The present invention generally relates to solids reduction and, in a representatively illustrated embodiment thereof, more particularly relates to a commercial machine for reducing solid materials.
Solids reduction is the process by which certain materials are ground, crushed or pulverized from a certain input size to a prescribed, smaller output size. Solids reduction technology is utilized in a wide array of commercial applications such as, for example, cement production, mining, utility and chemical processes, oil and gas processing, paper production and various agricultural applications.
Various devices have been developed and utilized to reduce the size of solids in these and other applications. One such device is called a ball mill. A ball mill typically includes a cylindrical or conical shell that rotates about a horizontal axis and is partially filled with a grinding medium such as, for example, natural flint pebbles, ceramic pellets or metallic balls. The material to be ground is added so that it slightly more than fills the voids between the individual grinding medium pieces. The shell is rotated at a speed which causes the grinding medium pieces to cascade, thus reducing the sizes of the solid material particles introduced into the shell. While ball mills have been successfully used in a number of industries, the amount of material they are able to process is often less (per hour) than other devices that actively hammer, crush or otherwise pulverize solids. In addition, the electrical cost required to operate a ball mill per ton of resultant processed solids, can be expensive and even cost prohibitive.
A recently proposed alternative to a conventional ball mill is the rotating hammer mill type solids reduction processor illustrated and described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,669,125 to Howard, such patent being hereby incorporated by reference herein in its entirety. While this solids reduction processor provides various improvements in solids reduction compared to a ball mill machine, and is generally well suited to its intended application, the processor has proven to present certain operational problems, limitations and disadvantages of its own.
For example, the solids reduction processor disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,669,125, which is hereby incorporated herein by reference in its entirety, is provided with a pair of hammer-carrying rotor assemblies each having a shaft on which a spaced series of transverse support discs are coaxially welded, pairs of such discs fixedly supporting a circumferentially spaced series of radially outwardly projecting hammer members. The two shafts are rotationally supported in a spaced apart, parallel relationship, and are motor-driven in opposite rotational directions within a housing structure having an inlet opening through which solids to be reduced are introduced above the shafts, and an outlet opening through which the reduced solids outwardly pass from a location beneath the shafts. The series of disc-supported hammers on one shaft are axially offset from the series of disc-supported hammers on the other shaft so that when the two shafts are counter-rotated the rotating hammers on one shaft are interdigitated with and swing between hammer pairs on the other shaft in a radially overlapping relationship therewith.
The rigidly mounted hammers, when striking an unexpectedly large rock or the like interiorly traversing the processor, may break their connection to the support disc and swing into an adjacent rotating hammer or otherwise damage a portion of the associated rotor assembly. Further, due to the substantial radial overlap of the counter-rotating hammers, incoming solids such as rocks tend to be thrown by a given hammer directly against the shaft of the other rotor assembly and/or against a side surface portion of a disc portion of the other rotor assembly, thereby imposing very high abrasive forces on the non-hammer portions of the rotor assemblies and shortening their operating lives. This abrasion problem, which of course is not limited to the specific solids reduction processor shown in U.S. Pat. No. 6,669,125, is compounded by the necessity of replacing the entire fixedly intersecured disc and shaft portion of a rotor assembly when its shaft or any of its support discs become abraded to an unacceptable degree.
Another limitation commonly associated with hammer mill-type solids reduction processors has to do with the placement and orientation of impact or breaker bars which are suitably supported on inner side portions of the outer housing section to be struck by solids thrown off the rotating hammers and broken up into yet smaller pieces. As commonly configured and placed within the processor housing, conventional breaker bars are not operative to redirect in advantageous directions the solid objects which strike them.
As can readily seen from the foregoing, a need exists for a rotating hammer mill-type solids reduction processor of the type generally described above in which these operational limitations and disadvantages are eliminated or at least substantially reduced.
In carrying out principles of the present invention, in accordance with representatively illustrated embodiments thereof, a specially designed solids reduction processor is provided. The processor has a housing with an inlet opening for receiving solid material to be reduced in size, and an outlet opening through which size-reduced solid material may outwardly pass. Preferably, first and second parallel, spaced apart rotor assemblies are suitably supported within the housing, and a drive system is provided for rotating the rotor assemblies in opposite directions. The rotor assemblies, during driven rotation thereof, are operative to impact and reduce the size of solid material received in the housing.
Each rotor assembly includes a shaft, a longitudinally spaced series of disc structures, illustratively a spaced apart, facing disc pair, coaxially mounted on the shaft, and a circumferentially spaced series of hammer members mounted on each disc structure for rotation relative thereto about an axis parallel to the length of the shaft. Preferably, the hammer member series on each rotor assembly are aligned with the hammer series on the other rotor assembly in a direction parallel to the shaft axes.
According to one aspect of the invention, each hammer member has an outer end portion projecting outwardly beyond the periphery of its associated supporting disc structure and being transversely enlarged in a direction parallel to the length of the shaft so that circumferentially spaced peripheral portions of the disc structure act as abutments for the outer hammer end portion to limit the available rotational arc of the hammer member. Preferably the available rotational arc of each hammer member is sized to prevent it from pivoting into engagement with any circumferentially adjacent hammer member on its associated disc structure. Illustratively, such available rotational arc of each hammer member is about twenty degrees.
According to another aspect of the invention, each rotor assembly includes a shaft, a longitudinally spaced series of disc structures rotationally locked to the shaft and being axially movable along its length for selective removal therefrom, hammer members removably secured to the disc structures in circumferentially spaced arrays thereon and projecting outwardly past their peripheries, a series of spacer members coaxially mounted on the shaft in an interdigitated relationship with the disc structures and being axially removable from the shaft, and a retaining structure removably associated with the shaft in a manner preventing axial movement of the disc structures and the spacer members relative to the shaft. Such removability of the discs, hammers and spacers permits portions of each rotor assembly to be replaced without the necessity of replacing the entire rotor assembly.
Preferably the discs are rotationally locked to their associated shaft by a spline connection. Illustratively, the shaft of each rotor assembly has an axially extending exterior surface groove thereon, each disc has a radially extending interior edge groove therein, and the spline connection is formed by keys received in the shaft groove and corresponding inner edge grooves in the discs. The spacer members preferably have annular configurations, with each spacer member coaxially circumscribing its associated shaft and being positioned between an adjacent pair of the discs. Each shaft preferably has an axially spaced pair of annular exterior surface grooves thereon, and the retainer structure includes a pair of diametrically split annular retainer plates removably secured to adjacent axially outer disc member side surfaces and having radially inner portions received in the annular exterior surface grooves on the shaft.
A breaker member is supported within the processor housing on either its top wall portion or generally vertical side wall portion and positioned to be struck on an impact surface thereof by solid objects thrown from the rotating hammer members in an ejection direction generally parallel to a line tangential to the circular path through which the hammer members rotate. Such breaker member may be positioned adjacent one rotor assembly and oriented to be transversely impacted by solid material thrown from such rotor assembly, or oriented to be transversely impacted by material thrown from the other rotor assembly. According to a further aspect of the invention such impact surface is sloped both horizontally and vertically, and is oriented generally transversely to the particle ejection direction. Due to this sloped orientation of the impact surface, the impact force of a solid particle striking it is substantially maximized. The specially oriented breaker member may be positioned in the processor housing generally below the rotor assemblies, generally above the rotor assemblies, or this type of breaker member may be positioned generally above and generally below the rotor assemblies.
In representatively illustrated methods of using it a processor embodying one or more principles of the present invention may be operated to (1) pregrind clinkers in a cement production process, (2) reduce limestone for use in flue gas de-sulfurization, (3) reduce coal for use in coal-fired utilities or burner applications, or (4) reduce fly ash to produce a very fine cement additive. In carrying out these representatively illustrative methods a solids reduction processor embodying one or more principles of the present invention may be utilized (1) by itself, (2) in series with a conventional ball mill, or (3) in series with another, substantially identical solids reduction processor.
With initial reference to
Extending through the interior of the main housing 12, between the top inlet opening 24 and the bottom outlet opening 36, are a pair of rotor assemblies 38 which are disposed in a laterally spaced relationship for rotation about vertically aligned horizontal axes 40 extending transversely through the opposite end walls 14,16 of the main housing 12. With additional reference now to
Turning now to
During operation of the processor 10, the rotating hammer members 58 impact and at least partially pulverize solid material dropped into the housing inlet opening 24, and additionally throw the solid material against other interior portions of the processor 10, as later described herein, to further pulverize the solid material. As shown in
According to one aspect of the present invention, the available rotational arc of each hammer member 58 relative to its associated supporting disc pair 56,56 is limited, preferably to an angle of approximately 20 degrees, by a unique cooperation of the outwardly projecting outer end portion 62 of the hammer member 58 and the peripheries 56a of its supporting disc pair 56,56. Specifically, as may be best seen in
When the hammer members 58 are normally spinning about their shaft axes 40, they are generally radially oriented relative to the shafts. Due to the pivotal mounting of the hammer members 58, when any of the hammer members 58 strike a larger or harder than normal incoming solid material object, it rotationally deflects relative to its disc support structure to avoid breaking or damaging the hammer member/disc connection area. Such deflection can occur in rotationally opposite directions 66,68 shown in
Other aspects of the present invention advantageously reduce internal abrasion wear within the processor 10, thereby desirably lengthening the operational life of its rotor assemblies 38. For example, the previously mentioned axial alignment of the circumferentially spaced hammer member sets on the two rotor assemblies 38 reduces wear on the side surfaces of the support discs 56 and other radially inner portions of the rotor assemblies 38. Specifically, because these hammer member sets on the two rotor assemblies are axially aligned with one another, when an axially extending row of hammer members 58 on one rotor assembly 38 is swung into facing relationship with the axially extending row of hammer members 58 on the other rotor assembly 38, a solid object striking and being thrown radially outwardly from the outer end portion 62 of a given hammer member 58 in one row thereof strikes the facing outer end portion 62 of a hammer member 58 in the other row instead of being thrown between a disc pair of the other row and abrading such disc pair or the shaft-based connecting structure therebetween.
Furthering this abrasion wear reduction aspect of the present invention is a unique rotary assembly construction which will now be described in conjunction with
Turning now to
The discs 56 are maintained in their indicated axially spaced apart orientation on the shaft 42 by a series of annular spacer members 76 coaxially and slidably telescoped onto the shaft 42 in an interdigitated relationship with the discs 56. The discs 42 and the spacers 76 are captively retained on the shaft 42 by annular, diametrically split end plates 78 having radially inner edge portions received in the annular shaft grooves 72, the halves of each end plate 78 being removably secured to the axially outermost discs 45 by, for example, bolts 80.
This modular construction of the rotor assemblies 38 permits ready removal and replacement of some or all of the discs 56 on a rotor assembly 38, when they become operationally abraded, without having to scrap the entire rotor assembly. Such removal of the discs 56 (with or without the hammer members 58 thereon) may be accomplished simply by removing the end plates 78 to thereby permit the discs 56 and spacers 76 to be axially slid off the shaft 42. New discs 56 and/or spacers 76 may then be re-installed on the shaft 42 and again locked in place thereon by re-installing the split annular end plates 78 on the shaft 42. It should be noted that the annular spacer members 78 not only maintain the desired axial spacing between adjacent pairs of the discs 56, but also shield the axial portion of the shaft 42 disposed within the processor housing 12 from operational abrasion wear.
Returning now to
Breaker bars 82, whose top sides are horizontally oriented, are positioned in a row along an interior bottom side portion of the main housing 12 beneath the rotor assemblies 38 to be impacted on their horizontal top sides by solid materials thrown downwardly from the spinning rotor assemblies. Breaker bars 84 are positioned on the inner sides of the vertical housing side walls 18,20 somewhat above the levels of the bottom sides of the rotor assemblies 38, and the breaker bars 86 are positioned above the rotor assemblies 38 on the inner side of the top housing wall 22 adjacent opposite sides of the inlet opening 24. According to a further aspect of the present invention, the breaker bars 84,86 respectively have bottom impact surfaces 84a,86a which are horizontally and vertically sloped as viewed in
Specifically, the impact surfaces 84a are sloped downwardly and horizontally away from the rotor assemblies 38 so that solid material thrown outwardly from the spinning rotor assemblies 38 generally parallel to lines 88 tangent to the circles through which the outer hammer member end portions 62 are rotationally driven strike the impact surfaces 84a generally perpendicularly thereto (as opposed to striking them at a glancing angle if the impact surfaces 84a were vertically oriented) to substantially increase the solid material pulverization action of the breaker bars 84. In a similar manner the impact surfaces 86a are sloped downwardly and horizontally toward the rotor assemblies 38 so that solid material thrown upwardly from the spinning rotor assemblies 38 generally parallel to lines 90 tangent to the circles through which the outer hammer member end portions 62 are rotationally driven strike the impact surfaces 86a generally perpendicularly thereto (as opposed to striking them at a glancing angle if the impact surfaces 86a were horizontally oriented) to substantially increase the solid material pulverization action of the breaker bars 86. As can be seen, the unique use of the specially configured and positioned breaker structures 84,86 desirably increases the overall solid material pulverization efficiency of the representatively illustrated reduction processor 10.
In the representatively illustrated angular orientations of the upper breaker members 86 their side surfaces 86a are, as discussed above, generally transversely impacted by solid material thrown off the left and right rotor assemblies 38 along the tangent lines 90. Additionally, as viewed in
As can be seen from the foregoing, the various unique features incorporated in the representatively illustrated solids reduction processor 10 of the present invention provide it with enhanced abrasion wear resistance, improved solid material pulverization efficiency, and rotor assembly maintenance cost reduction.
As schematically depicted in
In the method 96 schematically depicted in
In the method 100 schematically depicted in
The foregoing detailed description is to be clearly understood as being given by way of illustration and example only, the spirit and scope of the present invention being limited solely by the appended claims.
This application claims the benefit of the filing date of U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 60/691,854 filed on Jun. 17, 2005 and entitled “SOLIDS REDUCTION PROCESSOR”, such provisional application being hereby incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60691854 | Jun 2005 | US |