Up next

Autoplay

Cement manufacturing Process | How to make OPC & PPC Cement by Kiln Dry Pyro-processing system

1 Views • 05/31/24
Share
Embed
paccione .co.uk
paccione .co.uk
2 Subscribers
2

Cement manufacturing Process | How to make OPC & PPC Cement by Kiln Dry Pyro-processing system;

Please LIKE | SUBSCRIBE | SHARE our you tube video for our motivation & please do not forget to hit the bell icon button for latest update.

This video is only for education purpose.

Mr. JK Singh has rich experience in cement plant project designing, operation & maintenance of equipment, etc.

Email-ID for any Technical Guidance & support : cementpdm@gmail.com

Please give your valuable comments & suggestion in comment box for continuous improvement. Thanks
******************************
Following process is made for making OPC & PPC Cement;
1. Quarring
2. Lime stone Crushing (Size from 1500 mm to below 75 mm)
3. Limestone stacking & Reclaiming (Homogenization Process)
4. Raw mill Grinding (Size below 75 mm to 212 Mic 1to1.8% Residue, 90 Mic 14to16% Residue)
5. Pyro-Processing (Kiln, Cooler, Clinker Silo)
6. Coal mill Grinding (Size below 50 mm to 212 Mic 1% Residue, 90 Mic 12to14% Residue)
6. Cement mill Grinding (95%Clinker + 5%Gypsum size below 50 mm to 90 Mic 1% Residue, 45 Mic 10 to12% Residue, 3200 Blaine)
7. Packing plant (8 or 16 spout packer) & dispatch

Cement is typically made from 95%Limestone (CaoCo3) and 5%Laterite (Fe2O3), Clay or shale, Red mud, etc. These raw materials are extracted from the quarry crushed to a very fine powder and then blended in the correct proportions.

This blended raw material is called the 'raw feed' or 'kiln feed' and is heated in a rotary kiln where it reaches a temperature of about 1400 C to 1500 C. In its simplest form, the rotary kiln is a tube up to 85 metres long and perhaps 6 metres in diameter, with a long flame at one end. The raw feed enters the kiln at the cool end and gradually passes down to the hot end, then falls out of the kiln and cools down.

The material formed in the kiln is described as 'clinker' and is typically composed of rounded nodules between 1mm and 25mm across.

After cooling, the clinker may be stored temporarily in a clinker store, or it may pass directly to the cement mill.

The cement mill grinds the clinker to a fine powder. A small amount of gypsum - a form of calcium sulfate - is normally ground up with the clinker. The gypsum controls the setting properties of the cement when water is added.

#CementmanufacturingProcess #Cementplant #Rawmill #Kiln #Cementpdm

Show more
0 Comments sort Sort By
Facebook Comments

Up next

Autoplay