The present invention relates to the field of refining, and in particular to refining discs or refining disc segments for disc refiners.
Disc refiners (sometimes referred to as double-disc refiners) are traditionally used in the pulp- and paper industry for dispersing pulp of recycled paper and thereby improve the appearance of the paper product (e.g. reduce the impurities in the recycled paper pulp to an invisible size). The disc refiners comprise refining discs or refining disc segments. The refining disc segments are arranged to form full refining discs in the disc refiner. Toothed refining discs are sometimes referred to as dispersing discs.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,116,392 discloses a pulp refining disc composed of an annular base and sets of radially oriented, tempered knife blades projecting from the base. The knife blades are made of a relatively high temperature resistant material.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,868,330 discloses another pulp refining disc comprising a base member and a plurality of refiner bars integrally informed with the base member and extending upwardly from it. Portions of the bars are formed of a material having gains of abrasive imbedded therein such that surface portions of the uppermost surface of each bar wear rough.
The inventors have realized that it is desirable to find a structure of the refining discs or refining disc segments that improves their performance and/or resistance to wear. In particular, they have found that disc refiners may have new applications, such as the disintegration of wood chips or wood pellets and that the new structure is particularly important in such cases.
A benefit of using disc refiners is such applications is that the disc gap normally may be adjusted, also during operation, in response to the properties of the supplied material or a product specification, such as a certain particle distribution.
Further, the inventors have found that the combination of a cast iron base and metal carbide composite teeth provides the desired refining disc structure.
The present disclosure thus provides a refining disc or a segment thereof, comprising a base composed of a cast iron and teeth composed of a metal carbide composite, which teeth protrude from the base, wherein the teeth are partially embedded in the base. Preferably the teeth are cast in the base, i.e. fixed in the base by means of casting. The present disclosure also provides a disc refiner comprising a first and a second disc composed of such discs or according, said first and second discs being arranged such that the teeth of the first disc face the teeth of the second disc.
There is thus provided a refining disc or a segment thereof, comprising a base composed of a cast iron and teeth composed of a metal carbide composite, which teeth protrude from the base, wherein the teeth are partially embedded in the base. To cast prefabricated teeth in the base has proven to be a particularly suitable fixation technique.
The metal carbide composite of the teeth is hard and resistant to wear. Typically, the hardness of the metal carbide composite is at least 1000 Vickers (HV10). The metal carbide of the metal carbide composite may for example be WC (tungsten carbide), TiC (titanium carbide), TaC (thallium carbide) or a metal carbonitride, such as TiCN. Further, the metal carbide composite may comprise a metal alloy binder, such as Co (cobalt), Ni (nickel) or Iron (Fe). The metal carbide particles of a metal carbide composite may be evenly distributed in the metallic alloy binder. Thus, the hardness and strength of the metal carbide is combined with the toughness and plasticity of the metallic alloy binder. Such a material is frequently referred to as a cemented carbide. Cemented carbide is normally produced by powder metallurgy.
The process of casting cemented carbide teeth into cast iron follows largely common sand molding methods. To produce discs or segments of the present disclosure, the teeth may be arranged in their pattern in a sand core and the molding process may be performed in accordance with what is described in the patent application EP 0 374 116 A1 (see e.g. column 3, lines 9-26 and the example). Further information on casting cemented carbide in cast iron is found in the patent application WO 92/13651 (however, in the normal case centrifugal casting is not performed in connection with the present disclosure).
The hardness requirements for the base material are much lower than for the teeth. For example, the base may be composed of a material having a hardness of HRC 30-70, such as HRC 50-60 (Rockwell scale). Thus, a cheaper and in at least in some aspects more workable material may be used for the base. However, the base must be capable of fixing the teeth, and cast iron generally meets this requirement. The cast iron may for example be ductile iron, grey cast iron or white cast iron. Ductile iron, such as nodular cast iron, may be preferred as it is impact resistant and has a relatively high tensile strength. The grey cast iron may be preferred as it is relatively easy to form in a casting process. The white cast iron may however also be preferred as it is relatively hard (compared to other types of cast iron, such as grey cast iron) and thus relatively resistant to wear during use. The cast iron may for example comprise 1-30% Cr (chromium), such as 5-30% Cr, such as 10-30% Cr, such as 15-30% Cr. A higher Cr content makes the cast iron harder. White cast iron is one example of a cast iron that may have high Cr content.
The cast iron of the present disclosure may also have a lower carbon content and be classified as steel.
In commercial disc refiners, the refining discs are normally ring shaped. Thus, the refining disc of the present disclosure may have such a shape. Sometimes, a plurality of refining disc segments are arranged to form a refining disc in a disc refiner. Thus, the refining disc segment of the present disclosure may have the shape of a ring segment. Examples of segments having such a curved shape are shown in
In disc refiners, the material to be disintegrated is normally fed centrally, i.e. to the center of the refining discs (see
The teeth may have the shape of a pyramid or truncated pyramid (see e.g.
A refining disc segment of the present disclosure typically weighs 1-15 kg and has an area of 100-1000 cm2.
In some disc refiners, two discs facing each other are arranged such that a row of teeth of one disc run between rows of teeth of another disc when the one disc rotates relative the other. To facilitate such rotation of one disc relative another, the teeth of the discs may be arranged in concentric rows (see the rows in FIGS. 1 and 4-6).
The present disclosure also provides a disc refiner comprising a first and a second disc composed of discs or segments according to any one of the embodiments described above, wherein said first and second discs are arranged such that the teeth of the first disc face the teeth of the second disc. In such a disc refiner, two whole refining discs may thus be arranged to face each other. Alternatively, a plurality of refining disc segments may be arranged to form two full discs that face each other. In the disc refiner construction, the second disc may be fixed and the first disc may be rotatably arranged such that it may rotate in respect of the first disc. The rotatable disc may be connected to a rotatable shaft. The shaft may be movable in the direction of its elongation such that the gap between the teeth of the first disc and the teeth of the second disc may be adjusted. Accordingly, the degree of disintegration may also be adjusted. An embodiment of a disc refiner is illustrated in
The present disclosure also provides a method of disintegration of a material, wherein a disc refiner according to any one of the embodiments described above is used for disintegrating the material. The disc refiner is particularly suitable for the disintegration of a material comprising cellulose fibers. An example of such a material is pulp. The paper pulp may for example be the pulp of recycled paper, which is the type of material traditionally disintegrated with a disc refiner. Other examples of pulp are reject pulp and virgin pulp.
Wood-based material such as saw dust, cutter dust, wood chips and, in particular, wood pellets have been found to be difficult to disintegrate. As an example, disc refining using discs having teeth of cast iron (e.g. the base and the teeth cast in one piece) disintegrate wood pellets with a satisfactory result (see
The purpose of disintegrating (raw) wood chips may be to set free drying surfaces or to produce a material having a particle size suitable for wood pellets production.
Other examples of material comprising cellulose fibers are straw, straw briquettes (pucks), agro chips form one-year plants and bagasse.
The material may also be torrefied material (torrefied biomass), other types of bio-coal, pellets of torrefied material or pellets of other types of bio-coal.
The material may also be pellets of organic material different from the above, such as pellets of an organic compound.
Further examples of materials are organic sludge, household waste, rejects from sewage treatment plants, cotton, tobacco, grain, manure and slaughtering residues.
16 disc segments similar to those shown in
A power plant requested a wood powder (disintegrated wood pellets) according to the following specification:
The wood pellets are less bulky and more suitable for transport and storage than the wood powder. Thus, the wood powder is preferably produced at the site of the power plant.
The wood pellets, which had a density of 0.670 kg/dm3 and a dry matter content of 91%, were disintegrated with a disc refiner (KRIMA Disperser, marketed by Cellwood Machinery) having refining disc segments with widely spaced teeth (marketed by Cellwood Machinery) using the following conditions:
The run time was two minutes for both samples.
The results are presented in
The results were considered to meet the specification to a sufficient degree. Thus, disc refiners having toothed disc segments were found to successfully disintegrate the wood pellets. At a later time, it was however found that the disc segments were worn down considerably during disintegration of wood pellets. The wear problem is solved by the introduction of teeth of harder material embedded in the base of the disc or segment as described herein.
A mill study was carried out, first using standard refining discs (base and teeth made of white iron) and then refining discs having metal carbide teeth cast in an iron base.
The following conditions applied:
Equipment: Krima Disc Refiner, type KR-710
Application: Wood Pellets to Powder
Production: 10 Ton/h
As shown in
As explained above in Example 1, it is generally desirable that the share of powder particles being smaller than 2 mm is as high as possible in this pellets-to-powder application. As shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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11160992.1 | Apr 2011 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2012/056164 | 4/4/2012 | WO | 00 | 12/11/2013 |