Industrial Minerals - Latest Practice in Burning Cement and Lime in Europe

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 5
- File Size:
- 539 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1955
Abstract
Modern shaft kilns in Europe are fully mechanized and burn cement of acceptable quality at 700,000 Btu per bbl and lime at 3.2 million Btu per net ton. Rotary kilns for cement have increased in thermal efficiency by using exit gas heat for preheating incoming raw material and by recovering heat from outgoing clinker in air-quench coolers. The dry process Lepol or ACL kiln has the lowest fuel consumption, 580,000 to 630,000 Btu per bbl, and very low dust loss, about 1 pct weight of clinker. The Holdebank-Gygi system reaches 720,000 Btu per bbl. The calcinator kiln for the wet process consumes 1.1 million Btu per bbl. IN every country economic circumstances prescribe the method used to produce a commodity at lowest cost. In Pennsvlvania a man's wages for working 4 hr buys a ton of coal wholesale; in Germany a laborer must work 40 hr, or ten times as long. In western Europe, therefore, conservation of fuel is of primary importance, and recent practices of burning lime and cement differ from those employed in the United States. 'This Paper presents data collected during a trip through western Europe in 1953. Considered uneconomical, shaft kilns for burning
Citation
APA:
(1955) Industrial Minerals - Latest Practice in Burning Cement and Lime in EuropeMLA: Industrial Minerals - Latest Practice in Burning Cement and Lime in Europe. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1955.