The present invention relates to a mixing unit, as well as to a method for mixing. In particular the present invention relates to a mixing unit and a method for mixing powder with fluid, such as water.
Mixing units are used in several different applications, e.g. in order to combine a first flow of a specific compound with a second flow of a different compound. In food processing mixing units may be used for adding powder to a flow of liquid, such as when mixing milk powder with water.
When mixing powders with liquids one important parameter to control is the amount of air, or other gases, present in the liquid and/or the powder. During powder mixing with water, the surrounding air, and the air entrapped within the powder will be mixed simultaneously into the liquid. This may cause formation of air bubbles. Further to this, dissolved air in the liquid may also contribute to the total amount of air bubbles, especially in cases where mixing is performed in a low-pressure environment.
Gas bubbles are generally not desired since such presence may affect the mixing process, as well as further downstream processes such as separator operation etc., negatively. Therefore, one of the main challenges in mixing powders with liquids lies in preventing unwanted air and foaming. Air may be incorporated into a product by mixers with whipping action or when adding ingredients such as powder, which tends to trap air. Air bubbles will rise to the surface in a product and from there they escape. However, if foam-stabilizing ingredients such as protein are present, they will stabilize into foam at the product's surface instead.
Air incorporation may cause major problems in processing and end-product quality. Air in the product may cause increased fouling in heat exchangers, cavitation in homogenizers, and unwanted whey formation in fermented products. In terms of product quality, air in the product can cause oxidation, both during processing and in the package on the way to consumers. Further to this, air incorporation can also lead to significant product losses in production if the air creates large volumes of unwanted foam in mixing tanks and other equipment.
During mixing, time is therefore required for releasing the entrapped air bubbles. This however, may also constitute a significant drawback of current mixing units, since the only possible way for small air bubbles to vanish is by rising upwards to the surface, which normally is a very slow process especially for small bubbles.
Hence, there is a need for an improved mixing unit, as well as an improved method for mixing.
An object of the present invention is to provide a mixing unit and a method for mixing solving the above-mentioned drawbacks of prior art solutions.
For example, an object of the present invention is to provide a mixing unit, and a method for mixing, which significantly reduces the formation of air bubbles. By doing so the time required for air bubble diffusion may be significantly reduced.
According to a first aspect, a mixing unit is provided. The mixing unit comprises a low-pressure vessel, a liquid supply system being in communication with the vessel via a liquid inlet, a powder supply system being in communication with the vessel via a powder inlet, and a discharge system being in communication with the vessel via a product outlet. Said liquid supply system comprises a deaeration system, said powder supply system comprises an air separator, and said discharge system comprises a pump for increasing the pressure of the mixed product by pumping the mixed product.
Said deaeration system of the liquid supply system may comprise a throttling point in direct connection with an inlet of the vessel.
The pressure inside the vessel may be less than atmospheric pressure.
The pressure inside the vessel may be equal to steam pressure of water at a temperature range expanding from the product temperature to 10 degrees above the product temperature.
The air separator may be a multi-stage air separator, such that air is separated in sequence by two or more air separators.
The air separator of the powder supply system may comprise a screw conveyor, or a powder cyclone separator having a powder outlet in fluid communication with the powder inlet.
The mixing unit may further comprise a vacuum pump being in fluid communication with the low-pressure vessel and with a gas outlet of the powder cyclone separator.
The mixing unit may further comprise a cooler arranged downstream the pump.
According to a second aspect, a liquid product processing line is provided, comprising a mixing unit according to the first aspect.
According to a third aspect, a method for mixing is provided. The method comprises the steps of providing a flow of liquid from a liquid supply system comprising a deaeration system; providing an amount of powder through a powder supply system comprising an air separator; feeding said flow of liquid and said amount of powder to a low-pressure vessel for mixing said liquid with said powder; and increasing the pressure of the mixed product by pumping said mixed product out from said low-pressure vessel.
Preferred embodiments of the present invention will now be described in greater detail herein below with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Starting with
The mixing unit 100 may consequently form part of a liquid food processing line, or plant, whereby additional food processing equipment (not shown) may be arranged in fluid communication with the mixing unit 100, either upstream or downstream.
The mixing unit 100 comprises a low-pressure vessel 110, a liquid supply system 120 being in communication with the vessel 110 via a liquid inlet 122, a powder supply system 130 being in communication with the vessel 110 via a powder inlet 132, and a discharge system 140 being in communication with the vessel 110 via a product outlet 112. In accordance with the embodiment described herein, the liquid supply system 120 comprises a deaeration system 200, the powder supply system 130 comprises an air separator 134, and said discharge system 140 comprises a pump 142 for pumping the mixed product under increased pressure.
The low-pressure vessel 110 may enclose various mixing equipment (not shown), such as turbo units with a rotor and a perforated stator in order to ensure an efficient and reliable mixing process. Such mixing equipment is for example known from Tetra Almix In-Line vacuum high shear mixer, which is commercially available.
The low-pressure vessel 110 is in communication with a vacuum pump 150 via an outlet 114, preferably arranged at an upper position of the vessel 110. The vacuum pump 150 is configured to create a very low pressure inside the vessel 110, being close, such as in the neighborhood of 1° C., for example, 0-2° C., to the boiling pressure of the liquid product inside the vessel 110.
The air separator 134 of the powder supply system 132 preferably comprises a powder cyclone separator having a powder outlet 135 in fluid communication with the powder inlet 132 of the low pressure vessel 110. Further to this, the powder cyclone separator 134 has a gas outlet 136 being in fluid communication with the vacuum pump 150, optionally via a flow control valve 160. Hence the vacuum pump 150 will draw gas, such as air, from the vessel 110 as well as from the gas outlet 136 of the powder cyclone separator 134.
The powder is consequently introduced via the powder cyclone separator 134, letting the majority of the carrier air out, while the powder falls down into the mixer/vacuum vessel 110. In certain embodiments two or more separation steps are preferred, realized either by arranging two or more cyclone separators 134 in series, or by circulating the powder over a single cyclone separator 134.
The discharge system 140 is preferably connected to a lower part of the vessel 110, i.e. the outlet 112 is arranged at a vertically low position. The pump 142 is configured to pump out mixed product from the vessel 110 at an increased pressure, such as 3-4 Bar(g). By this the very little remaining air from the mixing will rapidly dissolve into the water, which due to the deaeration of the liquid by means of the deaeration system 200, is very prone to absorbing air into the dissolved state again. A valve 144 is preferably provided downstream of the exit pump 142, and the fluid channel from the pump 142 to the pressure increase point, i.e. at the position of the valve 144, should be long enough for the dissolving kinetics. The distance should preferably be selected such that the time for product to flow this distance is approximately 5-10 seconds. The pressure should preferably be released gently to avoid transition from dissolved state into bubbles again. Such gentle pressure decrease could be provided by means of a pipe having increased inner diameter, over a distance such as 1 meter.
The discharge system 140 may further comprise a cooler 146. If the product is to be cooled after the mixing, it is recommended that the cooling take place just after the pump 142 as the solubility of air is higher the cooler the fluid is.
Still referring to
An embodiment of the deaeration system 200 is shown in
The deaeration system 200 of the liquid supply system 120 has a fluid channel 202 in connection with the low-pressure vessel 110. A throttling point 204 is provided in direct connection with an inlet 212 of the low-pressure vessel 110. The inlet 212 forms a horizontal diffusion and bubble separation channel. Optionally, the fluid channel 202 connects with an intermediate tank, and an exit pump may be provided and arranged in fluid communication with an outlet of the intermediate low-pressure tank. Further to this, a vacuum pump may be connected via a pipe at the top of the intermediate tank for the exhaust gases. A very low pressure may be required for cold water deaeration. The pressure depends on the desired amount of dissolved oxygen, but approximately ΔT≈−5−(−0.5° C.).
The throttling point 204 provides a point of nucleation by a high pressure drop, such as >3.5 Bar. After the throttling point the pressure should preferably remain the same as, or very close to the pressure in the vacuum vessel. Thus the throttling point should preferably—without any further pressure drops due to, e.g., a valve bend or similar—be directly connected to the horizontal diffusion and bubble separation channel, i.e., the inlet 212. Here, further deaeration takes place together with bubble separation. The length of the inlet 212 may depend on the desired performance, but normally it should be within the range of 2-3 m. The diameter is strongly depending on the desired flow rate. The inlet 212 is connected to the vessel 110, or optionally to the intermediate low-pressure tank in which low oxygen equilibrium level prevail by a vacuum pressure close to the pressure corresponding to boiling (ΔT≈−0.5° C.). Thus it is important to control this pressure to be close to boiling, i.e., flash, but without the risk of flashing.
An example of a deaerator 200 is shown in
Now turning to
The invention has mainly been described with reference to a few embodiments. However, as is readily understood by a person skilled in the art, other embodiments than the ones disclosed above are equally possible within the scope of the invention, as defined by the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1451576-1 | Dec 2014 | SE | national |
This application is the United States national stage entry under 35 U.S.C. §371 of International Application No. PCT/EP2015/080464, filed on Dec. 18, 2015 and published as WO 2016/097278 A1, which claims priority to Swedish Patent Application No. 1451576-1, filed on Dec. 18, 2014. The contents of these applications are each incorporated herein by reference in their entirety.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2015/080464 | 12/18/2015 | WO | 00 |