This disclosure relates to a device for separating ferromagnetic particles from a suspension.
There are a large number of technical tasks which involve separating ferromagnetic particles from a suspension. One important area where this takes place is the separation of reusable ferromagnetic particles from a suspension containing ground ore. These are not just iron particles, which are to be separated from an ore; other reusable materials, for example particles containing copper, which are not ferromagnetic per se, can be chemically coupled with ferromagnetic particles, for example magnetite, and thus be separated selectively from the suspension containing the entire ore. Ore here refers to a raw rock material, which contains particles of reusable material, in particular metal compounds, which are reduced to metals in a further reduction process.
Magnetic separation methods serve to extract ferromagnetic particles selectively from the suspension and separate them. The magnetic separation system structure that has proved expedient comprises a tubular reactor, on which coils are arranged so that a magnetic field is generated on an inner reactor wall, where the ferromagnetic particles collect and are conveyed from there in an appropriate manner. Modern embodiments of such tubular reactors also comprise a so-called displacement body in their interior, which serves to adjust the width of a separating channel to the penetration depth of the magnetic field into the suspension, so that the volume through which the flow passes is penetrated to the greatest possible degree by the generated magnetic field and the ferromagnetic particles present in the suspension are picked up as effectively as possible by the magnetic field.
The use of a displacement body per se is a suitable means for improving the penetration of the suspension flowing through the reactor by the magnetic field, which already has a positive impact on the overall separation rate for ferromagnetic particles. However it is necessary, in order to improve the economic viability of the separation process and therefore of the overall ore extraction process, to increase the magnetic field penetration of the suspension flowing through the reactor further.
One embodiment provides a device for separating ferromagnetic particles from a suspension, having a tubular reactor through which the suspension can flow with an inlet and an outlet and means for generating a magnetic field along an inner reactor wall and a displacement body arranged in the interior of the reactor, wherein means for generating a magnetic field on an outer wall of the displacement body are provided on the displacement body.
In a further embodiment, the means for generating a magnetic field are configured to generate a migrating magnetic field.
In a further embodiment, a migrating field is present on the inner reactor wall and on the outer wall of the displacement body.
In a further embodiment, the migrating field migrates in the throughflow direction.
In a further embodiment, annular apertures are respectively arranged equidistant from the inner reactor wall and the outer wall of the displacement body at the outlet to separate ferromagnetic particles and non-magnetic components of the suspension.
In a further embodiment, the means for generating a magnetic field on an outer wall of the displacement body are arranged in the form of coils within the displacement body.
In a further embodiment, the means for generating a magnetic field on an outer wall of the displacement body are configured in the form of coils, the outer surfaces of which form the outer wall of the displacement body.
In a further embodiment, the apertures are arranged so that they can be adjusted in respect of their distance from the inner reactor wall and/or the outer wall of the displacement body.
In a further embodiment, the migrating field migrates counter to the throughflow direction.
Exemplary embodiments will be explained in more detail below based on the schematic drawings, wherein:
Embodiments of the present disclosure may increase the usable penetration depth of the magnetic field in a magnetic separation reactor compared with certain conventional arrangements, thereby improving the separation rate for ferromagnetic particles and at the same time saving space.
In some embodiments, a device for separating ferromagnetic particles from a suspension, in other words a magnetic separation device, has a tubular reactor, through which a suspension flows. The reactor comprises an inlet and an outlet, as well as means for generating a magnetic field along an inner reactor wall. The tubular reactor also comprises a displacement body arranged in the interior of the reactor, wherein means for generating a magnetic field on an outer wall of the displacement body are also provided in the displacement body.
some embodiments provide a separating channel through which the suspension flows is not just penetrated from one side by a magnetic field, as is the case of certain conventional arrangements. Instead it is penetrated from two sides by two different magnetic fields, thereby enlarging the penetration depth of the magnetic fields. The hollow space 21 generally present in the displacement body is profitably used by the coil arrangement and the separation rate is increased significantly for the same reactor size. Also the volume throughput of suspension through the separation reactor can be almost doubled while the size remains the same.
Suspension here refers to a freeflowing mass of solvent, in particular water, and solids, in particular ground ore.
In one embodiment the means for generating a magnetic field, in particular coils, are controlled in such a manner that the magnetic field moves in the form of a migrating magnetic field along the inner reactor wall or the outer wall of the displacement body, in other words the non-magnetic reactor walls, in the throughflow direction of the suspension. This means that the ferromagnetic particles separated on the magnetized walls are moved along the reactor and can be separated in a specific manner in the region of the outlet. In principle the migration of the magnetic field can also take place counter to the throughflow direction, with the particles then being separated in the region of the inlet.
One embodiment includes annular apertures respectively arranged equidistant from the inner reactor wall and the outer reactor wall of the displacement body in the region of the outlet to separate the ferromagnetic particles from the non-magnetic components of the suspension. In particular when the reactor is embodied as cylindrical, the apertures are embodied as correspondingly annular. It may be expedient here for the apertures to be arranged so that they can be adjusted in relation to the magnetized surfaces, in other words the inner reactor wall or the outer wall of the displacement body, depending on the concentration of ferromagnetic particles in the suspension, so that the optimum concentration of ferromagnetic particles, transported by the migrating field in the region of the apertures, can always be separated.
There are various embodiments for the arrangement of the means for generating the magnetic field on an outer wall of the displacement body. On the one hand the hollow space 21 in the displacement body can be used to arrange the corresponding means, in particular coils, for generating a magnetic field there. It may likewise also be expedient to provide a core, in particular a cylindrical core, as the core of the displacement body and to position the corresponding means in the form of coils for generating magnetic fields thereon from the outside. In some instances such coils arranged on the core from the outside would have to be provided with a suitable material with a smooth surface.
Arranged in the interior of the tubular reactor is a displacement body 20, which in this example is also arranged as a cylindrical body centrically in the tubular reactor 8.
The displacement body 20 has an outer wall 24, the centric arrangement of the displacement body 20 in the reactor 8 between the outer wall 24 of the displacement body 20 and an inner wall 18 of the reactor (inner reactor wall 18) causing an annular gap to form, which is referred to as a separating channel 42.
A suspension 6 (not shown here but see
One particular feature of the magnetic separation system 2 illustrated in
The distance between the apertures 30, 30′ and correspondingly magnetized walls 18 and 24 can be controlled in a variable manner as a function of the concentration of ferromagnetic particles 4 in the suspension 6 and the degree of separation of the particles 4, as shown by the arrows 37.
In another embodiment of the displacement body 20 the coils 32 are introduced into the hollow space 21 in the displacement body 20, rest against its outer wall there and generate a magnetic field 16 on the outer face 24 of the displacement body 20.
As a result of these arrangements according to
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2010 061 952.3 | Nov 2010 | DE | national |
This application is a U.S. National Stage Application of International Application No. PCT/EP2011/070482 filed Nov. 18, 2011, which designates the United States of America, and claims priority to DE Patent Application No. 10 2010 061 952.3 filed Nov. 25, 2010. The contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP11/70482 | 11/18/2011 | WO | 00 | 5/28/2013 |