SYSTEM AND METHOD FOR COMMINUTING MATERIALS
20230302459 · 2023-09-28
Inventors
Cpc classification
B02C15/003
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B02C13/28
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B02C15/06
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B02C13/28
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B02C13/282
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B02C15/06
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B02C15/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
There is provided an apparatus and method for comminuting a material. The apparatus may comprise a chamber and an inner surface with a plurality of protrusions, and a hammer positioned within said chamber comprising an outer surface having a plurality of second protrusions configured to engage with the first protrusions. The outer and inner surfaces may be separated by a gap distance which defines a comminution zone. The anvil may be rotated to cause a material to be comminuted as the material passes through the comminution zone.
Claims
1. An apparatus for comminuting a material, the apparatus comprising: an anvil comprising a chamber and an inner surface comprising a plurality of anvil protrusions, said anvil configured to rotate about an anvil axis; a hammer positioned within said chamber, said hammer comprising an outer surface comprising a plurality of hammer protrusions configured to engage with said plurality of anvil protrusions, said outer surface and said inner surface separated by a gap distance to define a comminution zone, and said hammer configured to rotate about a hammer axis parallel to said anvil axis and radially offset from said anvil axis; wherein said apparatus is configured to receive said material in said chamber, and wherein said anvil and said hammer are configured to comminute said material as said material travels through said comminution zone.
2. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein at least some of the material that has travelled through said comminution zone is returned to the comminution zone without introducing additional feed material to said chamber.
3. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the hammer is substantially cylindrical and comprises a plurality of axial sections arranged along said hammer axis.
4. The apparatus of claim 3, wherein at least one of said axial sections has a first radius and at least one of said axial sections has a second radius different from said first radius.
5. The apparatus of claim 4, wherein said gap distance includes a plurality of gap distances, each of said gap distances corresponding to a distance between an outer surface of a respective axial section and said inner surface of said chamber.
6. The apparatus of claim 3, wherein at least a first of said axial sections has a first outer surface geometry and at least a second of said axial sections has a second outer surface geometry different from said first outer surface geometry.
7. The apparatus of claim 3, wherein said plurality of axial sections are driven by a central shaft.
8. The apparatus of claim 3, wherein said axial sections are at least partially filled with solids and/or fluids.
9. The apparatus of claim 1, further comprising a chute for feeding said material into said chamber, wherein said chute includes one or more liners comprising ridges and/or flutes configured to guide said material.
10. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein said material comprises a mixture of solid material to be comminuted and liquid.
11. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein said anvil is configured to rotate at a speed of rotation sufficient to cause comminuted material to return to said comminution zone.
12. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein said hammer includes one or more hammer panels containing said hammer protrusions.
13. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein said anvil includes one or more anvil panels containing said anvil protrusions.
14. The apparatus of claim 12, wherein said hammer panels are removable.
15. The apparatus of claim 13, wherein said anvil panels are removable.
16. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein rotation of said hammer is driven at least in part by one or more of said anvil protrusions engaging with one or more of said hammer protrusions.
17. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein at least one of said hammer and said anvil comprises radially extending feed vanes arranged helically to drive said material towards said comminution zone.
18. A method of comminuting a material, the method comprising: transporting said material to a chamber of an anvil, said chamber including an inner surface having a plurality of anvil protrusions; rotating said anvil about an anvil axis; rotating a hammer positioned within said chamber about a hammer axis parallel to said anvil axis and axially spaced apart from said anvil axis, said hammer comprising an outer surface having a plurality of hammer protrusions configured to engage with said plurality of anvil protrusions, wherein said outer surface and said inner surface are separated by a gap distance to define a comminution zone; comminuting said material as said material travels through said comminution zone.
19. The method of claim 18, further comprising returning at least some of said material that has passed through said comminution zone to said comminution zone without introducing additional feed material to said chamber.
20. The method of claim 18, further comprising segmenting said hammer into a plurality of axial sections arranged along said hammer axis.
21. The method of claim 20, wherein at least one of said axial sections has a first radius and at least one of said axial sections has a second radius different from said first radius.
22. The method of claim 20, wherein at least one of said axial sections has a first outer surface geometry and at least one of said axial sections has a second outer surface geometry different from said first outer surface geometry.
23. The method of claim 18, further comprising guiding said material through said chamber via one or more liners comprising ridges and/or flutes.
24. The method of claim 18, comprising rotating said anvil at a speed of rotation sufficient to cause comminuted material to return to said comminution zone.
25. The method of claim 18, wherein said anvil protrusions are provided on one or more removable anvil panels.
26. The method of claim 18, wherein said hammer protrusions are provided on one or more removable hammer panels.
27. The method of claim 18, further comprising: transporting said comminuted material to a second chamber of a second anvil, said second chamber including an inner surface having a plurality of anvil protrusions; rotating said second anvil about a second anvil axis; rotating a second hammer positioned within said second chamber about a second hammer axis parallel to said second anvil axis and axially spaced apart from said second anvil axis, said second hammer comprising an outer surface having a plurality of hammer protrusions configured to engage with said plurality of anvil protrusions, wherein said outer surface and said inner surface are separated by a gap distance to define a second comminution zone; further comminuting said comminuted material as said material travels through said second comminution zone
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0060] In this disclosure, various aspects of a monoroll grinding mill (MRGM) 20 will be described. Specific details will be set forth in order to provide a thorough understanding of the disclosure. In the specification and drawings, well-known features may be omitted or simplified in order not to obscure the disclosed features. Repeated usage of the phrase “in one embodiment” or “in one example” does not necessarily refer to the same embodiment or example.
[0061] For ease in description, an axes system 10 is shown which generally comprises a vertical axis 12, an anvil radial axis 14 extending radially outward from the center of the anvil (outer) ring 22, a hammer radial axis 16 extending radially outward from the center of the hammer (inner) ring 28, and a longitudinal axis 18. Each of the hammer and the anvil may be right cylinders, oblique cylinders, or combinations thereof with other geometric shapes. The longitudinal axis 18 is substantially parallel to the axes 42 of rotation of the shell 22, and the axes 43 of rotation of the hammer 28. These axes and directions are included to ease in description of the disclosure and are not intended to limit the disclosure to any orientation.
[0062] The term “material” is used herein to indicate rock, ore, mineral matter of variable composition, and equivalents. These may be consolidated or unconsolidated, assembled in masses or considerable quantities, as by the action of heat or water and equivalent materials. The material (for example rock) may be unconsolidated, such as a sand, clay, or mud, or consolidated, such as granite, limestone, or coal. While not normally defined as rock, equivalent materials such as hardened concrete may also be used in the disclosed mill and are included in the term “material”.
[0063]
[0064] In some embodiments, hammer 28 may be provided with an external pressure device configured to press the hammer 28 against the inner surface of the anvil 22. One such external pressure system is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 8,955,778 filed on Mar. 15, 2012 incorporated herein by reference. In some embodiments, hammer 28 might not be provided with an external pressure device configured to press hammer 28 against the inner surface of anvil 22.
[0065] The anvil 22 in one example rotates about the anvil longitudinal axis 42. The hammer 28 in one form comprising a substantially cylindrical outer surface 34 rolls within the anvil 22 and presses down upon the material to be comminuted and may comprise ridges configured to longitudinally move material during rotation. In one example, the hammer 28 is mounted to a shaft 30 to rotate about a longitudinal axis 43 substantially parallel to and offset from the axis 42 of the anvil 22. The outer surface 34 of the hammer 28 and/or inner surface 51 of the anvil 22 may, in some embodiments, have a plurality of protruding elements or ridges such as the protruding elements 32 (as depicted, for example, in
[0066] During the process of comminuting, material 38 is inserted into the chamber 24 and comminuted between the outer surface 34 of the hammer 28 and the inner surface 51 of the anvil 22. A fluid (for example, air, water, or the like) may also be added to aid in transport (e.g. by differential transport based on size) of the material 38 longitudinally 18 down the anvil 22 and aid in comminution. In some embodiments, retaining shields 40 are positioned at the anvil outer edges to contain material before and during comminution and to allow exiting of material when the material is adequately comminuted. In some embodiments, retaining shields may be conical in shape, as depicted in
[0067] As depicted, in some embodiments there may be a longitudinal gap 36 between the inner end surface of the anvil 22 or retaining shield 40 and the end of the hammer 28. Thus, the feeding point 56 of the chute 58 may be longitudinally 18 inward from the shield 40 to form an overlap distance 48 such that material 38 inserted is less likely to be deposited in the gap 36. Alternatively, in some embodiments, retaining shield 40 may be fitted with one or more liners which include ridges and/or flutes configured to transport and/or cascade the feed material into comminution zones.
[0068] In some embodiments, one or more of the density, size, shape, and mass of the hammer 28 may be specifically configured to maximize comminution based on the anvil 22 configuration, and material 38 to be comminuted. The mass and density of the hammer 28 may be changed by providing a void or voids within the hammer 28. These voids may contain other materials such as water or other liquids, lead shot, sand, balls or other solids.
[0069] In
[0070] In one example, the anvil 22 may be supported by bearing pads 26 or wheels/tires. In some embodiments, bearing pads 26 may be hydrodynamic. Bearing pads 26 may be configured to exert lifting/supporting/rotational force on the outer surface 66 of the anvil 22. An example is shown in
[0071] In another example, a motor may alternatively or cooperatively drive (rotate) the hammer 28 by way of a gearing system, or other apparatus such as a belt, or chain drive.
[0072] In some embodiments, the hammer 28 may be pressed against the anvil 22 by additional force, such as by inserting fluids (e.g. water) or other solids (e.g. metals) into the hollow hammer 28.
[0073] Some embodiments may reduce the circumference of the hammer 28, which may increase compression in the fracture zone 78 where a larger circumference would more evenly distribute this pressure. By utilizing the weight of the hammer 28 to comminute material 38 with no external pressure/drive system, power consumption directed toward forcing the hammer 28 against the anvil 22 can be decreased relative to prior art embodiments. This configuration in one example operates as a constant-pressure system, rather than constant pressure system known with a hydraulic or other compression system. In this configuration, when material 38 is not comminuted due to hardness, volume, size, or a combination thereof, the gap 49 between the outer surface 34 of the hammer 28 and the inner surface 51 of the anvil 22 will increase, rather than jamming or damaging the MRGM 20 as is common in constant gap systems. Where the hammer 28 is allowed to float on the material 38 above the inner surface 51 of the anvil 22 in a constant pressure system increases efficiency of the apparatus in many applications.
[0074] In some embodiments, the hammer 28 has an outer diameter 52 sized between 40% and 80% of the inner diameter 50 of the anvil 22. In one example the hammer 28 has an outer diameter 52 0.2 (20%) of the inner diameter 50 of the anvil 22. In another example, the ratio between outer diameter 52 of hammer 28 and inner diameter 50 of the anvil 22 is between 0.65 and 0.7. This ratio represents a trade-off between (a) a larger hammer 28 to improve the mechanical crushing advantage and longer wear life of the anvil 22 to comminute material, and (b) a smaller anvil 22 which can be configured to comminute lighter throughput and be able to crush larger material due to the clearance 54 at the feeding point 56 as shown in the top of
[0075] In one example, the diameter 52 of the hammer 28 is no less than 0.2 of the inner diameter 50 of the anvil 22, which may ensure or increase the likelihood that that pressure between the hammer 28 and the anvil 22 are adequate for breakage (comminution) of the material.
[0076] In some embodiments, the relative size of the hammer and anvil roll may be selected to provide an angle between the hammer and anvil which is 14 degrees or less (as depicted, for example, in
[0077] As depicted in
[0078] This torque and associated inefficiency can be further reduced where the center 43 of the hammer 28 is laterally much closer to the longitudinal center 42 of the anvil 22 and the rotational speed of the anvil 22 is set such that the material 38 might not build up at any one longitudinal location. In such an arrangement, the speed of the anvil 22 in cooperation with the depth of the protruding elements 33 on the anvil 22, size/mass/density of the material 38, inner diameter 50 of the anvil 22 may be coordinated such that the material 38 is centrifugally forced radially toward the anvil 22 and in each rotation of the anvil 22, the material 38 circles the hammer 28 and is once again presented to be broken as the hammer 28 and anvil 22 rotate together. In some embodiments, selection of appropriate anvil 22 speed, protruding elements 33, size/mass/density of material 38, and inner diameter 50 may ensure that with each rotation of anvil 22, material 38 is returned back over the roll to the “feed side”, and will therefore experience repeated breakage events as the anvil 22 rotates. This may represent a significant advantage over other known systems, which may only produce one breakage event (rather than repeated breakage events for material 38, which may cause increased fragmentation and reduction in particle size with each subsequent breakage event).
[0079] Combined with longitudinal 18 movement of the material 38, this rotation and passing of the material circumferentially around the hammer 28 may results in a helical transport 82 of the material (as shown in
[0080] During comminution, rock or other material to be comminuted is fed into the MRGM 20 from a chute 58 or by other means that guides the material 38 into the chamber 24. The material then passes between the anvil 22 and the hammer 28. Rotation of the anvil 22 conveys the material 38, by rotation and gravity to a comminution gap 49 between the anvil 22 and the hammer 28, and the hammer 28 applies pressure to the material 38. This action comminutes the material 38 within the anvil 22 by way of compressive fracturing of the material 38 (e.g. rock). In some embodiments, the feed chute 58 penetrates the anvil shield. In some embodiments, the anvil shield may be flat or conical and may be fitted with ridges and/or protrusions which may launch material 38 into the main body of the anvil shell, where the material 38 can then be captured within comminution gap 49 as the hammer 28 and anvil 22 rotate together.
[0081] In one example, the material 38 may then pass through a grate or opening or equivalent exit 96 out of the MRGM 20 to be used in other processes. In other example embodiments, the material 38 may be further comminuted by the rotating action of the anvil 22 and hammer 28 through multiple rotations of anvil 22. In in one example, a retaining shield 40 forms a ring attached to the anvil 22 with a radially inner edge 46. The retaining shield 40 in one example rotates with the anvil 22 and as the material 38 passes over the inner edge 46 of the shield 40, the material 38 exits the mill 20. This inner edge 46 may also be configured to maintain the hammer 28 within the anvil 22. The retaining shield 40 may be positioned on either or both longitudinal end(s) of the anvil 22. In some embodiments, retaining shield 40 includes ports and/or openings. In some embodiments, the ports and/or openings may be of varying sizes and/or have varying spacing from the edge of anvil 22, so as to allow comminuted material 38 to exit MRGM 20.
[0082] In one example, the textured surfaces 62 of the anvil 22 and/or textured surfaces 63 of the hammer 28 (as shown by way of simplified example in
[0083] In one example as shown by way of example in
[0084] During initial startup of the MRGM 20, an initial buildup of material 38 is anticipated at a feed end 88. This may result in tilting of the hammer 28 (as shown in
[0085] In one example, tilting may be temporary, and as the material 38 moves down the MRGM 20 towards the ejection port 96, the system may become longitudinally balanced. In other example embodiments, the MRGM is configured to maintain such a tilt, so as to improve efficient movement of material 38 from the chute 58 to the ejection port 96.
[0086] In some embodiments, hammer 28 is vertically positioned by gravity to achieve the desired gap 49 between anvil 22 and hammer 28. In some embodiments, hammer 28 may be segmented or divided into multiple portions or “slices” which are substantially perpendicular to the longitudinal axis of rotation (as depicted in
[0087] In some embodiments, roll segments may be filled with similar materials. In some embodiments, roll segments may be filled with different materials. Roll segments may include similar or distinct surface textures and profiles. Roll segments may be filled with similar or different materials to provide similar or variable forces for each segment. Roll segments may be configured to shift vertically and/or horizontally relative to adjacent segments so as to provide a sequence of minimum gap distances between hammer 28 and anvil 22.
[0088] In one example, material 38 is contained in the chamber 24 by a shield 40 on one or both longitudinal ends of the MRGM 20. In one example the feed chute 58 extend longitudinally inward of the shield 40 into chamber 24 to a discharge end 90. The shield(s) 40 may withhold the material from escaping the mill 20 at undesired positions during comminution.
[0089] In one example, once the material 38 is crushed and rotates past the position 76 of minimum gap 49 between the anvil 22 and the hammer 28 a desired number of times (as shown in
[0090]
[0091] Additionally, some embodiments may allow material 38 to re-enter the compression fracture zone 78 (as shown in
[0092] In one example, the hammer 28 may have a first diameter at a first (feed) end, and a second diameter at other longitudinal positions to control longitudinal 18 movement of material 38 along the mill 20. In one example, the hammer 28 may be tapered along the longitudinal length to accomplish the aforementioned longitudinal positioning. In addition, the protrusions on the hammer 28, and on the anvil may be configured to maximize the benefits of this geometry.
[0093] In one example, the core 30 of the hammer 28 (or individual segments thereof) may be made of a different material than the outer surface 31. For example, the core 30 may be made of lead, while the outer surface may be made of steel, which may maximize one or more of density, comminution efficiency, and life of the hammer 28.
[0094] In one example, the ratio of the protrusions on the hammer 28 may be configured to maximize efficiency. In the example shown in
[0095] In some embodiments, one or both of the anvil 22 and hammer 28 may have alternating ridges 84 and/or grooves 86 as shown in
[0096] During comminution, as the anvil 22 and hammer 28 rotate, the material 38 is compressed between the anvil 22 and hammer 28 as the gap 49 between the anvil 22 and hammer 28 decreases into the compression zone 78. As depicted in the embodiment of
[0097] In one embodiment as shown in
[0098] One significant disadvantage of conventional high pressure grinding roll (HPGR) and other crushing mills is that material tends to get jammed between the shield and one or both rollers. In many designs, the shield is static, and does not rotate with the anvil 22, further causing material to jam between the shield and the other components. Some embodiments may at least partially alleviate this issue by providing a shield 40 which may be attached to the anvil 22 either permanently or removably and rotates therewith. Thus, the shield(s) 40 will generally hold material 38 within the chamber 24, and any material that would lie against the shield 40 in the compression zone 78, will be compressed therein.
[0099] In some embodiments, MRGM 20 using a hammer with no external pressure device may substantially reduce capital cost, complexity and operating costs over existing mill designs. Further, the disclosed free-floating hammer in such an arrangement may also substantially reduce capital cost, complexity and operating costs. In addition, MGRM 20 may be used in existing ball and rod mills with relatively minor configuration changes and adaptations thereto.
[0100] One objective of some embodiments is to create a focused and efficient comminution zone to allow thin ore bed breakage for maximum efficiency without requiring external force augmentation.
[0101] Another objective of some embodiments is to improve the throughput of existing comminution mills of the same shell (anvil) size. In some embodiments, MRGM 20 may have as much as twice the throughput of a similarly-sized existing comminution mill.
[0102] Another objective of some embodiments is to achieve a reduced mill retention time relative to existing comminution mill technology.
[0103] Another objective of some embodiments is to provide a comminution mill which can accept larger ore particle sizes. In some embodiments, ore sizes may be upwards of 60 mm, which may represent a substantial increase relative to the existing 12 mm upper particle size for conventional ball mill technology at a moderate ore hardness of Axb=37.5.
[0104] Another objective of some embodiments is to provide mill wear liner replacement without removing hammer 28 from the anvil 22. This may be accomplished by providing the surface 34 of the hammer 28 with removable panels 100 (as shown in
[0105] Another objective of some embodiments is to reduce grinding media and liner wear consumption compared with the ball or rod mill. In some embodiments, as much as an 80% reduction in wear may be achieved by using a single hammer 28 instead of multiple balls/rods which impact each other and wear each other during comminution.
[0106] Another objective of some embodiments is to improve grinding efficiency improvement compared with the existing ball mill technology. In some embodiments, efficiency may be more than doubled. The traditional metric for efficiency is kWh/ton (or “specific energy”—energy per ton of ore processed) to effect the same change in particle size distribution from feed to product size. Another metric is surface area liberation per ton of ore processed. In some embodiments, energy consumption relative to existing systems may be reduced by not having to rotate a “kidney” shaped mass as far from the center line of the mill (thereby requiring less torque for the same mass, as the moment arm is shorter).
[0107] Some embodiments provide guide vanes or ridges 84 to move material 38 longitudinally along the mill length from the feed end 88 to the discharge end 90. The vanes 84 may be configured to control the number of passes under the hammer roll from the feed end to the charge end, thereby enabling finer control of product fineness.
[0108] In some embodiments, material transport and dispersion may be greatly impacted by controlling the thickness of the bed of particles being broken, so as to maintain thinness (e.g. less than 5 particles deep) and “unconfined” conditions (e.g. void spaces remaining available around the material, so that it is not packed too tightly). Some embodiments of MRGM 20 may allow for the thickness of the bed of particles to be maintained within a desired range, and to avoid packing particles too tightly. For example, some existing designs may be thin and unconfined, but are nevertheless random and inefficient in terms of ensuring breakage, and other existing designs may be thick beds with confined particle beds
[0109] Another objective of some embodiments is to provide material transport and localized dispersion within the mill. In some embodiments, transport and/or localized dispersion may be enhanced through the use of air knives, water injection, and the like. In some embodiments, MRGM 20 may be operated in a “wet mode” or a “dry mode”. In a dry mode of operation, feed material is between 80% to 100% by mass of solids, and up to 20% liquid (whether water, other additives, or other liquids). In a wet mode of operation, the feed material may be a mixture of rock and water and/or other liquids containing 10% to 80% solids by mass.
[0110] In some embodiments, MRGM 20 may provide an improvement in capacity relative to existing ball mill designs of the same size.
[0111] The MRGM 20 disclosed herein is configured to internally distribute and crush material 38 (ore) between the hammer 28 and the anvil 22.
[0112] Some embodiments may improve throughput (in tons per hour) relative to existing ball mill designs.
[0113] Some embodiments may be configured to rotate at or above 80% of critical speed to ensure that material 38 that has passed beneath hammer 28 can be cascaded back up and over hammer 28 to be broken additional times. It will be appreciated that the actual speed may depend on the liner surface design and on the material being broken, as well as possible the presence and amount of water being added to MRGM 20. In some embodiments, rotation may occur at approximately 38 rpm within the 20-40 rpm range of an existing variable speed motor. In some embodiments, the actual rotational speed may be a function of the diameter of the shell of the MRGM 20.
[0114] As noted above, the presence of liquids mixed with feed material may affect the suitable range of rotational speeds for anvil 22. For example, in a wet mode, some embodiments of MRGM 20 may be capable of operating at any rotational speed while nevertheless maintaining sufficient centripetal or centrifugal force on material 38 so as to ensure particles remain “pinned” to the anvil during a rotation (thereby ensuring particles may be subjected to successive comminution cycles). In some embodiments, MRGM 20 may operate at between 60%-100% of the critical speed when in a dry mode. In some embodiments, liner geometry and/or vanes and other features of the inner anvil surface and outer hammer surface may contribute to guiding feed materials up and over the hammer roll. In some embodiments, this may allow for rotation of anvil 22 at below critical speeds (which may reduce energy consumption).
[0115] Some embodiments may be configured to operate using a 30 hp motor, and may have a power demand of 18 hp at 2 tph, which may represent an improvement in power consumption relative to existing comminution mill designs.
[0116] In some embodiments, MRGM 20 may be configured to facilitate the replacement of worn or damaged hammer panels 98 and/or anvil panels 100. In one example, as shown, these panels 98/100 may be removed and replaced as needed due to wear, changes in material being comminuted, changes in panel design, etc. In some embodiments, the panels 98 and/or 100 may be replaced without removing the hammer 28 from the anvil 22.
[0117] In some embodiments, MRGM 20 may improve energy efficiency relative to existing ball mills as measured by power draw at a specified throughput and size reduction or energy consumption as a function of particle surface area.
[0118] One significant advantage of some embodiments is that an existing ball mill in service may be retrofitted to an MRGM 20 as disclosed herein by, for example, removing the balls and inserting a roller hammer 28. In some embodiments, shields 40 of an existing ball mill may be modified and/or replaced to conform to new design parameters. Anvil panels 100 may be installed into existing ball mills and optionally later removed to revert the mill to a functioning ball mill, if desired. In a shell supported ball mill, shell supports may be upgraded so as to support the additional mass of hammer 28. In a trunnion supported mill, a discharge shield may require modification (see
[0119]
[0120] Beyond the moment arm advantage, some embodiments of MRGM may have additional benefits. For example, MRGM 20 may exert much greater pressure on the material 38 than prior known mills. In some embodiments, MGRM 20 may have about 50% more total crushing mass than a ball mill, on a much smaller point rock breakage zone.
[0121] Some embodiments of MRGM 20 may substantially eliminate all ball mill ball-to-ball shear losses that are present between every two balls in contact 102 of
[0122] In some embodiments, when operated in dry mode, MRGM 20 may reduce iron hydroxide contamination on sulfide mineral surfaces. In some embodiments, this may yield an increase in sulfide mineral recovery in downstream flotation by up to 2%.
[0123] In some embodiments, MRGM 20 comprises a hammer roller 28 surface geometry which includes radially extending gear teeth 106/108 along some or all of the hammer length. Gear teeth 106/108 may include the ridges 84 described herein. In some embodiments, gear teeth 106/108 may include separate gear teeth 106 near the feed end 88 of the roller 28 and/or gear teeth 108 on the discharge end 90. In some embodiments, teeth 106/108 may be configured to mesh with corresponding mating radially extending teeth 110/112 and/or other surface features designed on the anvil's inner surface 51. In some embodiments, MRGM 20 comprises two main structural components as shown in cutaway schematics in
[0124] In some embodiments, hammer 28 may include hammer panels 98 installed on the outer surface 34 of the hammer 28. In some embodiments, hammer panels 98 are configured to mate with anvil panels 100.
[0125] In some embodiments, components 100 comprise the shell liner. In some embodiments, the shell liner geometry may have multiple axial geometry variant zones. In one example there may be 18 pieces that constitute the anvil panels 100. It will be appreciated that embodiments in which the shell liner comprises more than 18 pieces or fewer than 18 pieces are contemplated. In some embodiments, individual liner pieces can be removed from MRGM 20. In one example this can be accomplished via pulling recesses 101 at the discharge end 90.
[0126]
[0127] As previously mentioned, the material 38 might not conform to the surfaces 62/63. As such, material 38 may bridge from one texture ridge to another in a two, three, or more point contact compression in regions using ridges 84 (as shown in
[0128] In the example embodiment shown in
[0129] The substantially smooth surfaces 116 and/or 118 in one example may comprise elevated lands 120 (as depicted, for example, in
[0130] In some embodiments, to further increase the longitudinal movement vector of the material 38 along a helical flow 122, anvil 22 and/or hammer 28 may comprise radially extending feed vanes 124 (see
[0131] In addition to the axial movement encouraged by the structures/textures in some example embodiments of hammer 28 and anvil 22 described herein, a vane structure 140 may also be utilized. Vane structure 140 may be mounted within anvil 22 and remain stationary therein as anvil 22 rotates during operation. For example, vane structure 140 may be cantilevered from an end panel 142. In some embodiments, end panel 142 may be one or more shield(s) 40 previously described. In other embodiments, vane structure may be attached to end panel 142 or to a similar structure. In some embodiments, vane structure 140 may alternatively be suspended from end panels 142 on both longitudinal 18 ends of MRGM 20. In some embodiments, one or more vanes 144 may be suspended in the space above hammer 28 and below the upper inner surface of the anvil 22. Vanes 144 may be oriented at a vane angle 146 to the axis 42 of anvil 22 and the axis 43 of hammer 28. In some embodiments, vanes 144 may be a section of a helix. Vane angle 146 may be selected to promote the axial (longitudinal 18) flow of material 38 down the axial length of anvil 22. In some embodiments, vane angle 146 may vary from the feed end 88 to the discharge end 90, such that material 38 is advanced further down anvil 22 with each rotation. In some embodiments, each vane 144 may eject particles from MRGM 20 through discharge end 90. Once ejected, ejected particles may be captured in an enclosure external to anvil 22.
[0132] In some embodiments, vanes 144 are attached to a vane panel 148 which provides support and rigidity for vanes 144.
[0133] In some embodiments, vane panel 148 and attached vanes 144 may have various distinct sections corresponding to regions of anvil 22. For example, in a section 150 of the vane structure 140 above a first section (e.g. smooth section 118) of hammer 28, vane panel 148 may have a first radius 152. In another section or sections 156 of the vane structure 140 above or adjacent to a second section, such as gear teeth 110/112 and/or discharge vanes 126, vane panel 148 may have a second radius 154.
[0134] To further increase the longitudinal movement vector of the material 38 past the discharge end 90, anvil 22 and/or hammer 28 may comprise radially extending discharge vanes 126 on the discharge end 90 of the anvil 22 and/or hammer 28. These feed vanes 124 may be non-parallel to the axis 43 of the hammer 28 and arranged helically to drive the material 38 out of the comminution region or compression fracture zone 78.
[0135] In some embodiments, hammer 28 comprises an outer shell 128 filled or partially filled by a material 30 as previously described. To support such a structure, reinforcing tubes 130 or equivalents may be used. In addition, dust shields 132 may be used to keep material 38 and other dirt, debris, or the like, out of hammer 28.
[0136] In addition to circuit configurations such as open circuit (single pass flow through) and closed circuit (in which a portion of discharge is screened and recycled for combining with fresh feed material at the input of MRGM 20), some embodiments of MRGM 20 may be operated in a cascading mode.
[0137] In the cascading mode, some or all of the discharge material may be returned to the feed end of the MRGM 20 (or to a second MRGM 20) without being combined with any additional fresh feed material. The ability to provide multiple passes through MRGM 20 may allow for the minimum gap between hammer 28 and anvil 22 to decrease (sometimes significantly) with each successive pass through, as the largest particle size in each feed stream will diminish. In some embodiments, cascading mode may ensure that material is well distributed based on particle size in order to maintain bed thinness and unconfined breakage (which, as noted above, may provide improvements to the energy efficiency of the comminution process).
[0138]
[0139] In some embodiments, different sections 28a, 28b may have different outer surface geometries. For example, vanes on section 28a may be in a different pattern than vanes on section 28b. Many other variations in design for different sections 28a, 28b are contemplated as described herein with reference to other embodiments (e.g. other embodiments described above in relation to a hammer which is not segmented into sections, including the use of liner panels which may be removable).
[0140] In some embodiments, sections 28a, 28b, 28c may be driven by a central shaft 4900 (as depicted in
[0141] In some embodiments, different axial sections 28a, 28b, 28c may be partially or fully filled (denoted by regions 4910) with solids and/or water to vary the weight and density of different sections 28a, 28b, 28c. In some embodiments, portions of sections 28a, 28b, 28c may be filled with elastomers or fluids. It will be appreciated that varying the weight and density of hammer 28 may obviate the need for any external pressure system to apply downward pressure to hammer 28 during operation. For example, in some embodiments, the gravitational force added by introducing weight
[0142] It will be appreciated that
LABEL LISTING
[0143] 20—MRGM [0144] 22—anvil [0145] 23—shaft [0146] 24—chamber [0147] 26—bearing pad [0148] 28, 28a, 28b, 28c—hammer and axial sections of hammer [0149] 30—core of hammer [0150] 31—shell of hammer [0151] 32—protruding element [0152] 33—protruding element [0153] 34—outer surface of hammer [0154] 36—gap (
[0215] While the present disclosure is illustrated by description of several embodiments and while the illustrative embodiments are described in detail, it is not the intention of the applicants to restrict or in any way limit the scope of the appended claims to such detail. Additional advantages and modifications within the scope of the appended claims will readily appear to those skilled in the art. The disclosed apparatus and method in their broader aspects are therefore not limited to the specific details, representative apparatus and methods, and illustrative examples shown and described. Accordingly, departures may be made from such details without departing from the spirit or scope of applicants' general concept.