The crushing chamber of a cone crusher is composed of the mantle and concave. The particles in the crushing chamber are crushed by the squeezing of the mantle and concave. In this process, the mantle and concave directly contact the particles, and are gradually worn down due to the enormous crushing pressure and intense impact. As a result, in order to evaluate the wear on the mantle and concave in detail, it is necessary to analyze the particle crushing pressure in the crushing chamber.
2.1. Particle Crushing Pressure Experiment
According to the particle crushing experiment conducted by Lindqvist [
7], the particle crushing pressure increases with the increasing compression degree of the particles. In the particle crushing process, because the particles in the crushing chamber are a mixture of various sizes, the bulk properties of particles inevitably affect the particle crushing pressure. As a result, the particle crushing pressure is related to the compression degree and bulk properties of particles. Here, the particle size distribution coefficient
σ and the compression ratio
ε were selected as the research objects of the particle crushing pressure experiment. The particle size distribution coefficient
σ characterizes the uniformity of the particle size distribution [
25], and the compression ratio
ε represents the proportional relationship between the compression volume and the initial volume:
where
is the mass percentage of particles in the
i-th particle size,
is the average particle size in the
i-th particle size,
is the average particle size considering the mass percentage,
s is the compression volume, and
b is the initial volume.
Particles with a certain size were loaded into an experimental cylinder and crushed with a predetermined compression ratio. The crushed particles were sieved and weighed, then reloaded into the experimental cylinder for a second crushing with the same compression ratio. Thus, the crushing process of particles with different sizes in the crushing chamber subjected to squeezing with different compression degrees was simulated. The particle size distribution coefficient
σ and compression ratio
ε were selected as the experimental parameters, and the experimental values of the parameters were determined within a reasonable range according to the performance of the cone crusher and the geometry of the crushing chamber. The particles were loaded into the experimental cylinder and placed on the working platform of the hydraulic press. The particles in the experimental cylinder were crushed by the hydraulic press. The crushed particles were sieved using a standard stone sieve. The masses of crushed particles with different sizes were weighed, and the particle size distribution coefficient
σ of the crushed particles was obtained. The crushed particles were remixed and reloaded into the experimental cylinder, and a second crushing was carried out with the same compression ratio
ε as the first crushing. Then, a series of experimental data on the particle crushing pressure were obtained. The experimental process is shown in
Figure 1. The experimental equipment and results are shown in
Figure 2. The physical parameters of the experiment particles are shown in
Table 1. The detailed steps of the particle crushing pressure experiment are described below.
Step 1. Particles with a size of 25–31.5 mm were selected as experimental material using the standard stone sieve. After loading into the experimental cylinder, the particles were leveled to allow the horizontal error of the particle surface to be controlled to 1 mm. The loading height b of the particles in the experimental cylinder was determined using a vernier caliper.
Step 2. The indenter was arranged on the experimental cylinder. The experimental cylinder was placed on the bottom working platform of the hydraulic press. The compression length was calculated according to the loading height b of the particles in the experimental cylinder and the preset compression ratio (ε = 0.5).
Step 3. Through the control system of the hydraulic press and the scale on the indenter, the particles in the experimental cylinder were crushed steadily by the indenter at a constant speed.
Step 4. As the indenter reached the preset compression length, the particle crushing pressure in the experimental cylinder was read using the scale plate of the hydraulic press.
Step 5. The upper working platform of the hydraulic press was raised. The indenter in the experimental cylinder was removed. The height of particles in the experimental cylinder was measured using a vernier caliper. The crushed particles were screened using standard stone sieves, and the masses of crushed particles with different sizes were weighed using an electronic scale. The particle size distribution coefficient σ of the crushed particles was obtained.
Step 6. The crushed particles with different sizes were mixed evenly and reloaded into the experimental cylinder. The mixed crushed particles were crushed again with the same compression ratio. The particle crushing pressure was determined according to the scale plate of the hydraulic press. The crushed particles were sieved and weighed to obtain the particle size distribution coefficient σ of the crushed particles.
Step 7. The compression ratio
ε was changed to 0.1, 0.15, 0.2, 0.25, 0.3, and 0.35, and Steps 1–6 were repeated. The experimental data on the particle crushing pressure were obtained and recorded in
Table 2, then the particle crushing pressure experiment finished.
Our analysis of the particle crushing pressure experimental data found that the particle crushing pressure
p is proportional to the particle size distribution coefficient
σ. Meanwhile, when the compression ratio
ε increases, the particle crushing pressure
p grows rapidly, with an exponential changing trend. As a result, the particle crushing pressure model can be established by non-linear fitting of the particle crushing pressure experimental data, as expressed by Equation (4):
where
a1,
a2,
a3, and
a4 are the fitting coefficient of the particle crushing pressure model.
According to the particle crushing pressure model expressed in Equation (4), the simulation of the particle crushing pressure model is shown in
Figure 3.
As shown in
Figure 3, the particle crushing pressure is proportional to the compression ratio. As the compression ratio increases, the particle crushing pressure increases exponentially. As the particles are filled with voids at the initial stage of crushing, the particle crushing pressure gradually increases as the compression ratio increases. With the further crushing of the particles, the particles are gradually deformed and crushed. The particle crushing pressure increases sharply with the increase in the compression ratio. The particle crushing pressure increases with the increase in the particle size distribution coefficient. The main reason for this is that those particles with a larger size distribution coefficient have a more uneven distribution. Certain particles have a larger size, while others particles have a relatively small size. The voids between particles with a larger size become filled by particles with a small size, and the “dense effect” is more obvious in the process of particle crushing, which leads to an increase in the particle crushing pressure.
2.2. Particle Crushing Pressure Distribution in the Crushing Chamber
Based on the particle crushing pressure model, the particle crushing pressure distribution in the crushing chamber can be simulated. During operation of a cone crusher, the particles are fed into the crushing chamber from the feeding port. After several crushings, the particles are discharged from the crushing chamber. According to the structural and operating parameters of the cone crusher, the motion characteristics of particles in the crushing chamber can be determined such that the path of the particles in the crushing chamber can be obtained [
26]. Then, the crushing chamber can be divided into several crushing zones, as shown in
Figure 4.
The mantle rotates eccentrically around the central axis of the cone crusher. As the mantle moves from the concave to the limit position, the surface OSS (Open Side Setting) of the mantle is formed. As the mantle moves towards the concave to the limit position, the surface CSS (Closed Side Setting) of the mantle is formed. When the particles pass through any of the crushing zones they are crushed by a single squeeze of the mantle and concave, which leads to the direct effect of the particle crushing pressure on the mantle and concave of the current crushing zone. Based on the particle crushing pressure model, the particle crushing pressure in any crushing zone is determined by the compression ratio of the crushing zone and the size distribution coefficient of the crushed particles. The compression ratio is determined by the structural and operating parameters of the cone crushers. The size distribution coefficient is determined by the feed bulk properties of the cone crusher. As a result, the particle crushing pressure distribution of the crushing chamber is related to the structural and operating parameters and feed bulk properties of the cone crusher.
As shown in
Figure 5, in the
i-th crushing zone of the crushing chamber the particles dynamically fill the whole crushing zone. When the mantle rotates the central axis of the cone crusher for a week, the particles in the
i-th crushing zone are crushed once. According to the definition of the compression ratio, the volume of particles before compression is
Vint. After crushing, the volume of the particles is
Vend. The volume of particles in the
i-th crushing zone decreases
Vcom during this crushing, and the compression ratio in the
i-th crushing zone can be expressed as
where
εi is the compression ratio in the
i-th crushing zone.
Based on the improved model of inter-particle breakage considering the transformation of the particle shape for the cone crusher [
27,
28,
29], the crushing process of particles in the crushing chamber was simulated by measuring the feed bulk properties of the cone crusher and calculating the compression ratio of each crushing zone in the crushing chamber. Based on the particle crushing pressure model, the particle crushing pressure distribution of the mantle and concave can be obtained according to the compression ratio and particle size distribution coefficient of each crushing zone in the crushing chamber, as shown in
Figure 6.
As shown in
Figure 6, the particle crushing pressure on the mantle and concave gradually increase with the decrease in height, which is determined by the geometry of the crushing chamber and the bulk properties of the crushed particles. The compression ratio in the crushing chamber increases as the height of the crushing chamber decreases due to the eccentric rotation motion of the mantle and the geometry of the crushing chamber, which is “large on top and small on bottom.” As the particles are crushed several times in the crushing chamber, the particle size distribution becomes more uniform. The particle size distribution coefficient of the crushing zone decreases with the reduction in the height. According to Equation (4), the compression ratio has a more substantial influence on the particle crushing pressure than the particle size distribution coefficient, resulting in the particle crushing pressure increasing as the height of the crushing chamber decreases.