Method of producing powder materials

Solid material comminution or disintegration – Processes – By utilizing kinetic energy of projected or suspended material

Reexamination Certificate

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C241S026000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06367722

ABSTRACT:

The present invention relates to the technology of producing finely powdered materials having narrow particle size range particularly, for use in mining and construction.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Technological processes such as those employed in the mining and construction industries often require a step in which solid materials or coarsely ground materials are reduced to relatively fine powders so that they are in a condition to be dispersed in a subsequent step of the process. Several different methods of physically treating solid materials in order to put them into a condition where they may be readily dispersed are known. One such method of getting such dispersion conditioned materials is disclosed in Inventor's Certificate USSR 1.431.864, I. cl. B07B 1/40 1988 which comprises electromagnetic conditioning (i.e. electrostatic charging) of a polyfractional mixture of a material after grinding, its separation, and the collection of finished powdered material. It should be noted that electromagnetic separation of fine and large particles after the polyfractional mechanical mixture has been formed, is taught in this method, i.e. electromagnetic conditioning does not take place during the grinding process. Such electromagnetic conditioning does not permit concentrated field forces to work efficiently with structural defects, such as point defects developed in particles of the processed material mixture (see Levich V. G. “Theoretical physics”, M. Nauka, 1969, p. 75). Thus, electromagnetic conditioning action taught in this method does not promote any further break down to finer particles.
Another method known in the prior art for production of ground powdered materials is disclosed by Story in U.S. Pat. No. 5,507,439 in which an electrostatic charge is imparted to a starting powder to form a charged powder and then milling or grinding the charged powder to produce a milled powder. In the electrostatic conditioning step, charge is transferred using an alternating current (AC) or a direct current (DC) high-voltage generator that delivers 10,000 to 1,000,000 volts at a frequency of 1 to 10,000 Hz.
A mill is disclosed in Inventor's Certificate USSR-SU-A-1.724.369 I.cl. B02C 19/18 1978 which functions by electromagnetic conditioning of the material to be treated. Initial ground material (e.g., cement) is loaded then high voltage is applied to two electrodes, electromagnets are turned on, and then a current-conducting impeller fans a dust-air mixture into an ionizer where the particles become electrostatically charged. The charged particles are then entrapped by the accelerator's electromagnetic field where additional grinding takes place through collisions with neutral particles. The charged particles go to a neutralizer, in the form of a current-conducting impeller, where electrical neutralization and additional grinding collisions take place, which is followed by separation of the finely ground powder in a vortex chamber.
Although U.S. Pat. No. 5,507,439 and Inventor's Certificate USSR-SU-A-1.724.369 I.cl. B02C 19/18 1978 contemplate putting an electrostatic charge on the primary powder particles by applying high voltage utilizing two electrodes to allow additional outer mechanical grinding to improve the grinding quality, the charged particles are passively neutralized at the final stage of the grinding by contacting a current conducting grounded element. There is also no possibility of neutralizing electric counter potentials or opposite charges that develop in cracks and break fissures of the particles during grinding that keep the particles from breaking down further. These unneutralized potentials lead to partial cracks rejoining after mechanical treatment. As a result, the energy used for grinding is consumed in abrading the particles and rolling them into a spherical shape rather than breaking them apart. In the separation process these rolled particles tend to rebound from the layer of powder that adheres to the wall of e.g. a vortex separator while more undersized particles get through the separation screens leading to ground powders having a wide range of particle sizes.
There is therefore a need for a method to more efficiently reduce particle size by grinding and to facilitate separation of particles produced by grinding into more narrowly defined particle size ranges or metric fractions so that particle size ranges preferred for particular products can be obtained and to obtain narrow particle size ranges required for certain types of premium products such as cement mixtures.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
The present invention is directed to meeting the foregoing needs by providing a method for obtaining fine powders having narrow particle size range from non-conducting solids comprising the steps of: 1) creating an electrostatic charge on particles of a solid mixture formed by mechanical means 2) grinding the mixture and neutralizing the electrostatic charge during grinding 3) separating and 4) collecting the finely ground finished powder product.
The present invention may be applied to any mechanical mixture of non-electrically conducting materials in order to reduce it to a powder having a finer and more uniform particle size. The method of the present invention differs from the methods of Story in U.S. Pat. No. 5,507,439 and Inventor's Certificate USSR-SU-A-1.724.369 I.cl. B02C 19/18 1978 in that the electric charges present during the grinding process are discharged or electrically neutralized by applying a depolarization potential to the powdered mixture while it is being ground.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
Fine powders having narrow particle size ranges can be obtained from non-conducting solids by the process of the present invention which comprises the steps of:
a) providing a mixture of non-electrically conducting solid particles;
b) creating an electrostatic charge on particles of the mixture;
c) grinding the mixture of solid particles and neutralizing the electrostatic charge by exposing the mixture to an electrical potential sufficient to produce a corona discharge during grinding;
d) separating particles formed in step c) according to particle size range;
e) collecting the separated particles.
For electro-neutralization the mixture is preferably exposed to a depolarizing electrical potential of 10 to 60 V. When the potential value is less than 10 V, the powder mixture cannot be easily separated into its component fractions while at potentials exceeding 60 V, undesirable electrochemical reactions may occur in the mixture. For concrete powders potentials in the middle of the range, that is 35 V to 45 V, are more preferred with 40 V most preferred as it produces finer particles of narrow range. The depolarization potential is preferably applied through a single electrode.
Since during grinding of the powdered mixture large electrostatic charges remain on the freshly exposed surfaces there is agglomeration of particles that makes grinding and separation difficult, thus preventing the production of finely ground particles in a narrow size range. Particle size reduction is enhanced by application of the depolarizing electric potential during grinding because a corona discharge develops creating an intense zone of ionized air resulting in the neutralization of the charges on fracture surfaces and fissures of the powder particles. Consequently, any surface polarization that might develop on fracture surfaces or fissures that cause the particles to hold together are neutralized allowing the fissures to continue developing which results in further breakdown of the particles. Agglomeration of particles due to the presence of surface polarized electric charges is also prevented.
As a result of applying a depolarizing electric potential during milling, more angular powder particles are formed and specific energy consumption for the grinding process is reduced. Separation via screening is facilitated as fine particles do not agglomerate but instead pass through screens intended to separate fines from the mixture. This resul

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