Pig iron
Adapted from Wikipedia ยท Adventurer experience
Pig iron is a very important material used by the iron industry to make steel. It is created by heating iron ore in a special building called a blast furnace. This process is known as smelting.
Pig iron contains a lot of carbon, usually between 3.8% and 4.7%, along with some other materials. Because of this, pig iron is very hard and not easy to shape. This means it can't be used directly to make most things, except for a few special uses.
Even though pig iron isn't perfect, it is a key step in making steel, which is used in many everyday objects like buildings, cars, and appliances.
Etymology
The name "pig iron" comes from how the metal looked when it cooled. Workers made molds in sand that looked like baby pigs. There was one big mold like a mother pig and smaller molds for the piglets. After the metal hardened, they broke the smaller pieces from the big one. This made it easier to handle and melt the metal again later.
History
See also: Ferrous metallurgy
People in China made pig iron a very long time ago, during the Zhou dynasty, which ended in 256 BC. In Europe, places like Lapphyttan in Sweden and some areas in the County of Mark, now part of Westphalia, Germany, had furnaces as early as the 12th and 13th centuries. We do not know if these European methods came from China or were discovered on their own.
Making pig iron needed special furnaces and strong materials to handle very high heat, more than 1538ยฐC, the temperature at which iron melts. Before the Middle Ages in Europe, people made a type of iron called wrought iron in smaller furnaces called bloomeries. They did not make pig iron because it was too hard to work with. Changing pig iron into steel was very hard with old methods, so the small pieces of pig iron were often thrown away.
Uses
Traditionally, pig iron was changed into wrought iron using special furnaces. Later, it was turned into steel. In these processes, pig iron is melted, and air is blown over it to remove impurities.
Pig iron can also be used to make gray iron. This is done by melting pig iron together with steel and old iron pieces, and adjusting the amount of carbon. Special types of pig iron can be used to make ductile iron, depending on the quality needed.
In the past, pig iron was poured from the bottom of a blast furnace into a container for transport to a steel mill. This hot liquid pig iron was then used to make steel in special furnaces.
Today, steel factories and iron plants either use the molten iron right away or pour it into smaller pieces for later use. Modern machines create small pieces of pig iron that break into chunks when they come out.
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