Crusher

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

For other uses, see Crusher (disambiguation).

A crusher is a machine designed to reduce large solid chunks of raw material into smaller chunks.

Contents

[edit] Description

Crushers are commonly classified by the degree to which they fragment the starting material, with coarse crushers not reducing it by much, intermediate crushers fragmenting it much more significantly, and grinders reducing it to a fine powder.

[edit] Types of crushers

The two best known types of coarse crusher are the jaw crusher and gyratory crusher.

[edit] Jaw crusher

A jaw crusher consists of a set of vertical jaws, one jaw being fixed and the other being moved back and forth relative to it by a cam or pitman mechanism. The jaws are farther apart at the top than at the bottom, forming a tapered chute so that the material is crushed progressively smaller and smaller as it travels downward until it is small enough to escape from the bottom opening. The movement of the jaw can be quite small, since complete crushing is not performed in one stroke.

[edit] Gyratory crusher (Cone crusher)

A gyratory crusher (or cone crusher) is similar in basic concept to a jaw crusher, consisting of inner and outer vertical crushing cones; the outer cone is oriented with its wide end upward, and the inner cone is inverted relative to the outer with its apex upward. The inner cone has a slight circular movement, but does not rotate; the movement is generated by a cam or eccentric arrangement. As with the jaw crusher, material travels downward between the two cones being progressively crushed until it is small enough to fall out through the gap between the two cones at the bottom.

[edit] Impact crushers

Impact crushers involve the use of impact rather than pressure to crush material. The material is contained within a cage, with openings on the bottom, end, or side of the desired size to allow pulverized material to escape. This type of crusher is usually used with soft material such as coal, seeds, or soft metalic ores.

  • Hammer mills utilize heavy metal bars attached to the edges of horizontal rotating disks by hinges, which repeatedly strike the material to be crushed.


  • Ball mills use metal balls in a rotating cylinders.
  • Stamp mills use cams to lift weighted vertical hammers which are dropped by gravity to crush the material.

[edit] Roller crushers

One type of intermediate crusher consists of a pair of horizontal cylindrical rollers through which material is passed. The two rollers rotate in opposite directions, "nipping" and crushing material between them. A similar type of intermediate crusher is the edge runner, which consists of a circular pan with two or more heavy wheels known as mullers rotating within it; material to be crushed is shoved underneath the wheels using attached plow blades.

[edit] Mobile crushers

Crushers mounted on tracks or wheels. Popular in Recycling applications due to their ease of installation on building sites.

See also: Rock crusher

[edit] See also

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