A. Gibbs
По материалам сайта:
www.bulk-solids-handling.comModernisation of Belt
Conveyor Systems
Данная статья посвящена модернизации ленточных конвейеров. А именно доказыват эффективность нового прибора, который предотвращает заштыбовку конвейера, что существенно повышает его нагрузку.
Modernization
of conveyor systems in today's coal mines and coal-fired
power plants helps ensure that the mine or plant is running to their
optimum
capacities, maximizing the tonnes per hour and producing the highest
quality
product with as little impact to the environment as possible.
Modernization
of conveyor systems in today's coal mines and coal-fired power plants
should be
an essential goal for the management, employees and share holders of
the
company. It helps ensure that the mine or plant is running to their
optimum
capacities, maximizing the tonnes per hour and producing the highest
quality
product with as little impact to the environment as possible.
Power
plants being built today emit more than 90 per cent less pollutants (SO2,
NOx, particulates, mercury) than the plants they replaced
from the
1970's, according the National Energy Technology Laboratory.
Asset
optimisation/modernisation has never been more critical in the everyday
activities we do at home and at work. Coal is abundant, clean and the
most
efficient energy source available. Conveyors are the lifeline to any
coal-fired
power plant’s productivity. No coal = No low cost, clean,
abundant, affordable
energy. Proper consistent training and periodic inspections of the
conveying
systems with reliable turn-key installations substantially increases
the
system’s availability.
On-going
maintenance is essential to ensuring an incident and injury free
workplace
while maintaining a productive reliable workforce. All of which are
essential
to any material handling system and the employees who maintain and are
responsible for them.
Properties
of Coal
"Coal
is the most affordable source of power fuel per million Btu,
historically
averaging less than one-quarter the price of petroleum and natural
gas,"
according the National Mining Association.
There are
four basic varieties of coal :
- Anthracite: Sometimes also
called "hard coal," anthracite was formed from bituminous coal when
great pressures developed in folded rock strata during the creation of
mountain ranges. Anthracite has the highest energy content of all coals
and is used for space heating and generating electricity. Anthracite averages 25 million Btu per tonne.
- Bituminous: Bituminous or "soft"
coal formed when greater pressure was applied to sub-bituminous coal.
This is the type most commonly used for electric power generation in
the U.S. It has a higher heating value than either lignite or
sub-bituminous, but less than that of anthracite. Bituminous coal averages 24 million Btu per
tonne.
- Sub-bituminous: Sub-bituminous
coal formed from lignite when it came under higher pressure. This coal
has a high (25 to 35 per cent) moisture content which raises the risk
of spontaneous combustion. A dull black coal with a higher heating
value than lignite that is used primarily for generating electricity
and for space heating. Sub-bituminous
coal averages 18 million Btu per ton.
- Lignite: Increased pressures and
heat from overlying strata caused buried peat to dry and harden into
lignite. Lignite is a brownish-black coal with generally high moisture
and ash content and lower heating value. However, it is an important
form of energy for generating electricity, particularly in the American
Southwest. Lignite averages 14
million Btu per tonne.
The above
information is important to power plants today because they might have
been
designed to burn bituminous coals, but due to the higher costs of this
coal
they might be switching or what's commonly known as blending in
sub-bituminous
coal, like we see from the growing Powder River Basin in Wyoming and
Indonesia
and Australia.
Advances
in Transfer Point Design
Some
recent advancements or modernizations have been accomplished through
conveyors
designed with new chutes in the transfer points. The number of the new
coal-fired power plants burning bituminous coals or steel plants that
use
metallurgical coal for producing coke, verses the worldwide demand has
not been
consistent.
We have
far greater demand than the current amount of plants capable of
producing coke
or energy. Therefore, we are asking our current mines to mine more coal
and our
power plants to produce more megawatts (energy). We are asking them to
do this
most of time using the same equipment that was installed when the mine
or power
plant was originally started up, sometimes more than 20-30 years ago.
When the
power plant was originally designed it might have been designed for 800
megawatts and today we are asking it to produce more than 1000
megawatts.
A newly
designed ideal transfer point chute should be a tight enclosure with
dust
curtains to reduce the induced air velocity and a direction hood that
is either
mounted into the existing transfer chute or a newly designed transfer
that
incorporated a hood into the actual design of the framework around it.
The hood
will smoothly guide the discharged material through the chute with
minimum
impact as to not separate the material which would then induce more
air. The
downward energy of the material stream is converted to flow in the same
direction of the downstream conveyor. The use of a spoon type design
allows the
material stream to enter at a shallow centring angle onto the receiving
conveyor which requires minimal acceleration to match the speed of the
receiving conveyor belt.
This will
result in minimizing the impact and wear on the receiving conveyor
belt, centre
load the conveyor belt which would reduce spillage in the load zone and
off
centre tracking problems along the troughing side of the conveyor
system.
Off-centre loading is responsible for poor conveyor belt tracking and
consequent spillage, dusting and wear at the skirtboard area throughout
the
length of the conveyor.
Combined
with a well-sealed skirtboard system in the receiving conveyors load
zone area,
including proper internal liners, roller cassette beds to ensure little
or
no-sag in the load zone as the material is being loaded on to the
conveyor belt
and a skirt rubber clamping system. The skirtboard system should also
include
adequate dust skirting material and dust curtains staggered throughout
the load
zone area which will reduce the induced air velocity from existing out
of the
end of the skirtboards into the building.
Everywhere
else along the conveyor system should be made to isolate and contain
areas
where dust is created. The use of high quality belt cleaners or wash
box
systems to help eliminate material carryback is another important step
to help
reduce dust and spillage making the conveyor systems more productive,
efficient
and safe means of transporting material.
Transfer
Point Upgrade at a Coal-fired Power Plant
A
coal-fired power plant that wanted to upgrade an existing transfer
point which
had been a major problem area for the coal yard and in turn limited the
plant’s
ability to keep a consistent supply of coal to the bunkers. While in
the reclaiming
operation, the chute would buildup and plug with coal fines that stuck
together
when they were in wet coal or freezing conditions.
Chute
heaters, vibrators and internal baffles were added, but the problem
still
remained. When the coal was dry it generated more dust at the transfer
point
and spillage was occurring between the skirtboard and the belt, due to
the
angle of discharge onto the 60” receiving conveyor. Off centre
loading caused
serious conveyor belt misalignment and constant spillage in the load
zone.
The bypass
conveyor is a 42 inch (approx. 1070 millimetre) wide conveyor belt
running at
700 feet per minute (approx. 3.6 metre per second) and 1400 tonnes per
hour and
the receiving conveyor is a 60 inch (approx. 1500 millimetre) wide
conveyor
belt running at 850 feet per minute (approx. 4.3 metre per second) and
3000
tonnes per hour.
A new
transfer point was modelled and designed using ASGCO's 3-DEM (Discrete
Element
Modelling) and ASGCO's project management and engineering team to
review the
current conditions as well as the potential for different types of
coals to be
conveyed or blend with the existing coal, .
The main
goal of the project was to make a more efficient (no plugging or
buildup) and
less dust than in the current load zone. Also allowing for current coal
(bituminous) conditions as well as the possibility of using new coal
(sub-bituminous PRB) coal or the potential to blend both types of coal
in the
future at the plant.
Other
goals were for the coal to be loaded onto the receiving conveyor belt,
moving
in the same direction, speed and in the centre of the receiving
conveyor belt,
therefore causing less spillage and dust in the load zone and longer
run life
on the receiving conveyor belt.
The design
of the new chute also eliminated corner build-up of the wet sticky coal
and
reduced the wear due to less impact and not being properly directed
that was
noticed in the old chute. An upper deflection hood was installed and
utilized a
hydraulically powered ram that actuated in or out depending if the
plant was
stacking or reclaiming coal.
This
design eliminated the problems of flop-gates which can be a maintenance
problem
for any plant. The deflector hood was automatically positioned in the
head
chute to direct the coal during either stack out or reclaim.
The bottom
of the chute incorporated a dual spoon design to operate without
buildup and
the coal is centre loaded onto the 60 inch (1500 millimetre) receiving
conveyor
belt at the same speed and direction. This has resulted in a nearly
"dustless" transfer point, dramatically reduced spillage as well as
increased life on the receiving conveyor belt. There was less wear
on the internal liners and centre loading to minimize any misalignment
of the
conveyor belt as it was being loaded is now a thing of the past.
Another
major concern for plants handling coal is in bunker house or on the
tripper/cascade floors where the coal is being loaded into the bunkers
or silos
prior to being pulverized and being injected into the boiler.
Because
these conveyors are located inside the plant, the combustible dust
issues are
exemplified. Many regulations, like the United State's OSHA NEP
combustible
dust requirements, has made it mandatory for all coal fired power
plants to
address any airborne dust issues.
Improvement
at a Dual Tripper Car System
The installation
shown in Fig 6. was an existing dual tripper car system with two
(side-by-side)
tripper conveyors, rail mounted, handling a blend of sub-bituminous and
bituminous coal with a particle size of 1 inch minus. The conveyors of
the
system, that feeds the coal bunkers below, are 36 inch (approx. 915
millimetres) wide and run at 400 feet per minute (approx. 2 metres per
second),
handling 600 tonnes per hour, each.
The major
problems were the large amount of airborne dust created from
handling the coal and the increased tonnages demanded from the plant.
Another
concern was the timeline and installation issues of being located ten
floors
above the ground and having to dismantle the existing tripper cars and
transfer
chutes was on a tight schedule and had to be accomplished one at a time
so at
least one of the trippers could run during the day to fill the coal
bunkers
below.
Two new
tripper cars were modelled and designed using ASGCO's 3-DEM material
modelling
software as well as reviewed with engineers, maintenance and operators
from the
power plant. Together they came up with the new design that would meet
all the
goals of the project.
The
primary goal was to create a nearly "dustless" transfer of coal and
allow the coal to be either loaded down to the bunkers or loaded back
onto
itself, moving in the same direction, speed and in the centre of the
receiving
conveyor. The new design improved the flow of the coal and the new
combination
of internal liners also improved the wear ability of the liners.
The
combination of the X-Wear MDX liners, a combination of ceramic
cylinders
encased in rubber, for the impact area and the chromium carbide overlay
plate
(double pass and polished) was the answer to the sliding abrasion
issues prior
to the new design.
The amount of airborne
dust and spillage is virtually eliminated with
the new tripper design. Clamp mount skirting, dust curtains and skalper
belt
cleaners further aid in the elimination of any fugitive dust and
carryback
helped the plant meet and exceed its goals for the project.
The newly
installed transfer chutes now operate with improved coal flow through
the
tripper system without buildup and less wear in the internal liners
nearly
eliminating all spillage and any significant amount of airborne dust. A
nearly
"dustless" transfer point.
In
conclusion, it is necessary for any coal mine or coal handling facility
to look
at ways to improve productivity, efficiency and safety.