Patent Document

RELATED APPLICATION 
     This application is a continuation-in-part of applicant&#39;s copending application Ser. No. 602,670, filed Aug. 7, 1975, entitled &#34;Method and Apparatus for the Manufacture of Glass&#34;, now abandoned. 
    
    
     BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 
     It is known, in cyclone type melting furnaces, how to cause finely divided vitrifiable raw materials to flow onto the strongly inclined or vertical walls of revolution. In such construction, the material is heated by jets of hot gases introduced tangentially to the walls. The raw material must be finely divided so that under the dynamic action of the gas jets, it is distributed homogeneously and flows with a slow enough speed to be able to melt during its travel. The drawback of these devices is a segregation of the raw materials deposited on the wall causing heterogeneities during melting. 
     In copending U.S. application Ser. No 602,670 filed Aug. 7, 1975, now abandoned, entitled &#34;Method and Apparatus for the Manufacture of Glass&#34;, a rapid glass refining process is described in which a raw vitreous mass is brought to an elevated temperature while maintaining the viscosity of the molten mass at less than 1000 poises. Then, an intense foaming of this molten mass is effected throughout its entire thickness while keeping the viscosity at a value less than 1000 poises. The rate of expansion of the mass is at least about 1.5. After the end of the foaming, a perfectly refined glass is collected. The present invention relates to a prefusion process and devices that can advantageously be used in association with the process described in said copending application. 
     SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION 
     The process according to the invention is characterized in that the vitrifiable material to be melted is in the form of an agglomerated mixture divided into solid elements, each element containing the totality of components in the proportions necessary for the formation of glass. These elements are preheated to a temperature below that of fritting and then placed on the surface of a thin layer of molten material of the same nature and subjected to an intense heating by hot gaseous currents directed toward the molten surface. The molten mass is fed along a path to the entrance of a glass refining apparatus as disclosed in the above-mentioned copending application. The movement of the molten mass also continually renews the receiving layer on which the raw material is deposited. 
     The apparatus for carrying out the process of the present invention includes a hearth opposite and above which are placed burners which direct the hot gases toward the hearth in a direction preferably close to perpendicular. Means are provided for depositing the mineral materials to be melted onto the hearth. The material is deposited in a finely divided form such as gravel, granules, balls, shot, small plates and the equivalent. Heat exchange means preheats the material to a temperature below the fritting point, before its arrival on the hearth. Finally, means are provided for removing the melted material from the hearth and directing it into the glass refining apparatus. 
    
    
     BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS 
     FIG. 1 is a schematic view, in longitudinal section, of the apparatus according to the invention for melting mineral materials; 
     FIG. 2 represents, in longitudinal section, a modified embodiment of the apparatus shown in FIG. 1 including structure for the recovery of the heat of hot gases; 
     FIG. 3 represents, in vertical section, still another embodiment comprising a drum-shaped hearth; and 
     FIG. 4 is a schematic overall view of an installation according to the invention with the heat recovery circuit. 
    
    
     DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS 
     In the present example, the raw materials are agglomerated from a homogeneous mixture comprising all the constituents of a common soda-lime glass so as to constitute small size solid elements such as gravel, granules, pellets, briquettes and small plates. Preferably, the size of the elements will be on the order of 5 to 30 mm. Processes for making such elements are known in themselves. Thus, granules can be obtained by extrusion with or without a binder. Briquettes can be made by standard devices such as briquetting machines. 
     With reference to FIG. 1, the raw material to be melted is placed in a hopper-heat exchange structure 1 which has an exit at its lower end disposed over a distributor drum 2 by which the basic elements of the raw material to be melted are guided through a conduit 3 above the end of hearth 4, of melting furnace 10. This hearth 4, which is constructed of refractory material, comprises an inclined part followed by a more steeply inclined overflow part 4&#39;. This hearth is made up of blocks of refractories such as sillimanite. Steel pipes 12 extend through hearth 4 perpendicularly to the plane of symmetry of the installation. Cooling fluids with variable delivery are fed through these pipes 12 to regulate the temperature of the hearth. The arch 14 of the furnace is covered with insulating bricks. 
     Burners 5 are disposed above the hearth. These burners extend through the arch 14 and are directed preferably almost perpendicularly to the hearth. Additional burners 6 extend through the bottom of chimney 7 of the furnace and are directed so as to make their flame converge in the zone of arrival of the raw materials introduced into furnace 10 by conduit 3. Burners 5 and 6 are of the so-called &#34;intensive&#34; type, i.e., ones in which the rate of ejection of the gases is greater than the rate of combustion of the fuel mixture used and in which the flame is caught onto the combustion chamber created in the arch. 
     Above the hearth 4, the chimney 7 collects the combustion fumes which go through a grill 15a into a heat exchanger 15 in which the elements of the raw material to be melted travel by gravity in a direction countercurrent to the flow of the fumes. 
     The gases thermally depleted in exchanger 15 and those coming directly from chimney 7 through bypass 8 are sent into a dust-removal cyclone 20. Circulation of these gases and their evacuation are assured by a blower 22. 
     Exchanger 15 assures a preheating of the material to be melted to a temperature between about 500° C. and 600° C. at the level of distributor 2. The temperature of the combustion gases penetrating into exchanger 15 is on the order of 750° C. and is regulated by dilution with cold air admitted through the orifice 18. Bypass 8 is provided with an adjustable flap valve 8a making it possible to control the delivery of combustion gases through this bypass. 
     Reference is now made to FIG. 2 which represents a variant of the device of the invention. In this construction, the hearth 30 and spout 30&#39; are cooled by a cooling fluid, for example, air, which is circulated through a circuit of pipes 31. By regulating the air delivery, it is possible to control with precision the temperature of the hearth. The raw materials brought from hopper 45 flow onto the hearth 30 by means of distributor drum 33 and conduit 34. 
     Burners 35 and 36 assure the melting of the raw materials. A burner 37 acts as the end of the hearth to prevent countercurrents and carrying of the material upstream. A conduit 38 assures evacuation of the fumes into a heat recovery device 39 where they are cooled during heating the air in pipe 40 which air serves to feed the burners and, optionally, the dryer of the installation described below with reference to FIG. 4. The fumes are then brought through a conduit 41 and a grill 42, into heat exchanger 32 where they heat the raw materials. 
     The air for cooling the hearth 30 which circulates in pipes 31 is directed, by a conduit 43&#39;, to a point above the intake conduit 34 of the material. This creates a dynamic counterpressure at 43 which is directed downwardly to prevent rising of hot gases. Such gases, if they came to the height of distributor drum 33, could deteriorate it and cause premature meltings of the raw materials and clogging. 
     The upper part of exchanger 32 includes a conduit 44 for evacuating the fumes which are then directed toward a scrubber cyclone, not shown, before being released into the atmosphere by means of a centrifugal blower. This part of the installation is identical with that described above with reference to FIG. 1. 
     The raw materials are introduced into exchanger 32 from a filling hopper 45 whose lower section is cut at a bevel to balance the losses of load in exchanger 32 and to avoid a greater delivery of hot gasses on one side of the exchanger in relation to the other. This characteristic facilitates the flow of products and the homogeneity of their temperature at the level of the distribution drum. 
     In the embodiment shown in FIG. 3, the melting hearth is defined by the peripheral walls of two hollow drums 50 and 51. These walls are constructed of refractory materials such as, for example, concrete of refractory cement and corundum. They are monolithic or an assembly of molded pieces. These drums are driven in rotation in the direction of arrows F by a motor not shown. Cold air pipes 52 and 53, extending concentrically to shafts 54 and 55 of the drums, make it possible to direct an air current f against the inside walls of the periphery of the drums to keep them at the desired temperature which is on the order of 900° C. The outside surfaces of the drums define between them a space 62, of some centimeters, sufficient to accommodate the molten layer. The raw material to be melted is delivered to the drums by conduits 56 and 57 and slides to the point 62a above the space 62. 
     A housing 58 surrounds the drums in spaced relation thereto. The housing carries burners 59 directed approximately along the radii of the drums to apply jets of hot gases on their periphery. Additional burners can be provided between the drums and the housing, at each end of the drums, to direct the charge of melting material toward the median part of the drums. These additional burners are aligned with the burner 59 which overlies the space 62. Thus, cloggings due to an incomplete melting of the raw material are avoided; and the molten material flows at 60 into the refining furnace, not shown. Because of its nature, the melting technique according to the process of the invention should preferably employ a compact mixture, which is, for example, in the form of pellets or small plates and which lends itself to preheating of the charge in a column through which hot fumes pass. 
     Reference is now made to FIG. 4 which schematically represents an installation according to the invention. The raw materials stored in hoppers 63 are weighed, mixed in mixer 64, compacted in a compacting installation 65 and finally dried in a dryer 66. As described above, these raw materials are introduced into a preheating heat exchanger 67 from which they are brought into a melting unit 68 comprised of a hearth 68&#39; cooled by circulation of a cooling fluid 69. The mixture of raw materials, preheated in the heat exchanger 67 to temperatures on the order of 500° C. to 600° C., is brought into unit 68 at its melting temperature. The temperature of the hearth is about 900° C. so that the under layer of the molten material is fixed at tis contact, it means it is practically immobilized. The upper surface of this material, for example glass paste at 1300° C., flows by gravity to the refining furnace 70 of the type described in the above-mentioned copending application. The glass exits from the furnace through a drawing off orifice 71. 
     The circuit of the fumes from the burners will now be described. The fumes are evacuated from the melting unit 68 via a conduit 72 at a temperature on the order of 1350° C.. They are then delivered to a heat recovery device 73 (identical with heat recovery device 39 of FIG. 2) where they are used to heat the air being supplied to the burners 74. This combustion air is collected by hood 75 disposed above the furnace 70. Consequently, this air is charged with sulfur dioxide emitted by the refining reactions, which makes it possible to oppose the premature decomposition of the sulfates at the level of the premelting. The air is directed into the heat recovery device 73 and then to the burners 74. A bypass 76 allows a part of the hot air coming from the heat recovery device to be shunted directly to the dryer 66. 
     The fumes coming out from heat recovery device 73 at about 700° C. are directed by a conduit 77 through the column of materials in the heat exchanger 67 where they are used to bring the temperature of the materials to values on the order of 500° C. to 600° C.. These fumes, after passing through the heat exchanger are on the order of 300° C. and are thereafter aspirated through a conduit 77a, by a blower 79, to direct them to a scrubber cyclone 78. From the cyclone, they are finally delivered to the dryer 66 before their evacuation through chimney 80. 
     Of course, many other materials can be melted or elaborated by modifying for instance, the slope of the hearth or the working temperatures without departing from the scope of the invention.

Technology Category: 4