WO2020074509A1 - Lining armor plate for a casing of a hammer mill - Google Patents

Lining armor plate for a casing of a hammer mill Download PDF

Info

Publication number
WO2020074509A1
WO2020074509A1 PCT/EP2019/077217 EP2019077217W WO2020074509A1 WO 2020074509 A1 WO2020074509 A1 WO 2020074509A1 EP 2019077217 W EP2019077217 W EP 2019077217W WO 2020074509 A1 WO2020074509 A1 WO 2020074509A1
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
casing
armor plate
recesses
hammer mill
lining
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/EP2019/077217
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Mauro Panizzolo
Original Assignee
Panizzolo S.R.L.
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 Panizzolo S.R.L. filed Critical Panizzolo S.R.L.
Priority to EP19780265.5A priority Critical patent/EP3863768B1/en
Publication of WO2020074509A1 publication Critical patent/WO2020074509A1/en

Links

Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B02CRUSHING, PULVERISING, OR DISINTEGRATING; PREPARATORY TREATMENT OF GRAIN FOR MILLING
    • B02CCRUSHING, PULVERISING, OR DISINTEGRATING IN GENERAL; MILLING GRAIN
    • B02C13/00Disintegrating by mills having rotary beater elements ; Hammer mills
    • B02C13/26Details
    • B02C13/282Shape or inner surface of mill-housings

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to a lining armor plate for a casing of a hammer mill.
  • the invention has application, in particular, in hammer mills used for milling refuse of various types (constituted by materials such as plastic, rubber, ferrous and non-ferrous metals, glass, rubble, wood, etc.), as an inner lining of the casing containing a rotor with hammers.
  • hammer mills are known for refining apparatuses, and are used to mill refuse with a sizing of approximately 30 mm, which may optionally originate from a previous processing stage for breaking up the refuse, in order to obtain a sizing of maximum 2 mm at the end of the processing.
  • Such reduced sizing serves mainly to select the material with gravimetric boards.
  • stainless steel takes on a magnetic charge and the sizing reduction enables separation with special magnets.
  • the sector has therefore an evident interest in taking maximum advantage of the potential of hammer mills for milling refuse.
  • hammer mills which comprise a cylindrical casing which defines a receptacle for a roller-type rotor which is provided with milling hammers.
  • fixed hammer mills and movable hammer mills are known, the latter being movable because they are installed so that they can tilt.
  • the casing is provided with an entry channel for the material to be milled and with an exit channel for discharging the milled material.
  • the transit of material occurs by pneumatic conveyance, by aspirating the material at the entry of the mill.
  • the casing is provided, on the inner walls, with lining armor plates which have longitudinal channels that make it possible to channel and conduct the material being processed toward the exit channel.
  • linings favor the pneumatic conveyance of the material toward the exit from the casing.
  • the material channeled in the channels of the armor plates no longer comes into contact with the hammers of the mill and slides therein up to the region where it exits from the casing.
  • the dimensions of the channel determine the dimensions of the material that is milled, because it can be such that it does not protrude sufficiently from the armor plates for it to be touched by the hammers, instead continuing on its way toward the exit. As a consequence, the mill mills less than its capacity and its performance is reduced.
  • the material that is not adequately milled often has a size range that exceeds the optimal design size for subsequent processing (typically smaller than 5 mm), thus causing damage and anomalous wear of the machines on the subsequent stages. Material in a size range that exceeds the design size must be reprocessed with other machines and therefore with other investments and costs.
  • the aim of the present invention is to provide a lining armor plate for a hammer mill, which is capable of improving the known art in one or more of the above mentioned aspects.
  • an object of the invention is to provide a lining armor plate that is capable of improving the performance of the hammer mills in which it is installed.
  • Another object of the invention is to increase the milling ratio of the hammer mills in which the armor plate according to the invention is installed.
  • Another object of the invention is to limit the investments and costs for obtaining the correct size ranges of the materials to be recycled.
  • the present invention is to overcome the drawbacks of the known art in an alternative manner to any existing solutions.
  • Another object of the invention is to provide a lining armor plate that is highly reliable, easy to implement and of low cost.
  • a lining armor plate for a casing of a hammer mill characterized in that it has a surface that is contoured with parallel series of recesses which extend along a same longitudinal direction and are alternated with regions without recesses.
  • FIG. 1 shows a first variation of an armor plate according to the invention
  • FIG. 2 shows a second variation of an armor plate according to the invention
  • FIG. 3 shows a hammer mill in which the armor plate according to the invention is mounted.
  • the armor plate according to the invention has, as an advantageous peculiarity, a surface that is contoured with parallel series of recesses 11 which extend along a same longitudinal direction and are alternated with regions without recesses.
  • the recesses 11 extend along the direction of travel of the material being processed within the casing 12 of the mill, from an entry region to an exit region.
  • Figures 1 and 2 respectively show two versions of armor plate according to the invention, which differ in the dimensions of the recesses 11.
  • FIG. 3 shows a hammer mill 13, for milling refuse, in which armor plates 10 are mounted.
  • the mill 13 comprises a substantially cylindrical casing 12 with two heads, which defines a receptacle for a roller- type rotor 14 with peripheral milling hammers 15.
  • the motor 12 and the rotor 14 are conveniently connected by way of transmission belts 16 and in a conventional manner.
  • the casing 13 is provided with an entry channel 17 for the material to be milled and with an exit channel for the milled material.
  • the entry channel 17 and the exit channel have inlets for connection to the casing 13 which are arranged on respective heads 17a, 18a and along directions that are parallel to the direction of the rotation axis 19 of the rotor 14.
  • the entry channel 17 is on one side, the right- hand side in the illustration, in the upper part of the casing 12, which acts as a lid to be closed over the rotor 14, while the exit channel is on the opposite side to the previous one, on the side where the processed material exits.
  • the conveyance is pneumatic and is implemented in a known manner with an aspiration at the entry.
  • the mill 13 illustrated is a movable hammer mill 15, in that the hammers oscillate, but the same inventive concept described can also be applied to fixed hammer mills, both of which are conventional per se.
  • the armor plate 10 shown in Figure 1 is adapted to be installed in a fixed hammer mill, while the armor plate 10 shown in Figure 2 is adapted to be installed in a movable hammer mill 13, as shown in Figure 3.
  • the recesses 11 advantageously extend along the direction of travel of the material being processed within the casing 12, from an entry region to an exit region.
  • the armor plate 10 is modular and adapted to cover, with other, similar armor plates 10, the inner surface of the casing 12, as shown in Figure 3.
  • the recesses 11 are distributed substantially uniformly on the surface of the armor plate 10.
  • recesses of shorter length which are adapted to be arranged in the casing at the fixed hammers of the rotor 14, alternate with longer recesses. In this manner the material is free to travel longer paths by sliding toward the exit inside the longer recesses, where there are no hammers.
  • a plurality of armor plates 10 is installed in the hammer mill 13 to line the inner surface of its cylindrical casing 12, arranging them side-by- side and affixing them to the casing 12 by way of affixing screws.
  • the material to be milled is introduced into the casing 12 through the entry channel 17 and conveyed with air by way of aspiration at the exit.
  • the material being processed is pushed radially outward, against the lining armor plates 10.
  • the recesses 11 constitute preferential passages for the material, in which the material is channeled toward the exit from the casing 12.
  • Each row of recesses 11, aligned and alternated with regions without recesses, can be likened to a fragmented channel, i.e. in which there are walls in its length that are substantially perpendicular to its direction of extension, and the direction of the flow of channeled material, indicated with X in Figures 1 and 2.
  • such walls are constituted by the perimetric wall 1 la of each individual recess, in a direction substantially perpendicular to the direction in which the material travels each recess.
  • the larger amount of material that is consequently milled results in an increase in the milling ratio, which goes from about 3: 1 (incoming material with an average diameter of 15-20 mm and outgoing of 8-10 mm) to 5.5: 1 (incoming material with an average diameter of 25-30 mm and outgoing of 4- 6mm) and in an increase in the wear of the armor plates and of the hammers, which is simply solved by making them in cast metals.
  • the armor plate according to the invention therefore improves the performance of the mills in which it is installed, by bringing the material to be milled to a size range as small as 0-2 mm, for subsequent gravimetric selection. Bringing material in the correct size range to enter the subsequent stage of the plant makes it possible to operate the subsequent machine correctly, with greater efficiency and fewer problems of anomalous wear and unforeseen malfunctions, further increasing the performance of the entire recycling plant.
  • the invention fully achieves the intended aim and objects by providing a lining armor plate which improves the performance of the hammer mills in which the casing is installed, and by virtue of which it is possible to limit the overall investments and costs of processing.

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Food Science & Technology (AREA)
  • Crushing And Pulverization Processes (AREA)
  • Packages (AREA)
  • Working Measures On Existing Buildindgs (AREA)

Abstract

A lining armor plate (10) for a casing of a hammer mill, which has a surface that is contoured with parallel series of recesses (11) which extend along a same longitudinal direction and are alternated with regions without recesses.

Description

LINING ARMOR PLATE FOR A CASING OF A HAMMER MIFF
The present invention relates to a lining armor plate for a casing of a hammer mill.
The invention has application, in particular, in hammer mills used for milling refuse of various types (constituted by materials such as plastic, rubber, ferrous and non-ferrous metals, glass, rubble, wood, etc.), as an inner lining of the casing containing a rotor with hammers.
In the recycling sector, hammer mills are known for refining apparatuses, and are used to mill refuse with a sizing of approximately 30 mm, which may optionally originate from a previous processing stage for breaking up the refuse, in order to obtain a sizing of maximum 2 mm at the end of the processing. Such reduced sizing serves mainly to select the material with gravimetric boards. Secondly, it has been observed that during the processing and in the various stages of passing through the recycling stations, stainless steel takes on a magnetic charge and the sizing reduction enables separation with special magnets.
The sector has therefore an evident interest in taking maximum advantage of the potential of hammer mills for milling refuse.
Nowadays hammer mills are known which comprise a cylindrical casing which defines a receptacle for a roller-type rotor which is provided with milling hammers. In particular, fixed hammer mills and movable hammer mills are known, the latter being movable because they are installed so that they can tilt.
The casing is provided with an entry channel for the material to be milled and with an exit channel for discharging the milled material. The transit of material occurs by pneumatic conveyance, by aspirating the material at the entry of the mill.
The casing is provided, on the inner walls, with lining armor plates which have longitudinal channels that make it possible to channel and conduct the material being processed toward the exit channel. Such linings favor the pneumatic conveyance of the material toward the exit from the casing. However, it has been found that the material channeled in the channels of the armor plates no longer comes into contact with the hammers of the mill and slides therein up to the region where it exits from the casing.
The dimensions of the channel determine the dimensions of the material that is milled, because it can be such that it does not protrude sufficiently from the armor plates for it to be touched by the hammers, instead continuing on its way toward the exit. As a consequence, the mill mills less than its capacity and its performance is reduced.
Furthermore, the material that is not adequately milled often has a size range that exceeds the optimal design size for subsequent processing (typically smaller than 5 mm), thus causing damage and anomalous wear of the machines on the subsequent stages. Material in a size range that exceeds the design size must be reprocessed with other machines and therefore with other investments and costs.
The aim of the present invention is to provide a lining armor plate for a hammer mill, which is capable of improving the known art in one or more of the above mentioned aspects.
Within this aim, an object of the invention is to provide a lining armor plate that is capable of improving the performance of the hammer mills in which it is installed.
Another object of the invention is to increase the milling ratio of the hammer mills in which the armor plate according to the invention is installed.
Another object of the invention is to limit the investments and costs for obtaining the correct size ranges of the materials to be recycled.
Furthermore, the present invention is to overcome the drawbacks of the known art in an alternative manner to any existing solutions.
Another object of the invention is to provide a lining armor plate that is highly reliable, easy to implement and of low cost.
This aim and these and other objects which will become better apparent hereinafter are achieved by a lining armor plate for a casing of a hammer mill, characterized in that it has a surface that is contoured with parallel series of recesses which extend along a same longitudinal direction and are alternated with regions without recesses.
Further characteristics and advantages of the invention will become better apparent from the detailed description that follows of a preferred, but not exclusive, embodiment of the lining armor plate according to the invention, which is illustrated for the purposes of non-limiting example in the accompanying drawings wherein:
- Figure 1 shows a first variation of an armor plate according to the invention;
- Figure 2 shows a second variation of an armor plate according to the invention;
- Figure 3 shows a hammer mill in which the armor plate according to the invention is mounted.
With reference to the figures, the armor plate according to the invention, generally designated by the reference numeral 10, has, as an advantageous peculiarity, a surface that is contoured with parallel series of recesses 11 which extend along a same longitudinal direction and are alternated with regions without recesses.
In particular, the recesses 11 extend along the direction of travel of the material being processed within the casing 12 of the mill, from an entry region to an exit region.
Figures 1 and 2 respectively show two versions of armor plate according to the invention, which differ in the dimensions of the recesses 11.
Figure 3 shows a hammer mill 13, for milling refuse, in which armor plates 10 are mounted. The mill 13 comprises a substantially cylindrical casing 12 with two heads, which defines a receptacle for a roller- type rotor 14 with peripheral milling hammers 15.
The motor 12 and the rotor 14 are conveniently connected by way of transmission belts 16 and in a conventional manner.
The casing 13 is provided with an entry channel 17 for the material to be milled and with an exit channel for the milled material.
Preferably, the entry channel 17 and the exit channel have inlets for connection to the casing 13 which are arranged on respective heads 17a, 18a and along directions that are parallel to the direction of the rotation axis 19 of the rotor 14. In particular, the entry channel 17 is on one side, the right- hand side in the illustration, in the upper part of the casing 12, which acts as a lid to be closed over the rotor 14, while the exit channel is on the opposite side to the previous one, on the side where the processed material exits.
The conveyance is pneumatic and is implemented in a known manner with an aspiration at the entry.
The mill 13 illustrated is a movable hammer mill 15, in that the hammers oscillate, but the same inventive concept described can also be applied to fixed hammer mills, both of which are conventional per se.
In particular, the armor plate 10 shown in Figure 1 is adapted to be installed in a fixed hammer mill, while the armor plate 10 shown in Figure 2 is adapted to be installed in a movable hammer mill 13, as shown in Figure 3.
The recesses 11 advantageously extend along the direction of travel of the material being processed within the casing 12, from an entry region to an exit region.
The armor plate 10 is modular and adapted to cover, with other, similar armor plates 10, the inner surface of the casing 12, as shown in Figure 3.
It has in fact a substantially plate-like shape structure and in cross- section it is shaped like a circular arc, in order to follow the curvature of the surface of the casing 12.
The recesses 11 are distributed substantially uniformly on the surface of the armor plate 10. In the variation shown in Figure 1, recesses of shorter length, which are adapted to be arranged in the casing at the fixed hammers of the rotor 14, alternate with longer recesses. In this manner the material is free to travel longer paths by sliding toward the exit inside the longer recesses, where there are no hammers.
In the variation shown in Figure 2 and in Figure 3, on the other hand, the recesses 11 are of equal length.
In both cases, the distribution of recesses 11 is uniform apart from dedicated seats for the insertion of screws to affix the armor plate 10 to the casing 12.
Operation of the armor plate according to the invention is the following.
A plurality of armor plates 10 is installed in the hammer mill 13 to line the inner surface of its cylindrical casing 12, arranging them side-by- side and affixing them to the casing 12 by way of affixing screws.
During use of the mill 13, the material to be milled is introduced into the casing 12 through the entry channel 17 and conveyed with air by way of aspiration at the exit.
During rotation of the rotor 14, the material being processed is pushed radially outward, against the lining armor plates 10. Here the recesses 11, because they have a longitudinally-extended shape structure and are aligned, convey the material being processed toward the region for exiting from the casing 12, and at the same time they force its return toward the hammers 15, in the manner explained below.
Substantially, the recesses 11 constitute preferential passages for the material, in which the material is channeled toward the exit from the casing 12. Each row of recesses 11, aligned and alternated with regions without recesses, can be likened to a fragmented channel, i.e. in which there are walls in its length that are substantially perpendicular to its direction of extension, and the direction of the flow of channeled material, indicated with X in Figures 1 and 2. With the recesses, such walls are constituted by the perimetric wall 1 la of each individual recess, in a direction substantially perpendicular to the direction in which the material travels each recess.
When the material encounters such walls 11a, it is forced to return toward the rotor 14 and therefore to collide with a hammer 15.
The larger amount of material that is consequently milled results in an increase in the milling ratio, which goes from about 3: 1 (incoming material with an average diameter of 15-20 mm and outgoing of 8-10 mm) to 5.5: 1 (incoming material with an average diameter of 25-30 mm and outgoing of 4- 6mm) and in an increase in the wear of the armor plates and of the hammers, which is simply solved by making them in cast metals.
The increase in processed material also results in an increase in the power used. However, overall, an apparatus in which there is a hammer mill provided with the armor plate according to the invention is still economically advantageous, in terms both of energy consumption and of installation and maintenance costs, because the material does not need to pass to a subsequent processing machine.
The armor plate according to the invention therefore improves the performance of the mills in which it is installed, by bringing the material to be milled to a size range as small as 0-2 mm, for subsequent gravimetric selection. Bringing material in the correct size range to enter the subsequent stage of the plant makes it possible to operate the subsequent machine correctly, with greater efficiency and fewer problems of anomalous wear and unforeseen malfunctions, further increasing the performance of the entire recycling plant.
In practice it has been found that the invention fully achieves the intended aim and objects by providing a lining armor plate which improves the performance of the hammer mills in which the casing is installed, and by virtue of which it is possible to limit the overall investments and costs of processing.
The invention thus conceived is susceptible of numerous modifications and variations, all of which are within the scope of the appended claims. Moreover, all the details may be substituted by other, technically equivalent elements.
In practice the materials employed, provided they are compatible with the specific use, and the contingent dimensions and shapes, may be any according to requirements and to the state of the art.
The disclosures in Italian Patent Application No. 102018000009340 from which this application claims priority are incorporated herein by reference.
Where technical features mentioned in any claim are followed by reference signs, those reference signs have been included for the sole purpose of increasing the intelligibility of the claims and accordingly, such reference signs do not have any limiting effect on the interpretation of each element identified by way of example by such reference signs.

Claims

1. A lining armor plate for a casing of a hammer mill, characterized in that it has a surface that is contoured with parallel series of recesses (11) which extend along a same longitudinal direction and are alternated with regions without recesses.
2. The armor plate according to claim 1, characterized in that said recesses (11) extend along the direction of travel of the material being processed within the casing (12) from an entry region to an exit region.
3. The armor plate according to one or more of the preceding claims, characterized in that it is modular and adapted to line, with other, similar armor plates (10), the internal surface of said casing (12).
4. The armor plate according to one or more of the preceding claims, characterized in that it has a substantially flat shape structure and is shaped like a circular arc in cross-section.
PCT/EP2019/077217 2018-10-11 2019-10-08 Lining armor plate for a casing of a hammer mill WO2020074509A1 (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
EP19780265.5A EP3863768B1 (en) 2018-10-11 2019-10-08 Lining armor plate for a casing of a hammer mill

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
IT102018000009340A IT201800009340A1 (en) 2018-10-11 2018-10-11 COVER ARMOR FOR A HAMMER MILL CASE
IT102018000009340 2018-10-11

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
WO2020074509A1 true WO2020074509A1 (en) 2020-04-16

Family

ID=64902269

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
PCT/EP2019/077217 WO2020074509A1 (en) 2018-10-11 2019-10-08 Lining armor plate for a casing of a hammer mill

Country Status (3)

Country Link
EP (1) EP3863768B1 (en)
IT (1) IT201800009340A1 (en)
WO (1) WO2020074509A1 (en)

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
IT202000023695A1 (en) 2020-10-08 2022-04-08 Guidetti Srl MILL TO REDUCE THE GRAIN SIZE OF SOLID MATERIAL

Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3722805A (en) * 1971-08-06 1973-03-27 American Pulverizer Grate for reduction mill
US3966126A (en) * 1975-02-10 1976-06-29 Kimberly-Clark Corporation Classifying hammermill system and method of operation
US5472148A (en) * 1992-01-10 1995-12-05 Envirotech Pumpsystems, Inc. Grinding mill, lining and associated method of manufacture

Patent Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3722805A (en) * 1971-08-06 1973-03-27 American Pulverizer Grate for reduction mill
US3966126A (en) * 1975-02-10 1976-06-29 Kimberly-Clark Corporation Classifying hammermill system and method of operation
US5472148A (en) * 1992-01-10 1995-12-05 Envirotech Pumpsystems, Inc. Grinding mill, lining and associated method of manufacture

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
IT202000023695A1 (en) 2020-10-08 2022-04-08 Guidetti Srl MILL TO REDUCE THE GRAIN SIZE OF SOLID MATERIAL

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
IT201800009340A1 (en) 2020-04-11
EP3863768B1 (en) 2024-05-01
EP3863768C0 (en) 2024-05-01
EP3863768A1 (en) 2021-08-18

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
EP3863768B1 (en) Lining armor plate for a casing of a hammer mill
CN202951562U (en) Electrostatic separation machine
CN102716852A (en) Sorting mechanism and sorting machine
CN108187862A (en) A kind of rapidly and efficiently sand making machine
EP3863767B1 (en) Hammer mill for milling refuse
CN103831150B (en) The rotor structure of impact breaker
CN202555379U (en) High-efficiency cylinder scrubbing machine
KR200473431Y1 (en) Pulverization drum for Food garbage Pulverization machine
CN202778698U (en) Drum-type magnetic separator
CN111715347A (en) Gradable intelligence system sand machine
JP2006346576A (en) Single axial crusher
CN105435931A (en) Centrifugal sand making machine
CN104707726A (en) Down-flow type double-selection magnetic separator
KR102271722B1 (en) crushing apparatus for KEYBOARD
CN109261324B (en) Efficient crusher for mining industry
CN218309961U (en) Crushing and separating device and vehicle-mounted garbage disposal system
EP2908954B1 (en) Impact mill for grinding loose material
CN211216903U (en) Mobile crusher
EP3922355B1 (en) Horizontal hammer mill
CN105196033A (en) Automatic cover buckling machine
CN101513624B (en) Improved direct current magnetic separator
CN101476012B (en) Feeding apparatus for feeding to rotary hearth furnace turntable and feeding system of rotary hearth furnace
KR101868313B1 (en) Chute of cutting apparatus for a round bar
CN218742287U (en) Drum-shaped feeder for feeding of continuous ball mill
CN205164822U (en) Crushing device

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
121 Ep: the epo has been informed by wipo that ep was designated in this application

Ref document number: 19780265

Country of ref document: EP

Kind code of ref document: A1

NENP Non-entry into the national phase

Ref country code: DE

ENP Entry into the national phase

Ref document number: 2019780265

Country of ref document: EP

Effective date: 20210511