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pivoted at the top Crushing faces are formed of manganese steel. The max movement of the jaw is at the bottom; so there is little tendency for the machine to clog, though some uncrushed material may fall through and have to be returned to the crusher. The maximum pressure is exerted on the large material which is introduced at the top. One of the toggle plates in the driving mechanism is made relatively weak so that, if any large stresses are set up, this is the first part to fail. Easy renewal of the damaged part is then possible.
quantity of fines is produced The angle of nip, the angle between the jaws, is usually about 30. Because the crushing action is intermittent, the loading on the machine is uneven and the crusher therefore incorporates a heavy flywheel. The power requirements of the crusher depend upon size and capacity and vary from 7 to about 70 kW, the latter figure corresponding to a feed rate of 10 kg/s.
more uniform product is obtained Although the crusher is less widely used because of its tendency to choke. The large opening at the top enables it to take very large feed and to effect a large size reduction. This crusher is usually made in smaller sizes than the Stag crusher, because of the high fluctuating stresses that are produced in the members of the machine.
Gyratory Crusher
Gyratory Crusher
Crushing head is in the form of a truncated cone,
mounted on a shaft The crushing action takes place round the whole of the cone The crusher is continuous in action, thus fluctuations in the stresses are smaller than in jaw crushers and the power consumption is lower. It also does not take such a large size of feed as a jaw crusher, although it gives a rather finer and more uniform product. Because the capital cost is high, the crusher is suitable only where large quantities of material are to be handled. Employs a compressive force for size reduction
walls. Feed is introduced at the top. The cylinder is rotated and the coal is lifted by means of arms attached to the inner surface and then falls against the cylindrical surface. The coal breaks by impact and passes through the perforations as soon as the size has been sufficiently reduced. This type of equipment is less expensive and has a higher throughput than the jaw or gyratory crusher.
Intermediate Crushers
mounted on a horizontal shaft which is rotated in a horizontal plane in a heavy pan. Alternatively, the muller remains stationary and the pan is rotated Material is fed to the centre of the pan and is worked outwards by the action of the muller, whilst a scraper continuously removes material that has adhered to the sides of the pan, and returns it to the crushing zone.
pan is perforated, so that the product may be removed continuously as soon as its size has been sufficiently reduced. The mill may be operated wet or dry and it is used extensively for the grinding of paints, clays and sticky materials.
Hammer Mill
Hammer Mill
Type of Impact mill with high speed rotating disc, to
which are fixed a number of hammers Hammers are swung outwards by centrifugal force. Material is fed in, either at the top or at the centre, and it is thrown out centrifugally and crushed by hammer bars, or against breaker plates fixed around the periphery of the cylindrical casing. The material is beaten until it is small enough to fall through the screen at the lower portion of the casing. Hinged hammers: the presence of any hard material does not damage to equipment.
Hammer Mill
The bars are replaced when they are worn out.
materials
Suitable for hard materials Since a large amount of fines is produced, pressure
Hammer Mill
The size of the product is regulated by the size of the
screen and the speed of rotation. In some cases the hammer bars are rigidly fixed in position. Since a large current of air is produced, the dust must be separated in a cyclone separator or a bag filter.
Pin-type Mill
Pin-type Mill
Two vertical steel plates
and is thrown outwards by centrifugal action and broken against of the projections before it is discharged to the outer body of the mill
dust Used with chemicals, fertilisers and other materials that are non-abrasive, brittle or crystalline. Control of the size of the product is effected by means of the speed and the spacing of the projections and a product size of 20 m is readily attainable.
Crushing Rolls
Crushing Rolls
Two rolls, one in adjustable bearings, rotate in opposite
directions The clearance between them can be adjusted according to the size of feed and the required size of product. Protected, by spring loading, against damage from very hard material. Both rolls may be driven, or one directly and the other by friction with the solids. Effect a small size reduction ratio, 4 : 1 in a single operation commonly a no. of pairs of rolls are employed in series
Crushing Rolls
Roll shells with either smooth or ridged surfaces are
held in place
shafts of which one is rotated The two crushing faces continuously approach and recede. Material is fed in the centre between the two discs The product is discharged by centrifugal action as soon as it is fine enough to escape through the opening between the faces.
Fine Crushers
Buhrstone mill
Buhrstone mill
Grinding takes place between two heavy horizontal
wheels, one of which is stationary and the other is driven. The surface of the stones is carefully dressed so that the material is continuously worked outwards from the centre of the circumference of the wheels. Size reduction takes place by a shearing action between the edges of the grooves on the two grinding stones. Used for the grinding of grain, pigments, harmaceuticals, cosmetics and printers ink, Although used where the quantity of material is very small.
Roller Mill
The roller mill consists of a pair of rollers that rotate
at different speeds in opposite directions. one of the rollers is held in a fixed bearing whereas the other has an adjustable spring-loaded bearing since the rollers rotate at different speeds, size reduction is effected by a combination of compressive and shear forces. The roller mill is extensively used in the flour milling industry and for the manufacture of pigments for paints.
Roller Mill
grooved rollers rotate. Connected to the central drive shaft; they are pushed outward by centrifugal force and roll on the grinding surface. The material is fed by gravity is discharged at the bottom of the mill.
repeatedly crushed between the rollers and the stationary grinding surface. Crushing and shearing force caused by rotational motion of the rollers.
Ball Mill
Consists of a rotating hollow cylinder, partially filled
with balls Horizontal or at a small angle to the horizontal. The outlet is normally covered with a coarse screen to prevent the escape of the balls Balls fall on the grinding medium from a height Size reduction mainly by Impact, Compression and Attrition
Ball Mill
Ball Mill
Inner surface of the cylinder is lined with an abrasion-
resistant material
volume of the mill Balls wear out during grinding and are replaced Different sized balls may be used large balls deal effectively with the feed and the small ones are responsible for giving a fine product. For very fine grinding in small mills pebbles are often used instead of balls.
perforated plates. Material flows axially along the mill Can pass from one compartment to the next only when its size has been reduced to less than the perforations in the plate. Each compartment is supplied with balls of a different size. large balls are at the entry while the small balls before discharge. Results in economical operation and the formation of a uniform product.
lower than that for dry grinding Continuous removal of product as it is formed is facilitated
Weight of balls.
A heavy charge of balls produces a fine product. The weight of the charge can be increased, either by increasing the number of balls, or by using a material of higher density
Discharge freedom.
another and little crushing At still higher speeds they are thrown greater distances At very high speeds, the balls are carried right round in contact with the sides of the mill and little relative movement or grinding takes place again. The minimum speed at which the balls are carried round in this manner is called the critical speed of the mill Hence at Critical speed there will be no resultant force acting on the ball when in the uppermost position
equal to the weight of the ball. If the mill is rotating at the critical angular velocity r2 = g
low level of material can be done by providing suitable discharge opening for the product. If the level of material is raised, the cushioning action is increased and power is wasted by the production of an excessive quantity of undersize material.
and therefore can be used for the grinding of explosive materials. The grinding medium is cheap. The mill is suitable for materials of all degrees of hardness. It may be used for batch or continuous operation. It may be used for open or closed circuit grinding.
Tube Mill
Similar to ball mill
as compared with 1 or 1.5 : 1 for the ball mill. The mill is filled with pebbles The characteristics of the two mills are similar But material remains longer in the tube mill because of its greater length, and a finer product is therefore obtained.
Rod Mill
High carbon steel rods about 50 mm diameter and extending
the whole length of the mill are used. This mill gives a very uniform fine product Power consumption is low Not suitable for very tough materials and Feed should not exceed about 25 mm in size. It is particularly useful with sticky materials which would hold the balls together in aggregates, because the greater weight of the rods causes them to pull apart again. Worn rods must be removed from time to time and replaced by new ones, which are rather cheaper than balls.
Hardinge Mill
A ball mill in which the balls segregate themselves
according to size. The main portion of the mill is cylindrical as in the ball mill, although the outlet end is conical and tapers towards the discharge point large balls collect in the cylindrical portion while the smaller balls, in order of decreasing size, Like a Compound Ball Mill
Hardinge Mill
Hardinge Mill
The mill has an advantage over the compound ball mill in
that the large balls are raised to the greatest height and therefore are able to exert the maximum force on the feed. As the size of the material is reduced, smaller forces are needed to cause fracture and it is therefore unnecessary to raise the smaller balls as high. The capacity of the Hardinge mill is higher than that of a ball mill of similar size and it gives a finer and more uniform product with a lower consumption of power. It is difficult to select an optimum speed, however, because of the variation in shell diameter.
effectively only below its critical speed Planetary mill obviate this constraint by rotating the mill simultaneously about its own axis and about an axis of gyration. In practice, several cylinders are incorporated in the machine, all rotating about the same axis of gyration.
down to very small sizes. Consist of at least one grinding jar which is arranged eccentrically on a so-called sun wheel. The difference in speeds between the balls and grinding jars produces an interaction between frictional and impact forces, which releases high dynamic energies. The interplay between these forces produces the high and very effective degree of size reduction of the planetary ball mill.
Vibration Mill
By imparting a vibrating motion to a mill
either by the rotation of out-of-balance weights or by the use of electro-mechanical devices,
acceleration may be imparted to the machine. The body of the machine is generally supported on powerful springs and caused to vibrate in a vertical direction. Grinding may take place in two stages, the material falling from an upper to a lower chamber when its size has been reduced below a certain value.
Vibration Mill
Has much higher capacity than a conventional mill
of the same size So either smaller equipment may be used or a much greater throughput is obtained. Well suited for incorporation in continuous grinding systems.
Vibration Mill
Colloid Mill
Colloidal suspensions, emulsions and solid
dispersions are produced by means of colloid mills or dispersion mills. Droplets or particles of sizes less than 1 m may be formed Feed material of approximately 100-mesh or 50 m in size is used
Colloid Mill
Clearances could be from virtually zero to 1.25 mm,
although in practice the maximum clearance used is about 0.3 mm The gap setting between rotor and stator is not necessarily in direct proportion to the droplet size or particle size of the end product. The thin film of material continually passing between the working surfaces is subjected to a high degree of shear, and consequently the energy absorbed within this film is frequently sufficient to reduce the dispersed phase to a particle size far smaller than the gap setting used.
Colloid Mill
The rotor speed varies with the physical size of the
mill and the clearance necessary to achieve the desired result The required operating conditions and size of mill can only be found by experiment. In all colloid mills, the power consumption is very high, and the material should therefore be ground as finely as possible before it is fed to the mill.
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steam or compressed air, supplied up to 3.5 MN/m2 (35 bar). The pulverising takes place in a shallow cylindrical chamber with a number of jets arranged tangentially at equal intervals around the circumference. The solid is thrown to the outside walls of the chamber Fine particles are formed by the shearing action resulting from the differential velocities within the fluid streams. The jet pulveriser will give a product with a particle size of 110 m.
Specialised applications
Electrohydraulic crushing
an underwater discharge is generated by the release of energy from a high-voltage capacitor The spark length depends on the nature of the material to be crushed
Ultrasonic grinding
fed between a drive roll and a curved plate, both of which are ultrasonically activated.
rather than to fracture when subjected to compressive forces. However can be done by subjecting it to very low temperatures. Material is cooled with liquid nitrogen at a temperature of about 196C (77K) to render it brittle before it enters the grinder cooling causes the crystal lattice to shrink and to give rise to microscopic cracks which act as nuclei and then grow thereby reducing the energy input required to cause fracturing to occur. Application in market for frozen foods