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Title:
RUN-THROUGH BRICK DRYING PLANT AND METHOD FOR THE CONTROL OF ITS OPERATION
Document Type and Number:
WIPO Patent Application WO/1985/002249
Kind Code:
A1
Abstract:
Run-through brick drying plant, which operates by the chamber dryer principle. The brick loads (T) to be dried are brought through a front door (16a) into the drying chamber (K1). After drying, the brick loads (T) are removed from the opposite side of the drying plant through the rear door (16b). The brick drying plant comprises two or more drying chambers (K1, K2, K3) connected in series, each of which said chambers (Kn) operates independently so that, when the brick loads (T) are shifted from the preceding drying chamber (Kn) into the subsequent drying chamber (Kn+1), in the latter chamber (Kn+1) the drying of the brick load (T) is continued substantially from the point of the drying formula that had been reached in the drying in the preceding chamber (Kn). There are at least two, preferably three or more, drying chambers (K) in series, and there are one or more groups of chambers obtainedin this way, side by side. Moreover, a novel control method is described for controlling the operation of the drying plant.

Inventors:
UIMONEN MATTI (FI)
Application Number:
PCT/FI1983/000072
Publication Date:
May 23, 1985
Filing Date:
November 15, 1983
Export Citation:
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Assignee:
TEKMA OY (FI)
International Classes:
F26B15/16; F26B21/06; F26B25/22; (IPC1-7): F26B15/16
Foreign References:
SE321895B1970-03-16
US1783030A1930-11-25
SE319431B1970-01-12
FR1462448A1966-04-15
Other References:
See also references of EP 0162838A1
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Claims:
WHAT IS CLAIMED IS:
1. Runthrough brick drying plant, which operates by the chamber dryer principle, in which the brick loads (T) to be dried are brought through a front door (16a) into the drying chamber (K..), and out of which drying plant the brick loads (T) are, after drying, removed from the opposite side of the drying plant through the rear door (16b), c h a r a c t e r i z e d in that the brick drying plant comprises two or more drying chambers (K_.,K2,K_) connected in series, each of which said chambers (K ) operates independently so that, when the brick loads (T) are shifted from the preceding drying chamber (K ) into the subsequent drying chamber (K .,) / in the latter chamber (K .) the drying of the brick load (T) is continued substan¬ tially from the point of the drying formula (Fig. 7) that had been reached in the drying in the preceding chamber* (Kn) .
2. Brick drying plant as claimed in claim 1, c h a r a c t e r i z e d in that there are at least two, preferably three or more, drying chambers (K) in series, and that there are one or more' groups of chambers obtained in this way, side by side.
3. Brick drying plant as claimed in any of claims 1 to 3, c h a r a c t e r i z e d in that between the subsequent groups of drying chambers there is a lightweight partition wall (30;31), which permits running through of the brick loads (T) from the pre ceding chambers into the following chambers.
4. Brick drying plant as claimed in claim 1 or 2, c h a r a c t e r i z e d in that one end or both ends of the dryer wagons (7,8) on which the brick loads (T) travel through the dryer channels are pro vided with such vertical walls (21) as function as partition walls of the dryer chambers ( ) placed one after the other and connected in series (Fig. 4) . •"BURE i _OMPI .
5. Method of control of the operation of a runthrough chamber dryer for brick loads as claimed in any of claims 1 to 4, c h a r a c t e r i z e d in that such a control system has been fitted so as to control the operation of the group of drying cham¬ bers (K1,K2,K,) connected in series with each other as has as many control units (S..,S2,S3) as there are drying chambers in the said group of drying chambers, and that, after a drying formula (Fig. 7) in accord¬ ance with the brick load (T) to be dried at each parti¬ cular time has been fed into a certain control unit (S_. ;S2;S3) , the control signal (a_,;a2;a3) of the said control unit (S ;S2;S3) is arranged so that it follows along with the brick load (T) concerned to be dried and so that it is connected so as always to control the control devices (13,16) of the drying chamber in which the load (T) concerned to be dried is at each particular time.
6. Method as claimed in claim 5, c h a r ¬ a c t e r i z e d in that the control signals (a_. ,aj,a3) received from the different control units (S;S2;S3) are connected to a selector device (30) , which passes the control signal concerned alternatingly to the control motors (23,25) of the drying chamber ( ), or equivalent, in which the brick load (T) to be followed is.
7. Method as claimed in claim 5 or 6, c h a r a c t e r i z e d in that by means of the control signals (a_.,a2,a3) received from the control units (S.. ,S2/S) , at each particular time, alternatingly in respect of each of the dryer chambers (K1,K2,K_.) , the control motor (23) of the control damper (18a) for the inlet air (F. ) and the control motor (25) of the control valve (14) of the heating radiator (9) for the drying air, and possibly other, corresponding devices acting upon the state of the drying air are controlled.
Description:
Run-through brick drying plant and method for the control of its operation

The present invention is concerned with a run-through brick drying plant, which operates by the chamber dryer principle, in which the brick loads to be dried are brought on an inlet conveyor through a front door into the drying chamber, and out of which drying plant the brick loads are, after drying, removed from the opposite side of the drying plant through the rear door.

The invention is further concerned with a control method for the brick drying plant subject of the inventio . In prior art, as lumber drying plants, so- called run-through chamber drying plants are known. Their construction is such that dryer loads consisting of dryer packages are brought into the drying chamber along a roll track placed ahead of the drying plant, from which the loads are pushed into the dryer chamber. The ready dried loads are taken out through the opposite door of the dryer chamber. It is an advantage of these prior-art chamber dryers that therein the time of exchange of the load is relatively short. A drawback is, however, the costly and complicated construction of the drying plants.

It is an object of the present invention to provide a simple solution which permits a substantial reduction in the drawbacks stated above as well as to provide such a chamber drying plant in which the above properties of a chamber drying plant are retained.

It is a further object of the present inven¬ tion to provide such a brick drying plant in which the drying of the bricks can be carried out more advan- tageously and economically than in prior art.

One of the goals of the invention is to provide a novel control method for a brick drying plant.

which method can be accomplished by means of relatively simple control devices.

The brick drying plant in accordance with the invention is mainly characterized in that the brick drying plant comprises two or more drying chambers connected in series, each of which said chambers oper¬ ates independently so that, when the brick loads are shifted from the preceding drying chamber into the sub¬ sequent drying chamber, in the latter chamber the drying of the brick load is continued substantially from the point of the drying formula that had been reached in the drying in the preceding chamber.

On the other hand, the control method in accordance with the invention is mainly characterized in that such a control system has been fitted so as to control the operation of the group of drying chambers connected in series with each other as has as many control units as there are drying chambers in the said group of drying chamber's, and that, after a drying formula in accordance with the brick load to be dried at each particular time has been- fed into a certain control unit, the control signal of the said control unit is arranged so that it follows along with the brick load concerned to be dried and so that it is connected so as always to control the control devices of the drying chamber in which the load concerned to be dried is at each particular time.

In the brick drying plant in accordance with the invention, the advantages characteristic of a chamber drying plant have been retained. Moreover, such a chamber drying plant for brick loads has been provided in which exactly the desired drying formula can be followed accurately in a way advantageous in view of both the drying result and the energy con- sumption. For its part, the control method in accordance with the invention permits the reaching of the goals described above by means of a control

equipment of simple construction and operation.

In the following, the invention will be described in detail with reference to one exemplifying embodiment of the invention, illustrated in the figures of the attached drawing, whereby the invention is by no means strictly confined to the details of the said embodiment.

Figure 1 is a vertical sectional view of drying chambers in accordance with the invention on an enlarged scale.

Figure 2 is a vertical sectional view of the first chamber of the drying channel in the direction opposite to that shown in Fig. 1.

Figure 3 is a horizontal sectional view of the initial end of the drying channel of the invention. Figure 4 shows a second embodiment of the partition wall between the drying chambers in a way corresponding to Fig. 3.

Figure 5 shows the control system of the operation of a brick drying plant in accordance with the invention schematically and partly as a block diagram.

Figure 6 shows the principle of the selection switch for the program circulation, belonging to the control system shown in Fig. 5.

Figure 7 shows an example of a drying formula followed in a drying plant in accordance with the invention, which formula is accomplished by means of the control system shown in Figures 5 and 6. In the following, the construction and the operation of the chamber drying plant will be described with reference to Figures 1 to 4. The drying chambers K- to K N (N pcs.) of the drying channels of the chamber drying plant, connected in series with each other, operate independently. When the brick loads T_. are shifted from the first chamber K- into the second drying chambers K-, after this transfer the drying is

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continued as if no transfer at all had been performed, in other words, after the transfer, the drying formula (e.g., in Fig. 7) starts being followed in the second chambers K_ from the drying point that had been reached in the drying in the first chambers K 1 . The drying takes place in a corresponding way when the brick loads T 2 are shifted into the third drying chambers I , , when the brick loads T- are shifted into the fourth drying chambers K. , if any, etc. There may be an appro- priate number of drying chambers K connected in-series, at least two, and for example three, as is shown in Fig.5

The arrangement of the circulation F, of the drying air in the drying chambers K is shown best in Fig. 2. In each drying chamber there is a batch of four brick loads and two brick loads T side by side, and the circulation.flow F, of drying air is blown through the brick loads. Above the drying chambers K, there is an intermediate plane 26, .and at its both sides there are air flow openings 27 and 28. .The opening 27 opens into the air flow duct 11 placed above the drying chambers, which duct 11 includes a blower 10 driven by a motor 19. At the intake side of the blower 10 in the duct 11, the duct 17a for intake air F. opens, which said duct 17a is provided with a control damper 18a. At the pressure side of the duct

11, there is an outlet air duct 17b, which is provided with a control damper 18b. Moreover, at the pressure side of the duct 11 , there is a heating radiator 9 for the circulation air F,k. The inlet air flows Fm. are introduced through the ducts 17a to the intake side of the blowers 10, which said flows Fm. can be heated, all of them together, by means of a heater (not shown) . Correspondingly, the outlet air flows F . are taken from the pressure side of the blowers 10 through the ventilation ducts 17b. The ventilation ducts 17a and 17b are provided with control dampers 18a and 18b, by means of which, together with adjustment of the

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radiators 9, it is possible to act upon the condition and drying capacity of the circulation air F .

The blower 10 is arranged as of reversible direction, whereby, correspondingly, the intake and pressure sides of the blower 10 are interchanged and, at the same time, the inlet air duct 17a becomes outlet air duct, and the outlet air duct 17b becomes inlet air duct as the direction of the circulation air flow F, is reversed. The objective of the reversing of the cir- culation air flow F, is that the brick loads are dried uniformly irrespective of whether there are one ' or more of them side by side in the drying chamber. The reversing of the direction of the circulation air flow F described above is performed at appropriate inter- vals, e.g., of about 2 hours.

The dryer channels, which have two or pre¬ ferably more dryer chambers K_. to I as connected in series, may have 1 , 2, 3 or more tracks so that, in each chamber, there is a- number of brick loads equal to the number of tracks placed side by side. In accordance with Figures 1 to 4, there are two brick loads, one after the other, in each dryer chamber 7.

An example of the loads T in a drying plant is a load consisting of 20 x 6 x 14 pcs. = 1,680 pcs. of bricks. In the loads T_. in the drying plant, the brick layers are, in a way in itself known, placed on shelves so that an efficient current of air F.k is produced through the loads T in the drying plant. As is shown in Fig. 3, there is a light- weight partition wall 20 between the dryer chambers K -r etc. placed one after the other and connected in series. The partition walls 20 are made, e.g., of a flexible cloth-like material, because they need not be heat-insulating-. The partition walls 20 separate the adjoining dryer chambers K, connected in series, from each other and permit independent drying in each chamber K. The partition walls 20 may be, e.g., of an

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accordion-type construction and such that they can be pulled to the side and/or upwards when .the load T in the drying plant moves from the preceding chamber K into the following chamber _.. Fig. 4 shows an alternative solution for the construction of the partition wall between the drying chambers . According to Fig. 4, the dryer wagons 7 are provided with end walls 21 which function as par¬ tition walls of the drying chambers. If required, the edges of the end walls 21 of the dryer wagons 7 and/or the walls 15 of the drying channels or equivalent are provided with seals, which are in Fig. 4 denoted schematically with reference numerals 22. The use of the ends 21 of the dryer wagons as partition walls of the drying chambers K is partly permitted by the fact that the dimensions of the brick loads T are accurate. In the following, with reference to Figures 5, 6. and 7, the new control system in accordance with . the invention, controlling the operation of the chamber drying plant, will be described, which said system comprises three separate control centres S_. , S„, and S,.

The position of the control dampers 18a pro¬ vided in the inlet air ducts 17a is controlled by means of control motors 23. Correspondingly, the position of the control valve 24 of the heating radiator 9 is controlled by means of control motors 25. Each drying chamber K.. , K~ and ^ has its own control means for the heating radiator 9 for intake air and drying air. In accordance with the program that is being fed into them, in a way in itself known, at each par¬ ticular time, the said control centres S give a control signal a. ,a~ and a.,, each of them in its turn, to con¬ trol the operation of the control motors 23,25 of the different chambers K^K, and K 3 . If necessary, the control system may include measurement and feedback devices, by means of which, e.g., the state of the

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drying air circulating in the different drying cham¬ bers K„ I,K Λ __.,K-.,I is observed, and, accordingly, the control signals a.., a 2 and a, are acted upon. The control signals a_.,a 2 ,a 3 may also be formed with the principle of "blind" control, and in such a case the said feed¬ back arrangements are unnecessary.

In the following, with reference to Figures 5, 6 and 7, the operation of the drying plant in accord¬ ance with the invention and of its control system will be described. When the nature of the brick load coming into the first chamber K_. , i.e. the dimensions of the bricks and possibly their humidity, are known, a drying formula is fed into the control centre S- in a way in itself known, which said formula is followed in respect of the load T_. through the entire drying channel K.. to K-, .

Fig. 7 illustrates one possible example of a drying formula. The drying of a fresh load T_. intro¬ duced into the ' chamber K 1 will be followed by means of Fig. 7. In Fig. 7, the straight line K stands for the dry temperature t, of the drying air, and the straight line M for the corresponding wet temperature t . The horizontal axis T indicates the drying time, and the vertical axis t indicates the said temper- atures t, and t of the drying air as °C. By means of the control signal a- of the control centre S.. , which signal is, at the initial stage of the operation, con¬ trolled so as to act upon the control motors 23 and 25 of the first chamber K 1 , while following the drying formulae K and M, during the period 0 to T,. , drying is carried out from the dry temperature t n , to the tem¬ perature t., and from the wet temperature t Q to the wet temperature t.. . Hereupon the brick load T 1 is transferred into the next chamber K 2 . According to the present invention, at the same time as the dryer load T-. is transferred from the first drying chamber K- into the second drying chamber

'BUK t T

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2 , the switch 31 of the selector device 30 is turned, or controlled by means of an automatic system (not shown) so that it is turned, so that the control signal a 1 follows the dryer load, i.e. the control signal a.. , which comes from the first control centre S_. , now starts controlling the operation of the second chamber K 2 by means of the control motors 23 and 25. Thus, the drying is continued,while following the drying formulae K and M, in the second chamber K 2 as if no transfer at all had been carried out in respect of the drying formula and of the control of the control devices. However, the brick load T. has been shifted out of the first chamber K.. into the second chamber K 2 , and a new load has been introduced into the first chamber K-. , and the controlling of the drying of the said new load is per- * formed, in accordance with Fig. 5, by the control centre S_ 5 , which has become free from the controlling of the drying of the load T., removed out of the last chamber K, and into which control centre S, the drying formula required by the new load has been programmed.

In the second chamber K 2 , in accordance with Fig. I , drying is performed within the period T 2 - -, to the dry temperature t„, and to the wet temperature t_ . whereupon the load is transferred into the next drying chamber K^ and, at the same time, the selection switch 31 is turned to the next position, wherein the control signal a- of the control centre S- is controlled so as to act upon the control motors 23 and 25 of the third chamber K 3 *

In the last chamber K-, the drying of the said load T is performed within the period of time T 3 ~T 2 to the ultimate dry temperature t-.. and wet temperature t- as controlled by the same control centre S_. under whose control the drying was started in the first chamber K. and carried out in the second chamber K_.

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Hereinafter the said load T is removed through the rear door 17, and the control centre S- becomes free for the control of the drying of the next brick load, and the drying formula in accordance with this new load is programmed into the said centre, and its control signal a- is passed through the selection switch 31 so as to act upon the first drying chamber K..

As has come out above, in drying plants, as a rule, there are several groups of dryer chambers K.. to K * connected in parallel. In such a case, each group of dryer chambers K- to K N has a control system of its own, which has as many (N pcs.) independently operating control units S- to S^ as there are, in the group of dryer chambers controlled by it, dryer chambers placed one after the other and connected in series.

Owing to the control system in accordance with the invention, the important practical advantage is accomplished that for each brick -load to be dried, only one programming of the control centre has to be performed, because the control centre "follows" the load to be dried into all of the different chambers through which the load passes during the drying.

In the following, the patent claims will be given, and the various details of the invention may show variation within the scope of the inventive idea defined in the said claims.