GB2394684A - Reclamation treatment of bonded particulates - Google Patents

Reclamation treatment of bonded particulates Download PDF

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Publication number
GB2394684A
GB2394684A GB0400265A GB0400265A GB2394684A GB 2394684 A GB2394684 A GB 2394684A GB 0400265 A GB0400265 A GB 0400265A GB 0400265 A GB0400265 A GB 0400265A GB 2394684 A GB2394684 A GB 2394684A
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GB
United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
particulate material
compartment
outlet
binder
heat
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Granted
Application number
GB0400265A
Other versions
GB2394684B (en
GB0400265D0 (en
Inventor
Christopher Clayton
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Clayton Thermal Processes Ltd
Original Assignee
Clayton Thermal Processes Ltd
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Priority claimed from GB0108619A external-priority patent/GB0108619D0/en
Application filed by Clayton Thermal Processes Ltd filed Critical Clayton Thermal Processes Ltd
Priority claimed from GB0321077A external-priority patent/GB2389810B/en
Publication of GB0400265D0 publication Critical patent/GB0400265D0/en
Publication of GB2394684A publication Critical patent/GB2394684A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of GB2394684B publication Critical patent/GB2394684B/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Fee Related legal-status Critical Current

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Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B22CASTING; POWDER METALLURGY
    • B22DCASTING OF METALS; CASTING OF OTHER SUBSTANCES BY THE SAME PROCESSES OR DEVICES
    • B22D29/00Removing castings from moulds, not restricted to casting processes covered by a single main group; Removing cores; Handling ingots
    • B22D29/001Removing cores
    • B22D29/003Removing cores using heat
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B22CASTING; POWDER METALLURGY
    • B22CFOUNDRY MOULDING
    • B22C5/00Machines or devices specially designed for dressing or handling the mould material so far as specially adapted for that purpose
    • B22C5/08Machines or devices specially designed for dressing or handling the mould material so far as specially adapted for that purpose by sprinkling, cooling, or drying
    • B22C5/085Cooling or drying the sand together with the castings

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Molds, Cores, And Manufacturing Methods Thereof (AREA)

Abstract

Apparatus (102) useful in the reclamation treatment of bonded particulate material, the apparatus (102) being for removing adherent binder from particulate material by the application of heat, the apparatus (102) having an inlet (121) and an outlet (112), a fluidized bed (105b) in which the particulate material with adherent binder flows from the inlet (121) to the outlet (112); means (111) for regulating the flow of the particulate material from the inlet (121) to the outlet (112) to allow sufficient exposure of the particulate material to the heat to remove the adherent binder from the particulate material; and heating means (115) to heat the entire fluidized bed (105b) between inlet (121) and outlet (112) to a temperature sufficient to remove adherent binder from the particulate material.

Description

RECLAMATION TREATMENT OF BONDED PARTICULATES
5 This application is a divisional application of GB 0321077.0 (Published as GB2389810), and is derived from international (PCT) patent application number PCT/GB02/001605.
The invention relates to the treatment of bonded particulate material and more 10 particularly to the recovery or reclamation of sand in cores in the casting of articles of molten metal or alloy for its subsequent reuse.
It is known to use vibration devices to remove the cores from the castings. Such apparatus can be noisy. The vibration devices can cause industrial diseases such 15 as white finger, hand and arm vibration syndrome and the like.
Because of such problems, other processes and apparatus have been proposed.
EP-B1-0612276 (CEC) discloses the use of a combined heat-treatment furnace and 20 sand reclamation apparatus, the furnace sitting above the sand reclamation apparatus. A casting with a core is held in the furnace and is exposed to a heated atmosphere. As the casting heats up, the sand core loosens and eventually falls from the casting into the sand reclamation unit. Oxygenated air is introduced to the sand reclamation apparatus which fluidises the bed; the air may be heated also. The 25 attrition of the particles of sand within the fluidized bed together with the heat which may be present act to remove, by abrasion and/or combustion, binder which
adheres to the sand. The casting is retained within the furnace to effect heat treatment thereof.
US 5423370 (PROCEDYNE) discloses a process for removing the sand cores from 5 a metal casting which comprises placing the casting in a fluidized bed and heating the casting to a temperature sufficient to pyrolyse the sand core binder. Pyrolysis of the sand core binder causes the sand to return to particulate form and be assimilated with the fluidised bed.
10 It has also been proposed to clean old foundry sand, that is a core which has been reclaimed from castings and broken down into sand, by pneumatic-mechanical methods which accelerate sand particles with adherent binder towards an impact wall. Two such devices are proposed in DE 4434115 and CH 575262.
15 US 3685165 proposes that old foundry sand can be cleaned by passing it through a fluidised bed. The bed has a portion which is heated by elements. The sand travels up and down the apparatus, with the heated portion being located intermediate the inlet and outlet for the sand. Thus, the sand is heated at the mid-point of its travel through the apparatus. The heated (and treated) sand can then transfer some of its 20 heat to the to-be heated sand.
It is an object of this invention to provide apparatus and a method for reclamation of cores of bonded particulate material which is more compact and energy efficient.
25 In one aspect the invention provides apparatus for the reclamation of particulate material from cores of bonded particulate material, the apparatus comprising an
outer compartment arranged substantially concentrically about an inner compartment, heated fluidised bed means comprising loose particulate material in one compartment for breaking up the cores of bonded particulate material and heated fluidised bed means comprising loose particulate material in the other 5 compartment for removing the binder from the broken up material, and means for transferring broken up material from one compartment to the other.
The temperature of the inner and outer compartments may be controlled by heating means arranged to heat at least one wall of each compartment to heat, and hold, 10 the contents of each compartment to and at a desired temperature heat.
Preferably the transfer means is a weir or the like, in a wall common to the compartments. The transfer means may also be a chute, passageway or the like defining a path between the outer and inner compartments.
The outer compartment may have two or more partitions, to define two or more distinct compartments. The or each compartment may be held at the same or at a different temperature.
20 The inner compartment may comprise an inlet and an outlet, means for fluidising the particulate material to cause it to flow from the inlet to the outlet and means for regulating the flow of the particulate material from the inlet to the outlet to allow sufficient exposure to the heat to remove the adherent binder from the particulate material.
A second aspect of the invention provides apparatus useful in the reclamation treatment of bonded particulate material, the apparatus being for removing adherent binder from particulate material by the application of heat, the apparatus having an inlet and an outlet, a fluidised bed in which the particulate material with adherent 5 binder flows from the inlet to the outlet; means for regulating the flow of the particulate material from the inlet to the outlet to allow sufficient exposure of the particulate material to the heat to remove the adherent binder from the particulate material; and heating means to heat the entire fluidised bed between inlet and outlet to a temperature sufficient to remove adherent binder from the particulate material.
The regulating means may comprise at least one or two spaced apart baffles. The baffles may each comprise an overweir or an underweir. In a preferred embodiment one baffle is an overweir and the other is an underweir. The inner compartment may comprise more than two baffles, say four, two providing overweirs and two providing 15 underweirs, so that the particulate material flows along a tortuous path between the inlet and outlet.
The inner compartment may further comprise mesh partitions to slow the flow of particulate material from the inlet to the outlet.
The apparatus preferably further includes means for cooling the binderfree loose particulate material to a predetermined temperature and the method preferably includes the step of cooling to a predetermined temperature. Conveniently the cooling means is a heat exchanger, e.g. a set of coils.
While the cores could be detached from castings and then treated in apparatus of the invention, preferably castings and the attached cores are placed in the outer compartment which contains the loose sand or the like. This bed is then fluidised so that the cores are separated from the castings by thermal reaction in the outer 5 compartment and the detached core material is transferred to the inner compartment where the binding agent is removed. Once the sand has been detached from the casting the casting itself may need to undergo a heat treatment, e.g. ageing or cleaning process. If heat-treatment of a casting is required heat treatment means will be provided in which the at least substantially sandfree 10 casting can be located for this to take place. Preferably the heat treatment means will comprise a heated fluidised bed of preferably virgin or clean sand. The casting is located in the loose sand and the heat treatment or cleaning is carried out In known manner. 15 Preferably the apparatus also includes heat exchange means to recover heat from the waste gas from the inner compartment for use in heating gas used to fluidise the loose particulate material in the outer compartment.
It will be understood that the apparatus is made up of a number of components and 20 that each may be made as an independent unit and used as such or joined with other components useful in the process of reclamation.
A third aspect of the invention provides a method of reclaiming particulate material from cores of bonded particulate material, the method comprising breaking up the 25 cores of bonded particulate material in a heated fluidised bed located in one compartment of a dual compartment apparatus, the compartments being
substantially concentric, and passing the broken material into the other compartment and removing the binder from the broken-down material in a second heated fluidised bed to provide binder-free loose particulate material.
5 According to the invention in another aspect there is provided a method of reclaiming loose particulate material from cores of bonded particulate material in multi-compartment apparatus, each compartment having a perforate floor, one compartment containing binder-free loose particulate material, the method comprising placing the material to be treated in the one compartment, passing gas 10 at elevated temperature into the one compartment to fluidise the loose material to break up the cores of bonded material to release the bonded particles, passing the released particles into the second compartment and passing gas at a higher temperature through the perforate floor of the second compartment to remove the binding agent.
A yet further aspect of the invention provides a method of removing adherent binder from particulate material by the application of heat, the method comprising causing particulate material having adherent binder to flow from an inlet to an outlet of a compartment therefor by fluidising a bed of particulate material and heating the 20 fluidised bed to a predetermined temperature sufficient to remove adherent binder, the method including the step of regulating the flow of particulate material between the inlet and outlet to allow sufficient exposure of the material to the heat to remove the adherent binder from the particles.
25 In order that the invention may be fully understood it will now be described, by way of illustration only, with reference to the accompanying drawings; in which:
Figure 1 is an exploded perspective view of one unit of the invention; Figure 2 is a vertical section of another unit of the invention; and Figure 3 is a top plan view of the unit of Figure 2.
The apparatus 1 of Figure 1 comprises two substantially concentric compartments, one 2 being an inner compartment and the other being an outer compartment 3. A hood portion 4 is connected to the upper rim of the outer compartment 3. The hood portion 4 contains pipe-work for the flow of gas. Within the hood portion 4 is a 10 smaller hood portion 5, having a neck portion 6, which is received in the upper end of the inner compartment 2. The pipe-work provides a heat exchanger unit 7 located within the hood portion 5. The inner compartment 2 and the outer compartment 3 each have a perforate floor supporting sand forming a fluidised bed 8,9 respectively. The heat exchanger 7 is connected to pipes 10 which transfer heat 15 from waste gas in the inner compartment to the fluidised bed 9 of the outer compartment 3.
An overflow chute 11 is present between the inner compartment 2 and outer compartment 3 for transferring material from the outer compartment 3 to the inner 20 compartment 2. A vertical wall 12 is present to prevent oversized agglomerates of bonded material from the outer compartment 3, which pass along the chute 11, from entering the inner compartment 2. Holes 13 are present in the vertical wall 12 to allow released bonded particulate material of a suitable size to fall into the inner compartment 2. A cooling coil 14 is present in a zone of the inner compartment 3.
25 An outlet 15 is situated in the base of the cooling zone 2 for removing the reclaimed
material. An outlet 16 is present in the inner compartment to allow reclaimed sand to pass into the cooling zone.
In one specific use, metal or alloy castings (not shown) each containing one or more 5 cores of bonded sand are loaded into open baskets (not shown) which are placed into the outer compartment 3 containing loose binder-free virgin sand. The hood portions 4 and 5 are locked in place. Heated air is supplied to the fluidised beds 8 and 9 from below. The air entering the fluidsed bed 8 of the inner compartment 2 is heated electrically by external heating elements (not shown). The heat from the 10 waste hot gas is extracted by the heat exchanger 7, which transfers the heat via pipes 10 to the air supply to the fluidised bed 9 of the outer compartment. Due to the presence of the electrical heating element around the inner compartment 2, the inner compartment 2 is maintained at a higher temperature than the outer compartment 3.
Because the castings in the outer compartment are in the heated fluidised sand the cores are subjected to thermal reaction. The heat introduced into the outer compartment 3 loosens or breaks up the bonded sand in the cores of the castings.
20 As the cores of all of the castings are recovered the level of sand in the outer compartment 3 will rise, and eventually reach the level of the overflow chute 11. As the loose sand flows down the chute, particles small enough will pass through holes 13 into the inner compartment 2. (Large particles of sand are prevented from entering the inner compartment 2 by the vertical wall 12. They can be returned to 25 the outer compartment or broken up in another way.) The baskets containing sand-free castings are removed from the outer compartment 3.
The agitation of the fluidised bed 8 and the high temperature within the inner compartment causes the binding agent on the surface of the bonded sand to burn off or be released by thermal shock. The bonding agent may be resin based or 5 inorganic. The waste gases produced are removed from the inner compartment 2 by a ventilation system (not shown). Once the process is complete the reclaimed clean sand is removed from the inner compartment 2 via outlet 15. The sand may be reused in casting in a mould, in die castings or the like.
10 By having two compartments, one inside the other, the furnace takes up little space and the capital cost is reduced. By splitting the treatment of the bonded particulate material into two stages and using heat energy from one in the other, the running costs are reduced. The method can be quiet because vibration equipment is not used. The apparatus shown in Figures 2 and 3 comprises an annular outer chamber 101, split into two halves by radial partitions 120 to form separate and distinct chambers 101a and 101b, and an inner circular chamber 102. The outer chamber 101 has an outer circular wall 103, and an inner circular wall. A circular wall 104 defines the 20 inner chamber 102. The outer chambers 101a and 101 b contain beds of sand 105, 105a respectively, on a perforate floor or platform 106. The inner chamber 102 has a perforate floor 106a and will receive sand from the outer chamber 101a to form a bed 1 05b via a chute 121.
25 The inner chamber 102 has vertical partitions 111 The partitions 111 provide a series of weirs arranged to allow the particulate material to flow either thereover or
thereunder to define a tortuous path from the inlet via chute 121 to an outlet 112, as shown by the arrow. Beneath the exit of chute 112 is a bank of cooling pipes 113.
Heat packs 114 are present on the walls which define the outer chamber 101 and adjacent the wall 104.
A heat exchanger unit 107 is present near the wall 104. Hot air is drawn from the upper regions of the inner chamber 102 via pipe 110 into the heat exchanger 107.
Chamber 101b may be used as a place in which to heat treat, e.g. a casting M from 10 which cores C have been removed. The casting M is placed on loose clean sand in that chamber 101b and left for a pre- determined period at the temperature of the sand for ageing or the like.
In use, virgin sand is placed in the outer chambers 101a and 101b to form the beds 15 105 and 105a. The heat packs 114 are activated to heat the sand of bed 105, up to say 500 C and the sand of bed 105a to say 520 C and air is passed via pipe 109 to fluidise the sand 105, 105a forming a gently bubbling fluidised beds. The temperature of bed 105 is selected to break up the core and not to affect the metallurgy of the casting C during de-coring. The casting M having cores C of 20 bonded sand is placed in the bed of sand 105. Thermal reaction cause the cores C to decors from the casting M and also to break up into small pieces once the casting M has reached the fluid bed temperature. The casting M is left within the bed 105 for, typically 30 minutes, to ensure complete core removal. As the level of sand in the outer chamber 101a rises because the released material is added to the level of 25 the virgin sand, some flows via the chute 121 into the inner chamber 102.
The bed 105b of the inner chamber 102 is fluidised by supplying air from pipe 109.
The heat packs 115 are activated to ensure that temperature of the inner chamber 102 is about 700 C, which is usually enough for complete burn off or removal of the binder over a period of time. The partitions 111 define a tortuous path for the 5 particulate material to describe. The tortuous flow path ensures that the sand entering the bed 105b has a sufficient residence time within the chamber 102 to ensure complete removal of the binder. Binder-free sand falls down the chute 112 to the cooling pipes 113. These contain flowing water, and the size of the pipes and the rate of flow are adjusted to cool the binder-free sand to a pre-determined 10 temperature. This will be from about 30 C to about 40 C dependent on the temperature at which the sand should be mixed with fresh binder for reuse.
Computer controls may control the temperature in the chambers 101a, 101b, 102. A time control may be present to indicate that the casting has been in the de-coring 15 chamber 101a for time enough to effect de-coring. When an alarm may sound and/or the castings may be automatically lifted from the chamber 101a.
The total apparatus requires little floor space, which is much reduced compared to prior apparatus. Temperature controls, preferably electrical or electronic controls, 20 may be used to control the cooling water in the pipes of the coils 113. It must be emphasised that each compartment is separate and the individual treatments can be performed separately.
For example, whilst we have described the outer chamber 101 as being separated 25 into two chambers 101a and 101b by partitions 120, the chambers 101a and 101b
may in fact be two separate units placed together. Further, chamber 102 may be configured to accept used and broken-down sand from cores from any source.

Claims (1)

1. Apparatus (102) useful in the reclamation treatment of bonded particulate material, the apparatus (102) being for removing adherent binder from 5 particulate material by the application of heat, the apparatus (102) having an inlet (121) and an outlet (112), a fluidized bed (105b) in which the particulate material with adherent binder flows from the inlet (121) to the outlet (112); means (111) for regulating the flow of the particulate material from the inlet (121) to the outlet (1 12) to allow sufficient exposure of the particulate material to 10 the heat to remove the adherent binder from the particulate material; and heating means (115) to heat the entire fluidized bed (105b) between inlet (121) and outlet (112) to a temperature sufficient to remove adherent binder from the particulate material.
15 2. Apparatus (100; 102) according to Claim 1, wherein said flow regulating means
comprises at least one baffle (111).
3. Apparatus (100; 102) according to Claim 1 or 2, wherein said flow regulating means comprises at least two spaced apart baffles (111).
4. Apparatus (100; 102) according to Claim 3, wherein the baffles (111). each comprise an overweir or an underweir.
5. Apparatus (100; 102) according to Claim 3 or4, wherein one baffle (111) Is an 25 overweir and the other is an underweir.
6. Apparatus (100; 102) according to any of Claims 2 to 5, wherein said regulating means (111) comprises more than two baffles, say four baffles, providing sequential overweirs and underweirs, arranged to ensure that the particulate material flows along a tortuous path between the inlet (121) and outlet (112).
7. Apparatus (100; 102) according to any of Claims 2 to 6, wherein said flow regulating means (11) further comprises mesh partitions to slow the flow of particulate material from the inlet to the outlet.
10 8. Apparatus (1; 100) according to any preceding Claim, further comprising heat exchange means (10) to recover at least some of any heat from the waste gas from the compartment in which binder is removed from broken down particulate material for use in heating gas used to fluidise the loose particulate material in the other compartment.
9. Apparatus (100; 102) according to any preceding Claims, further comprising means (113) for cooling binder-free loose particulate material exiting therefrom to a predetermined temperature.
20 10. A method of removing adherent binder from particulate material by the application of heat, the method comprising causing particulate material having adherent binder to flow from an inlet to an outlet of a compartment therefor by fluidzing a bed of particulate material and heating the entire fluidised bed to a predetermined temperature sufficient or remove the adherent binder, the 25 method including the step of regulating the flow of particulate material between
. the inlet and outlet to allow sufficient exposure of the material to the heat to remove the adherent binder form the particles.
11. A method of reclaiming loose particulate material from cores of bonded 5 particulate material in multi-compartment apparatus, each compartment having a perforate floor, one compartment containing binder- free loose particulate material, the method comprising placing the cores of material to be treated in the one compartment, passing gas at elevated temperature into the one compartment to fluidise the loose material to break up the cores of bonded 10 material to release the bonded particules, passing the released particles into the second compartment and passing gas at a higher temperature through the perforate floor of the second compartment to remove the binding agent.
GB0400265A 2001-04-05 2002-04-05 Reclamation treatment of bonded particulates Expired - Fee Related GB2394684B (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (3)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB0108619A GB0108619D0 (en) 2001-04-05 2001-04-05 Treatment of bonded particulates
GB0123874A GB0123874D0 (en) 2001-04-05 2001-10-04 Reclamation treatment of bonded particulates
GB0321077A GB2389810B (en) 2001-04-05 2002-04-05 Reclamation treatment of bonded particulates

Publications (3)

Publication Number Publication Date
GB0400265D0 GB0400265D0 (en) 2004-02-11
GB2394684A true GB2394684A (en) 2004-05-05
GB2394684B GB2394684B (en) 2004-11-03

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Citations (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB1293187A (en) * 1969-11-24 1972-10-18 Upper Canada Mfg Ltd Improvements relating to the treatment of granular material
US4437834A (en) * 1980-12-16 1984-03-20 Cosworth Research And Development Limited Method of and apparatus for treating granular material
EP0122029A2 (en) * 1983-03-09 1984-10-17 Cosworth Research And Development Limited Casting metal and reclaiming foundry sand
US4738615A (en) * 1985-05-08 1988-04-19 Richards Structural Steel Co. Limited Thermal reclamation of industrial sand
US5251684A (en) * 1991-12-06 1993-10-12 Gmd Engineered Systems, Inc. Method for controlling the oxidation and calcination of waste foundry sands
US5271450A (en) * 1990-05-11 1993-12-21 Richards Engineering Limited Thermal reclamation method
WO1997030805A1 (en) * 1996-02-23 1997-08-28 Consolidated Engineering Company, Inc. System and process for reclaiming sand
EP0998999A1 (en) * 1998-11-07 2000-05-10 Timothy George Henson Casting sand reclamation apparatus

Patent Citations (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB1293187A (en) * 1969-11-24 1972-10-18 Upper Canada Mfg Ltd Improvements relating to the treatment of granular material
US4437834A (en) * 1980-12-16 1984-03-20 Cosworth Research And Development Limited Method of and apparatus for treating granular material
EP0122029A2 (en) * 1983-03-09 1984-10-17 Cosworth Research And Development Limited Casting metal and reclaiming foundry sand
US4738615A (en) * 1985-05-08 1988-04-19 Richards Structural Steel Co. Limited Thermal reclamation of industrial sand
US5271450A (en) * 1990-05-11 1993-12-21 Richards Engineering Limited Thermal reclamation method
US5251684A (en) * 1991-12-06 1993-10-12 Gmd Engineered Systems, Inc. Method for controlling the oxidation and calcination of waste foundry sands
WO1997030805A1 (en) * 1996-02-23 1997-08-28 Consolidated Engineering Company, Inc. System and process for reclaiming sand
EP0998999A1 (en) * 1998-11-07 2000-05-10 Timothy George Henson Casting sand reclamation apparatus

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
GB2394684B (en) 2004-11-03
GB0400265D0 (en) 2004-02-11

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PCNP Patent ceased through non-payment of renewal fee

Effective date: 20100405