Title of Invention | A METHOD FOR PREPARING MINERALIZED PORTLAND CEMENT CLINKER IN A KILN SYSTEM |
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Abstract | 57) Abstract: A method for preparing mineralized Portland cement clinker in a kiln system said method comprising the steps of preheating a rawmix feedstock in a preheater, calcining the preheated feedstock in a calciner, burning the calcined feedstock in the kiln to form clinker and then cooling the clinker in a cooler characterized in that adding a mineralizer such as herein described to the feedstock, the mineralizer and the feedstock are mixed together and homognized in suspension in at least one of the preheaters or calciners wherein the quantity of mineralizer added to the feed stock is subjected to the condition that the sulphue content(Xs) is not greater than 1.2% by weight and / or the fluroine content (Xf) is not greater than 0.14% by weight on loss on ignition free basis. PRICE :THIRTY RUPEES |
Full Text | The present invention relates to a method and a plant for preparing mineralised Portland cement clinker in a dry or semidry process kiln system where the rawmix feedstock is being subjected to preheating, calcination, burning, and, finally, cooling. The major oxide components of Portland cement clinker (CaO, Si02, Al2O3 and Fe2O3)normallyaccount for 96-97% of the chemical analysis. The relative levels of these four oxides control the proportions of the four principal clinker mi¬nerals, C3S, C2S, C3A and C4AF, and these proportions have a fundamental influence on cement properties. Howeve-r, the minor components which account for the remaining 3-4% can have a very significant influence on the clinker-making process and the properties of the cement. In the pure four component system C3S does not form below 1250°C. The presence of minor components can lower this temperature, thus facilitating C3S formation. The term mi-neraliser is used for components which encourage the for¬mation of C3S and facilitate the sintering reaction.s in the rotary kiln. A method for manufacturing mineralised clinker is known from the British patent No. 1 498 057. According to this method fluorine and sulphur are added during the rawmix preparation, usually in the form of flourite (CaF2) and gypsum (CaS04 .2H2O), the major goal being to achieve a clinker with a fluorine content of about 0.25 wt% and a SO3 content of about 2.5 wt%. The method of said patent focuses on utilization in a rotary kiln of the wet process type, which was extensively used at the time of publication in 1975, but regarded today as being uneconomic due to the substantial amounts of energy needed for drying, and it has proven to be extremely diffi- So, despite the very substantial improvements in the cement quality which can be achieved (see e.g. Moir, Phil Trans Roy Soc Lond., 1983, A310, 127-138) by this method according to the British patent No. 1 498 057, it is noteworthy that the field of application of this method has been very limited. This is probably ascribable to the operational difficulties associated with the implementation of the method, both in terms of controlling of clinker production and with respect to the occurrence of blockages in cyclones and riser ducts. Therefore, it is the objective of the present invention to provide a method and a plant for manufacturing mineralised cement clinker, where the plant is constructed so that prehe¬ating and at least part of the calcination process takes place outside the kiln, in such a way problems associated with the known technique are avoided. A first operational difficulty is to determine how to control the input of mineraliser and how, at the same time, to ensure the necessary degree of homogeneity in the rawmix feedstock. From the British patent No. 1 498 057 it appears that the mineraliser is mixed with the rawmix feedstock before it is burned (page 5, line 89 - page 6, line 43). Addition of the mineraliser in this v^ay will, admittedly, result in a high degree of homogeneity, but it will not be possible to make a swift regulation of the mineraliser input relative to the raw materials so that the kiln operation and the properties of the finished cement clinker can be control¬led in this manner, since the mineraliser constitutes a fixed percentage of the total quantity of raw materials. Particularly in connection with the production of mineralised clinker with a high content of sulphate, it is of importance to control temperature variations in the burning zone. This is due to the tendency of the sulphate to decompose into SO 2 in the burning zone and to condense in the cooler regions of the kiln. When the burning zone temperature is increased, the evaporation of SO2 will increase, which will result in higher concentrations of sulphates in the cooler regions of the kiln. The situation may become so critical that continued kiln operation becomes impossible because of ring formations in the kiln or the formation of build-ups or blockages in the preheater system unless the input of sulphate to the rawmix feedstock is temporarily reduced or eliminated altogether. Conversely, if the burning zone temperature has decreased, a severe dust circulation between kiln and cooler may result and continued kiln operation becomes impossible unless the sulphate input is reduced or eliminated. By using the method according to the invention, these problems are avoided since it is possible to use the amount of mineralizer input as a controllable parameter for the manufacture of mineralized clinker during offset kiln operating conditions. Preferably, some of the mineralizer can be added to the rawmix feedstock prior to grinding and homogenization, whilst the remainder of the necessary mineralizer input is used for controlling the process. In some cases, the rawmix feedstock will have a natural content of mineralizer, but, provided that the content is not excessively high, it will still be possible to control the overall process by further addition of mineralizer. ft is also possible to add two or more different mineralizers to different points in the process line, independent of each other, in order to control the process and the product. A second operational difficulty which is well-known when burning ordinary Portland cement clinker with a high content of mineraliser, particularly SO3 and F, in the rawmix feed¬stock, relates to the precipitation of solids and the oc¬currence of blockages when the material passes through a tem¬perature range of about 700-900°C. It has been found that in the presence of significant con¬centrations of these mineralisers in the preheating zone, the condensation of chlorides on the preheater feedstock par¬ticles results in the formation of a minor, but significant, quantity of a melt phase at temperatures as low as 680°C which, upon reaction with the oxide components in the feed¬stock at the high CO2 partial pressures prevailing in the suspension preheater cyclones, solidifies through the for¬mation of the mineral spurrite (2C2S.CaC03) . The formation of in excess of 5 wt% spurrite in the feedstock can result in impaired flow properties of the feedstock lea¬ding to severe build-ups and ultimately to production shut¬down . In American patent No. 5.183.506 the method chosen to solve this problem involves the use of a special mixture of gypsum. In order to reduce or eradicate the problems associated with build-ups in the preheater cyclones and the riser ducts between the cyclones, the mineraliser may advantageously be added at a stage where calcination has begun to take place, i.e. where the feedstock has been preheated to more than 700- 750°C, preferably more than 800°C. Such action will further enhance production in ensuring a smooth flow of the feedstock through the preheater, since a substantial deterioration of the flow properties of the feed¬stock may occur when the mineraliser is added, depending on the type of mineraliser being selected. In a precalcining plant with a separate cooler, as for exam¬ple a grate cooler, it may further be advantageous to add the mineraliser to the tertiary air duct, through which heated air is directed from the cooler to the calciner. The air in the tertiary air duct will, in connection with this solution, ensure that the mineraliser is conveyed to the calciner. Preferably, the mineraliser may be subjected to prior drying in excess air from the cooler, before it is added to the tertiary air duct. The mineraliser can be a sulphurous-product, and in conjunc¬tion with this product another mineralising component or an auxiliary substance containing fluorine or copper or zinc oxide may be used, but frequently, addition of such a compo¬nent or substance will not be necessary since it is already present in the raw materials. It has been recognized that through the combined presence of fluorine and sulphur components in the clinker at concentra¬tions of at least 0,15 wt% F and 1,5 wt% SO3, both early combination in the burning process and enhanced strength development of the finished product is achieved. Through the reduction in the contents of the mineraliser components in the rawmix feedstock and through the introduc¬tion of the said components to the feedstock stream at a temperature greater than 800°C, the mineraliser content in the feedstock in the preheating zone is reduced, thereby effectively eliminating or at least significantly reducing the risk of blockages in the preheating zone, which is impor¬tant when the mineraliser is a sulphur containing component. The exact degree of reduction in the mineraliser content in the feedstock "in the preheating zone will obviously depend on the degree of recirculation characteristic of the kiln system in question, although it is clear that the said content can never be lower than the corresponding content in the rawmix feedstock. However, investigations have indicated that if the risk of blockages is to be eliminated or substantially redu¬ced, contents of at the most 1,2 wt% SO3 on a loss on igni¬tion free basis or 0,14 wt% F on a loss on ignition free basis or both in the feedstock in the preheating zone should be observed and the same limits should therefor apply to the composition of the rawmix feedstock. The sulphur containing component may inter alia be natural gypsum (CaS04-2H20) , hemihydrate (CaS04.1/2H20) (bassanite) , anhydrite (CaS04) , Ca or Mg langbeinite, barytes or other sulphur containing minerals also containing calcium or magne¬sium. The sulphur containing component could also be a waste product e.g. FGD (Flue Gas Desulphurization) gypsum, sulphite or sulphide containing desulphurization products, sulphate containing industrial byproducts such as ammonium or iron-based sulphates, cement kiln dust, sulphur-containing fuel such as petcoke or high sulphur coal or oil. The desulphurization products are formed when flue gases, for example from power plants, are cleaned of SO2. Semi-dry flue gas desulphurization produces a by-product of calcium sulphi¬te and calcium sulphate, which may also contain flyash and other constituents. Modern, wet-process desulphurization methods are capable of producing a very clean gypsum, emer¬ging initially, however, in the form of wet sludge or a filter cake. After being subjected to drying, the last-mentioned product may, for example, find application in gypsum wallboard manu¬facturing or it may replace natural gypsum in the manufacture of cement where it is inter-ground with the clinker in the cement mill. At the present point in time, the application range for the desulphurization product, derived from semi-dry desulphurization, is very limited, and it is further a com¬plicating factor that disposal of the product is difficult due to the unfavourable rheological properties of the pro- duct. Another interesting by-product is anhydrite contaminated with CaF2 and H2SO4 formed during the manufacture of hydrofluoric acid from fluorspar and sulphuric acid. In the future, another by-product may emerge which involves the destruction of asbestos: one method proposed entails the dissolution of asbestos in hydrofluoric acid (HF) followed by neutralizion with burnt lime, whereby a product consisting of MgO, Si02, CaF2 and a certain amount of CaS04.2H2O results. Finally, another option to be considered is the use of phosp-ho-gypsum (i.e. the gypsum which is the by-product derived from the manufacture of phosphoric acid on the basis of raw phosphate and sulphuric acid). By means of the method according to the invention it is now possible to employ these waste products in the cement manu¬facturing process in an appropriate manner, since experience has shown that the operating difficulties discussed above may be avoided when the waste products are not processed together with the raw meal, but rather added separately to the pro¬cess. Examples of suitable fluorine containing components are fluorite, fluor apatite, cryolite, or industrial byproducts containing fluorine such as hexafluorosilicic acid or sili-contetrafluoride, preferably fluorite. Accordingly, the present invention therefore provides a method for preparing mineralized Portland cement clinker in a kiln system said method comprising the steps of preheating a rawmix feedstock in a preheater, calcining the preheated feedstock m a calciner, burning the calcined feedstock in the kiln to form clinker and then cooling the clinker in a cooler characterized in that adding a mineralizer such as herein described to the feedstock, the mineralizer and the feedstock are mixed together and homogenized in suspension in at least one of the preheaters or calciners wherein the quantity of mineralizer added to the feed stock is subjected to the condition that the sulphur content (Xs) is not greater than 1.2% by weight and / or the fluorine content (Xf is not greater than 0.14% by weight on loss on ignition free basis. The invention will now be explained in further detail with reference being made to the accompanying drawings which shows an embodiment of the invention. The drawing shows a cement kiln plant of the generally known type which comprises a preheater 1, which in the figure consists of three cyclones, a calciner 2 with a separation cyclone 3 and a rotary kihi 4 with clinker cooler 5. In a plant of the aforementioned kind, manufacturing of cement is carried out according to a method where cement raw meal is introduced at the inlet 13.at the top of the prehea-ter 1, passing through the preheater in counter-current with the exhaust gases from the kiln 4 and the calciner 2. The exhaust gases are drawn up through the preheater. 1 and dis¬charged at 14 by means of a not shown exhaust gas fan. The raw meal is conveyed from the preheater 1 via a duct 7 down into the calciner 2 where it is calcined and passed on in suspension to the separation cyclone 3. Here the calcined raw meal is separated from the exhaust gases and conveyed by means of a duct 6 to the rotary kiln 4 where, by means of heat from the burner 9, the rawmeal is burned into clinker. The clinker then drops into the cooler 5 where it is air-cooled. One part of the hot air thus produced passes to the rotary kiln, another part is directed through the tertiary air duct to the calciner. The remainder of the cooling air drawn into the cooler is diverted at 10. A mineraliser which does not have any detrimental effect upon the flow properties of the raw meal, may, in principle, be added at any location after the raw meal has left the store where the raw meal can have been subjected to homogenization, and after the raw meal has been added to the process through a dosale apparatus. A mineraliser, such as a sulphur containing component emer¬ging for example as a by-product of flue gas desulphuriza-tion, may advantageously be fed to the calciner either di¬rectly via the duct 12 or by adding the mineraliser to the tertiary air duct 8 via the duct 11 so that the mineraliser is carried by the hot air from the cooler to the calciner. Thus, when the mineraliser is directed into the calciner and into the subsequent separation cyclone, the calciner and the cyclone will operate as an homogeniser, facilitating thorough mixing of SO3 in the raw meal stream. If the by-product contains sulphur in a lower state of oxida- X tion, e.g. sulphite or sulphide, it may advantageously be added at 11 or 12 so that these sulphur compounds can be oxidated into sulphate in the calciner. If added at 13, this will result in the formation of a small amount of SO? being entrained in the exhaust gases. If drying of the mineraliser is required prior to use, it will be possible to extract hot excess air from the cooler at 10 for use in a conventional drying apparatus. In a preferred embodiment of the method where both sulphur and fluorine might be present, the composition of the rav/mix feedstock is such that the sulphur content Xs is at the most; 1,0 % by weight calculated as SO3 on a LOI (Loss On Ignition) free basis, or the fluorine content XF is at the most 0,12 % by weight calculated on a LOI free basis, or both of these conditions are fulfilled, in particular that X3 is at the most 0,8 wt%, or XF is at the most 0,10 wt%, or both, especi¬ally that Xs is at the most 0,6 wt%, or XF is at the most 0,08 wt%, or both, such as that Xs is at the most 0,4 wt%, or XF is at the most 0,0 6 wt%, or both. WE CLAIM: 1. A method for preparing mineralized Portland cement clinker in a kiln system said method comprising the steps of preheating a rawmix feedstock in a preheater, calcining the preheated feedstock in a calciner, burning the calcined feedstock in the kiln to form clinker and then cooling the clinker in a cooler characterized in that adding a mineralizer such as herein described to the feedstock, the mineralizer and the feedstock are mixed together and homogenized in suspension in at least one of the preheaters or calciners wherein the quantity of mineralizer added to the feed stock is subjected to the condition that the sulphur content (X,) is not greater than 1.2% by weight and / or the fluorine content (Xf) is not greater than 0.14% by weight on loss on ignition free basis. 2. The method according to claim 1, wherein the mineralizer is added to the feedstock stream after the feedstock has been heated to more than 800°C. 3. The method according to claim 1, wherein the addition of the mineralizer is carried out in the zone where the rawmix feedstock is being preheated. 4. The method according to claim 1, wherein the kiln system has a special calcining zone and the mineralizer is added to this zone. 5. The method according to claim 1, wherein the kiln system is one having a special calcining zone and that the mineralizer is added to a tertiary air duct connecting the cooler to the calcining zone. 6. The method according to claims 1 to 5, wherein the mineralizer is a sulphurous product, e.g. natural gypsum, hemihydrate (bassanite), anhydrite, langbeinite, barytes, or other sulphurous minerals containing calcium or magnesium or that the mineralizer is a sulphurous waste product selected from sulphates such as FGD (Flue Oas Desulphurization) gypsum, sulphite or sulphide-containing desulphurization products, sulphate-containing industrial by products such as ammonium or iron-based sulphates, cement kiln dust, sulphur-containing fuel such as petcoke or high sulphur coal or oil. 7. The method according to claims 1 to 5, wherein the mineralizer is a fluorine-containing product, e.g. fluorite, fluor apatite, cryolite or industrial by products containing fluorine such as hexafuorosilicic acid or silicon tetrafluoride, preferably fluorite. 8. The method according to claim 6 & 7, wherein the sulphur content in the feedstock with added mineralizer is not greater than 0.8% by weight and / or the fluorine content in the feedstock with mineralizer is not greater than 0.10% by weight. 9. The method according to claim 1, wherein the sulphur content is preferably not greater than 0.4% by weight and / or the fluorine content is preferably 0.6% by weight, or both. 10. The method according to claims 8 & 9, wherein the addition of the sulphur containing component and/or the fluorine-containing component, or both, is carried out in the zone where the rawmix feedstock is being preheated. 11. The method according to claims 8 & 9» wherein the kiln system is one having a special calcining zone and that the sulphur containing component and/or the fluorine component is added to this calcining zone. 12. A plant for manufacturing mineralized clinker which comprises an inlet for processed rawmix, preheater, a calzinmg zone, a kiln and a cooler, and wherein the plant has an inlet (11,12,13) for mineralizer located downstream from the position at which the rawmix is fed. 13. The plant according to claim 12, wherein the inlet (11,12) for mineralizer is located after the preheater (1). 14. The plant according to claim 12. wherein the inlet (11) for mineralizer is located at a point along the tertiary air duct (8). 15. A method for preparing Portland cement clinker in a kihi system, substantially as herein described and illustrated with reference to the accompanying drawings. |
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190-mas-95 correspondence-others.pdf
190-mas-95 correspondence-po.pdf
190-mas-95 description (complete).pdf
190-mas-95 others document.pdf
Patent Number | 188222 | |||||||||
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Indian Patent Application Number | 190/MAS/1995 | |||||||||
PG Journal Number | 30/2009 | |||||||||
Publication Date | 24-Jul-2009 | |||||||||
Grant Date | 02-May-2003 | |||||||||
Date of Filing | 17-Feb-1995 | |||||||||
Name of Patentee | M/S. F L SMIDTH & CO A/S | |||||||||
Applicant Address | VIGERSLEV ALLE 77, DK 2500 VALBY | |||||||||
Inventors:
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PCT International Classification Number | C04B 7/42 | |||||||||
PCT International Application Number | N/A | |||||||||
PCT International Filing date | ||||||||||
PCT Conventions:
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