Why ACM is replacing Raymond Mill for High-End Calcium Carbonate Processing?

The case for upgrading from a Raymond mill to an air classifier mill is not universal. It depends entirely on which calcium carbonate grades you are producing and which markets you are serving. For coarse construction-grade GCC at 75-180 microns, a Raymond mill is still a reasonable choice. For fine-grade GCC at D50 5-20 microns for paints, sealants, paper coatings, and premium plastics, the Raymond mill’s limitations in fineness, PSD control, and contamination make it the wrong tool — and those limitations have a direct cost in the form of products you cannot make and markets you cannot enter.

This article maps GCC grades to the equipment that produces them, explains where the Raymond mill stops and the air classifier mill takes over, and gives real production data from GCC operations that have made the switch. The focus is on the specific market and technical requirements of calcium carbonate — not general fine powder processing.

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The GCC Market: Why Grade Determines the Right Mill

Ground calcium carbonate is sold into a wide range of markets at very different price points. The fineness and PSD specification required by each market is what determines which grinding technology is appropriate — and which is not.

GCC Market SegmentTypical D50Typical D97Right Mill Technology
Construction fill, putty30-75 um100-200 umRaymond mill — adequate for this fineness
Rubber filler (standard)10-25 um35-60 umRaymond mill with external classifier; borderline
Plastics compounding (premium)5-12 um18-30 umACM required — Raymond mill cannot hold this D97
Paint and coatings filler3-8 um12-22 umACM required — tight span essential for gloss
Paper filler and coating2-5 um8-15 umACM required — Raymond mill cannot reach this fineness
Adhesive and sealant filler4-10 um15-25 umACM preferred — low contamination critical for white sealants
Food and pharmaceutical3-8 um12-20 umACM with ceramic lining — metal contamination limit strict

The clear pattern: Raymond mills are adequate for the lower half of the GCC market. Air classifier mills are the enabling technology for the upper half — the grades where producers earn meaningfully more per tonne. A GCC plant producing D50 5-8 microns for premium paint and coatings receives approximately 3-5 times the price per tonne of one producing D50 30-50 microns for construction fill. The capital cost difference between the two mill types is recovered quickly when the product value differential is this large.

Where the Raymond Mill Stops Working for GCC

The Fineness Ceiling

A Raymond mill’s practical upper limit for calcium carbonate is approximately 600 mesh, which corresponds to D97 around 25 microns. At this fineness, throughput has already dropped to a fraction of the mill’s rated capacity and the product PSD is wide — a significant coarse tail extends well above 25 microns. Achieving D97 consistently below 20 microns is not practical on a Raymond mill at production scale.

For the GCC grades that attract premium pricing — paint, paper, sealant — the typical D97 requirement is 12-22 microns, with a narrow span. These are specifications a Raymond mill simply cannot reliably hold, regardless of how the external classifier is configured. The fundamental limitation is the grinding mechanism: roller-ring compression generates particles across a broad size range, and the coarse tail cannot be eliminated by downstream classification alone without recirculating large volumes of material and reducing throughput to uneconomical levels.

The Particle Shape Problem for GCC Applications

The roller-ring fracture mechanism of a Raymond mill produces flat, platy calcium carbonate particles. For construction-grade GCC, particle shape is unimportant. For premium applications, it matters significantly.

In plastics compounding, flat particles align during processing and create anisotropic mechanical properties — the plastic is stiffer in one direction than another. In paint formulations, flat particles increase the resin demand because their high surface-area-to-volume ratio requires more binder to wet all surfaces. In sealants, flat particles can reduce the elastic recovery of the cured compound. An air classifier mill’s impact-dominant grinding produces more equiaxed, polyhedral particles that perform better across all these applications — requiring less binder, producing more isotropic mechanical properties, and improving the flow of the uncured compound.

Metal Contamination: Critical for White GCC Applications

The direct roller-ring contact of a Raymond mill generates iron-containing wear debris that contaminates the product. For construction-grade GCC, this contamination is irrelevant. For white GCC in premium paints, sealants, and food applications, iron contamination causes brightness reduction and product discolouration. Buyers of high-end white GCC specify brightness as a primary quality parameter (typically above 93-96 GE) and incoming iron content limits. Meeting these specifications on a Raymond mill requires extensive downstream processing (magnetic separation, flotation) that adds cost and complexity.

An air classifier mill with ceramic lining eliminates the grinding-step contamination pathway entirely. The wear surfaces are alumina or silicon carbide ceramic — materials that do not introduce iron. Combined with standard upstream magnetic separation of the limestone feed, an ACM consistently delivers the brightness levels that premium white GCC markets require without additional downstream purification.

The Economic Case: Energy, Wear, and Market Access

Specific Energy: The Ongoing Cost Difference

For GCC at D50 8-15 microns, an air classifier mill uses approximately 25-35% less specific energy (kWh per tonne) than a Raymond mill combined with an external classifier at the same fineness target. The saving comes from the ACM’s integrated classification: particles exit the circuit as soon as they reach the target size, rather than continuing to receive grinding energy in the mill. The external classifier, its fan, and its ductwork that a Raymond mill requires are also eliminated, removing their associated energy consumption from the circuit.

On a GCC plant producing 5 tonnes per hour of D50 10 microns product running 7,000 hours per year, a 30% energy saving at 60 kWh per tonne represents approximately 630,000 kWh per year. At $0.09 per kWh, this is a saving of around $56,700 per year from energy alone — significant relative to the capital cost difference between the two mill types.

Wear Parts: The Hidden Cost Difference

Raymond mill roller and ring replacement is the largest maintenance cost item in most Raymond mill operations for GCC. The direct metal-to-metal contact under high spring pressure causes rapid wear on both components. Replacement is typically required every 3-6 months for medium-hardness limestone, requires 2-3 days of production shutdown each time, and involves heavy components that need specialist rigging. The direct cost of the replacement parts, the lost production during shutdown, and the labour are all significant.

An air classifier mill’s wear parts — impact liners, classifier wheel — last substantially longer because there is no metal-to-metal contact. The wear mechanism is limestone particle impact on the liner surface, which is far gentler than roller-ring metal-to-metal grinding. Wear part replacement intervals of 12-24 months are common for calcium carbonate processing on an ACM, versus 3-6 months for a Raymond mill. The result is fewer shutdowns, lower annual parts cost, and more predictable maintenance scheduling.

Real GCC Plant Data

CASE STUDY 1

Plastics and Paint-Grade GCC — Switching from Raymond Mill to ACM at D50 10 Microns

The situation

A GCC producer supplying both the plastics compounding market (D50 12 microns) and the paint market (D50 8 microns) was running two Raymond mills with external classifiers. Their specific energy was consistently above 95 kWh per tonne at the paint-grade specification. Roller and ring sets required replacement every 3-4 months on both mills, with 2-day shutdowns each time — approximately 6-8 shutdowns per year across both mills, totalling 12-16 days of lost production annually. Iron contamination from roller wear was causing intermittent brightness failures on white GCC batches destined for premium paint customers, resulting in batch rejections and rework.

The switch

EPIC Powder Machinery replaced both Raymond mills with ceramic-lined ACMs sized for the same throughput. Two validated classifier speed recipes were established — one for the plastics grade, one for the paint grade — allowing the same machine to produce both products with a documented grade-change procedure.

Results

• Specific energy: 68 kWh per tonne on paint-grade D50 8 microns — 28% reduction
• Annual wear parts cost: reduced by 62% — ACM liners replaced annually vs. quarterly roller/ring sets on the Raymond mills
• Unplanned downtime: reduced from 12-16 days per year to 3 days per year
• Brightness: consistently above 96 GE on white paint-grade product — zero brightness failures in 12 months post-commissioning
Grade flexibility: plastics-grade and paint-grade produced on the same machines with VFD-controlled classifier speed changes

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CASE STUDY 2

Sealant-Grade GCC — Entering a Premium Market with ACM

The situation

A limestone processor had been producing construction-grade GCC at D97 80-120 microns on Raymond mills for the local building materials market. A sealant manufacturer in the same region was sourcing D50 6 microns, D97 18 microns white GCC from an overseas supplier due to the unavailability of a local producer meeting the specification. The sealant manufacturer approached the limestone processor about local supply, but the processor’s Raymond mills were technically incapable of reaching D97 18 microns at the required brightness specification.

The solution

The processor installed a single EPIC Powder ACM with ceramic lining, commissioned for the sealant grade specification. A test production run was carried out with the sealant manufacturer’s quality team observing, and samples were submitted to the manufacturer’s incoming lab for approval testing.

Results

• D50: 6.1 microns, D97 17.4 microns — within the sealant manufacturer’s specification on all test batches
• Brightness: 96.8 GE — above the 96 GE minimum for white sealant applications
• Iron content: below 15 ppm — within the sealant manufacturer’s incoming specification
• Product price achieved: approximately 3.8x the construction-grade price per tonne — the ACM investment was recovered in under 14 months from the product price uplift alone

Supply arrangement: the sealant manufacturer switched to local supply within two production qualification cycles; the processor subsequently added a second ACM to handle the additional sealant volume

Upgrading a GCC Grinding Line or Entering a Premium Market Segment?

EPIC Powder Machinery can audit your existing Raymond mill operation, calculate the specific energy and wear cost per tonne against an ACM configuration for your limestone feed and target D97, and provide a payback analysis based on your actual production volume and market pricing. We also offer free test grinds on your limestone at our R&D facility.

Tell us your current Raymond mill model, your feed material, your target D97 and market (plastics, paint, paper, sealant), and your annual production volume.

Request a Free Process Audit: www.nonmetallic-ore.com/contact  

Explore Our ACM Range for GCC: www.nonmetallic-ore.com

Frequently Asked Questions

At what GCC fineness does an air classifier mill become more economical than a Raymond mill?

The crossover is approximately D97 25-30 microns. At D97 above 30 microns (roughly 400 mesh), a Raymond mill with external classifier is a reasonable choice for calcium carbonate. It operates within its efficient range, wear is manageable, and the product specification does not require the tight PSD control that only an ACM provides. At D97 below 25 microns, the Raymond mill is operating beyond its efficient design range: throughput drops, the product PSD widens with a significant coarse tail, and the specific energy rises steeply. Below D97 20 microns, the Raymond mill is not practically viable at production scale regardless of how the external classifier is configured.

The ACM becomes the only viable dry grinding option. The economic crossover also depends on product value: even in the D97 25-35 micron range. If the product commands a significant premium over construction-grade GCC, the ACM’s lower operating cost and better product quality make it the better long-term investment.

Can a calcium carbonate producer run multiple GCC grades on the same air classifier mill?

Yes — this is one of the ACM’s practical advantages over the Raymond mill for multi-grade operations. The classifier wheel speed is the primary control for product D50 and D97, and it is adjusted via a variable frequency drive without stopping the mill. A plastics-grade D97 25 microns and a paint-grade D97 15 microns requires adjusting the classifier speed setting, waiting for the circuit to reach steady state, confirming the new D97 by PSD sampling, and releasing product to the new grade stream. Each grade should have a validated parameter recipe documented in the control system so that the changeover is reproducible rather than operator-dependent. The Raymond mill’s spring-pressure or gap adjustment is not precise enough to reliably reproduce specific D97 targets between production runs. It’s a significant disadvantage for multi-grade operations.

Epic Powder

At Epic Powder, we offer a wide range of equipment models and tailor solutions to meet your specific needs. Our team has more than 20 years experience in various powders processing. Epic Powder is specialized in fine powder processing technology for mineral industry, chemical industry, food industry, pharama industry, etc.

Contact us today for a free consultation and customized solutions!


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“Thanks for reading. I hope my article helps. Please leave a comment down below. You may also contact EPIC Powder online customer representative Zelda for any further inquiries.”

Emily Chen, Engineer

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