Claims
- 1. A magnetic separator for filtrating magnetizable particles from a fluid, in which they are suspended, comprising a separation chamber having a pair of opposed chamber walls and a fluid inlet and a fluid outlet, means for causing said fluid to flow through said separation chamber along a predetermined flow path between said opposed chamber walls from said fluid inlet to said fluid outlet, a magnetic circuit comprising a pair of separate permanent magnetic devices connected with a closed magnetic circuit including yoke members and arranged with opposed mainly parallel pole surfaces on each side of an air gap, said opposed chamber walls of said separation chamber being disposed in said air gap adjacent to said opposed pole surfaces, respectively, said pair of opposed chamber walls being in magnetic contact with a respective one of said pole surfaces, said magnetic circuit for generating inside the separation chamber a magnetic field with a field direction substantially transverse to at least a portion of said flow path, and a matrix of a soft magnetic material arranged in said separation chamber to substantially fill up a part of the interior thereof extending between said pair of opposed chamber walls, said matrix thereby creating local magnetic gradients in said magnetic field, chamber inlet and outlet compartments being provided in said separation chamber at opposite ends of said matrix-filled part with respect to said flow path to be positioned outside said gap and communicating with said matrix as well as said fluid inlet and said fluid outlet, respectively, to define a main flow direction for said fluid through said matrix, each of said permanent magnetic devices comprising at least one member of a permanent magnetic material having a substantially linear demagnetization curve, said matrix comprising an arrangement of strands of said soft magnetic material extending mainly in planes substantially transverse to said field direction, a major portion of said matrix strands having an orientation transverse to said magnetic field direction and said main flow direction for said fluid, said closed magnetic circuit including said permanent magnetic devices and said air gap being proportioned as a whole to generate a substantially uniform magnetic field with an intensity, by which the individual strands throughout the matrix are substantially driven into a magnetic saturated state, when the separation chamber is positioned in said air gap.
- 2. A magnetic separator as claimed in claim 1, wherein the cross-sectional area of the separation chamber transverse to said main flow direction increases in the main flow direction.
- 3. A magnetic separator as claimed in claim 1, wherein the separation chamber is formed as a generally box-shaped canister which is arranged to be removable from said gap in a direction perpendicular to the field direction by a linear displacement and is coupled at at least one of two opposite side faces normal to the direction of displacement to a further substantially corresponding canister containing a matrix of soft magnetic material acting as a dummy load for the magnetic gap during displacement.
- 4. A magnetic separator as claimed in claim 3, further comprising two additional generally box-shaped canisters and wherein said three canisters are arranged in series for linear displacement between first and second positions, in which either of the extreme canisters is disposed in said gap, whereas the other extreme canister is displaced to a position outside the gap for cleaning of said matrix.
- 5. A magnetic separator as claimed in claim 1, wherein each of said permanent magnetic devices comprises a stacked magnetic series arrangement of at least two members of permanent magnetic materials having different energy products with intermediate coupling members of a soft magnetic material, said members being stacked in an order of succession corresponding to increasing energy products in the direction towards said pole surfaces.
- 6. A magnetic separator as claimed in claim 5, wherein said permanent magnetic members are proportioned with cross-sectional areas normal to their internal field direction yielding substantially the same magnetic flux and with thicknesses yielding substantially the same magnetomotive forces.
- 7. A magnetic separator as claimed in claim 1, wherein the pole surface of each of said permarent magnetic devices is formed by a pole shoe of a magnetic soft material having a decreasing cross-sectional area in the direction towards the air gap.
- 8. A magnetic separator as claimed in claim 1, wherein each of said permanent magnetic devices comprises at least one member consisting of a permanent magnetic alloy comprising cobalt and at least one rare earth metal.
- 9. A magnetic separator as claimed in claim 8, wherein said rare earth metal is samarium.
- 10. A magnetic separator as claimed in claim 1, wherein at least two pairs of said permanent magnetic devices are arranged side-by-side to define at least two parallel air gaps to receive a respective one of a corresponding number of separation chambers with substantially parallel main flow directions for a slurry.
- 11. A magnetic separator as claimed in claim 10, wherein all permanent magnetic devices in said side-by-side arrangement are magnetically connected through a common yoke.
- 12. A magnetic separator as claimed in claim 1, wherein each of said permanent magnetic devices comprises a pole shoe member of a magnetic soft material forming one of said pole surfaces, a first permanent magnetic member arranged in magnetic contact with a side of said pole shoe member opposite said gap and parallel to said one of said pole surfaces, said member having a direction of magnetization generally normal to said one of said pole surfaces, and second magnetic members extending on each side of said pole shoe member mainly transverse to said one of said pole surfaces and having a direction of magnetization substantially perpendicular to that of said first member, the surfaces of said first and second members facing said pole shoe member all having the same magnetic polarity, said first magnetic member being in magnetic contact with said second magnetic members to provide a leakage-free enclosure for said pole shoe member.
- 13. A magnetic separator as claimed in claim 12, wherein said pole shoe member has a substantially T-shaped cross-sectional profile with a leg projecting from a base plate amd with the free end of said leg forming said one of said pole surfaces and said first magnetic ebr arranged in magnetic contact with the opposite end of said magnetic members being arranged parallel to said leg at either side of said base plate.
- 14. A magnetic separator as claimed in claim 13, wherein each of said second magnetic members extends beyond said base plate in the direction towards the gap.
- 15. A magnetic separator as claimed in claim 14, wherein each of said second members has a length corresponding to that of said leg.
- 16. A magnetic separator as claimed in claim 12, wherein said pole shoe member has a uniform cross-sectional area transverse to the field direction therein, and said second members are arranged in direct contact with side faces of the pole shoe member.
- 17. A magnetic separator as claimed in claim 12, wherein said first and second permanent magnetic members are made of ferrite.
Priority Claims (2)
Number |
Date |
Country |
Kind |
1115/82 |
Mar 1982 |
DKX |
|
83301361.8 |
Mar 1983 |
EPX |
|
Parent Case Info
This application is a continuation-in-part of applicants copending application Ser. No. 413,249, filed Aug. 30, 1982.
US Referenced Citations (8)
Foreign Referenced Citations (6)
Number |
Date |
Country |
2645096 |
Apr 1977 |
DEX |
2929468 |
Feb 1981 |
DEX |
48172 |
Apr 1977 |
JPX |
191448 |
Nov 1982 |
JPX |
816974 |
Jul 1959 |
GBX |
1594267 |
Jul 1981 |
GBX |
Continuation in Parts (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
413249 |
Aug 1982 |
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