US629023A - Roasting-furnace. - Google Patents

Roasting-furnace. Download PDF

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US629023A
US629023A US69915498A US1898699154A US629023A US 629023 A US629023 A US 629023A US 69915498 A US69915498 A US 69915498A US 1898699154 A US1898699154 A US 1898699154A US 629023 A US629023 A US 629023A
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arms
pipe
shaft
furnace
roasting
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US69915498A
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Lewis T Wright
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01FMIXING, e.g. DISSOLVING, EMULSIFYING OR DISPERSING
    • B01F35/00Accessories for mixers; Auxiliary operations or auxiliary devices; Parts or details of general application
    • B01F35/90Heating or cooling systems
    • B01F35/95Heating or cooling systems using heated or cooled stirrers
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10STECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10S165/00Heat exchange
    • Y10S165/135Movable heat exchanger
    • Y10S165/139Fully rotatable
    • Y10S165/145Radially extending hollow arm on rotating shaft traverses furnance shelf, e.g. rabble arm
    • Y10S165/146Angled blade suspended from arm for advancing material

Definitions

  • ⁇ My invention relates to improvements in roasting-furnaces, the object of my inventiont being to provide animproved rotary stirrer for use in such furnaces.
  • My invention is more particularlyjapplica- ⁇ ble to what is known as the McDougall roasting-furnace,7 and I shall describe it as applied thereto, it being understood that I do not limit the application of my invention to any one form of furnace.
  • the McDougall furnace contains a Vertical series of floors of brick having dischargeopenings in eachfloor to the floor next below alternately at the circumference and at the center.
  • a central shaft is provided having arms extending over these iloors, said arms carrying rabbles, and the rabbles on the series of arms are alternately inclined, so as to gradually Work the ore that is being roasted first outward to the circumference, where it is discharged through an opening onto the floor below, then from the circumference to the center, where it is discharged through a central opening onto the next floor, and so on, being finally discharged from thelowest floor at the circumference.
  • the air necessary for combustion of the ore passes upward in the reverse direction to the downward movement of the ore.
  • the heat required in roasting certain ores is such that the central shaft, the arms, and the rabbles thereonhave but a short lifetime and are always in danger of bei-ng disabled by momentaryexcess of heat; and the object of my invention has been to provide means for cooling these parts, so as to give them greater' durability and to enable the temperature of the furnace to be increased, if desired, considerably above such a temperature as would, if employed withuncooled arms, rapidly result in their destruction.
  • Figure l is a central vertical section of the apparatus.
  • Fig. 2 is a vertical section, on a larger scale, of the upper portion of the hollow driving shaft or column and the Water-pipe connections.
  • Fig. 3 is a similar view of the lower portion thereof.
  • Figli is a plan view of a detail.
  • Fig. 5 is a vertical section of the lower ⁇ end of the hollow shaft andan arm extending therefrom, broken, partly in section, and partly in side elevation.
  • Fig. 6 is a plan View from below of one of the arms with the rabbleeholding sections in position therein, but without the rabbles.
  • Fig. 7 is a similar view, enlarged, but showing one rabble in position in the holder; and
  • Fig. 8 is an enlarged transverse section of an arm with a rabble-holder and rabble therein.
  • l representsthe circular wall of a McDougall roasting-furnace, having the brick arches or lioors *2, the ore-feeders 3, and stack 4. of the usual construction.
  • a central vertical shaft 7 carrying a bevel-gear 8, driven through a pinion 9 from ,any suitable source of power.
  • Said shaft 7 extends through central apertures in the floors 2 of the furnace, of which apertures alternate ones, as lO, are closed around the shaft, whereas the other apertures l2 are of greater diameter and form'passages through the oors for the descending ore and ascending currents of air.
  • the shaft 7 is revolubly supported at its upper end in a bearing 14, suitablyfmounted on I-beams l5 at the top of the furnace. From said shaft 7 extend arms 16, there being two such arms immediately over each floor in opposite directions from the shaft, arms over alternate floors being arranged at right angleswith each other.
  • each arm are secured a nurnber of rabbles 17, set obliquely to the arm, the function of such rabbles being to stir the ore and gradually work it either toward the center or toward the circumference of the furnace, according to the inward or outward inclination of the rabble.
  • the ore after IOO being fed through the ore-traps in the topmost arch is alternately moved outward and inward along successive floors and undergoes continued exposure to currents of air ascending in the reverse direction, being finally discharged through the pockets 19.
  • the shaft 7 is made hollow and is connected above the bearing 14 by means of a stuffing-box 2O to a head-piece 2l, suitably packed in said stuffing-box, as shown at 71, which head-piece does not rotate, but is held by stays 22, mounted on the I-beams From the top of the head-piece 21 extends eentrally downward a feed-water pipe 23, into which water is supplied from any suitable source, said pipe being of such length as to approach within a short distance of the bottom of the hollow shaft 7.
  • the water discharging from the open bottom of the pipe 23 escapes into the bottom of a pipe 24 of larger diameter than and surrounding said pipe 23 and closed at the bottom, so that the water now fiows upwardly in said pipe 24.
  • spider 29 is mounted between the pipe 23 and the stuffing-box 20, and said spider serves to hold the top of the pipe 24 and close the annular space formed by the pipe 24 around the pipe 23.
  • the water passes from the hollow shaft '7, around the pipe 24, into the interior of the stuffing-box 20, thence through the head-piece 21, and out by an eX- haust-pipe 30.
  • the arms of the stirrer are sufficiently cooled to withstandthe action of the intense heat of the furnace.
  • the rabbles for stirring the ore are in my invention attached to the arms 16 in the following manner: Upon each arm 16 a number of clamps 35 are secured by means of setscrews 36, so as to extend downward from the arms, the lowerportion of said clamps being bent around to form claws 37, adapted to engage the sides of a rabble-holder 3S.
  • Saidy holder comprises a bar 39, which is adapted to slide within the claws 37 of a series of clamps 35, secured on one of the arms 16 and having ribs 40 projecting from the bar in a plane at right angles to the plane of the bar, but obliquely to its general direction, as shown will readily be seen that with this constrnci tion the rabbles and their holder can be readily removed from the arms 16 and replaced thereon for the purpose of inspection, repairs, or renewal.
  • Doors 70 are provided in the wall of the furnace, through which the arms and the branch pipes therein and the rabble-holders supported thereupon can be withdrawn.
  • a roasting-furnace the combination, with a series of doors, of a central hollow shaft, hollow arms carried thereon over the respective floors, an open-bottomed pipe inserted in said shaft, an intermediate closedbottomed pipe in said shaft into which the first pipe discharges at the bottom, a spider between the first pipe and the shaft, supporting, and closing the top of, the intermediate pipe, open-ended pipes leading from the intermediate pipeinto the hollow arms, and feed and exhaust pipes connected to the first pipe and the hollow shaft, substantially as described.

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  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Chemical Kinetics & Catalysis (AREA)
  • Vertical, Hearth, Or Arc Furnaces (AREA)
  • Furnace Housings, Linings, Walls, And Ceilings (AREA)

Description

Patented Iuly I8, |899.
L. T. WRIGHT.
ROASTING FUHNACE.
(Application led Dec. 13, 1898.1
3 Sheets-Sheet l t-Ho Model.
Ull
l i n S27/fhg@ Wff No. 629,923. Patented July la, |999. L. T. WRIGHT. RUASTING FURNACE` (Application led Dec. 13` 1898.`
filo Model.) 3 Sheets-Sheet 2 lill/1111,
D.. T. H G R w T. L
ROASTING FURNACE.
(Application led Dec. 13, 1898.
3 Sheets-Sheet 3 @Nb model.)
llivrrnn drains Farrar N@rerum LEWIS T. VRIGIIT, OF KESVICII, CALIFORNIA.
RoAsTmc-Fuennceii SPECIFICATION forming part of Letters Patent No. 629,023, dated July 18, r1899. Application filed December 13, 1898. Serial No. 699,154. (N mdl) ing at Keswick, in the county of Shasta and State of California, have invented certain new and useful Improvements in Roasting- Furnaccs, of which the following is a specilication.
`My invention relates to improvements in roasting-furnaces, the object of my inventiont being to provide animproved rotary stirrer for use in such furnaces.
My invention is more particularlyjapplica-` ble to what is known as the McDougall roasting-furnace,7 and I shall describe it as applied thereto, it being understood that I do not limit the application of my invention to any one form of furnace.
The McDougall furnace contains a Vertical series of floors of brick having dischargeopenings in eachfloor to the floor next below alternately at the circumference and at the center. A central shaft is provided having arms extending over these iloors, said arms carrying rabbles, and the rabbles on the series of arms are alternately inclined, so as to gradually Work the ore that is being roasted first outward to the circumference, where it is discharged through an opening onto the floor below, then from the circumference to the center, where it is discharged through a central opening onto the next floor, and so on, being finally discharged from thelowest floor at the circumference. At the same time the air necessary for combustion of the ore passes upward in the reverse direction to the downward movement of the ore.
Now the heat required in roasting certain ores is such that the central shaft, the arms, and the rabbles thereonhave but a short lifetime and are always in danger of bei-ng disabled by momentaryexcess of heat; and the object of my invention has been to provide means for cooling these parts, so as to give them greater' durability and to enable the temperature of the furnace to be increased, if desired, considerably above such a temperature as would, if employed withuncooled arms, rapidly result in their destruction.
My invention also resides in the novel construction, combination, and arrangement of parts hereinafter fully'speciiied, and particularly pointed out inthe claims.
In the accompanying drawings, Figure l is a central vertical section of the apparatus. Fig. 2 is a vertical section, on a larger scale, of the upper portion of the hollow driving shaft or column and the Water-pipe connections. Fig. 3 is a similar view of the lower portion thereof. Figli is a plan view of a detail. Fig. 5 is a vertical section of the lower `end of the hollow shaft andan arm extending therefrom, broken, partly in section, and partly in side elevation. Fig. 6 is a plan View from below of one of the arms with the rabbleeholding sections in position therein, but without the rabbles. Fig. 7 is a similar view, enlarged, but showing one rabble in position in the holder; and Fig. 8 is an enlarged transverse section of an arm with a rabble-holder and rabble therein.
Referring to the drawings,l representsthe circular wall of a McDougall roasting-furnace, having the brick arches or lioors *2, the ore-feeders 3, and stack 4. of the usual construction. Upon a pier 5 of masonry is stepped, as shown at 6, a central vertical shaft 7, carrying a bevel-gear 8, driven through a pinion 9 from ,any suitable source of power. Said shaft 7 extends through central apertures in the floors 2 of the furnace, of which apertures alternate ones, as lO, are closed around the shaft, whereas the other apertures l2 are of greater diameter and form'passages through the oors for the descending ore and ascending currents of air. Passages through the other floors are formed at the circumference, as shown at 13. The shaft 7 is revolubly supported at its upper end in a bearing 14, suitablyfmounted on I-beams l5 at the top of the furnace. From said shaft 7 extend arms 16, there being two such arms immediately over each floor in opposite directions from the shaft, arms over alternate floors being arranged at right angleswith each other.. To
the under side of each arm are secured a nurnber of rabbles 17, set obliquely to the arm, the function of such rabbles being to stir the ore and gradually work it either toward the center or toward the circumference of the furnace, according to the inward or outward inclination of the rabble. Thus the ore after IOO being fed through the ore-traps in the topmost arch (indicated at 13 by dotted lilies) is alternately moved outward and inward along successive floors and undergoes continued exposure to currents of air ascending in the reverse direction, being finally discharged through the pockets 19.
All of the above construction is well known and forms no part of my invention, which I will now proceed to describe.
'In my invention the shaft 7 is made hollow and is connected above the bearing 14 by means of a stuffing-box 2O to a head-piece 2l, suitably packed in said stuffing-box, as shown at 71, which head-piece does not rotate, but is held by stays 22, mounted on the I-beams From the top of the head-piece 21 extends eentrally downward a feed-water pipe 23, into which water is supplied from any suitable source, said pipe being of such length as to approach within a short distance of the bottom of the hollow shaft 7. The water discharging from the open bottom of the pipe 23 escapes into the bottom of a pipe 24 of larger diameter than and surrounding said pipe 23 and closed at the bottom, so that the water now fiows upwardly in said pipe 24. Into said pipe 24 are screwed, as shown at 25, small branch pipes 26, extending horizontally from the pipe 24 into the arms 16, which in my invention are made of piping closed at the end by removable caps 2S to permit of inspection of the interior of the arms 16 and of the branch pipes 26 therein, the outer ends of said branch pipes being supported in said arms 16 by spiders 66. The water, flowing upwardly in the pipes 24, passes radially outward in the pipes 26, escapes from the open ends of said pipes into the arms 16, returning in said arms on the outside of the branch pipes into the hollow shaft 7 outside the pipeY 24, and continues to ascend in the shaft 7. A
spider 29 is mounted between the pipe 23 and the stuffing-box 20, and said spider serves to hold the top of the pipe 24 and close the annular space formed by the pipe 24 around the pipe 23. Through this spider the water passes from the hollow shaft '7, around the pipe 24, into the interior of the stuffing-box 20, thence through the head-piece 21, and out by an eX- haust-pipe 30. By this means the arms of the stirrer are sufficiently cooled to withstandthe action of the intense heat of the furnace.
The rabbles for stirring the ore are in my invention attached to the arms 16 in the following manner: Upon each arm 16 a number of clamps 35 are secured by means of setscrews 36, so as to extend downward from the arms, the lowerportion of said clamps being bent around to form claws 37, adapted to engage the sides of a rabble-holder 3S. Saidy holder comprises a bar 39, which is adapted to slide within the claws 37 of a series of clamps 35, secured on one of the arms 16 and having ribs 40 projecting from the bar in a plane at right angles to the plane of the bar, but obliquely to its general direction, as shown will readily be seen that with this constrnci tion the rabbles and their holder can be readily removed from the arms 16 and replaced thereon for the purpose of inspection, repairs, or renewal. 'In the same manner the attachment of the hollow arms 16 to the central shaft 7 is such as to facilitate removal and replacement, said arms being threaded near their inner end, as shown at 60, and screwedV into flanged collars 61, secured on anged sleeves 62, said sleeves being mounted, as
shown, on apertured bosses 63, cast on the side of the central hollow column or shaft 7. The extreme inner end of the arm 16 is turned to Alit snugly within said sleeve 62 to better support the arm. Doors 70 are provided in the wall of the furnace, through which the arms and the branch pipes therein and the rabble-holders supported thereupon can be withdrawn.
In my invention also the central openings for the shaft of those floors which discharge peripherally are made sufficiently large to permit said shaft to be hoisted out without the necessity of pulling ont any of the brickwork and are closed by removable plates 11.
1. In a roasting-furnace, the combination, with a series of iioors, of a central hollow shaft, hollow arms carried thereon over the respective floors, an open-Lbottomed pipe inserted in said shaft, an intermediate closedbottomed pipe in said shaft into which the first pipe discharges. at the bottomopen ended pipes leading from the intermediate pipe into the hollow arms, and feed and eX- hanst pipes connected to the first pipe and hollow shaft, substantially as described.
.2. In a roasting-furnace, the combination, with a series of doors, of a central hollow shaft, hollow arms carried thereon over the respective floors, an open-bottomed pipe inserted in said shaft, an intermediate closedbottomed pipe in said shaft into which the first pipe discharges at the bottom, a spider between the first pipe and the shaft, supporting, and closing the top of, the intermediate pipe, open-ended pipes leading from the intermediate pipeinto the hollow arms, and feed and exhaust pipes connected to the first pipe and the hollow shaft, substantially as described.
3. In a roasting-furnace, the combination, with a series of floors, of a central hollow shaft, hollow arms carried thereon over the respective floors, an open-bottomed pipe inserted in said shaft, an intermediate closedbottomed pipe in said shaft into 'which the first pipe discharges at the bottom, openended pipes leading from the intermediate pipe into the hollow arms, spiders within the IOO IOS
IIO
arms around the open ends of said pipes, and feed and exhaust pipes connected to the first pipe and hollow shaft, substantially as described.
4. In a roasting-furnace, the combination, with a series of floors, of a central hollow shaft, sleeves secured to the shaft, hollow arms having their ends inserted in said sleeves, and threaded outside said sleeves, threaded collars on said threaded portions and secured to said sleeves, and a feedepipe for supplying water to said hollow shaft and arms, substantially as described.
5. In a roasting-furnace, the combination of a rabble-arrn, clamps removably secured at intervals therealong, said clamps carrying guides in line with each other parallel to said arm, a rabble-holder slidably held in said guides, and rabbles secured to said holder, substantiallyy as described.
6. In a roasting-furnace, the combination of a rabble-arm, clamps removably secured thereon, rabbleholder sections held in said v nesses.
LEWIS T. WRIGHT. Witnesses:
LEONARD W. COLEMAN, A. Il. SENGsTAoK.
US69915498A 1898-12-13 1898-12-13 Roasting-furnace. Expired - Lifetime US629023A (en)

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