A contribution to the relationship of energy and particle size in the comminution of brittle particulate materials

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Abstract

The contribution of this paper on the relationship of energy-particle size in the comminution of brittle particulate materials is based on two concepts: (a) the potential energy of a single particle and (b) the size distribution of particles in a particulate material. The potential energy Qx of a single particle of size x is defined as the energy required to create this particle. By definition Qx = qxMx, where qx is the specific energy per unit mass and Mx the mass of the particle. The relationship, which relates the energy to the size of the material, is assumed to be an empirical one: (dqx/dx) = -C(1/xm), where C and m are constants. For particulate materials, the particle distribution is assumed to be the Gates, Gaudin, Schuhmann: Px = W0(x/y)α, where Px is the cumulative particle mass finer than x, W0 is the total mass of the assembly, y is the maximum particle size (size modulus) and α is a constant (distribution modulus). The potential energy Ey of a particle assembly is defined as the total energy of its particles. It is shown that for m > 1 and α - m ≠ -1 then Ey = (CW0/(m - 1))(α/(α - m + 1))y1-m and for α - m = -1 then Ey = (CW0/(m - 1))(ln yα/yα). For m = 1 and α ≠ 0 then Ey = -CW0(ln y - 1/a). For α = 0, which is practically impossible, then Ey is not defined. The case for m < 1 is not realistic because it gives negative values for the potential energy. The conditions for the application of the formulae above are presented in the text. © 2002 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.

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Stamboliadis, E. T. (2002). A contribution to the relationship of energy and particle size in the comminution of brittle particulate materials. Minerals Engineering, 15(10), 707–713. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0892-6875(02)00185-1

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