This application claims the benefit of International Application Number PCT/GB01/05509, which was published in English on Jun. 20, 2002.
The present invention relates to briquettes and to a method of making them. More particularly, it relates to a briquette which is formed to have a readily accessible hole by which it can be suspended on, or fixed to, a support.
The invention is of particular use in the manufacture of pesticide blocks, especially rodenticide blocks, but is also believed to have use in the manufacture of blocks for domestic and/or sanitary applications such as lavatory cleaning or freshening blocks and air freshening blocks.
In the United Kingdom there are requirements for regulatory purposes to be able to secure rodenticide-containing bait blocks. This is normally achieved by introducing a hole in the block. A nail or pin can then be used to secure the block in the location required to ensure that that block is not removed from this location. Such blocks are commercially available but they are manufactured by either an extrusion process or a casting process. It would also be possible to produce blocks with holes using press equipment similar to a tablet press. Although an extrusion process can be operated as a continuous process, the material to be extruded needs to have sufficient fluidity otherwise blocking of the extrusion die can occur. Also, a product having a hole, obtained by an extrusion process, will have a hole of uniform dimensions which is as deep as the thickness of the extruded product. Unless the extruded product is cut, after extrusion, into thin slices it is necessary to use long nails or pins to secure the extruded product through the hole provided.
One aim of the present invention is to provide a briquette comprising compacted particulate material which has a pierceable section of non-uniform dimensions which can be readily pierced by a nail or rod of relatively short length to achieve a secure fastening.
Accordingly, the present invention provides a briquette, comprising compacted particulate material, having an outer region and an inner region, said inner region being provided with a well having a diameter which decreases progressively in a non-linear relationship with increasing distance from the top of the well such that the sides of the well extend convexly into the well.
The briquettes of the present invention are formed not with a hole of uniform dimension but with a well which has sides which extend convexly into the well. Preferably, the well does not have sides which in cross-section describe the arc of a circle since in such a case the rate of decrease of the diameter of the well with increasing depth of the well (i.e. distance from the top to the bottom of the well) becomes so small that the well bottom, when pierced for suspension on a support, may not be readily accessible to the support. According to a preferred embodiment, the diameter at the bottom of the well is less than the depth of the well.
The purpose of the well is to allow secure fastening of the briquette onto a suitable support. The provision of a well which has a diameter larger than is necessary to achieve this results in a briquette which has a well volume which is excessively large to the detriment of the volume comprising the compacted particulate material. In a particularly preferred embodiment, the well has a shape which is defined by an inverse hyperbolic truncated cone. The well extends into the thickness of the briquette such that at the well bottom the disc of compacted material is sufficiently thin to enable it to be pierced easily. Preferably, a briquette according to the present invention is provided with two wells approaching each other from opposite sides of the briquette, i.e. the wells are aligned with each other. The edge of the briquette at its outer region is discontinuous at the junction of the top side of the briquette with the bottom side of the briquette and, typically, is pointed. In the case of a rodenticide block such a pointed edge provides a location on the block at which a rodent can readily bite. Thus, according to a preferred embodiment the inner region on a first side of the briquette is provided with a first well and the inner region on a second side of the briquette opposite to the first side is provided with a second well opposite to the first well. According to this preferred embodiment, the second well will also have a diameter which decreases progressively in a non-linear relationship with increasing distance from the top of the second well. Thus, the sides of the second well extend convexly into the second well and the dimensions of the first and second wells are similar and, preferably, identical.
According to a further aspect, the present invention provides a method of making a briquette, comprising compacted particulate material, having an outer region and an inner region, said inner region being provided with a well having a diameter which decreases progressively in a non-linear relationship with increasing distance from the top of the well such that the sides of the well extend convexly into the well which method comprises feeding a particulate material to be compacted into the nip between a first roll and a second, counter-rotating, roll, said first roll having a surface in which is provided at least one depression mould having a mould interior, a mould exterior at the circumference of the roll and a post extending radially from the lowest portion of the mould interior to an extremity within the circumference of the roll which post has a diameter which decreases progressively in a non-linear relationship with increasing distance from the lowest portion of the mould such that the sides of the post extend concavely away from the lowest portion of the mould, compacting the particulate material in the mould as the first and second rolls rotate through the nip and collecting the compacted briquette as it leaves the mould as the first and second rolls rotate away from the nip. In order to produce a briquette having two wells approaching each other from opposite sides of the briquette it is necessary for the second roll to have a surface in which is provided at least one depression mould having a mould interior, a mould exterior at the circumference of the roll and a post extending radially from the lowest portion of the mould interior to an extremity within the circumference of the second roll. The post has a diameter which decreases progressively in a non-linear relationship with increasing distance from the lowest portion of the mould interior such that the sides of the post extend concavely away from the lowest portion of the mould interior. It is necessary, of course, that the first and second rolls are aligned such that the mould provided in the surface of the first roll is opposed to the mould provided in the surface of the second roll with the post extending from the mould provided in the first roll being completely aligned with the post extending from the mould provided in the counter-rotating second roll. Typically, both the first and second rolls will each be provided with a plurality of moulds wherein the moulds and posts provided on the two rolls are exact opposites of each other and are aligned when turning in opposite directions of rotation.
The invention will now be described, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
Referring to
With reference to
As can be seen in
Although in the embodiment described above the moulds are designed to provide a briquette having wells which have a shape defined by an inverse hyperbolic truncated cone and a shape that is approximately toroidal it will be appreciated that other shapes can be achieved by the use of appropriately shaped moulds.
Rodenticide briquettes were made, according to the method described above, using the following formulation (wherein the percentages are by weight)
The briquette, thus produced, possessed integrity and did not crumble or break easily. The briquette had a thin disc of compressed material at its centre which was easily pierced by a nail to enable securement to a support.
Although the example describes the production of a rodenticide block it will be appreciated that different formulations can be manufactured into blocks, having different applications, according to the present invention. For instance, it will be appreciated that the present invention can be applied to the manufacture of blocks for sanitary and/or domestic use such as toilet freshening blocks, cistern blocks and air freshening blocks.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0030340.4 | Dec 2000 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/GB01/05509 | 12/13/2001 | WO | 00 | 10/31/2003 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO02/47896 | 6/20/2002 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2595865 | Lunsford | May 1952 | A |
3113076 | Jacobs | Dec 1963 | A |
3840631 | Alexander | Oct 1974 | A |
4057381 | Korsch | Nov 1977 | A |
4798529 | Klinner | Jan 1989 | A |
4816262 | McMullen | Mar 1989 | A |
4891218 | Sherman | Jan 1990 | A |
5449514 | Marshall et al. | Sep 1995 | A |
6009690 | Breitenbach | Jan 2000 | A |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20040060455 A1 | Apr 2004 | US |