The present invention relates to a roller mill, and in particular to a roller mill suitable for producing fine powders from hard materials.
The present invention is concerned with a roller mill which can be used to mill material traditionally milled using ball mills. Ball mills are used widely to manufacture of powders in the cement industry and in the aluminium industry where they are used to mill bauxite, which is a particularly hard material.
Ball mills consume large amounts of energy. Typically, where a ball mill would use 80 kw/tonne to mill a material to a particular particle size, the roller mill of the present invention would use significantly less energy, perhaps as little as 4 to 5 kw/tonne.
There are certain waste materials which if milled to a sufficiently small particle size may be used in the manufacture of cementitious compositions. For example, lime stone may be incorporated in to cementitious compositions if it is reduced to a sufficiently small particle size. However, the energy consumption of a ball mill may render such reduction in particle size uneconomic. Similarly, there are products which could be used as part of a mixture to be burnt to generate power, if those products could be reduced to a sufficiently small particle size. It would therefore be advantageous to provide a mill capable of producing materials of small particle size for a modest consumption of energy.
In many instances, if these materials cannot be reduced in size economically they will be dumped in land fill sites, which incurs a cost and uses space required for materials which have no other useful purpose.
Another problem associated with ball mills particularly when miffing very hard materials, such as bauxite, is that the metal material of the balls wears leaving metal mixed with the milled product. This metal must then be extracted by passing the milled material between magnets, further increasing the cost of production.
A roller mill is known from GB 331877. In this mill grinding rolls are arranged to rotate about a vertical axis and to engage with a ring. The rollers are mounted on swinging arms, which are provided with biasing means to force the rollers against the ring before the centrifugal action of the mill comes into full effect. The product to be milled is delivered to the rollers by a feeder apparatus which rotates with the mill and is arranged to deposit product ahead of the rollers.
A multi-stage roller mill is known from Bulgarian patent no 37402 which includes three roller mills arranged in series and is provided with classifying means to remove particles of a size within a defined range between each milling stage.
A multi-stage mill is also known from Japanese Patent number 5096197. In this multi-stage roller mill a plurality of sets of rollers are mounted in a housing on a drive shaft common to each set. The roller mill described mills particles of solid substances which are entrained in a slurry. In addition to milling the solid particles the action of the roller mill ensures that solid particles are well dispersed in the slurry.
Roller mills of the prior art are not designed to mill hard substances, such as bauxite. However, in comparison to ball mills, roller mills use considerably less energy.
It would therefore be desirable to provide an improved roller mill.
According to a first aspect of the invention there is provided a multi-sectional roller mill comprising at least two mill sections, wherein each mill section includes a drive shaft and male and female parts of a coupling element attached to respective ends of said drive shaft for rotation therewith, wherein a male part attached to one drive shaft engages with a female part attached to another drive shaft, and wherein the said coupling element provides for drive shafts of adjacent mill sections to be driven by the same drive and by different drives.
The male part may comprise a plurality of rollers and the female part may comprise an annular channel, wherein the rollers facilitate relative rotation between the male and female parts if the drive shafts of respective mill sections are to be driven at different speeds.
According to a second aspect of the invention there is provided a multi-sectional roller mill comprising at least two mill sections, wherein the rollers of each mill section and a wall element of each mill section are adapted to provide a lead-in to an interface between a roller surface of said roller and a rolling surface of the wall element.
The edges of the rollers and wall element may comprise chamfered edges which together provide the lead-in. Advantageously, at least the rolling surface of the wall element is hardened. Further, the rolling surface of each roller may be hardened.
Each mill section may include a spreader plate arranged above the rollers to deliver material to the interface between the rollers and the rolling surface of the wall. Preferably, the spreader plate is arranged to deliver material to the said lead-in.
According to a third aspect of the invention there is provided a multi-sectional roller mill comprising at least two mill sections, wherein the walls of each mill section comprise at least three wall elements, and wherein one of the wall elements includes a rolling surface for engagement of rollers thereon, and wherein the wall elements are stackable one on top of the other, the said wall elements including means to restrict lateral movement of one wall element relative to another.
The upper and lower wall elements of each mill section may support a bearing housing, wherein a bearing located in the housing supports the drive shaft of the mill section.
Advantageously, the means to restrict lateral movement of one wall element relative to another comprises corresponding rebates in the end faces of adjacent wall elements, wherein the rebate of one wall element engages with the rebate of the adjacent wall element.
By configuring the wall in a number of wall elements, each wall element may be made from the most suitable material, for example the working life of the rolling surface of the wall element engaged by the rollers of the mill may be enhanced by hardening thereof. However, there is no need to harden those parts of the wall which support the drive shafts. Further, by configuring the wall in a number of wall elements, assembly, disassembly and repair of the mill sections is simplified, as walls of the mill section and the inner working elements of the mill section may be built up at the same time.
According to a fourth aspect of the invention there is provided a multi-sectional roller mill wherein each mill section is separable from the other mill sections and wherein each mill section is provided with elements for engagement by a lifting apparatus. This provides the advantage that the mill sections may be removed easily from other mill sections, for example in a situation where one of the mill sections has malfunctioned that mill section may be removed and replaced with another mill section which is in good order.
The said elements for engagement by a lifting apparatus may comprise brackets extending outwardly from each side of a mill section. Preferably, the said brackets are each configured to receive a fork of a forklift truck. More preferably, where the wall is comprised of a plurality of wall elements, the uppermost wall element of each mill section is provided with said lifting apparatus. This arrangement no only allows for the easy movement of one mill section from another, but also provides for the upper wall element of a mill section to be lifted off the wall element to which is it attached by the same lifting apparatus.
According to a fifth aspect of the invention there is provided a multi-section roller mill comprising a first drive and a second drive, wherein at least one mill section is driven by the first drive and at least one mill section is driven by the second drive, and wherein the first and second drive may be arranged to drive respective mill sections at different speeds.
The ability to drive different mill sections at different speeds is advantageous. For example, when milling very hard products and where fine particles are required, it may not be possible to produce particles of the required size by passing the material once through the mill. With such materials, to achieve a desired particle size, it has been found that the least energy is expended by reducing the material to a first size with the first mill section which may be driven at a relatively low speed, and then reducing the material to particles of a desired size by passing them through an adjacent mill section operating at a greater speed than the first mill section. In fact, it has been found that such an arrangement gives better results than passing the material through a single mill section twice, with the single mill section operating at the same first and second speeds for the first and second passage through the mill section.
According to a sixth aspect of the invention there is provided a multi-sectional roller mill including a feeder unit, wherein the feeder unit includes at least two product inlets and means to mix the at least two products prior to introduction thereof into the first mill section of the multi-sectional roller mill.
Another aspect of the invention provides a method of reducing the size of particulate material comprising the step of passing said material through a multi-sectional roller mill according to any one or more of the aspects of the invention set out above.
In the drawings, which illustrated preferred embodiments of a multi-sectional roller mill according to the invention, and are by way of example only:
a is a schematic representation of the roller carriage of the mill illustrated in
b is a schematic representation of the roller carriage of the mill illustrated in
c is a schematic representation of elements of the mill illustrated in
a is a cross-section of an alternative roller mounting for use in a roller mill of the invention; and
With reference to the drawings, to the extent that the parts of the roller mill sections 2, 2′ correspond for parts of the roller mill section 2′ the same reference numerals are used for both mill sections except that in the case of parts of the roller mill section 2′ the reference numeral is followed by an apostrophe.
Referring now to
Referring now to
The intermediate wall element 11 is the part of the wall which engages with the rollers 20. Preferably, at least the surface of each roller 20 which engages with the wall element 11 is hardened. As can be seen from
Referring now to
As an alternative to driving the lower mill section 2′ from the upper mill section 2 by means of shaft 16, the lower mill section 2′ may be driven independently of the upper mill section 2. When so configured, the bottom end of shaft 16′ is equipped with a coupling 15″. The coupling 15″ may be attached to the output of a drive similar to drive 4, or the shaft of another mill section driven by a drive independent of the drive 4. In the embodiment illustrated in
Each mill section 2, 2′ is provided with a spreader plate 18, the function of which is to ensure that the material to be milled is delivered to the rollers at the interface between the rollers 20, 20′ and the inner surface of the wall element 11, 11′. Each spreader plate 18 is attached to the upper plate 30 of the carriage and so rotates therewith.
The lower plate 30b and the bearing housing 14 include means to prevent ingress of milled material into the bearing 37, the said means comprising an annular recess 40 formed in the underside of the lower plate 30b and a corresponding annular element 41 projecting upwardly from the surface of the bearing housing 14 and being located in the recess 40, the sizes of the respective recess 40 and element 41 being such that a small gap 42 is formed between the element 41 and recess 40. The gap 42 is required as the lower plate 30b rotates with respect to the bearing housing 14. In order for milled material to come into proximity with the bearing 37 the material must pass through the tortuous path formed by the gap 42. The size of the gap 42 and its shape mean that passage of material therethrough is resisted.
Another part of the mill illustrated in
Also illustrated in
Referring now to
The feeder 3 unit illustrated in
All of the features disclosed in this specification (including any accompanying claims, abstract and drawings), and/or all of the steps of any method or process so disclosed, may be combined in any combination, except combinations where at least some of such features and/or steps are mutually exclusive.
Each feature disclosed in this specification (including any accompanying claims, abstract and drawings), may be replaced by alternative features serving the same, equivalent or similar purpose, unless expressly stated otherwise. Thus, unless expressly stated otherwise each feature disclosed is one example of a generic series of equivalent or similar features.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0719426.9 | Oct 2007 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/GB08/50058 | 1/29/2008 | WO | 00 | 7/26/2010 |