Hardgrove Grindability Index

Summary

Hardgrove Grindability Index (short HGI) is a measure for the grindability of coal. Grindability is an index, therefore it has no unit. The smaller the HGI, the harder is coal texture and less grindable is the coal.

Grindability is an important factor for the design a coal mill. As grindability depends on many unknown factors, HGI is determined empirically using a sample mill according to the following procedure:

Procedure of measurement edit

50 g of air dried coal featuring a grain size in the range between 0.6 and 1.18 mm are filled into the sample mill and a weight is put on the mill's grinding stone. After 60 rounds the grinded coal is put on a sampling sieve. Factor D equals the fraction of the coal passing through the sieve of 74 μm corresponding to 200 mesh. HGI is calculated from D as follows:

 

This procedure only results in relative values because the sampling mill is calibrated using a reference coal. The HGI of the reference coal is defined as 100.

Developer edit

HGI is named after Ralph M. Hardgrove (born 1891 in Massillon, Ohio, died October 29, 1978, in Jacksonville, Florida[1]), who developed this procedure in the 1930s [2] for the company Babcock & Wilcox[3] in the USA.

The procedure is generally accepted and standardized by ASTM-Standard D 409, DIN 51742 and ISO 5074.

References edit

  1. ^ Archive of The Westfield (N.J.) Leader, issue of November 9, 1978 Archived October 14, 2014, at the Wayback Machine (PDF, 404 kB)
  2. ^ Hardgrove Grindability Index - Detailed Information about HGI by Australian Coal Industry's Research Program (PDF, 538 kB)
  3. ^ The Stock Gravimetric Feeder auf asme.org Archived 2012-09-16 at the Wayback Machine, featuring a photo of R. Hardgrove (PDF, 794 kB)