Metso Insights Blog Mining and metals blog How we developed our DEM Cone Crusher model
Mining
Nov 11, 2022

How we developed our DEM Cone Crusher model

Dilek Alkac
Dilek Alkac
Research and Development Manager, MIN Digital Technologies
Vasile Murariu
Vasile Murariu
Principal Scientist, MIN Digital Technologies
Xiangjun Qiu
Xiangjun Qiu
Principal Scientist, MIN Digital Technologies
For the past 20 years, Metso Outotec’s DEM team has developed several Discrete Element Method (DEM) models for the design of comminution devices and bulk material handling units. This expert blog looks back to one of the projects and explains why validation played a key role in the breakthrough.

In 1979, Peter Cundall, a civil engineer, pioneered a seminal numerical method to simulate granular motion. Later, this method was named the discrete element method, or DEM. In 1992, Raj K. Rajamani, professor at the University of Utah, developed a 2D version of the DEM program to simulate grinding mill operation. Ever since then, DEM has gradually entered research and development in the mining industry.

In 2002, Metso Outotec established its DEM team to develop 3D DEM programs to model various comminution devices, including several types of mill backends, mill liner wear, screens, chutes, crushers, magnetic separators and so on. In the development process, the DEM team has constantly faced challenges in finding the right balance for efficiency and accuracy: the latest parallel computing algorithm was introduced for efficiency, with subsequent updates as required. It was not easy to numerically define the physics of the comminution process and the task required several iterations and volumes of validation data. In the past twenty years, the DEM team has overcome those challenges and gained extensive experience in developing the DEM models. One of the most unforgettable experiences was the development of the fast breakage (FB) DEM model for crushers.

First, the DEM team succeeded in developing DEM models for most comminution devices, except for the cone crusher. In 2005, the team started to focus on the development of the cone crusher model. After several rounds of brainstorming, the team scientists decided to try a novel approach: the Fast Breakage DEM algorithm. In this algorithm, polyhedron particles are employed, energy criterion is used to determine if each of the particles is going to break or not; the Voronoi partition algorithm is applied to break a polyhedron particle into several daughter polyhedron particles, and finally a population balance model (PBM) is used to determine the size distribution of the daughter particles. While the implementation of the Fast Breakage DEM algorithm was difficult, the scientists successfully completed the code in one year. However, the real challenge was the validation that took six whole years to complete.

Initially, the validation results showed that the power draw and throughput predictions were about 50% and 30% lower than field measurements. Moreover, the predicted product size distribution was always coarser than the measurement. Many mechanisms and modifications were introduced but the validation progressed slowly. It was not until 2012 that the DEM team scientists discovered a hidden mechanism in the crusher. Inspiration struck when a series of laboratory test-works were conducted in a project, which investigated the cone crusher efficiency at lab-scale.

This discovery was a breakthrough, and the validation of the crusher model could be successfully completed. The Fast Breakage DEM model of cone crushers could now reliably predict the power draw, throughput, and product size distribution.

Soon after the FB DEM model was calibrated and validated, the team decided to build a set of regression equations that can be successfully incorporated into process simulator(s) for performance metrics. Within one year, the team developed a novel data-based model for the cone crushers. It uses four input parameters; crusher speed, Closed Side Setting (CSS), ore hardness and crusher filling level. Using these independent variables, the model can accurately predict the throughput, the power draw, and the product size distribution (PSD). This model is unique and as of this date, we are not aware of any data-based model comparable in any other process or plant simulator platform. The model has proved successful both on pilot-scale and full-scale cone crusher performance predictions since 2014 - the year the model was made available as a flowsheet simulation model.

In the past two decades, the DEM team has developed several DEM models for the design of comminution devices and bulk material handling units. Our answer to what is the key to success, is validation, validation and validation.

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