Yingfeng Machinery-More Than 30 Years Experience In Clay Brick Making Machine ,Tunnel Kiln, Rotary Tunnel Kiln.
In summer, with the change of climate, the moisture content in raw materials fluctuates, so pay close attention to the change of moisture content in production. When the moisture content is low, it is necessary to add water to the raw material in time to make it reach the moisture required for molding. When the moisture content in the raw material is too high, it is necessary to properly reduce the moisture content in the raw material. It can be reduced by adding some dry materials to the raw material, such as dry fly ash, coal gangue, slag, tailings of other mines and other industrial waste slag. When adding these components into the raw material, it is necessary to select the right time and specify the adding position. It must be added at the crushing position of the raw material. In this way, the added components can form a good mixture with the main components of the raw material to make the performance of the raw material uniform. If the adding time is too late, and then add after the raw material is broken, then the performance of the raw material is not uniform because several materials cannot be fully mixed, The molding work cannot be carried out smoothly. That is, the forming can be carried out, but the quality of the formed green body is also extremely unstable. When adding water to raw materials, it is also necessary to pay attention to the time of adding water. It is necessary to add 98%~100% of the water required for raw material molding when raw materials are broken and crushed, so that the water content of raw materials can meet the requirements of molding water. Don't wait until the raw material enters the extruder to add water, which is too late to ensure that the added water is evenly dispersed in the raw material, and the water content on the surface and inside of the particles will also be greatly different, which is not conducive to the consistency of the raw material performance, and will cause certain harm to the molding and green body performance.
In terms of lubricating water at the machine mouth, attention should also be paid to the amount of water added. Under the condition of ensuring normal molding, water should be added as little as possible. Although molding can also be carried out with more water, this will make the surface of the green body absorb too much water, which will have a certain impact on the drying process of the green body and the uniformity of the green body performance. It is inevitable to form delamination phenomenon in the forming body by using the screw extruder, which is generally called spiral striation. This texture (layering) is formed by the uneven extrusion of mud from the machine mouth section through the spiral blade. When raw materials are formed into mud strips, we hope to increase the density of the green body by the close combination of particles, rather than by the effect of lubricants. According to the principle of the densest packing of raw materials, when the proportion of each component in the coarse, medium and fine particles of raw materials is distributed according to "big at both ends and small in the middle", the density of the green body is the largest, that is, the particles can reach the densest packing. All particles with one particle size can not achieve good forming effect, and when the proportion of each component is out of balance, it can not achieve good forming effect, and it is easy to produce delamination during forming.
Collapse often begins before the bricks even enter the kiln if the green body lacks physical integrity.
Moisture Threshold: The residual moisture content must be kept below 6%. High moisture levels drastically reduce the compressive strength of the bricks, causing the bottom layers to buckle under the weight of the stack.
Material Aging: Clay requires at least 3 days of aging to ensure uniform plasticity and water distribution. Insufficient aging leads to internal stresses and a fragile structure.
Mechanical Density: Ensure an extrusion pressure of ≥40kg/cm² to increase the density of the green body, making it more resistant to deformation at high temperatures.
Stacking is not just about volume; it is about managing gravity and thermodynamics.
The "Four-Point" Standard: Stacks must be level, stable, vertical, and straight. Any minor deviation in the center of gravity will be amplified as the bricks soften in the heat.
Airflow Optimization: Follow the principle of "Dense Edges, Sparse Centers" and "Dense Tops, Sparse Bottoms." This balances the temperature across the kiln cross-section, preventing the edges from over-firing while the center remains under-fired.
Load Management: Due to the high sensitivity of clay, limit the stacking height to 12 layers or fewer. This minimizes the static pressure on the base bricks.
This is the most common zone for collapses. If moisture is not evacuated efficiently, the bricks effectively "steam" and lose their rigidity.
Inlet Temperature Control: Keep the initial drying air below 116°C. Temperatures above this threshold cause the surface to harden too quickly, trapping steam inside and creating internal pressure.
Heating Rate: Maintain a steady rise of 6–8°C/h. Sudden temperature spikes, especially in winter, can cause thermal shock and structural failure.
Ventilation and Pressure: Ensure the exhaust fan provides sufficient negative pressure. Poor ventilation causes moisture to linger and re-condense on the bricks, leading to "soggy" bricks that collapse instantly.
Once the bricks reach high temperatures, preventing them from entering a pyroplastic state (melting) is vital.
Anti-Overfiring Measures: Strictly monitor the sintering peak. Exceeding the clay's softening point leads to viscous flow, where the bricks begin to behave like liquid and slump.
Internal Fuel Ratio: Control the amount of internal additives (coal powder or gangue). Excessive internal fuel generates uncontrollable heat within the stack, causing the bricks to "melt from the inside out."
Visual Monitoring: Use inspection holes to watch for "white-out" conditions or "shimmering/swaying" stacks, which are immediate warning signs of imminent collapse.
The physical environment of the kiln must remain consistent to prevent mechanical triggers.
Track Leveling: Regularly inspect kiln car tracks. Uneven rails cause vibration and jolting, which can topple a stack that is already weakened by heat.
Kiln Structure Maintenance: Check for sagging roof bricks or protruding exhaust ports. Mechanical obstructions are a frequent cause of "domino-effect" collapses during car movement.
Name: Mr. Kai
Skype: fanchen588
WhatsApp: +86 18638712391
WeChat: +86 18638712391
Address: Block 5, South Longhai Road and East Tongbai Road, Zhongyuan District, Zhengzhou City, Henan Province, China