Applicant claims priority under 35 U.S.C. §119 of German Application No. 101 13 891.1, filed Mar. 21, 2001. Applicant also claims priority under 35 U.S.C. §365 of PCT/EP02/01887, filed Feb. 22, 2002. The international application under PCT article 21(2) was not published in English.
The invention relates to a device for lifting and removing oven doors of a coking oven comprising
In a modern coking plant, emissions caused when the doors of the coking oven are lifted off and removed, are collected by a suction hood that can be displaced along the horizontal chamber oven and is positioned above the door-lifting device, and then passed by means of pipelines either into dust removal systems on the coke side, or to filter installations that are installed on the side on which the oven is controlled. The length of the suction head amounts to multiple times the width of an oven chamber in order to trap the emissions escaping when the doors of the oven are lifted and removed. Due to the large height of the chamber of a modern horizontal chamber oven, which often amounts to in excess of 6 meters, and due also to the unavoidable currents of air occurring in front of the doors of the oven, substantial amounts of emissions released when the doors are opened, in particular from the lower areas of the oven doors, are still not trapped by the suction head and thus released into the environment. It is a drawback, furthermore, that the suction lines, the suction blower and mainly filter installations have to be designed for large volumes of air.
The invention is based on the problem of improving the removal by suction of the emissions occurring when the oven door is opened.
Based on a device characterized by the features described above, the problem is resolved according to the invention in that sealing elements are connected with the door removing head and can be displaced on both sides of an oven door to be removed against front contact faces of the horizontal chamber oven. These contact faces extend substantially over the entire height of the suction hood and, when the oven door is opened, are forming a suction chamber for door emissions. The sealing elements resting against the front side of the horizontal chamber oven when the oven door is opened, delimit an upwardly open suction chamber feeding into the suction area of the suction hood. In this way, the emissions released when the door of the oven is opened are channeled and can be passed with relatively small amounts of air into the suction hood in a controlled manner. The arrangement as defined by the invention permits an almost complete collection of all emissions occurring when the door of the oven is opened, in particular also from the lower areas of the door.
The door removing head usefully comprised mechanical, electromechanical, pneumatic or hydraulic setting devices that control the setting movements of the sealing elements in such a manner that the sealing elements rest against the front-side contact surfaces of the horizontal chamber oven as the oven door coupled to the door removing head is being lifted and removed from the opening of the door. The sealing elements are preferably designed in the form of pivot-mounted wings. Furthermore, the sealing elements may be designed in the form of sliding walls that can be driven from a recessed resting position against the front-side contact surfaces of the horizontal chamber oven by a straight-line setting movement. Furthermore, it is possible to design the sealing elements in the form of single- or multi-component elements.
The coupling operation, in which the door removing device is coupled with an oven door to be opened, is not impaired by the sealing elements provided as defined by the invention. The sealing elements usefully can be moved between a resting position and a working position, whereby the sealing elements are pushed or swiveled back into the resting position to such an extent that the coupling operation taking place between the door removing head and the closed oven door can be observed.
The arrangement as defined by the invention permits the use of compact and small suction hoods. The suction head, which can be displaced along the horizontal chamber oven, preferably has a length that is not substantially exceeding the width of an oven chamber of the horizontal chamber oven. Suction lines connected to the suction hood, the suction blower and a filter installation downstream can be designed for streams of emissions with relatively small volumes.
The invention is explained in the following with the help of the drawing showing only one exemplified embodiment. The following is schematically shown in the drawing:
The figures show a device for lifting and removing oven doors that is mounted on a machine for pushing out or transferring coke. The device has a door removing head 1 that is coupled to the vertically extending oven doors 2 of a horizontal chamber oven, and comprises a driving device 3 indicated only schematically, for setting movements of the door removing head 1. Furthermore, provision is made for a suction hood than can be displaced above the oven doors along the horizontal chamber oven. Its suction area 4 is shown dashed in the figures. The suction hood is positioned above the door removing device in front of the oven chamber of the horizontal chamber oven to be opened, and, in the exemplified embodiment as well as also according to a preferred embodiment of the invention, has a length not substantially exceeding the width of the oven chamber.
The sealing elements 5 are connected with the door removing head 1. These sealing elements can be driven from a basic position I, which is shown dashed in
From the position shown in
The operation implemented for lifting and removing the oven door from the opening of the door is shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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101 13 891 | Mar 2001 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP02/01887 | 2/22/2002 | WO | 00 | 4/3/2003 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO02/077122 | 10/3/2002 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20040099520 A1 | May 2004 | US |