Applicants claim priority under 35 U.S.C. §119 of German Application No. 100 46 487.4 filed Sep. 20, 2000. Applicants also claim priority under 35 U.S.C. §365 of PCT/EP01/07513 filed Jun. 30, 2001. The international application under PCT article 21(2) was not published in English.
The invention relates to a device for leveling the coal with which the retort of a coke oven is filled, comprising a leveler bar that is connected with a leveler drive and that can be moved in and out the retort and performs a leveling movement back and forth in the retort.
A device with the structure and purpose of application described above is known from DE-A 23 17 685. The leveler bar is driven in and out through the door of the oven, which, for reasons of the construction, is clearly narrower than the width of the retort. The result thereof is that the cones of heaped-up coal forming when the retort is filled from the topside cannot be uniformly level toward the walls of the retort. In a coking process in non-recovery coke ovens, which are operated with a flat filling of the retort according to the flat-bed coking process, a uniform bulk height is required across the entire base area of the retort.
In connection with a leveling device known from DE-A 32 45 552, the front end of the leveler bar is provided with a head that contains two sliding parts mounted on jointed levers. The sliding parts can be pivoted with the help of an actuating device from an idle position, in which the sliding parts are disposed within the headpiece, into an operating position by spreading them. The sliding parts are comprised of sliding shoes and sliding rollers and, in their operating positions, slide on slanted belt sections. In this way, the leveler bar is provided with a support at its front end, which is lowered on correspondingly shaped slanted surfaces, for which provision is made in the gas collection chamber, as soon as the leveler bar is flexing through. The leveler bar is suited for particularly long retorts. No contribution is made by the headpiece to uniform leveling of the coal.
The invention is based on the problem of providing a leveling device by means of which the cones of heaped up bulk can be leveled in the retort very uniformly up to the walls of the retort.
For resolving this problem, the instruction of the invention specifies that the leveler bar is equipped at its front end with a rake blade with a width that can be adjusted by means of an operating device mounted on the leveler bar. The maximum width of the rake blade preferably approximately corresponds with the width of the retort. The effective leveling area can be considerably widened by means of the operating device after the leveling bar has been driven into the retort. This permits an efficient operation and uniform leveling.
According to a preferred embodiment of the construction, the rake blade is comprised of two wings pivot-mounted on the front end of the leveler bar. As the leveler bar is being driven into and out of the retort through the leveling opening, these wings rest against the leveler bar like a plow, and can be folded open in the retort by an adjusting movement of the operating device. Each wing is articulated with a lever on an adjusting rod, which is supported in the leveler bar in an axially displaceable manner, for example on support rollers, and, at its rearward end, connected with an adjusting device. The adjusting device may be comprised of a hydraulic cylinder-and-piston system.
In the basic position, the wings are pivoted inwards like a plow. This permits the arrangement to pass through the leveling opening, which is substantially narrower as compared to the width of the retort. The basic position of the rake blade is maintained as the leveler bar is moving forward. As the leveler bar is moving forward in the retort, the inwards-pivoted wings aligned in the form of a plow push the coal away from the center of the retort in the direction of the lateral walls of the retort. After the leveler bar has driven though the retort up to the end of the latter, the adjusting rod is extended, whereby the wings are pivoted forwards via the lever system until the outer surface of the spread rake blade is aligned substantially parallel with the wall of the retort disposed opposite the leveling opening. The raking area is widened in the course of in this process. Furthermore, the pivoting movement of the wings distributes coal into the corner areas of the retort.
According to another advantageous embodiment of the invention, the inner surfaces of the rake blade are arranged at an acute angle in relation to the outer surface of the rake blade, whereby the apex of the angle is located in each case at the outer end of the rake blade and selected in such a manner that the extended rake blade pushes coal toward the lateral walls of the retort as the leveler bar is moving back. In the course of this rearward leveling movement of the leveler bar, the wings of the rake blade are extended, and the rake blade has its largest span width. The described profiling of the wings produces a plow-like raking profile that conveys coal still forming cones of heaped-up coal from the edge of the already-leveled area to the side walls of the retort. The return movement of the leveler bar is stopped just before it reaches the door of the retort, with the result that the coal filling is uniformly leveled up into the corner areas of the retort. Subsequently, the leveler bar is driven forwards to such an extent that the wings of the rake blade can be swung back. After the rake blade has assumed its basic position and the wings again rest against the leveler bar like a plow, the leveler bar is driven out of the retort and the leveling process is finished.
The invention is explained in the following with the help of the drawing showing only one exemplified embodiment of the invention. The following is schematically shown in the drawing:
The leveling device shown in
The section A—A from
The leveler bar 2 is driven through the retort 4 up to the end of the latter. After the leveler bar 2 has reached its final position at the end of the forward movement, the wings 7, 7′ forming the rake blade 5 are pivoted outwards and moved into the position represented by the dash-dotted line in
The section B—B from
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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100 46 487 | Sep 2000 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP01/07513 | 6/30/2001 | WO | 00 | 9/12/2003 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO02/24833 | 3/28/2002 | WO | A |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
279 307 | Oct 1914 | DE |
497 569 | May 1930 | DE |
11 10 134 | Jul 1961 | DE |
2 317 685 | Oct 1974 | DE |
32 45 552 | Jun 1984 | DE |
63248889 | Oct 1988 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20040020413 A1 | Feb 2004 | US |