The present invention relates to a method for thermal dewatering and preheating of aqueous mixtures for feeding glass melting plants during passage through a shaft-type container provided with heating elements disposed one over the other in tiers for the supply of heat.
In the area of glass melting technology, it has long been sought to prevent the gluing together of feed material, usually in the form of glass mixtures and glass fragments, during preheating by the exhaust gases of the glass melting plant. However, it has turned out that at the latest after a certain operating duration such a gluing together does occur, interrupting continuous operation. By guiding the smoke gases and the feed material in separate shafts or pipes, the aqueous smoke gas can be prevented from coming into contact with the feed material. Here, shafts or pipes have been used that are disposed in parallel or in intersecting grid structures. However, it has turned out that here as well the feed material still becomes glued together.
Trials have shown that in the case of large amounts of bulk material the gluing together or agglomeration of the feed material takes place above the area of the uppermost smoke gas guide, going out from the container wall of the preheater. Clearly, this was caused by water that repeatedly penetrated into the preheater and/or was carried in by the feed material, either in the form of carried-along moist air in the feed material or in the form of free or bound water in the feed material, which at least partly also has hygroscopic properties.
Anhydrous soda is a component frequently used in the feed material. Below 32° C., the decahydrate (Na2CO310H2O) is stable. Above 32° C., the decahydrate is transformed into heptahydrate (Na2CO37H2O) with release of 3H2O. Above 35° C., the heptahydrate is transformed into monohydrate (Na2CO31H2O) with release of 6H2O. Above 105° C., the monohydrate releases the water of crystallization and is converted at least partly into a different crystal structure (cubic). The hydrate formation (adsorption of water of crystallization) is exothermic, and the release is again endothermic. The exothermic conversion can be clearly measured during the mixing process. With the addition of approximately 18% soda and 10% water, the temperature in the mixture increases from approximately 25° C. to approximately 40° C. This heating conflicts with the hydration. The exiting moisture from the mixture is palpable and can be regarded as a cause of the gluing together of the mixture.
DE 10 2008 030 161 B3 discloses a shaft-type heat exchanger for preheating particulate glass mixtures for glass melting ovens, through which smoke gases from the heating of the oven are conducted in alternating, meandering horizontal smoke gas channels. The heat exchanger has numerous channels for the melt material that are vertical and rectangular in cross-section and that—offset transversely—intersect with the smoke gas channels and are connected to one another by openings in the channel walls in a manner intended to suction water vapor out from the vertical melt material channels in the transverse direction and to prevent the entry of smoke gases into the melt material channels. However, it cannot be excluded that, due to the distances between the stated openings in the shaft walls and due to the long horizontal flow paths within the melt material, moisture remains in the melt material, causing gluing together of the particles of the melt material and causing blockage of the supply.
The present invention is therefore based on the object of indicating a method and a device with which it is possible to heat the feed material of glass melting plants using the standard exhaust gases in preheaters having separate guidance of exhaust gases and feed material, without gluing together or agglomeration of the feed material in the preheaters.
According to the present invention, in the method indicated above this object is achieved in that
a) the heating elements situated in the uppermost tier are closed with respect to the mixture and are maintained at temperatures of at least 100° C.,
b) the boundary surface between the bulk material of the mixture and the atmosphere above the bulk material is shaped and heated by the heating elements situated in the uppermost tier in such a way that a part of the heat energy is emitted to the atmosphere via the bulk material, and
c) as the mixture proceeds through the container, additional heating elements bring the mixture to temperatures close to the feed temperature for the glass melting plant.
Through this solution, it is achieved that the feed material of glass melting plants is heated using the standard exhaust gases in preheaters having separate guidance of exhaust gases and feed material, without gluing together or agglomeration of the feed material in the pre-heaters. Moisture that is carried along is largely driven out upward from the container, from the beginning onward, and also cannot penetrate into the exhaust gas of the oven heating. This also holds for example for rainwater or wash water carried along by glass fragments. In particular, the previously standard column of feed material above the uppermost heating elements is avoided, which also encouraged gluing together due to gravitational forces.
In further embodiments of the method, it is particularly advantageous if, either individually or in combination:
The present invention also relates to a device for the thermal dewatering and preheating of aqueous mixtures for feeding glass melting plants when conducted through a shaft-type container provided with heating elements disposed one over the other in tiers for the supply of heat.
In order to achieve the same object and the same advantages, such a device is characterized in that
a) at least the heating elements situated in the uppermost tier are fashioned so as to be closed at their circumference, and
b) are situated with their cross-sectional surfaces in a horizontal plane that intersects a constructively determined boundary surface between the mixture and the atmosphere above the mixture, and that
c) with a part of their surfaces, these uppermost heating elements stand in thermal contact with, in addition to the mixture, the atmosphere above the mixture.
In further embodiments of the device, it is particularly advantageous if, either individually or in combination:
Exemplary embodiments and further developments of the subject matter of the present invention, and the operation and further advantages thereof, are explained in more detail in the following on the basis of the schematic
Above feed opening 3 there is situated a charging device 5 having a discharge element 5a whose conveying rate is controlled by a sensor 6. Here the following is important: the gluing together of the feed material is prevented in that this material is applied over the uppermost tier of heating elements 2, in the largest cross-sectional surface thereof, up to container 1, the maximum extent of the application being only up to the uppermost lines of each of the uppermost heating elements 2. In this way it is ensured that the particles of the feed material, during its downward movement in the critical temperature range between 30° C. and 100° C., are kept in constant movement relative to one another. The feed material can advantageously also contain glass fragments, preferably limited to a maximum of 50% by weight. Further details are explained below on the basis of
Sensor 6 can be supplied with the following signals: known are mechanical and piezoelectric filling level sensors, and sensors that operate on the basis of a radar measurement. Depending on the setting of the upper and lower limits for these measurements, charging device 5 is commanded either to operation or to terminate the charging.
On the basis of
Boundary surfaces G show surface profiles between the bulk material of the feed material, fed in the direction of upper arrows B, and the gas or vapor atmosphere thereabove. The feeding can take place in stationary fashion or through alternating transverse movements of charging device 5. The uppermost lines of the heating elements lie in a virtual horizontal and planar enveloping surface H, and boundary surface G is situated thereunder. This illustrates the relative spatial position of the uppermost particles or granulates of the feed material, which is specified in the direction of arrows T by a prespecified ratio of feed quantity and drawn-off quantity per time unit, and also constructively by regulating mechanisms.
The mixture first flows in the transverse direction, from the uppermost surface elements or edges of heating elements 2, and produces a shaping and possibly also an interruption of boundary surface G. This shaping, and the resulting relative position of boundary surface G to enveloping surface H is the precondition for the fact that the upper partial surfaces of all upper heating elements 2 are able to emit a part of their overall heat contribution into the gas or vapor atmosphere of container 1 by convection. The consequence is that water vapor is kept from penetrating into the mixture, and that water vapor that could be carried along by the mixture rises up.
Continuing the foregoing numbering,
α=20 to 40 degrees (so-called roof angle)
In the lower region, in which there is no danger of gluing together, heating elements 11 can be downwardly open. The following dimensions have proven suitable:
β=20 to 40 degrees (so-called roof angle)
The number is determined by the size of container 1.
Again continuing the previous reference character numbering,
An essential element of the present invention is the extremely thin layer of the mixture distributed over a large cross-sectional surface in the region of the uppermost heating elements. The following drying area can, depending on the size of the device, extend to a depth of from 0.2 m to 0.5 m. There then follows the further heating to the charging temperature for the melting oven. The stated cross-sectional surface extends over the entire inner cross-section of container 1.
At a production quantity of 300 tons of glass per day, there is a raw material requirement of 326 tons per day with an addition of fragments of 50%. The raw mixture requirement is 176 tons per day. The content of storage silo 12 here is 150 tons, and its feeding takes place every two hours. The decrease in the silo contents after two hours is 27 tons, and the bulk density of the raw materials is 1.1 tons/m3. The height of the silo is 13 m, and its base surface is 10 m2. After two hours, the decrease in the filling level in the silo is 2.5 m.
Storage silo 12 can also be designated a “buffer silo,” and its capacity can be reduced for example to 50 tons. The feeding then takes place every two hours, after a decrease in the content of 27 tons.
The particles of the mixture can be agglomerates and/or granulates. The agglomerates are a technically produced balling together of individual grains. In general, the granulates are a powdered, easily pourable solid material.
Successful mixture: Initial weight 1500 kg.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2009 054 354.6 | Nov 2009 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP10/06812 | 11/9/2010 | WO | 00 | 10/1/2012 |