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The main function of a bulk material handling system is to continuously transport and
supply bulk materials to units in processing plants. Secondary functions include storage
and blending.
In a typical bulk material handling system, raw materials (such as bulk solids and powders)
are received from trucks, ships or trains. Then they are unloaded to a yard or storage
facility, often using a conveyor system. The materials are usually stored in stockpiles.
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Material can be reclaimed from the stockpile using an automatic reclaimer or a gravity-
reclaim arrangement consisting of reclaim tunnel hoppers and feeders. It is then conveyed
to the processing facility. This is true for most bulk material handling systems, whether in
processing applications or in moving/storing a nal bulk product.
One of the most prevalent equipment types in bulk material handling is a belt conveyor.
Although many other types of conveyors are available – such as screw, chain and pneumatic
– the most commonly used is the belt.
Belt conveyors are the backbone of bulk material handling systems in many different
processing plants. Other equipment used in material handling systems includes
stacker/reclaimer machines, hoppers, chutes, feeders and magnetic separators.
A key component of belt conveyors is the belt, which has a double function: to contain
conveyed materials; and to transmit the force (in the form of tension) to move the load. The
belt is also one of the most expensive components in a belt conveyor. Many factors – such
as materials to be handled, corrosion, impact, tension, strength and elongation – should be
considered in careful selection.
Belts can also be damaged and destroyed under loads that are inappropriate for their
design, when experiencing corrosion or in applications unsuitable for their material. Many
other factors must be considered in the design, operation and reliability of conveyor belts.
For instance, dust and emissions are often present in processing environments. If superior
seals are not used for bearings and other components, this equipment can be affected and
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damaged. On the other hand, if all these components are correctly designed and selected,
they can experience trouble-free operation for many years.
In a typical bulk material handling system, raw materials (such as bulk solids and
powders) are received from trucks, ships or trains. Then they are unloaded to a yard
or storage facility, often using a conveyor system.
Appropriate accessories should be used to clean the belt at the feed and discharge points to
increase the life of many components such as idlers and rollers. Belt cleaners and play
important roles in a belt conveyor’s reliability, safety and overall environmental conditions
of the conveyor and surrounding facilities.
Another design recently used for some conveyors is the motorized drum. In this
arrangement, the electric motor, gear unit and bearings form a complete drive unit inside
the pulley’s drum shell, which offers protection. This unit directly powers the belt,
eliminating the complication of an external drive and coupling that are used in
conventional arrangements. They are particularly popular in revamped and renovated units.
Generally conveyors should be compact and lightweight, making the motorized drum
design a good choice, but conveyors have some advantages and disadvantages. They offer
compact and better-protected drive units for some applications. On the other hand, access
and maintenance may be dif cult, and some size and design restrictions exist.
Another design recently used for some conveyors is the motorized drum. In this
arrangement, the electric motor, gear unit and bearings form a complete drive unit
inside the pulley’s drum shell, which offers protection.
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The drum diameter is dimensioned according to the class and type of belt and to the
designed pressures on its surface. The shell face of pulleys might be clad in rubber with a
thickness determined by the operational details and the power to be transmitted. Patterns
for rubber cladding may be grooved in a herringbone design, horizontally grooved based on
the direction of travel or diamond grooved. These are designed to increase the coef cient
of friction.
A tension or take-up unit is an important but often overlooked component for any belt
conveyor. This unit should provide and maintain the force (belt tension) necessary to
ensure that the belt continuously contacts the drive pulley. In small and non-critical
conveyors, a simple screw type unit is speci ed and used. This is the simplest and least
expensive tension-unit type, and it always needs operator attention for adjustment and
control. A counterweight tension unit (often known as a gravity take-up unit) is the most
widely used in many belt conveyors. In these units, the belt tension is provided by a
properly calculated weight (usually installed in a special unit near the drive pulley at the
head of the conveyor), which can be adjusted easily. This system is reliable and robust and
provides high performance.
For large conveyors or special applications in which compact, lightweight options are
needed (for instance, conveyors on mobile or moving units such as stacker/reclaimer
machines or unloader units), a motorized winch take-up or hydraulic take-up unit is used. A
counterweight unit or take-up unit should provide constant tensional force to the belt
regardless of the operating conditions and transient cases. Its force (provided tension in the
belt) is designed according to the minimum tension limits necessary to guarantee the belt
pull and to avoid unnecessary belt stretch. The designed movement of the take-up unit is
derived from the elasticity of the belt during its phases of operation with limits. As very
rough estimates, the minimum movement of a tension unit should not be less than 2
percent of the distance between the centers of a conveyor using plastic/textile-woven
belts or 0.5 percent of a conveyor using steel-corded belts.
Trippers can create multiple discharge points for a belt conveyor. Typically, belt conveyors
only discharge a bulk material from the end of the belt. Belt trippers are specially designed
equipment, most often in the form of short belt conveyors that can be positioned along a
main belt conveyor to trip or divert the ow of the bulk material through a chute or similar
apparatus for controlled discharge.
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Belt trippers can be stationary or mobile. Less common are stationary trippers that
discharge materials at the same location. However, movable belt trippers are widely used.
For example, they are used to load large stockpiles or bunkers or to spread material over a
large area. Even a special tripper is designed to load individual bins or bunkers by moving
across the top of them.
Belt trippers are speci cally designed to discharge the material from the belt at one
or more points or along the length of the conveyor. They are an important element of
many bulk material handling systems, but often receive little attention.
Movable trippers have a frame mounted on anged wheels, which engages rails parallel to
the belt conveyor. They are designed with a one- or two-sided chute, so the conveyor can
discharge material on either side. Tripper cars are usually powered by an electric drive,
although many other different drive systems have been used. Properly designed trippers
can build and maintain large-volume stockpiles by discharging material on either side of
the conveyor and creating custom heights, lengths and locations of stockpiles.
An overhead belt conveyor tripper is mounted on the top of a silo or bunker, which
improves the structure of a traditional belt conveyor tripper and requires less switch time.
This is true when compared to a traditional shuttle belt conveyor tripper. It provides
quieter operation and precise location. For modular design, the equipment was downsized
in volume and weight by around 50 percent.
During stacking mode, material is fed on a boom conveyor and then distributed in
stockyards. In reclaim mode, the boom conveyor discharges materials on the stockpile
conveyor for feeding to bunkers, silos or consumers through other conveyors and transfer
points. Some conveyors in this system can be reversible depending on the layout
requirement. Stacker/reclaimer machines using bucket wheels or moving on rail tracks are
commonly used in material handling systems.
A bucket wheel mechanism is usually driven by a variable frequency electric motor. The
reclaiming capacity can be adjusted by changing the rotational speed of the bucket wheel.
The drive system is equipped with over-force protection units. When the digging force of
the bucket wheel is higher than the set value (which is determined for each application
based on comprehensive practical tests and an operational study), an alarm sounds, and the
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reclaiming capacity is reduced to decrease the digging resistance to protect the bucket
wheel system.
The bucket mouth experiences severe wear and damaging forces. It is made of wear-
resistance materials, such as tungsten carbide, featuring high-level wear resistance and
structural rigidity. The bucket tooth and the bucket shell are connected by specially
designed bolts to ensure convenient replacement. Bucket teeth are made of ferromagnetic
materials with high-level wear resistance and drop-proof capabilities.
The boom conveyor must operate under different inclination angles. All its components –
such as the driver, brake and backstop system – should be designed with special
consideration to this requirement. Often the most dif cult case for the driver sizing and
other system components is the maximum inclination angle with full loads.
Stacker/reclaimer machines are used to stack and store materials in stockpiles and
stockyards and to reclaim materials when needed. Old-fashioned separate stacker
and reclaimer machines have been used for decades, but modern designs favor
combined stacker/reclaimer machines.
Many discussions and disagreements arise regarding the maximum relocation speed of
stacker/reclaimer machines because higher speeds often require a more stable machine,
stronger structures and more power. These requirements are expensive. A good
recommendation is always to differentiate clearly between what the machine’s capabilities
are and the range recommended by the manufacturer. Both should be noted with all details.
Also, proper calculations, studies, simulations and technical details for speci ed maximum
speed and all associated conditions should be provided.
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After clearly de ning what the machine can do, the end user should understand if the
manufacturer wants to recommend a preferred relocation speed range for a machine. In
operation, relocating at very low speeds, even lower than the conservatively recommended
values, is suggested unless an urgent operational requirement mandates fast relocation at
the maximum recommended speed.
Chutes are usually only used to guide and feed materials to the next equipment and not for
storage, although in practice, they should be able to store some volume of materials in case
of emergency, for instance, if a piece of equipment upstream of the system malfunctions or
surges.
They usually feed materials with constant discharge. Stoppage of material, such as arching
or ratholing does occur sometimes.
Arching occurs when an obstruction in the shape of an arch or a bridge forms over the
chute, silo, bunker or hopper outlet because of the material’s cohesive strength. When a
stable arch forms above the outlet, discharge is prevented, and no material can ow.
Hoppers and chutes are used for feeding bulk materials to other equipment, mainly
belt conveyors. The main function of hoppers is to store the materials next to
equipment for feeding.
Ratholing occurs when material ows in a channel located above the chute, silo, bunker or
hopper outlet. As the level of material in the ow channel drops, resistance to further ow
into this channel occurs because of the material’s cohesive strength. If material has enough
cohesive strength, the stagnant material outside the ow channel will not move into it,
forming a stable rathole. Once the ow channel has emptied, no further material discharge
will occur from the outlet resulting in a no- ow condition. In addition to causing a no- ow
condition, ratholes signi cantly reduce the live capacity of a bunker, silo or stockpile.
Combinations of these two may also occur – such as when ow obstructions switch or
interchange between arches and ratholes and erratic ow results.
These problems can be recti ed with many solutions such as vibration-induced forces.
When an arch or rathole form, it can be removed by vibrations transmitted to the hopper or
silo, and then material ow will resume.
However, a passive solution is well-designed chutes, hoppers and bunkers. One example is
including a minimum valley angle, around 65 to 75 degrees, in the vessels. The angle
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depends on the materials and operational details to help avoid such stoppage and other
issues.
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