Abstract:
Jaw crushers are important mechanisms in quarries and construction sites used to
reduce rocks and stones into aggregate materials for construction works. These
crushers are also used in the mining industry to prepare the ore for secondary
milling processing by reducing it to suitable sizes. The single-toggle jaw crusher
is the most common crusher and uses a swing jaw which crushes the feed material
against a fixed jaw. The crushing process is achieved through the application of
both motion and force. The swing jaw moves back and forth towards the fixed
jaw while transmitting forces from a motor-coupled eccentric shaft. For the feed
material to be crushed, the mechanism must supply enough compressive force to
overcome the compressive strength of the feed. This research was concerned with
the synthesize of jaw crusher mechanisms which achieves optimal force and motion
transmission from the input eccentric shaft to the ouput swing jaw. The aim
was to ensure maximum crushing motion for better rock comminution as well as
minimising shearing motion for wear reduction. In addition, the research investigated
optimal force application on the rocks to overcome their fracture toughness and
reduction to small particle sizes. The research involved the use of evolutionary
optimisation technique called Genetic Algorithm (GA) to search for optimum link
sizes that gave the best transmission results. Genetic Agorithm was implemented
using MATLAB software. Motion optimisation was divided into two sections namely,
crushing-shearing ratio and crush-travel inverse. Force optimisation was also split
into two: static force and dynamic force and an objective function for each was
created and fed into the GA solver. All objective functions were developed from first
principles and then coded in MATLAB. Four optimised designs were synthesised
each corresponding to the crusher motion or force parameter being optimised. The
motion crushing-shearing ratio optimised design had 1.18 times higher crushing than
shearing. The crushing-only optimised design achieved a production rate of 1.7
×10−4 m3
. Meanwhile, the static force optimised design gave a total torque of
425 MNm while the dynamic force optimised design resulted in a total dynamic
torque of 640GNm. The effect of link lengths on the four criteria were also sought
and established. The swing jaw had the highest influence on both motion and force
transmission so that a longer swing jaw was preferrable. The findings from this study
will assist in the production of a new, optimised and locally fabricated single-toggle
jaw crusher with high crushing efficiency, power saving and increased production.
These findings will also aid in the modification of the existing ones by varying lengths
of the components to increase crusher production via optimised motion and force
transmission.