The invention relates to an agitator ball mill according to the preamble of claim 1.
Such an agitator ball mill is known from EP 2 178 642 A1. In such agitator ball mills, a flowable grinding material, a grinding material suspension is ground or dispersed with the aid of grinding bodies. The grinding suspension consists of a carrier liquid and solids distributed therein, wherein the starting particle size is in the range of some micrometers to some hundreds of micrometers. The final size is in the range of micrometers, submicrons, and in special cases even nanometers.
In the agitator ball mill known from EP 2 178 642 A1 there are relatively large openings formed in the agitating discs that are bounding adjacent grinding cells, which are arranged some distance away from the inner wall of the grinding chamber. The grinding bodies are accelerated outwardly by the agitating disc at the surface of the agitating disc in a—relative to the axis—outer area of a grinding cell. Similar considerations hold for the grinding suspension. In the—relative to the axial direction—central area the flow is redirected and is directed toward the agitating shaft. Two such generally oppositely directed flows in a grinding cell are referred to as braided flows or circular flows. The large openings formed in the agitating discs serve for the passage of grinding material and grinding bodies from a grinding cell to a—viewed in the direction of the overall flow—downstream grinding cell. In the respective opening the grinding bodies are entrained in different directions by the walls that bound the respective opening, so that a completely uncontrolled passage of grinding bodies and grinding material occurs between adjacent grinding cells, thereby strongly affecting the braided flows so that there is a very uneven distribution of grinding bodies in the entire grinding chamber as well as in each individual grinding cell. In addition, a broad distribution for the residence time results for the grinding material during the flow through the grinding chamber.
In the known agitator ball mill grinding material/grinding bodies passage openings are formed in the most downstream agitating disc that forms part of a separator device, for the passage of grinding material and grinding bodies into the separator device. In the most downstream agitating disc, congruent with the already mentioned large openings in the upstream agitating discs grooves are arranged through which the grinding bodies are entrained and are accelerated outwardly through centrifugal forces. The grinding material/grinding bodies passage openings are arranged relatively close to the agitating shaft due to the grooves, that is to say for constructional reasons.
By means of the agitating elements, the grinding bodies are caused to move within the active grinding chamber. The grinding suspension to be processed is supplied with the aid of a suitable pump into the sealed grinding chamber which may be operated under pressure of up to about 5 bars, in special cases up to 10 bars. The solids contained in the grinding suspension, i.e. the grinding material, are exposed to the grinding bodies which are moved relative to each other and are ground or dispersed, depending on their morphology.
Through the entraining forces which are transmitted to the grinding bodies by the grinding material due to its viscosity, the latter ones are transported by the flow toward the grinding material outlet. This causes a non-uniform distribution of the grinding bodies along the axis of the grinding chamber. The non-uniform distribution of the grinding bodies caused by the uncontrolled acceleration of the grinding bodies at the surface of the large openings in the agitating discs adds thereto. For relatively high throughputs and/or relatively high viscosities of the grinding material compression of the grinding bodies with increased wear may very easily be the result. Also, often this may result in overly stressed grinding material and, as a consequence, it may lead to the damaging thereof.
It is therefore an object of the invention to, with the aid of particularly simple means, ensure in an agitator ball mill of the known type a uniform distribution of the grinding bodies along the grinding chamber even at highest throughputs and in a broad operational range, and at the same time yield a particularly uniform grinding effect.
In accordance with the invention, this object is achieved by an agitator ball mill having the features of independent claim 1.
Surprisingly, it has turned out that such an agitator ball mill can be operated with extraordinary high throughputs, if the agitating discs which are otherwise free of through-openings only have small grinding material passage openings arranged in immediate proximity to the agitating shaft. The term “in immediate proximity” is to be understood to comprise cases in which the grinding chamber inner boundary and the radially inner boundary of the grinding material passage openings coincide and thus the grinding material passage openings are bounding the grinding chamber inner boundary, as well as cases in which the radially inner boundary of the grinding material passage openings have an—even small—distance from the grinding chamber inner boundary. For example, the distance of the radially inner boundary of the grinding material passage opening may have a distance from the grinding chamber inner boundary that is in a range of up to one tenth (≤0.1) of the radial extension of the respective agitating disc from the grinding chamber inner boundary to the radially outer edge of the respective agitating disc. Such small distance of the radial inner boundary of the grinding material passage opening from the grinding chamber inner boundary may be advantageous or even required for reasons of manufacturing. In a very broad range for the throughput, an absolutely constant power consumption is achieved which is an indicator for a uniform distribution of the grinding bodies that is not negatively affected by an increase of the throughput. In addition, over the whole operational range significantly narrower distributions of particles are achieved than are achievable in a single-batch operation with agitator ball mills having agitating discs that have the otherwise conventional large openings in the radially farther outwardly arranged area. Essential for the described effect is that the grinding material passage openings arranged in immediate proximity to the agitating shaft are provided in the agitating discs that are bounding adjacent grinding cells. The grinding bodies are accelerated outwards over the major part of the surface of the agitating disc, so that in the region of the wall of the grinding vessel an increased density of grinding bodies is achieved that forms a correspondingly high flow resistance for the grinding material, i.e. the grinding suspension. Accordingly, there is no bypass, i.e. a free passage, for the grinding material in the outer region of the grinding chamber. This effect is particularly promoted in case the difference of the solid density and the mixture density of the grinding suspension, i.e. of the grinding material consisting of the solids and of the carrier liquid, is as high as possible, preferably equal to or higher than 2 g/cm3. Since the comparatively small grinding material openings are located in an area where there are only few grinding bodies, no uncontrolled exchange of grinding material occurs between adjacent grinding cells, an in particular no significant passages of grinding bodies through the grinding material openings occur.
Particularly advantageous relative radial extensions of the grinding material passage openings of the agitator ball mill according to the invention are the subject of the dependent claims 2 and 3.
In principle, only a single grinding material passage opening may be present. In dependent claim 4 an advantageous arrangement of the grinding material passage openings around the agitating shaft of the agitator ball mill according to the invention is specified.
The dependent claims 5 to 8 specify particularly advantageous further embodiments of the agitator ball mill according to the invention, in which different accelerations of the grinding bodies along the radial extension of the agitating discs can be purposefully achieved, whereby a targeted outwardly directed transportation of the grinding bodies is achieved.
Through the features of dependent claim 9, in the agitator ball mill according to the invention it is achieved that the grinding material flows in a guided manner from the circular flow, i.e. the braided flow, in one grinding cell into a similar flow of a downstream grinding cell.
Further advantages and detail of the invention result from further dependent claims and from the following description of embodiments of the invention with the aid of the drawings. These show:
In
An essentially cylindrical grinding vessel 10 is releasably mounted to the upper portion 8 of the stand 1. The cylindrical grinding vessel 10 has an inner wall 11 and is closed by a first lid 12 at an end facing the upper portion 8 and by a second lid 13 at the opposite end. It encloses a grinding chamber 14. The inner wall 11 thus forms the grinding chamber outer boundary.
An agitating shaft 16 is arranged in the grinding chamber 14 concentric with the common central longitudinal axis 15 of grinding vessel 10 and drive shaft 7, and is connected in a torque-proof manner to the drive shaft 7. The grinding chamber 14 is sealed with the aid of gaskets 17 arranged between the lid 12 and the drive shaft 7. The agitating shaft 16 is supported in the manner of a cantilever, that is to say it is not supported in the region of the second lid 13. Over its entire length it is provided with agitating tools which are embodied as circular agitating discs 18.
The agitating discs 18 are attached to the agitating shaft 16 and are held in a conventional manner on the agitating shaft 16 in a torque-proof manner, for example with the aid of a tongue and groove connection, and are held spaced from one another by means of spacer sleeves 19. The agitating shaft 16 together with the spacer sleeves 19 and the agitating discs 18 form an agitator 20. The spacer sleeves 19 are bounding the essentially cylindrical grinding chamber 14 at its inner end and thus form a grinding chamber inner boundary.
In the region of the first lid 12 a grinding material feed 21 leads in into the grinding chamber 14. At the end of the grinding vessel 10 opposite to the grinding material feed 21 a grinding material outlet 22 leads out of the second lid 12.
At the outer circumference of the last agitating disc 18 adjacent to the second lid 13 a cylindrical cage 23 is formed. It comprises a plurality of openings 24 which are distributed along its circumference. In the separator space 25 which is enclosed by the most downstream agitating disc 18 and the cage 23, there is arranged a screen body 26, which is attached to the second lid 13 and which is connected to grinding material outlet 22. These parts form a grinding material/grinding bodies separating device 27 which is known from EP 2 178 642 A1.
The agitating discs 18 (or 18a, 18b; see
The grinding material passage openings 28 comprise a radially outer boundary that has a distance R28 from the spacer sleeve 19 (grinding chamber inner boundary) in the radial direction of the agitating disc 18. For the ratio of the distance R28 of the radially outer boundary of the respective grinding material passage opening 18 from the spacer sleeve 19, i.e. the grinding chamber inner boundary, to the radial outer edge 30 (radially outer boundary) of the agitating discs, the following condition applies: 0.05·R18≤R28≤0.25·R18, and more preferably R28≤0.15·R18.
Adjacently arranged agitating discs 18 have the same axial distance a from one another, respectively. In addition, adjacently arranged agitating discs 18 a separator angle α which is defined by a line 29 from the radially outer edge 30 of an agitating disc 18 and the inner end of the adjacent agitating disc 18 at the agitating shaft 16, i.e. at the respective spacer sleeve 19, as well as by a line 31 running parallel to the central longitudinal axis 15. Here the condition 30°≤α≤60° applies.
The width b of the gap 32 between the radial outer edge 30 and the wall 11 amounts at maximum 20% of the free radius R14 of the grinding chamber 14.
The grinding chamber 14 is essentially filled with grinding bodies 33, and preferably with grinding bodies 33 made of materials having a high density, for example high performance ceramics made of ZrO2 (zirconium dioxide) having a solid density of 6.0 g/cm3. The degree of filling (bulk volume of the grinding bodies relative to the volume of the grinding chamber) is in the range of 50% to 90%, in particular in the range of 80% to 90%. The high solid density of the grinding bodies 33 relative to the density of the grinding suspension is important for the desired effects, i.e. to transport the grinding bodies 33 near the surfaces of the respective agitating discs 18 outwards into the zone of the accumulated grinding bodies.
Between adjacent agitating discs 18 grinding cells 34 are formed, respectively, in which the braided flows 35 shown in
The acceleration of the grinding bodies 33 caused by the agitating discs 18 can be increased by means of groove-like channels 38a, 38b (see
According to a first embodiment shown in
In the embodiment of the agitating discs 18b shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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16194369.1 | Oct 2016 | EP | regional |