This invention relates to a method and apparatus for preheating particulate material and, more particularly, to an improved method and apparatus for more efficiently preheating particulate material.
Although the present invention is applicable generally to the preheating of particulate material, it is particularly applicable to the preheating and precalcining of limestone by flowing the limestone and the hot kiln gases from the calcining kiln in countercurrent heat exchange relationship to each other.
A prior art packed bed preheating and precalcining apparatus for particulate material such as lime is seem in
Alternatively, the preheater may contain individual material cassettes in the manner taught in U.S. Pat. No. 6,926,522, which teaches that the particulate material is directed from the feed bin or bins into a plurality of essentially vertical cylindrical feed cassettes via intermediate feed ducts. Each feed cassette is completely segregated from its adjacent cassettes. The particulate material falls from each cassette into the annular flow passage section of the lower chamber. A plurality of ram plungers, the number of which corresponds to the number of cassettes, discharges particulate material that has fallen into the annular flow chamber from the overhanging cassettes into a material outlet located in the floor located at the center of the lower chamber.
It is known that in such packed bed heat exchangers used to preheat materials such as limestone the amount of heat exchange and pressure drop through the material bed is determined in part by the size graduation of the raw material, the temperature and quantity of the gas, and the bed depth. Packed bed heat exchangers typically cannot effectively adjust to different particle size graduations.
It is therefore an object of this invention to have a preheater that can adjust to different particle size graduations.
The current invention provides for a limestone preheater which segregates material according to particle size and further provides for material bed depth adjustment, preferably during operation. Pursuant to the present invention, changes in particle size graduations (for example to allow for better quarry utilization) can easily be accommodated while maintaining optimal preheater performance.
It is known that resistance to airflow increases as particle size decreases. This can affect the preheating quality in material preheaters such as limestone preheaters. These preheaters typically will treat irregular size feeds which can lead to uneven preheating. It has been discovered that in order to achieve more uniform flow rates and improved preheating through piles of different size stone, it is necessary to first segregate the various sized stones into discreet areas of the preheater and then adjust the various bed heights of the differently vertically sized piles of stones to a point where there is more even air flow rates through the various stone piles, that is, where the sizes of the various piles of material have been adjusted so that pressure drop across a pile of fine materials is as close as possible to the pressure drop across a pile of coarse materials. Thus, by classifying the stone entering a preheating chamber and then carefully adjusting pile depth while keeping the flow rate of material into the preheater constant, a more even flow through the material can be realized.
The present invention raises and lowers the material pile depth within a preheater by extending or retracting a material feed pipe within the preheating chamber.
Classifier 44 as depicted is in the shape of a truncated cone, with its smaller parallel base being 44a located closer to the end 48 (material exit point) of feed pipe 42 and the larger parallel base being located closer to the floor of the preheater. Classifier 44 can have other shapes that suitable for particle size classifier by impact, such as a truncated square pyramid, a truncated pyramid or a semi-circular or arc shape. Feed pipe 42 and therefore classifier 44 are located approximately on the vertical centerline of the cassette 40.
The finer the material impacting with the classifier 40, the further the material will migrate from the center of the cassette, with the finest material being scattered toward the outer perimeter of the cassette. Therefore, in the roughly circular material pile that builds up from the preheater floor directly underneath cassette 40, the finest material will build up on the outside of the pile and the coarsest material will make up the center-most portion of the pile.
It is a feature of the present invention that it provides for a means of raising and lowering the material pile that builds up from the floor of the preheater by raising and lowering the feed pipe, which in the depicted embodiment is comprised of a plurality of interfitting and telescoping sections 42a, 42b and so forth. Therefore feed pipe 42 can be extended vertically downward into the interior of the cassette 40 or it can be shortened considerably by having the sections retract into themselves. When the feed pipe is at its most retracted position the bed depth of the material pile in the preheater area located under a specific feed pipe (whether it be in a cassette, chimney or an open annular preheating area) will be at its highest and when the feed pipe is at its most extended position the bed depth of the material pile will be at its lowest.
Depending upon the specific composition of the feed (which can vary because of a number of factors, including the quarry location) a practitioner of the invention can optimize the preheating capabilities of the preheater. If a particular practitioner has more fines, relatively speaking, in the feed the preheater efficiency can be optimized by lowering the feed pipe in the preheating chamber and thereby lowering the bed height.
The fewer fines in the feed the preheater efficiency can be optimized by raising the feed pipe in the preheating chamber and thereby increasing the bed height. Furthermore, there can be different feed size mixtures in different areas of the feed bin and thus one feed inlet can receive feeds having different size characteristics than another feed inlet in the same preheater. Therefore it may be advantageous to separately adjust the bed depth under each feed pipe in a preheater.
The feed pipe 42, and accordingly the material bed depth, can be raised or lowered while in operation through the use of hoist 49 which is located exterior to the cassette. It is understood that the distances depicted are exemplary only and can be varied by the practitioner, along with the method of raising and lowering the cassette, which can be done manually, electrically, automatically or semi-automatically. In addition, any method of determining the feed size being delivered to the preheater can be utilized in the present invention.
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Although the present invention has been described with reference to preferred embodiments, workers skilled in the art will recognize that changes may be made in form and detail without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/581,285, filed Dec. 29, 2011.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US2012/071810 | 12/27/2012 | WO | 00 | 6/19/2014 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61581285 | Dec 2011 | US |