Evaluation Of Scale Up Factors In A Lab Scale High Pressure Grinding Roll

- Organization:
- International Mineral Processing Congress
- Pages:
- 18
- File Size:
- 699 KB
- Publication Date:
- Sep 1, 2012
Abstract
In the last decades, High Pressure Grinding Roll (HPGR) has gained significant importance in hard rock processing due to numerous metallurgical benefits such as energy savings, particle weakening, preferential damage of coarse particles, and preferential comminution-liberation. There are a limited numbers of lab-scale HPGR units throughout the world. The laboratory-scale HPGR machine at the University of Utah is first-ever lab-scale machine designed by late Dr Klaus Schönert, the inventor of HPGR. This HPGR is constructed with two counter-rotating hardened tool steel rolls, each 200 mm in diameter and 100 mm in width. The HPGR unit is equipped with eight sensors and a robust control system, which serves as an ideal system for fundamental studies and lab-scale testing. In HPGR operation, throughput, energy and product size distribution are intricately linked to specific grinding pressure, roll gap and rolls speed. The nip angle existing during the operation determines the volume of feed material above the rolls that is pulled into rolls without slip. In this paper, scale-up factors and some of the existing models have been reviewed. A number of experiments have been carried out with limestone and a slag material. The influence of operating variables and their complex relationship has been studied.
Citation
APA:
(2012) Evaluation Of Scale Up Factors In A Lab Scale High Pressure Grinding RollMLA: Evaluation Of Scale Up Factors In A Lab Scale High Pressure Grinding Roll. International Mineral Processing Congress, 2012.