Claims
- 1. A solid fuel pulverizer, comprising a vertical shaft rotatably mounted in a vertically positioned substantially cylindrical housing having a top wall, cylindrical side wall, and bottom wall; a series of horizontal impellers fixed to said shaft in mutually spaced arrangement and terminating short of but relatively close to said housing to define therewith relatively narrow peripheral flow space therearound, said impellers being provided with air-motivating, solid particle impact members thereon, and the inside face of the cylindrical side wall of said housing being provided with mutually spaced, substantially vertical, impact bars positioned within said flow space; a series of annular, substantially flat and horizontal partitions fixed to the housing, the individual partitions thereof extending peripherally inwardly thereof between mutually adjacent impellers, each of said individual partitions being spaced closely below and underlying a corresponding impeller to direct flow toward the axis of said shaft in opposition to centrifugal force exerted by the impellers; air inlet means in said top wall of the housing for introducing primary air to provide a carrier stream of air; solid fuel inlet means also in said top wall of the housing for introducing solid fuel to be pulverized; discharge conduit means adjacent to the lower end of the housing; and means for rotating the impeller shaft.
- 2. A solid fuel pulverizer according to claim 1, wherein the primary air inlet means and the solid fuel inlet means comprise respective elongate, substantially rectangular openings through the top wall of the housing at diametrically opposite sides of the impeller axis; and flow conduits leading to the respective openings.
- 3. A solid fuel pulverizer according to claim 2, wherein the long sides of the rectangular, elongate, air inlet opening are substantially uniformly concavely curved toward the impeller axis.
- 4. A solid fuel pulverizer according to claim 2, wherein both the primary air inlet opening and conduit and the solid fuel inlet opening and conduit are similarly formed, but wherein deflector skirts are provided in the solid fuel inlet so as to reduce its size relative to that of said air inlet.
- 5. A solid fuel pulverizer according to claim 1, wherein the discharge conduit means opens substantially tangentially into the lowest impeller through the cylindrical wall of the housing, said impeller having vanes fixed to and projecting from the upper surface thereof substantially within the height of the opening into said discharge conduit means, so as to serve in effect as an ejector fan for the carrier stream of primary air and the pulverized fuel entrained therein.
- 6. A solid fuel pulverizer according to claim 5, wherein the the lowest impeller also has members on the underside thereof to aid in ejecting any particles that tend to settle on the bottom wall of the housing.
- 7. A solid fuel pulverizer according to claim 1, wherein the inside face of the cylindrical wall of the housing is lined with ceramic.
- 8. A solid fuel pulverizer according to claim 1, wherein the primary air inlet means and the fuel inlet means are arranged to discharge directly against the uppermost impeller; and wherein the next lower impeller is provided with a greater number of impact members than is said uppermost impeller.
- 9. A solid fuel pulverizer according to claim 8, wherein the annular partition between the uppermost and next lower impellers has additionally a discharge lip turned inwardly toward the axis of the impellers to funnel material from the former to the latter.
RELATED APPLICATION
The present application is a division of our application Ser. No. 06/588,900, filed Mar. 12, 1984 now U.S. Pat. No. 4,531,461 entitled "Solid Fuel Pulverizing and Burner System and Method and Burner Therefor", which is a continuation of our similarly entitled copending application Ser. No. 06/378,347, filed May 14, 1982, now abandoned itself a continuation-in-part of our copending application Ser. No. 06/216,267 now abandoned, filed Dec. 15, 1980, entitled "Pulverized Solid Fuel Burning Apparatus".
Note is also made of copending applications Ser. No. 304,860, filed Sept. 23, 1981 now abandoned, entitled "Apparatus and Method for the Pulverization and Burning of Solid Fuels", and Ser. No. 482,503, filed Apr. 6, 1983, similary entitled.
US Referenced Citations (7)
Divisions (1)
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588900 |
Mar 1984 |
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Continuations (1)
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378347 |
May 1982 |
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Continuation in Parts (1)
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216267 |
Dec 1980 |
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