Power Optimization and Structural Evolution of Lining Plates in Large Rotary Grinding Equipment

Rotary grinding equipment efficiency critically depends on lining plate design and power management. Our analysis of a φ11m semi-autogenous grinding (SAG) mill revealed that filling rate directly impacts power consumption. At 50% filling rate, power peaks due to optimal cascading action:

$$P_{max} = K \cdot D^{2.5} \cdot L \cdot \rho \cdot \sqrt{\psi}$$

Where \(P_{max}\) = peak power (kW), \(D\) = mill diameter (m), \(L\) = mill length (m), \(\rho\) = material density (t/m³), \(\psi\) = rotational speed (rpm), and \(K\) = empirical constant.

Filling Rate (%) Power Deviation (%) Optimal Motor Safety Factor
10-40 +8.2 1.5×
50 0
60-90 +7.8

Material properties significantly influence lining plate wear. For the copper ore studied:

Parameter Value Range Effect on Lining Plate
Bond Work Index (kWh/t) 13.27-15.60 High wear
A×b Parameter 46.31-55.51 High impact stress
Abrasion Index (ta) 0.44-0.54 Accelerated erosion

Initial symmetric lining plates with 28° lifting angles showed premature failure due to insufficient height-to-ball-diameter ratios:

$$H_{eff} \geq 2 \times D_{ball}$$

Where \(H_{eff}\) = effective lift height (mm), \(D_{ball}\) = ball diameter (mm). For 150mm balls, initial \(H_{eff}\)/\(D_{ball}\) = 1.4 caused catastrophic impacts.

Evolution to asymmetric lining plates with variable angles demonstrated 23% lifespan improvement:

Design Lifting Angle Plate Height (mm) Throughput (Mt)
Symmetric 28° 290 2.0
Asymmetric 30°/15° 340-380 3.49

3D wear mapping revealed axial wear differentials exceeding 40mm. Optimized designs incorporated:

  1. Variable face angles (25°-35° along axis)
  2. Zoned height adjustments (\(H_{feed}\) = 320mm → \(H_{center}\) = 380mm)
  3. Reinforced base plates (\(t\) = 110mm vs initial 80mm)

The refined lining plate configuration reduced fracture incidents by 68% while increasing metal utilization efficiency by 19%.

Complementary research on molybdenum ore compared HPGR (High-Pressure Grinding Rolls) with vertical stirred milling (CSM). Energy savings were quantified as:

$$E_{sav} = \frac{P_{ball} – P_{CSM}}{P_{ball}} \times 100\%$$

Process Specific Energy (kWh/t) Savings vs Ball Mill
HPGR (F100=3mm) + CSM (P80=84µm) 9.2 19.5%
HPGR (F100=5mm) + CSM (P80=84µm) 9.8 14.9%

Critical findings for lining plate optimization:

  1. Power calculations must accommodate filling rate inflection points
  2. Asymmetric designs increase effective lift height without proportional mass gain
  3. Variable-angle lining plates match wear profiles to impact zones
  4. HPGR+CSM circuits enable coarser feeds to downstream mills

These advancements demonstrate that strategic lining plate redesign coupled with circuit optimization can simultaneously enhance durability and energy efficiency in mineral processing systems.

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