1. Core Judging Factors
Select based on purity requirement, particle shape, particle size distribution (PSD), grinding temperature, production cost, and end application.
2. Working Principle Difference
Jet Mill (Fluidized Bed Opposed Jet Mill / Spiral Jet Mill)
- Ultra-fine grinding by high-speed air jet & particle-to-particle collision
- No metal grinding media contact; integrated dynamic air classification
- Low-temperature grinding by compressed air expansion
Mechanical Mill (Ball Mill / Vibration Mill / Impact Mill / Vertical Roller Mill)
- Grinding by mechanical extrusion, impact and friction between rotor, liner and grinding media
- Direct metal-to-material contact; simple static classification
- Generates obvious frictional heat during operation
3. Comprehensive Performance Comparison
表格
| Comparison Item | Jet Mill | Mechanical Mill |
|---|---|---|
| Metal Contamination | Extremely low, high purity; no iron pollution | Obvious iron/metal impurities from liner & media wear |
| Particle Shape | Achieves graphite spheronization, smooth round particles | Keeps original flaky/irregular shape; cannot spheroidize |
| Particle Size Distribution | Narrow PSD, uniform fineness, no over-grinding | Wide PSD, mixed coarse and fine powder |
| Grinding Temperature | Near room temperature; protects graphite crystal structure | High heat generation; damages graphite layered structure |
| Fineness Capability | Stable ultra-fine grinding: D50 = 1~20 μm | Only medium-fine grinding; hard to control ultra-fine grade |
| Initial Investment | High equipment cost | Low investment cost |
| Operating Cost | High energy cost (air compressor support) | Low power consumption |
| Maintenance | Few wearing parts, long service life | Frequent replacement of liners, balls and rotors |
| Production Capacity | Medium & high for high-end fine powder | Large throughput for coarse/medium graphite powder |
4. When to Choose a Jet Mill
Choose jet mill if you meet any of the below:
- Produce lithium battery anode spherical graphite (natural / artificial graphite)
- Require high purity & ultra-low metal impurities
- Need spherical particle morphology to improve compaction density and electrical performance
- Demand narrow particle size distribution and stable ultra-fine fineness
- High-end applications: thermal conductive graphite, high-purity conductive powder, premium lubricant graphite
- Need to avoid high-temperature damage to graphite crystal structure
5. When to Choose a Mechanical Mill
Choose mechanical mill if all conditions apply:
- Ordinary industrial-grade graphite: refractory, foundry coating, common lubricant, low-grade conductive paint
- No requirement for spherical particles; flaky graphite is acceptable
- Project is cost-sensitive with limited budget
- Only need coarse / medium-fine graphite powder (D50 >20 μm)
- Allow minor metal impurity content
- Pursue large-volume bulk production of low-end graphite powder
6. Key Trade-Offs & Limitations
Jet Mill Limitations
- Higher initial equipment investment
- Needs dry, clean compressed air system
- Higher overall energy consumption due to air compressor
Mechanical Mill Limitations
- Unavoidable metal contamination, not qualified for battery-grade graphite
- Cannot realize graphite spheronization
- Poor particle uniformity, unstable product consistency
- Short service life of wear parts, high daily maintenance cost
7. Quick One-Step Selection Rule
- Battery grade / high purity / spherical / ultra-fine graphite → Jet Mill
- Ordinary industrial / bulk production / cost priority / flaky graphite → Mechanical Mill