Cement Production Line
Cement Production Line
Raw Materials
The main raw materials used in the cement manufacturing process are limestone, sand, shale, clay, and iron ore. The main material,
limestone, is usually mined on site while the other minor materials
may be mined either on site or in nearby quarries. Another source
of raw materials is industrial by-products. The use of by-product
materials to replace natural raw materials is a key element in
achieving sustainable development.
Raw Material Preparation
Mining of limestone requires the use of drilling and blasting
techniques. The blasting techniques use the latest technology to
insure vibration, dust, and noise emissions are kept at a minimum.
Blasting produces materials in a wide range of sizes from
approximately 1.5 meters in diameter to small particles less than a
few millimeters in diameter.
Material is loaded at the blasting face into trucks for
transportation to the crushing plant. Through a series of crushers
and screens, the limestone is reduced to a size less than 100 mm
and stored until required.
Depending on size, the minor materials (sand, shale, clay, and iron
ore) may or may not be crushed before being stored in separate
areas until required.
Raw Grinding
In the wet process, each raw material is proportioned to meet a
desired chemical composition and fed to a rotating ball mill with
water. The raw materials are ground to a size where the majority of
the materials are less than 75 microns. Materials exiting the mill
are called "slurry" and have flow ability characteristics. This
slurry is pumped to blending tanks and homogenized to insure the
chemical composition of the slurry is correct. Following the
homogenization process, the slurry is stored in tanks until
required.
In the dry process, each raw material is proportioned to meet a
desired chemical composition and fed to either a rotating ball mill
or vertical roller mill. The raw materials are dried with waste
process gases and ground to a size where the majority of the
materials are less than 75 microns. The dry materials exiting
either type of mill are called "kiln feed". The kiln feed is
pneumatically blended to insure the chemical composition of the
kiln feed is well homogenized and then stored in silos until
required.
Pyroprocessing
Whether the process is wet or dry, the same chemical reactions
take place. Basic chemical reactions are: evaporating all moisture,
calcining the limestone to produce free calcium oxide, and reacting
the calcium oxide with the minor materials (sand, shale, clay, and
iron). This results in a final black, nodular product known as
"clinker" which has the desired hydraulic properties.
In the wet process, the slurry is fed to a rotary kiln, which can
be from 3.0 m to 5.0 m in diameter and from 120.0 m to 165.0 m in
length. The rotary kiln is made of steel and lined with special
refractory materials to protect it from the high process
temperatures. Process temperatures can reach as high as 1450oC
during the clinker making process.
In the dry process, kiln feed is fed to a preheater tower, which
can be as high as 150.0 meters. Material from the preheater tower
is discharged to a rotary kiln with can have the same diameter as a
wet process kiln but the length is much shorter at approximately
45.0 m. The preheater tower and rotary kiln are made of steel and
lined with special refractory materials to protect it from the high
process temperatures.
Regardless of the process, the rotary kiln is fired with an intense
flame, produced by burning coal, coke, oil, gas or waste fuels.
Preheater towers can be equipped with firing as well.
The rotary kiln discharges the red-hot clinker under the intense flame into a
clinker cooler. The clinker cooler recovers heat from the clinker
and returns the heat to the pyroprocessing system thus reducing
fuel consumption and improving energy efficiency. Clinker leaving
the clinker cooler is at a temperature conducive to being handled
on standard conveying equipment.
Finish Grinding and Distribution
The black, nodular clinker is stored on site in silos or clinker
domes until needed for cement production. Clinker, gypsum, and
other process additions are ground together in ball mills to form
the final cement products. Fineness of the final products, amount
of gypsum added, and the amount of process additions added are all
varied to develop a desired performance in each of the final cement
products.
Each cement product is stored in an individual bulk silo until
needed by the customer. Bulk cement can be distributed in bulk by
truck, rail, or water depending on the customer’s needs. Cement can
also be packaged with or without color addition and distributed by
truck or rail.

