Ferrosilicon is used as a source of silicon to reduce metals from their oxides and to
deoxidize steel and other ferrous alloys. This prevents the loss of carbon from the molten steel (so called
blocking the heat);
ferromanganese,
spiegeleisen,
calcium silicides, and many other materials are used for the same purpose. It can be used to make other ferroalloys. Ferrosilicon is also used for manufacture of silicon, corrosion-resistant and high-temperature-resistant ferrous silicon alloys, and
silicon steel for
electromotors and
transformer cores. In the manufacture of
cast iron, ferrosilicon is used for inoculation of the iron to accelerate
graphitization. In
arc welding, ferrosilicon can be found in some electrode coatings. Ferrosilicon is a basis for manufacture of
prealloys like magnesium ferrosilicon (MgFeSi), used for production of
ductile iron. MgFeSi contains magnesium and small amounts of
rare-earth elements. Ferrosilicon is also important as an additive to cast irons for controlling the initial content of silicon. Magnesium ferrosilicon is instrumental in the formation of nodules, which give
ductile iron its flexible property. Unlike gray cast iron, which forms
graphite flakes, ductile iron contains graphite nodules, or pores, which make cracking more difficult. Ferrosilicon is also used in the
Pidgeon process to make magnesium from
dolomite. Historically, it was used to make Cilferite (also spelled Cilpherite): a military explosive containing
ammonium nitrate, ferrosilicon (), aluminum powder, and wood meal used in
World War I by the British and the French. The former used Cilferite as filler for the
Mills bomb No. 36, which was replaced in favor of the
Baratol-filled No. 36M in 1932; all Cilferite-filled grenades were deemed as unsafe and destroyed by the end of 1932.
Silanes Treatment of high-silicon ferrosilicon with
hydrogen chloride is the basis of the industrial synthesis of
trichlorosilane. Ferrosilicon is also used in a ratio of in the manufacture of sheets for the magnetic circuit of
electrical transformers. ==Hydrogen production==