The present invention relates to an apparatus for applying material and more particularly to a gunning device for gunning monolithic refractories.
Gunning devices that project a material onto a target substrate for producing or repairing of refractory linings are generally known. Two widely used gunning methods for fabricating and repairing refractory linings are known as the gunnite-type and shotcrete-type gunning methods. Unlike other casting methods, these gunning methods require no framework for casting refractory linings and allow for easy application even on irregular shapes or where frameworking is difficult to construct. Accordingly, gunning methods have been widely used in fabricating and repairing refractory linings, particularly, in furnaces such as a blast furnace, hot stove, electric furnace, converter, ladle, tundish, basic oxygen furnace and reheating furnace.
In a gunnite method, a dry powdery material to be “gunned” is pneumatically fed through a transporting hose to a nozzle assembly where water is added to produce a wet, highly viscous gunning material with good adhesive properties. The gunning material is projected through the nozzle assembly so that the material adheres and cures on the furnace wall portion, whereby a refractory furnace lining is fabricated or repaired. The gunnite application method requires no premixing of material with water and can therefore be carried out rapidly and on short notice and clean-up of equipment is minimal. An additional advantage over other methods of fabricating or repairing furnace linings include not having to use a lining mold, thereby enabling cost reduction and improving working efficiency and enables the repair of both hot and cold furnace linings. However, one disadvantage of the gunnite method is that it is difficult to completely wet and thoroughly mix the material and water stream as it is transported through the application gunning lance, pipe or nozzle. This is particularly true for short (less than about 5 feet) gunning pipes. In these situations, a lack of thoroughness in mixing results in less than optimum and desirable applied mass homogeneity and density, an increase in material waste due to rebounding aggregate and poor mass adhesion and often excessive material pipe drip. Additionally, when a directional change in the flow of the gunning material is required, the material tends to exit the nozzle in a “split” non-homogenous stream where part of the stream is very dry while the other part is overly wet, a phenomenon that is independent of any attempted water control. A problem associated with an overly dry or poorly wet gunning material that is gunned onto the object target, is that a portion of the material does not adhere to the substrate and causes a loss of deflected particles (known as “rebound”) which lowers the adhesion percentage of the gunning material to the furnace wall, thus affecting the quality and durability of a refractory furnace mass. To overcome the problems associated with nozzle gunning methods, shotcrete-gunning methods were developed.
Shotcrete gunning methods produce refractories having a more uniform quality and better physical properties than obtained by the gunnite method and generally are used for producing high density, monolithic structures. In the shotcrete method, a gunning material is produced by mixing a dry material with water in a separate mixing device prior to delivery to a gunning device. The dry powdery material is pre-wet with water in a mixer and then pumped by a delivery pump through a transfer hose to a gunning device which projects the gunning material to a target using compressed air. Usually, a setting agent is added to the gunning material at the nozzle prior to the gunning material being projected onto a furnace wall structure.
The shotcrete gunning method is not without its attendant drawbacks, however, in that it is necessary to mix the dry material with water in a separate vessel until a suitable consistency is obtained. Thus, a shotcrete gunning material is mixed before it is supplied by the delivery pump to a gunning device requiring additional equipment, e.g., mixer and delivery systems, and manpower, when compared with the nozzle gunning method. Moreover, it is important to accurately control the amount of water to the gunning material in the shotcrete gunning method to maintain the proper consistency. As a result, skill on the part of the shotcrete-gunning operator is required to maintain the correct amount of water for a desirable composition. If too little water is used, blocking or premature hardening of the gunning material may occur in the pump or delivery hose. Conversely, if an excessive amount of water is used, there can occur separation of aggregates of coarse particles and fine powder which is contained in the gunning material to be sprayed causing uneven and poor quality refractory layers.
An additional disadvantage of the “shotcrete” method is the logistics of the mixer and pump. A certain amount of gunning material remains in the delivery hose and nozzle creating a waste of material and increased manpower costs for the emptying and cleaning of equipment.
Furthermore, unlike the gunnite application method, which can be employed in hot applications to repair furnace walls at elevated temperature (e.g., above 2000 degrees Fahrenheit), attempts at using the shotcrete gunning method for repairing refractories at high temperatures have not been very successful.
The foregoing illustrates limitations known to exist in present refractory coating methods and devices. Thus it is apparent that it would be advantageous to provide an alternative directed to overcoming one or more of the limitations set forth above. Accordingly an alternative apparatus for the gunning of a material is provided including the features more fully disclosed hereinafter.
According to the present invention, an apparatus for the gunning of a material is provided having a nozzle with an inner passage having an inlet end into which a wetted material is to be introduced and an outlet end from which the material is to be sprayed. An outer passage is disposed around the inner passage and in fluid communication therewith and has an inlet end for introducing a gas to be passed through the outer passage and impinged on the wetted material passing through the inner passage, thus constricting the material as it exits the nozzle.
Also provided is an apparatus for the gunning of a material having a material delivery hose for providing a material. A water inlet in fluid communication with the material delivery hose provides water to wet the material and a nozzle outputs the wetted material. A mixing chamber is disposed intermediate and in fluid communication with the material delivery hose and the nozzle and has at least one inlet for introducing a mixing gas.
The foregoing and other aspects will become apparent from the following detailed description of the invention when considered in conjunction with the accompanying drawing figures.
Novel features and advantages of the present invention will become apparent to those skilled in the art from a reading of the following detailed description in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, wherein:
As used herein, the term “drip” refers, generally, to the phenomenon that results when wet product fines separate out from the stream of a gunning material. More specifically, it includes, but is not limited to, a viscous “putty-like” build-up at the tip of the discharge end of the nozzle assembly that can fall down from the gunning material being projected onto the target substrate, thus adversely effecting the quality of the application. Also included in this definition is a second type of “drip” phenomenon which results when fines settle out from a gunning nozzle stream along the inside wall of the nozzle assembly, producing a less viscous “drip” that is projected from the nozzle assembly at a lower velocity such that it creates material waste since it does not reach the target substrate.
As used herein the term “rebound” refers, generally, to the occurrence when a gunning material does not adhere to the target substrate, e.g., because it is poorly wet or not entrapped by more fully wet gunned mass. This also includes, but is not limited to, instances of aggregate deflection which generally occurs when aggregate contained in the material bounces off a targeted surface and/or when the gunning material falls off of the target substrate during or immediately after the gunning material is applied to the targeted substrate causing a lower adhesion percentage of the gunning material to the furnace wall.
According to the present invention a gunning device is provided for applying materials such as monolithic refractories to a surface such as an interior wall surface of a furnace, preferably while the furnace is still heated. Additionally, the present invention provides a nozzle for a gunning device that more uniformly mixes a material with water and conveys the mixed material onto a target surface. In particular, it has been discovered that the gunning device of the present invention increases the degree and thoroughness of contact between the powdery material and the water and improves irregular and/or poor mixing and improved the consolidation of the gunning stream, thereby reducing “drip,” the occurrence of a “split” non-homogenous stream, and “rebound.” By reducing these problems, the adhesion percentage of the gunning material is improved to produce a lining body having improved density and improved strength, relative to conventional application equipment and methods, thereby enhancing the quality and durability of an applied mass.
The invention is best understood by reference to the accompanying drawings in which like reference numbers refer to like parts. It is emphasized that, according to common practice, the various dimensions of the apparatus and the associated component parts as shown in the drawings are not to scale and have been enlarged for clarity.
Referring now to the drawings, shown in
Sequentially attached to the nozzle 100 are a mixing chamber 30, a material delivery hose 20, and a water inlet 10, all of which are in fluid communication and through which a material is fed, preferably, being supplied pneumatically by a transporting pipe 5 that attaches to the water inlet 10. Water inlet 10 is connected to a water source 60 that provides water to wet the material to form a “gunning” material that is passed through the material delivery hose 20 to mixing chamber 30.
Mixing chamber 30 is disposed intermediate to and in fluid communication with material delivery hose 20 and nozzle 1. More specifically, mixing chamber 30 is in fluid communication with the inlet end 102 of the inner passage 100 of nozzle 1 and a source of mixing gas. The mixing gas is preferably provided by at least one gas inlet 90 for injecting gas onto the flow of the gunning material. More preferably, the gas inlet 90 includes a ring of horizontally oriented gas injection ports which impinge a flow onto the material to cause additional mixing of the material and water.
In operation, the pneumatically driven gunning material exits mixing chamber 30 and is projected into inlet end 102 and out of outlet end 103 of inner tubular member 110 onto a target substrate (not shown). The inner tubular member 110 defining inner passage 100 is from about 4 inches to about 30 feet. Preferably, the inner tubular member 110 defining inner passage 100 is from about 12 inches to about 36 inches in length and is in fluid communication with the mixing chamber 30 and, preferably, attached by a threaded nipple as shown. Preferably, the outer passage 200 is an annular space that is defined by the inner tubular member 110 being disposed concentrically within the outer tubular member 210.
According to a first nozzle embodiment, outer tubular member 210 defining the outer passage 200 is longer than the inner tubular member 110 defining the inner passage 100, as shown in FIG. 1. The outer tubular member 210 is located such that the outer passage 200 extends beyond the outlet end 103 of the inner tubular member 110, preferably, from about ¼ inch to about 12 inches.
Preferably, nozzle 1 further comprises a hollow flange 40 disposed around the inlet end 102 of the inner passage 100. Shown in
In this fashion, a controlled gas injection can be provided through the outer passage in which gas flows through the outer passage, reaches the outlet end, and acts to consolidate the stream of gunning material as it leaves the outlet end of the inner tubular member 110 allowing for lower material waste and better quality application. As shown in
According to another embodiment of the present invention, shown in
According to another embodiment of the present invention, shown in
While embodiments and applications of this invention have been shown and described, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that more modifications are possible without departing from the inventive concepts herein described. It is understood, therefore, that the invention is capable of modification and therefore is not to be limited to the precise details set forth. Rather, various modifications may be made in the details within the scope and range of equivalents of the claims without departing from the spirit of the invention. It is envisioned that this apparatus can be used in the shotcrete method of material placement. It is also envisioned that this apparatus can be used in applications outside of those for fabricating or repairing refractory linings.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20040144859 A1 | Jul 2004 | US |