US3642534A - Sugar-crystallizing method and apparatus - Google Patents

Sugar-crystallizing method and apparatus Download PDF

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US3642534A
US3642534A US882604A US3642534DA US3642534A US 3642534 A US3642534 A US 3642534A US 882604 A US882604 A US 882604A US 3642534D A US3642534D A US 3642534DA US 3642534 A US3642534 A US 3642534A
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massecuite
magma
sugar
syrup
comminuting
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Jacques De Cremoux
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Fives Lille Cail
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    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C13SUGAR INDUSTRY
    • C13BPRODUCTION OF SUCROSE; APPARATUS SPECIALLY ADAPTED THEREFOR
    • C13B30/00Crystallisation; Crystallising apparatus; Separating crystals from mother liquors ; Evaporating or boiling sugar juice
    • C13B30/02Crystallisation; Crystallising apparatus
    • C13B30/022Continuous processes, apparatus therefor
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01DSEPARATION
    • B01D9/00Crystallisation
    • B01D9/0036Crystallisation on to a bed of product crystals; Seeding
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01DSEPARATION
    • B01D9/00Crystallisation
    • B01D9/0059General arrangements of crystallisation plant, e.g. flow sheets
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01DSEPARATION
    • B01D9/00Crystallisation
    • B01D9/0063Control or regulation

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  • This invention relates to the continuous crystallization of raw sugar from concentrated syrup, and particularly to a method of seeding the syrup and to apparatus for performing the method.
  • a principal object of the invention is a simpler and more economical method of preparing a magma of seed crystals. Another object is the provision of apparatus for performing the method.
  • a useful magma may be prepared by comminuting the particulate crystalline sugar ofmassecuite to the desired size while the crystalline sugar is immersed in the mother liquor of the massecuite.
  • the wet grinding of the crystalline sugar does not produce the tines which are undesirable in the seed crystals and unavoidable in dry crushing or grinding.
  • the equipment required for the method consists solely of a comminuting device, such as a ball mill, and the invention thus reduces the initial cost and the operating expense of a sugar crystallization plant.
  • magma may be prepared according to the method of the invention either in batches or continuously, but continuous magma preparation normally is better adapted to use with continuously operating crystallizing equipment.
  • FIG. 1 is a flow diagram of apparatus for performing the method of the invention
  • FIG. 2 illustrates a ball mill for use in the method of FIG. 1 in elevational section on the axis of rotation of the mill
  • FIG. 3 shows a modification of the apparatus of FIG. 1.
  • FIG. 1 there is shown a vacuum crystallizer of a conventional type, not shown in detail, to which concentrated syrup is fed by a feed line 12.
  • a separate feedline 14 supplies magma to the crystallizer vessel, and massecuite is withdrawn continuously by a rotary slurry pump 16, most of the withdrawn material being pumped into a mixer 18 for further processing, not relevant to this invention.
  • Metered amounts of the withdrawn massecuite are continuously transferred by a positive displacement pump 20 to a crusher 24, together with dilute syrup admitted through a control valve 22, and the magma of comminuted crystals suspended in the mother liquor of the massecuite is fed to the crystallizer 10 through the feedline 14 which connects the crusher to the crystallizer vessel and is equipped with a storage and settling tank 26 and a control valve 28, the setting of the valve being coordinated with the operation of the pump 20 to maintain steady operating conditions in the crusher 24 and to maintain an adequate magma level in the storage tank 26, which prevents air from being entrained with the magma fed to the crystallizer 10 in which a vacuum is maintained for rapid evaporation of water from the syrup, as is conventional.
  • FIG. 2 A ball mill modified for the purpose of the invention has been found advantageous in apparatus of the type shown in FIG. 1, and a suitable ball mill is illustrated in FIG. 2. It has a cylindrical shell 30 which is rotated about a horizontal axis in the usual manner, not shown. The interior ofthe shell 30 is axially divided into three compartments by two upright screens 32, 34 of an aperture size sufficient to retain the grinding balls 36 which partly fill the shell. An additional screen 38 prevents discharge of the balls 36 through an annular aperture 40 in one radial end wall of the shell. Massecuite somewhat reduced in viscosity by the admixture of syrup is fed to the shell 30 continuously through a central aperture 42 in the other radial end wall. The material is still viscous enough to maintain in the shell 30 a surface 44 which slopes obliquely downwardly in the direction ofthe mill axis.
  • the particle size distribution of the comminuted sugar crystals discharged from the aperture 40 together with mother liquor depends mainly on the dwell time of the material in the shell, on the rotary speed of the shell, and on the size, weight and shape of the grinding bodies 36 in a manner well known to those skilled in the art. Suitable comminuting conditions must be established experimentally for each piece of comminuting equipment.
  • a continuous crystallizer having an hourly capacity of 30 metric tons of massecuite was equipped with a metering pump capable of transferring 150 to 300 kg. of the withdrawn massecuite per hour to a ball mill of the type shown in FIG. 2.
  • a control valve could be set for delivering 75 to 150 kg./hour syrup or hot water to the mill, approximately one half of the liquid being added to the massecuite prior to grinding, and the other half being added to the treated massecuite to form a magma which was returned to the crystallizer.
  • the grown crystals in the massecuite had an average particle size of 0.7 mm.
  • the magma contained 20 to 25 percent seed crystals by weight, depending on the specific diluting conditions chosen, and the particle size on the seed crystals was practically entirely within the range from 20 to microns.
  • the ball mill employed had an axial length of one meter, a diameter of 0.4 meter, and it was rotated at a speed of 44 rpm.
  • FIG. 3 Another crystallizing arrangement is shown in FIG. 3. It includes a vacuum crystallizer 10' from which massecuite is withdrawn by a slurry pump 16 and largely flows into a mixer 18'. A portion of the massecuite is transferred from the intake of the pump 16' to a crusher 24 by a metering pump 20.
  • a calibrated control valve 22 delivers syrup to two branch lines respectively equipped with valves 46, 48 for feeding respective portions of the syrup to the intake of the crusher 24 and to an open storage tank 26' equipped with a nonillustrated agitator to which the treated massecuite from the crusher 24' is also transferred.
  • the mixture of treated massecuite and diluting syrup is held long enough in the tank 26' to permit escape of entrapped air before the mixture flows to a pump 50 which discharges the magma'into the feedline 12' delivering concentrated syrup to the crystallizer 10.
  • a bypass 52 connects the intake and discharge conduits of the pump 50 and is controlled by a motor-operated valve 54.
  • the reversible valve motor is connected with a level gage 56 in the storage tank 26 to open the valve 54, and thereby to reduce the effective output of the pump 54 when the magma level in the tank 26 drops below a desired height, and to reduce the flow section of the valve 54, and thereby to increase the effective output of the pump 50 when the magma level rises above the desired height.
  • a crystallizing arrangement for sugar including a crystallizer vessel, feeding means for continuously feeding a body of syrup and a magma of sugar crystals suspended in syrup to said vessel, and withdrawing means for withdrawing massecuite from said vessel, the improvement which comprises:
  • connecting means connecting said comminuting means with said feeding means for flow ofthe treated massecuite from said comminuting means to said vessel.
  • said comminuting means including a rotary mill and grinding bodies in said mill.
  • said mill including a container mounted for rotation about a horizontally extending axis, an inlet and an outlet on said container axially spaced on said container, and a plurality of screens axially dividing the interior of said container into a plurality of compartments, the apertures of said screens being of a size to retain said grinding bodies but to pass said treated massecuite.

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  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Crystallography & Structural Chemistry (AREA)
  • Chemical Kinetics & Catalysis (AREA)
  • Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
  • Biochemistry (AREA)
  • Organic Chemistry (AREA)
  • Saccharide Compounds (AREA)
  • Jellies, Jams, And Syrups (AREA)
  • Coloring Foods And Improving Nutritive Qualities (AREA)
  • Medicines Containing Plant Substances (AREA)

Abstract

A magma of sugar seed crystals is prepared by grinding the massecuite continuously withdrawn from a crystallizer in a ball mill until the crystalline, particulate sugar in the mother liquor of the massecuite is reduced to the necessary grain size of seed crystals and a suitable magma is thereby formed which is fed continuously to the crystallizer simultaneously with a body of concentrated syrup.

Description

United States Patent De Cremoux Feb. 15, 1972 [54] SUGAR-fllYSTALLIZlNG METHOD 3,356,532 12/1967 Grandadam ..127/5s AND APPARATUS 3,506,486 4/1970 Ganiaris ..127/15 X [7 2] Inventor: Jacques De Cremoux, Lille, France FOREIGN PATENTS OR APPLICATIONS [73] Assignee: Fives Lille-Cail, Paris, France 98,737 4/1940 Switzerland ..24l/72 F D 5 l 69 1,539,106 8/1968 France ..127/l6 [22] 9 OTHER PUBLICATIONS [21] Appl. N0.: 882,604
Honig, liri nciples of Sugar Technology V. 11, pp. 279-82 Elcvier Pub. Co. 1959 [30] Foreign Apphcatmn Pnomy Data P. Honig Principles of Sugar Technology, V. 11, p. 286- Dec. 6, 1968 France ..176907 Z96, Elsevie" 1959 Primary ExaminerMorris O. Wolk [52] US. Cl ..127/15, 23/273, 127/16, Assistant Examiner-D. G, Conlin 127/58, 127/60, 241/72 Att0rneyKurt Kelman [51] Int. Cl ..Cl3f 1/02, C13g 1/04 [58] Field of Search ..127/15, 16, 29-31, ABSTRACT 127/58 60-64; 23/273 303; 241/72 A magma of sugar seed crystals is prepared by grinding the massecuite continuously withdrawn from a crystallizer in a [56] References Cited ball mill until the crystalline, particulate sugar in the mother liquor of the massecuite is reduced to the necessary grain size UNITED STATES PATENTS of seed crystals and a suitable magma is thereby fonned which 1 671 291 5/1928 Ihlefeldt ..241/72 is fed cminuusly crystallize simultanmusly with 2,091,900 8/1937 Widmerm, .1271 5 ofmncemrated Syrup CRUSHER 8 Claims, 3 Drawing Figures CRYSTALLIZER MIXER PAIENIEUFEB i s I972 3, 642 5 34 SHEET 1 [IF 3 CONTROL VALVE P 2o MIXER CRUSHER INVENTOR- JACQUES DE CREMOUX AGENT Partmmrzm m 3.642534 SHEET 2 BF 3 INVENI'OK. JACQUES DE CREMOUX AGENT PAIQNIEBFEBIS m2 3.642.534
"I INVENTOR. JACQUES'DE CREMOUX BY if m; m
AGENT SUGAR-CRYSTALLIZING METHOD AND APPARATUS This invention relates to the continuous crystallization of raw sugar from concentrated syrup, and particularly to a method of seeding the syrup and to apparatus for performing the method.
It is common practice to introduce a continuous stream of concentrated syrup into a crystallizer vessel, and to initiate crystallization of sugar from the syrup by a previously prepared magma of seed sugar crystals suspended in syrup. A massecuite of coarser crystals suspended in a mother liquor is continuously withdrawn from the crystallizer vessel. The number of crystals in the massecuite is practically identical with the number of added seed crystals, and the grain size distribution and quantity of the added seed crystals must be controlled precisely for obtaining a massecuite of desired properties.
For preparing a magma of seed crystals, it has been proposed to separate the raw sugar crystals from the mother liquor of massecuite by centrifugal extraction, to crush the recovered crystals, to screen the broken material for removal of fines and of an oversized fraction, and thereafter to mix the desired grain fraction with syrup. The known method requires a crusher or mill, classifying screens, and a mixer, and operation of these machines consumes an appreciable amount of labor and energy.
A principal object of the invention is a simpler and more economical method of preparing a magma of seed crystals. Another object is the provision of apparatus for performing the method.
It has now been found that a useful magma may be prepared by comminuting the particulate crystalline sugar ofmassecuite to the desired size while the crystalline sugar is immersed in the mother liquor of the massecuite. The wet grinding of the crystalline sugar does not produce the tines which are undesirable in the seed crystals and unavoidable in dry crushing or grinding. The equipment required for the method consists solely ofa comminuting device, such as a ball mill, and the invention thus reduces the initial cost and the operating expense of a sugar crystallization plant.
If the massecuite withdrawn from the crystallizer is too viscous for partial use as magma, it may be diluted with water or syrup prior to grinding or after grinding and prior to being added to the body of concentrated syrup in the crystallizer. A magma may be prepared according to the method of the invention either in batches or continuously, but continuous magma preparation normally is better adapted to use with continuously operating crystallizing equipment.
Other features, additional objects and many of the attendant advantages of this invention will readily become apparent from the following detailed description of preferred embodiments when considered in connection with the appended drawing in which:
FIG. 1 is a flow diagram of apparatus for performing the method of the invention;
FIG. 2 illustrates a ball mill for use in the method of FIG. 1 in elevational section on the axis of rotation of the mill; and
FIG. 3 shows a modification of the apparatus of FIG. 1.
Referring now to the drawing in detail, and initially to FIG. 1, there is shown a vacuum crystallizer of a conventional type, not shown in detail, to which concentrated syrup is fed by a feed line 12. A separate feedline 14 supplies magma to the crystallizer vessel, and massecuite is withdrawn continuously by a rotary slurry pump 16, most of the withdrawn material being pumped into a mixer 18 for further processing, not relevant to this invention.
Metered amounts of the withdrawn massecuite are continuously transferred by a positive displacement pump 20 to a crusher 24, together with dilute syrup admitted through a control valve 22, and the magma of comminuted crystals suspended in the mother liquor of the massecuite is fed to the crystallizer 10 through the feedline 14 which connects the crusher to the crystallizer vessel and is equipped with a storage and settling tank 26 and a control valve 28, the setting of the valve being coordinated with the operation of the pump 20 to maintain steady operating conditions in the crusher 24 and to maintain an adequate magma level in the storage tank 26, which prevents air from being entrained with the magma fed to the crystallizer 10 in which a vacuum is maintained for rapid evaporation of water from the syrup, as is conventional.
A ball mill modified for the purpose of the invention has been found advantageous in apparatus of the type shown in FIG. 1, and a suitable ball mill is illustrated in FIG. 2. It has a cylindrical shell 30 which is rotated about a horizontal axis in the usual manner, not shown. The interior ofthe shell 30 is axially divided into three compartments by two upright screens 32, 34 of an aperture size sufficient to retain the grinding balls 36 which partly fill the shell. An additional screen 38 prevents discharge of the balls 36 through an annular aperture 40 in one radial end wall of the shell. Massecuite somewhat reduced in viscosity by the admixture of syrup is fed to the shell 30 continuously through a central aperture 42 in the other radial end wall. The material is still viscous enough to maintain in the shell 30 a surface 44 which slopes obliquely downwardly in the direction ofthe mill axis.
The particle size distribution of the comminuted sugar crystals discharged from the aperture 40 together with mother liquor depends mainly on the dwell time of the material in the shell, on the rotary speed of the shell, and on the size, weight and shape of the grinding bodies 36 in a manner well known to those skilled in the art. Suitable comminuting conditions must be established experimentally for each piece of comminuting equipment.
In an actual embodiment of the invention, a continuous crystallizer having an hourly capacity of 30 metric tons of massecuite was equipped with a metering pump capable of transferring 150 to 300 kg. of the withdrawn massecuite per hour to a ball mill of the type shown in FIG. 2. A control valve could be set for delivering 75 to 150 kg./hour syrup or hot water to the mill, approximately one half of the liquid being added to the massecuite prior to grinding, and the other half being added to the treated massecuite to form a magma which was returned to the crystallizer.
The grown crystals in the massecuite had an average particle size of 0.7 mm. The magma contained 20 to 25 percent seed crystals by weight, depending on the specific diluting conditions chosen, and the particle size on the seed crystals was practically entirely within the range from 20 to microns.
The ball mill employed had an axial length of one meter, a diameter of 0.4 meter, and it was rotated at a speed of 44 rpm.
Another crystallizing arrangement is shown in FIG. 3. It includes a vacuum crystallizer 10' from which massecuite is withdrawn by a slurry pump 16 and largely flows into a mixer 18'. A portion of the massecuite is transferred from the intake of the pump 16' to a crusher 24 by a metering pump 20. A calibrated control valve 22 delivers syrup to two branch lines respectively equipped with valves 46, 48 for feeding respective portions of the syrup to the intake of the crusher 24 and to an open storage tank 26' equipped with a nonillustrated agitator to which the treated massecuite from the crusher 24' is also transferred.
The mixture of treated massecuite and diluting syrup is held long enough in the tank 26' to permit escape of entrapped air before the mixture flows to a pump 50 which discharges the magma'into the feedline 12' delivering concentrated syrup to the crystallizer 10.
A bypass 52 connects the intake and discharge conduits of the pump 50 and is controlled by a motor-operated valve 54. The reversible valve motor is connected with a level gage 56 in the storage tank 26 to open the valve 54, and thereby to reduce the effective output of the pump 54 when the magma level in the tank 26 drops below a desired height, and to reduce the flow section of the valve 54, and thereby to increase the effective output of the pump 50 when the magma level rises above the desired height.
Many modifications and variations are obviously possible in the illustrated apparatus without departing from the scope and spirit ofthis invention as set forth in the appended claims.
What is claimed is:
1. In a method of crystallizing sugar from concentrated syrup by preparing a magma of sugar crystals of predetermined size, and adding said magma to a body of syrup under conditions in which said sugar crystals act as seeds initiating the crystallization of the sugar from said syrup, the improvement in the preparation of the magma which comprises comminuting the sugar crystals in a massecuite to said predetermined size.
2. ln a method of crystallizing sugar from concentrated syrup by preparing a magma of sugar crystals of predetermined size, and adding said magma to a body of syrup under conditions in which said sugar crystals act as seeds initiating the crystallization of the sugar from said syrup, the improvement in the preparation of the magma which comprises comminuting the sugar crystals in a massecuite to said predetermined size, and diluting the magma with water prior to adding the magma to the body of syrup.
3. In a method of crystallizing sugar from concentrated syrup by preparing a magma of sugar crystals of predetermined size, and adding said magma to a body of syrup under conditions in which said sugar crystals act as seeds initiating the crystallization of the sugar from said syrup, the improvement in the preparation of the magma which comprises comminuting the sugar crystals in a massecuite to said predetermined size, and diluting the massecuite with water prior to comminuting the sugar crystals therein.
4. ln a crystallizing arrangement for sugar including a crystallizer vessel, feeding means for continuously feeding a body of syrup and a magma of sugar crystals suspended in syrup to said vessel, and withdrawing means for withdrawing massecuite from said vessel, the improvement which comprises:
a. comminuting means;
b. transferring means for transferring a portion of said massecuite from said withdrawing means to said comminuting means for comminuting treatment ofthe massecuite; and
c. connecting means connecting said comminuting means with said feeding means for flow ofthe treated massecuite from said comminuting means to said vessel.
5. In an arrangement as set forth in claim 4, temporary storing means in said connecting means for temporarily storing said treated massecuite.
6. In an arrangement as set forth in claim 5, means for maintaining the level of said treated massecuite in said storing means at a level sufficiently high to prevent entrainment ofair into said vessel with said treated massecuite.
7. In an arrangement as set forth in claim 4, said comminuting means including a rotary mill and grinding bodies in said mill.
8. In an arrangement as set forth in claim 7, said mill including a container mounted for rotation about a horizontally extending axis, an inlet and an outlet on said container axially spaced on said container, and a plurality of screens axially dividing the interior of said container into a plurality of compartments, the apertures of said screens being of a size to retain said grinding bodies but to pass said treated massecuite.

Claims (7)

  1. 2. In a method of crystallizing sugar from concentrated syrup by preparing a magma of sugar crystals of predetermined size, and adding said magma to a body of syrup under conditions in which said sugar crystals act as seeds initiating the crystallization of the sugar from said syrup, the improvement in the preparation of the magma which comprises comminuting the sugar crystals in a massecuite to said predetermined size, and diluting the magma with water prior to adding the magma to the body of syrup.
  2. 3. In a method of crystallizing sugar from concentrated syrup by preparing a magma of sugar crystals of predetermined size, and adding said magma to a body of syrup under conditions in which said sugar crystals act as seeds initiating the crystallization of the sugar from said syrup, the improvement in the preparation of the magma which comprises comminuting the sugar crystals in a massecuite to said predetermined size, and diluting the massecuite with water prior to comminuting the sugar crystals therein.
  3. 4. In a crystallizing arrangement for sugar including a crystallizer vessel, feeding means for continuously feeding a body of syrup and a magma of sugar crystals suspended in syrup to said vessel, and withdrawing means for withdrawing massecuite from said vessel, the improvement which comprises: a. comminuting means; b. transferring means for transferring a portion of said massecuite from said withdrawing means to said comminuting means for comminuting treatment of the massecuite; and c. connecting means connecting said comminuting means with said feeding means for flow of the treated massecuite from said comminuting means to said vessel.
  4. 5. In an arrangement as set forth in claim 4, temporary storing means in said connecting means for temporarily storing said treated massecuite.
  5. 6. In an arrangement as set forth in claim 5, means for maintaining the level of said treated massecuite in said storing means at a level sufficiently high to prevent entrainment of air into said vessel with said treated massecuite.
  6. 7. In an arrangement as set forth in claim 4, said comminuting means including a rotary mill and grinding bodies in said mill.
  7. 8. In an arrangement as set forth in claim 7, said mill including a container mounted for rotation about a horizontally extending axis, an inlet and an outlet on said container axially spaced on said container, and a plurality of screens axially dividing the interior of said container into a plurality of compartments, the apertures of said screens being of a size to retain said grinding bodies but to pass said treated massecuite.
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Cited By (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3996018A (en) * 1974-11-11 1976-12-07 Merck & Co., Inc. Crystallization system and method using crystal fracturing external to a crystallization column
US4145230A (en) * 1976-05-21 1979-03-20 Aktieselskabet De Danske Sukkerfabrikker Method for seeding super-saturated sugar solution to effect crystallization
US4164429A (en) * 1976-12-14 1979-08-14 Fives-Cail Babcock Process and installation for the production of selected crystallization seeds for use in a sugar refinery
US4518436A (en) * 1982-09-23 1985-05-21 Csm Suiker B.V. Process for the production of graft crystals for use in seeding sugar boiling brines
FR2602153A1 (en) * 1986-08-01 1988-02-05 Fives Cail Babcock Process for the production of a seeding magma for a continuously operating crystalliser
EP0255786A1 (en) * 1986-08-01 1988-02-10 FIVES-CAIL BABCOCK, Société Anonyme Process and device for producing a magma of seed crystals for a continuous-crystallization apparatus
US5015297A (en) * 1985-05-15 1991-05-14 Roquette Freres Method and installation for the production of anhydrous crystalline fructose
WO2000056416A1 (en) * 1999-03-20 2000-09-28 Domo Caproleuna Gmbh Method for controlling crystal size during continuous mass crystallisation
EP1993513A2 (en) * 2006-03-14 2008-11-26 Merck & Co., Inc. Processes and apparatuses for the production of crystalline organic microparticle compositions by micro-milling and crystallization on micro-seed and their use

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CH98737A (en) * 1922-11-21 1923-04-16 Riser Christian Slurry mixer.
US1671291A (en) * 1927-03-04 1928-05-29 Ihlefeldt Johannes Multichamber mill for grinding materials of all kinds
US2091900A (en) * 1932-04-04 1937-08-31 Penick & Ford Ltd Inc Crystallizer apparatus
US3356532A (en) * 1963-01-11 1967-12-05 Andre Pierre Osmond Bizet Crystallization of sugar
FR1539106A (en) * 1967-08-01 1968-09-13 Fives Lille Cail Continuous plant for the production of crystals from a solution of the product to be crystallized
US3506486A (en) * 1966-12-30 1970-04-14 Struthers Scient & Intern Corp Continuous crystallization

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* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
CH98737A (en) * 1922-11-21 1923-04-16 Riser Christian Slurry mixer.
US1671291A (en) * 1927-03-04 1928-05-29 Ihlefeldt Johannes Multichamber mill for grinding materials of all kinds
US2091900A (en) * 1932-04-04 1937-08-31 Penick & Ford Ltd Inc Crystallizer apparatus
US3356532A (en) * 1963-01-11 1967-12-05 Andre Pierre Osmond Bizet Crystallization of sugar
US3506486A (en) * 1966-12-30 1970-04-14 Struthers Scient & Intern Corp Continuous crystallization
FR1539106A (en) * 1967-08-01 1968-09-13 Fives Lille Cail Continuous plant for the production of crystals from a solution of the product to be crystallized

Non-Patent Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Title
Honig, Principles of Sugar Technology, Vol. II, pp. 279 82. Elsevier Pub. Co. 1959. *
P. Honig, Principles of Sugar Technology, Vol. II, pp. 286 296, Elsevier Pub. Co. 1959. *

Cited By (12)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3996018A (en) * 1974-11-11 1976-12-07 Merck & Co., Inc. Crystallization system and method using crystal fracturing external to a crystallization column
US4145230A (en) * 1976-05-21 1979-03-20 Aktieselskabet De Danske Sukkerfabrikker Method for seeding super-saturated sugar solution to effect crystallization
US4164429A (en) * 1976-12-14 1979-08-14 Fives-Cail Babcock Process and installation for the production of selected crystallization seeds for use in a sugar refinery
US4518436A (en) * 1982-09-23 1985-05-21 Csm Suiker B.V. Process for the production of graft crystals for use in seeding sugar boiling brines
US5015297A (en) * 1985-05-15 1991-05-14 Roquette Freres Method and installation for the production of anhydrous crystalline fructose
FR2602153A1 (en) * 1986-08-01 1988-02-05 Fives Cail Babcock Process for the production of a seeding magma for a continuously operating crystalliser
EP0255786A1 (en) * 1986-08-01 1988-02-10 FIVES-CAIL BABCOCK, Société Anonyme Process and device for producing a magma of seed crystals for a continuous-crystallization apparatus
AU591313B2 (en) * 1986-08-01 1989-11-30 Fives-Cail Babcock Method and equipment for production of a seeding magma for a continuous crystallization apparatus
WO2000056416A1 (en) * 1999-03-20 2000-09-28 Domo Caproleuna Gmbh Method for controlling crystal size during continuous mass crystallisation
EP1993513A2 (en) * 2006-03-14 2008-11-26 Merck & Co., Inc. Processes and apparatuses for the production of crystalline organic microparticle compositions by micro-milling and crystallization on micro-seed and their use
US20090087492A1 (en) * 2006-03-14 2009-04-02 Merck & Co., Inc. Processes and Apparatuses for the Production of Crystalline Organic Microparticle Compositions by Micro-Milling and Crystallization on Micro-Seed and Their Use
EP1993513A4 (en) * 2006-03-14 2012-06-27 Merck Sharp & Dohme Processes and apparatuses for the production of crystalline organic microparticle compositions by micro-milling and crystallization on micro-seed and their use

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DE1960646B2 (en) 1976-05-26
GB1244543A (en) 1971-09-02
BR6914773D0 (en) 1973-04-10
NL6918348A (en) 1970-06-09
FR1597729A (en) 1970-06-29
IT1044186B (en) 1980-03-20
PL80373B1 (en) 1975-08-30
BE741840A (en) 1970-05-04
NL151133B (en) 1976-10-15
ES373898A1 (en) 1972-05-16
JPS5224107B1 (en) 1977-06-29

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