US2510240A - Solid fuel stoker, including auxiliary air feed means - Google Patents

Solid fuel stoker, including auxiliary air feed means Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2510240A
US2510240A US657807A US65780746A US2510240A US 2510240 A US2510240 A US 2510240A US 657807 A US657807 A US 657807A US 65780746 A US65780746 A US 65780746A US 2510240 A US2510240 A US 2510240A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
nozzle
air
inner tube
passageway
fuel
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.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US657807A
Inventor
Reubin E Mayo
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.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
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
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Priority to US657807A priority Critical patent/US2510240A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2510240A publication Critical patent/US2510240A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F23COMBUSTION APPARATUS; COMBUSTION PROCESSES
    • F23KFEEDING FUEL TO COMBUSTION APPARATUS
    • F23K3/00Feeding or distributing of lump or pulverulent fuel to combustion apparatus
    • F23K3/10Under-feed arrangements
    • F23K3/14Under-feed arrangements feeding by screw

Definitions

  • This invention relates to improvements in stokers, and more particularly to a Stoker designed to furnish solid fuel such as powdered coal, and air for the combustion thereof, to the re box of a tobacco curer, or the like,
  • the primary object of the invention is to provide a portable stoker having a discharge nozzle of unique design and adapted to be projected into a fire box for supplying a mixture of powdered fuel onto the grate thereof, as well as combustion air into the fire box above and below the grate.
  • a still further object is to furnish a stoker of the above character with a common means for operating a fuel feeding worm and the air blower.
  • the single sheet of drawing illustrates a stoker exhibiting the invention in vertical section and partly in elevation cooperating with the re box of a tobacco eurer.
  • 3 designates the walls of a conventional tobacco barn, having in the lower portion thereof, a horizontally arranged heating flue 4 which extends in a circuitous manner from a fire box 5 to a chimney or stack (not shown). All of these parts are of conventional construction and the fire box is provided with a horizontal grate 1, separating a combustion chamber 8 from an ash pit 9. The outer end of the fire box is provided with a doorway IIJ by which access is had to the interior of the re box from the exterior of the barn.
  • I will employ a wheel-supported carriage II on which is mounted a hopper I2 to receive powdered coal.
  • the hopper is rigidly connected at its lower end to an inner horizontal tube I3 arranged within, and in spaced relation to, an outer tube I 4, rigidly connected with the carriage and hopper.
  • the outer end of the tube I4 is provided with an air inlet I5, and interposed in the tube is a fan or blower I6, driven by any suitable means, such as a belt I1, from a prime mover I8.
  • the latter is mounted on a reduction gear box I9, supported by the carriage I I, and the prime mover by any suitable transmission means, drives through gearing in the box, a miter gear positioned within the tube I4.
  • a screw conveyor 2l has a. shaft 22 journalled in the inner tube, and
  • the shaft is provided at its outer end with a miter gear 23 meshing with, and driven by, gear 20.
  • Such sleeve functions as the casing of a nozzle in which there is an apertured conical structure, formed in the present example, of a series of spaced members or rings 26, 2'I, 28 and 29, of gradually increasing diameter from the outlet end of the tube I3 to the discharge end 30 of the sleeve. so as to form a throat flaring to ward the discharge end of the nozzle.
  • the rings may be connected to one another and to the sleeve by any suitable means, such as spaced joints 3I so as to allow the air forced into the sleeve by the blower to enter each ring through one end thereof, and after commingling with the powdered coal, or the like, to travel with it into combustion chamber 8.
  • the sleeve is provided with hollow elbows 32 and 33, respectively, for discharging air below the grate and also into the upper portion of the fire box.
  • the sleeve may also be provided with lateral ⁇ elbows (not shown) so as to discharge air into the opposite side portions of the fire box.
  • the ydoorway I0 is of suilicient size to permit the nozzle and its projecting elbows to be introduced into the re box, or to be removed therefrom, and when the nozzle is within the fire box, the doorway may be closed by a door 35, carried by the Stoker, if desired.
  • a stoker of the character described comprising inner and outer tubes spaced from one another to provide an air passageway, means for forcing air through said passageway, means for feeding solid fuel into the inner tube, a nozzle operatively connected to one end portion of the outer tube, a conveyor arranged in the inner tube for feeding said fuel into the nozzle, a series of spaced members arranged in the nozzle and forming a throat flaring from one end of the inner tube toward the outer end of the nozzle, whereby fuel discharged from the inner tube will mix with air from the passageway, discharged into the throat through the spaces'between said series of members, and auxiliary means for discharging air from the peripheral portion of the nozzle and for directing it forwardly away from the nozzle and in spaced relation to the axis thereof.
  • a stoker of the character described comprising inner and outer tubes spaced from one another to provide an air passageway, means for forcing air through said passageway, means for feeding solid fuel into the inner tube, a y
  • nozzle operatively connected to one end portion of the outer tube, a conveyor arranged in the inner tube for feeding said fuel into the nozzle, a series of spaced members arranged in the nozzle and forming a throat flaring from one end of the inner tube toward the outer end of the nozzle, whereby fuel discharged .from the inner tube will mix with air from the passageway, discharged into the throat through the spaces between said series of members, and auxiliary means for discharging air from the peripheral portion of the top and bottom .of the nozzle and for directing such air forwardly away from said nozzle 4and in spaced relation to the axis thereof.
  • a stoker of the character described comprising inner and outer tubes spaced from one another to provide an airpassageway, means for forcing air through said passageway, means for feeding solid fuel into the inner tube, a nozzle operatively connected to one end portion ofthe outer tube, a conveyor arranged in the inner tube for feeding said fuel into'the nozzle, a series of spaced members arranged in the nozzle and forming a throat flaring from one ⁇ end of the inner tube toward the outer end of the nozzle, whereby fuel discharged from the inner tube will mix with air from the passageway, discharged into the throat through the spaces between said series of members, and upper and lower hollow elbows connected to the peripheral portion of the nozzle for discharging air forwardly from the nozzle in spaced relation to the axis thereof.
  • a Stoker of the character described comprising inner and outer vtubes spaced from one another to provide an air passageway, means for forcing air through said passageway, means for feeding solid fuel into the inner tube, a substantially cylindrical sleeve-like nozzle operatively connected to the vdischarge end portion of the outer tube, means in the inner tube for feeding said fuel into the sleeve-like nozzle, a series of spaced substantially cylindrical rings arranged in the nozzle substantially concentric with the axis of the inner tube and forming a throat flaring toward the discharge end of the nozzle, said rings varying in diameter withv the smaller ring arranged to directly receive fuel discharged from the inner tube, said passageway communicating with the throat, and circumferentially spaced conduit members carried by the periphery of the sleeve-like nozzle directing air from said passageway forwardly of the nozzle as a plurality of streams spaced outwardly from the axis of thenozzle.
  • a stoker comprising inner and outer tubes provided with discharge ends extending through said doorway into the fire box, said tubes being spaced apart to provide an air passageway, means for feeding solid fuel into the inner tube, a nozzle operatively connected to the discharge end portion of the outer tube, a conveyor arranged in the inner tube for feeding said fuel into the nozzle, a series of ⁇ spaced members arranged in the nozzle and forming a throat fiaring from the discharge end of the inner tube toward the discharge end of the nozzle, whereby ⁇ fuel discharged from the inner tube will mix with air from the passageway, discharged into the throat through the spaces between said series of members, said throat being positioned above the grate, and means for discharging air from the nozzle beneath the grate.
  • a stoker comprising inner and outer tubes provided with discharge ends extending through said doorway into the re box, said tubes being spaced apart to provide an air passageway, means for feeding solid fuel into the inner tube, a nozzle coaxial with the outer tube and operatively connected to the discharge end portion of the outer tube, said nozzle discharging toward the first mentioned means, a conveyor arranged in the inner tube for feeding said fuel into the nozzle, a series of concentric spaced members arranged in the nozzle coaxial therewith and forming a throat flaring from the discharge end of the inner tube toward the discharge end of the nozzle, whereby fuel discharged from the inner tube will mix with air from the passageway, discharged into the throat through the spaces between said series of members, said throat being ⁇ positioned above the grate, and auxiliary means for dis
  • a Stoker comprising inner and outer tubes provided with discharge ends extending through said doorway into the fire box, said tubes being spaced apart to provide an air passageway, means for feeding solid fue] into the inner tube, a nozzle operatively connected to the discharge end portion of the outer tube, fa ccnveyor arranged in the inner ltube for feeding said fuel into the nozzle, a series of spaced members arranged in the nozzle and forming a throat flaring from the discharge end of the inner tube toward the discharge end of the nozzle, whereby fuel discharged ⁇ from the inner tube will mix with air from the passageway, discharged into the throat through the spaces between said series of members, said throat being positioned above Ithe grate, and means for discharging air from the nozzle into the nre box, above the throat
  • a portable Stoker of the character described comprising a carriage having a fuel hopper at the medial portion thereof, inner and outer concentric tubes arranged substantially horizontally on the carriage and spaced from one another to provide an air passageway, .a blower mounted on the carriage for forcing air through said passageway toward the discharge end of the passageway, said hopper communicating with the inner tube, a conveyor in the inner tube for forcing fuel toward the discharge end of the latter, means including a prime mover mounted on the carriage and driving the blower and conveyor, a nozzle mounted on the discharge end portion of the outer tube, a series of spaced collars arranged n the nozzle coaxially with the aXis of the tubes and forming a throat flaring from the discharge end of the inner tube toward the discharge end of the nozzle, whereby fuel discharged from the inner tube will mix with air from the passageway, discharged into the throat through said series of members, and means for directing air from the passageway above and below said collars in directions substantially parallel with respect to the axis of said tubes.

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Combustion & Propulsion (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)

Description

m R o, mw M 1.. A R Y mm m m.\\ A.. Nm WM. @J Y m NN mw vmQ ww Q. B+ mm K. TNI N J, f f Il ATI @mmm N Y ww Q S D .Y :LII I 1| \n ,U l. 2 Mmmm QP N n R QQ QM; ,J ES h n\ Rmmd .l vw Q\ l\ mmm w @j H Q s n m E m W M v June 6, 1950 Patented June 6, 1950 UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE SOLID FUEL STOKER, INCLUDING AUXILIARY AIR FEED MEANS Reubin E. Mayo, Maury, N. C.
Application March 28, 1946, Serial No. 657,807
8 Claims. (Cl. 110-105) This invention relates to improvements in stokers, and more particularly to a Stoker designed to furnish solid fuel such as powdered coal, and air for the combustion thereof, to the re box of a tobacco curer, or the like,
The primary object of the invention is to provide a portable stoker having a discharge nozzle of unique design and adapted to be projected into a fire box for supplying a mixture of powdered fuel onto the grate thereof, as well as combustion air into the fire box above and below the grate.
A still further object is to furnish a stoker of the above character with a common means for operating a fuel feeding worm and the air blower.
With the foregoing objects outlined and with other objects in view which will appear as the description proceeds, the invention consists in the novel features hereinafter described in detail, illustrated in the accompanying drawing, and more particularly pointed out in the appended claims:
The single sheet of drawing illustrates a stoker exhibiting the invention in vertical section and partly in elevation cooperating with the re box of a tobacco eurer.
Referring to the drawing, 3 designates the walls of a conventional tobacco barn, having in the lower portion thereof, a horizontally arranged heating flue 4 which extends in a circuitous manner from a fire box 5 to a chimney or stack (not shown). All of these parts are of conventional construction and the fire box is provided with a horizontal grate 1, separating a combustion chamber 8 from an ash pit 9. The outer end of the fire box is provided with a doorway IIJ by which access is had to the interior of the re box from the exterior of the barn.
With such a conventional structure, I will employ a wheel-supported carriage II on which is mounted a hopper I2 to receive powdered coal. The hopper is rigidly connected at its lower end to an inner horizontal tube I3 arranged within, and in spaced relation to, an outer tube I 4, rigidly connected with the carriage and hopper.
The outer end of the tube I4 is provided with an air inlet I5, and interposed in the tube is a fan or blower I6, driven by any suitable means, such as a belt I1, from a prime mover I8. The latter is mounted on a reduction gear box I9, supported by the carriage I I, and the prime mover by any suitable transmission means, drives through gearing in the box, a miter gear positioned within the tube I4. A screw conveyor 2l has a. shaft 22 journalled in the inner tube, and
2 the shaft is provided at its outer end with a miter gear 23 meshing with, and driven by, gear 20.
As the inner tube is spaced from the outer one, the air forced by the blower travels through a substantially annular passageway 24, so as to cool the conveyor before the air is discharged into an enlarged sleeve 25 fixed to the inner end of the tube I4. Such sleeve functions as the casing of a nozzle in which there is an apertured conical structure, formed in the present example, of a series of spaced members or rings 26, 2'I, 28 and 29, of gradually increasing diameter from the outlet end of the tube I3 to the discharge end 30 of the sleeve. so as to form a throat flaring to ward the discharge end of the nozzle. The rings may be connected to one another and to the sleeve by any suitable means, such as spaced joints 3I so as to allow the air forced into the sleeve by the blower to enter each ring through one end thereof, and after commingling with the powdered coal, or the like, to travel with it into combustion chamber 8.
To insure perfect combustion, the sleeve is provided with hollow elbows 32 and 33, respectively, for discharging air below the grate and also into the upper portion of the fire box. The sleeve may also be provided with lateral `elbows (not shown) so as to discharge air into the opposite side portions of the fire box. As the mouths of all the elbows are directed toward the inner end of the re box, it is obvious that the stream of powdered fuel and air, in travelling over the grate, will be substantially surrounded by longitudinally travelling streams of air, and this will result in complete combustion of the fuel.
It will be observed that the ydoorway I0 is of suilicient size to permit the nozzle and its projecting elbows to be introduced into the re box, or to be removed therefrom, and when the nozzle is within the fire box, the doorway may be closed by a door 35, carried by the Stoker, if desired.
From the foregoing, it is believed that my improved stoker and the operation thereof may be readily understood, and it is evident that changes may be made in the details disclosed without departing from the spirit of the invention, as expressed in the following claims:
What I claim and desire to secure by Letters Patent is:
1. A stoker of the character described comprising inner and outer tubes spaced from one another to provide an air passageway, means for forcing air through said passageway, means for feeding solid fuel into the inner tube, a nozzle operatively connected to one end portion of the outer tube, a conveyor arranged in the inner tube for feeding said fuel into the nozzle, a series of spaced members arranged in the nozzle and forming a throat flaring from one end of the inner tube toward the outer end of the nozzle, whereby fuel discharged from the inner tube will mix with air from the passageway, discharged into the throat through the spaces'between said series of members, and auxiliary means for discharging air from the peripheral portion of the nozzle and for directing it forwardly away from the nozzle and in spaced relation to the axis thereof.
2. A stoker of the character described comprising inner and outer tubes spaced from one another to provide an air passageway, means for forcing air through said passageway, means for feeding solid fuel into the inner tube, a y
nozzle operatively connected to one end portion of the outer tube, a conveyor arranged in the inner tube for feeding said fuel into the nozzle, a series of spaced members arranged in the nozzle and forming a throat flaring from one end of the inner tube toward the outer end of the nozzle, whereby fuel discharged .from the inner tube will mix with air from the passageway, discharged into the throat through the spaces between said series of members, and auxiliary means for discharging air from the peripheral portion of the top and bottom .of the nozzle and for directing such air forwardly away from said nozzle 4and in spaced relation to the axis thereof.
3. A stoker of the character described comprising inner and outer tubes spaced from one another to provide an airpassageway, means for forcing air through said passageway, means for feeding solid fuel into the inner tube, a nozzle operatively connected to one end portion ofthe outer tube, a conveyor arranged in the inner tube for feeding said fuel into'the nozzle, a series of spaced members arranged in the nozzle and forming a throat flaring from one `end of the inner tube toward the outer end of the nozzle, whereby fuel discharged from the inner tube will mix with air from the passageway, discharged into the throat through the spaces between said series of members, and upper and lower hollow elbows connected to the peripheral portion of the nozzle for discharging air forwardly from the nozzle in spaced relation to the axis thereof.
4. A Stoker of the character described comprising inner and outer vtubes spaced from one another to provide an air passageway, means for forcing air through said passageway, means for feeding solid fuel into the inner tube, a substantially cylindrical sleeve-like nozzle operatively connected to the vdischarge end portion of the outer tube, means in the inner tube for feeding said fuel into the sleeve-like nozzle, a series of spaced substantially cylindrical rings arranged in the nozzle substantially concentric with the axis of the inner tube and forming a throat flaring toward the discharge end of the nozzle, said rings varying in diameter withv the smaller ring arranged to directly receive fuel discharged from the inner tube, said passageway communicating with the throat, and circumferentially spaced conduit members carried by the periphery of the sleeve-like nozzle directing air from said passageway forwardly of the nozzle as a plurality of streams spaced outwardly from the axis of thenozzle.
5. In combination 'With a fire box having an internal grate, a doorway at one end of the fire box, and means at the opposite end of the re box for discharging hot gases of combustion from the same, a stoker comprising inner and outer tubes provided with discharge ends extending through said doorway into the fire box, said tubes being spaced apart to provide an air passageway, means for feeding solid fuel into the inner tube, a nozzle operatively connected to the discharge end portion of the outer tube, a conveyor arranged in the inner tube for feeding said fuel into the nozzle, a series of `spaced members arranged in the nozzle and forming a throat fiaring from the discharge end of the inner tube toward the discharge end of the nozzle, whereby `fuel discharged from the inner tube will mix with air from the passageway, discharged into the throat through the spaces between said series of members, said throat being positioned above the grate, and means for discharging air from the nozzle beneath the grate.
6. In combination with a i'lre box having an internal grate, a doorway at one end of the fire box, and means at the opposite end of the lfire box for discharging hot gases of combustion from the same, a stoker comprising inner and outer tubes provided with discharge ends extending through said doorway into the re box, said tubes being spaced apart to provide an air passageway, means for feeding solid fuel into the inner tube, a nozzle coaxial with the outer tube and operatively connected to the discharge end portion of the outer tube, said nozzle discharging toward the first mentioned means, a conveyor arranged in the inner tube for feeding said fuel into the nozzle, a series of concentric spaced members arranged in the nozzle coaxial therewith and forming a throat flaring from the discharge end of the inner tube toward the discharge end of the nozzle, whereby fuel discharged from the inner tube will mix with air from the passageway, discharged into the throat through the spaces between said series of members, said throat being `positioned above the grate, and auxiliary means for discharging air from the nozzle into the fire box from above the throat.
7. In combination with a fire box having an internal grate, a doorway at one end of the fire box, and means at the opposite end -of the re box for discharging hot gases of combustionafrom the saine, a Stoker comprising inner and outer tubes provided with discharge ends extending through said doorway into the fire box, said tubes being spaced apart to provide an air passageway, means for feeding solid fue] into the inner tube, a nozzle operatively connected to the discharge end portion of the outer tube, fa ccnveyor arranged in the inner ltube for feeding said fuel into the nozzle, a series of spaced members arranged in the nozzle and forming a throat flaring from the discharge end of the inner tube toward the discharge end of the nozzle, whereby fuel discharged `from the inner tube will mix with air from the passageway, discharged into the throat through the spaces between said series of members, said throat being positioned above Ithe grate, and means for discharging air from the nozzle into the nre box, above the throat and below the grate.
8. A portable Stoker of the character described comprising a carriage having a fuel hopper at the medial portion thereof, inner and outer concentric tubes arranged substantially horizontally on the carriage and spaced from one another to provide an air passageway, .a blower mounted on the carriage for forcing air through said passageway toward the discharge end of the passageway, said hopper communicating with the inner tube, a conveyor in the inner tube for forcing fuel toward the discharge end of the latter, means including a prime mover mounted on the carriage and driving the blower and conveyor, a nozzle mounted on the discharge end portion of the outer tube, a series of spaced collars arranged n the nozzle coaxially with the aXis of the tubes and forming a throat flaring from the discharge end of the inner tube toward the discharge end of the nozzle, whereby fuel discharged from the inner tube will mix with air from the passageway, discharged into the throat through said series of members, and means for directing air from the passageway above and below said collars in directions substantially parallel with respect to the axis of said tubes.
REUBIN E. MAYO.
6 REFERENCES CITED The following references are of record in the file of this patent:
UNITED STATES PATENTS Number Name Date 1,254,393 Clendon Jan. 22, 1918 1,322,999 Bester Nov. 25, 1919 1,697,048 Cox Jan. 1, 1929 1,712,326 Brock May 7, 1929 1,856,902 Arrowood May 3, 1932 1,970,523 Hoiman Aug. 14, 1934 2,054,805 Burton Sept. 22, 1936 2,114,942 Sugg Apr. 19, 1938 2,228,947 Casey Jan. 14, 1941 FOREIGN PATENTS Number Country Date 73,391 Sweden Jan. 12, 1932
US657807A 1946-03-28 1946-03-28 Solid fuel stoker, including auxiliary air feed means Expired - Lifetime US2510240A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US657807A US2510240A (en) 1946-03-28 1946-03-28 Solid fuel stoker, including auxiliary air feed means

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US657807A US2510240A (en) 1946-03-28 1946-03-28 Solid fuel stoker, including auxiliary air feed means

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2510240A true US2510240A (en) 1950-06-06

Family

ID=24638729

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US657807A Expired - Lifetime US2510240A (en) 1946-03-28 1946-03-28 Solid fuel stoker, including auxiliary air feed means

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2510240A (en)

Cited By (13)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2711075A (en) * 1950-01-16 1955-06-21 Perret Paul Auguste External combustion engines with bellows-type expansion chambers
US4412496A (en) * 1982-04-27 1983-11-01 Foster Wheeler Energy Corp. Combustion system and method for a coal-fired furnace utilizing a low load coal burner
WO1984002385A1 (en) * 1982-12-08 1984-06-21 Dan Trim Aps Maskinfab A solid fuel stoker
FR2552206A1 (en) * 1983-09-17 1985-03-22 Koch Transporttechnik Gmbh Refuse incinerator grate loading mechanism
US4520740A (en) * 1982-04-20 1985-06-04 Coal Industry (Patents) Limited Combustion and heating equipment
US6055914A (en) * 1997-12-09 2000-05-02 Sure Alloy Steel Corporation Pre-riffle box mixing device for coal-fired power plant
US6186079B1 (en) 1999-08-31 2001-02-13 Sure Alloy Steel Corporation Linear diffuser for balancing coal flow
US6234090B1 (en) 1999-08-31 2001-05-22 Sure Alloy Steel Corporation Linear diffuser for balancing coal flow
US6257415B1 (en) 1999-11-15 2001-07-10 Sure Alloy Steel Corporation Multi-outlet diffuser system for classifier cones
US6588598B2 (en) 1999-11-15 2003-07-08 Rickey E. Wark Multi-outlet diffuser system for classifier cones
US20030209470A1 (en) * 1999-11-15 2003-11-13 Wark Rickey E. Diffuser insert for classifier piping
EP2685166A1 (en) * 2011-03-11 2014-01-15 Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Environmental & Chemical Engineering Co., Ltd. Garbage supply device
ITTV20130109A1 (en) * 2013-07-12 2015-01-13 Orion Power Srl MOBILE HOT AIR GENERATION SYSTEM.

Citations (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1254393A (en) * 1914-07-17 1918-01-22 Locomotive Pulverized Fuel Company Pulverized-fuel and air feeder and mixer.
US1322999A (en) * 1919-11-25 Hybrqgarbgn-burher
US1697048A (en) * 1925-02-06 1929-01-01 George R Metcalf Fuel-feeder nozzle
US1712326A (en) * 1926-07-13 1929-05-07 Brock Joseph Burner
US1856902A (en) * 1927-02-26 1932-05-03 Milton W Arrowood Apparatus for burning powdered fuel
US1970523A (en) * 1929-04-01 1934-08-14 Richard F Kehr Stoker
US2054805A (en) * 1930-12-13 1936-09-22 Steel Products Eng Co Furnace
US2114942A (en) * 1937-05-11 1938-04-19 Henry C Sugg Tobacco curing apparatus
US2228947A (en) * 1937-08-24 1941-01-14 James A Casey Automatic stoker

Patent Citations (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1322999A (en) * 1919-11-25 Hybrqgarbgn-burher
US1254393A (en) * 1914-07-17 1918-01-22 Locomotive Pulverized Fuel Company Pulverized-fuel and air feeder and mixer.
US1697048A (en) * 1925-02-06 1929-01-01 George R Metcalf Fuel-feeder nozzle
US1712326A (en) * 1926-07-13 1929-05-07 Brock Joseph Burner
US1856902A (en) * 1927-02-26 1932-05-03 Milton W Arrowood Apparatus for burning powdered fuel
US1970523A (en) * 1929-04-01 1934-08-14 Richard F Kehr Stoker
US2054805A (en) * 1930-12-13 1936-09-22 Steel Products Eng Co Furnace
US2114942A (en) * 1937-05-11 1938-04-19 Henry C Sugg Tobacco curing apparatus
US2228947A (en) * 1937-08-24 1941-01-14 James A Casey Automatic stoker

Cited By (16)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2711075A (en) * 1950-01-16 1955-06-21 Perret Paul Auguste External combustion engines with bellows-type expansion chambers
US4520740A (en) * 1982-04-20 1985-06-04 Coal Industry (Patents) Limited Combustion and heating equipment
US4412496A (en) * 1982-04-27 1983-11-01 Foster Wheeler Energy Corp. Combustion system and method for a coal-fired furnace utilizing a low load coal burner
WO1984002385A1 (en) * 1982-12-08 1984-06-21 Dan Trim Aps Maskinfab A solid fuel stoker
FR2552206A1 (en) * 1983-09-17 1985-03-22 Koch Transporttechnik Gmbh Refuse incinerator grate loading mechanism
US6055914A (en) * 1997-12-09 2000-05-02 Sure Alloy Steel Corporation Pre-riffle box mixing device for coal-fired power plant
US6186079B1 (en) 1999-08-31 2001-02-13 Sure Alloy Steel Corporation Linear diffuser for balancing coal flow
US6234090B1 (en) 1999-08-31 2001-05-22 Sure Alloy Steel Corporation Linear diffuser for balancing coal flow
US6257415B1 (en) 1999-11-15 2001-07-10 Sure Alloy Steel Corporation Multi-outlet diffuser system for classifier cones
US6588598B2 (en) 1999-11-15 2003-07-08 Rickey E. Wark Multi-outlet diffuser system for classifier cones
US20030209470A1 (en) * 1999-11-15 2003-11-13 Wark Rickey E. Diffuser insert for classifier piping
US6840183B2 (en) 1999-11-15 2005-01-11 Rickey E. Wark Diffuser insert for coal fired burners
EP2685166A1 (en) * 2011-03-11 2014-01-15 Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Environmental & Chemical Engineering Co., Ltd. Garbage supply device
EP2685166A4 (en) * 2011-03-11 2015-04-01 Mitsubishi Heavy Ind Environmental & Chemical Eng Co Ltd Garbage supply device
US9869472B2 (en) 2011-03-11 2018-01-16 Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Environmental & Chemical Engineering Co., Ltd. Garbage supply device
ITTV20130109A1 (en) * 2013-07-12 2015-01-13 Orion Power Srl MOBILE HOT AIR GENERATION SYSTEM.

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2510240A (en) Solid fuel stoker, including auxiliary air feed means
US3856455A (en) Method and apparatus for mixing and turbulating particulate fuel with air for subsequent combustion
US2335188A (en) Fuel burner
US2395103A (en) Turbulent burner for fuels in general
US1163650A (en) Furnace-burner.
US3286666A (en) Combustion apparatus
US1315719A (en) Apparatus for burning powdered coal.
US2702013A (en) Burner for incinerating cotton gin waste
US1500651A (en) Glass-making apparatus
US3134345A (en) Combination incinerator and draft control apparatus
US2039890A (en) Burner
CN104728850A (en) Organic fertilizer production line
US2170277A (en) Stoker and furnace therefor
US1943376A (en) Stoker for pulverized fuel
US1204631A (en) Feeding and burning fine fuel.
US789796A (en) Automatic fuel-feeding device.
US2122708A (en) Underfeed stoker and ash remover
US1728958A (en) Rotary furnace
US2467805A (en) Apparatus for burning fuel
US1178436A (en) Feeding and burning fine fuel.
US2079420A (en) Burner for firing furnaces with powdered fuel
US1304973A (en) Fuel-feeding- device
US2341252A (en) Automatic stoker
US1669635A (en) Powdered-coal feeder
US1980755A (en) Stoker