Loesche Coal Mill
Loesche Coal Mill
Loesche Coal Mill
Central grinding plant for lignite (brown) coal dust Schwarze Pumpe Power Station, Senftenberg, Germany, 1997
Loesche designs, plans and constructs everything from individual machines to turnkey dry-grinding installations for all solid fuels. Loesche is certified in accordance with EN ISO 9001, and our grinding plants meet both national and international safety regulations. Keep it solid and simple this is the design concept behind Loesche roller grinding mills, ensuring their reliability and safety. Each of our dry-grinding installations thus represents our technological prowess, offering advantages that ensure the competitiveness of our customers: No metallic contact between grinding components (even when a coal mill is empty), thus avoiding the generation of sparks. Particularly suitable for easily-combustible dust with a high proportion of volatile matter (e.g. brown coal, wood, etc.). Low-vibration mill running, even in partial load ranges down to 20% of the mill load, thanks to individually-guided grinding rollers. The specially-developed hydraulic roller relief system enables grinding of different fuels (both hard and soft) and improves the machine control response. Individual grinding mill design with a proven track record, encompassing 2, 3 and 4 rollers for fuel throughput rates up to and in excess of 200 t/h.
Loesche coal grinding mills are distinguished by other characteristics that improve efficiency, safety and environmental protection, from the standard version to top-of-the-range installations: Pressure shock resistance up to 3.5 bar (gauge). Horizontal grinding table with segmented grinding track and tapered grinding rollers, arranged at an angle of 15 to the grinding table. Hydraulic grinding roller swinging-out device for easier and quicker changing of grinding components. Constant product quality in compliance with specification achieved through static or dynamic classification. Product rate control from 40 to 100%. Special versions are available with further characteristics that meet special safety regulation or output control requirements: Pressure shock resistance up to 8 bar (gauge). Grinding pressure control for expansion of the mill control range from 20 to 100%; Grinding table speed control with frequency converter.
Rocker arm with stop buffer to prevent metallic contact Spring-loaded suspension cylinderder
EN ISO 9001:2000.
This range can be expanded beyond the LM 43.4 D without any design problems or operational risks being involved, and construction modules from mills in the cement industry that have proven their effectiveness under practical conditions are also available. These components have been in operation for many years without encountering breakdown. Application areas: Steam boiler furnaces for electricity, steam, and heat generation Coal dust furnaces for cement rotary kilns and industrial furnaces Coal conversion plants (gasification, liquefaction) Direct firing of coal dust in blast furnaces.
with table diameters from 1,200 to 2,000 mm. Larger roller grinding mills with two, three and four rollers and modular structures (LM 21.2 D to LM 43.4D), with table diameters from 2,100 to 4,300 mm.
D - H - G
Fineness
fine coarse
difficult
easy
Grindability
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The modular structure of larger roller grinding mills enables utilisation of the same components in different mill sizes. Module components include grinding rollers, rocker arms, pedestals and spring assemblies. The principle behind this structure was patented in 1970 and is employed for coal grinding mills and mills in the cement and industrial minerals industry. 2, 3, 4 or even 6 grinding roller configurations for a single grinding table can be realised. The first Type LM 26.3 D modular coal grinding mills were developed in 1980 and employed for 12 times 2 x 600 MW power station blocks in the Duvha power station, South Africa. The LM 35.3 D has been frequently utilised with great success in the following applications: iron industry: Tubaro, Brazil, 1994 and 2004. cement industry: Nghi Son, Vietnam, 1998, Guangzhou, China, 2005. Loesche developed the 4-roller coal grinding mill with four tried and tested modules for throughputs over 150 t/h. The development was first realised in 1970 for grinding mills in the cement industry. This number of rollers also enables operation with only one pair of rollers to increase control response availability and flexibility. Large Loesche coal grinding plants can be realised with ease using system components that have been employed for decades in Loesche mills in the cement industry. The operator can therefore enjoy the following advantages: Reduced project investment cost for associated electrical, instrumentation and control equipment Reduction of maintenance costs Reduction of costs for spare parts.
3-roller modular grinding mill LM 28.3 D in Kosice, Slovakia, 1991
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Functional Description
Grinding principle The feed material is reduced in size in a Loesche roller grinding mill between the rotating horizontal grinding table and the fixed grinding rollers. The axes of the tapered rollers are tilted at a 15 angle to the horizontal towards the centre of the grinding table, enabling the achievement of optimum grinding efficiency. Rollers with large diameters can be arranged on the smaller grinding table surface. The importance of larger rollers becomes clear when one considers that grinding mill throughput increases relative to the square of the roller diameter. In addition to a rolling movement, the large narrow rollers also achieve a sliding motion, as the roller axis and grinding table axis do not intersect at the grinding table level. The shearing forces thus create additional reduction of the grinding material. Function and structure Grinding components subject to wear (roller tyres The feed material can be introduced laterally table
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Coarse material is rejected by the classifier (according to the grit size) and falls onto the grinding table again in the internal grit recirculation system
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product passes through the classifier and exits the Loesche mill with the process gas flow .
the gearbox absorb the roller forces. The grinding rollers are raised hydraulically from the grinding table prior to commencing grinding. This is realised by reversing the oil pressure exerted on the spring assembly cylinders. The grinding mill can therefore be started in an empty or full state with a low starting torque (approx. 40% of the nominal torque). Direct online started squirrel cage motors are standard supply. An auxiliary drive is not required. Metal to metal contact between the grinding rollers and grinding track is prevented by the adjustable stop buffer
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or centrally from above onto the rotating grinding . It is crushed over here by the rollers
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and ground through the action of the forces emanating from the hydraulic roller spring assembly When the mill rollers follow the contour of the grinding bed, the piston of the hydraulic-cylinders coupeld by the rocker arm and the rod head, moves up and down forcing oil in and out of the nitrogen charged accumulators. The grinding material is spun outwards by the rotation of the grinding table. The upwardly-directed hot gas current
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The immediate contact with the hot gas spontaneously evaporates any water contained in the grinding material, so that the desired mill outlet temperature of between 70 C to a max. of 130 C is already achieved in the grinding chamber.
Safety equipment Solid fuels can, under certain circumstances, combust, flash ignite or explode as a result of: an increased O2 content (> 12 %) in the process room ignition sources being present large quantities of volatile material being present an increased CO content in the process air the fineness of the grinding material the temperature of the material and process air. As a result, there is a greater need for effective safety measures. These include: inert operating status with max. O2 contents of approx. 10 % in damp process gas pressure-shock resistant structure adequate pressure relief surfaces O2 monitoring CO monitoring (e.g. to detect smouldering when the grinding mill is stationary) quick-closure gate valves to isolate plant components avoidance of ignition sources (e.g. stop buffers preventing metal to metal contact)
Loesche coal-grinding mill with explosion suppression system (ammonium phosphate)
Nowadays, safety and monitoring measures are automated, monitored and remotely controlled through simple systems consisting of control consoles supported by process computers. Loesche customers benefit from the many years of experience we have gained in this area. Plant layouts The safety of coal-grinding plants must be ensured in all operating situations. Safety aspects are laid down in regulations and ordinances. Nowadays inert and pneumatically-operated grinding plants can be designed with incorporated operational safety characteristics. The operator decides on the ultimate plant layout. Direct-firing mills for coal dust are utilised as non-inertised grinding plants for steam boilers. An economical combustion method with reduced emissions (NOx, CO) is achieved in every furnace system through the uniformity of the following parameters: air distribution coal dust distribution grit size distribution pressure. A distinction is made between the two types of inerted coal-grinding plants: Self-inert grinding plants that utilise recirculated gases occurring in the installation system itself. The required process heat is provided by a hot gas generator that is an intrinsic part of the grinding plant. Grinding plants with inert gas from an external source that utilise process gases with a low oxygen content from other processes, such as rotary kiln exhaust gases from the cement industry, hot stove waste gases from the iron steel industry, nitrogen from air separation plants, etc. Individual flow sheets illustrate typical plant layouts. A combination of the above-mentioned inert coal grinding plant concepts is frequently used to obtain optimum system availability.
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Loesche mill Raw coal feed Filter/Product separation Product silo Safety quick-closure valves (dampers) Flow meter Mill fan Exhaust flue (stack ) Recirculation air Fresh air Hot gas from external source Hot gas generator Boiler direct-firing system N2 /CO2 Start/Stop and emergency inerting Coal dust discharge Explosion vent
Grinding plant with external inert gas source Hot-stove waste gases or rotary kiln exhaust gases
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Loesche roller grinding mill LM 28.2 D, Detroit Thermal Energy, Vicksburg / Mississippi, USA, 2005
Loesche coal-grinding mills are adapted to individual customer requirements. A change in feed material can be achieved without interrupting grinding operation. Loesche has gained extensive experience over many years with the following fuels: all bituminous coals, anthracite coals, petroleum coke of differing quality, hard lignite (brown) coals, pre-dried lignite coals, pre-dried and pre-ground timber (wood pellets), turf pellets and turf briquettes, sewage sludge.
Bituminous coal grinding Bituminous coals are the most frequently-used fuels. They are broken down into various subgroups (e.g. steam coal, coking coal, gas coal), depending on their level of volatile matter (between 5% and 50%) and ash (approx. 50%). Test grinding of these coals in a laboratory ball mill (Hardgrove principle) is a generally accepted method for determining grindability. A higher Hardgrove index (HGI) of, for example, 90H indicates easy grindability properties. High ash contents detected at the same HGI lessen grindability and lead to increased wear. Materials with superior anti-wear characteristics are utilised to counter the resulting reductions in service life.
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Petroleum coke and anthracite Due to the low level of volatile matter (between 1 15 %) contained in petroleum coke and anthracite coals a greater fineness is required to achieve the necessary surface for optimum product combustion. A fineness of 0.5% R 90 m is achieved with the Loesche mill (LM 27.2 D, Beni Idir, Morocco) where coke is used. Grinding blends of variable mixtures of bituminous coals and petroleum coke are also practised in the same grinding plant (as is the case at Nasicecement in Croatia). A Type LM 20.2 D Loesche mill was selected for a finished product delivery rate of 12.5 t/h with a fineness of 3.0% R 90 m, and this commenced production in 2001. Mills of this kind are equipped with the following technological innovations to achieve the required petroleum coke grinding fineness: a grinding pressure control system that broadens the rigidity range of the hydraulic spring assembly system grinding table speed control. Consistent product quality is achieved with the Type LSKS dynamic classifier from Loesche.
Type LM 20.2 D Loesche mill in Nasicecement cement works, Nasice, Croatia, 2001
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Wood pellets, lignite coals and turf Hot gases with temperatures of up to 500C are used to ensure complete drying of particularly moist feed material during the grinding process. Loesche mills can also be used to cool material during the actual grinding process. Loesche has supplied coal grinding mills to the following firms in the lignite coal industry in Eastern Germany: Mibrag, for the Deuben works, Type LM 26.3 D, 65 t/h with 8 30% R 90m in 1992 and, Lausitzer Braunkohlenwerke AG, Laubag, Senftenberg, Type LM 28.2 D, 52 t/h with 25 40% R 90 m in 1997. Pre-dried lignite coals are fed directly to the grinding mills from steam dryers at a temperature of 90 100C on cold chain conveyors for cooling purposes. A product temperature of 60C is legally stipulated in this respect. Ambient air is used as a cooling medium. Lignite coal from Lausitz has a fibre content of approx. 5%, which is effectively reduced through the shearing forces of the grinding rollers. Product fineness lies between 25 and 40% R 90 m, with the largest fibre particles having a fineness of 0.4% R 0.5 mm. Lignite coal grinding plants in Germany supply the
Type LM 23.2 D Loesche mill, Avedoere, Denmark, 2001
cement industry, smaller power stations and hot gas generator plants to deliver heat quantity for down stream processes. Three Type 23.2 D mills were sold to Avedoere, Denmark in 2001. In addition to coal grinding, these mills also grind wood pellets with 70% R 0.5 mm at an output of 43.2 t/h. Customer satisfaction led to subsequent orders, which also included the grinding capability for straw pellets.
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Loesche Mill Classifier Pipeline to filter Filter Fan Silencer Stack Recirculated gas pipeline Hot gas generator for blast furnace gas
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Central coal grinding plant, Type LM 28.2D, Stahlwerk Bremen, Germany, 2004, 70 t/h, 25% R 90 m
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Structure
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Multiple lance burner Start burner Burner muffle
The perforated sheath furnace was developed by Loesche in mid-1960 and consists of a heatresistant steel furnace chamber with a burner muffle. It has become known on the market as the LOMA furnace. LOMA furnaces have been employed all
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Spiral housing Perforated sheath Ring gap Protective sheath Hot gas outlet
to achieve optimum thermal results. LOMA furnaces are subject to continuous further development and meet state-of-the-art standards. More than 600 hot gas generators have been commissioned to date for heat flow rates of 100 kW to 64,000 kW. Loesche hot gas generators are utilised where hot gas is required for direct drying (e.g. in the cement industry, power stations, steel, minerals industry, ore, timber, animal feed and chemical industry). The Loesche hot gas generator employed for blast furnace gas combustion is a special Loesche development used in particular for the coal grinding drying process in the steel industry.
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The multiple lance blast furnace gas burner has a control range of 1:10 and can burn blast furnace gas from a calorific value of 2,500 kJ/m3 (STP) upwards without support burners.
LOMA furnace Type LF 25 for Blast fumace gas for the steel plant Tubaro, Brazil, 2004
LOMA furnace Type LF 20 with Type MLB 4 multiple lance burner for blast furnace gas, for Dillingen steel plant, Germany, 1999
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LSKS dynamic classifier The Loesche classifier consists of a housing with adjustable vanes and grit return cone, a rotor and a drive with variable speed. The housing can resist pressure shock up to 3.5 bar (gauge). The classifier achieves product finesses < 1 % R 90 m and ensures close product particle size distribution and an excellent level of efficiency. The gas flow rising from the mill conveys the reduced particles into the classifying chamber where they are subjected to a deflective centrifugal force generated by the classifier rotor. Coarse particles are recirculated back to the grinding process via the grit cone, relative to the rotor speed. Efficient classification is particular important in power station applications. A steep product particle characteristic curve ensures that optimum combustion is achieved in the boiler while keeping emission rates at a low level. Wear protection is adapted to suit the abrasiveness of the feed material. The feed material can be introduced laterally or through a central vertical drop tube where high feed moisture is involved.
LSKS classifier with central inlet and 4 separate product discharges for direct-firing boiler plants LSKS classifier with central inlet and lateral product discharge for central coal grinding plants
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Structure:
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LSKS on LM 28.2 D
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The Loesche Technikum our technical centre for grinding material testing, research and development
Standard calibrated grinding trials for grinding plant design Loesche has gained extensive experience in the design of grinding plants over many years. The most important prerequisite for correct grinding plant design is exact knowledge of the material properties of the feed material involved. The most important key figures associated with feed material are the Loesche grindability and the specific working requirements relative to a defined fineness. The geological genesis of feed material means that extreme differences in properties can exist in materials found naturally that appear to be very similar.
Fully-automatic operation with PLC
The Loesche Technikum has 2 fully-equipped laboratory grinding plants (LM 3.6) at its disposal for efficiently conducting standard grinding trials.
Technological development through laboratory grinding trials under near-real conditions One of the first steps when introducing new technology is to conduct laboratory trials under near-real conditions. Our Research and Development projects involve: the examination of new grinding materials for future market segments; Analytical options: Determination of absolute density with gas pycnometer Determination of mass-related surface (Blaine) Grit size analysis with Cilas laser granulometer Sieve analysis with Alpine air-jet sieve Sieve analysis with Retsch sieve shaker Grindability (Hardgrove) Grindability (Zeisel) Microscopic analysis with Zeiss Stemi SV11 Drying cabinet for determining moisture content Coal examination (Cfix, volatile material, ash content)
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determining optimum grinding plant settings for special products; optimisation of plant components and layouts; testing new wear materials and concepts. Our test grinding installations are constructed to enable the simulation of different operational methods and plant layouts.
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Bituminous
1 cm
50 m
Wooden pellets
1 cm
50 m
Petroleum coke
1 cm
50 m
Charcoal briquettes
1 cm
50 m