This invention relates to agricultural equipment. The subject matter involves apparatus and methods for injecting viscous fertilizers, including but not limited to dewatered biosolids, semisolid manure, and viscous fertilizers and soil amenders, below the surface of the soil. The subject matter also involves apparatus and methods for creating a continuous flow of viscous material and for dividing a flow of viscous material.
Fluid agricultural fertilizers include manure, sewerage and septage and chemical fertilizers with a solids content under about 13 percent by weight. Application of such fluid fertilizers may be done by flood irrigation, aerial spraying, irrigation sprayers, mobile surface sprayers (tank-type or drag hose type, either of which may incorporate tillers to incorporate the liquid into the soil), and fluid injectors. Fluid injector applicators typically use a shank to loosen and create voids in the soil so that the liquid fertilizer may be injected into the soil immediately behind the shank. Gaseous anhydrous ammonia may be injected in the same fashion. These systems can leave fluid at the surface if the voids created below the surface are not large enough to accept the volume of fluid injected.
Fluid agricultural fertilizer application methods have many disadvantages, both in cost and effectiveness. Flood irrigation, aerial spraying, and irrigation sprayers have significant costs and are limited by the configuration or topography of the fields. Liquid manure or treated sewerage fertilizer may produce significant malodors. Mobile surface spraying and fluid injectors are costly because they require large volumes of liquid to be transported to the application site, and the volume of fluid to be applied limits the amount of solid nutrients which may be applied at one time. Tank surface sprayers cause soil compaction and high fuel costs due to the weight of the fluid necessarily carried. Drag hose surface spraying is often impractical on sloped or irregularly-shaped fields. As the solid content of fluid agricultural fertilizer increases, fluid application systems become prone to malfunctions and may require special pumps. Fluid systems may also require agitation to keep solids in suspension. Mobile spraying applications often require tilling to incorporate the fertilizer into the soil and to reduce malodors. Fluid injection applicators, such as that described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,865,131 (Dietrich), have been developed to place the liquid below the surface and reduce the need for tilling, but many of the problems of fluid application methods remain: large volumes of fluid to transport, limited amounts of nutrients which may be applied at one time, soil compaction, and difficulty accepting higher solid content. For treated sewerage, environmental regulations often limit where fluids may be applied because of malodors or the potential for the fluid to migrate to watercourses.
Conventional fluid injection systems are not generally adapted for the injection of high-pressure fluids. Such systems, with a tubular injector mounted behind a shank, are also not adaptable to the application of viscous fertilizers, in part because sufficient void space is not maintained below the surface of the soil to accept the viscous fertilizer, in part because they do not operate at high enough pressure, and in part because the equipment may not be adapted to the solids content of viscous fertilizers.
Between about 13-40% solid content by weight, fertilizers, soil amenders, and soil conditioners are viscous, and the term “viscous fertilizer” in this disclosure includes such a range of solid content. However, the apparatus and methods described are effective on a wider range of materials, and the term “viscous fertilizer” as used in this disclosure also refers to fertilizers, soil amenders, and soil conditioners with a solid content falling within a range whose lower limit is from 0% to 40% and whose upper limit both is above the lower limit and is from 13% to 52%. “Viscous fertilizers” include, but are not limited to, biosolids, dewatered biosolids, sewage sludge, manure, slurries, or other chemical or mineral fertilizers in the 0-52% solid content range.
Viscous fertilizers above about 13% solid content have traditionally been applied by manure spreaders that involve an open-topped hopper, a conveying mechanism (e.g, augers, a conveyor belt floor, a live bottom floor, a walking floor, an apron chain, or a push blade) which conveys the viscous fertilizer to an open end or side of the hopper where rotating tines fling the material into the air, from which it falls onto the surface of the ground. A second pass over the application area is often required to till the material into the soil and to mitigate malodors. Such viscous fertilizers may also be applied in bulk and then spread with earthmoving equipment. All these methods may result in uneven application of the viscous fertilizer and repeated and costly reworking of the soil.
Fertilizers, soil amenders, and soil conditioners with higher solids contents may be applied as are viscous fertilizers. They may also be supplied in granular or pellet form, in which case they may be applied with a centrifugal spreader.
The use of biosolids for fertilization, soil amendment, and/or soil conditioning presents particular problems. At a sewerage treatment plant, for example, biosolids are found in sewerage at only a few percent solid content by weight. However, the cost of transporting the great quantities of such fluid required and the difficulties in the agricultural application of such a fluid to the soil generally make it more efficient to dewater the biosolids before their use in agriculture.
The present invention resolves many of the problems with traditional agricultural application of fluids and viscous fertilizers by providing, in various aspects and embodiments, apparatus and methods for injecting viscous fertilizer below the surface of the soil. Compared to mobile surface spraying of fluids, the invention generally requires less material to be transported to the site of application (i.e., less water) and causes less soil compaction from the weight of a fluid tank. As compared to application of fluid fertilizers, the invention generally allows higher concentrations of nutrients to be applied at one time due to the higher nutrient concentration of the viscous fertilizer, relaxation of limitations on the amount of fluid fertilizer that can be applied to the soil at any one time, and broader implementation while complying with nutrient management regulations and clean water regulations. The invention presents fewer malodor problems because the viscous fertilizer is injected underground and is not sprayed through the air and onto the soil surface. The invention permits viscous fertilizer to be applied in places where regulatory and environmental concerns would not permit fluid biosolids to be applied due to runoff and malodor concerns. Compared to traditional methods of applying of solid and viscous fertilizers, the injection of viscous fertilizer below the surface of the soil eliminates the need to make a second pass over the field to till the material into the soil, and offers advantages with respect to malodors, uniformity of application, and regulatory and environmental concerns.
To permit injection of viscous fertilizer below the surface of the soil, the invention provides for the delivery of viscous fertilizer under pressure to an injection mechanism which places the viscous fertilizer below the surface of the soil. The viscous material is pressurized and movement motivated by a pump, which in some embodiments is a positive displacement, rotary lobe pump. The invention further provides for the conveyance of viscous fertilizer to this pump in a continuous manner, so as to allow the injection of viscous fertilizer to be uniform. In some embodiments, a proportioner permits the viscous fertilizer to be proportioned among multiple injectors so as to speed the injection process.
In one embodiment, the invention comprises a trailer-mounted open top container box for receiving and holding the viscous fertilizer. A hydraulically operated push blade pushes the viscous fertilizer rearward against a third side wall of the container having an outlet. In one such embodiment, particularly suitable for dewatered biosolids injection, the outlet is 6 inches high and 9 inches wide. The third side wall usefully has facets angled so as to help direct the viscous fertilizer through the outlet hole to the pump, which is usefully also mounted on or otherwise carried on the trailer. In this embodiment, the pump is preferably powered by a power take-off shaft. The pressurized viscous fertilizer exiting the pump in turn enters a proportioner, usefully also mounted on or otherwise carried on the trailer, which in some embodiments divides the flow; in one embodiment, into 9 divisions. The streams are directed into a delivery system comprising flexible hoses and/or pipes adapted to hold pressurized material from each flow division. The hoses direct the pressurized viscous fertilizer to an injection mechanism, which in some embodiments is also mounted on the trailer and additionally supported by gauge wheels.
In operation of this embodiment, a vehicle, such as a tractor, pulls the trailer forward. In the injection mechanism, a coulter for each division cuts vertically through any stubble into the soil, followed by shanks with sweep points which create voids under the soil. The voids are maintained under extension plates mounted behind the sweep points. Tubular injectors mounted in the extension plates allow pressurized viscous fertilizer that enters the tubular injectors to be expelled into the void, which closes over the injected viscous fertilizer as the injection mechanism passes. In another embodiment, the coulters may be omitted.
The depth of the injection, preferably 3 to 6 inches below the surface of the soil, is adjustable in certain embodiments by adjusting the height of a strut onto which the gauge wheels are mounted.
For a given pump speed, the speed of the vehicle will determine the rate of viscous fertilizer injection per unit area of soil surface (e.g., tons per acre). This rate may be further adjusted to accommodate the solids content of the viscous fertilizer to yield a desired amount of solid material injected per unit area of soil surface. For a given pump speed and vehicle speed, the push blade speed is typically adjusted to be slower than a speed that would push the viscous fertilizer faster than the pump can accept it (eventually causing the viscous fertilizer to spill out of the top of the box) and faster than a speed that allows the pump to accept viscous fertilizer through the outlet hole of the container box faster than the push blade supplies it to the outlet hole (eventually causing the level of viscous fertilizer adjacent to the outlet hole to fall to the point where air can enter the outlet hole and the pump, causing uneven injection and possibly causing the pump to stop). Although an adjustable push blade speed is not required, such adjustment permits a wider range of vehicle speeds to be used in operation.
The above and other objects and advantages of the present invention will be apparent upon consideration of the following detailed description, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which like reference characters refer to like parts throughout, and in which:
a through 7e are views of different embodiments of top plate 506 of cylindrical chamber 501 of proportioner 500.
In still another embodiment, proportioner 500, delivery system 600, and injection mechanism 700 are mounted on trailer 800 or a self-propelled vehicle, while the container box 200, conveying apparatus 300, and pump 400 are not, and the viscous fertilizer moves from the pump to the proportioner through drag hose comprising a length of flexible hose which may drag on the ground. Such an embodiment may include one or more booster pumps between pump 400 and injection mechanism 700.
In yet another embodiment, pump 400, proportioner 500, delivery system 600, and injection mechanism 700 are mounted on trailer 800 or self-propelled vehicle, while container box 200 and conveying apparatus 300 are not, and viscous fertilizer 201 moves from container box 200 to pump 400 through drag hose comprising a length of flexible hose which may drag on the ground. Such an embodiment may include one or more additional pumps between container box 200 and pump 400.
In a typical embodiment of the present invention, trailer 800 is operably linked to leading vehicle 803, which vehicle usefully comprises power take off shaft 806 which provides power pump 400 and hydraulic pump 810 which provides power to hydraulic cylinder 302, proportioner 500, and hydraulic cylinder 704. In other embodiments, any component requiring power may be powered by another power source, such as a hydraulic pump, a power take off mechanism, an engine, electricity, or others. In still other embodiments, any such power source may be integrated with the component requiring the power or may be located on leading vehicle 803, on trailer 800, on a self-propelled vehicle, or elsewhere.
In the embodiment depicted in
Leading vehicle 803 may usefully comprise hydraulic pump 810 which is operably connected via hydraulic hoses 809 to (i) hydraulic cylinder 302 operating push blade 301 (shown in
In some embodiments, container box 200 for containing viscous fertilizer 201 is mounted to and above trailer frame 801. Container box 200 comprises floor 202, left side wall 203, right side wall 206 (shown in
In still other embodiments, various other mechanisms may be used to convey viscous fertilizer 201 to pump 400. These may include containers or hoppers which feed pump 400 by gravity or by a combination of gravity and vibration of viscous fertilizer 201, pre-stage pumps, augers, apron chains, or floor 202 comprising a conveyor belt, live bottom, or walking floor mechanism.
In a typical embodiment, pump 400 and proportioner 500 are mounted to trailer frame 801 rearward of third side wall 204. Proportioner 500 has at least one outlet port 507, typically a plurality of outlet ports 507, in some embodiment nine outlet ports 507 (shown in
Mounted behind and below trailer frame 801 in a typical embodiment is injection mechanism 700 comprising injector frame 701 oriented roughly parallel to the surface of the soil and extending in a traverse direction from the longitudinal axis of trailer frame 801. Plow frame 701 extends a distance, typically at least one foot, in a transverse direction beyond left trailer tires 802 and beyond the right trailer tires. In other embodiments, injector frame 701 may be shaped differently and may be of a shorter or longer extent in a traverse direction from the longitudinal axis of trailer frame 801. In still other embodiments, the injector frame may be omitted and the remainder of the injection mechanism 700 may be mounted to trailer frame 801.
Usefully, an adjustable mounting apparatus, such as parallel linkage 703, connects the rear of trailer frame 801 and the front end of injector frame 701 such that hydraulic cylinders 704 may be actuated to raise injection mechanism 700, or hydraulic cylinders 704 may be disengaged allowing injection mechanism 700 to engage the soil. In other embodiments, the number of hydraulic cylinders may vary. This is useful to permit apparatus 100 to be moved over surfaces (e.g., roads) without disturbing the surface or damaging injection mechanism 700. In still other embodiments, an adjustable mounting apparatus may be omitted, or another type of apparatus for disengaging injection apparatus 700 from the surface of the soil (such as a hinging or folding of injector frame 701) may be used.
In typical embodiments, at least one, typically two, on occasion more, gauge wheels 702, typically with tires, support injector frame 701 when hydraulic cylinders 704 is disengaged. In the embodiment depicted in
In this exemplary embodiment, conveying apparatus 300 comprises push blade 301 above which is mounted push blade extension 304. Push blade extension 304 is inclined in a rearward direction 303 to help prevent viscous fertilizer 201 from overtopping the push blade. Hydraulic cylinder 302 is powered by and connected to vehicle-mounted hydraulic pump 810 via hydraulic hoses 809 (shown in
Third side wall 204 of container box 200 has, in the illustrated embodiment, extension 207 along its top edge and rectangular outlet hole 307 centered along the bottom edge of third side wall 204. In other embodiments, outlet hole 307 may be of other shapes and orientations. The plane of the entrance to outlet hole 307 is offset behind the surface defined by the rearmost edges of side walls 203, 206 and floor 202. Third side wall 204 has facets 209, 210, 211 (also illustrated in
As viscous fertilizer 201 is pushed rearward in operation by push blade 301, the facets 209, 210, 211 of third side wall 204 direct viscous fertilizer 201 toward outlet hole 307 in third side wall 204 which is connected to pump 400.
Above outlet hole 307 in this embodiment, baffle 308 is attached to third side wall 204 about one-third of the distance from floor extension 202 to the top of third side wall 204. When hydraulic cylinder 302 is operated so slowly as to move less viscous fertilizer 201 toward outlet hole 307 than pump 400 draws out of container box 200 through outlet hole 307, a hole may form in the surface of viscous fertilizer 201 adjacent to third side wall 204. If this situation continues, the hole may deepen and eventually reach outlet hole 307, thereby disrupting the continuous flow of viscous fertilizer to pump 400 and thereafter below the surface of the soil. Baffle 308 usefully delays the onset of this adverse operational condition by allowing the pump to draw viscous fertilizer into outlet hole 307 from an area of container box 200 which is not adjacent to third side wall 204. In other embodiments, the baffle may be omitted. In still other embodiments, floor extension 212 may be extended laterally so as to increase the degree of inclination from the vertical of center facet 209, or may not coplanar with the floor 202. Excessive of inclination of center facet 209 may result in a large volume of viscous fertilizer 201 that cannot be removed from container box 200 through use of conveying apparatus 300.
In another embodiment, outlet hole 307 is located in floor extension 212 with pump 400 moved to accommodate the position of outlet hole 307 or a conduit added to carry viscous fertilizer 201 from outlet hole 307 to pump 400.
Pump 400 is typically capable of pumping viscous fertilizer 201 at a pressure of at least 40 p.s.i. In operation of the embodiment depicted in
With further reference to the embodiment illustrated in
Referring to the particular embodiment depicted in
In other embodiments of proportioner 500, chamber 501 may have other orientations. Wall 514 and may be in the shape of a prism, or a combination of portions of a prism or cylinder. Shaft 509 may turn in the other direction. The number of outlet ports 507 with corresponding pipes 503 may be more or less. Similarly, the number of arms 510, rods 511, pucks 512, and springs 513 may be more or less. In another embodiment, pipes 503 may be of a different shape or eliminated such that delivery system 600 is connected directly to cylindrical chamber 501.
In operation of the embodiment shown in
In other embodiments of proportioner 500, bias may be applied to puck 512 through a torsion or planar spring. In yet other embodiments, arm 510 may be hinged to the shaft 509, and the bias may be applied to the entire arm. In yet other embodiments, the rotating parts may be replaced with a rotating disk which lies flat against the bottom surface of wear plate 517. This disk has solid areas and open areas (such as holes) which alternately cover and expose portions of each outlet port 507 as the disk spins, in the same manner as pucks 512 in the embodiment shown in
Proportioner 500 additionally serves as a macerator and apparatus to break up solid clumps within viscous fertilizer 201 and to prevent solid clumps from clogging delivery system 600 and injector mechanism 700. This is accomplished in three ways. First, the vertical orientation of proportioner 500, with top plate 506 above bottom plate 505 and walls 504 oriented vertically, allows relatively dense contaminants in viscous fertilizer 201, such as rocks or pieces of metal, to collect on bottom plate 505 rather than pass out through the outlet ports 507. A clean-out hole 517 (shown in
The pressure of viscous fertilizer 201 maintained in proportioning system 600 is, in part, dependent upon the relative cross sectional area of conduit 402 and the sum of the cross sectional areas of all outlet ports 507 minus the amount of those areas covered by pucks 512. Thus, to maintain a desired pressure of viscous fertilizer 201 which may facilitate its movement through proportioning system 600, different embodiments may vary the number of outlet ports 507 or vary the number of pucks 512 (with corresponding different numbers of arms 510, bars 511, springs 513, and scrapers 515). One such embodiment, reflected in the embodiment in
It is preferred that the pressure in proportioning system 600 remain nearly constant in order that the rate of injection of viscous fertilizer below the surface of the soil remain constant, and thus the amount of nutrients injected per acre be uniform. Some variation in pressure is sometimes desirable, however, as it may help clear any potential any clogs that may form in proportioning system 600. To maintain a constant pressure, it is desirable that the total cross sectional area of outlet ports 507 exposed (that is, not covered by pucks 512) remain nearly constant throughout the entire rotation of the rotating parts relative to the outlet ports. In the exemplary embodiment illustrated in
In yet other embodiments, the number of outlet ports 507 may be either more or less, and the number of pucks 512 may be greater than one. In
The radial extent of puck 512 is greater than the radial extent of outlet port 507 such that puck 512 has both a radially inner portion and a radially outer portion in contact with the bottom face of wear plate 517 throughout the entire rotation of the rotating parts relative to top plate 506 and wear plate 517. This permits a greater bias pressure to be applied to each puck 512 by spring 513 without puck 512 catching on the lip of outlet port 507. Bar 508, whose bottom surface is coplanar with the bottom face of wear plate 517, also helps serve the same function.
Referring again to
Usefully, injection mechanism 700, may be disengaged from the surface of the soil 101 by hydraulic cylinder 704. When actuated, cylinder 704 raises parallel linkage 703 which connects injector frame 701 to trailer frame 801. Hydraulic cylinder 704 is powered by hydraulic pump 810 on vehicle 803 (shown in
In the embodiment illustrated, a series of nine coulters 705 are mounted onto injector frame 701, arranged parallel to forward direction 804 and arranged to cut through any stubble into the surface of the soil 101 when apparatus 100 is moved in the forward direction 804. Coulters 705 are mounted in two rows alternating front and rear, with hinges and springs 706 biased such that when coulter 705 hits a large rock or similar obstruction, it is deflected backwards, and then sprung back into position when the obstruction is passed. In another embodiment, coulter 705 is held in position by shear fittings, or rigidly attached to injector frame 701. Coulters 705, springs 706, and their arrangement and operation are well known in the art. In another embodiment, the coulters and springs are omitted. In another embodiment, the relative location of the coulters is changed to a single row, a chevron, or another arrangement.
Also mounted onto injector frame 701 in this embodiment are a series of nine shanks 707 with hinges and springs 716 arranged to follow coulters 705 when apparatus 100 is moved in forward direction 804. The embodiment in
Behind each sweep point 708, in typical embodiments, is extension plate 710 which is oriented parallel to the surface of the soil 101. Through the extension plate is a hole to which tubular injector 711 is butted. Tubular injector 711 extends from extension plate 710 upward to fitting 603 which attaches the top of injector 711 to the flexible hose 602. Each tubular injector 711 is rigidly attached to its corresponding shank 707 by bracket 712 and U-bolt 713. Each extension plate 710 is positioned against shank 707 by flange 714 attached to extension plate 710 and by bolts 709. Tab 715 at the rear of extension plate 710 is inclined downward and rearward. In other embodiments, tubular injector 711 and/or extension plate 710 may be fitted and attached to the shank in another manner, including welding, riveting, bolting, and/or with interlocking flanges. In yet other embodiments, a separate extension plate 710 may be omitted an sweep point 708 may extend in a rearward direction 303 to a point behind injector 711.
In other embodiments, a different point shape may be used, including but not limited to narrower sweep points 708, chisel points, or knife points, and/or the width of extension plate 710 may be narrowed, such that operation of apparatus 100 results in less tilling of the soil surface; however, these embodiments generally result in smaller voids 716 which may limit the amount of viscous fertilizer 201 that may be injected below the surface of the soil 101. In another embodiment, a chisel point may be used and extension plate 710 eliminated, such that injector 711 is mounted to shank 707 such that the lower end of injector 711 terminates below the surface of the soil 101 behind shank 707, in which case viscous fertilizer 201 would be injected in a vertical slit cut by the chisel point and shank 707, the depth of which depends in part upon the relative vertical position of the lower end of injector 711 to the lower end of shank 707 and the chisel point.
All publications, patents, patent applications and other documents cited in this application are hereby incorporated by reference in their entireties for all purposes to the same extent as if each individual publication, patent, patent application or other document were individually indicated to be incorporated by reference for all purposes.
While various specific embodiments have been illustrated and described, it will be appreciated that various changes can be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention(s).
This application is a divisional of application Ser. No. 11/410,811, filed Apr. 24, 2006, the contents of which are incorporated herein in its entirety by reference thereto.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11410811 | Apr 2006 | US |
Child | 12849671 | US |