bcavender
Electrical
- May 31, 2018
- 104
Powder Making Machine
I was approached by a client to find a ‘continuous powderizer’ (passing 25-35 mesh) that can reduce 115 kg / hour (254 lbs/hr) of finely chopped, relatively soft ‘organic material’ at appx 5% moisture content into dry powder residue.
That’s around 4.25 lbs of powder / minute.
The questions I would pose to materials experts here:
1. Since the material is a soft organic rather than a hard material that fractures, are there any suggestions of one type of machine that would be superior to others for this material?
2. Can you recommend a reliable company making pulverizers that has a good reputation in this space?
Clearly even low amounts of moisture adds to the problem of getting to a dry powder.
I would appreciate any thoughts and comments related to ways to most efficiently approach a drying mechanism.
I am definitely open to out of the box suggestions as this is in the feasibility stage and prudent risks to benefit throughput makes sense.
All thoughts and suggestions are most welcome.
Best regards,
Bruce
I was approached by a client to find a ‘continuous powderizer’ (passing 25-35 mesh) that can reduce 115 kg / hour (254 lbs/hr) of finely chopped, relatively soft ‘organic material’ at appx 5% moisture content into dry powder residue.
That’s around 4.25 lbs of powder / minute.
The questions I would pose to materials experts here:
1. Since the material is a soft organic rather than a hard material that fractures, are there any suggestions of one type of machine that would be superior to others for this material?
2. Can you recommend a reliable company making pulverizers that has a good reputation in this space?
Clearly even low amounts of moisture adds to the problem of getting to a dry powder.
I would appreciate any thoughts and comments related to ways to most efficiently approach a drying mechanism.
I am definitely open to out of the box suggestions as this is in the feasibility stage and prudent risks to benefit throughput makes sense.
All thoughts and suggestions are most welcome.
Best regards,
Bruce