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| DIMMINUTOR®
- OPEN CHANNEL COMMINUTOR |
Grinders, Shredders and Comminutors - An Evolving
Technology
By: William Galanty
Comminution technology has been evolving quite rapidly in response to
the increasing burden entrained solids have placed on treatment facilities.
More advanced devices have been developed in rapid succession. The result
has been an exciting and fluid race between the leading manufacturers
to develop the best size reduction device. The latest grinder innovations
to be introduced have coupled the power of twin shaft grinding with higher
flow capabilities and screw screening systems. Here’s a rundown
on the past and present state of the art in wastewater solids reduction.
Wastewater solids such as tampons, sanitary napkins and plastic laden
disposables like diapers and other solids are becoming commonplace in
wastewater. Even entire shirts, blankets and uniforms are found in wastewater
downstream of correctional and other institutions. Even where screening
is employed some percentage of solids remain in the system and often weave
into formidable bundles that can ensnare rotary equipment and nozzles.
These solids must either be screened or ground to a size that can pass
through the system without plugging of equipment
Since the 1950s, each decade has seen the development and installation
of a new breed of solids reduction (comminution) devices. Each major new
development contributed a set of improvements in performance. Over time
many of these units have evolved and found specialized applications where
they excel.
Of late, the pace of twin shaft comminutor development and innovation
has accelerated markedly. These units use two counter-rotating banks of
intermeshing cutters to cut and shred solids to fine particles. The shortfall
of these units has been their banks of cutters provided little open area
for fluids to pass through. The latest designs discussed below have solved
this problem to form a compact solids screening system.
WHAT IS A COMMINUTOR
Comminutors (a.k.a. grinders, macerators) are used to reduce the particle
size of wastewater solids. The terms “Sewage Grinder” and
“Comminutor” are two terms for a cutting device for sewage
solids. The term “comminutor” originated with a device for
chopping meat. It was later applied to equipment used for reducing pharmaceuticals
and wastewater. The term grinder, as in meat grinder, is commonly used
to imply a comminutor that reduces solids finely and often has multitudes
of cutting edges. However, this is a loose terminology. There are units
that finely reduce solids with only a few working elements. The original
sewage grinders, installed as long as thirty years ago, were all called
comminutors. Many of these machines are still in service to this day although
some are sorely in need of hard to find spare parts. In response to operators’
frustration with these units, manufacturers refrain from calling their
current offerings - comminutors. But most persons skilled in this art
agree that comminutor is the valid term for this type of device.
WHERE COMMINUTORS OR GRINDERS ARE USED
An important use for comminutors (grinders) is in the primary treatment
of raw sewage solids in plant headworks and pump stations. Large, stringy
solids can easily plug even supposedly “non-clog” pump impellers
and necessitate the use of size reduction devices. In sludge, inline grinders
are often installed ahead of pumps in recirculation lines and also to
enhance the operation of dewatering equipment, digestors and nozzles which
can easily become plugged. Belt filter presses and centrifuges are especially
sensitive to oversized particles that can puncture filter membranes, reduce
their efficiency or damage expensive centrifuge drums. As a result, grinders
can easily pay for themselves in damage and downtime prevention.
Comminutors are commonly employed where it is undesirable, impractical
or uneconomic to remove solids due to the lack of disposal options. Even
when screening equipment is employed, some solids inevitably slip through,
so the use of a comminutor is useful as a backup. Alternatively, some
plants find it desirable to put the solids through the plants’ digestion
processes and thus require size reduction equipment and not screening.
A Brief History of Comminution
Drum Type Comminutors
Sewage comminutors date back to the early 1950s with the introduction
of the bottom discharge Comminutor. This unit featured a rotating drum
with attached cutter teeth. Solids would get caught on and rotate with
the drum and get reduced as the teeth passed through a fixed comb. This
design featured a large active screen area and heavy construction. The
drawbacks of this unit’s design included: a bottom discharge that
required a special “L” shape channel construction; trouble
handling certain solids, the rotating drum was subject to wear from bottom
grit, and the teeth were extremely difficult to remove to service.
Straight-thru Comminutors
Next to be introduced was the Worthington comminutor that fit into straight-thru
channels. Its oscillating cutters wipe a semi-circular screen surface
clear and sweep and cut the solids against vertically mounted stationary
cutters. This design featured easier maintenance and a straight through
configuration. The drawbacks were the screens were light and subject to
puncturing. The unit was incapable of handling the increasingly heavy
solids encountered due to low power and a lack of torque at the end of
each stroke. The straight thru comminutor generally had a good reputation
when maintained. However, if maintenance schedules were missed, unit performance
would suffer.
An improved, higher powered, straight through comminutor has subsequently
been introduced with a similar but improved design. It has a heavier solids
reduction capability, rotary design as opposed to oscillating and a heavier
screen. This unit, the DIMMINUTOR, easily replaces and upgrades older
straight through Worthington style comminutors, which are no longer made.
It features individually removable and replaceable cutters and a cantilivered
design that eliminates the need for bottom seals at the gritty channel
bottom.
INLINE COMMINUTORS/GRINDERS
The first machine to address the problems of reducing solids directly
inline was the Pipeline DELUMPER. Originally developed in the 1960's for
the chemical process industry, this pressure rated unit quickly became
invaluable to treatment plants. It could reduce heavy solids directly
inline and improve flow properties of the system thus reducing maintenance
problems for operators. The Delumper was the pioneer inline processor
that helped treatment plants with a difficult and previously unsolved
maintenance problem.
DUAL SHAFT COMMINUTORS (Grinders)
After the US Navy in the early 1970s adapted the Pipeline Delumper as
the wastewater processor of choice for its frigate fleet, a competing
inline comminutor was introduced with a twin shaft design. This unit adapted
and miniaturized a German twin shaft solid waste. shredder’s mechanism.
Others subsequently also started marketing this design for municipal applications.
Twin shaft grinders use two slowly counter-rotating shafts with intermeshing
cutter disks. As one cutter passes the opposing cutter at close clearance
it shears solids trapped between the two and passes them downstream. This
design provided good dry solids reduction and feeding capability. The
design came originally from solid waste shredders with up to 300 hp motors
for reduction of everything from steel drums and tires to construction
debris. The drawbacks of these miniaturized shredders for liquid waste
systems were poor ability to pass liquids. They were also excessively
complicated assembly due to the use of multiple individual cutter and
spacer disks. Another problem was the possibility of cutter stack collapse
and disk cracking as every thin cutter was dependent on every other one
for its position in the stack.
Cutter Cartridge Enhanced Twin Shaft Comminutors
An improvement to the original twin shaft design was the introduction
of cutter cartridge elements. These cartridges replace the multiple individual
cutters and spacer disks with one piece solid cartridge elements. This
increases cutter strength and eliminates multitudes of small gaps and
associated stack re-tightening requirements. The cutter cartridge design
is often used to retrofit twin shaft units with old individual cutter
disks.
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IN-LINE “SHAFT-LESS” DESIGN
The FMI Super Shredder employs a spherical rotor design with a completely
open “shaftless” center. It combines the benefits of an
open flow configuration for low headloss with a high shear principle
that produces a finely ground output. This unit features a bi-directional
cutting operation, heavy solids handling, abrasion resistant hardfaced
cutters and stainless steel cutter construction. The Super Shredder
excels at handling high flow rates with a minimum of headloss. As
it only has two cutting elements, it is simple to maintain. The design
uses the flow to help in feeding the unit, so it is best applied to
applications where the flow velocity is greater than 2 ft/sec. |
Hi-Flow Twin Shaft Grinders with Diverters
To improve the flow capability of twin shaft units, various flow “diverters”
have been employed to move solids to the grinder while allowing flow to
bypass the grinder. The first of these grinders with a “diverter”
design was introduced the 1950s by Geiger. This unit employed a grinder
unit in combination with a vertical rotating drum screen to handle high
flows.
In the later 1980s, the diverter concept was again introduced. Several
units implemented flat diverter screens such as the “disc screen”
which employed multiple parallel banks of rotating disks to convey solids
to an adjacent grinder. Another design re-introduced the drum screen with
an adjacent grinder.
While these designs increased the flow capability of their grinders,
they also had a number of drawbacks. Flat screen or disc designs were
subject to “plastering” or bridging of solids across the screen.
Screen wear against bottom grit was problematic. Also, solids tend to
get trapped within the screen center. Solids could also bypass the grinder
altogether as these units have no way to assure that the solids don’t
escape in the gap between the screen and the grinder. In the drum type
screen, only 1/4 of the screen can be active as the rest rotates in the
wrong direction or doesn’t feed the solids effectively. This results
in increased headloss.
Reducing Institutional Waste
and Screenings
The units discussed above fall into the category of “grinders”
which typically have between a 1 and 5 hp motor. While they can
do an excellent job on typical wastewater solids, there are some
applications that are better left to a larger industrial strength
“shredder”. These are units that typically have a minimum
of 10 or 15 hp motors and are built with a heavier drive and shafting
to accommodate the added power.
The applications for these shredders include institutional
waste where high concentrations of solids are encountered. Often
prisoners flush whole bed sheets, blankets and garments into the
wastewater system in a deliberate effort to plug the system. The
screenings discharged from a bar screen is another case where a
heavy duty 10 or 15 hp shredder is suitable. While grinders excel
at handling liquid-borne solids, heavier solid masses which are
not suspended in a liquid carrier call for a heavy duty shredder
type device.
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The Latest Developments
The latest innovations in twin shaft channel grinding, the TASKMASTER
ROVER and the TASKMASTER TITAN, feature new designs that handle higher
flows than and avoids the pitfalls of the previous units as well.
Traveling Grinder Technology
The TASKMASTER ROVER mates the power of twin shaft grinders with effective
fine screening. In this unit, a grinder travels (roves) back and forth
across a semicircular sizing screen to intercept and grind the solids
to a size that must be fine enough to pass through the screen slots. Oversized
solids are continuously recycled back through the grinder for further
reduction. The unit’s screen is positioned across the entire unit
so there are no gaps through which unprocessed solids can pass. As the
screen is positioned behind the grinder, it acts like an industrial solids
classifier to recirculate oversized particles back to the grinder for
further processing. This design assures a high level of effectiveness
and a completely processed output.
The TASKMASTER ROVER uses a stainless semi-circular screen. This design
eliminates the possibility of trapping of solids as occurs with screen
drums. Even in the event of a power outage, the unit may be automatically
restarted without the need for the operator to manually clear out imbedded
debris. In fact, The Rover’s twin shaft grinder has an excellent
screen sweeping capability and has the ability to self-clear its screen,
even if solids have accumulated during the outage.
Twin Shaft Grinders Using Two Cutter Diameters
Another recent improvement in high flow grinding is the Taskmaster
Titan. This unit employs twin shafts with intermeshing cutters but
each stack has a different sized cutter disks. The benefit of this
design is that the smaller disks efficiently perform the cutting against
an apposing cutter disks while the larger disk allows much more fluid
to pass through. The result is a twin shaft grinder that requires
no more power than previous units but handles much higher flows without
the need for diverter screens and their potential operational problems.
It can also more effectively feed larger solids into its cutters without
repelling them. |
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Some Grinders Can Screen Too!
The addition of a shaftless screw-screen behind the discharge of
an in-channel grinder results in an interesting synergy. The screw
screen becomes more effective at removing solids from the flow and
the ground solids are more easily washed and compacted. These combined
grinding and screening systems have been introduced by two manufacturers
and have proven to be an effective alternative to bar screens. One
manufacturer employs the TITAN style grinder where the larger cutter
acts as a primary screen for enhancing the system’s flow capability
as compared to a screw screen alone. The second manufacturer uses
their rotating diverter screen for the same purpose.
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Things to look for when selecting
a grinder:
* Is the manufacturer well established
and have broad experience in the field?
* Is the unit ruggedly constructed
* Will the design handle the present and future flow capacity without
excessive upstream head?
* Is the design easy to maintain in the given installation?
* Is the unit built for long term reliability and ease of maintenance?
* Is the unit built with materials that are resistant to the corrosive
or abrasive conditions of our flow?
* Is the unit capable of handling the specific solids encountered
in your system such as industrial waste or institutional solids
such as particularly heavy solids encountered downstream from correctional
facilities.
An important
criteria in choosing a grinder is hydraulic
performance. Can the unit be placed in the flow without raising
the head excessively to the point of backing up the system or cavitating
the pump? For this, it is important to work closely with the manufacturer
in sizing of the unit to the application. In general, a more open
design will pass more flow and cause less backup than a unit with
a higher percentage of closed area.
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About the Author
William Galanty is a holder of 10 patents in the field of wastewater
comminution and is the President of Franklin Miller Inc., a manufacturer
of size reduction processors for municipal as well as industrial
applications. He is experienced in the design and application of
high powered industrial solid waste shredders, design and production
of high pressure and complex industrial size reduction systems in
addition to his experience in wastewater treatment comminution.
Mr. Galanty has also testified as an expert witness on the design
and application of wastewater grinders.
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