Metallurgical Coke – Low Ash, High Strength, Fast Delivery

Metallurgical Coke – Low Ash, High Strength, Fast Delivery

28 October 2025
Metallurgical Coke – Low Ash, High Strength, Fast Delivery

A Pragmatic Buyer’s Guide to Metallurgical Coke

Met coke is one of those unsung materials that quietly determines the fate of a blast furnace shift. Origin: China. And yes, demand has been surprisingly resilient—green steel talk is loud, but foundries, ferroalloy plants, and BF ironmaking still depend on high-CSR lumps to keep productivity steady.

Metallurgical Coke

What’s moving the market

Two big trends: tighter sulfur caps from downstream EAFs and BF operators, and more buyers asking for consistent 25–90 mm screened sizes. Many customers say stability beats record CSR—they’ll trade a point of CSR for uniformity, fewer fines, and clean logistics. To be honest, that’s what saves costs at the stockyard.

Metallurgical Coke

From coal blend to furnace: process and QA

Typical flow: coal blend design (caking index control) → stamping/charging → high-temp carbonization (≈1000–1100°C) → dry quenching or wet quenching → screening (10–30, 25–90 mm) → de-dusting → QC. Key tests follow ASTM and ISO: Ash (ASTM D3174), VM (ASTM D3175), S (ASTM D4239), Moisture (ASTM D3173), CRI/CSR (ASTM D5341 or ISO 18894), M10/M40 drum index (ISO 18895). Third-party inspection (SGS/BV) is common before shipment.

Metallurgical Coke

Typical Specifications

Metallurgical Coke
Property Typical value (real-world use may vary)
CSR (Coke Strength after Reaction)≈ 60–65
CRI (Coke Reactivity Index)≈ 22–28
Ash (Ad)8.5–11.5%
Sulfur (Sd)≤ 0.6% (low-S options ≤ 0.5%)
Volatile Matter≤ 1.5%
Moisture (as shipped)≤ 5%
Size10–30 mm; 25–90 mm
Apparent density≈ 0.85–0.95 g/cm³
Metallurgical Coke

Where Metallurgical Coke earns its keep

- BF ironmaking (core fuel, reductant, and burden support).
- Foundry cupolas needing strong, low-S lumps.
- Ferroalloys and non-ferrous smelting lines.
- Calcium carbide and phosphorus chemistry. Advantages? Stable thermal profile, predictable permeability, and fewer BF slips—operators tell me “consistency beats hero specs.”

Metallurgical Coke

Vendor landscape (quick take)

Vendor Certifications CSR/CRI (typ.) S (typ.) Delivery Notes
China producer (Dah Carbon) ISO 9001/14001; SGS/BV upon request 62/25 ±2 ≤0.6% FOB Tianjin/Qingdao; CIF Strong screening and size control
Global Trader A Mix of mills; QC varies 60/27 ≤0.8% CFR only Broader origins; variable fines
Regional Coke Oven B ISO 9001 58/29 ≤0.7% FOB Competitive price; QC bandwidth limited
Metallurgical Coke

Customization, service life, logistics

Metallurgical Coke can be tailored: low-S (≤0.5%), low-P, special size windows for BF throat conditions, and even dry-quenched lots for lower moisture. In-furnace survivability correlates with CSR; higher CSR typically means better integrity through the stack and raceway. Storage life? Covered yards see 6–12 months without meaningful degradation; keep it dry, minimize drops (fines). Usual load ports: Tianjin, Rizhao, Qingdao.

Metallurgical Coke

Case notes from the field

- BF operator (SE Asia): after switching to Metallurgical Coke CSR 63/CRI 24, top gas CO ratio stabilized and coke rate dropped ≈10–12 kg/thm over two months. They told me it felt “uneventful—in a good way.”
- Foundry using 10–30 mm: lower sulfur helped keep HCl emissions down; cupola lining wear looked slower by the third campaign, though I’d call that anecdotal.

Metallurgical Coke Metallurgical Coke Metallurgical Coke

Final checklist

- Specify CSR/CRI targets and screen size with tolerances.
- Ask for test methods on the COA (ASTM or ISO).
- Request pre-shipment sieve analysis and moisture photo log.
- Consider dry-quenched lots if moisture caps are strict.
- For sustainability reporting, ask for ISO 14001 and any recent emissions audits.

References

  1. ASTM D5341 – Standard Test Method for Measuring Coke Reactivity Index (CRI) and Coke Strength after Reaction (CSR).
  2. ISO 18894 – Coke — Determination of Coke Reactivity Index (CRI) and Coke Strength after Reaction (CSR).
  3. ASTM D3174, D3175, D3173, D4239 – Proximate and sulfur analyses for coal and coke.
  4. World Steel Association – Blast furnace operation and raw materials overview.
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