Ballistic Separator

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Revision as of 13:45, 3 September 2021 by Wikiwaster123 (talk | contribs)

A ballistic separator is a machine that sorts waste materials by separating flexible items from rigid ones. The machine, on an inclination, pushes light, flexible material up the screen/paddle and causes heavy rigid items to fall downwards. This device is useful in single stream applications to replace typical rubber star screens and are beneficial as it is a versatile piece of equipment[1]. This device is capable of sorting stones, glass, metal, wood, plastic, paper, containers, cans, construction and demolition waste, other heavy items, MSW and C&I waste[2]. The separator then divides the waste input into three streams: 2-dimentional light and flat material that walk up the screens, 3-dimentional heavy and rigid items that fall down the screens, and fine pieces of waste that falls/is sieved through the holes/openings in the screens. The angle of inclination and the speed can be adjusted infinitely. The separation characteristics can be adjusted to changes in the waste stream at any time[3].

Advantages

  • Easy and safe maintenance
  • Versatility: enables processing of different material streams within a single system
  • Angle adjustment (optional)
  • Reduces operating & maintenance costs
  • Constant performance with all steel screening surface
  • No wrap design minimizes cleaning & maintenance costs
  • Single motor and direct drive system reduce maintenance and energy costs
  • High amplitude paddle movement improves the quality of the separation[1]

The Process

  1. The material is fed into the ballistic separator via feeding shoot onto the rotating paddles
  2. The small pieces of waste fall/are sieved through the holes/openings in the paddles and is caught in the screen fraction
  3. The light and flat material walks/is pushed up the screens by the inclined rotating paddles and falls over the top into the light fraction
  4. The heavy and rigid items fall/roll down the screens and off the lower end of the machine into the heavy fraction[2]


References