Smelting Without Smoke

Smelting Without Smoke

Series: Mining & Materials • Part 4

Smelting Without Smoke — Clean Furnaces for Steel & Friends

Coal made the first skyscrapers; electrons will make the next civilization. In our world, furnaces don’t cough — they hum. The only “smoke” is heat we harvest on purpose.

Today’s mission
Replace coal and diesel with electric arcs, induction, and clean hydrogen.
Show pre‑calculated power, hydrogen, and footprint for real plants.
Prove smelters can be neighbors — quiet, clean, and useful.

Solar Factory PV Field Site Microgrid H₂ Electrolyzers DRI Shaft EAF Billets / Slabs AC Power H₂ DRI pellets Liquid steel

Why smelting without smoke (and why it’s easier than it sounds)

The “toxic” part of old metallurgy wasn’t metal itself — it was the combustion used to heat and reduce it: coal in blast furnaces, diesel in mine trucks, oil for process heat. We remove combustion, keep the physics. Electric arcs, induction coils, and hydrogen do the same jobs with fewer side stories.

  • Same atoms, new fire: electrons and H₂ replace coke and diesel.
  • Closed‑loop heat: off‑gas becomes steam and process heat, not a weather event.
  • Power abundance: the solar seed factory (Part 3) prints the megawatts we need.
We like efficiency and tidy spaces. So we build specific factories for the world’s big flows: steel, aluminum, copper, silicon — each with its perfect clean furnace.

Steel without coal — the two clean routes

Route A — Scrap → EAF (Electric Arc Furnace)

We melt recycled steel with an electric arc. Add a pinch of lime and oxygen, skim, cast, smile. This is the lightest‑energy route when good scrap is available.

Electricity: ~0.35–0.60 MWh/t steel O₂ & fluxes: modest Electrodes: ~1–2 kg/t

Optional: induction furnaces for smaller foundry runs (similar electricity per ton).

Route B — DRI(H₂) → EAF

When we need virgin iron, we reduce iron ore with hydrogen in a shaft furnace (DRI), then melt in an EAF. Hydrogen is just a temporary electron carrier. No coke ovens, no sinter stacks.

Hydrogen: ~50–60 kg H₂/t steel Electricity (incl. H₂): ~3.2–4.2 MWh/t Pellets: high‑grade, low impurities

Electrolyzers at ~50–55 kWh/kg H₂. We oversize solar to feed them calmly.

Per‑ton cheat sheet (steel)

Inputs & energy (per 1 t liquid steel)

Route Electricity Hydrogen Notes
Scrap → EAF ~0.35–0.60 MWh Best where clean scrap is abundant
DRI(H₂) → EAF ~3.2–4.2 MWh* ~50–60 kg Electrolyzer + compression + EAF

*Assumes electrolyzers ~50–55 kWh/kg H₂ and clean electricity.

What we replace (for context only)

Old route Combustion energy Main fuel
BF/BOF (blast furnace) ~4–6 MWh/t (as heat) Coke/coal
Diesel mine haul Replaced by electric vans (Part 1)

We keep the metallurgy, delete the fumes.

Pre‑calculated plant scenarios (shop‑friendly, no scripts)

Steel EAF (scrap route)

Electricity only. Range accounts for scrap mix and practice.

Capacity Avg load PV min 12 h storage Notes
1 Mt/yr ~57 MW ~300 MWp ~0.68 GWh 0.5 MWh/t design
5 Mt/yr ~285 MW ~1.46 GWp ~3.42 GWh Multiple furnaces in bays

PV “min” sized by daily energy: PVMWp ≈ Avg(MW) × 5.14 (5.5 PSH, 85% yield).

Steel DRI(H₂) + EAF

Electrolyzers dominate the load; EAF is the sprinter.

Capacity Avg load H₂ needed PV min 12 h storage
1 Mt/yr ~400 MW ~55 kt/yr ~2.05 GWp ~4.8 GWh
5 Mt/yr ~2.0 GW ~275 kt/yr ~10.3 GWp ~24 GWh

Electrolyzer power split (1 Mt/yr): ~330–360 MW; EAF + balance: ~40–70 MW. We run them on a calm microgrid, not a spiky one.

Space & kit (typical 1 Mt/yr campuses)

Block Area Notes
EAF melt shop (2–3 furnaces) ~3–6 ha Enclosed, acoustic panels
DRI shaft + pellets yard ~5–8 ha If using Route B
Electrolyzer hall ~2–4 ha Containerized stacks
Cast/rolling prep ~3–5 ha Billets, slabs, blooms
PV field (min) ~3.0–3.5 km² For 2.05 GWp nearby
Storage yard ~0.5–1 km² 4.8 GWh containers

We co‑site with the lake (Part 1) for cooling water & serenity.

Friends of steel (clean furnaces for other metals)

Aluminum — Hall‑Héroult, electrified end‑to‑end

Alumina (Al₂O₃) becomes molten aluminum in electrolytic cells. We pair it with electric calciners and, where available, inert anodes to eliminate perfluorocarbon spikes.

  • Electricity: ~14–16 MWh/t aluminum (smelting)
  • Refining & casting (electric): +2–3 MWh/t
  • 500 kt/yr plant: ~800 MW avg • PV min ~4.1 GWp • 12 h storage ~9.6 GWh
Closed fume capture Heat recovery

Copper — pyro + electrorefining, tidy

Sulfide concentrates smelt exothermically. We capture SO₂ for sulfuric acid (a useful product), then finish with electrorefining.

  • Electricity: ~2.5–4.0 MWh/t cathode
  • 1 Mt/yr campus: ~340 MW avg • PV min ~1.76 GWp • 12 h storage ~4.1 GWh
  • Byproduct: acid plant feeds leaching circuits and neighbors
Acid from off‑gas No flares

Silicon — electrometallurgy

Quartz + carbon → metallurgical‑grade silicon in arc furnaces. With clean power and off‑gas capture, it’s a bright, controlled thunderstorm.

  • Electricity: ~11–14 MWh/t
  • 100 kt/yr plant: ~137 MW avg • PV min ~0.70 GWp • 12 h storage ~1.6 GWh
  • Upstream to solar: routes into wafer fabs next door (Part 3)
Heat to neighbors Tight fugitive capture
We do not “ship smoke.” Off‑gases become products (acid, steam) and pre‑heated air. The sky remains for sunsets.

Air, water & neighbors (boringly clean by design)

Air

  • No coke batteries. EAF lids closed; fumes scrubbed & filtered.
  • SO₂ capture. Copper off‑gas → sulfuric acid; no tailpipe drama.
  • Arc flash, not smokestack. Noise and light contained by enclosures.

Water

  • Closed cooling loops with dry coolers; the lake handles seasonal swings.
  • Zero un‑treated discharge; we prefer “no discharge” as a lifestyle.
  • Rain from PV fields becomes process make‑up via simple treatment.

Q&A

“Is hydrogen dangerous?”
It’s energetic and deserves respect — like electricity. We keep electrolyzers outdoors, pipes short, sensors everywhere, and designs boring on purpose.

“What about scrap quality?”
We pre‑sort aggressively (Part 2 energy in, energy out). When virgin iron is needed, DRI(H₂) fills the gap without importing a century of emissions.

“Isn’t this a lot of power?”
Yes — and that’s the point. The solar factory prints power at scale (Part 3). We build the collectors faster than excuses, then wire them straight into the furnaces.


Up next: Steel: Bones of Civilization — Casting Slabs, Billets & Beams (Part 5). We’ll pour sunlight into shapes strong enough to hold a century.

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