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Mill (grinding)

A mill is a device, often a structure, machine or kitchen appliance, that breaks solid materials into smaller pieces by grinding, crushing, or cutting. Such comminution is an important unit operation in many processes. There are many different types of mills and many types of materials processed in them. Historically mills were powered by hand or by animals (e.g., via a hand crank), working animal (e.g., horse mill), wind (windmill) or water (watermill). In modern era, they are usually powered by electricity.

Other names

Grinding mill

Grinding

The grinding of solid materials occurs through mechanical forces that break up the structure by overcoming the interior bonding forces. After the grinding the state of the solid is changed: the grain size, the grain size disposition and the grain shape.


Milling also refers to the process of breaking down, separating, sizing, or classifying aggregate material (e.g. mining ore). For instance rock crushing or grinding to produce uniform aggregate size for construction purposes, or separation of rock, soil or aggregate material for the purposes of structural fill or land reclamation activities. Aggregate milling processes are also used to remove or separate contamination or moisture from aggregate or soil and to produce "dry fills" prior to transport or structural filling.


Grinding may serve the following purposes in engineering:

Grinding degree referring to grain size d80

In spite of a great number of studies in the field of fracture schemes there is no formula known which connects the technical grinding work with grinding results. Mining engineers, Peter von Rittinger, Friedrich Kick and Fred Chester Bond independently produced equations to relate the needed grinding work to the grain size produced and a fourth engineer, R.T.Hukki suggested that these three equations might each describe a narrow range of grain sizes and proposed uniting them along a single curve describing what has come to be known as the Hukki relationship.[1][2][3]


In stirred mills, the Hukki relationship does not apply and instead, experimentation has to be performed to determine any relationship.[4]


To evaluate the grinding results the grain size disposition of the source material (1) and of the ground material (2) is needed. Grinding degree is the ratio of the sizes from the grain disposition. There are several definitions for this characteristic value:

E is the energy (kilowatt-hours per metric or short ton)

W is the work index measured in a laboratory ball mill (kilowatt-hours per metric or short ton)

P80 is the mill circuit product size in micrometers

F80 is the mill circuit feed size in micrometers.

wind powered

Windmill

water powered

Watermill

animal powered

Horse mill

human powered (archaic: "treadmill")

Treadwheel

floats near a river bank or bridge

Ship mill

simple mill for grinding and pulverizing (typically) gold or silver ore.

Arrastra

an equipment for the grinding or pulverizing of grain and other raw materials using cylinders

Roller mill

a specialized machine for reducing ore to powder for further processing or for fracturing other materials

Stamp mill

Bark mill

. Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 18 (11th ed.). 1911.

"Mill" 

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