Author
Luckins, E
Oliver, J
Please, C
Sloman, B
van Gorder, R
Journal title
European Journal of Applied Mathematics
DOI
10.1017/S0956792521000243
Issue
5
Volume
33
Last updated
2024-04-11T12:44:32.31+01:00
Page
828-863
Abstract
Silicon is produced in submerged arc furnaces which are heated by electric currents passing through the furnace. It is important to understand the distribution of heating within the furnace in order to accurately model the silicon production process, yet many existing studies neglect aspects of this current flow. In the present paper, we formulate a model which couples the electrical current to thermal, material flow, and chemical processes in the furnace. We then exploit disparate timescales to homogenise the model over the timescale of the alternating current, deriving averaged equations for the slow evolution of the system. Our numerical simulations predict a minimum applied current that is required in order to obtain steady state solutions of the homogenised model, and show that, for high enough applied currents, two spatially heterogeneous steady state solutions exist, with distinct crater sizes. We show that the system evolves to the steady state with a larger crater radius, and explain this behaviour in terms of the overall power balance
typically found within a furnace. We find that the industrial practice of stoking furnaces increases the overall rate of material consumption in the furnace, thereby improving the efficiency of silicon production.
Symplectic ID
1186143
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Publication type
Journal Article
Publication date
13 Aug 2021
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