division of Fata SpA (a Finmeccanica company) – a leading, diversified industrial group of companies operating in the field of industrial plant engineering, procurement and construction. Fata EPC has developed an outstanding capability in general contracting (TK / LSTK) based on over 50 years’ experience, providing customised, state-of-the-art technology and environmentally consistent solutions for its various industries: primary and secondary aluminium, downstream facilities, power generation plants, and other sectors, such as oil and gas, container handling and storage facilities as well as infrastructures. In 2011 Fata EPC was awarded a USD300 million EPC LSTK contract to build an aluminium flat rolled products facility in Sohar for OARC, the Oman Aluminium Rolling Company. This company is fully owned by Takamul Investment Co. (100% Oman Oil) and was formed in 2006 to develop a sustainable downstream chain to support Oman’s industrial sector. OARC is purchasing the molten aluminium for the FRP facility from the neighbouring Sohar Aluminium smelter. The OARC Initial Plant Acceptance was 64 achieved on schedule in August 2013. The company has produced coils across almost all product ranges, so meeting commercial specifications, and will next move into commercial production. The OARC plant will be a world class, light gauge sheet rolling facility with a capacity of 160,000 tonnes a year. It includes a Hazelett twin belt caster which provides unique metallurgical properties that benefit customers in their business applications of aluminium sheet products. The successful combination of the industry leading technology of the Hazelett belt caster with the state-of-the-art hot rolling, cold rolling and finishing equipment supplied by Fata Hunter will allow OARC to provide customers with value-added products and will generate long term, sustainable employment opportunities in Oman. Depending on the final product and on the required productivity, Fata EPC / Hunter has the capability and the flexibility to satisfy every customer’s request, being able to integrate in the process chain either the twin roll casting machine, the Hazelett caster or the direct chill casting. The unique mechanical and automation features of the hot and cold rolling as well as tension levelling equipment designed and built by Fata Hunter enable the plant to reach the highest standard of quality and productivity for the final products. The FRP facility in Oman is designed to produce strips made from aluminium alloys, in widths up to 1,950 mm and in the thickness range 0.075 to 1.5 mm in the form of semifinished coil products, i. e. foil stock for converter foil, packaging foil and cable wrap. In addition it will produce finished coil products such semi-rigid container foil, e. g. for aluminium food containers, and fin stock for the air conditioning and automotive heat exchanger markets. The molten aluminium is delivered via holding furnaces to a twin-belt caster, where it solidifies into strips (2,032 mm max. width, and 16-21 mm thickness range). The solidified strip goes directly to a hot rolling mill where it is reduced down to a thickness of 1.3 to 3 mm in a multi-stand in-line / hot rolling process, and then coiled. This is then followed by the usual cold-rolling process on a 4-high ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 technology non-reversing rolling stand with the necessary intermediate and final annealing operations. Levelled coils may be produced as well, by passing through the tension levelling line. Functional description of the hot mill The OARC hot strip mill is a 2-stand (in future 3-stand) 4-high, non-reversible hot strip mill. It is located downstream of a Hazelett continuous belt caster. The aluminium strip is fed from the Hazelett caster continuously to the hot mill. The strip leaving the caster exit pinch roll will form a loop over the roller table before entering the mill pinch roll. This is necessary to compensate for any slight mismatch of speed between the caster and the mill. Loop height is measured by a laser sensor and is controlled during normal operation by trimming the hot mill speed. A driven pinch roll and a travelling shear are located at the entry of the hot mill. The pinch roll serves to thread the strip at the initial phase and, when the strip is in the first stand, can be kept in closed or open position. This pinch roll must be closed to enable the strip shearing. The travelling shear located after the pinch roll allows for strip head scrapping during the start-up phase, and it serves as an emergency shear to isolate the caster from the mill in case of a mill emergency stop or caster stop, to avoid pulling the strip dangerously from the casters belts. A roller table will support the strip up to mill stand No. 1. There is provision for future installation of a mill stand No. 0 between the entry shear and mill stand No. 1. The future mill stand will enable the mill to increase its final productivity, to decrease the minimum exit thickness and to hot roll harder aluminium alloys. Mill stand No. 1 is a 4-high configuration with the work rolls driven by a variable speed AC motor, connected to the rolls through a gearbox reducer and pinion stand. The mill stand is equipped with the following main groups: • Pair of work rolls and back-up rolls • Load cylinders mounted on top of the mill stand, equipped with position transducers, pressure transducers and servo-valves for closed loop position and force control • Automatic passline adjustment • Positive and negative bending cylinders (E-type, machined in the blocks) equipped with pressure transducers and servo-valves for closed loop force control; top back-up roll balancing cylinders • Work rolls brushes to remove the metallic ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 oxide layer from the work roll surface • Top back-up roll wiper • Entry and exit cooling sprays (selective strip cooling). Between mill stand No. 1 and mill stand No. 2 a looper roll is located, with the function of keeping constant tension to the strip between the two stands. The looper roll is equipped with pressure transducer and servovalves for closed loop force control, and a position transducer used for speed synchronising of the two stands. Mill stand No. 2 is an exact copy of mill stand No 1. Downstream of mill stand No. 2 are located the X-Ray sensors for strip centreline thickness and for profile measurement. These sensors will be interfaced to the ‘hSystem’ for process control of strip thickness and profile. Located after the X-ray sensors are the exit pinch roll, the edge trimmer and the rotary shear. The exit pinch roll is used when the strip at the exit side is not subjected to strip tension from the coilers. The edge trimming unit consists of separate variable-speed AC motor driven blades and choppers, on both operator mandrel during threading • Upper table guiding the strip from top side to the mandrel during threading • Expanding mandrel for strip winding and tension application, driven by a variable speed AC motor through a gearbox • Mandrel outboard bearing support • Belt wrapper (non-metallic) to help wrapping of first strip wraps (special ‘feeding on the fly’) • Hold down and tail rolls, to keep the last wrap in position at tail-out. The finished coil is then removed from the coiler by means of a coil car equipped with a hydraulic motor for the transverse movement and with a cylinder-operated coil cradle. Coils are then unloaded onto coil saddles for coil banding, marking and weighing, before removal by overhead crane. To allow continuous mill operation, a second coiler is provided with the same configuration as coiler No. 1. An automatic sequence will be provided for switching from one coiler to the other at each coil end. A driven roller table is provided between the two coilers, to support the strip. Next to coiler No. 2 is in- First saleable coils for Initial Acceptance in OARC plant and drive side. The trim width is set by independent positioning of the blades and chopper heads, using hydraulic motors. The exit rotary shear is used to cut the strip between preceding coil tail and following head of new coil. In between coils, it is possible to perform a double cut to remove a sample sheet that will be taken to the visual inspection area. The drum shear is driven by a variable speed ac motor, and it will operate in a synchronized manner with respect to strip speed. Following the exit shear there is a roller table that guides the strip to coiler No. 1. This coiler is equipped with the following main items: • Driven pinch roll • Flip table to divert the strip to the mandrel • Threading table supporting the strip to the stalled a driven roller table identical to the one installed in between the two reels. This roller table is used as a visual inspection area. At the end is installed a retractable mechanical stop, to stop the sheet as it arrives after cut from the exit rotary shear. A pinch roll and shear allows the operator to cut smaller samples for the quality control and to scrap the remaining cut sheets. A sample can be cut for every hot rolled coil. The scrap can be piled over a tiltable scrap table, to be then removed by means of fork lift. Hot mill control is divided into two main systems named Line PLC and Fata Hunter Process control system ‘hSystem’. Line PLC will cover the Mill Speed Master Control (speed reference control of mill motors and reel tension control) and the Mill logics (con- 65 technology trol of mill manual and automatic sequences). The hSystem process control will cover: • Load cylinders position and force control • Bending cylinders control • Cooling spray control • Looper roll force control • Roll eccentricity compensation (REC) • Automatic gauge control (AGC, a special feature is the ‘long stroke’, able to compensate for the wear of back-up rolls and work rolls) • Automatic profile control and Level 2. Functional description of the cold mill The OARC cold rolling mill is 4-high type, non-reversible. It is a special light gauge cold rolling mill, having the entry material maximum thickness 3.0 mm and the exit material minimum thickness 0.065 mm. Coils enter the cold mill area through the pallet conveyor from two different locations: • Hot area storage: coils are loaded by manually operated crane onto the pallet conveyor entry section. • Cold area storage: coils are loaded by automated cranes on the pallet conveyor exit section. Coils are moved around the mill while loaded on pallets, and are transported by a dual row pallet conveyor. By means of the entry coil car, each coil is then transferred to the preparation station, where it is possible to prepare the coil head. The coil diameter and width are measured at the preparation station. The coil is then loaded onto the payoff mandrel: the coil car will automatically centre the coil in vertical and horizontal position based on the measured coil diameter and width. The payoff reel is an expanding mandrel type with outboard bearing support, driven by variable speed AC motors with dual speed Twin-belt caster leading to the hot mill gearbox. Once the coil is loaded on the payoff reel and the payoff mandrel is expanded, the strip is fed toward the mill with the help of a feed roll mounted on the payoff reel and driven by hydraulic motor. An extensible tail opener table, mounted on the entry bridle, will guide the strip to the entry pinch roll, with top roll driven by a hydraulic motor and bottom roll driven by variable speed AC motor. The entry bridle is also equipped with a strip centring device, with a retractable thickness sensor incorporating also a laser speed sensor, and with a shear and three bridle rolls, one of which is vertically movable. The mill stand includes two driven work rolls supported by back-up rolls. The work rolls are connected to a dual-speed gearbox with pinion stand, driven by a variable speed AC motor. The rolling force is applied by two hydraulically operated load cylinders, one for each side of the mill, located on the top side. Load cylinders are position and force controlled by the automation system (hSystem). The mill View of the OARC cold rolling mill 66 stand is also equipped with bending blocks for positive and negative bending action as well as upper back-up roll balancing. To maintain the correct lower roll stack passline against roll diameter variation, adjustments are made to the passline wedge positions, located at the bottom of the mill stand. Roll cooling sprays and hot spray bars are located at the mill entry side. Roll wipers are provided for the top back-up roll, to avoid cooling oil splashing toward the exit side. Rolls and strip blow-off tables and nozzles are provided on the exit side. The mill exit bridle includes a retractable thickness sensor incorporating also a laser speed sensor, as well as the flatness roll driven by AC variable motor, and the exit deflector roll. An ironing roll is also fixed to the exit bridle frame, equipped with dual rubber and steel rolls. Dedicated pressure control for each side as well as for back-pressure, allows for fine force control across the strip width, compensated for coil diameter change. The rewind reel is an expanding mandrel type with outboard bearing support, driven by variable speed AC motors with a dual speed gearbox. A movable exit table is mounted on the exit bridle, to guide the strip toward the mandrel. A horizontally retractable belt wrapper is provided, to wind up the first wraps on the mandrel when the slot gripper in the mandrel is not used. The belt wrapper is automatically removed after a few wraps when the strip tension is established on the rewinder. Coils are unloaded by the exit coil car and are transferred to a pallet conveyor. Cores are loaded and unloaded from the mandrels using dedicated core loader / unloader arms. Core racks are provided for core storage on both entry and exit side. On the entry side, it is possible to remove pup coils: the pup coil is then handled on the despoiling station, to clear the core from the scrap wound strip. Out of the mill area on the exit side is located a visual inspection station. Coils can be transferred to this station from the pallet conveyor by means of a dedicated coil car. The inspection station allows for strip unwinding over an inspection table, to prepare and cut strip samples. Process control does include position and ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 technology pressure control for load cylinders, bending cylinder pressure control, cooling sprays. AGC, REC, AFC (Automatic Flatness Control) and Level 2 is implemented by the Fata Hunter hSystem package. Description of the tension levelling line The tension levelling installed in the OARC facility is a state-of-the-art line with a maximum speed of 350 m/min that will produce levelled coils for all applications. Reliable strip tracking and strip tension control is achieved throughout the line by means of the proper number and configuration of bridle units and steering units, thereby limiting strip edge damage, strip breakage, telescoping finished coils, and equipment abuse, while at the same time promoting higher uniformity and better product flatness. Tension bridle rolls and deflector rolls are polyurethane covered, to prevent strip marking and to assure the proper friction coefficient between the rolls and the strip. The coils are loaded onto the automated storage interface stand by means of an automated overhead crane. The entry coil car, equipped with traversing and lifting motion, picks the coils up and transfers them to the entry coil stands and onto the stub mandrels type payoff reel. The payoff reel, designed with over-unwinding capability, is equipped with an automatic coil centring system. After unwinding, the strip is fed through the No. 1 pinch roll, the 3-roll flattener, the entry shear, the side trimmer, the double row strip joiner and the No. 2 pinch roll. Coil changeover takes place with the entry section stopped. After the old and new coils are joined, the splice is transferred to the exit section at a reduced speed. After the joint has gone through, the strip is levelled in the tension leveller. The tension levelling section includes a 4-roll entry tension bridle, a 6-high amplifier and a 4-roll exit tension bridle. The combination of the bridle generated tension force with the superposed bending reversals in the levelling zone takes the strip beyond the material’s yield point and thereby reduces the flatness errors in the strip to very low and acceptable levels. The amplifier is a pull-through, segmented backed-up, 6-high, heavy duty design. The unit includes a leveller, cross-bow and exit flattening zone. It consists of a solid frame with work cassettes which can be extracted from the side. This combines optimum rigidity, tight mechanical tolerances and ease of maintenance. A horizontal inspection station with table to inspect strip flatness is provided after the tension levelling equipment. As soon as the scrap portion of the strip reaches the exit shear, the line is stopped again and one cut is performed to separate the good material from the scrap and to complete the rewinding of the processed coil. Alternatively to the levelling operation, it will also be possible to slit the incoming strip into two strips (of equal width). This is achieved by using the exit trimmer / slitter that is installed in the exit section. The electrical and automation system includes full AC drives based strip transportation, operator stations with integrated HMI, and automatic sequencing for coil handling and Level 2. Authors Anthony Tropeano is CEO of Fata EPC and Fata Hunter. Enrico Romano is process engineer of Fata Hunter. Both are based in Pianezza, Italy. Stacast project – raising the bar for eU aluminium castings © StaCast strategic role aluminium alloys play across industry in the EU, to promote greater production efficiency and quality in the foundry sector, and to boost integration of cast components in the value chain. The overall plan is to deliver these objectives through the creation of formal documentation on: defect classification in aluminium alloy castings, mechanical properties of aluminium foundry alloys, and guidelines and standards for the design and manufacture of aluminium alloys castings. In practice, the StaCast project addresses its objectives through elaboration of a series of dedicated workshops coordinating expertise in metallurgy, mechanical design, and manufacturing and casting production technologies. Authoritative partners The end of 2013 marked the first year of activity for the European StaCast project. An acronym for ‘Standards for Aluminium Alloy Cast Products’, the initiative conceived and ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 driven by a selection of prestigious bodies in Europe, is related to new quality and design levels for the production of light alloy castings. Essentially, the prime aims are to highlight the The key partners in the StaCast Project are the Universities of Padova (DTG) in Italy, Aalen (GTA), Germany and Trondheim (NTNU) Norway, which together will coordinate activities, collect data and elaborate the creation of standards and guidelines. Specifically, DTG, as overall coordinator of the project is focussed on correlating defects and mechani- 67 technology cal properties GTA’s main role is to investigate high-pressure die-cast components and related mechanical properties, and NTNU’s work is centred on gravity die cast components, related defects and mechanical properties. Associations representing the industry, the Federation of European Aluminium Consumers (Face) and the Italian Association of Metallurgy (AIM) will undertake data collection and dissemination of project results. The Italian Standardization board of non-ferrous alloys (Unimet) will collate and organise information in a standardised format and also with the Al alloys Committee of the Brusselsbased European Committee for Standardization (CEN) . From the outset, the project partners acknowledged that the broad potential of aluminium alloys in the EU foundry industry urgently needs a coordinated framework of dedicated support actions, in which new and advanced standards must play a central role, particularly in the mutually inter-related areas of Defect Classification and Mechanical Design. Key sector It is well recognised that the foundry industry is a key sector of the European manufacturing industry as a whole and, in particular, that aluminium alloys play a significant role, with the value of castings production estimated for 2010, at over three million tonnes, produced by 2,850 foundries employing over 100,000 people. The size and importance of the casting sector is a reflection of the excellent combination of properties offered by aluminium, including low density, good mechanical proper- ties and high corrosion-resistance, that in recent years have become increasingly vital in terms of ecological sustainability. The major end use applications for cast aluminium alloys are in the automotive and transport field, due to the increasing trend towards lightweighting, and the benefits from the reductions achiev- contribute in driving the application of new standards in such a strategic field in the EU field as foundry production of aluminium alloy components. All activities are aimed at helping the foundry industry sector to compete more effectively in world markets, by impacting positively on all the members of the supply Die cast aluminium part for automotive application able in fuel consumption and emissions. Cast aluminium alloy components for automotive applications are in the main (60-65%) manufactured by High Pressure Die Casting (HPDC), due to the high production rate and complexity of shape that the process delivers. Some 1,500 HPDC foundries across the EU, especially in Italy, Germany and Spain – mainly SMEs – produce an estimated 1.5 million tpy of aluminium die castings. The StaCast project also identifies Permanent Mould Gravity Casting as an important complementary production route in the EU aluminium foundry sector. objectives developed StaCast is expected to develop for 18 months, during which time the partners will work together to identify collective needs and chain. Particular aspects include: having a positive influence on effective mechanical design by engineering companies; enhancing alloy producers’ knowledge and capability to work with foundries on alloy selection; boosting the ability of foundries to interact with customers in a collaborative engineering approach, and presenting end-users, such as automotive companies, with ways to use cast components produced with a more knowledge-based approach, thus improving the technological edge of their products. This includes, for example, improved reliability and safety, cost optimisation and reduced time-to market. A dedicated website has been designed for the StaCast project and includes general background information, a discussion forum for partners, questionnaires, document sharing, technical databases and a calendar of key related events, see www.stacast.org. Die caster MRt expands to double production capacity In the UK, MRT Castings has launched an ambitious development programme to double its production capacity over the next three years. The world-class die casting specialist, which offers complete endto-end manufacturing solutions, reports that it is seeing significant growth in its major niche markets. MRT is expanding the workforce at its manufacturing facility in Andover, Hampshire, to address new component manufacturing projects for the medical, electronics, aerospace and defence sectors. The company has also been investing in new capital equipment, including a new advanced Colosio PF250 die casting cell, 68 now commissioned, which features real-time shot control to ensure consistent high quality production and further enhance the already high quality of its die casting facilities. MRT is well known for both its aluminium and zinc gravity and high-pressure die casting and firmly maintains that the new investment strategy clearly reflects its ongoing commitment to quality, precision and productivity. Prior to the latest investment schedule, existing facilities comprised five pressure die casting cells with locking forces ranging from 220 to 530 tonnes. This includes two stateof-the-art Buhler cells, featuring real-time computerised shot control, robot ladling and die-spray, and a fully automated Urpe die casting cell. Post-casting equipment capability includes hydraulic trimming presses ranging from 5-30 tonnes. Pressure die castings up to 4.5 kg are produced in a range of metals, including LM2, LM6, LM24, LM25 and Castasil 37 aluminium alloys. A major focus of the new plant investments, the Colosio PFO 250 die casting cell, precision-built in Brescia, Northern Italy, delivers a range of innovative features including: • Real-time shot control – by monitoring and storing process data, the advanced control system of the machine affords MRT accurate repetition of all the injection parameters, pressures, speeds and strokes to ensure consistent high quality casting at all times. ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 technology ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 components can be cast in lower volumes and more cost-effectively than its competitors. Quality is at the core of all of MRT’s activities with 100% of castings production undergoing visual inspection for cosmetics appearance prior to shipment. Dimensional control is also ensured using two CNC co-ordinate measuring machines and advanced SPC. Through this systematic quality control, waste can be reduced to deliver lean manufacturing – 5S techniques and visual management are also used throughout all production areas. Mr Rawnson adds: “Many of our customers are involved in the medical and electronics industries where their production areas helps to cut out waste from the start, making production as lean as possible. MRT also offers established customers Kanban-triggered delivery systems to schedule lean and just-in-time production across all of the processes involved in high pressure casting, gravity die casting and CNC machining. Additionally, the company provides its customers with full turnkey manufacturing solutions including design, tooling, painting and plating. MRT also offers assembly, storage and shipping of customers’ products directly to their clients as a complete and seamless outsourced service, enabling complete outsourcing of their own manufacturing. © MRT • A fully integrated two-axis automatic die sprayer – enabling fast, effective and consistent lubrication of even the most complex die forms. • A robotic casting extractor with integrated cooling conveyor – increasing productivity and improving repeatability. • A new Ramsell-Naber gas-fired melting furnace with recuperative burner technology, thus reducing energy consumption and emissions. The Colosio PFO 250 delivers a locking force of 250 tonnes, making it suitable for aluminium components up to around 3.5 kg. Its latest advanced features ensure that MRT can continue to deliver the highest quality castings and at optimum tolerances. The company’s facilities have been further expanded downstream of the casting lines over the last year with the addition of two further Brother S2DN-0 casting machining centres. The company’s managing director, Phil Rawnson, emphasises the resulting benefits for customers, saying: “Our focus has always been on precision engineering, regardless of the size of the contract, which is what makes MRT so attractive to medical and electronics industries. With these new plant additions we can continue to deliver a consistently high quality product within tighter tolerances, ensuring that we continue to be an innovative provider of bespoke engineering solutions.” Looking forward, the company sees that further growth in production will be realised by continuously developing the world class manufacturing practices that it already has already in place. Mr Rawnson explains that he recently went on a fact-finding mission to Japan to study the latest techniques and see how lean manufacturing is applied in some of the most productive manufacturing facilities in the world. He indicates the intent to “accelerate MRT’s lean journey” after touring production plants in Tokyo and Kyoto. “Lean manufacturing has been a part of MRT’s manufacturing processes for many years,” he claims. “The trip to Japan has provided an amazing insight into how the Japanese operate their leading production sites to world class standards by empowering staff, investing in technology and creating a culture of continuous improvement. “Successful improvement activities are about taking those common sense ideas from every level of the team and developing them to add value throughout the business,” he adds. Evidence of these improvement activities is already apparent throughout MRT’s business operations. Notably, for example, set up routines have been optimised so that aluminium MRT Castings is investing in latest casting technologies and process systems to maximise productivity and quality are immaculate and highly organised. They rightly expect the same from us.” As a smaller-size, but nevertheless top class foundry MRT now has the capability to deliver the same high level of workmanship regardless of the size of the batch needed. Many larger foundries often claim that lengthy set-ups required make the process prohibitive when dealing with small batches of die castings. MRT has optimised its tooling preparation and set-up operations to make the process more accessible to customers who require only small batches. Supporting this, the Colosio machine has been built to MRT’s own specifications to include a number of innovative features to support fast and frequent die changes. This will help to ensure that MRT can continue to meet the needs of clients requiring even batches of just a few hundred parts. Customers can work alongside MRT’s engineers on the design of their products and this In another direction, MRT has implemented a lean energy management system to save energy on the production floor by monitoring energy consumption on every production cell. Further in this respect, the company has set energy reduction targets as part of its ISO14001 accredited environmental management system. MRT is an expert company in all aspects of the die casting and machining process and its experienced team offers advice based on this level of knowledge and expertise. This covers for example, which aluminium and zinc casting alloys offer the best strength, castability and resilience for their particular projects. The best die casting processes for customers’ requirements, from sand casting and gravity die through to high pressure die casting, and also the best CNC machining and finishing processes for each project. Ken Stanford, contributing editor 69 technology Foundry investments further improve quality casting solutions One of the UK’s premier aluminium and iron casters, Incanite Foundries, based in Smethwick, West Midlands, continues to develop its knowledge and capability of over 85 years in providing quality casting solutions to a wide range of industry sectors. With current sales at around some £11 million a year the company plans to develop the business further and is currently in the process of elaborating ongoing extensive refurbishment and upgrades. • Installation of full in-house heat-treatment capability • New heavy-duty electricity and gas supplies with a range of ‘green’ air compressors and gas / air mixers to optimise energy efficiency, and • Latest extraction and clean air policies have been implemented from start up. Also, a complete team of people has been recruited and trained in parallel with the plant investments. Incanite also reports that new high frequency furnaces and a sand handling transfer system are being evaluated for its associated iron foundry and this equipment is planned for installation this year. Over the past 18 months alone major schemes have been progressed to install a second aluminium manufacturing cell, build a new technology centre and refurbish its associated iron foundry – all this to further expand and com- Machining plement its casting operations and ancillary services, including its project development As part of its investment plan, Incanite has team and CNC operation. With stated hall- installed a full range of CNC machines inmarks of quality and reliability, its investments in latest technologies enable Incanite to continue exceeding customers’ expectations. Based in the heart of industrial Britain, Incanite can boast a rich heritage that can be traced back over the last century. The company has made a major and firm commitment to manufacturing in the UK with £2.3 million worth of investments in plant, equipment and workforce earmarked over the next three years, including skilled workers and well qualified Incanite Foundries: now an approved parts supplier for managers together with associated the new AV-8B Harrier Jump Jet military vertical fighter infrastructure. The company now more than tripled its total workforce to over cluding CMM measuring at a cost in excess of 140 people within the last 18 months. £900,000. Skilled operatives and setters have been recruited to ensure machined castings satisfy all quality requirements. Further plans Aluminium foundry for this year for include introducing rapid The foundry was installed during the summer CAD prototype production together with new of 2012 at a cost in excess of £1.4 million to alloys and energy-saving initiatives developed in conjunction with a leading UK University. include new process equipment, notably: • Gravity die production facility for LM6 and LM25 alloy castings supplied to multinational Buildings OEMs in the energy, engine and medical secAn upgrade of the existing buildings comtors • Fast loop sand line for lower volume com- menced in 2012 and will run through this plex castings requiring complex core assembly year with £300,000 allocated. In addition, • Hand moulding line for complex aluminium construction of a new state-of-the-art technology centre was launched in April 2013 at a castings with thin-wall sections • New second manufacturing cell completed cost of £800,000 to house all of the compain December 2012 for production of high vol- ny’s design and development capability and expertise. ume safety-critical components 70 gravity die From 50 gram to 50 kg in batch sizes to suit customer production schedules, Incanite’s gravity die casting process is tailored to specific client requirements. Knowledge gained over many years has allowed the company to successfully develop and supply castings that customers had previously considered to be impossible. Sand casting With the capability to produce sand castings via the precision sand process and Fast Loop line, customers are offered the flexibility of lower volumes with larger, more complex shapes if required. Enhanced part consistency and superior surface finish from both processes is a feature enjoyed by all Incanite’s sand casting customers. The company is a trusted and preferred supplier to a wide range of global engineering and OEM companies. A range of long standing prestige customers includes, for example, global metrology equipment specialist Renishaw who has chosen Incanite once again to supply components including gravity die and sand castings to be incorporated in six new metrology products to be marketed in 32 countries around the world. Prestige approvals In another acknowledgement of the company’s performance and levels of integrity in casting production, Incanite announces that it has been approved as a parts supplier for the new military vertical fighter plane AV8B – the Harrier Jump Jet. Additionally, following an audit by other leading clients, Safran Power UK and Safran Power USA, Incanite’s quality management organisation was found to satisfy all criteria and the firm has been accepted by this customer onto its Register of Approved Suppliers for aluminium castings. Newly appointed general manager Mark Sarginson, speaking about his vision of the future, said that he wanted to see the company as a Centre of Excellence in the UK and he would use all his experience to push the boundaries and introduce changes into the foundry, building upon the available expertise attained by Incanite as it approached its cente- ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 technology nary in 2019. He wants customers to have the confidence so they can commission Incanite to deliver their complex casting requirements. From aerospace to X-ray equipment, from Australia to Zambia, Mr Sarginson says, Incanite’s capability is truly global. And, within the UK, he adds, the Midlands base is ideal to ensure the company’s support capability is never more than a few hours away. Referring to the present position and looking beyond, the company’s managing director Mark Beresford said current developments and plans for the future represent a great step forward in reinforcing the company’s drive towards adopting new technologies and processes to better serve an ever increasingly demanding market place. Ken Stanford, contributing editor Special coating improves service life of dies Improved quality, efficiency and productivity in aluminium casting © ASK Chemicals Aluminium castings produced by low-pressure die/permanent mould and gravity casting methods have become increasingly important in both economic and technological terms, particularly for automotive industry applications. There has been a steady growth in volumes of castings produced and in parallel, developments and innovations are continuously generated in materials and process technologies to support the light alloy foundry industry in further improving performance. In one latest development and with these aspects firmly in mind, coatings specialist ASK Chemicals, based in Hilden, Germany, has developed a semi-insulating mould and die coating, Solitec AD 901, a waterbased medium said to be highly efficient and to offer major economic advantages in foundry processes as a result of its extremely long service life. Initial trials and testing of the coating Innovative die coating can extend casting die life and improve part quality and productivity in practice were carried out in controlled conditions on aluminium cylinder head castings at German foundry company Martinrea Honsel. ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 In addition to ensuring that dies are filled completely, to control the solidification of the cast part and protect the die surface, Solitec AD 901 offers another key benefit: the service life of the dies is extended by more than 50% compared with using traditional standard coatings. This reduces the downtime intervals required for die coating and maintenance and, therefore, increases productivity. The comparatively high graphite content of the new ASK coating also significantly reduces the ejection forces and hence the wear on the die surfaces. Even production downtime lasting up to four hours does not have any negative impact on the quality of the coating or cast part. The economic impact of this is that longer continuous process periods are realised with reduced maintenance costs. In spite of their relatively low proportion of the total costs of production, effective coatings have significant effects across the entire casting process: they influence cast part quality to a considerable extent and make a key contribution in production, both environmentally and economically. By using the Solitec AD 901 die coating, foundries can generate significant economic advantages through improved productivity, fewer rejects, longer die life and casting process uptimes, lower consumption of abrasives and consequently greater durability of the casting dies and their dimensional accuracy. To meet the increasingly demanding and stringent requirements of customers and suppliers of cast aluminium parts, ASK Chemicals says it is continuously developing new products and applications supported by the leading edge Ashland-Südchemie Kernfest GmbH Research and Technology Centre. By combining theoretical knowledge with practical experience and through close collaboration with customers, the company’s dedicated research teams continuously develop new products and applications that are innovative, efficient and consistently set new industry standards. Ken Stanford, contributing editor Fighting die wear and failure Considering the relatively high cost of tooling for shape casting, particularly with more complex configurations, any factors influencing die life are of crucial importance. Consequently, die wear and failure are significant issues and involve a complex interaction between various mechanisms that can contribute to degradation. The most important wear mechanism is associated with ‘washout’ damage on working die surfaces, due to erosion, corrosion and soldering – while thermal fatigue is the most important mode of failure in die casting tooling. As a result, the most important performance criteria for die coatings include wear resistance, non-sticking characteristics, and corrosion resistance. 71 APPlicAtion eAc 2013: Still great potential for aluminium in car manufacturing Aluminium plays a key role in automotive lightweight construction concepts – already today, and all the more so in future. All participants at the 3rd European Aluminium Congress (EAC) were in complete agreement about that. Organised by GDA (the association of the aluminium industry in Germany), the congress, held in November in Düsseldorf, was the meeting place of the year for lightweight construction experts from the international automotive and aluminium industry. Below, a summarising report from the event. strength-steels (see diagram). For example, in the engine compartment of the S-Class aluminium is used for the upper and lower front rail, shock tower, partial cross member below the windshield, struts and steering bracket. The cradle / subframe area uses several aluminium sheet and extrusion components as well as die-castings. The roof and hang-on parts such as the front doors, engine bonnet and tailgate are also made of aluminium sheet. Addressing the aluminium industry as a whole, Mr Bösselmann underlined the need to develop new alloys that enable better deep drawing and tighter radii, not only for structural components or door inner panels but also for outer skin applications. Henk-Jan Brinkman of Hydro Aluminium Rolled Products took up Mr Bösselmann’s remarks. One of the major remaining technical challenges for aluminium, he said, was to enable more freedom of design. Although more exotic forming processes like warm forming or super-plastic forming enable this freedom of design with aluminium for niche markets, the cost penalty associated with these forming processes in comparison with the usual cold stamping process prohibits the use of the former for larger volumes. Door inner panels and side panels are typical examples of parts where today’s aluminium automotive sheet qualities are at the limits of their formability. Door inner parts are typically made from 5xxx series alloys like © GDA Under the main theme of Aluminium Auto­ motive Applications – Tomorrow’s Design and Sustainable Performance, over 200 experts from the semis industry and from automotive parts suppliers and OEMs, such as Audi, BMW, Daimler, Ford, Honda or Jaguar, as well as suppliers from the area of plant construction or surface engineering, met to discuss new developments related to aluminium in car manufacturing. Apart from the various uses of aluminium in vehicle manufacturing, further developments that have the potential to make vehicles of the future even lighter and more energy efficient were also presented at the congress. In his keynote address GDA president Heinz-Peter Schlüter described the huge potential still available for even more use of aluminium in motor cars. “Our material is far from having reached the zenith of its devel- opment, but it has already demonstrated that effective lightweight construction in the car is inseparable from the material aluminium,” he said. His estimate corresponds to studies forecasting that the amount of aluminium used per car produced in Europe will rise from today’s 140 kg to 160 kg by 2020. A main driving force of this development toward lightweight design is that not only European and US authorities but also Japan and China will be implementing stricter CO2 emission limits for new passenger cars in the coming years, namely: • from today’s 187 g/km driven to 160 g/km in 2016 and, under discussion, to 91 g/km in 2025 (in the USA) • from today’s 136 g/km driven to 130 g/km in 2015 and to 95 g/km in 2020 (in the EU) • from today’s 131 g/km driven to 125 g/km in 2015 and to 105 g/km in 2020 (in Japan) • from today’s 185 g/km driven to 167 g/km in 2015 and, under discussion, to 117 g/km in 2020 (in China). Jürgen Bösselmann from Daimler AG presented the body-in-white lightweight design concept for the new Mercedes-Benz S-Class. Hybrid lightweight engineering aims “to bring the right material to the right place,” he said. The aluminium-hybrid-body of the S-Class offers a perfect balance between lightweight design and functional as well as safety requirements by using a mix of aluminium components (die-castings, extruded profiles and sheet), hot-formed steel parts and ultra-high- More than 200 experts from the aluminium and automotive industries met to discuss new developments related to aluminium in car manufacturing 72 ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 APPlicAtion © Daimler BiW structure material properties of the new generation S-Class ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 in outer skin quality with conventional cold stamping with regard to formability and design options. Erich Hoch from FW Brökelmann gave a presentation on extruded aluminium alloys for body structure components. The company is a system supplier for complex extrusions and covers the complete process chain from engineering products and prototyping to extrusion, machining and assembly of components and systems. Since about 2011 automobile manufacturers have demanded higher strength for auto body structural components, with yield strengths of 320-330 MPa for greater energy absorption in a crash. Only ten years ago the strength required was of the order of 200240 MPa. For the aluminium industry as a whole and extruders in particular, this entails developing alloys and geometries capable of satisfying the new and stricter requirements. The more stringent demands on the T6 heat treatment with short-term temperature stability up to 1 hour at 205 °C and long-term stability of 1,000 hours at 150 °C also present challenges for aluminium as a material, but © Hydro AA5182 because of their better formability in comparison with 6xxx alloys. In contrast, the surface quality requirements for visible parts necessitate the use of a 6xxx alloy for side panels. Due to assembly costs, a one-piece side panel is preferred over a multi-piece solution, thereby again increasing the demands on formability for this application. Hydro Aluminium has developed dedicated 6xxx sheet alloy qualities for car body applications, e. g. AA6016 and AA6014. At present, the formability requirements for many typical outer parts like doors and fenders is growing due to the increased use of design features. The typical forming-optimised 6xxx alloy qualities are usually able to cope with this demand. However, the component that, at present, represents the major challenge in terms of formability is the 1-piece side panel in outer skin quality. Obviously, a side panel represents a significant weight saving potential if it can be made from aluminium sheet, but it appears to depend upon the design of the components whether the best 6xxx alloy qualities can meet the formability demands for a 1-piece side panel in outer skin surface quality. Hydro’s forming-optimised HA 6016-U is able to meet the demands for hang-on parts with the latest design features, and also for 1-piece side panel applications with a restrained design. Hydro’s latest development, HA 6016-X, is a proprietary variant that was developed to meet customer demands for aluminium 1-piece side panel solutions with highest demands on formability (see diagram). HA 6016-X is currently successfully tested in several OEM development programmes to push the boundaries of aluminium body-in-white (BiW) parts ones which must be overcome. In that context alloys of the 6xxx series such as EN AW 6060, 6063 and 6082 are relevant. Michael Lough from Jaguar Land Rover (JLR) presented the aluminium architecture of the Range Rover and Range Rover Sport models. The British luxury vehicle is the first SUV in the world to have a fully aluminium body structure, which is considerably lighter, more efficient and more sustainable than conventional solutions. While the previous RR model weighs 2.580 kg, the new one weighs only 2.160 kg. The aluminium body and chassis is 42 percent lighter than its predecessor. There is a clear trend at JLR toward increased use of higher strength 6xxx series alloys (see diagram next page). Efficient lightweight construction from a holistic perspective was the focus of the presentation by Jean-Marc Ségaud from the BMW lightweight metal foundry in Landshut. The revolutionary approach to new kinds of body concepts was prompting enormous structural investments in the body shell, he said. For all lightweight construction work done in body manufacturing it is important to keep an eye on the feasibility and consequences in the overall process chain. The evolutionary approach of material substitution allows continued use of available body shell structures, but limits lightweight construction potential. Nonetheless, Mr Ségaud takes an optimistic view that aluminium castings have much potential for replacing steel parts, especially when it comes to integral components. As one example he pointed to a longitudinal chassis beam made of steel and of aluminium: while the steel version made of 12 parts weighs 15.5 kg, the alternative integral aluminium casting made as a single part weighs only 9.8 kg. The presentation of Joachim Gundlach from Grunewald was about suitable production of thin-walled aluminium prototype and small series castings for BiW applications. Casting joints and other structural castings are used in all areas of a car body. Those castings have to be light, rigid and stable. In order to realise the defined properties, the low-pres- Single-piece side panel made from HA6016-X 73 APPlicAtion metallic particles shows variations through the thickness in twin-roll cast 5754 alloy, similar to the other low-alloyed aluminium alloys. The large grain size of TRC materials at the final thickness has an adverse effect on strain-hardening behaviour and bending performance. Aesthetic deterioration of the bent curvature is directly related with the large grain size of TRC material. Large grains are not only detrimental to bending performance but also impair the surface quality of the stamped parts. © Jaguar Land Rover sure casting technique and integrated casting product and process development are mandatory. The whole process chain of design, pattern making, casting process, heat treatment, levelling and NC-finished part processing needs to be carefully adjusted. Hatice Mollaoglu Altuner of Assan Aluminium gave a presentation on the mechanical characterisation and formability performance of twin-roll cast AA5754. Twin-roll casting (TRC) is a well-established and economical method for producing aluminium foil and heat exchanger fin stock as well as various grades of building and construction sheet. According to Mr Altuner, there is increasing interest in using TRC as a method for producing low-cost, high-quality 5000 series aluminium sheet for automotive structural applications. Compared with the conventional production route of DC casting and hot rolling, TRC is a less costly method for producing aluminium alloys thanks to a thinner gauge of cast strip which allows further processing steps to be reduced. On the other hand, TRC has a disadvantage in achieving the required microstructure due to the solidification behaviour of liquid metal and the reduced amount of thermo-mechanical processing from the ascast condition to final gauge. These differences in microstructural features may affect the strength, ductility and formability of aluminium sheet. So the production routes (cold rolling and annealing) should be well designed to achieve sufficient formability as well as the desired mechanical properties. Mr Altuner elaborated on the microstructure, mechanical properties and formability performance of the twin-roll cast AA5754 alloy. The results were compared with the same materials produced by DC casting and hot rolling. One result is that the size of inter- 74 TRC material shows moderate performance yield strengths compared with DC / hot rolled counterpart. These results indicate that thermo-mechanical processes must be designed to achieve a texture development that promotes ultimate formability performance. Casting of AA 5754 at optimised gauges, radical alterations in the chemical composition and accordingly designed downstream operations that aim to achieve ultimate formability performance through the course of crystallographic texture development are still subjects for further studies. Bernard Gilmont from the EAA (European Aluminium Association) focused on ‘Aluminium intensive electric vehicles’. Since electric cars are more expensive than conventional vehicles, mainly due to the cost of batteries, it is important to make electric cars as energy efficient as possible so that the battery size can be reduced. Lightweighting is one of the most effective options for improving the energy efficiency of any vehicle, including electric ones; however, lightweighting comes at some cost, as the material used is often rather more expensive than steel. Mr Gilmont investigated whether the cost of lightweighting a car with the intensive use of aluminium could be compensated for by a reduction in the cost of the batteries. While still meeting the defined crashworthiness targets, the weight of the total body could be reduced by 162 kg compared to the electric reference steel body. Thanks to this weight saving, the battery system capacity could be downsized by 3.3 kWh (which is 9% of the system capacity) while still maintaining the intended driving range of 200 km. This also meant an additional weight reduction of 25 kg, making the aluminium electric vehicle in total 187 kg lighter than the steel electric vehicle. The cost implications were then quantified using a cost assessment tool. With an assumed production volume of 100,000 cars per year, the aluminium-intensive electric car can be produced for additional part and joining costs of €1,015 per vehicle. This additional cost should be compared to the cost reduction related to the battery capacity downsizing of 3.3 kWh. With a battery system cost of €500/ kWh, the reduction in total battery system costs is €1,650. According to these assumptions, producing the aluminium electric vehicle is €635 cheaper than the reference electric vehicle. In his case study Mr Gilmont demonstrated that, while retaining the same crash performances, lightweighting through aluminium reduces both the production and operating costs of electric vehicles. The reason for this is that a lighter car needs fewer batteries and less electricity to travel the same distance. concluding remarks In view of the legislative measures under way to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, lightweight construction is of high priority and on the agenda of all carmakers. Although the European Aluminium Congress was dominated by presentations from premium carmakers it can be assumed that virtually all OEMs are strengthening their efforts to reduce fuel consumption and to counteract weight increase caused by rising safety requirements and increasing comfort equipment in passenger cars – not only in premium models but also in the medium and small car segment. Whether we talk of an aluminium-intensive approach or of a multi-material concept, the prospects for aluminium castings, extrusions and sheet applications in cars are bright. However, the demands from the carmakers regarding cost reduction and technological further development of alloys and processes continue to grow and the aluminium industry has to work steadily on improving its performance. n ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 co m pa n y n e w s w o r l d w i d e aluminium smelting industry © Rusal for the acquisition of a 20% share in the second phase of the aluminium smelting project in Sarawak, Malaysia. This project is being developed by PMB through its 100% subsidiary, Press Metal Bintulu Sdn. Bhd, and will have a production capacity of 320,000 tpy. Completion was scheduled for the end of last year. Sumitomo has already a 20% equity in the first phase of PMB’s aluminium smelting complex, containing a production capacity of 120,000 tpy. PMB is a leading integrated aluminium company in Southeast Asia and has been promoting vertical integration of its aluminium operations. SC deals with primary aluminium metals widely in Japan and other Asian markets. eU commission clears acquisition of two rTa plants by Trimet The European Commission has approved the acquisition of two Rio Tinto Alcan (RTA) plants in France by the Trimet group of Germany and Electricité de France; the latter will hold a minority stake. The acquisition does not raise competition concerns, because the overlaps between the parties’ activities are moderate, says the Commission. One of the two production facilities is the aluminium smelter Saint-Jean de Maurienne in eastern France, which has a production capacity of 140,000 tpy. The smaller Castelsarrasin plant for high-grade wire rod is located in the southwest of France. Both plants employ some 500 people. on the Saudi Arabia joint venture project is on track, says Alcoa, with USD159m invested in 2013 against a USD350m annual plan. Special items in Q4 2013 included a USD 243m charge in connection with the resolution of the US government investigations regarding certain legacy alumina contracts between an Alcoa-led joint venture and Aluminium Bahrain. Alcoa also settled civil charges filed by the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) in an administrative proceeding related to the anti-bribery, internal controls, and books and records provisions of the FCPA (Foreign Corrupt Practices Act). Alcoa has agreed to pay a total of USD161m to SEC over the next four years. century aluminium close to new power contract for sebree smelter Century Aluminum Sebree, Kenergy Corp. and Big Rivers Electric Corp. have finalised agreements for a new power contract for the Sebree aluminium smelter, located in Henderson County, Kentucky. The agreement is subject to approvals from various third parties, including the Kentucky Public Service Commission and the USDA Rural Utilities Service. The parties will continue to move as expeditiously as possible to finalise the agreement in advance of the expiration of the current power contract at the end of January. The Sebree smelter has a production capacity of 205,000 tpy and employs some 480 people. point Henry smelter at risk alcoa reports Q4 net loss Alcoa Inc. opened the earnings season with a bang. The company posted a Q4 2013 net loss of USD2.3bn due to a USD1.7bn goodwill write-down to the former smelting acquisitions Alumax in 1998 and Reynolds Metals Co. in 2000. Special items excluded, Q4 net income was USD40m, which is still disappointing compared with a net income of USD64m in the year-ago period. For the full business year 2013 net loss was USD2.3bn, whereas 2012 net income was USD191m. Excluding special items, 2013 net income was USD357m, which is a 36% increase on 2012 figures. The company also reported USD1.1bn productivity savings exceeding a USD750m annual target. Progress ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 According to Australian media, Alcoa will decide on the future of Point Henry at the end of March. The loss-making aluminium smelter has been struggling to survive for some years. However, with further declining aluminium prices in recent years, along with greater regulation of the energy intensive industry, the plant’s future is at high risk, all the more so as the new coalition government led by Tony Abbott seems unwilling to further support uncompetitive industries with taxpayer money. sumitomo to acquire stake in pmB smelter project in malaysia Sumitomo Corporation has entered into an agreement with Press Metal Berhad (PMB) china imposes tiered power tariffs on aluminium smelters Since the beginning of this year, China has imposed tiered power rates on aluminium smelters as part of its efforts to address severe overcapacity in the industry. Power tariffs will remain unchanged for smelters that use less than 13.7 kWh/kgAl produced, while those that use between 13.7 and 13.8 kWh/kgAl will be charged an additional 0.02 yuan per kWh. Smelters that consume more than 13.8 kWh/ kgAl will be charged an additional 0.08 yuan per kWh, according to media reports that refer to a notice released by the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology. The notice stipulates that local governments may not reduce power rates for aluminium smelters and must stop all previously of- 75 co m pa n y n e w s w o r l d w i d e fered subsidies. Local governments must also cease fee deductions and other incentives to smelters with their own power plants. This move will help weed out less competitive producers and slim the sector, which has been mired in capacity surplus for years. Over 1.2m tpy in aluminium capacity was slashed in China in 2013. Further capacity cuts may be on the way this year given the sluggishness in the sector. ■ Bauxite and alumina activities He added the imposed carbon tax was not the driver of the decision to close the refinery. Rio will be consulting with employees and the community in coming weeks to develop detailed plans regarding the timing and phases for ramping down the refinery. There will be no immediate change to refinery operations. The process of suspending production will probably start in the first quarter of 2014 and take the entire year. A priority will be establishing long-term certainty for the bauxite operation and its 350 employees and contractors. Senior Rio Tinto executives and company representatives from Gove are already working in partnership with the Northern Territory Government and the Federal Government. © Norsk Hydro rio Tinto and chinalco to explore technology partnership dubal and mubadala agree Usd5bn Guinea plan Dubai Aluminium (Dubal) and the Mubadala Development Co. have agreed on a plan with the Guinean government to develop the Sangaredi alumina project. The project is owned by the Guinea Alumina Corp. (GAC), which is owned by Dubal and Mubadala. The agreement will deliver an estimated USD5bn of foreign investment into Guinea over the next eight years. The development plan will create, at peak, 14,000 direct and indirect jobs and will contribute substantially to Guinea’s GDP. The agreement includes plans to build a bauxite mine to be operational by 2017, a multi-user port in Kamsar to be completed by the same year, and an alumina refinery that will produce 2m tpy by 2022. Dubal and Mubadala jointly took full control of GAC earlier in 2013. It will be a fullyowned subsidiary of Emirates Global Aluminium, which will be created by the merger between Dubal and Emal. almatis completes acquisition of ormet’s Burnside alumina refinery Almatis, a global supplier of premium alumina for the refractory, ceramic and polishing industries, has completed the purchase of the alumina refinery at Burnside, Louisiana, from 76 the Ormet Corp. The acquisition provides Almatis with its own feedstock for the production of premium alumina products, supplementing external sources. The Burnside refinery has a capacity of 500,000 tpy. Though the refinery was established as a smelter grade alumina producer, it has proven its capability to produce high quality feedstocks needed to fulfil Almatis’ premium alumina standards. In addition to the internal supply, the company now will also serve the specialty alumina and hydrate markets with designed products directly from the refinery. rio Tinto to suspend production at Gove alumina refinery Rio Tinto has announced to suspend alumina production at Gove and to focus on its bauxite operations. The refinery is no longer a viable business in the current market environment, says the company. The Australian and Northern Territory Governments have been in talks with Rio Tinto over recent months to secure a long-term future for the refinery; however, with no success. Rio will now work on the scope and phased timing of suspension. CEO Sam Walsh said that the decision had been made due to low alumina prices, the strong Australian dollar and substantial aftertax losses for the refinery despite considerable efforts to improve refinery performance. Rio Tinto and Chinalco have signed an MoU that aims at deploying leading-edge technology to create safer working operations, improve environmental performance and increase the productivity of mining operations. The focus will be on enhancing the value of both companies’ partner networks by developing and applying new ideas at a faster pace and at a lower cost. The two companies will work together to determine how best to capture the potential for cooperation in this area, and the arrangements contemplated by the MoU remain subject to the execution of a binding agreement. Utkal alumina well under way to reach full capacity Utkal Alumina International Ltd (UAIL), a subsidiary of Hindalco Industries, is yet to reach its full production capacity of 1.5m tpy after starting operations in June last year. So far, the company has achieved 75% capacity utilisation at its alumina refining unit in Kasipur in south Odisha’s Rayagada district. An alumina plant usually takes around a year to reach full capacity. Utkal Alumina would also take another four to five months to get there, a senior manager of the company said in January. After struggling hard for over two decades, UAIL started its trial production in June powered by a 90 MW co-generation thermal power plant. The company has captive bauxite mines at Baphimali, and is capable of mining 4.2m tpy. The mines are located 17 km from the refinery site. The alumina is sent to the ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 co m pa n y n e w s w o r l d w i d e Aditya smelter at Lapanga. UAIL also has plans to despatch alumina to Hindalco’s Mahan aluminium project in Madhya Pradesh. rTa celebrates weipa jubilee In December Rio Tinto Alcan (RTA) celebrated 50 years of operation at the Weipa bauxite mine on Queensland’s western Cape York Peninsula. Since the first commercial shipment of bauxite in 1963, Rio has mined 500m tonnes of bauxite from Weipa. Together, RTA’s Queensland operations – the Yarwun and QAL refineries in Gladstone, and the Weipa mine – employ about 3,000 people and are mainstays of these important regional communities. The Weipa mine alone employs more than 1,000 people, and each year it pays A$150m in salaries and wages as well as A$70m in taxes and royalties. antam terminates mining activities at Kijang PT Antam has officially terminated its bauxite mining activities at Kijang, Riau Islands, Indonesia. The mine closure was part of the company’s commitment to implement good mining practices. The bauxite mine, named after Mount Kijang, had been originally managed by a Dutch company since 1935. In 1959, the Indonesian government took over the Kijang mine and subsequently handed its management to Antam in 1968. Antam ceased its bauxite mining operations in Kijang in September 2009 but continued to conduct various post mining programmes comprising reclamation, re-vegetation and corporate social responsibility activities, focusing on environmental management and self-sustaining local economy. ■ recycling and secondary smelting year in a row. Figures from the aluminium association Abal and the can producers association Abralatas show that about 267,100 tonnes of cans were recycled in 2012 in Brazil. In comparison, the USA recycled 67% of the cans in the market while Japan recycled 92.5%. In 2011, Brazil had recycled 98.3% of the cans available in the market. Atlanta-based Novelis accounted for more than 70% of all the aluminium cans recycled in Brazil, corresponding to 13.9bn cans. The company is currently investing USD35m to increase its recycling capacity at its plant in Pindamonhangaba, São Paulo. The target is to increase the capacity to 390,000 tpy, from the current 200,000 tpy. chalco plans to sell stake in nanhai alloy Aluminium Corp. of China (Chalco) plans to sell its 60% stake in Chalco Nanhai Alloy through Shanghai United Assets and Equity Exchange, for 119.6m yuan (USD19.6m). After the sale, Chalco will still have a 40% stake in the alloy company. Chalco Nanhai Alloy was established in 2007 in Foshan of Guangdong province, with an alloy bar capacity of 110,000 tpy. © Hertwich rio’s shawinigan casthouse for sale Japan’s scrap exports on record high According to data from the Japanese Ministry of Finance, aluminium scrap exports from the country are likely to reach an new record high in 2013: scrap exports during the first nine months of 2013 amounted to 120,000 tonnes, up 24% compared to the year-ago period. Shipments to South Korea accounted for nearly 40% of the total exports, a plus by more than 100%. By contrast, the scrap exports to China fell by nearly 3% during the nine-month period. Exports had touched a record high of 148,000 tonnes in 2009. The weakening yen and the higher recycling capacity in South Korea have boosted shipments of aluminium scrap from the coun- ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 try. The yen has depreciated by almost 12% in 2013 against the Korean Won. The demand for aluminium scrap from the Asian automotive market is expected to grow by an average of 5% annually over the next five years. Aluminium semis producer Novelis has recently opened a 265,000 tpy aluminium beverage can recycling centre in its Yeongju facility in South Korea. Brazil remains leader in aluminium can recycling Brazil recycled 97.9% of all aluminium cans consumed in the country in 2012, making it the top can recycler in the world for the 11th Rio Tinto Alcan is seeking a buyer for its casthouse in Shawinigan, Quebec, which it plans to operate until year-end. The aluminium producer is also switching feedstock for the casthouse from liquid metal to cold metal. Therefore, Rio took a maintenance outage at the Shawinigan casthouse in December to boost burner capacity at the casthouse furnaces so that the operation can melt cold metal units, such as sows, more efficiently. Once the casthouse is operating entirely as a remelter, its capacity will be slightly less than when it was receiving liquid metal from the smelter. The Shawinigan smelter was commissioned in 1942. Buyers may nonetheless be interested in the casthouse because it makes smalldiameter niche products that fetch higher premiums than standard sizes and alloy grades. Brussels puts Usd12.6m into non-ferrous recycling research The European Commission has announced €9.37m of funding for three major research projects into the recycling of NF metals. The three projects – one in auto shredding, one in 77 co m pa n y n e w s w o r l d w i d e aluminium scrap and one in batteries – was launched in November. The ventures are funded by the EU’s outgoing seventh framework programme for research and technological development. One project is called ShredderSort, under which the EU will spend €3.38m to develop a new shredder to screen out NF metals from automobiles during scrapping. Project coordinator will be Lenz Instruments of Cornellá de Llobregat, Spain. About 8% of shredded automobile material is NF metal. This is cur- rently processed by more cumbersome separation methods, including hand sorting. Another project will involve spending €2.4m on converting post-consumer scrap into low-cost, low-emissions feedstock for wrought products and high-quality castings. Currently, this is generally downgraded into de-ox ingot or low-quality cast products locally, or exported. The Recycal project will design and manufacture a prototype small industrial-scale high shear processing system. Project coordinator is TWI of Cambridge, UK. ■ © Constellium aluminium semis alcoa signs long-term agreement with airbus Alcoa has signed a multi-year supply agreement with Airbus worth USD110m for titanium and aluminium aerospace forgings. Alcoa will produce the parts using its modernised 50,000-ton press in Cleveland, Ohio. The agreement comprises several large aluminium forgings for the A330 and A380 – including the A380 inner rear wing spar, which is the world’s largest aerospace forging – that will be made using Alcoa’s proprietary 7085 alloy intended specifically for large structural aircraft components. Most of these forgings support the wing structure where strength-toweight ratio is critical to efficient flight performance. In 2012 the company signed multi-year supply agreements with Airbus for aluminium sheet, plate and hard alloy extruded products utilising Alcoa’s current, advanced-generation and aluminium lithium alloys. The agreements are valued at USD1.4bn. rio Tinto reduces stake in constellium rusal to invest in sual-powder metallurgy modernisation Rusal plans to modernise the Sual-Powder Metallurgy (Shelekhov, Russia) plant. The total project investment is estimated to be €4m. Intralogistik-Lösungen neu im Internet unter www.herrmannhieber.de The plant is acquiring a classifier mill Hosokawa Alpine (Germany) to increase production capacity by 30%, as well as launching a new range of ultra-high quality aluminium powders. This material is used in construction, in particular in the production of autoclave aerocrete. The installation of the new Alpine equipment at Sual-Powder Metallurgy is part of a broader modernisation of aluminium powder production. Assembly works being carried out at the plant, should be complete in January this year. The new equipment will 78 sion press supplying tubes and tubular profiles to the automotive market. run at full capacity in August. Russia and CIS aerocrete industry, the world’s fastest growing aerocrete market, is the key consumer of new aluminium powder to be produced by Sual-Powder Metallurgy. The consumption of aluminium-based gassing agents has been growing by 8-12% per year, with an increasing demand for high-quality agents. With consumption volumes up to 12,000 tonnes, Rusal’s market share will reach 60%. Rusal also exports aluminium powder to Europe. sapa closes tubing plant in Belgium Already in November Sapa announced a potential closure of its Precision Tubing plant in Seneffe, Belgium. After having conducted consultations with the employee representatives of Seneffe, the decision to close the plant has now been confirmed. Precision Tubing’s production in Europe will be concentrated in Tønder, Denmark. Seneffe is expected to stop production by the end of March. The plant employs 41 people, and has one extru- Rio Tinto has trimmed its stake in Constellium NV, selling more than 19.3m shares worth about USD328.4m. Rio continues to hold 9.6m shares of Constellium, or a 9.22% stake in the company. Constellium conducted an initial public offering in May valued at USD333m. Alcan Engineered Products, the former downstream division of Rio Tinto Alcan, was renamed Constellium after being acquired by Apollo Global Management. The author The author, Dipl.-Ing. R. P. Pawlek is founder of TS+C, Technical Info Services and Consulting, Sierre (Switzerland), a service for the primary aluminium industry. He is also the publisher of the standard works Alumina Refineries and Producers of the World and Primary Aluminium Smelters and Producers of the World. These reference works are continually updated, and contain useful technical and economic information on all alumina refineries and primary aluminium smelters of the world. They are available as loose-leaf files and / or CD-ROMs from Beuth-Verlag GmbH in Berlin. ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 co m pa n y n e w s w o r l d w i d e Zhongwang plans to raise funds for Tianjin aluminium project China’s major extrusion company Zhongwang plans to raise about 4.23bn yuan (USD690m) for an aluminium extrusion project in Tianjin. The Hong Kong-listed company intends to raise the money through share allocation. Already in October 2011 Zhongwang said that it will invest 3.8bn yuan in the next three years for the Tianjin project, where it plans to produce high value-added aluminium products including sheet, plate and foil. constellium unveils new aluminium functional surface solutions Constellium NV has launched two new aluminium solutions for functional surfaces with highly demanding technical requirements. ‘Staybright’ is a long-lasting, high-gloss aluminium product used in decorative trims for cars while ‘Helaris’ brings high-grade surfaces for solar thermal energy collectors to the market. With Staybright surface solutions, cars can be washed their entire lifetime without losing their trim brilliance, and if anodised, require no additional layer of coating. Through a new production process, Staybright combines the brilliance of aluminium with a high-alkaline resistance increasingly needed for exterior automotive trims, due to regular washes with high pH products. Helaris is a new generation of surfaces for solar thermal energy collectors. With Helaris, aluminium can be used instead of copper while applying the so-called Physical Vapour Deposition process, which combines high productivity and excellent level of quality. shandong nanshan to invest Usd240m on die forging project China’s Shandong Nanshan Aluminium plans to invest 1.5bn yuan (USD240m) on a die forging project in Shandong province. The project aims to produce 14,000 tpy of aluminium alloy forged pieces. The products target aircraft, transportation, energy and mining facilities, among others. Nanshan plans to fund 63% of the investment through bank loans and the remaining on its own. Project construction is expected to be completed by October 2015. ■ suppliers Qatalum paste plant produces its one millionth anode Early in December the Qatalum paste plant produced its one millionth green anode. The plant has faced many challenges in producing anodes, from the day it started in January 2010. It took almost two months to produce its first good anode, and several weeks of commissioning before the plant was able to run at full 60 tph capacity. Performance tests and fine tuning took a further 18 months, until finally the plant was able to produce at the required throughput and quality. Today, the paste plant produces at close to 80% uptime and is continuously improving to reach the 90% uptime target which is considered best practice in the industry. energoprom and r&d carbon cooperate in anode block testing Energoprom Group and R&D Carbon, Switzerland, have signed an agreement for testing anode block samples produced by OJSC EPM-Chelyabinsk Electrode Plant. The Quality assessment of two anode block types will take six months. Following the research, a report certificate will be issued by R&D Carbon providing product test results. Energoprom conducts business on a global scale, and exports more than 50% of its output. The group ranks among the top five world manufacturers of carbon and graphite products. The company incorporates three plants specialising in the manufacture of highquality electrode and cathode products in Novocherkassk, Novosibirsk and Chelyabinsk. © innovatherm alcoa orders aluminium cold rolling mill from sms siemag new contracts for innovatherm innovatherm from Germany, a leading supplier of firing and process control systems for anode baking furnaces, signed three new contracts in December, namely: • with Alcoa Intalco, WA, for the supply of the ProBake firing technology for three ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 fires. The start-up is planned for June 2014. • with Carbone Savoie in Venissieux for the supply of firing systems for the cathode baking furnaces. • for the supply of a new firing system at ETI, Sedishir, Turkey, for the new prebake smelter plant. Alcoa has placed an order with SMS Siemag, Germany, for the supply of an ultra-modern X-Roll cold rolling mill for the Alcoa Tennessee plant outside Knoxville. The new rolling mill is to satisfy the strongly increasing demand for lightweight, durable aluminium in the automotive market. Alcoa has assigned SMS Siemag as key equipment supplier for the Tennessee expansion. In addition to the mechanical equipment complete with media systems, the new cold mill will be equipped with the SMS X-Pact electrical and automation systems, including the associated actuating and control systems. This will make it possible to meet the automotive industry’s exacting requirements on sur- 79 co m pa n y n e w s w o r l d w i d e face quality. SMS will supply comprehensive environmental technology engineering for the purification of air and fluids. The supply scope also includes a Multi-Plate filter for rolling oil cleaning and an Airwash system for exhaust air purification. indalum orders extrusion press from sms meer The Indalum group in Santiago de Chile has ordered from SMS Meer a short-stroke frontloading extrusion press with a press force of 32/35 MN. The extrusion press will process aluminium billets up to a length of 1,500 mm. To achieve the high productivity, the press is additionally equipped with Cadex optimisation software for isobaric and isothermal extrusion. The intelligent start / stop function for the hydraulic main drives ensures energy-efficient production and is currently setting new standards on the market. The conventional hydraulic drives such as side table and billet loader have been replaced by modern servo drives. To ensure optimal discard shearing, the press is also equipped with an advanced servoelectrical, movable high-performance shear. Container and stem guidance are based on the tried-and-tested linear guide system patented by SMS Meer, which sets new standards as regards precision and longevity. “We were convinced by the innovations and permanent further development of the extrusion presses from SMS Meer. The company’s extrusion press technology will not only increase our productivity and quality but also provides us with access to new sales markets. We are proud that we will be operating the largest light-metal extrusion press in Chile in the future,” says Indalum CEO José Ramón Jotter. energoprom delivers prebaked anodes to azerbaijan Energoprom Group has started the supply of anode products for Det.Al Holding, Azerbaijan. The company will cover 50% of Det.Al’s demand for pre-baked anodes. “A contract on the move Hydro President and CEO Svein Richard Brandtzæg has been appointed chairman of the Norwegian University of Science and Technology in Trondheim. The executive responsibilities of Glencore Xstrata’s Peter Coates have ceased since 1 January 2014, but he will remain on the board as a non-executive director. Rio Tinto has appointed Greg Lilleyman the new group executive, Technology and Innovation, as Preston Chiaro will retire at the end of March. Mr. Lilleyman’s appointment has been effective since 1 January 2014. Alcoa has hired James Garren as used beverage can manager and scrap purchasing and sales manager of its recycling division. Alcoa chairman and CEO Klaus Kleinfeld has been named to China’s Global CEO Council. Aleris has appointed Donald T. Misheff to its board of directors and as a member of the board’s audit committee. Nenad Pavic, Alcoa’s commercial director Asia, will relocate to Perth from Singapore in 2014 to take on the role of general manager, Alcoa Materials Management. In his new role, he will be in charge of the sales and marketing of primary products and administration and transportation activities in the Asia-Pacific region. The new management board of SGL Carbon SE consists of three members: Jürgen Köhler (CEO), Jürgen Muth (CFO) and Gerd Wingefeld. Alumina Ltd CEO John Bevan retired in December; he was replaced by director Peter Wasow. Said Mohammed al Masoudi has been appointed the new CEO of Sohar Aluminium. Shri K.C. Samal has assumed the office of director Finance at Nalco. Prior to this assignment, he was executive director (Finance) of the company. with Det.Al opens wide prospects for cooperation, especially in light of the company’s plans to build the second production line with a capacity of 50,000 tpy of primary aluminium,” said Natalya Yaremenko, sales director of Energoprom. In view of the difficult market environment and closure of potlines in Russia, Energoprom is expanding its business to new sales regions. Det.Al Holding operates in the mining and processing of iron ore, and produces alumina and primary aluminium. OJSC Azerbaijan Aluminium, a subsidiary of Det.Al, consists of Sumgait Aluminium Smelter, which produces 60,000 tpy of primary aluminium, and Ganja Alumina Refinery, which produces 450,000 tpy of metallurgical grade alumina. Det.Al Aluminium LLC in Ganja produces 50,000 tpy of aluminium. In 2014 the company will complete a second production line thus doubling its production capacity. multi-wheeler dcy 200 arrives at Qatalum for pot relining Qatalum has acquired a 200-tonne capacity, self-elevating multi-wheeler vehicle (DCY200) which will transport cathodes and pot superstructures in and out of potrooms during relining. One of the major requirements for the operation of the relining facility is a transporter to load, transport and unload the damaged and the newly repaired cathode pots and superstructures from potlines to the relining facility located north of the potlines. DCY200 was supplied by Rumaillah Motors Qatar and manufactured by Suzhao Dafang Special Vehicle Company in China. The equipment was designed and manufactured according to Qatalum specifications to precisely fit with potline operating conditions. DCY200 arrived at Qatalum in October last year and has been tested and approved for magnetic field operability in the potroom. Qatalum technical / engineering and operation / maintenance team had been sent to China to carry out the FAT in order to verify that the equipment satisfies Qatalum’s specifications for both design and functionality. ■ Bezugsquellen sinnvoll nutzen Auf den Seiten 84 bis 97 präsentieren führende Ausrüstungspartner der Aluminiumindustrie ihr Angebot. Nutzen Sie diese wertvollen Informationen! 80 ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 paT e n T e patentblatt oktober 2013 Fortsetzung aus ALUMINIUM 12/2013 Kolben für einen Verbrennungsmotor. Mahle International GmbH, 70376 Stuttgart, DE. (F02F 3/10, EPA 2638273, WO 2012/062286, EP-AT: 11.11.2011, WO-AT: 11.11.2011) Verfahren zur Herstellung eines Aluminiumkolbens. Mahle International GmbH, 70376 Stuttgart, DE. (B23K 31/00, OS 10 2012 204 947, AT: 28.03.2012) Kolben für eine Brennkraftmaschine. Mahle International GmbH, 70376 Stuttgart, DE. (F02F 3/16, OS 10 2012 206 392, AT: 18.04.2012) Gießkern zur Bildung eines Kühlkanals in einem gießtechnisch hergestellten Kolben. Mahle International GmbH, 70376 Stuttgart, DE. (B22C 9/10, PS 50 2008 008 308, EP 2142323, WO 2008/131754, AT: 25.04.2008, EP-AT: 25.04.2008, WO-AT: 25.04.2008) Aluminium-Glasfaser-Verbundschichtfolie. Constellium France, Paris, FR. (B32B 15/08, EP 1 545 871, WO 2004/028798, AT: 19.09.2003, EP-AT: 19.09.2003, WO-AT: 19.09.2003) Sequenzgießen von Metallen mit hohen Kontraktionskoeffizienten. Novelis, Inc., Toronto, Ontario, CA. (B22D 11/00, EP 2 007 535, WO 2007/ 098583, AT: 28.02.2007, EP-AT: 28.02.2007, WO-AT: 28.02.2007) Vorrichtung und Verfahren zum Horizontalgießen und Schneiden von Metallknüppeln. Novelis, Inc., Toronto, Ontario, CA. (B22D 11/126, PS 60 2004 039 325, EP 1704006, WO 2005/056217, AT: 09.12.2004, EP-AT: 09.12. 2004,WO-AT: 09.12.2004) Aluminiumlegierungsdraht für Bolzen, Bolzen und Verfahren zu deren Erzeugung. Sumitomo Electric Industries, Ltd., Osaka, JP; Sumitomo Electric Toyama Co., Ltd., Imizu-shi, Toyama, JP. (C22C 21/02, WO 2013 073575, AT: 14.11. 2012, WO-AT: 14.11.2012) Aluminiumstruktur und Verfahren zu deren Erzeugung. Sumitomo Electric Industries, Ltd., Osaka, JP. (C25D 7/00, WO 2012 096220, AT: 06.01.2012, WO-AT: 06.01.2012) Verfahren zur Herstellung von Magnesiumlegierungsprodukten. Sumitomo Electric Industries, Ltd., Osaka, JP. (B22D 21/04, EP 1 777 022, WO 2006/003899, AT: 28.06.2005, EP-AT: 28.06.2005, WO-AT: 28.06.2005) patentblatt november 2013 Elektrolysezelle, insb. zur Herstellung von Aluminium. SGL Carbon SE, 65201 Wiesbaden, DE. (C25C 3/08, EPA 2650404, EP-AT: 12.04.2012, WO-AT: 12.04.2012) Regenschutzschiene ohne Endkappen. Gutmann AG, 91781 Weißenburg, DE. (E06B 7/26, GM 20 2004 004 648, AT: 24.03.2004) ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 Yttrium-Aluminium-Granat-Phosphor. Panasonic Corp., Osaka 571-8501, JP. (C09K 11/80, EPA 2647689, WO 2013/118199, EP-AT: 04.07.2012, WO-AT: 04.07.2012) Al-Si-Mg-Zn-Cu-Legierung für Gussteile für Luftund Raumfahrt und Kraftfahrzeuge. Alcoa Inc., Pittsburgh, Pa., US. (C22C 21/02, EP 1 778 887, WO 2006/014948, AT: 28.07.2005, EP-AT: 28.07.2005, WO-AT: 28.07.2005) Verfahren zum Herstellen einer Al-Sc-Ca-Legierung sowie A-Sc-Ca-Legierung. EADS Deutschland GmbH, 85521 Ottobrunn, DE. (C22C 21/00, EPA 2646587, WO 2012/075993, EP-AT: 30.11.2011, WO-AT: 30.11.2011) Feuerverzinktes, plattiertes Stahlblech auf AlZn-Basis. JFE Steel Corp., Tokio, 100-0011, JP. (C23C 2/06, EPA 2644737, WO 2012/070695, EP-AT: 25.11.2011, WO-AT: 25.11.2011) Feuerverzinktes, plattiertes Stahlblech auf Al-Zn-Basis und Herstellungsverfahren dafür. JFE Steel Corp., Tokio, 100-0011, JP. (C23C 2/06, EPA 2644736, WO 2012/070694, EP-AT: 25.11.2011, WO-AT: 25.11.2011) Fenster- und/oder Türflügelelement bestehend aus thermisch getrennten Aluminium-Hohlkammerprofilen mit eingefassten Glasscheiben. heroal – Johann Henkenjohann GmbH & Co. KG, 33415 Verl, DE. (E06B 3/42, GM 20 2010 008 622, AT: 24.09.2010) Aluminium-Gusslegierungen. KSM Castings Group GmbH, 31137 Hildesheim, DE. (C22C 21/02, PS 50 2006 012 107, EP 1917372, WO 2007/025528, AT: 30.08.2006, EP-AT: 30.08.2006, WO-AT: 30.08.2006) Metallorganische Gerüstmaterialien mit hexagonal-trigonaler Struktur, basierend auf Aluminium, Eisen oder Chrom, sowie einer Dicarbonsäure. BASF SE, 67063 Ludwigshafen, DE. (B01J 31/22, PS 50 2008 008 423, EP 2155390, WO 2008/129051, AT: 23.04.2008, EP-AT: 23.04.2008, WO-AT: 23.04.2008) Verfahren zur Herstellung eines Schmiedestücks aus einer Gamma-Titan-AluminiumBasislegierung. Boehler Schmiedetechnik GmbH & Co. KG, Kapfenberg, AT. (C22C 14/00, EP 2 272 993, AT: 19.05.2010, EP-AT: 19.05.2010) Bruchsicheres Glas aus Erdalkali-AluminiumBorosilikat. Corning Incorp., Corning, New York 14831, US. (C03C 3/091, EPA 2646379, WO 2012/074954, EP-AT: 29.11.2011, WO-AT: 29.11.2011) Verbesserte geschützte Silberbeschichtungen auf Aluminium für einen optischen Spiegel und Herstellungsverfahren dafür. Corning Incorp., Corning, New York 14831, US. (C23C 14/06, EPA 2640864, WO 2012/067924, EP-AT: 10.11. 2011, WO-AT: 10.11.2011) Verfahren zur Inertisierung von metallischem Aluminium und anderen unedlen metallischen Phasen. Andritz Energy & Environment GmbH, 8074 Raaba, AT. (B09B 3/00, EPA 2650058, EPAT: 05.04.2013, WO-AT: 05.04.2013) Bindung von Perfluorelastomeren an Aluminium. E.I. du Pont de Nemours and Co., Wilmington, Del., US. (B29C 43/18, PS 60 2006 032 514, EP 1855864, WO 2006/099235, AT: 09.03.2006, EP-AT: 09.03.2006,WO-AT: 09.03.2006) Verfahren zur Extraktion von Aluminium aus Aluminiumerzen. Orbite Aluminae Inc., SaintLaurent, Québec H4T 1S3, CA. (C22B 21/00, EPA 2640862, WO 2012/065253, EP-AT: 18.11. 2011, WO-AT: 18.11.2011) Verbesserte Flussmittelmodifizierung für geschmolzenes Aluminium. Foseco International Ltd., Barlborough Links, Derbyshire, GB. (C22C 1/02, EP 2 231 887, WO 2009/081157, AT: 22.12. 2008, EP-AT: 22.12.2008, WO-AT: 22.12.2008) Beschlag für einen Aluminium-Fensterladen. Griesser Holding AG, Aadorf, Thurgau, CH. (E05D 5/02, OS 503 00 844, EP 1382784, AT: 21.06.2003, EP-AT: 21.06.2003) Vorbereitungsverfahren vor dem Schweißen von Produkten aus Lithium-Aluminium-Legierung. Constellium France, Paris, FR. (B23K 25/42, PS 60 2009 010 915, EP 2321436, WO 2010/004132, AT: 03.07.2009, EP-AT: 03.07. 2009, WO-AT: 03.07.2009) Al-Mg-Legierung und Herstellungsverfahren dafür. Korea Automotive Technology Institute, Cheonan-si, Chungcheongnam-do 330-912, KR. (C22C 21/06, EPA 2644726, WO 2012/070818, EP-AT: 21.11.2011, WO-AT: 21.11.2011) Hochwarmfeste Aluminiumgusslegierung. BMW AG, 80809 München, DE. (C22C 21/02, OS 10 2006 059 899, AT: 19.12.2006) Verfahren zum Verbinden von Bauteilen aus hochfestem Aluminiummaterial und nach diesem Verfahren montierter Wärmeübertrager. Halla Visteon Climate Control Corp. 95, Daejeon, Daedeok, KR. (B23K 1/20, OS 10 2007 022 632, AT: 11.05.2007) Montageplatte aus Aluminium für Wärme erzeugende Elemente. RBB Aluminium Profiltechnik AG, 54531 Wallscheid, DE. (H01L 31/052, OS 10 2011 113 677, AT: 20.09.2011) Hitzebeständige und hochfeste Aluminiumlegierung und Verfahren zu ihrer Herstellung. Kabushiki Kaisha Toyota Chuo Kenkyusho, Nagakute-shi, Aichi 480-1192, JP. (C22C 1/04, EPA 2646585, WO 2012/132280, EP-AT: 13.03.2012, WO-AT: 13.03.2012) Verfahren zur dynamischen Tiefätzung und Partikelextraktion aus Aluminiumlegierungen. Univerza V Mariboru, Maribor, SI. (C23F 1/00, EP 2 458 033, AT: 04.10.2011, EP-AT: 04.10.2011) Herstellungsverfahren einer Mg-Sc-Vorlegierung und Verfahren zur Herstellung einer Aluminiumlegierung, die Scandium enthält. Korea Institute of Industrial Technology, Cheonan-si, Chungcheongnam-do, KR. (C22C 1/03, OS 60 2009 017 779, EP 2298944, AT: 30.09.2009, ➝ EP-AT: 30.09.2009) 81 paT e n T e Herstellungsverfahren für Aluminiumlegierung. Korea Institute of Industrial Technology, Cheonan-si, Chungcheongnam-do, KR. (C22C 1/03, EP 2 339 037, AT: 22.11.2010, EP-AT: 22.11.2010) Verbundwerkstoff mit Korrosionsschutzschicht und Verfahren zu dessen Herstellung. Hydro Aluminium Deutschland GmbH, 41515 Grevenbroich, DE. (B32B 15/01, EP 2 090 425, AT: 18.01.2008, EP-AT: 18.01.2008) Verfahren zum Fügen von Werkstücken aus zinkhaltigen Aluminiumlegierungen durch Laserstrahlschweißen. Helmholtz-Zentrum Geesthacht Zentrum für Material- und Küstenforschung GmbH, 21502 Geesthacht, DE. (B23K 26/26, EPA EP 2647465, EP-AT: 02.04.2012, WO-AT: 02.04.2012) Verfahren zur elektrischen Verbindung und magnetischen Kompensation von Aluminiumreduktionszellen und System dafür. Norsk Hydro ASA, Oslo, NO. (C25C 3/16, EP 1 812 626, WO 2006/033578, AT: 16.09.2005, EP-AT: 16.09.2005, WO-AT: 16.09.2005) Gewalztes Magnesium-Legierungsmaterial, strukturelles Teil aus Mg-Legierung und Verfahren zur Erzeugung eines gewalzten Mg-Legierungsmaterials. Sumitomo Electric Industries, Ltd., Osaka, JP. (B21B 3/00, WO 2012/ 111632, AT: 13.02.2012, WO-AT: 13.02.2012) Hochleistungs-Presssitz-Befestigungsvorrichtung für Verbundstoffanwendungen. Alcoa Global Fasteners Inc., Torrance, Calif., US. (F16B 23/00, GM 20 2007 019 163, AT: 19.09.2007) Verfahren zur Rezyklierung von Aluminiumschrott aus der Luftfahrtindustrie. Constellium France, Paris, FR. (C22B 21/06, PS 60 2007 026 165, EP 2038440, WO 2007/147962, AT: 18.06.2007, EP-AT: 18.06.2007, WO-AT: 18.06.2007) Verbinder, Werkzeug zur Montage und Verwendung eines Verbinders. Norsk Hydro ASA, 0240 Oslo, NO. (E04B 2/96, EPA 2642040, EPAT: 18.03.2013, WO-AT: 18.03.2013) Texturierte Stromableiterfolie. Hydro Aluminium Rolled Products GmbH, 41515 Grevenbroich, DE. (H01M 4/64, OS 10 2012 103 834, AT: 02.05.2012) Wärmegedämmtes Verbundprofil, insb. für Fenster, Türen, Fassaden und dergleichen. Norsk Hydro A/S, Oslo, NO. (E06B 3/263, PS 501 14 114, EP 1170454, AT: 23.05.2001, EPAT: 23.05.2001) sowie (E06B 3/263, EP 1 997 998, AT: 29.05.2008, EP-AT: 29.05.2008) ALUMINIUM veröffentlicht unter dieser Rubrik regelmäßig einen Überblick über wichtige, den Werkstoff Aluminium betreffende Patente. Die ausführlichen Patentblätter und auch weiterführende Informationen dazu stehen der Redaktion nicht zur Verfügung. Interessenten können diese beziehen oder einsehen bei der Mitteldeutschen Informations-, Patent-, Online-Service GmbH (mipo), Julius-Ebeling-Str. 6, D-06112 Halle an der Saale, Tel. 0345/29398-0 Fax 0345/29398-40, www.mipo.de Die Gesellschaft bietet darüber hinaus weitere Patent-Dienstleistungen an. 82 Anordnung zur Reinigung eines Röhrentrenners. Norsk Hydro ASA, Oslo, NO. (B01D 17/00, PS 60 2006 032 644, EP 1861581, WO 2006/098636, AT: 15.03.2006, EP-AT: 15.03. 2006, WO-AT: 15.03.2006) Kontaktierung und Befestigung eines Bauteils, Klebkontaktierung. WKW Erbslöh Automotive GmbH, 42349 Wuppertal, DE. (F16B 11/00, GM 20 2013 005 800, AT: 28.06.2013) Kolben für einen Verbrennungsmotor und Verfahren zu seiner Herstellung. Mahle International GmbH, 70376 Stuttgart, DE. (F02F 3/00, OS 10 2006 045 729, AT: 27.09.2006) Kolben für einen Verbrennungsmotor. Mahle International GmbH, 70376 Stuttgart, DE. (F02F 3/18, OS 10 2012 008 945, AT: 05.05.2012) und (F02F 3/00, OS 10 2012 008 946, AT: 05.05. 2012) sowie (F02F 3/12, OS 10 2012 009 029, AT: 05.05.2012) Gießkern zur Bildung eines Kühlkanals. Mahle International GmbH, 70376 Stuttgart, DE. B22C 9/10, PS 50 2009 005 085, EP 2113319, AT: 11.04.2009, EP-AT: 11.04.2009) Verbundrohre. Novelis, Inc., Toronto, Ontario, CA. (B32B 1/08, PS 60 2009 003 637, EP 2293929, WO 2009/146993, AT: 07.05.2009, EP-AT: 07.05.2009, WO-AT: 07.05.2009) Magnesiumlegierungsfolie und Herstellungsverfahren dafür. Sumitomo Electric Industries, Ltd., Chuo-ku Osaka-shi 541-0041, JP. (C22C 23/02, EPA 2641986, WO 2012/066986, EP-AT: 08.11.2011, WO-AT: 08.11.2011) Poröser Aluminiumkörper mit dreidimensionalem Netzwerk für einen Stromsammler, Stromsammler, der den porösen Aluminiumkörper verwendet. Sumitomo Electric Industries, Ltd., Osaka, JP; Sumitomo Electric Toyama Co., Ltd., Imizu-shi, Toyama, JP. (H01M 4/80, WO 2012 111605, AT: 13.02.2012, WO-AT: 13.02.2012) Aluminiumgusslegierung mit hoher Steifigkeit und kleinem, linearem Ausdehnungskoeffizienten. Nippon Light Metal Co. Ltd., Tokio, JP. (C22C 21/02, EP 1 728 882, WO 2005/090624, AT: 23.03.2005, EP-AT: 23.03.2005, WO-AT: 23.03.2005) Aluminiumlegierungsdraht und verdrillter Aluminiumlegierungsdraht, isolierter Elektrodraht und Kabelbaum damit. Sumitomo Electric Industries, Ltd., Osaka 541-0041, JP; AutoNetworks Technologies, Ltd., Yokkaichi-shi, Mie 510-8503, JP; Sumitomo Wiring Systems, Ltd., Yokkaichi-shi Mie 510-8503, JP. (C22C 21/08, EPA 2641985, WO 2012/141041, EP-AT: 03.04.2012, WO-AT: 03.04.2012) Verfahren zur Herstellung von Aluminiumnitridkristall, Aluminiumnitridkristall, Aluminiumnitridkristallsubstrat und Halbleiterbauelement. Sumitomo Electric Industries, Ltd., Osaka, JP. (C30B 29/38, EP 1 972 702, WO 2007/080881, AT: 10.01.2007, EP-AT: 10.01. 2007, WO-AT: 10.01.2007) Montagefreundliche Halteleiste. Erbslöh AG, 42553 Velbert, DE. (F16B 5/12, GM 20 2010 005 776, AT: 16.04.2010) Feuerfestmaterial für Düse zur Verwendung im Stranggießen und Stranggussdüse. Krosakiharima Corp., Kitakyushu-shi, Fukuoka, JP; Nippon Steel & Sumitomo Metal Corp., Tokio, JP. (B22D 11/10, EP 2 322 300, WO 2010/013686, AT: 27.07.2009, EP-AT: 27.07.2009, WO-AT: 27.07.2009) Leichtmetallguss und Herstellungsverfahren dafür. Nippon Light Metal Co. Ltd., Tokio, JP; Nissan Motor Co., Ltd., Yokohama-shi, Kanagawa, JP. (C22C 21/02, EP 2 475 794, WO 2011/ 030500, AT: 27.07.2010, EP-AT: 27.07.2010) patentblatt dezember 2013 Druckgusslegierung auf Al-Si-Basis, aufweisend insb. Sekundäraluminium. Audi AG, 85045 Ingolstadt, DE; Amag casting GmbH, 5282 Ranshofen, AT. (C22C 21/02, EPA 2657360, EPAT: 26.04.2012, WO-AT: 26.04.2012) Mehrschichtig strukturiertes, legierungsplattiertes Stahlblech mit einer Al-/Al-Mg-Plattierungsschicht mit hervorragender Plattierungshaftung und Korrosionsresistenz sowie Herstellungsverfahren dafür. Posco, Pohang Kyungsangbook-do 790-300, KR. (C23C 2/12, EPA 2659018, WO 2012/091345, EP-AT: 20.12.2011, WO-AT: 20.12.2011) Verfahren zur Herstellung einer geformten Platte aus einer Al-Legierung für die Luftfahrt. Aleris Aluminum Koblenz GmbH, 56070 Koblenz, DE. (C22C 21/06, EPA 2652162, WO 2012/079828, EP-AT: 28.10.2011, WO-AT: 28.10.2011) Bi-Al-Zn-basierte, Pb-freie Lotlegierung. Sumitomo Metal Mining Co., Ltd., Tokio, JP. (B23K 35/26, OS 11 2011 102 028, WO 2011/158668, AT: 03.06.2011, WO-AT: 03.06.2011) Al-Legierungsblech, das nach Anodisierung eine hervorragende Oberflächenqualität aufweist, und Verfahren zur Herstellung davon. Sumitomo Light Metal Industries, Ltd., Minato-ku, Tokio 105-8601, JP. (C22C 21/00, EPA 2653577, EP-AT: 11.04.2013, WO-AT: 11.04.2013) Produkt aus einer Magnesiumlegierung. Sumitomo Electric Industries, Ltd., Osaka, JP. (B21B 1/16, PS 60 2005 037 135, EP 2168695, AT: 23.06.2005, EP-AT: 23.06.2005) ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 paT e n T e Aluminiumlegierung. Georg Fischer Druckguss GmbH & Co. KG, 3130 Herzogenburg, AT; Georg Fischer GmbH & Co KG, 8934 Altenmarkt, St. Gallen, AT. (C22C 21/02, EPA 2653579, EP-AT: 17.04.2012, WO-AT: 17.04.2012) Verfahren zur Entfernung von Aluminium und anderen Metallchloriden aus Chlorsilanen. Lord Ltd LP, San Diego, Calif., US. (C01B 33/107, EP 2 262 729, WO 2009/126218, AT: 31.03.2009, EP-AT: 31.03.2009, WO-AT: 31.03.2009) Für Hochspannungsfreileitungen verstärkter leitfähiger Aluminiumlegierungsverbundstoff. Alcan Products Corp., Atlanta, GA 30346-2133, US. (H01B 1/02, EPA 2661754, WO 2012/094504, EP-AT: 05.01.2012, WO-AT: 05.01.2012) Al-Cu-Li-Legierung mit verbesserter Druckfestigkeit und Beständigkeit. Constellium France, 75008 Paris, FR. (C22C 21/12, EPA 2655680, WO 2012/085359, EP-AT: 16.12.2011, WO-AT: 16.12.2011) Gesintertes Aluminium- und Zirkon-Material. Saint-Gobain Centre de Recherches et d© Etudes Européen, Courbevoie, FR. (C04B 35/626, EP 2 438 029, WO 2010/140121, AT: 01.06.2010, EPAT: 01.06.2010) Hülsenbefestigungselement mit verbesserter Leitfähigkeit. Alcoa Inc., Pittsburgh, US. (F16B 25/06, GM 20 2010 017 260, AT: 20.10.2010) Verfahren zur Herstellung von einer Anodenfolie eines Aluminium-Elektrolytkondensators. Xinjiang Joinworld Co. Ltd., Urumqi, Xinjiang 830013, CN. (H01G 9/055, EPA 2660837, WO 2012/088700, EP-AT: 30.12.2010, WO-AT: 30.12.2010) Vorrichtung zur Aufnahme von fester Debris bei einer Elektrolysezelle zur Herstellung von Aluminium. ECL, Ronchin, FR. (C25C 3/06, EP 2 510 136, WO 2011/070245, AT: 07.12.2010, EP-AT: 07.12.2010) Verfahren zur Herstellung von dünnwandigen, rotationssymmetrischen Bauteilen aus Aluminium oder Aluminiumlegierung. Magna BDW technologies GmbH, 85570 Markt Schwaben, DE. (B23P 13/00, PS 10 2011 056 942, AT: 22.12.2011) Nickel-Chrom-Aluminium-Legierung mit guter Verarbeitbarkeit, Kriechfestigkeit und Korrosionsbeständigkeit. Outokumpu VDM GmbH, 58791 Werdohl, DE. (C22C 19/05, OS 10 2012 011 161, AT: 05.06.2012) Aluminiumschnalle für Tragegurte. Stührmann, Jan-Marc, 28211 Bremen, DE. (A44B 11/04, GM 20 2005 016 661, AT: 21.10.2005) Heißversiegelungsmasse für Aluminium- und Polyethylenterephthalatfolien gegen Polyvinylchlorid- und Polystyrolbehälter. Evonik Röhm GmbH, 64293 Darmstadt, DE. (C08L 51/08, EP 2 495 282, AT: 19.12.2006, EP-AT: 19.12.2006) Vorrichtung und Verfahren zum Verbinden von inerten Anoden zur Herstellung von Aluminium durch Schmelzflusselektrolyse. Aluminium Pechiney, Voreppe, FR. (C25 3/12, PS 60 2004 039 987, EP 1678349, WO 2005/033368, AT: 28.09.2004, EP-AT: 28.09.2004, WO-AT: 28.09.2004) Schmiedekolben aus Aluminiumlegierung. Constellium Aviatube, Carquefou, FR. (C22C 21/02, GM 20 2005 014 834, AT: 20.09.2005) Wässrige saure Eintauchmetallabscheidungslösungen und Verfahren zur Metallabscheidung auf Aluminium und Al-Legierungen. Atotech Deutschland GmbH, 10553 Berlin, DE. (C255D 5/44, EP 1 649 083, WO 2005/010233, AT: 14.04.2004, EP-AT: 14.04.2004, WO-AT: 14.04.2004) Vorrichtung und Verfahren zur carbothermischen Produktion von Aluminium. Alcoa Inc., Pittsburg, Pa., US. (F27B 3/18, EP 2 225 404, WO 2009/073381, AT: 20.11.2008, EP-AT: 20.11.2008, WO-AT: 20.11.2008) Mehrschichtige laminierte Folie für Verpackungen. Alcan Packaging Italia Srl, Lugo di Vicenza, IT. (B32B 3/10, GM 20 2005 022 042, AT: 08.09.2005) ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 Endloskapillarrohr in Aluminiumlegierung und Drosselventil mit diesem Endloskapillarrohr in Al-Legierung. Aro Tubi Trafilerie S.p.A., Milano, IT; C.R. S.r.l., Moniga Del Garda, IT. (F25B 41/06, EP 1 840 487, AT: 31.03.2006, EP-AT: 31.03.2006) Rekristallisierte Aluminiumlegierungen mit Messingtextur und Herstellungsverfahren dafür. Alcoa Inc., Pittsburgh, Pa., US. (C22C 21/00, EP 2 212 444, WO 2009/045645, AT: 14.08. 2008, EP-AT: 14.08.2008, WO-AT: 14.08.2008) Verfahren zur Herstellung von diorganomagnesiumhaltigen Synthesemitteln und hochreaktivem Magnesium. Chemetall GmbH, 60487 Frankfurt, DE. (C07F 3/02, OS 10 2006 049 463, AT: 16.10.2006) Verfahren zur Herstellung von Blechen oder Blechteilen aus Leichtmetall, sowie Kraftfahrzeugbauteil aus Magnesium oder einer Magnesiumlegierung. Volkswagen AG, 38440 Wolfsburg, DE. (B21C 35/03, OS 10 2007 002 322, AT: 16.01.2007) Dicke Produkte aus 7xxx-Legierung und Herstellungsverfahren. Constellium France, 75008 Paris, FR; Constellium Valais SA (AG, Ltd), 3960 Sierre, CH. (C22C 21/10, EPA 2652163, WO 2012/080592, EP-AT: 06.12.2011, WO-AT: 06.12.2011) Automobilkonstruktionsteil, das aus einem AlZnMgCu-Legierungsprodukt hergestellt ist, und Verfahren zu dessen Herstellung. Aleris Aluminum Duffel BVBA, Duffel, BE; Aleris Rolled Products Germany GmbH, 56070 Koblenz, DE. (C22C 21/10, EP 2 440 680, WO 2010/142579, AT: 01.06.2010, EP-AT: 01.06.2010) Legierungen der 2000er-Serie mit verbesserter Schadenstoleranzleistung für Luft- und Raumfahrtanwendungen. Alcoa Inc., Pittsburgh, Pa., US. (C22C 21/14, PS 60 2005 037 508, EP 1776486, WO 2006/019946, AT: 14.07.2005, EP-AT: 14.07.2005, WO-AT: 14.07.2005) Abstützelement zur Abstützung eines Bauelements, damit ausgerüstetes Bauelementsystem sowie dieses enthaltendes Fassadensystem. Aleris Aluminum Vogt GmbH, 88267 Vogt, DE. (E06B 1/70, GM 20 2010 017 078, AT: 23.12.2010) Korrosionsbeständige Aluminiumlegierungssubstrate und Herstellungsverfahren. Alcoa Inc., Pittsburgh, US. (C25D 11/08, PS 60 2008 020 144, EP 2198075, WO 2009/032567, AT: 22.08. 2008, EP-AT: 22.08.2008, WO-AT: 22.08.2008) Verfahren zur Koextrusion von Metallprodukten und Matrize zur Durchführung des Verfahrens. Aleris Aluminum Bitterfeld GmbH, 06749 Bitterfeld, DE. (B21C 23/22, PS 60 2009 011 489, EP 2289641, AT: 24.08.2009, EP-AT: 24.08.2009) Verfahren zum Bearbeiten von Knüppeln und Brammen. Aleris Rolled Products Germany GmbH, 56070 Koblenz, DE. (B21B 1/02, OS 602 31 720, EP 1420895, WO 2003/022469, AT: 16.08.2002, EP-AT: 16.08.2002, WO-AT: 16.08.2002) Aluminium zu verbindende Legierung aus einer Nickel-Magnesium Legierung. Neomax Materials Co., Ltd., Suita-shi Osaka 564-0043, JP. (B23K 35/30, EPA 2662179, EP-AT: 25.10.2010, WO-AT: 25.10.2010) Aluminiumverbundwerkstoff für das flussmittelfreie Löten. Hydro Aluminium Rolled Products GmbH, 41515 Grevenbroich, DE. (B32B 15/01, EPA 2660043, EP-AT: 04.05.2012, WOAT: 04.05.2012) Verfahren zur Herstellung eines Absorberblechs für Sonnenkollektoren. Hydro Aluminium Rolled Products GmbH, 41515 Grevenbroich, DE. (F24J 2/48, OS 50 2007 012 022, EPA 2054676, WO 2008/023054, AT: 24.08.2007, EP-AT: 24.08.2007, WO-AT: 24.08.2007) Verfahren und Einrichtung zum Verdichten von Materialien. Norsk Hydro ASA, Oslo, NO. (B28B 3/02, PS 603 14 846, EP 1476288, WO 2003/068468, AT: 07.02.2003, EP-AT: 07.02. 2003, WO-AT: 07.02.2003) Wärmetauscher, insb. zur Anwendung bei Kühlmöbeln. Erbslöh Aluminium GmbH, 42553 Velbert, DE. (F28F 13/06, GM 20 2010 014 956, AT: 30.10.2010) System zur wetterseitigen Verkleidung von Blend- und Flügelrahmen. Gutmann AG, 91781 Weißenburg, DE. (E06B 3/30, GM 20 2007 014 137, AT: 09.10.2007) Kolben für einen Verbrennungsmotor und Verfahren zu seiner Herstellung. Mahle International GmbH, 70376 Stuttgart, DE. (F02F 3/18, EPA 2652302, WO 2012/079566, EP-AT: 15.12. 2011, WO-AT: 15.12.2011) Fortsetzung in ALUMINIUM 2/2014 83 lieferverzeichnis 1 Smelting technology Anode Technology & Mixing Equipment Hüttentechnik 1.5 1.6 1.7 1.8 1.9 1.10 1.1 raw materials rohstoffe 1.2 Storage facilities for smelting Lagermöglichkeiten in der Hütte 1.3 Anode production Anodenherstellung 1.4 Anode rodding Anodenschlägerei 1.4.1 Anode baking Anodenbrennen 1.4.2 Anode clearing Anodenschlägerei 1.4.3 Fixing of new anodes to the anodes bars 1.11 1.12 1.13 1.14 1.15 1.16 1.17 Befestigen von neuen Anoden an der Anodenstange Casthouse (foundry) Gießerei Casting machines Gießmaschinen Current supply Stromversorgung Electrolysis cell (pot) Elektrolyseofen Potroom Elektrolysehalle Laboratory Labor Emptying the cathode shell ofenwannenentleeren Cathode repair shop Kathodenreparaturwerkstatt Second-hand plant Gebrauchtanlagen Aluminium alloys Aluminiumlegierungen Storage and transport Lager und Transport refractory products Feuerfesttechnik Protective Clothing Schutzkleidung Buss chemtech AG, Switzerland Phone: +4161 825 64 62 E-Mail: info@buss-ct.com Internet: www.buss-ct.com Auto firing systems Automatische Feuerungssysteme RIEDHAMMER CARBON BAKING TECHNOLOGY riedHAMMer GmbH D-90411 nürnberg Phone: +49 (0) 911 5218 0, Fax: -5218 231 E-Mail: thomas.janousch@riedhammer.de Internet: www.riedhammer.de Hydraulic presses for prebaked anodes / Hydraulische Pressen zur Herstellung von Anoden LAeiS GmbH Am Scheerleck 7, L-6868 wecker, Luxembourg Phone: +352 27612 0 Fax: +352 27612 109 E-Mail: info@laeis-gmbh.com Internet: www.laeis-gmbh.com Contact: Dr. Alfred Kaiser Mixing Technology for Anode pastes 1.2 Storage facilities for smelting Lagermöglichkeiten i.d. Hütte FLSmidth MöLLer GmbH Haderslebener Straße 7 D-25421 Pinneberg Telefon: 04101 788-0 Telefax: 04101 788-115 E-Mail: moeller@flsmidth.com Internet: www.flsmidthmoeller.com Kontakt: Herr Dipl.-Ing. Timo Letz Paul Hedfeld GmbH Hundeicker Str. 20 D-58285 Gevelsberg Phone: +49 (0) 2332 6371 E-mail: verkauf@hedfeld.com Internet: www.hedfeld.com Unloading/Loading equipment Entlade-/Beladeeinrichtungen FLSmidth MöLLer GmbH www.flsmidthmoeller.com see Storage facilities for smelting 1.2 Bulk materials Handling from Ship to Cell ALuMinA And Pet coke SHiPunLoAderS Contact: Andreas Haeuser, ha@neuero.de Solios carbone – France www.fivesgroup.com Conveying systems bulk materials Förderanlagen für Schüttgüter (Hüttenaluminiumherstellung) FLSmidth MöLLer GmbH Internet: www.flsmidthmoeller.com see Storage facilities for smelting 1.2 84 1.4 Anode rodding Removal of bath residues from the surface of spent anodes Entfernen der Badreste von der Oberfläche der verbrauchten Anoden 1.3 Anode production Anodenherstellung www.coperion.com mailto: info.cc-mh@coperion.com Buss AG CH-4133 Pratteln Phone: +41 61 825 66 00 E-Mail: info@busscorp.com Internet: www.busscorp.com Anodenanschlägerei www.alu-web.de Bulk materials Handling from Ship to Cell Mischtechnologie für Anodenmassen GLAMA Maschinenbau GmbH Hornstraße 19 D-45964 Gladbeck Telefon 02043 / 9738-0 Telefax 02043 / 9738-50 Rodding shop Storvik AS Industriveien 13 6600 SunnDALSØrA/norwAy Tel.: +47 71 69 95 00 | Fax: +47 71 69 95 55 www.storvik.no | storvik@storvik.no www.brochot.fr ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 suppliers directory 1.4.1 Anode baking Anodenbrennen Open top and closed type baking furnaces Offene und geschlossene Ringöfen RIEDHAMMER CARBON BAKING TECHNOLOGY riedHAMMer GmbH D-90411 nürnberg Phone: +49 (0) 911 5218 0, Fax: -5218 231 E-Mail: thomas.janousch@riedhammer.de Internet: www.riedhammer.de Degassing, filtration and grain refinement Entgasung, Filtern, Kornfeinung drache umwelttechnik GmbH werner-v.-Siemens-Straße 9/24-26 D 65582 Diez/Lahn Telefon 06432/607-0 Telefax 06432/607-52 Internet: www.drache-gmbh.de Gautschi engineering GmbH see Casting equipment 3.1 Dross skimming of liquid metal Abkrätzen des Flüssigmetalls Sie möchten einen Eintrag schalten? Rufen Sie an: Tel. 0821 / 31 98 80-34 GLAMA Maschinenbau GmbH see Anode rodding 1.4 1.5 Casthouse (foundry) Gießerei Furnace charging with molten metal Ofenbeschickung mit Flüssigmetall Furnaces casting machines transport crucibles info@bartz-maschinenbau.de www.bartz-maschinenbau.de GLAMA Maschinenbau GmbH see Anode rodding 1.4 Ingot Casting Line Bartz GmbH MoBiLe eQuiPMent see Casthous (foundry) 1.5 Phone: +31.315.683941 info@hencon.com · www.hencon.com Sistem teknik endüstryel Firinlar Ltd. Sti. ToSB – TAySAD oSB 1.Cad. 14.Sok. no.: 3 Gebze, Kocaeli / Turkey Tel.: +90 262 658 22 26 Fax: +90 262 658 22 38 E-Mail: info@sistemteknik.com Internet: www.sistemteknik.com Solios thermal uk www.fivesgroup.com Metal treatment in the holding furnace Metallbehandlung in Halteöfen Gautschi engineering GmbH see Casting equipment 3.1 Transfer to the casting furnace Überführung in Gießofen drache umwelttechnik GmbH werner-v.-Siemens-Straße 9/24-26 D 65582 Diez/Lahn Telefon 06432/607-0 Telefax 06432/607-52 Internet: www.drache-gmbh.de Gautschi engineering GmbH see Casting equipment 3.1 GLAMA Maschinenbau GmbH see Anode rodding 1.4 www.brochot.fr Transport of liquid metal to the casthouse Transport v. Flüssigmetall in Gießereien HertWicH enGineerinG GmbH Maschinen und industrieanlagen weinbergerstraße 6, A-5280 Braunau am Inn Phone +437722/806-0 Fax +437722/806-122 E-Mail: info@hertwich.com Internet: www.hertwich.com inotHerM induStrieoFenund WÄrMetecHnik GMBH Konstantinstraße 1a D 41238 Mönchengladbach Telefon +49 (02166) 987990 Telefax +49 (02166) 987996 E-Mail: info@inotherm-gmbh.de Internet: www.inotherm-gmbh.de www.alu-web.de Bartz GmbH see Casthous (foundry) 1.5 GLAMA Maschinenbau GmbH see Anode rodding 1.4 Melting/holding/casting furnaces Schmelz-/Halte- und Gießöfen Gautschi engineering GmbH see Casting equipment 3.1 HERTWICH ENGINEERING GmbH see Casthouse (foundry) 1.5 Treatment of casthouse off gases Behandlung der Gießereiabgase Gautschi engineering GmbH see Casting equipment 3.1 1.6 Casting machines Gießmaschinen see Equipment and accessories 3.1 Hampshire House, High Street, Kingswinford, west Midlands Dy6 8Aw, uK Tel.: +44 (0) 1384 279132 Fax: +44 (0) 1384 291211 E-Mail: sales@mechatherm.co.uk www.mechatherm.com ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 inSertec-inGenierÍA Y SerVicioS tÉcnicoS, S.A Avenida Cervantes nº6 48970 – Basauri – Bizkaia – Spain Tel: +34 944 409 420 E-mail: Insertec@insertec.biz Internet: www.insertec.biz GAPcast tM: the Swiss casting solution see Casting machines and equipment 4.7 www.mechatherm.com see Smelting technology 1.5 85 lieferverzeichnis Pig casting machines (sow casters) 1.9 Potroom Masselgießmaschine (Sowcaster) Bartz GmbH see Casthous (foundry) 1.5 Gautschi engineering GmbH see Casting equipment 3.1 Rolling and extrusion ingot and T-bars Elektrolysehalle sermas@sermas.com Heat treatment of extrusion ingot (homogenisation) Formatebehandlung (homogenisieren) Gautschi engineering GmbH see Casting equipment 3.1 Formatgießerei (Walzbarren oder Pressbolzen oder T-Barren) Gautschi engineering GmbH see Casting equipment 3.1 HERTWICH ENGINEERING GmbH see Casthouse (foundry) 1.5 Horizontal continuous casting Horizontales Stranggießen Gautschi engineering GmbH see Casting equipment 3.1 HERTWICH ENGINEERING GmbH see Casthouse (foundry) 1.5 see Casthouse (foundry) 1.5 Phone: +31.315.683941 info@hencon.com · www.hencon.com t.t. tomorrow technology S.p.A. Via dell’Artigianato 18 Due Carrare, Padova 35020, Italy Telefon +39 049 912 8800 Telefax +39 049 912 8888 E-Mail: gmagarotto@tomorrowtechnology.it Contact: Giovanni Magarotto Anode changing machine Anodenwechselmaschine Vertical semi-continuous DC casting / Vertikales Stranggießen GLAMA Maschinenbau GmbH see Anode rodding 1.4 Gautschi engineering GmbH see Casting equipment 3.1 Anode transport equipment Anoden Transporteinrichtungen GLAMA Maschinenbau GmbH see Anode rodding 1.4 wagstaff, Inc. 3910 n. Flora rd. Spokane, wA 99216 uSA +1 509 922 1404 phone +1 509 924 0241 fax E-Mail: info@wagstaff.com Internet: www.wagstaff.com 1.8 Electrolysis cell (pot) HERTWICH ENGINEERING GmbH MoBiLe eQuiPMent Elektrolyseofen Bulk materials Handling from Ship to Cell Bulk materials Handling from Ship to Cell Crustbreakers / Krustenbrecher GLAMA Maschinenbau GmbH see Anode rodding 1.4 Dry absorption units for electrolysis exhaust gases Trockenabsorptionsanlage für Elektrolyseofenabgase Solios environnement www.fivesgroup.com Scales / Waagen Gautschi engineering GmbH see Casting equipment 3.1 www.coperion.com mailto: info.cc-mh@coperion.com Calcium silicate boards Calciumsilikatplatten HERTWICH ENGINEERING GmbH see Casthouse (foundry) 1.5 Sawing / Sägen Gautschi engineering GmbH see Casting equipment 3.1 Promat GmbH High Performance insulation Scheifenkamp 16, D-40878 ratingen Tel. +49 (0) 2102 / 493-0, Fax -493 115 verkauf3@promat.de, www.promat.de Exhaust gas treatment Solios environnement www.fivesgroup.com Beschickungseinrichtungen für Elektrolysezellen see Casthouse (foundry) 1.5 86 www.brochot.fr Tapping vehicles/Schöpffahrzeuge GLAMA Maschinenbau GmbH see Anode rodding 1.4 Abgasbehandlung Pot feeding systems HERTWICH ENGINEERING GmbH Pot ramming Machine FLSmidth MöLLer GmbH www.flsmidthmoeller.com see Storage facilities for smelting 1.2 1.12 Cathode repair shop KathodenreparaturWerkstatt Cathode Sealing Bench Eingießen von Kathodenbarren Sermas Industrie sermas@sermas.com see Smelting technology 1.6 ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 suppliers directory 1.14 Aluminium Alloys Aluminiumlegierungen SMS Siemag AG see rolling mill technology 3.0 Billet heating furnaces Öfen zur Bolzenerwärmung 1.16 Refractory Products rHeinFeLden ALLoYS GmbH & co. kG A member of ALuMInIuM rHEInFELDEn Group Postfach 1703, 79607 rheinfelden Tel.: +49 7623 93-490 Fax: +49 7623 93-546 E-Mail: alloys@rheinfelden-alloys.eu Internet: www.rheinfelden-alloys.eu 1.15 Storage and transport Feuerfesttechnik refratechnik Steel GmbH Schiessstrasse 58 40549 Düsseldorf / Germany Phone +49 211 5858 0 Fax +49 211 5858 46 Internet: www.refra.com Am großen Teich 16+27 D-58640 Iserlohn Tel. +49 (0) 2371 / 4346-0 Fax +49 (0) 2371 / 4346-43 E-Mail: sales@ias-induction.com Internet: www.ias-induction.com Lager und Transport 1.17 Protective Clothing www.brochot.fr Schutzkleidung see Casthouse (foundry) 1.5 2.2 Extrusion equipment Strangpresseinrichtungen see Coil transport systems 3.4 2 www.charnaud.co.za www.charnaud.eu +27 (0)11794 6040 +44 (0)1133 507651 Extrusion Strangpressen 2.1 Extrusion billet preparation Pressbolzenbereitstellung 2.1.1 Extrusion billet production Pressbolzenherstellung 2.2 Extrusion equipment Strangpresseinrichtungen 2.3 Section handling Profilhandling 2.4 Heat treatment wärmebehandlung 2.5 Measurement and control equipment Mess- und regeleinrichtungen 2.6 Die preparation and care werkzeugbereitstellung und -pflege 2.7 Second-hand extrusion plant Gebrauchte Strangpressanlagen 2.8 Consultancy, expert opinion Beratung, Gutachten 2.9 Surface finishing of sections oberflächenveredlung von Profilen 2.10 Machining of sections Profilbearbeitung 2.11 Equipment and accessories Ausrüstungen und Hilfsmittel 2.12 Services Dienstleistungen www.mechatherm.com see Smelting technology 1.5 oilgear towler GmbH Im Gotthelf 8 D 65795 Hattersheim Tel. +49 (0) 6145 3770 Fax +49 (0) 6145 30770 E-Mail: info@oilgear.de Internet: www.oilgear.de Press control systems Pressensteuersysteme oilgear towler GmbH see Extrusion Equipment 2.2 Heating and control equipment for intelligent billet containers Heizungs- und Kontrollausrüstung für intelligente Blockaufnehmer MArx GmbH & co. kG www.marx-gmbh.de see Melt operations 4.13 2.1 Extrusion billet preparation Pressbolzenbereitstellung see Section handling 2.3 extrutec GmbH Fritz-reichle ring 2 D-78315 radolfzell Tel. +49 7732 939 1390 Fax +49 7732 939 1399 E-Mail: info@extrutec-gmbh.de Internet: www.extrutec-gmbh.de ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 Hier könnte Ihr Bezugsquellen-Eintrag stehen. Rufen Sie an: Tel. 0821 / 31 98 80-34 Dennis Ross 2.3 Section handling Profilhandling cti Systems S.A. Z.I. Eselborn-Lentzweiler 12, op der Sang | L- 9779 Lentzweiler Tel. +352 2685 2000 | Fax +352 2685 3000 cti@ctisystems.com | www.ctisystems.com 87 lieferverzeichnis 2.4 Heat treatment H+H HerrMAnn + HieBer GMBH rechbergstraße 46 D-73770 Denkendorf/Stuttgart Tel. +49 711 93467-0, Fax +49 711 34609-11 E-Mail: info@herrmannhieber.de Internet: www.herrmannhieber.de Wärmebehandlung kASto Maschinenbau GmbH & co. kG Industriestr. 14, D-77855 Achern Tel.: +49 (0) 7841 61-0 / Fax: +49 (0) 7841 61 300 kasto@kasto.de / www.kasto.de Hersteller von Band- und Kreissägemaschinen sowie Langgut- und Blechlagersystemen MFW Maschinenbau GmbH A-4813 Altmünster, AuSTrIA see Coil transport systems 3.4 Vollert Anlagenbau GmbH Stadtseestraße 12, D-74189 weinsberg Tel. +49 7134 52 220 l Fax +49 7134 52 222 E-Mail intralogistik@vollert.de Internet www.vollert.de BSN Thermprozesstechnik GmbH Kammerbruchstraße 64 D-52152 Simmerath Tel. 02473-9277-0 · Fax: 02473-9277-111 info@bsn-therm.de · www.bsn-therm.de Ofenanlagen zum Wärmebehandeln von Aluminiumlegierungen, Buntmetallen und Stählen see Section handling 2.3 Section transport equipment Profiltransporteinrichtungen Packaging equipment Verpackungseinrichtungen Hütte GmbH Hüttenstraße 33, D-52355 Düren Phone: +49 (0) 24 21 591 507-0 Fax: +49 (0) 24 21 591 507-99 E-Mail: info@huette-tpt.de Internet: www.huette-tpt.de see Coil transport systems 3.4 inSertec-inGenierÍA Y SerVicioS tÉcnicoS, S.A see Section handling 2.3 see Coil transport systems 3.4 nijverheidsweg 3 nL-7071 CH ulft netherlands Tel.: +31 315 641352 Fax: +31 315 641852 E-Mail: info@unifour.nl Internet: www.unifour.nl Sales Contact: Paul overmans Avenida Cervantes nº6 48970 – Basauri – Bizkaia – Spain Tel: +34 944 409 420 E-mail: Insertec@insertec.biz Internet: www.insertec.biz see Equipment and accessories 3.1 Stackers / Destackers Stapler / Entstapler www.mechatherm.com see Smelting technology 1.5 see Section handling 2.3 Section saws Profilsägen see Section handling 2.3 see Section handling 2.3 Section store equipment Profil-Lagereinrichtungen www.ctisystems.com see Section handling 2.3 Transport equipment for extruded sections Transporteinrichtungen für Profilabschnitte www.ctisystems.com see Section handling 2.3 Seco/WArWick euroPe S.A. ul. Šwierczewskiego 76 66-200 Šwiebodzin, PoLAnD Tel: +48 68 38 19 800 E-mail: europe@secowarwick.com.pl Internet: www.secowarwick.com could not find your „keywords“? Please ask for our complete „Supply sources for the aluminium industry“. e-Mail: anzeigen@giesel.de Heat treatment furnaces Wärmebehandlungsöfen see Section handling 2.3 88 see Section handling 2.3 inotHerM induStrieoFenund WÄrMetecHnik GMBH see Casthouse (foundry) 1.5 ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 suppliers directory 2.10 Machining of sections Profilbearbeitung ernSt reinHArdt GMBH Güterbahnhofstrasse 1 D-78048 Villingen-Schwenningen Tel. +49 (0) 7721 8441-0, Fax -44 E-Mail: info@ernstreinhardt.de Internet: www.ernst-reinhardt.com Homogenising furnaces Homogenisieröfen HERTWICH ENGINEERING GmbH Ageing furnace for extrusions Auslagerungsöfen für Strangpressprofile Billet saw Bolzensägen Sermas Industrie sermas@sermas.com see Smelting technology 1.6 www.alu-web.de see Extrusion billet preparation 2.1 see Heat treatment furnaces 2.4 2.11 Equipment and accessories Ausrüstungen und Hilfsmittel see Casthouse (foundry) 1.5 see Casthouse (foundry) 1.5 Inductiv heating equipment Induktiv beheizte Erwärmungseinrichtungen see 2.1 Billet heating furnaces see Casthouse (foundry) 1.5 2.6 Die preparation and care 3 Rolling mill technology Walzwerktechnik Werkzeugbereitstellung und -pflege Die heating furnaces Werkzeuganwärmöfen see Extrusion billet preparation 2.1 schwartz GmbH see Heat treatment 2.4 nijverheidsweg 3 nL-7071 CH ulft netherlands Tel.: +31 315 641352 Fax: +31 315 641852 E-Mail: info@unifour.nl Internet: www.unifour.nl Sales Contact: Paul overmans 2.9 Surface finishing of sections Oberflächenveredlung von Profilen see Section handling 2.3 ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 nijverheidsweg 3 nL-7071 CH ulft netherlands Tel.: +31 315 641352 Fax: +31 315 641852 E-Mail: info@unifour.nl Internet: www.unifour.nl Sales Contact: Paul overmans 3.1 Casting equipment Gießanlagen 3.2 rolling bar machining walzbarrenbearbeitung 3.3 rolling bar furnaces walzbarrenvorbereitung 3.4 Hot rolling equipment warmwalzanlagen 3.5 Strip casting units and accessories Bandgießanlagen und Zubehör 3.6 Cold rolling equipment Kaltwalzanlagen 3.7 Thin strip / foil rolling plant Feinband-/Folienwalzwerke 3.8 Auxiliary equipment nebeneinrichtungen 3.9 Adjustment devices Adjustageeinrichtungen 3.10 Process technology / Automation technology Prozesstechnik / Automatisierungstechnik 3.11 Coolant / lubricant preparation Kühl-/Schmiermittel-Aufbereitung 3.12 Air extraction systems Abluftsysteme 3.13 Fire extinguishing units Feuerlöschanlagen 3.14 Storage and dispatch Lagerung und Versand 3.15 Second-hand rolling equipment Gebrauchtanlagen 3.16 Coil storage systems Coil storage systems 3.17 Strip Processing Lines Bandprozesslinien 3.18 Productions Management Sytems Produktions Management Systeme 3.0 Rolling mill technology Walzwerktechnik see Cold rolling units / complete plants 3.6 www.alu-web.de Siemens plc, Metals technologies Sheffield Business Park, Europa Link Sheffield S9 1Xu Phone: +44 1709 726500 Fax:+44 1142 611719 aluminiummill.metals@siemens.com 89 lieferverzeichnis Melting and holding furnaces Schmelz- und Warmhalteöfen Bartz GmbH SMS Siemag Aktiengesellschaft Eduard-Schloemann-Straße 4 40237 Düsseldorf, Germany Telefon: +49 (0) 211 881-0 Telefax: +49 (0) 211 881-4902 E-Mail: communications@sms-siemag.com Internet: www.sms-siemag.com Geschäftsbereiche: Warmflach- und kaltwalzwerke wiesenstraße 30 57271 Hilchenbach-Dahlbruch, Germany Telefon: +49 (0) 2733 29-0 Telefax: +49 (0) 2733 29-2852 Bandanlagen walder Straße 51-53 40724 Hilden, Germany Telefon: +49 (0) 211 881-5100 Telefax: +49 (0) 211 881-5200 elektrik + Automation Ivo-Beucker-Straße 43 40237 Düsseldorf, Germany Telefon: +49 (0) 211 881-5895 Telefax: +49 (0) 211 881-775895 Graf-recke-Straße 82 40239 Düsseldorf, Germany Telefon: +49 (0) 211 881-0 Telefax: +49 (0) 211 881-4902 ein eintrag (s/w) in diesem Format kostet pro Ausgabe + Stichwort 110,00 � + MwSt. Weitere informationen unter tel. +49 (0) 821 / 31 98 80 - 34 3.1 Casting equipment Gießanlagen www.mechatherm.com see Smelting technology 1.5 Electromagnetic Stirrer Elektromagnetische Rührer Solios thermal uk www.fivesgroup.com Filling level indicators and controls Füllstandsanzeiger und -regler Gautschi engineering GmbH see Casting equipment 3.1 Gautschi engineering GmbH Konstanzer Straße 37 CH 8274 Tägerwilen Telefon +41 71 666 66 66 Telefax +41 71 666 66 77 E-Mail: info@gautschi.cc Internet: www.gautschi.cc Kontakt: Sales Departement inSertec-inGenierÍA Y SerVicioS tÉcnicoS, S.A see Heat treatment 2.4 90 eBner industrieofenbau Ges.m.b.H. Ebner-Platz 1, 4060 Leonding/Austria Tel. +43 / 732 / 6868-0 E-Mail: sales@ebner.cc Internet: www.ebner.cc Gautschi engineering GmbH see Casting equipment 3.1 see Equipment and accessories 3.1 schwartz GmbH Loi thermprocess GmbH Am Lichtbogen 29 D-45141 Essen Germany Telefon +49 (0) 201 / 18 91-1 Telefax +49 (0) 201 / 18 91-321 E-Mail: info@loi-italimpianti.de Internet: www.loi-italimpianti.com Solios thermal uk www.fivesgroup.com Melt purification units Schmelzereinigungsanlagen Gautschi engineering GmbH see Casting equipment 3.1 see Heat treatment 2.4 Solios thermal uk www.fivesgroup.com www.alu-web.de Bar heating furnaces Barrenanwärmanlagen eBner industrieofenbau Ges.m.b.H. see Annealing furnaces 3.3 Gautschi engineering GmbH see Casting equipment 3.1 Metal filters / Metallfilter Gautschi engineering GmbH see Casting equipment 3.1 3.2 Rolling bar machining Homogenising furnaces Homogenisieröfen Gautschi engineering GmbH see Casting equipment 3.1 Walzenbarrenbearbeitung Plate saw Plattensägen Sermas Industrie sermas@sermas.com see Smelting technology 1.6 HERTWICH ENGINEERING GmbH Slab saw schwartz GmbH Sermas Industrie sermas@sermas.com see Smelting technology 1.6 Solios thermal uk www.fivesgroup.com see Casthouse (foundry) 1.5 Barrensägen Walzbarrenvorbereitung see Casting machines 1.6 Glühöfen see Casthous (foundry) 1.5 3.3 Rolling bar furnaces wagstaff, Inc. Annealing furnaces BSN Thermprozesstechnik GmbH see Heat Treatment 2.4 see Heat treatment 2.4 Roller tracks Rollengänge Gautschi engineering GmbH see Casting equipment 3.1 ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 suppliers directory 3.4 Hot rolling equipment Warmwalzanlagen Achenbach Buschhütten GmbH & co. kG Siegener Str. 152, D-57223 Kreuztal Tel. +49 (0) 2732/7990, info@achenbach.de Internet: www.achenbach.de see Cold rolling units / complete plants 3.6 Rolling mill modernisation Walzwerksmodernisierung Mino S.p.A. Via Torino, 1 – San Michele 15122 ALESSAnDrIA – ITALy Telefon: +39 0131 363636 Telefax: +39 0131 361611 E-Mail: sales@mino.it Internet: www.mino.it Sales contact: Mr. Luciano Ceccopieri 3.6 Cold rolling equipment Kaltwalzanlagen Achenbach Buschhütten GmbH & co. kG Siegener Str. 152, D-57223 Kreuztal Tel. +49 (0) 2732/7990, info@achenbach.de Internet: www.achenbach.de AndritZ Sundwig GmbH www.siemens.vai.com see rolling mill technology 3.0 Coil transport systems www.siemens.vai.com see rolling mill technology 3.0 SMS Siemag AG see rolling mill technology 3.0 Stephanopeler Str. 22, D-58675 Hemer Telefon: +49 (0) 2372 54-0, Fax -200 E-mail: sundwig_welcome@andritz.com Internet: www.andritz.com BSN Thermprozesstechnik GmbH see Heat Treatment 2.4 Bundtransportsysteme www.ctisystems.com see Section handling 2.3 could not find your „keywords“? Please ask for our complete „Supply sources for the SMS LoGiStikSYSteMe GMBH obere Industriestraße 8 D-57250 netphen Telefon: +49 2738 21-0 Telefax: +49 2738 21-1002 E-Mail: info@sms-logistics.com www.sms-logistiksysteme.com aluminium industry“. SMS Siemag AG Drive systems / Antriebe see rolling mill technology 3.0 Hier könnte Ihr Bezugsquellen-Eintrag stehen. Hot rolling units / complete plants Warmwalzanlagen/Komplettanlagen Mino S.p.A. Via Torino, 1 – San Michele 15122 ALESSAnDrIA – ITALy Telefon: +39 0131 363636 Telefax: +39 0131 361611 E-Mail: sales@mino.it Internet: www.mino.it Sales contact: Mr. Luciano Ceccopieri Rufen Sie an: Tel. 0821 / 31 98 80-34 Dennis Ross Gautschi engineering GmbH see Casting equipment 3.1 schwartz GmbH see Heat treatment 2.4 www.alu-web.de Coil transport systems Bundtransportsysteme www.ctisystems.com see Section handling 2.3 H+H HerrMAnn + HieBer GMBH rechbergstraße 46 D-73770 Denkendorf/Stuttgart Tel. +49 711 93467-0, Fax +49 711 34609-11 E-Mail: info@herrmannhieber.de Internet: www.herrmannhieber.de www.siemens.vai.com see rolling mill technology 3.0 SMS Siemag AG see rolling mill technology 3.0 ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 Bundglühöfen see Equipment and accessories 3.1 see rolling mill technology 3.0 SMS Siemag AG Coil annealing furnaces e-Mail: anzeigen@giesel.de Spools / Haspel see Section handling 2.3 www.siemens.vai.com see rolling mill technology 3.0 see Coil transport systems 3.4 91 lieferverzeichnis Rolling mill modernization Walzwerkmodernisierung Feinband-/Folienwalzwerke see Section handling 2.3 Cold rolling units / complete plants Kaltwalzanlagen/Komplettanlagen 3.7 Thin strip / foil rolling plant Achenbach Buschhütten GmbH & co. kG Siegener Str. 152, D-57223 Kreuztal Tel. +49 (0) 2732/7990, info@achenbach.de Internet: www.achenbach.de Achenbach Buschhütten GmbH & co. kG Siegener Str. 152, D-57223 Kreuztal Tel. +49 (0) 2732/7990, info@achenbach.de Internet: www.achenbach.de see Cold rolling units / complete plants 3.6 see Cold rolling units / complete plants 3.6 Mino S.p.A. Via Torino, 1 – San Michele 15122 ALESSAnDrIA – ITALy Telefon: +39 0131 363636 Telefax: +39 0131 361611 E-Mail: sales@mino.it Internet: www.mino.it Sales contact: Mr. Luciano Ceccopieri Mino S.p.A. Via Torino, 1 – San Michele 15122 ALESSAnDrIA – ITALy Telefon: +39 0131 363636 Telefax: +39 0131 361611 E-Mail: sales@mino.it Internet: www.mino.it Sales contact: Mr. Luciano Ceccopieri Coil annealing furnaces Bundglühöfen Slitting lines-CTL Längs- und Querteilanlagen www.siemens.vai.com see rolling mill technology 3.0 www.siemens.vai.com see rolling mill technology 3.0 Gautschi engineering GmbH see Casting equipment 3.1 see Cold rolling units / complete plants 3.6 SMS Siemag AG see rolling mill technology 3.0 Hier könnte Ihr Drive systems / Antriebe SMS Siemag AG see rolling mill technology 3.0 Heating furnaces / Anwärmöfen Gautschi engineering GmbH see Casting equipment 3.1 Process optimisation systems Prozessoptimierungssysteme Gautschi engineering GmbH see Casting equipment 3.1 Process simulation Prozesssimulation Gautschi engineering GmbH see Casting equipment 3.1 SMS Siemag AG see rolling mill technology 3.0 BezugsquellenEintrag stehen. Rufen Sie an: Tel. 0821 / 31 98 80-34 Dennis Ross Walzenwechseleinrichtungen SMS Siemag AG see rolling mill technology 3.0 92 schwartz GmbH see Cold colling equipment 3.6 Heating furnaces Anwärmöfen Gautschi engineering GmbH see Casting equipment 3.1 inotHerM induStrieoFenund WÄrMetecHnik GMBH see Casthouse (foundry) 1.5 inSertec-inGenierÍA Y SerVicioS tÉcnicoS, S.A see Heat treatment 2.4 schwartz GmbH see Heat treatment 2.4 Strip shears/Bandscheren see Cold rolling units / complete plants 3.6 SMS Siemag AG see rolling mill technology 3.0 Trimming equipment Besäumeinrichtungen Roll exchange equipment see Equipment and accessories 3.1 see Cold rolling units / complete plants 3.6 SMS Siemag AG see rolling mill technology 3.0 Thin strip / foil rolling mills / complete plant Feinband- / Folienwalzwerke / Komplettanlagen Mino S.p.A. Via Torino, 1 – San Michele 15122 ALESSAnDrIA – ITALy Telefon: +39 0131 363636 Telefax: +39 0131 361611 E-Mail: sales@mino.it Internet: www.mino.it Sales contact: Mr. Luciano Ceccopieri ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 suppliers directory SMS Siemag AG see rolling mill technology 3.0 Strip flatness measurement and control equipment Bandplanheitsmess- und -regeleinrichtungen Strip Tension Measurement equipment Bandzugmesseinrichtungen Rolling mill modernization Walzwerkmodernisierung Achenbach Buschhütten GmbH & co. kG Siegener Str. 152, D-57223 Kreuztal Tel. +49 (0) 2732/7990, info@achenbach.de Internet: www.achenbach.de Mino S.p.A. Via Torino, 1 – San Michele 15122 ALESSAnDrIA – ITALy Telefon: +39 0131 363636 Telefax: +39 0131 361611 E-Mail: sales@mino.it Internet: www.mino.it Sales contact: Mr. Luciano Ceccopieri ABB Automation Force Measurement S-72159 Västeras, Sweden Phone: +46 21 325 000 Fax: +46 21 340 005 E-Mail: pressductor@se.abb.com Internet: www.abb.com/pressductor Achenbach Buschhütten GmbH & co. kG Siegener Str. 152, D-57223 Kreuztal Tel. +49 (0) 2732/7990, info@achenbach.de Internet: www.achenbach.de SMS Siemag AG ABB Automation Force Measurement S-72159 Västeras, Sweden Phone: +46 21 325 000 Fax: +46 21 340 005 E-Mail: pressductor@se.abb.com Internet: www.abb.com/pressductor Hier könnte Ihr Bezugsquellen-Eintrag stehen. Rufen Sie an: Tel. 0821 / 31 98 80-34 Dennis Ross see rolling mill technology 3.0 3.10 Process technology / Automation technology Prozesstechnik / Automatisierungstechnik Plate handling/Packaging equipment Strip Width & Position Measurement equipment Strip thickness measurement and control equipment Banddickenmess- und -regeleinrichtungen Plattenhandling/Verpackungsanlagen MFW Maschinenbau GmbH A-4813 Altmünster, AuSTrIA Process control technology Prozessleittechnik ABB Automation Force Measurement S-72159 Västeras, Sweden Phone: +46 21 325 000 Fax: +46 21 340 005 E-Mail: pressductor@se.abb.com Internet: www.abb.com/pressductor SMS Siemag AG see Casting machines 1.6 Achenbach Buschhütten GmbH & co. kG Siegener Str. 152, D-57223 Kreuztal Tel. +49 (0) 2732/7990, info@achenbach.de Internet: www.achenbach.de SMS Siemag AG see rolling mill technology 3.0 Roll Force Measurement equipment Walzkraftmesseinrichtungen ABB Automation Force Measurement S-72159 Västeras, Sweden Phone: +46 21 325 000 Fax: +46 21 340 005 E-Mail: pressductor@se.abb.com Internet: www.abb.com/pressductor ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 ABB Automation Force Measurement S-72159 Västeras, Sweden Phone: +46 21 325 000 Fax: +46 21 340 005 E-Mail: pressductor@se.abb.com Internet: www.abb.com/pressductor 3.11 Coolant / lubricant preparation Kühl-/SchmiermittelAufbereitung see rolling mill technology 3.0 wagstaff, Inc. Bandbreiten- und Bandlaufmesseinrichtungen see Cold rolling units / complete plants 3.6 Rolling oil recovery and treatment units Walzöl-Wiederaufbereitungsanlagen SMS Siemag AG see rolling mill technology 3.0 could not find your „keywords“? Please ask for our complete „Supply sources for the aluminium industry“. e-Mail: anzeigen@giesel.de Filter for rolling oils and emulsions Filter für Walzöle und Emulsionen Achenbach Buschhütten GmbH & co. kG Siegener Str. 152, D-57223 Kreuztal Tel. +49 (0) 2732/7990, info@achenbach.de Internet: www.achenbach.de 93 lieferverzeichnis Rolling oil rectification units Walzölrektifikationsanlagen SMS Siemag AG see rolling mill technology 3.0 see rolling mill technology 3.0 see Section handling 2.3 see Cold rolling units / complete plants 3.6 3.17 Strip Processing Lines Bandprozesslinien 3.12 Air extraction systems Abluft-Systeme see Cold rolling equipment 3.6 see Cold rolling units / complete plants 3.6 Exhaust air purification systems (active) Abluft-Reinigungssysteme (aktiv) BWG Bergwerk- und WalzwerkMaschinenbau GmbH Mercatorstraße 74 – 78 D-47051 Duisburg Tel.: +49 (0) 203-9929-0 Fax: +49 (0) 203-9929-400 E-Mail: bwg@bwg-online.de Internet: www.bwg-online.com Achenbach Buschhütten GmbH & co. kG Siegener Str. 152, D-57223 Kreuztal Tel. +49 (0) 2732/7990, info@achenbach.de Internet: www.achenbach.de SMS Siemag AG see rolling mill technology 3.0 3.14 Storage and dispatch Lithografielinien www.bwg-online.com see Strip Processing Lines 3.17 Achenbach Buschhütten GmbH & co. kG Siegener Str. 152, D-57223 Kreuztal Tel. +49 (0) 2732/7990, info@achenbach.de Internet: www.achenbach.de SMS Siemag AG Lithographic Sheet Lines could not find your „keywords“? Please ask for our complete „Supply sources for the aluminium industry“. e-Mail: anzeigen@giesel.de Stretch Levelling Lines redex Zone Industrielle F-45210 Ferrieres Telefon +33 (2) 38 94 42 00 E-mail: info@redex-group.com Internet: www.tension-leveling.com Streckrichtanlagen www.bwg-online.com see Strip Processing Lines 3.17 Lagerung und Versand Strip Annealing Lines Bandglühlinien Via Monte rosa, 93 see Coil transport systems 3.4 SMS Siemag AG see rolling mill technology 3.0 3.16 Coil storage systems Bundlagersysteme 20149 Milan, ITALy Telefon +39 02 4384 7402 E-Mail: stripprocessing@it.tenovagroup.com Internet: www.tenova.com Sales Contact: Stefano Marelli Anodizing Lines H+H HerrMAnn + HieBer GMBH rechbergstraße 46 D-73770 Denkendorf/Stuttgart Tel. +49 711 93467-0, Fax +49 711 34609-11 E-Mail: info@herrmannhieber.de Internet: www.herrmannhieber.de SMS Siemag AG see rolling mill technology 3.0 Anodisier-Linien SMS Siemag AG see rolling mill technology 3.0 www.ctisystems.com see Section handling 2.3 www.bwg-online.com see Strip Processing Lines 3.17 Coil & Colour Coating Lines Bandlackierlinien Bronx international Pty Ltd Email: sales@bronx.com.au Internet: www.bronxintl.com 3.18 Production Management systems Produktions Management Systeme PSi Metals non Ferrous GmbH Software Excellence in Metals Carlo-Schmid-Str. 12, D-52146 würselen Tel.: +49 (0) 2405 4135-0 info@psimetals.de, www.psimetals.com www.bwg-online.com see Strip Processing Lines 3.17 see Coil transport systems 3.4 94 SMS Siemag AG see rolling mill technology 3.0 see Coil transport systems 3.4 ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 suppliers directory 4 Foundry Gießerei 4.1 work protection and ergonomics Arbeitsschutz und Ergonomie 4.2 Heat-resistant technology Feuerfesttechnik 4.3 Conveyor and storage technology Förder- und Lagertechnik 4.4 Mould and core production Form- und Kernherstellung 4.5 Mould accessories and accessory materials Formzubehör, Hilfsmittel 4.2 Heat-resistent technology Feuerfesttechnik Refractories / Feuerfeststoffe 4.6 Foundry equipment Gießereianlagen 4.7 Casting machines and equipment Gießmaschinen und Gießeinrichtungen 4.8 Handling technology Handhabungstechnik 4.9 Construction and design Konstruktion und Design 4.10 Measurement technology and materials testing Messtechnik und Materialprüfung 4.11 Metallic charge materials Metallische Einsatzstoffe 4.12 Finishing of raw castings rohgussnachbehandlung 4.13 Melt operations Schmelzbetrieb 4.14 Melt preparation Schmelzvorbereitung 4.15 Melt treatment devices Schmelzebehandlungseinrichtungen 4.16 Control and regulation technology Steuerungs- und regelungstechnik 4.17 Environment protection and disposal umweltschutz und Entsorgung 4.18 Dross recovery Schlackenrückgewinnung 4.19 Cast parts Gussteile Promat GmbH High Performance insulation Scheifenkamp 16, D-40878 ratingen Tel. +49 (0) 2102 / 493-0, Fax -493 115 verkauf3@promat.de, www.promat.de H+H HerrMAnn + HieBer GMBH rechbergstraße 46 D-73770 Denkendorf/Stuttgart Tel. +49 711 93467-0, Fax +49 711 34609-11 E-Mail: info@herrmannhieber.de Internet: www.herrmannhieber.de see Coil transport systems 3.4 see Section handling 2.3 4.5 Mold accessories and accessory materials Formzubehör, Hilfmittel Fluxes Flussmittel Solvay Fluor GmbH Hans-Böckler-Allee 20 D-30173 Hannover Telefon +49 (0) 511 / 857-0 Telefax +49 (0) 511 / 857-2146 Internet: www.solvay-fluor.de 4.6 Foundry equipment Gießereianlagen Hencon MoBiLe eQuiPMent see section Casthouse 1.5 www.mechatherm.com see Smelting technology 1.5 Casting machines Gießmaschinen refratechnik Steel GmbH Via Brallo, 2 – 27010 Siziano (PV), Italy Tel: +39 0382 6671413 E-mail: sales_dept@erediscabini.com Internet: www.erediscabini.com Schiessstrasse 58 40549 Düsseldorf / Germany Phone +49 211 5858 0 Fax +49 211 5858 46 Internet: www.refra.com www.alu-web.de inSertec-inGenierÍA Y SerVicioS tÉcnicoS, S.A Avenida Cervantes nº6 48970 – Basauri – Bizkaia – Spain Tel: +34 944 409 420 E-mail: Insertec@insertec.biz Internet: www.insertec.biz 4.3 Conveyor and storage technology Förder- und Lagertechnik HERTWICH ENGINEERING GmbH see Casthouse (foundry) 1.5 see Equipment and accessories 3.1 Heat treatment furnaces Wärmebehandlungsöfen inSertec-inGenierÍA Y SerVicioS tÉcnicoS, S.A see Heat treatment 2.4 Paul Hedfeld GmbH www.alu-web.de ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 Hundeicker Str. 20 D-58285 Gevelsberg Phone: +49 (0) 2332 6371 E-mail: verkauf@hedfeld.com Internet: www.hedfeld.com see Casthouse (foundry) 1.5 95 lieferverzeichnis 4.7 Casting machines and equipment Gießereimaschinen und Gießeinrichtungen GAPcast tM: the Swiss casting solution Casting Technology / Automation Tel.: +41 27 455 57 14 E-Mail: info@gap-engineering.ch Internet: www.gap-engineering.ch www.mechatherm.com see Smelting technology 1.5 Mould parting agents Kokillentrennmittel Schröder kG Schmierstofftechnik Postfach 1170 D-57251 Freudenberg Tel. 02734/7071 Fax 02734/20784 ostra Hamnen 7 SE-475 42 Hono / Sweden Tel.: +46 31 764 5520, Fax: +46 31 764 5529 E-Mail: marketing@precimeter.com Internet: www.precimeter.com Sales contact: Jonatan Lindstrand ein eintrag (s/w) in diesem Format kostet pro Ausgabe + Stichwort Weitere informationen unter tel. +49 (0) 821 / 31 98 80 - 34 4.10 Measurement technology and materials testin Messtechnik und Materialprüfung wagstaff, Inc. ratiotec Prüfsysteme GmbH see Casting machines 1.6 Hier könnte Ihr BezugsquellenEintrag stehen. Rufen Sie an: Tel. 0821 / 31 98 80-34 Dennis Ross Continuous ingot casting lines and aluminium rod lines Kokillengieß- und Aluminiumdraht-Anlagen Burner System Brennertechnik www.schroeder-schmierstoffe.de 110,00 � + MwSt. Precimeter control AB see Extrusion 2.4. In der Au 17 D-88515 Langenenslingen Tel.: +49 (0)7376/9622-0 Fax: +49 (0)7376/9622-22 E-Mail: info@ratiotec.com Internet: www.ratiotec.com Büttgenbachstraße 14 D-40549 Düsseldorf/Germany Tel.: +49 (0) 211 / 5 00 91-0 Fax: +49 (0) 211 / 5 00 91-14 E-Mail: info@bloomeng.de Internet: www.bloomeng.de Heat treatment furnaces Wärmebehandlungsanlagen Gautschi engineering GmbH see Casting equipment 3.1 HERTWICH ENGINEERING GmbH see Casthouse (foundry) 1.5 inSertec-inGenierÍA Y SerVicioS tÉcnicoS, S.A see Heat treatment 2.4 see Equipment and accessories 3.1 Holding furnaces www.alu-web.de 4.11 Metallic charge materials Metallische Einsatzstoffe Warmhalteöfen Bartz GmbH see Casthous (foundry) 1.5 Gautschi engineering GmbH see Casting equipment 3.1 inSertec-inGenierÍA Y SerVicioS tÉcnicoS, S.A see Heat treatment 2.4 Recycling / Recycling chr. otto Pape GmbH Aluminiumgranulate Berliner Allee 34 D-30855 Langenhagen Tel:+49(0)511 786 32-0 Fax: -32 Internet: www.papemetals.com E-Mail: info@papemetals.com 4.13 Melt operations Schmelzbetrieb inSertec-inGenierÍA Y SerVicioS tÉcnicoS, S.A see Equipment and accessories 3.1 could not find your „keywords“? Please ask for our complete „Supply sources for the aluminium industry“. e-Mail: anzeigen@giesel.de see Heat treatment 2.4 Via Emilia Km 310 26858 Sordio-LO Italy Tel. +39.02.988492-1 . hq@properzi.it Fax +39.02.9810358 . www.properzi.com 96 Melting furnaces Schmelzöfen www.mechatherm.com see Smelting technology 1.5 Bartz GmbH see Casthous (foundry) 1.5 ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 suppliers directory Gautschi engineering GmbH see Casting equipment 3.1 5 Werkstoffe und Recycling HERTWICH ENGINEERING GmbH see Casthouse (foundry) 1.5 inSertec-inGenierÍA Y SerVicioS tÉcnicoS, S.A see Heat treatment 2.4 see Equipment and accessories 3.1 MArx GmbH & co. kG Lilienthalstr. 6-18 D-58638 Iserhohn Tel.: +49 (0) 2371 / 2105-0, Fax: -11 E-Mail: info@marx-gmbh.de Internet: www.marx-gmbh.de 4.14 Melt preparation Schmelzvorbereitung Degassing, filtration Entgasung, Filtration drache umwelttechnik GmbH werner-v.-Siemens-Straße 9/24-26 D 65582 Diez/Lahn Telefon 06432/607-0 Telefax 06432/607-52 Internet: http://www.drache-gmbh.de 4.15 Melt treatment devices Schmelzbehandlungseinrichtungen Metaullics Systems europe B.V. Ebweg 14 nL-2991 LT Barendrecht Tel. +31-180/590890 Fax +31-180/551040 E-Mail: info@metaullics.nl Internet: www.metaullics.com Materials and Recycling Granulated aluminium Aluminiumgranulate chr. otto Pape GmbH Aluminiumgranulate Berliner Allee 34 D-30855 Langenhagen Tel:+49(0)511 786 32-0 Fax: -32 Internet: www.papemetals.com E-Mail: info@papemetals.com 6 Machining + Application Bearbeitung + Anwendung 6.1 Equipment to produce castplate Ausrüstungen für Gussplattenproduktion Slicing saw & Milling machines Folienschneidmaschinen Fräsmaschinen Sermas Industrie sermas@sermas.com see Smelting technology 1.6 6.2 Semi products Dust removal Entstaubung neotecHnik GmbH Entstaubungsanlagen Postfach 110261, D-33662 Bielefeld Tel. 05205/7503-0, Fax 05205/7503-77 info@neotechnik.com, www.neotechnik.com ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 Ausrüstung für Schmiedeund Fließpresstechnik Hydraulic Presses Hydraulische Pressen LASco umformtechnik GmbH Hahnweg 139, D-96450 Coburg Tel. +49 (0) 9561 642-0 Fax +49 (0) 9561 642-333 E-Mail: lasco@lasco.de Internet: www.lasco.com could not find your „keywords“? Please ask for our complete „Supply sources for the aluminium industry“. e-Mail: anzeigen@giesel.de 8 Literature Literatur Technical literature Fachliteratur taschenbuch des Metallhandels Fundamentals of extrusion technology Giesel Verlag GmbH Hans-Böckler-Allee 9, 30173 Hannover Tel. 0511 / 73 04-125 · Fax 0511 / 73 04-233 Internet: www.alu-bookshop.de Technical journals Fachzeitschriften Halbzeuge Wires / Drähte drAHtWerk eLiSentAL W. erdmann GmbH & co. werdohler Str. 40, D-58809 neuenrade Postfach 12 60, D-58804 neuenrade Tel. +49(0)2392/697-0, Fax 49(0)2392/62044 E-Mail: info@elisental.de Internet: www.elisental.de 4.17 Environment protection and disposal Umweltschutz und Entsorgung 6.3 Equipment for forging and impact extrusion Giesel Verlag GmbH Hans-Böckler-Allee 9, 30173 Hannover Tel. 0511/8550-2638 · Fax 0511/8550-2405 ein eintrag (s/w) in diesem Format kostet pro Ausgabe + Stichwort 110,00 � + MwSt. Weitere informationen unter tel. +49 (0) 821 / 31 98 80 - 34 GdMB-informationsgesellschaft mbH Paul-Ernst-Str.10, 38678 Clausthal-Zellerfeld Telefon 05323-937 20, Fax -237, www.gdmb.de 97 Vorschau / PreView iM NÄchsTeN heFT iN The NeXT issue special: Die internationale aluminium-strangpressindustrie special: The international aluminium extrusion industry Wir berichten über Unternehmen und Ausrüster der Strangpressindustrie, über Anlagentechnik und neue Projekte. Themen unter anderem: We will report on companies and equipment partners of the extrusion industry, with emphasis on plant technology and new projects. Topics include: • Die neue Strangpresslinie bei Aluminium Laufen • The new extrusion line at Aluminium Laufen, Austria • Omav SpA – Weiterhin auf Wachstumskurs • Omav SpA – still on course for growth • Extrutec: Neue Anlagen rund um die Strangpresse • Erbslöh Aluminium internationalisiert sein Geschäft • Extrutec: new machinery and equipment before and behind the extrusion press • Kind&Co.–„MehralsnurStahl“ • Erbslöh Aluminium goes global • Kind&Co.–“Morethanjuststeel” weitere Themen other topics • NachberichtvonderEuroguss • AktuelleNachrichtenausderinternationalen Aluminiumindustrie Erscheinungstermin: Anzeigenschluss: Redaktionsschluss: • Follow-up report on the Euroguss trade fair • Latest news from the global aluminium industry 07.März2014 21.Februar2014 7.Februar2014 International ALUMINIUM 90. Jahrgang 1. 1. 2014 Journal Verlag / Publishing house Giesel Verlag GmbH Postfach 5420, 30054 Hannover Hans-Böckler-Allee 9, 30173 Hannover Tel. +49(0)511 7304-0, Fax +49(0)511 7304-157 info@giesel.de, www.giesel-verlag.de Postbank Hannover (BLZ 250 100 30), Konto 90 898 306, IBAN DE65 2501 0030 0090 8983 06, BIC PBNKDEFF250; Commerzbank Hannover (BLZ 250 400 66), Konto 150 022 200, IBAN DE03 2504 0066 0150 0222 00, BIC COBADEFFXXX Geschäftsleitung / Managing Director Klaus Krause Redaktion / Editorial office Dipl.-Vw. Volker Karow Chefredakteur, Editor in Chief Franz-Meyers-Str. 16, 53340 Meckenheim Tel. +49(0)2225 8359643, Fax +49(0)2225 18458 vkarow@online.de Dipl.-Ing. Rudolf P. Pawlek Hüttenindustrie und Recycling rudolf.pawlek@span.ch Dipl.-Ing. Bernhard Rieth Walzwerkstechnik und Bandverarbeitung rollingmill-technology@t-online.de Ken Stanford, Contributing Editor kstanford2004@yahoo.co.uk Objektleitung / General Manager Material Publication Dennis Roß Tel. +49(0)821 319880-34, d.ross@giesel.de Anzeigenpreise / Advertisement rates Preisliste Nr. 52 vom 1. Oktober 2013 Price list No. 52 from 1 Oct. 2013 Druckunterlagen / Print documents anzeigendaten-ajo@schluetersche.de Tel. +49(0)511 8550-2522, Fax +49(0)511 8550-2401 98 Dateofpublication: Advertisementdeadline: Editorialdeadline: Vertrieb / Distribution Tel. +49(0)511 8550-2638, Fax +49(0)511 7304-233 vertrieb@giesel.de Jahresbezugspreis EUR 302,– (Inland inkl. 7% MwSt. und Versandkosten). Europa EUR 302,– inkl. Versandkosten. Einzelausgabe EUR 30,80. Übersee US$ 400,– inkl. Normalpost; Luftpost zzgl. US$ 84,–. Einzelausgabe US$ 40,–. Preise für Studenten auf Anfrage. ALUMINIUM erscheint zehnmal pro Jahr. Kündigungen jeweils sechs Wochen zum Ende der Bezugszeit. 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Bernhard Rieth Strümper Berg 10, D-40670 Meerbusch Tel. +49(0)2159 962643, Fax +49(0)2159 962644 marketing.xpertise@t-online.de France DEF & Communication, Romain Linguanotto 48 boulevard Jean Jaurès, F-92110 Clichy Tel. +33(0)147307181, Fax +33(0)147300189 rlinguanotto@defcommunication.com Angeschlossen der Informationsgemeinschaft zur Feststellung der Verbreitung von Werbeträgern (IVW) Druck / Printing house Gutenberg Beuys Feindruckerei GmbH Hans-Böckler-Straße 52, 30851 Langenhagen Der ALUMINIUM-Branchentreff des Giesel Verlages: www.alu-web.de ALUMINIUM · 1-2/2014 REGISTER NOW FOR &EBRUARYs3AN$IEGO#ONVENTION#ENTER 3AN$IEGO#ALIFORNIA53! In February, TMS returns to one of its most popular meeting destinations— sunny San Diego! Join more than 4,000 materials scientists and engineers from the around the world in San Diego, California, for the TMS 2014 Annual Meeting & Exhibition. Registration is now open for the meeting, so sign up as soon as possible to reserve your space at this important gathering of the materials community. Here are a few reasons you should attend this year’s event: s Hear from Leaders in Light Metals s Access Light Metals 2014 s View the Latest Technologies s Further Your Education Extensive light metals programming attracts high-profile speakers representing all areas of the light metals community. The following symposia are planned for TMS2014: Alumina and Bauxite; Aluminum Alloys: Development, Characterization and Applications; Aluminum Processing; Aluminum Reduction Technology; Cast Shop for Aluminum Production; Deformation, Damage, and Fracture of Light Metals and Alloys III; Electrode Technology for Aluminum Production; Light-Metal Matrix (Nano)-Composites; and Magnesium Technology 2014. Meeting registrants receive electronic access to the newest edition of the Light Metals proceedings series, widely recognized as the definitive source of information on new developments in aluminum production technology. Products and services from top light metals companies and other materials science and engineering organizations make the TMS 2014 Annual Meeting Exhibition a global showcase for the latest advances in materials. Pair your meeting attendance with a continuing education course. This year’s course topics include furnace systems technology, grain refinement of aluminum and magnesium alloys, pot ventilation and dry scrubbing operations for aluminum smelters, proper anode baking furnace operations, and tactics for creating business value in aluminum smelters. Preview all of the offerings of the TMS 2014 Annual Meeting & Exhibition— including a detailed listing of technical symposia, a virtual tour of the exhibit hall, and a complete listing of continuing education offerings—at the TMS2014 website: www.tms.org/tms2014 Remember: Registration is open, so make your plans to attend today!