Abstract

A population balance model is applied to a steel ball mill. Experimental data were obtained for two types of balls with different chemical compositions using a marked ball test in an industrial mill of a recognized cement producer company. The balls were marked since their manufacture by an international ball supplier who guided the entire experimental process. The mill was monitored for about eight months in 12 time cycles. It is found that the law of wear of balls was of zeroth order. The wear law is introduced to the model to predict and analyze the steel consumption due to the wear of the balls, the mass density function, the distribution function of balls, and the mill ball charge at steady state. Experimental data and theoretical predictions match in excellent agreement.

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