INCREASED REPLACEMENT OF FLY ASH IN CEMENT COMPOSITIONS
TECHNICAL FIELD OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates to cement compositions containing greater amounts of fly ash than hitherto with concomitant advantages in environmental control.
BA CKGROUND ART
It is estimated that at present 30 to 40 million tons of fly ash are used as a partial replacement for Portland cement in concrete, resulting in the reduction of 20 to 30 million tons of CO2 which would otherwise have been emitted by the production of an equivalent amount of Portland cement.
The increase in the replacement level of Portland cement with fly ash to a 35 percent level, say, would result in a corresponding decrease in about 310 million tons in the production of Portland cement which calculates at a decrease in CO2 emissions of some 200 million tons. This would also result in a reduction in the mining of some 500 tons of limestone and clay.
Industrial standards generally require that fly ash conforms to certain specifications when used as a replacement material for Portland cement and these standards limit the extent to which fly ash can be used. This limit is attributable to its latent pozzolanic reactivity which results in the early strength development of the concrete being less than that of a corresponding concrete using Portland cement alone.
It is believed that the limits of latent pozzolanic reactivity of the fly ash is due to a limited surface area as the majority of the particles are spherical - including cenospheres and plurospheres.
It is therefore an object of the present invention to provide a method of increasing the surface area of the fly ash and to provide apparatus for carrying out this method.
Several methods of achieving this have been proposed, one of which includes the wet grinding of fly ash in a ball mill to cause particle size comminution. Another method 5 involved the use of ultrasonic vibrations to cause deglommeration and to crack open the plurospheres and thus releasing encapsulated spheres.
DISCLOSURE OF THE INVENTION
According to the invention fly ash particulate material is subjected to a classification process in which the classifier is adapted to create a centrifugal force lOsuffϊcient to partition the fly ash into a particle size fraction with a mean particle size in the order of about 1 to about 5 micron., and separating the undersized particles from the oversize particles
The centrifugal force may be generated by means of a rotor fan speed of at least 3000 r.p.m.
Such a material may be used as a replacement material to the order of 30 to 55 15percent of Portland cement in concrete.
According further to the invention the oversize fraction is recycled for comminution to the same range, or disposed of.
In a preferred form of the invention the material is first processed in dry form in an impact mill and then in a pneumatic cyclone particle size classifier for separating the desired 0fraction from the oversize fraction. The oversize material may be continuously returned to the impact mill for comminution reprocessing while the desired product with a mean particle size of 1 to 5 microns is continuously conveyed to a storage silo.
A secondary impact mill may be added, if desired or required.
Should the fly ash contain water the recycled oversize material is mixed with the new wet fly ash and the mixture flash dried, thereby achieving an improvement in the efficiency of the feed rheology and therefore the drying efficiency and, secondly, for further comminution of the oversize fly ash material.
The product of the invention may be used as a replacement for Portland cement, or as a cementitious material for use in building products and materials, or as an additive, filler, extender or pigment in other industrial products.
In one form of the invention an impact mill is provided which has a vertically mounted shaft impeller with radial blades in an enclosed cylinder. The impeller is driven by a high speed motor mounted external to the cylinder. The fly ash material is fed to the impact mill pneumatically through high pressure air injectors which are located in opposed relationship and preferably at an angle of between 70 and 150 degrees above or below the horizontal depending on the desired airflow direction with such force that the imperfect spherical particles, such as plurospheres, cenospheres, agglomerated and oversize particles, are fractured thereby resulting in particles having an irregular shape and finer particle size, and therefore having a greater surface area.
The spaces between the outer edges of the blades and the inside surface of the cylinder should be reduced to a minimum otherwise the air used for moving the fly ash material through the mill will tend to escape without effecting the moving operation. Baffles or the like may be provided on the inside surface of the cylinder to overlap the free edges of the blades and thereby prevent a bypass movement of the air containing the fly ash material.
In another form of the invention, a mill is used which comprises a chamber with opposed pneumatic injection inlets to feed the fly ash material at elevated pressure to cause the particles to collide with such force that the imperfect spherical particles, such as plurospheres, cenospheres, agglomerated and oversize particles, are fractured thereby, resulting in particles having an irregular shape and finer particle size, and therefore having a greater surface area. As indicated above such a mill may be combined with the impact mill.
Examples
A particle size classification test was conducted, using previously accumulated data from test work, using a typical dry fly ash sample, to determine at which mean particle size the partitioning of fly ash material would equal or exceed the early strength development of
5 concrete, when replacing Portland cement in a concrete mixture at a higher than normal replacement level of fly ash for Portland cement.
The fly ash sample material was mixed and split into separate samples of 50 kilograms each and marked for identification purposes as; FA1, FA2, and FA3. FA1 to be retained as the unprocessed fly ash sample material for comparative purposes. Particle size lOanalysis of the unprocessed fly ash sample material determined the mean particle size of the sample at 12 micron and 90% of the material as being less than 44 micron.
A pneumatic double cyclone type separator, as typically used in the classification of fine particulate materials, was used as the classifier to effect partitioning at differing mean particle sizes. The rotor fan was typically fitted with a variable speed motor allowing for the
15 control of rpm of the rotor fan and therefore the centrifugal force intensity of the cyclone, so as to be able to achieve different mean particle size partitioning at differing rpm.
Referring to Figure 1 of the drawings, there is shown diagrammatically a silo 1 from which the fly ash sample material is conveyed pneumatically by pump 3, via conduit 2, to a pneumatic cyclone 4, which is pneumatically energised by rotor fan 5. Samples FA2 and 0FA3 were independently processed being fed to the pneumatic cyclone 4 with rotor fan settings at 2500 rpm and 3100 rpm respectively; resulting in the undersize partitioned material fractions having means particle sizes of 5 micron and 2.9 micron respectively. The samples being independently collected in silo 7, via conduit 6. The partitioned oversize material is collected via conduit 8 and may be further processed for comminution as 5 described below, or may be discarded.
The undersize partitioned material fractions of samples FA2 and FA3 were submitted for comparative compressive strength tests according to accepted standard testing
methods, together with the unprocessed fly ash sample material marked FA1, and a sample of the Portland cement, which was used in the cementitious mixtures of all the samples marked FA4. The results of the compressive strength tests are depicted in Table 1 below.
TABLE 1 - COMPRESSIVE STRENGTH - MEAN PARTICLE SIZE - COMPARISONS
NOTES:
Kilos = kilogram
N/m2 = Newtons per square metre
FA = Fly Ash
PC = Portland Cement
Micron= Micrometres
[PLE 1
Referring to Figure 2 of the drawings, there is shown diagrammatically dry fly ash material being pneumatically conveyed by pneumatic pump 3, from silo 1, via conduit 2, to impact mill 9. Pneumatic Pump 3, being a high pressure type compressor, controls the feed of fly ash through impact mills 9, 11, and 12, as diagrammatically shown in Figures 2, 3, and 4. Impact mills 9, 11, and 12, as diagrammatically shown in Figures 2, 3, and 4, are of the type as having a vertically mounted impeller, having a plurality of tangentially attached blades, in an enclosed cylindrical vessel. The impeller is driven by a high speed motor mounted external to the vessel. The high speed motor is geared to generate rpm of between
1400 to 4000, and, depending on the dimensions and throughput capacity of the cylindrical vessel, may be lo to 50 horse power. Typically throughput of 10 tonne per hour will require a 30 horse power motor to maintain a 3000 rpm impeller speed.
Processed material from impact mill 9, is pneumatically conveyed by pump 10a, to
5pneumatic cyclone 4 for partitioning as described in example 5. The oversize coarse partitioned material is returned to impact mill 11 via conduit 8 or is returned to silo 1 via conduit 8a and pneumatic pump 8 for reprocessing. The undersize desired fly ash material, is conveyed to product storage silo 7a. Exhaust air is dispersed through bag house 7a.
The oversize particles may be returned to the mill 9 or returned to the silo 1 via lOpump 8a.
EXAMPLE 2
Referring to Figure 3 of the drawings, there is shown diagrammatically dry fly ash material being fed from silo 1, by pneumatic pump 3, via conduit 2, to a primary impart mill
9, for size comminution as described in Figure 2, and, in series, a secondary impact mill 11,
15which is fed by pump 13a via conduit 13, material primarily comminuted in impact mill 9, for further comminution processing.
Processed material from impact mill 11, is pneumatically conveyed by pump 10a, via conduit 10, to pneumatic cyclone 4, for partitioning as described above with reference to Figure 1. The oversize coarse partitioned material is returned to impact mill 11, via conduit 208b, by pneumatic pump, to silo 1, for further comminution processing, or may be returned to impact mill 9, via conduit 8a, for further comminution processing, depending on the particle size comminution desired. The predetermined desired undersize material, having a mean particle size of between 1 to 5 micron, is conveyed, via conduit 6, under the influence of gravity and the cyclone air stream, to silo 7.
EXAMPLE 3
The invention also provides a method for the blending of recycled partitioned oversize dry fly ash material with wet fly ash material, which is in the state of vacuumed filter cake, produced as a result of having been dewatered subsequent to a hydrometallurgical process, or, subsequent to recovery from a landfill lagoon. Generally fly ash filter cake material will contain residual moisture of between 13% to 17%, and in order to be suitable as a feed material to a flash drying unit requires a residual moisture content of the feed material to be 10% or less.
Referring to Figure 4 of the drawings, there is shown diagrammatically fly ash filter cake material being fed by a conveyor 14, to hopper 15 and oversize coarse dry fly ash material, which has been partitioned in pneumatic cyclone 4, being pneumatically conveyed by pump 22, via conduit 23, for blending with the wet fly ash filter cake material in pug mill 16. The recycled oversize dry fly ash material required to obtain a suitable blended material for efficient feed to a flash drying unit is found to be 45% to 55% by weight of that of the vacuumed filter cake material.
The blended recycled dry fly ash material and the wet filter cake fly ash material is fed by screw conveyor 17 to flash dryer 19. The flue gas stream created by burner 18, conveys the dried fly ash material via flue conduit 20, to thermally protected impact mill 12, which is fitted with bag house 21, for release of excess gases.
Dried fly ash material is processed for particle comminution in impact mill 12, as previously described in EXAMPLE 1 , and is simultaneously cooled. The cooled material is pneumatically conveyed by pump 13a, via conduit 13, from impact mill 12, to impact mill 11 for further comminution, or, may be conveyed directly to pneumatic cyclone 4, by pump 13 a, via conduit 24, depending on the extent of the comminution required.
Fly ash material conveyed by pumps 13a or 10a to pneumatic cyclone size classifier
4, via conduits 24 or 10, is partitioned to the desired undersize mean particle size and
conveyed to silo 7 for storage. The oversize coarse fly ash material is conveyed to pug mill 16, by pneumatic pump 22, via conduit 23, as previously described, or may be split in a manifold (not diagrammatically shown), whereby a portion of the material may recycled to the pug mill 16, via conduit 23, the other portion being returned to impact mill 11 for 5comminution reprocessing, via conduit 23a.
EXAMPLE 4
Referring to Figures 5, 5a and 5b, the impact mill is a blast chamber shown in Figures 5a as an octagonal chamber with a plurality of injection nozzles 60 through which the fly ash is introduced from the silo at high pressure by means of high pressure compressor 103.
The nozzles are mounted in opposition so that the introduced fly ash collides head-on resulting in the fracture of the spherical particles.
The nozzles may have diameters of from 6 to 13 mm depending on the throughput 15 design. Typically a 13 mm nozzle with an air flow rate of 330 to 340 cubic ft/min (cfm) will generate 7 bar pressure which, through a 32 mm conduit will provide a feed rate of 900 to 1000 Kg of fly ash per hour.
In Figure 5 the impact mill 9b is shown, as described above. This impact mill may be fed from the exhaust outlet of the blast chamber 9a , or directly from the compressor 3, 0through injector nozzles 60.
Material processed in blast chamber 9a, as shown in Figure 5, is pneumatically conveyed by compressor pump 3b via conduit 10a and 10, directly to pneumatic cyclone 4. The classified desired undersize fly ash material, having a means particle size of between 1 to 5 micron, but preferably of 2.5 micron, is conveyed, via conduit 6, to silo 7. The 5 oversize coarse partitioned material is conveyed and returned via conduit 8 a, to silo 1, for further comminution, or, material processed in blast chamber 9 a, is conveyed to impact mill 9b, for additional comminution and subsequently conveyed via conduit 10 by pneumatic
pump 10a to pneumatic cyclone 4 for classification. The undersize coarse material being returned to silo 1, or to impact mill 9b, for further comminution. The desired undersize fly ash material, is conveyed to product storage silo 7a. Exhaust air is dispersed through bag house 7a.