Method of operating a multiple hearth furnace

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6832564
  • Patent Number
    6,832,564
  • Date Filed
    Friday, October 24, 2003
    20 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, December 21, 2004
    19 years ago
Abstract
A method of operating a multiple hearth furnace with a plurality of vertically aligned hearth floors includes feeding a first material onto the uppermost hearth floor and moving it over the hearth floor before it falls through a drop hole onto the next lower hearth floor. The first material is processed in this way from hearth floor to hearth floor to the lowermost hearth floor. A second material is fed onto one of the hearth floors to be mixed into the first material. This second material is moved separately from the first material in a separate annular zone of the hearth floor onto which it is fed before it is mixed into the first material, providing an efficient thermal preconditioning of the second material prior to mixing it with the first material without requiring any supplemental equipment.
Description




FIELD OF THE INVENTION




The present invention relates to a method of operating a multiple hearth furnace.




BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION




A multiple hearth furnace comprises an upright cylindrical furnace housing that is divided by a plurality of vertically spaced hearth floors in vertically aligned hearth chambers. A vertical shaft extends axially though the cylindrical furnace housing, passing centrally through each hearth floor. In each hearth chamber at least one rabble arms is secured to the vertical shaft and extends radially outside therefrom over the hearth floor. These rabble arms are provided with rabble teeth, which extend down into the material being processed on the respective hearth floor. As the vertical shaft rotates, the rabble arms move over the material on their respective hearth floor, wherein their rabble teeth plough through the material. The orientation of the rabble teeth of a rabble arm is such that they confer to the material a circumferential and a radial motion component, wherein the radial motion component is either centripetal (i.e. the material will be moved radially inwardly towards the vertical shaft) or centrifugal (i.e. the material will be moved radially outwardly towards the outer shell of the furnace). Drop holes are provided in each hearth floor, alternately in the inner zone of the hearth floor (i.e. centrally around the vertical shaft) or in the outer zone of the hearth floor (i.e. peripherally around the outer shell of the furnace). On hearth floors with a central drop hole, the rabble arms urge the material from the outer periphery of the hearth floor radially inwardly. On hearth floors with a peripheral drop hole, the rabble arms urge the material from the inner periphery of the hearth floor radially outwardly.




Operation of such a multiple hearth furnace takes place in the following manner. Solid material to be processed is supplied continuously via a material feed inlet into the uppermost hearth chamber, where it falls for example upon the outer periphery of the uppermost furnace floor. As the vertical shaft rotates, the rabble arms in the uppermost hearth chamber gradually urge the material in a kind of spiral movement over the hearth floor towards a central drop hole surrounding the vertical shaft. Through this central drop hole the material drops down onto the second hearth floor in the second hearth chamber, where the rabble arms of this chamber gradually work the material toward the outer periphery of the second hearth floor. Here the material drops through the peripheral drop holes of this second hearth floor onto the third hearth floor in the third hearth chamber. The material is then worked in the same way through successive hearth chambers, before it ultimately leaves the furnace via a material outlet in the hearth floor of the lowermost hearth chamber. Process gases move in an ascending counter-flow through the multiple hearth furnace. As the material travels downwards from hearth floor to hearth floor, it is thoroughly stirred and exposed to the hot process gases.




To optimise the process in the multiple hearth furnace, it is often of interest to feed additional material, e.g. a reducing agent as coal, on a lower hearth floor. This additional material is usually discharged by a conveyor through the outer shell of the furnace on a peripheral area of a hearth floor with a central drop hole (i.e. the rabble arms are consequently designed to urge the solid material radially inwardly, and the hearth floor immediately above has consequently peripheral drop holes). The rotating rabble arms urge the material falling through the peripheral drop holes of the next higher hearth floor and the additional material discharged by the conveyor through the outer shell of the furnace together to the central drop hole. Due to the ploughing action of the rabble teeth, both materials are thoroughly mixed before they fall through the central drop hole on the next lower hearth floor.




In many cases it would be of interest—at least from the point of view of process optimisation—to thermally precondition the additional material before adding it to the material already processed on upper hearth floors. Such a thermal preconditioning can for example comprise a preheating of the additional material to avoid an inhomogeneous temperature profile in the material bed, a preheating to dry the additional material or to evaporate other volatile components. However, in practice such a thermal preconditioning is generally not carried out, because it is considered to be too expensive in comparison to its benefits.




OBJECT AND SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION




A problem addressed by the present invention is to provide a simple and inexpensive method for thermally preconditioning a additional solid material prior to adding it to a material already processed on upper hearth floors of a multiple hearth furnace.




SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION




In accordance with the present invention, a method of operating multiple hearth furnace with a plurality of vertically aligned hearth floors, comprises in particular following steps. A first material is fed onto the uppermost hearth floor and moved over this uppermost hearth floor before it falls through a drop hole onto the next lower hearth floor. This first material is processed in this way from hearth floor to hearth floor down to the lowermost hearth floor. A second material is fed onto one of the hearth floors to be mixed into the first material. In accordance with an important aspect of the present invention, the second material is moved separately from the first material in a separate annular zone of the hearth floor onto which it is fed before it is mixed into the first material. It will be appreciated that this method allows to provide an efficient thermal preconditioning of the second material prior to mixing it into the first material without requiring any supplementary equipment therefore.




In a generally preferred implementation of the method, the second material is fed onto an outer annular zone of a hearth floor, and the first material is dropped from a higher hearth floor onto an inner annular zone of this hearth floor. The first material is then moved in the inner annular zone of the hearth floor, and the second material is moved in the outer annular zone surrounding the first material in the inner annular zone. It will be appreciated that this way of proceeding allows to easily feed the second material through a lateral outer wall of the furnace onto the respective hearth floor.




For process reasons it may be of interest to keep the first and second material separate until they are dropped onto the next hearth floor. If this is the case, the second material is e.g. advantageously fed onto the outer periphery of the outer annular zone and moved inwardly towards the inner annular zone; whereas the first material is dropped onto the inner periphery of the inner annular zone and moved outwardly towards the outer annular zone. The first material and the second material can then be dropped through at least one common drop hole located in a fringe range between the inner and outer annular zones.




The first material and the second material may be dropped through the at least one common drop hole either onto an inner zone or onto an outer zone of a lower hearth floor. Here they are mixed by moving them from the inner zone to the outer zone, respectively from the outer zone to the inner zone, e.g. by means of rotating rabble arms as commonly used in multiple hearth furnaces.




The same rabble arms may be used for moving the first material in the inner zone and the second material in the outer zone. In the inner zone, the rabble teeth are then arranged so as to move the first material outwardly. In the outer zone, the rabble teeth are then arranged so as to move the second material inwardly.




In an alternative implementation of the method in accordance with the present invention, the second material is fed onto an inner annular zone of a hearth floor and moved herein, and the first material is dropped onto an outer annular zone of the hearth floor and moved herein around the second material in the inner annular zone of the hearth floor. This implementation is of particular interest if the second material can be easily fed, e.g. by means of a cooled conveyor radially introduced into the hearth chamber or through a hollow central shaft of the multiple hearth furnace, onto the inner periphery of the inner annular zone.




If it is of interest to keep, in the above alternative implementation, the first and second material separate until they are dropped onto the next hearth floor, then it is of advantage to proceed as follows. The first material is dropped onto the outer periphery of the outer annular zone and moved inwardly towards the inner annular zone. The second material is the fed onto the inner periphery of the inner annular zone and moved outwardly towards the outer annular zone. The first material and the second material are dropped through at least one common drop hole located in a fringe range between the inner and outer annular zones. If rabble arms with rabble teeth are used for moving the first material and the second material, then it is sufficient to arrange the rabble teeth in the inner zone so as to move the second material outwardly and the rabble teeth in the outer zone so as to move the first material inwardly.




It will be appreciated that the above described method of operating a multiple hearth furnace can be advantageously used within the context of a process for recovering metals from dusts and sludges, including inter alia important amounts of iron, zinc and lead. Such a process is advantageously carried out in a multiple hearth furnace comprising a first furnace stage and a second furnace stage. Separate furnace atmospheres prevail in each furnace stage, and each stage has a plurality of vertically aligned hearth floors. The first material, i.e. the material that is fed onto the uppermost hearth floor of the first furnace stage, is a material comprising the metal oxides. The second material, that is the additional material that is fed onto one of the hearth floors, is a coal with volatile constituents. The first material is first subjected to mainly endothermic preconditioning processes in the first furnace stage. The coal is fed onto the lowermost hearth floor of the first furnace stage and moved thereon separately from the first material in a separate annular zone of this hearth floor, wherein most of its volatile constituents are driven off and burned in the first furnace stage. The preconditioned first material and the preconditioned coal are then fed through at least one material lock onto the uppermost hearth floor of the second furnace stage and thoroughly mixed thereon, so that the metal oxides are subjected to a reduction by the preconditioned coal. It will be appreciated that this method of operating the double stage hearth furnace allows to substantially improve the thermal balance of the process by using the combustion energy of the volatile constituents of the coal for the endothermic processes in the first furnace stage. At the same time it helps to avoid a start of the exothermic reduction process in the first furnace stage, which would disturb the separation result by reducing and evaporating e.g. the zinc in the first furnace stage instead of the second furnace stage. Furthermore, the method warrants an excellent preconditioning of the coal for the reduction process in the second furnace stage.




If the preconditioned second material can be mixed into the first material already on the hearth floor onto which the second material is fed, then it may be of advantage to proceed in accordance with one of the following implementations of the method in accordance with the invention. According to a first implementation, the second material is fed onto the outer periphery of the outer annular zone and moved separately inwardly towards the inner annular zone, where it is transferred from the outer annular zone into the outer periphery of the inner annular zone. The first material is dropped onto the outer periphery of the inner annular zone and moved together with the second material inwardly through the inner annular zone, wherein both materials are thoroughly mixed. The mixed materials are finally dropped through at least one common drop hole at the inner periphery of the inner annular zone. According to a second implementation, the second material is fed onto the inner periphery of the inner annular zone and moved separately outwardly towards the outer annular zone, where it is transferred from the inner annular zone into the inner periphery of the outer annular zone. The first material is dropped onto the inner periphery of the outer annular zone and moved together with the second material outwardly through the outer annular zone, wherein both materials are thoroughly mixed. The mixed materials are finally dropped through at least one common drop hole at the outer periphery of the outer annular zone.











BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS




Methods of operating a multiple hearth furnace in accordance with the present invention will now be described by way of illustration, in particular with reference to the multiple hearth furnace shown in the accompanying drawings, in which:




FIG.


1


: is a schematic vertical section through a multiple hearth furnace with two separate furnace stages, each furnace stage having a plurality of vertically aligned hearth floors; and




FIG.


2


: is a top view on the lowermost hearth floor of the first furnace stage.











DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION




The multiple hearth furnace


10


shown in

FIG. 1

has a first furnace stage


12


which is connected to a second furnace stage


12


′ by means of a gas-tight material lock


14


. It will be noted that the second furnace stage


12


′ is only shown in part.




The first furnace stage will now be described in detail. It comprises an outer shell


16


of a generally cylindrical configuration with a refractory lining


18


. This outer shell


16


is mounted upright on a support structure (not shown) and surrounded by a framework of structural steel (not shown). A vertical rotary shaft


20


, which is sheathed with a refractory lining


21


, extends axially through the cylindrical outer shell


16


. Its upper end protrudes above a refractory ceiling


22


of the outer shell


16


, where it is radially guided in upper bearing means


24


. Its lower end extends beneath a refractory floor


28


of the outer shell


16


, where it engages lower support and bearing means


30


. Reference number


32


identifies a rotary drive means for driving the vertical rotary shaft


20


in rotation.




The interior of the outer shell


16


is divided by means of five intermediary hearth floors


36




1


,


36




2


,


36




3


,


36




4


,


36




5


in sixth hearth chambers


38




1


,


38




2


,


38




3


,


38




4




38




5


,


36




6


. Each of the hearth floors


36




1


,


36




2


,


36




3


,


36




4


,


36




5


is made of a refractory material and is pre-stressed so as to be self-supporting within the outer shell


16


. The hearth floor of the sixth hearth chamber


38




6


is formed by the furnace floor


28


, which is identified by reference number


36




6


in its function as lowermost hearth floor of the first furnace stage


12


. Central drop holes


40




1


,


40




3


and


40




5


are formed in the alternate hearth floors


36




1


,


36




3


and


36




5


around the vertical rotary shaft


20


. Peripheral drop holes


42




2


and


42




4


are formed in the intermediate hearth floors


36




2


and


36




4


around the outer shell


16


. A material feed inlet


46


is arranged in the ceiling


22


at the outer periphery of the latter, for feeding a first solid material on the uppermost hearth floor


36




1


of the first furnace stage


12


. Reference number


48


identifies an outlet for the process gases in the upper-most hearth chamber


38




1


of the first furnace stage


12


. It will be noted that the first furnace stage


12


further comprises burners, which are not shown in the schematic section of FIG.


1


.




In each hearth chamber


38




i


, a plurality of rabble arms


50


are supported by the vertical rotary shaft


20


so as to extend radially therefrom over the respective hearth floor


36




i


. The multiple hearth furnace


10


of

FIG. 1

has for example four equally spaced rabble arms


50


in each hearth chamber


38




i


. Each of these rabble arms


50


supports a plurality of rabble teeth


52


which extend downward towards an upper surface


54


of the hearth floor


36


. As the vertical shaft


20


rotates, the rabble arms


50


move over the material on the respective hearth floor


36




i


,


28


, wherein the rabble teeth


52


plough through the material on the hearth floor


36




i


. The rabble teeth


20


are arranged on the rabble arm


16


so that substantially every point of the hearth floor


36




1


is passed over by a rabble tooth


52


. The orientation of the rabble teeth


52


of a rabble arm


50


is such that they confer to the material a circumferential and a radial motion component, wherein the radial motion component is either centripetal (i.e. the material will be moved radially inwardly towards the vertical shaft) or centrifugal (i.e. the material will be moved radially outwardly towards the outer shell of the furnace). In particular, in the hearth chambers


38




1


,


38




3


and


38




5


, the orientation of the rabble teeth


52


is such that the material will be moved from the periphery of the. hearth floors


36




1


,


36




3


,


36




5


radially inwardly toward the central drop holes


40




1


,


40




3


,


40




5


in the hearth floors


36




1


,


36




3


,


36




5


. In the hearth chambers


38




2


and


38




4


, the orientation of the rabble teeth


52


is such that the material will be moved radially outwardly toward the peripheral drop holes


42




2


and


42




4


in the hearth floors


36




2


and


36




4


. Material handling in the lowermost hearth chamber


38




6


is in direct relation with the method of the present invention and will be described further down.




The second furnace stage


12


′ is of substantially the same design as the first furnace stage


12


. Elements and features of the second furnace stage


12


′ are identified in

FIG. 1

with the same reference numbers as their equivalents in the first furnace stage


12


, wherein a prime symbol is added to the respective reference number of the second furnace stage


12


′. It will be noted that the second furnace stage


12


′ may have either the same number or a different number of hearth chambers


38





i


than the first furnace stage


12


. In

FIG. 1

only the uppermost hearth chamber


38





1


and the lowermost hearth chamber


38





n


of the second furnace stage


12


′ are shown. The uppermost hearth floor is identified with reference numbers


36





1


and the lowermost hearth floor with reference number


36





n


. It remains to be pointed out that in the lowermost hearth chamber


38





n


, the orientation of the rabble teeth


52


′ of the rabble arms


50


′ is such that the material will be moved radially outwardly towards a peripheral drop hole


42




n


, through which material falls into an outlet tube


56


.




Operation of the first furnace stage


12


as thus far described takes place in the following manner. A first solid material


60


is supplied via the material feed inlet


46


into the first hearth chamber


38




1


, where it falls upon the outer periphery of the first furnace floor


36




1


. As the vertical shaft


20


rotates, the rabble arms


50


in the first hearth chamber


38




1


gradually urge the material over the first hearth floor


36




1


towards the central drop hole


40




1


in the latter. Through this central drop hole


40




1


the material drops down onto the second hearth floor


36




2


in the second hearth chamber


38




2


, where the rabble arms


50


of this chamber gradually work the material toward the outer periphery. Here the material drops through the peripheral drop holes


42




2


of this hearth floor


36




2


onto the third hearth floor


36




3


in the third hearth chamber


38




3


. The material is then worked in the same way through the fourth and the fifth hearth chambers


38




4


,


38




5


, before it falls through the central drop hole


40




5


in the fifth hearth floor


36




5


onto the inner periphery of the sixth, i.e. the lowermost, hearth floor


36




6


. Process gases move in an ascending counter-flow through the multiple hearth furnace


10


. As the material travels downward from hearth floor to hearth floor, it is thoroughly stirred and exposed to the hot process gases.




Material handling in the lowermost hearth chamber


38




6


of the first furnace stage


12


will now be described in detail, referring simultaneously to

FIGS. 1 & 2

, wherein

FIG. 2

shows a top view of the lowermost hearth floor


36




6


with its four rabble arms


50




1


,


50




2


,


50




3


,


50




4


. Arrow


70


indicates the sense of rotation of these four rabble arms


50




i


.




A conveyor


62


, for example a worm conveyor, is used to feed a second solid material


64


through the cylindrical outer shell


16


onto the outer periphery of the lowermost hearth floor


36




6


. This second material


64


is urged by outer segments


66




1


,


66




2


,


66




3


,


66




4


of the rabble arms


50




1


,


50




2


,


50




3


,


50




4


over an outer annular zone


68


of the hearth floor


36




6


. The orientation of the rabble teeth


52


of these outer segments


66




i


of the rabble arms


50


is such that they generate a material movement with a centripetal component, i.e. they urge the material gradually towards the center of the hearth floor


36




6


. As already mentioned above, the first material


60


falls through the central drop hole


40




5


in the fifth hearth floor


36




5


(the border of this drop hole


40




5


is shown with a dotted line


72


in

FIG. 2

) onto the inner periphery of the hearth floor


36




6


. Here this first material


60


is urged by inner segments


74




1


,


74




2


,


74




3


,


74




4


of the rabble arms


50




1


,


50




2


,


50




3


,


50




4


over an inner annular zone


76


of the hearth floor


36




6


. The orientation of the rabble teeth


52


of these inner segments


74




i


of the rabble arms


50


is such that they generate a material movement with a centrifugal component, i.e. they urge the material gradually towards the periphery of the hearth floor


36




6


. In the fringe range between the inner annular zone


76


and the outer annular zone


68


there is at least one common drop hole


80


for the first material


60


and the second material


64


. This common drop hole


80


has an oblong shape extending radially into the inner periphery of the outer annular zone


68


, to receive the second material


64


, and into the outer periphery of the inner annular zone


76


, to receive the first material


60


. It will be noted that it may be of advantage to distribute several drop holes circumferentially in the fringe range between the inner annular zone


76


and the outer annular zone


68


, so as to achieve a more uniform evacuation of both materials over the hearth floor


36




6


. Reference number


82


identifies a optional small partition wall, which separates the outer annular zone


68


, in which the second material


64


is urged inwardly by the outer segments


66




i


of the rabble arms


50




i


, from the inner annular zone


76


, in which the first material


60


is urged outwardly by the outer segments


66




i


of the rabble arms


50




i


. The object of this partition wall


82


is to avoid, as well as possible, a mixing of the first material


60


and the second material


64


on the hearth floor


36




6


. Special rabble teeth


52


may associated with the partition wall


82


so as avoid, as well as possible, an overflow of material over the partition wall


82


.




While being urged by the outer segments


66




1


,


66




2


,


66




3


,


66




4


of the rabble arms


50




1


,


50




2


,


50




3


,


50




4


over the outer annular zone


68


of the hearth floor


36




6


towards the drop hole


80


, the second material


64


is subjected to an efficient thermal preconditioning. Such a thermal preconditioning may for example comprise a drying of the second material (i.e. an evaporation of water), an evaporation of other volatile components or simply a preheating of the second material to avoid a temperature drop of the first material


60


when both materials are mixed together.




Through the common drop hole


80


the first material


60


and the second material


64


drop into an outlet tube


84


, which is connected to the inlet side of the aforementioned gas-tight material lock


14


. The latter has a lock chamber


85


with a gas-tight inlet flap


86


and a gas tight outlet flap


88


. During charging of the gas-tight material lock


14


, the inlet flap


86


is completely open and the outlet flap


88


is completely closed. During emptying of the gas-tight material lock


14


, the inlet flap


86


is completely closed and the outlet flap


88


is completely open. As soon as a column of material in the outlet tube


84


exercises a predetermined weight force onto the inlet flap


86


, the latter opens an the outlet tube


84


empties into the lock chamber


85


, wherein the outlet flap


88


is completely closed. Thereafter the inlet flap


86


immediately closes. As soon as the inlet flap


86


is closed, the outlet flap


88


opens and the lock chamber


85


empties through a material inlet tube


46


′ into the uppermost hearth chamber


38





1


of the second furnace stage


12


′. The first material


60


and the second material


64


fall together upon the outer periphery of the first furnace floor


36





1


. As the vertical shaft


20


′ rotates, the rabble arms


50


′ in the first hearth chamber


38





1


gradually urge both materials


60


,


64


together over the first hearth floor


36





1


towards the central drop hole


40





1


in the latter. It will be appreciated that by ploughing both materials with the rabble arms


50


from the outer zone to the inner zone of this hearth floor


36




1


, both materials


60


,


64


are thoroughly mixed. The mixed materials


60


, are then worked, as described above, through the subsequent hearth chambers


38





2


. . .


38





n


of the second furnace stage


12


′, before the processed material ultimately leaves the second furnace stage


12


′ via the drop hole


42





n


in the lowermost hearth floor


36




n


.




It will be appreciated that the above described method of operating a multiple hearth furnace is e.g. particularly advantageous if used within the context of a process for recovering metals from dusts and sludges including important amounts of iron, zinc and lead. Such dusts and sludges are e.g. obtained. as by-products in iron and steel making processes and their recycling is a well known ecoproblem.




In the method of the present invention, these dusts and sludges represent the first material


60


, which is charged into the uppermost hearth chamber


38




1


of the first furnace stage


12


. In this first furnace stage


12


, the first material


60


descending from furnace chamber to furnace chamber is subjected to mainly endothermic preconditioning processes, such as drying, evaporation of organic substances (e.g. oils) and evaporation of lead and alkalis. The products that are evaporated in the first furnace stage


12


(i.e. mainly water, oils, lead and alkalis) are evacuated with the exhaust gases of this first stage through the exhaust gas outlet


48


into an exhaust gas conditioning plant


100


associated with the first furnace stage


12


. The heat required for the endothermic processes in the first furnace stage


12


has to be provided by burners.




A coal rich in volatile constituents is fed as second material


64


by the conveyor


62


through the cylindrical outer shell


16


onto the outer periphery of the lowermost hearth floor


36




6


of the first furnace stage


12


. While this coal


64


is urged over the outer annular zone


68


of the hearth floor


36




6


, its volatile constituents evaporate and burn, thereby providing an important contribution to the heat input required by the endothermic processes which take place in the first furnace stage


12


. Indeed, the combustion gases resulting from the combustion of the volatile coal constituents above the outer annular zone


68


of the lower-most hearth floor


36




1


contribute to a heat up of the descending first material


60


during their ascending movement towards the exhaust gas outlet


48


in the upper hearth chamber


38




1


.




Because the coal


64


is not mixed with the material


60


on the hearth floor


36




6


, no reduction process takes place in the first furnace stage


12


. Thus it is efficiently prevented that metallic zinc is formed and evaporated in the first furnace stage


12


. This zinc would indeed be evacuated with the exhaust gases of the first furnace stage


12


, which would have as a drawback that it could no longer be recovered separately from the less valuable lead and alkalis.




The reduction of the zinc and the iron oxides starts only in the second furnace stage


12


′ when the preconditioned coal


64


is mixed into the preconditioned first material


60


on the first hearth floor


36





1


of the second furnace stage


12


′. This reduction process is highly exothermic. The zinc oxides are reduced to metallic zinc, which evaporates instantaneously, is evacuated with the exhaust gases of the second furnace stage


12


′, is again oxidised and is finally recovered as solidified zinc oxide in an exhaust gas conditioning plant


100


′ connected to the exhaust gas outlet


48


′ of the second furnace stage


12


′. The iron oxides contained in the first material


60


are processed in the second furnace stage


12


′ into a direct reduced iron (DRI), which is collected at the outlet


56


of the second furnace stage


12


′.




It remains to be pointed out that feeding the coal directly into the upper-most hearth chamber


38





1


of the second furnace stage


12


′ would result in that the volatile constituents of the coal are directly evacuated with the exhaust gases of the second furnace stage


12


′, without having a positive contribution to the thermal balance of the multiple hearth furnace. It will therefore be appreciated that the above method of operating the multiple hearth furnace allows to substantially improve the thermal balance of the process.




It will be appreciated that the above described handling of the second material


64


is particularly advantageous if it is of interest not to mix the first and second materials


60


,


64


on the same hearth floor onto which the second material


64


is fed. If the preconditioned second material


64


may be mixed into the first material


60


on the same hearth floor onto which the second material


64


is fed, the method can e.g. be modified as follows. While the second material


64


is still fed onto the outer periphery of the outer annular zone


68


and separately moved inwardly towards the inner annular zone


76


, it is no longer dropped through a drop hole in the fringe zone between the outer and the inner annular zone, but transferred from the outer annular zone


68


into the outer periphery of the inner annular zone


76


(the partition wall


82


is of course eliminated). The first material


60


is dropped onto the outer periphery of the inner annular zone


76


(e.g. through a central drop hole with a bigger diameter or by means of chutes associated with peripheral drop holes in the next higher hearth floor). From this outer periphery of the inner annular zone


76


, the rabble arms


50


move both materials together inwardly and mix them thoroughly, before the mixed materials fall through at least a common drop hole arranged around the vertical shaft


20


. A similar result may be achieved by feeding the second material (e.g. by means of a cooled screw conveyor radially penetrating into the hearth chamber) onto the inner periphery of the inner annular zone


76


and moving it separately outwardly towards the outer annular zone


68


. In this case the first material is fed onto the inner periphery of the outer annular zone


68


, and the second material is transferred from the inner annular zone


76


into the inner periphery of the outer annular zone


68


. In this outer annular zone


68


the rabble arms


50


move both materials together outwardly so as to mix both materials in the outer annular zone


68


. The mixed materials are then dropped through at least one common drop hole located at the outer periphery of the outer annular zone


68


.




In the above examples, the second material


64


is always evacuated through a common drop hole together with the first material


60


. It will be noted that it is also possible to evacuate the first and the second material through separate drop holes. This is for example of advantage if the preconditioning of the second material


64


requires more space than available in the separate annular zone of the hearth floor onto which it is fed. In this case the second material


64


can be separately dropped onto a lower hearth floor and moved thereon separately from the first material


60


in further separate annular zone just as described above. This operation may of course be repeated on several hearth floors, until the second material


64


is ready to be mixed into the first material


60


.



Claims
  • 1. A method of operating a multiple hearth furnace with a plurality of vertically aligned hearth floors, comprising following steps:feeding a first material onto the uppermost hearth floor; moving said first material over said uppermost hearth floor before it falls through a drop hole onto the next lower hearth floor; processing said first material in this way from hearth floor to hearth floor down to the lowermost hearth floor; feeding a second material onto one of said hearth floors; and mixing said second material into said first material; moving said second material separately from said first material in a separate annular zone of the hearth floor onto which it is fed.
  • 2. The method as claimed in claim 1, comprising following steps:feeding said second material onto an outer annular zone of a hearth floor; dropping said first material onto an inner annular zone of said hearth floor; moving said first material in said inner annular zone of said hearth floor; and moving said second material in said outer annular zone surrounding said first material in said inner annular zone.
  • 3. The method as claimed in claim 2, comprising following steps:feeding said second material onto the outer periphery of said outer annular zone; moving said second material in said outer annular zone inwardly towards said inner annular zone; dropping said first material onto the inner periphery of said inner annular zone; moving said first material in said inner annular zone outwardly towards said outer annular zone; and dropping said first material and said second material through at least one common drop hole located in a fringe range between said inner and outer annular zones.
  • 4. The method as claimed in claim 3, wherein said first material is fed through a cylindrical outer shell of the multiple hearth furnace onto the outer periphery of said outer annular zone.
  • 5. The method as claimed in claim 3, comprising following steps:guiding said first material and said second material dropped through said at least one common drop hole either onto an inner zone or onto an outer zone of a lower hearth floor; and mixing said first material and said second material on said lower hearth floor by moving them from the inner zone to the outer zone, respectively from the outer zone to the inner zone, by means of rotating rabble arms.
  • 6. The method as claimed in claim 3, wherein:rabble arms with rabble teeth are used for moving said first material in said inner zone and said second material in said outer zone; in said inner zone, said rabble teeth are arranged so as to move said first material outwardly; and in said outer zone, said rabble teeth are arranged so as to move said second material inwardly.
  • 7. The method as claimed in claim 1, comprising following steps:feeding said second material onto an inner annular zone of a hearth floor; dropping said first material onto an outer annular zone of said hearth floor; moving said second material in said inner annular zone of said hearth floor; and moving said first material in said outer annular zone of said hearth floor around said second material in said inner annular zone of said hearth floor.
  • 8. The method as claimed in claim 7, wherein said first material is fed through a hollow central shaft of the multiple hearth furnace onto said inner periphery of said inner annular zone.
  • 9. The method as claimed in claim 7, wherein said first material is fed by means of a cooled screw conveyor, which extends radially over the respective hearth floor, onto the inner periphery of said inner annular zone.
  • 10. The method as claimed in claim 7, comprising following steps:dropping said first material onto the outer periphery of said outer annular zone; moving said first material in said outer annular zone inwardly towards said inner annular zone; feeding said second material onto the inner periphery of said inner annular zone; moving said second material in said inner annular zone outwardly towards said outer annular zone; and dropping said first material and said second material through at least one common drop hole located in a fringe range between said inner and outer annular zones.
  • 11. The method as claimed claim 7, comprising following steps:guiding said first material and said second material dropped through said at least one common drop hole either onto an inner zone or onto an outer zone of a lower hearth floor; and mixing said first material and said second material on said lower hearth floor by moving it from the inner zone to the outer zone, respectively from the outer zone to the inner zone, by means of rotating rabble arms.
  • 12. The method as claimed in claim 7, wherein:rabble arms with rabble teeth are used for moving said first material in said outer zone and said second material in said inner zone; in said inner zone said rabble teeth are arranged so as to move said second material outwardly; and in said outer zone said rabble teeth are arranged so as to move said first material inwardly.
  • 13. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein:said multiple hearth furnace comprises an first furnace stage and a second furnace stage, in which separate furnace atmospheres prevail, each stage having a plurality of vertically aligned hearth floors; said first material comprises metal oxides; said second material is a coal with volatile constituents; said first material is first subjected to mainly endothermic preconditioning processes in said first furnace stage; said coal is fed onto the lowermost hearth floor of said first furnace stage and moved thereon separately from said first material in a separate annular zone of this hearth floor, wherein most of its volatile constituents are driven off and burned in said first furnace stage; and the preconditioned first material and the preconditioned coal are fed through at least one material lock onto the uppermost hearth floor of said second furnace stage and thoroughly mixed thereon, so that said metal oxides are subjected to a reduction by said coal in said second furnace stage.
  • 14. The method as claimed in claim 2, comprising following steps:feeding said second material onto the outer periphery of said outer annular zone; moving said second material separately inwardly towards said inner annular zone; feeding said first material onto the outer periphery of said inner annular zone; transferring said second material from said outer annular zone into the outer periphery of said inner annular zone; moving said first material and said second material together inwardly through said inner annular zone so as to mix both materials in said inner annular zone; and dropping the mixed materials through at least one common drop hole at the inner periphery of said inner annular zone.
  • 15. The method as claimed in claim 14, comprising following steps:feeding said second material onto the inner periphery of said inner annular zone; moving said second material separately outwardly towards said outer annular zone; feeding said first material onto the inner periphery of said outer annular zone; transferring said second material from said inner annular zone into the inner periphery of said outer annular zone; moving said first material and said second material together outwardly through said outer annular zone so as to mix both materials in said outer annular zone; and dropping the mixed materials through at least one common drop hole at the outer periphery of said outer annular zone.
Priority Claims (1)
Number Date Country Kind
90766 Apr 2001 LU
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is entitled to the benefit of and incorporates by reference in their entireties essential subject matter disclosed in International Application No. PCT/EP02/04586 filed on Apr. 25, 2002, and Luxembourg Patent Application No. 90 766 filed on Apr. 25, 2001.

PCT Information
Filing Document Filing Date Country Kind
PCT/EP02/04586 WO 00
Publishing Document Publishing Date Country Kind
WO02/08640 10/31/2002 WO A
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Number Date Country
514977 Mar 1921 FR
2368678 May 1978 FR