The present invention relates to a method for the partial or complete hot-repair of the refractory walls that define the sides of each individual oven of a battery of coke ovens, each sidewall being built as hollow sections in order to define the heating or combustion chambers.
Coke oven batteries defined by a set of ovens, typically 25-100 ovens, built side by side, delimited by opposing sidewalls made of refractory bricks and being built as hollow sections to define, internally, the renowned heating or combustion chambers are well known in the art.
The opposing sidewalls are seated on a generally concrete base and are closed on the upper part by a top wall which is also made of refractory material, each oven being closed by a ceiling (roof), also made of refractory material and provided with loading ports to enable the loading of coal, which after a 16-36 hour cycle, is transformed into coke due to the heating process which they are subjected to within each oven (
Each hollow sidewall has its heating chambers arranged in vertical columns sequentially laid along the length of each internal wall and provided underneath with at least one ceramic burner, which depending on the number of combustion flues, are arranged along the length of said opposite sidewalls, generally every 500 mm, and it should be noted that the dimensions of each oven of the battery may range from about 400 mm to 700 mm in width and from about 3500 mm to 7500 mm in height and moreover a length of about 13000 mm, and with each two adjacent ovens sharing a common sidewall.
The opposite sidewalls of each oven are those that define the left and right sides of the respective oven, over the entire height of the latter. These sidewalls are made of refractory bricks, usually made of silica, forming the so called “rows”. The roof of the ovens and the top of the combustion flues in each sidewall are always built with bricks arranged in “rows” and made of silica, fireclay, clinker or insulating material (
It turns out that the coke ovens described above have progressive wear of their opposing sidewalls, and this wear is more pronounced on the anterior and posterior end regions of said walls. Thus, in many cases there is no need to entirely replace one or more of these coke ovens sidewalls. It is enough to simply replace the opposite end portions of said walls.
Often, the damaged end portions, which actually require repair by being replaced by new portions, represent altogether only about 30% to 40% of the total extent of a sidewall. Thus, replacing only the damaged or worn end portions of the sidewalls represents considerable savings in the repair operations of coke oven batteries.
While only partial replacement of the worn sidewalls is desirable, techniques that have been applied for the partial replacement of the sidewalls require laborious and expensive procedures to obtain an adequate joint between the ‘new refractory bricks’ and ‘old refractory bricks’, keeping the reformed walls with characteristics such as the resistance to the expansion of coal, the absence of gas leakage, elasticity between the new end portion and the old middle portion of each renovated wall.
In conventional techniques, the removal of the worn end portions of each wall is obtained by performing a flat vertical cutting operation in each of the regions bordering the middle portion of the wall to be maintained. The provision of these two cuts in the bordering regions defines the two flat and opposite end faces, arranged in orthogonal planes to their wall plane and against these walls there must be settled and fixed, watertight and with the necessary mechanical locking, the confronting flat faces of the adjacent bricks in the first row of the new refractory bricks that will form the two end portions to be mounted and solidly built in the middle portion of the old wall.
Due to the formation of flat joints between the new end portions and the middle portion of the old wall, the fixing of the flat faces of the old bricks on the flat faces of the new refractory bricks requires not only the necessary seal to resist the operating conditions of the oven, but also the mechanical forces of outwardly expansion of said sidewalls, during operation of the oven, by virtue of the expansion of the coal charge being converted into coke.
In this method for the partial repair of the coke oven walls, the strength of the junction regions, against forces transversal to the wall plane, requires the provision of ceramic welding between the old bricks and the new bricks by means of costly and laborious ceramic welds over the entire height of the junction region, which generally corresponds to the entire height of the sidewall of the oven.
In a battery composed of one hundred ovens, each of which may have up to about 7000 mm in height, each hollow wall may have four junction regions, two at each end, to be completed with the use of respective ceramic welds, which makes this operation extremely time-consuming and expensive due to the characteristics of such a ceramic welding process.
Besides the above-identified deficiencies derived from the requirement for the provision of a ceramic weld in the flat junction between the new and old bricks, this well-known method also requires maintenance and even the periodic replacement of these ceramic weld joints every two or three years, involving huge expenses for the maintenance of these ovens in suitable operating conditions.
Another drawback of the known methods is to restrict the number of adjacent walls to be partially or completely repaired, depending on the maximum allowable span for the maintenance of the travel rails of the loading machine which moves above the furnace battery. Typically, the number of adjacent walls to be reformed simultaneously cannot exceed five, thus limiting the number of walls to be simultaneously repaired or replaced.
Due to the drawbacks and limitations of the existing methods for repairing the sidewalls of coke ovens, it is an object of the present invention to provide a method for repairing the refractory walls of said ovens, enabling the rapid and relatively simple replacement of the sidewall end portions of said ovens with safe and tight mechanical connection between the new wall portions and the old wall portions without requiring ceramic welds in junction zones.
An additional object of the present invention is to allow partial and/or complete (mixed) repair of a larger number of sidewalls of adjacent ovens simultaneously without impairing the operation of the loading machine above the ovens of the coke oven battery which remain in operation.
As already mentioned, the method of the present invention is applied in the repair of coke ovens arranged side by side in a battery and which are each delimited by two hollow sidewalls, each one formed by side bricks, superimposed in two opposite rows, spaced and joined by transverse bricks and defining heating chambers there between.
According to the invention, the method comprises the initial steps of selecting adjacent sidewalls that have a middle wall portion to be maintained during the repair, and two end wall portions to be replaced by new end wall portions.
Then, each sidewall to be repaired is cut according to a cross-sectional vertical plane in order to define a respective flat end face on the middle wall portion, this cutting plane (PC) being coincident with a face of a row of transverse bricks, facing the adjacent end wall portion that is removed.
In each flat end face of the middle wall portion, a pair of lateral and opposite cutouts are provided and extended over the entire height of the sidewall, and a medial longitudinal groove defining a groove for a corresponding rib of the new bricks, larger side and standard side of the new end wall portion.
In each groove of a flat end face, a corresponding portion of a vertical row of side bricks of an adjacent new end wall portion is engaged.
The new end wall portion has its formation completed by the use of new transverse bricks with the same standard construction as the transverse bricks in the sidewall being restored.
The procedure above is fast and ensures a solid mechanical connection between the old and new portions of the wall being repaired without requiring any ceramic welding.
The invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings, given by way of example, in which:
As described above and illustrated in the drawing figures, the method is applied to ovens F for the production of coke that are arranged side by side in batteries and each comprising two sidewalls 10, opposite one another, and one of them is common to two adjacent ovens F. The sidewalls 10 are formed by side bricks 11 and transverse bricks 12 and 13, the latter being arranged in vertical columns, spaced apart from each other to define, within each sidewall 10, a plurality of heating chambers CA (or combustion chambers) arranged vertically and providing a hollow construction to each of said lateral sidewalls 10. The side bricks 11 and transverse bricks 12 and 13 are made of refractory material such as silica, fireclay, clinker or insulating material.
The opposing sidewalls 11 are seated on a generally concrete base (not shown), and are closed at the top by a top wall PT, in refractory bricks. Each oven F is closed at the top by a roof T, also made of refractory material and provided with loading ports (not shown) to allow charging of mineral coal to be processed into coke (see
Each heating chamber CA is internally and inferiorly provided with a ceramic burner Q that is sized to allow the combustion within each chamber to produce, within the two adjacent ovens F, the degree of heating required for the transformation of the mineral coal into coke.
As shown in
As illustrated in
Also, as illustrated in
As already mentioned in the introduction to this application, partial and even total periodic replacement of the sidewalls 10 in ovens F of a battery is required.
Thus, the method in question begins with the step of selecting a group of adjacent sidewalls 10 that have a middle wall portion 10a to be maintained in the oven battery F and two end wall portions 10b to be replaced by new end wall portions.
According to the proposed method, the replacement of the end wall portions 10b is obtained through a step of cutting each sidewall 10 to be repaired, in a cross-sectional vertical cutting plane PC, in order to define a respective flat end face 14 in the middle wall portion 10a, each cutting plane PC coinciding with a face of a transverse row of bricks 12, 13, facing the adjacent end wall portion 10b that is being removed.
With this cutting operation, each cutting plane PC intersects the tongue of the transverse bricks 13 which project to one of the outer faces of the sidewall 10, and also the side bricks 11 adjacent to the opposite outer face of the sidewall 10. These flat vertical cutting operations define, on each opposite end of the remaining middle wall portion 10a, a flat end face 14 shown in
Due to the already mentioned difficulty to provide the adequate junction of said flat end faces 14 in the middle wall portion 10a with the new end wall portions 10b, by using complex and expensive ceramic welds, the method in question also comprises a step of providing in the region of each flat end face 14 in the middle wall portion 10a, a pair of cutouts 15 in opposite sides that cover the entire height of the sidewall 10. Each cut has generally straight dihedral walls with a basic transverse wall and a longitudinal wall that define the longitudinal depth of each cutout 15.
In order to guarantee solid locking between each new end wall portion 10b and the middle wall portion 10a, in each basic transverse face of each cutout 15, a middle longitudinal channel 15c is produced, which defines a groove for a corresponding tongue 11c of new bricks, larger side 11b and standard side 11a of the new end wall portion 10b.
The cutting operation can be performed, for example, with a manual cutting machine, in a sufficiently precise manner, but which provides a flat end wall 14 devoid of any tongue and groove.
Upon execution of the cutouts 15 in the flat end faces 14 of each middle wall portion 10a, a new step can be initiated, comprising the fitting of a portion corresponding to a vertical row of side bricks 11 in a new adjacent end wall portion 10b. These side bricks comprise, alternately along the vertical row, a new standard side brick of equal length to that of the side bricks 11 of the middle wall portion 10a, and a new larger side brick 11b, having a length equal to the sum of the length X of the other side bricks 11 of each sidewall 10 with the longitudinal depth y of the cutouts 15, as shown in
The provision of the new larger side brick 11b results from the fact that each cutout 15 is transversely aligned with another cutout 15 in the same flat end wall 14, thus requiring one of the new side bricks, herein called ‘larger brick’ 11b, to present a greater length than the standard length of bricks 11 in the middle wall portion 10a, which is the same as other standard bricks 11a in the new end wall portion 10b, so that the same arrangement of bricks in “rows” can be maintained. The new transverse bricks 12a and 13a have the same standard construction as the transverse bricks 12 and 13 in the sidewall 10 that is being restored.
The fitting of the tongue 11c of the new bricks, larger side 11b and standard side 11a, into the middle longitudinal channel 15c of the basic transverse face in each cutout 15 allows the fit between the old bricks and new bricks to withstand the transversal expanding forces of the coal under treatment.
The junction regions of the new side bricks 11a and 11b and of the new transverse bricks 12a and 13a, with each other and with the old side bricks 11, only receive the appropriate amount of refractory mass to ensure the desired sealing of the joints, making it unnecessary to execute any ceramic welding.
This assembly provides a robust transverse mechanical locking between the middle wall portion 10a and the new end wall portions 10b, preventing relative displacement between said middle wall portions 10a and end walls 10b, in an direction orthogonal to their common assembly plane during normal operation of ovens F.
Typically, the sidewalls 10 are disposed on a lower portion of the ovens F constructed in known manner to define the aforementioned thermal regenerators RT. The method in question allows the walls of these thermal regenerators RT to also be restored concurrently with the repairs of the sidewalls 10 of ovens F, with the same benefits already mentioned regarding robustness with mechanical locking and sealing without formation of cracks and ensuring greater operational life between repairs.
Another innovative aspect of the solution proposed herein allows the significant increase on the number of sidewalls 10 to be simultaneously partially or completely restored. According to the oven battery F construction type considered here, the loading machine (not shown) travels over the battery, supported on rails 40 which are transversally supported on the sidewalls 10 of the ovens F throughout the extension of the oven battery (see
Due to the weight of the loading machine, particularly when loaded, the span of the rails 40 devoid of the support from the sidewalls 10 should normally not exceed four sidewalls 10, i.e. it does not allow the simultaneous restoration of more than three or four ovens F, which increases the cost of repair, requiring a greater number of operating interruptions for successive repairs of smaller scale.
To reduce the costs of such partial and/or complete repair operations of the ovens F, the present invention also proposes the step of structurally reinforcing the rails 40 in the spans to be formed by the sidewalls 10 that were demolished for repair, as shown in
Each rail 40 has its base longitudinally seated and fixed on a metal profile “I” 50 which is reinforced by a pair of beams 60, in the form of double “I” shaped metal profiles and welded side by side on the longitudinal ends of their top and lower flanges. The webs of the “I” profiles in the two beams 60 are crossed by a gripping stud 65 and the outer lower flanges of the two pairs of “I” profiles are fixed on the ends of a plurality of transversely arranged metallic base plates 70, spaced apart along the length of the beams 60, on whose middle portion the steel profile “I” 50 is seated and upon which rail 40 is supported.
The beams 60 are sized to fully cover the span to be formed by the partially or completely demolished walls, bearing on at least some of the walls near the span that will be covered by the rail.
In addition to the two beams 60 on each rail being fixed on the base plates 70, and thus also being lower and structurally interconnected, each two adjacent rails 40 are further structurally interconnected by means of metal sleepers 80 with their ends fixed on the external lower flanges of bordering beams 60, as partially illustrated in
With the above arrangement, the load on the rails 40 is transferred to the gripping studs 65 and to the beams 60 in the region of the spans formed by the removal of walls or end wall portions, so that the beam ends 60 are supported on the remaining walls of the oven battery F, closer to the region of formation of the span. With this procedure, it becomes possible to safely cover spans of about 10 meters, i.e. spans resulting from the removal of about seven sidewalls 10, without prejudice to the continued operation of the loading machine on the battery of ovens F, regardless of whether the walls of each span being repaired have been partially or completely removed.
As schematically illustrated in
The method in question presents the following advantageous aspects compared to those that have been used according to the state of the art:
Besides the above mentioned advantages, it should be noted that the new method is effective with regard to the ease of repair execution, to the elimination of the need for adjustments in the field and to the provision of a perfect pressure seal, with high mechanical strength without requiring periodic maintenance and ceramic welding in the connection between the new bricks and old bricks (sliding joint).
The improvements resulting from the new method described above enable an overall reduction of repair costs due to the substantial reduction in execution time and consequent optimization of labor, among other factors mentioned, such as not needing the application of ceramic welding.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2016 009636 7 | Apr 2016 | BR | national |