The invention relates to a tubular mill having a mill tube which is mounted so as to be rotatable about the longitudinal axis and whose shell is composed of a plurality of partial lengths.
Tubular mills serve to comminute or mill material to be milled, said material being transported in the rotating mill tube from the input end for the material to be milled to the discharge end for the milled material, generally using mill air or a drying gas, and in the process is usually milled using milling bodies such as, for example, steel balls, which are located in the mill tube so that instead of tubular mills, terms such as ball mills, air stream mills etc. are used. In the case of tubular mills which are suitable for large throughput rates, the mill tube has a correspondingly large length and a large diameter, and it is therefore subject to the risk of sagging and of other deformations.
In order to reduce this risk, until now the mill tube in tubular mills was previously welded together from a plurality of thick-walled cylindrical partial lengths, which made the entire tubular mill very heavy. This was the case both when the mill tube is rotatably mounted on its circumference, specifically supported on sliding bearing shells which are arranged distributed around the underside of the mill tube shell, and particularly when the mill tube is mounted at both ends in what are referred to as neck collar journal bearings because with this solution the mill tube has to be made particularly rigid and therefore embodied with thick walls. In addition, the deformation of thick-walled sheet steel to form cylindrical tubular lengths or partial lengths constitutes a costly fabrication process which has an adverse effect on the cost of such tubular mills.
The invention is based on the object of providing a tubular mill which is easy and inexpensive to manufacture.
This object is achieved according to the invention with a tubular mill having the features of claim 1. Advantageous developments of the invention are specified in the subclaims.
Firstly, a characteristic of the tubular mill according to the invention is that the mill tube has a comparatively extremely thin-walled sheet-metal shell compared to previously known tubular mills, wherein a thickness of the sheet-metal wall of, for example, 20 mm is, as explained in more detail further below, considered to be thin-walled. This sheet-metal shell is not welded together in one piece, and not welded together from cylindrical partial lengths either, but rather is screwed together from prefabricated sheet-metal segments and partial lengths.
According to one particular feature of the invention, all the partial lengths are screwed together from segments which are distributed around the circumference and are made of the thin-walled sheet-metal material, which is possible by virtue of the fact that rigid flanges are integrally formed onto the abutting sides of adjacent segments of, in each case, one partial length, for example by welding on or, more easily, by bending edges of the sheet-metal, as a result of which the flanges, which come to be positioned in the longitudinal direction of the mill tube, of adjacent sheet-metal segments are screwed to one another to form a partial length. These flange connections which come to be positioned in the longitudinal direction of the mill tube make the thin-walled sheet-metal shell sufficiently flexurally strong.
According to the invention, rigid flanges are also in turn integrally formed onto the two other sides, positioned opposite one another, of the sheet-metal segments, for example by welding on or, more simply, by bending the edges of the sheet-metal, and the flanges, each fitted together to form a flange ring, of adjacent partial lengths are then clamped to one another by means of clamping elements such as flange screws to form the complete, thin-walled, but still deformation-resistant sheet-metal shell.
Taking initially flat, rectangular sheet-metal segments as a basis, the side flanges which are necessary for assembly can therefore be manufactured by folding in each case all four segment edges, in which case folding is to be understood as meaning bending over of the edges of the sheet metal through approximately 90°.
The prefabricated sheet-metal segments can, according to a further feature of the invention, have at least one slight bend which extends in the longitudinal direction of the mill tube and is also manufactured by means of a bending process, as a result of which bend the segments are given a somewhat gable-roof-shaped configuration, as a result of which the sheet-metal segments which are positioned one against the other and are distributed around the circumference of a partial length approximate to a circular shape when viewed from the front end, and as a result of which the rigidity of the sheet-metal segments which are per se thin-walled is also increased. In addition, before the prefabricated sheet-metal segments are processed such as by being bent etc., they can also be provided with through bores for later attachment of armored elements to the inner wall of the screwed-together tubular mill shell and to the flange hole bores.
The advantages of the tubular mill shell according to the invention and its manufacture are significant. In contrast to complete mill tubes or partial lengths of tubes with a large diameter, the sheet-metal segments are easy to transport, specifically also with normal trucks. The sheet-metal segments can be replaced on an individual basis. In addition, one or more of the sheet-metal segments can serve at the same time as a manhole for the tubular mill at a desired location on the tube shell.
The thinness of the walls of the tubular mill shell according to the invention or of the partial lengths and sheet-metal segments is explained by means of the following numerical example:
In the previously known tubular mills, the wall thickness of the mill tube was, as a rule of thumb, approximately 1/100 of the diameter of the mill tube, that is to say as an example a mill tube with a diameter of 4,200 mm would have a wall thickness of the mill tube of approximately 42 mm. In contrast, the tubular mill according to the invention has a wall thickness of the mill tube which is less than half of this, for example 20 mm, i.e. a mill tube wall thickness< 1/200 of the diameter of the mill tube.
According to a further feature of the invention, the front side flanges of the sheet-metal segments can have thicker walls than the thin-walled sheet-metal segments if said flanges are not manufactured by folding but rather by welding. In order to increase further the rigidity of the fitted-together tubular mill shell, the flange rings of adjacent partial lengths are screwed to one another and/or also clamped to one another in such a way that, when viewed in the longitudinal direction of the mill tube, the end flange of the one partial length is clamped in each case to the starting flange of the next but one partial length by means of tensioning or clamping elements which are distributed around the outer circumference of the next partial length. In this context, the tensioning or clamping elements which are distributed around the outer circumference of the mill tube shell can be tie rods and/or preferably cables by means of which the thin walled partial lengths can also be reciprocally clamped so that they can take up the acting forces and loads. These additional tensioning elements or cables can be arranged parallel and/or also diagonal to the longitudinal axis of the tube.
On one of the locations on the flange ring, a crown gear for the rotary drive for the tubular mill can be attached. In addition, the running rings of the tubular mill can also be mounted on the rigid flange rings so that the mill tube then does not have to be mounted at both ends in neck collar journal bearings but rather is mounted on the circumference of the tube shell. Further stiffening of the thin-walled and lightweight mill tube according to the invention can also be achieved by armoring which is clamped to its inner wall and interacts with the milling bodies, in particular steel balls of the tubular mill.
The invention and its further features and advantages are explained in more detail below by means of exemplary embodiments which are illustrated schematically in the drawing, in which:
The mill tube of the tubular mill according to the invention is, according to the exemplary embodiment in
All the partial lengths 10 to 13 etc. are screwed together from prefabricated, thin-walled, sheet-metal segments distributed around the circumference in
By folding the edges, positioned opposite one another, of the segments 15 at the lines 17 and 18 which are indicated by dashes, rigid flanges 19 and 20 are integrally formed onto the abutting sides of adjacent segments by bending over the sheet metal through not quite 90°, said flanges 19 and 20 having been previously provided with the flange bores 21, as is apparent from
In addition, from
At any rate, from
In the exemplary embodiment in
All the flange rings are advantageously centered on the surfaces which are clamped one against the other.
In
From the perspective view in
In the tubular mill according to the invention, further stiffening of the thin-walled mill tube can also be carried out by clamping armoring to the inner wall of the mill tube, which armoring interacts with the mill bodies such as, for example, steel balls of the tubular mill.
At any rate, the tubular mill which is constructed according to the invention is very lightweight and easy and inexpensive to manufacture in comparison.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2006 019 473.7 | Apr 2005 | DE | national |
10 2006 013 569.5 | Mar 2006 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2006/003601 | 4/20/2006 | WO | 00 | 10/25/2007 |