Claims
- 1. A hopper that eliminates bridging of a particulate material it contains, comprising:
- an outlet;
- a wall extending upward from said outlet and including a plurality of sections, each section joined to the next-lower section and inclined at a less steep angle of inclination with respect to horizontal than the adjoining next-lower section, wherein the angles of inclination of said plurality of sections are such as to satisfy the equations
- .sigma..sub.n (Tan .theta.+.mu.)dp=ydA
- where
- .sigma..sub.n is stress perpendicular to the wall of the hopper,
- .theta. is the inclination of the hopper wall with respect to vertical,
- .mu. is coefficient of friction between the wall and the particulate material, and
- .gamma. is the bulk specific weight of the particulate material, and
- .sigma..sub.n =fc/(.mu..sup.2 +1)
- where
- f.sub.c is the unconfined yield stress of the particulate material, and
- .mu. is the coefficient of friction between the wall and the particulate material.
- 2. The hopper of claim 1 wherein the hopper is a one-dimensional convergence hopper and wherein the angles of inclination of said plurality of sections satisfy the following equation
- L/w=0.342.pi.(Tan .theta..sub.1 -Tan .theta.)/(1.368 Tan .theta..sub.1 +1.6.mu.)
- where for each section
- L is the length of the straight portion at the top of the section,
- W is the width of the outlet of the section,
- .theta..sub.1 is the inclination of the hopperwall with respect to vertical for the section,
- .THETA..sub.2 is the inclination of the hopper wall with respect to vertical for the next-higher section, and
- .mu. is the coefficient of friction between the wall and the particulate material.
- 3. The hopper of claim 1 wherein the hopper is a one-dimensional convergence hopper and wherein for each section the angle of inclination .theta. of the hopper wall with respect to the vertical is given by the following equation
- Tan .theta.=(y(.pi.w/4+L)(u.sup.2 +1)/(.pi.f.sub.c)-0.1 .mu.L(.pi.w) -0.425.mu.)/0.342
- where for each section
- .gamma. is the bulk specific weight of the particulate material,
- W is the width of the outlet of the section,
- L is the length of the straight portion at the top of the section,
- .mu. is the coefficient of friction between the wall and the particulate material, and
- f.sub.c is the unconfined yield stress of the particulate material.
- 4. The hopper of claim 1 wherein the hopper includes an upper chisel portion and a lower one-dimensional convergence portion and wherein the angles of inclination of said plurality of sections in said upper chisel portion satisfy the following equation
- Tan .theta..sub.2 =(B.sub.2 /B.sub.1)(Tan .theta..sub.1 +.mu.)-.mu.
- where for each section
- .theta..sub.1 is the inclination of the hopper wall with respect to vertical for the section,
- B.sub.1 is the outlet size for the section,
- .theta..sub.2 is the inclination of the hopper wall with respect to vertical for the next-higher section,
- B.sub.2 is the outlet size for the bottom of the next-higher section, and
- .mu. is the coefficient of friction between the wall and the particulate material, and the angles of inclination of said plurality of sections in the lower one-dimensional convergence portion satisfy the following equation,
- L/w=0.342.pi.(Tan .theta..sub.1 -Tan .theta.)/(1.368 Tan .theta..sub.1 +1.6.mu.)
- where for each section
- L is the length of the outlet of the straight portion at the top of the section,
- W is the width of the outlet of the section,
- .theta..sub.1 is the inclination of the hopper wall with respect to vertical for the section,
- .THETA..sub.2 is the inclination of the hopper wall with respect to vertical for the next-higher section, and
- .mu. is the coefficient of friction between the wall and the particulate material.
- 5. The hopper of claim 1 wherein the hopper includes an upper chisel portion and a lower one-dimensional convergence portion and wherein for each section of said upper chisel portion the angle of inclination .theta. of the hopper wall with respect to the vertical is given by the following equation
- Tan .theta.=y(A/P)(.mu..sup.2 +1)/fc-.mu.
- where for each section
- .gamma. is the bulk specific weight of the particulate material,
- A is the area of the outlet of the section,
- P is the periphery of the outlet of the section,
- .mu. is the coefficient of friction between the wall and the particulate material, and
- f.sub.c is the unconfined yield stress of the particulate material, and wherein for each section of said lower one-dimensional convergence portion the angle of inclination .theta. of the hopper wall with respect to the vertical is given by the following equation
- Tan .theta.=(y(.pi.w/4+L)(u.sup.2 +1)/(.pi.f.sub.c)-0.1 .mu.L(.pi.w) -0.425.mu.)/0.342
- where for each section
- .gamma. is the bulk specific weight of the particulate material,
- W is the width of the outlet of the section,
- L is the length of the straight portion at the top of the section,
- .mu. is the coefficient of friction between the wall and the particulate material, and
- f.sub.c is the unconfined yield stress of the particulate material.
- 6. The hopper of claim 1 wherein the hopper is an offset one-dimensional hopper and wherein each of said plurality of sections includes a maximum angle of inclination and a minimum angle of inclination which when averaged define an average angle of inclination for each section, and wherein the average angles of inclination of said plurality of sections satisfy the following equation,
- L/w=0.342.pi.(Tan .theta..sub.1 -Tan .theta.)/(1.368 Tan .theta..sub.1 +1.6.mu.)
- where for each section
- L is the length of the straight portion at the top of the section,
- W is the width of the outlet of the section,
- .theta..sub.1 is the average inclination of the hopper wall with respect to vertical for the section,
- .THETA..sub.2 is the average inclination of the hopper wall with respect to vertical for the next-higher section, and
- .mu. is the coefficient of friction between the wall and the particulate material.
CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 60/030321 filed Nov. 4, 1996.
US Referenced Citations (7)