This application claims benefit of and priority from co-assigned German Patent Application No. DE 10 2011 080 998.8 filed on Aug. 16, 2011. The disclosure of this German Patent Application is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
The present invention relates to a cooling grate for cooling and transporting of cement clinker and grate segments used to form such cooling grate.
A cement clinker, in the following referred to as a clinker, for short, is typically produced in a sintering process in so called rotary kilns. A clinker is discharged from the rotary kiln with a temperature of about 1450° C. onto an inlet distribution in the form of a bulk material bed, also known as a clinker bed. The clinker is then moved onto a grate cooler where it is cooled by cooling air and transported from the kiln to further processing stages, usually at first to a crusher. During this transport, a temperature exchange between hot clinker and cooling air takes place. The higher the resulting temperature of the cooling air, the more efficiently the contained heat can be reused as process heat in the kiln. Typical bed depths of the clinker bed are between about 0.4 m and about 0.8 m.
A typical grate cooler has at least one cooling grate having at least one support for the clinker. Cooling air is injected into said cooler via cooling air channels. The cooling air is used to transport the fine fraction of the bulk material bed upward allowing the cooling air to pass through the interstices between the larger particles undisturbed. This facilitates efficient cooling of the larger particles. Turmoil and stirring of the bulk material particles must be avoided, as this would result in a homogeneous temperature across the bed height. The desired bulk material bed temperature increases with the distance from the support, as the maximum cooling air temperature is governed by the temperature of the bulk material particles at the top of the material bed. Due to radiation losses at the surface, this optimum temperature profile cannot be realised, so the aim is to have the hottest section of the bulk material bed a few centimeters underneath the surface.
In order to achieve a uniform aeration, EP 0167 658 teaches a step grate having box-like grate elements, arranged in rows in parallel to each other, transversal to the conveying direction. The rear part of each row is overlapped by the front part of the preceding row (in conveying direction), thereby forming a structure resembling a stair, each step constituted by grate elements arranged side by side. Each grate element has several slot-like cooling air channels, arranged consecutively transversely to the conveying direction. The cooling air channels are constituted by gaps between grate segments, which are inserted in box-like carriers of the grate elements. The upper segments of the cooling air channels are straight and inclined in conveying direction, so that the cooling air exits the cooling air channels at an angle inclined in conveying direction and at least a noteworthy fraction of the cooling air flows along the support. The lower part of the slot-like cooling air channels is syphon-shaped, to prevent clinker from falling through the cooling air channels.
U.S. Pat. No. 8,132,520 discloses a grate cooler having multiple planks adjacently situated transverse to the direction of transport and operationally moved longitudinally relative to one another with moving gaps designed as blow openings situated therebetween. The planks form a grate floor. Cooling air is blown through the moving gaps into the bulk material on top of the planks. The upper parts of the moving gaps are straight and inclined in the direction of transport. The lower parts of the moving gaps are siphon-shaped.
The present invention stems from the realization that the discharge of the fine fraction from the bulk material bed is not sufficiently effected with the step grate according to the prior art. When the cooling air supply is below a critical value of about 0.75 m3/s per m2 of support area (reduced 0.75 m/s), the fine fraction may not be discharged reliably. This improves with increased aeration, however, this improvement is accompanied by an increase in formation of air tunnels, which reduces efficiency and temperature of the cooling air above the clinker. Above about 1.5 m/s of cooling air supply the particles are lifted and swirled inside the bulk material bed.
The problem to be solved by the invention is to reliably discharge the fine fraction of the clinker bed at the lowest possible aeration, in order to enable a good heat transfer between the clinker bed and the cooling air at low pressure drop.
The solution to this problem is described by the independent claims. The cooling grate as described in claim 1 can be equipped with grate segments as described in claim 11. In particular, it can be equipped with box-like grate elements, in which grate segments according to claim 11 are inserted. The dependent claims relate to further improvements of the invention.
The cooling grate for cooling and transporting of cement clinker has at least one support for cement clinker. This can preferably be the surface of a grate element or part thereof. During transport, the clinker is moved across the support. Hence, the support lies in the same plane as the conveying direction. Strictly speaking, this is only the case for flat supports. However, the orientation of undulated supports also defines the conveying direction at least substantially. In this context “undulated” stands for a surface which is made up of a multitude of wavelike ridges arranged in parallel to each other. For the sake of simplicity it is assumed, in the context of this application, that the support is located in a horizontal plane. Preferably however, the support is slightly inclined in conveying direction to support the transport of the clinker bed. At least one cooling air channel for injecting cooling air into the clinker ends in the support surface, i.e. cooling air may be blown via the cooling air channel into the clinker bed on the support. In a section adjacent to the outlet of the cooling air channel said channel is inclined in conveying direction. The fact, that at least the section of the cooling air channel adjacent to the outlet is curved, leads to the effect that the cooling air stream attaches to the support by the Coanda-effect better than is the case with known grate coolers. So the cooling air is first directed in conveying direction until it hits clinker particles, which deflect it upwards. As the clinker particles do not resemble a wall, but are distributed across the support in granular form, only a part of the cooling air is deflected in an upward direction in each section. As a result, it is possible to create a reliable and comparatively homogeneous aeration of the clinker bed over a comparatively long distance from the outlet of the cooling air channel. Furthermore, the transport of the bulk material bed is supported by the cooling air stream, being at least approximately parallel to the support or conveying direction respectively. The agitation of the clinker bed by the cooling air is less than in coolers with known cooling air channels. This results in better formation of the desired temperature gradient inside the clinker bed.
Furthermore, as a result of the curvature of the cooling air channel, the speed of the cooling air can be kept constant to the greatest possible extent, at least along the curved part, although the air, normally entering from below, is deflected in the conveying direction. This is especially true, if the cross section of the cooling channel is, at least in the curved part, approximately (±10%) constant.
In a preferred embodiment of the invention, the curvature at the transition from the cooling air channel to the support is steady, which supports the Coanda-effect particularly well, so that the predominant portion of the cooling air follows the transport direction of the clinker.
The best way to determine the curvature of the cooling air channel in conveying direction is by using the resulting line of a preferably vertical section of the cooling air channel. This section will be made through a plane containing a vector indicating the conveying direction. The curvature of a curve (or line) in a point M is the limit of the ratio of angle δ between the positive tangent directions in point M and a point N on the line (see Bronstein “Taschenbuch der Mathematik”, Verlag Harry Deutsch Frankfurt a. M., 1. Aufl. 1993, s. 174).
The Coanda-effect is especially supported, when the curvature decreases in the direction to the support. This is particularly the case, when the change in curvature of a section of the cooling air channel adjacent to the outlet decreases.
The cooling air channel preferably resembles a slot. It is bordered by walls in conveying direction and against conveying direction. The distance between the walls is preferably substantially constant (with possible deviation of about ±10%), at least in the section adjacent to the outlet of the cooling air channel. As a result, turbulences are reduced which could endorse the dissolution of the cooling air stream from the support and so counteract the Coanda-effect.
In a preferred embodiment the support has at least one longitudinal slit open to the top and connected to the cooling air channel. This causes an especially large-area injection of cooling air into the clinker bed located on top of the support. As a result, the cooling air temperature above the clinker bed is increased and the risk of the formation of air tunnels is decreased. Furthermore, the required fan power for an adjusted amount of cooling air is decreased.
When the depth of the longitudinal slit decreases with increasing distance from the cooling air channel, the speed of the cooling air can be kept so high that the fines are reliably blown out, even at the far end of the slit. Clogging of the longitudinal slit is thus avoided.
Particularly preferable the longitudinal slit branches off the cooling air channel in the conveying direction. This also results in a particularly homogeneous injection of cooling air into the clinker bed, because the stream of cooling air guided over the support picks up the cooling air in the longitudinal slit in conveying direction, leading to the advantages listed above.
Preferably, the longitudinal slit has a bottom that leads into the cooling air channel in a steadily curved manner. This also serves to homogenise the cooling air stream and reduce swirls, which would increase the flow resistance.
Preferably the cooling grate has several longitudinal slits, arranged in parallel to each other. The distance between these longitudinal slits should preferably be less than the medium distance of the clinker particles (without taking the fine fraction into account). The width of the longitudinal slits should be chosen so that, depending on the amount of cooling air through the longitudinal slits, at least most of the clinker particles that might drop into a longitudinal slit are blown out by the cooling air.
In a preferred embodiment, the inlet of the cooling air channel widens, i.e. its cross-section increases in a section adjacent to the inlet in the direction to the inlet opening. This reduces the cooling air speed at least, in said section at the inlet side or the inlet respectively, which in turn effects a reduction of the differential pressure required for a certain flow through the cooling air channel.
It is particularly simple to manufacture the cooling air channels as described above, if the cooling grate is equipped with grate segments having at least a support for cement clinker, a front side in conveying direction and a rear side facing away from the front side, with the front and rear sides are each formed by an area which are curved in conveying direction in at least in a segment adjacent to the support. Such grate segments can be located sequentially, for instance in a grate element, where a cooling air channel is created by the slot that is formed between subsequent front and rear sides of the grate segments. This slot is inclined and curved in conveying direction at least in the section adjacent to the outlet, which causes the cooling air flowing through the slot to attach to the support by the Coanda-effect. The cooling air channel is laterally bordered by the side walls of the grate element. Preferably the slot is much wider than thick, i.e. the distance between the lateral borders is substantially larger than the distance between two subsequent grate segments.
Preferably at least one segment of the front side adjacent to the support is congruent to a segment on the rear side. This allows for the formation of cooling air channels with at least segment-wise constant cross-section.
Preferably the curvature on the rear side is steady, at least at the transition to the support, to support the Coanda-effect.
When the curvature of the rear side increases with the distance from the support in a section adjacent to said support, the cooling air flow attaches to the support particularly well.
Particularly preferable, the alteration of the curvature of the rear side in a segment adjacent to the support decreases with the distance to the support.
Preferably the grate segment has at least one guide element on each side, to insert it into guide profiles of a box-like grate element. This allows for easy exchange of the grate segments.
Preferably the grate segment has at least one projection at the front and/or the rear side, used as a distance piece to a grate segment located in front or behind the grate segment respectively, thereby forming a slot-like cooling air channel in between two adjacent grate segments.
Preferably the distance between the bottom side and a plane defined by the support decreases in the direction to the front side. Particularly preferable, the distance decreases monotonic, especially strictly monotonic. This decreases the formation of swirls in the area of the inlet of the cooling air channel formed by two subsequent grate segments.
In the following, the invention will be described by way of example, without limitation of the general inventive concept, on examples of embodiment and with reference to the drawings.
While the invention is susceptible to various modifications and alternative forms, specific embodiments thereof are shown by way of example in the drawings and will herein be described in detail. It should be understood, however, that the drawings and detailed description thereto are not intended to limit the invention to the particular form disclosed, but on the contrary, the intention is to cover all modifications, equivalents and alternatives falling within the spirit and scope of the present invention as defined by the appended claims.
The cooling grate 100 in
For cooling the clinker bed cooling air can be injected into the grate element 1 through an opening 5 in the lower side 6 of the grate element 1 via the air beam 120 (indicated by arrow 3). The cooling air exits from at the upper side 7 of the grate element 1 through the cooling air channels 20. Consequently, the cooling air channels 20 have an inlet 21 on the lower side and an outlet 22 in the support 10 (see also
The grate elements in
In
The grate segments 60 depicted in
Usually the grate segments 60 are cast from metallic material. Alternatively they can also be made of ceramics or a compound material of steel and ceramics.
It will be appreciated to those skilled in the art having the benefit of this disclosure that this invention is believed to provide efficient cooling of cement clinker. Further modifications and alternative embodiments of various aspects of the invention will be apparent to those skilled in the art in view of this description. Accordingly, this description is to be construed as illustrative only and is for the purpose of teaching those skilled in the art the general manner of carrying out the invention. It is to be understood that the forms of the invention shown and described herein are to be taken as the presently preferred embodiments. Elements and materials may be substituted for those illustrated and described herein, parts and processes may be reversed, and certain features of the invention may be utilized independently, all as would be apparent to one skilled in the art after having the benefit of this description of the invention. Changes may be made in the elements described herein without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as described in the following claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2011 080 998 | Aug 2011 | DE | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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6290493 | Pirard et al. | Sep 2001 | B1 |
8132520 | von Wedel | Mar 2012 | B2 |
20080263888 | von Wedel | Oct 2008 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
700197 | Jul 2010 | CH |
1072487 | May 1993 | CN |
2727170 | Sep 2005 | CN |
2786111 | Jun 2006 | CN |
4103866 | Aug 1992 | DE |
10117225 | Oct 2002 | DE |
102007019530 | Oct 2008 | DE |
0167658 | Jan 1986 | EP |
0219745 | Apr 1987 | EP |
1103762 | May 2001 | EP |
1992897 | Nov 2008 | EP |
Entry |
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Bronstein, “Taschenbuch de Mathematik”, 1993, Verlag Harry Deutsch Frankfurt, pp. 174. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20130045454 A1 | Feb 2013 | US |