This invention relates to chutes for use in inspection and sorting apparatus, particularly to such apparatus in which products are fed to a chute which delivers it to a sorting or inspection station. Sorting apparatus of this type is described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,513,868; 4,630,736; and 5,628,411. Inspection apparatus can use similar techniques but for the purpose of gathering data, rather than ejecting unacceptable pieces from the product stream.
For some products, grooved or channeled chutes are used to orient and position the product pieces when they leave the lower end of the chute. This facilitates the sorting or inspection process, and in sorting apparatus can help to ensure that devices and mechanisms used to eject pieces from the product stream operate only on the properly selected pieces.
In the inspection station in apparatus of the kind to which the invention relates, which will typically use an optical system to differentiate between product pieces of different quality, ideally each product piece in the product stream is separate from all adjacent pieces so that individuals can be readily identified. At the same time it is of course desirable to have as many pieces as possible in the product stream. As the product flows off the vibrator it is moving relatively slowly. In known apparatus, where the product feeds straight off a vibrator tray onto a channeled chute the product is fed straight into the channels. If two or more grains enter a channel at the same time they will travel side by side in the channel, a little slower than individual grains, that will catch up with them and then form bunches. Once in the channel there is a tendency for these bunches of product to travel at the same velocity and not separate out on the chute, thus passing the inspection station as bunches rather than streams of individual product. This reduces the efficiency of the inspection and in sorting apparatus can cause more than one grain to be ejected if a defect is detected. To avoid this it is necessary to limit the rate of flow of product into the chute and the capacity of the apparatus is reduced.
The present invention seeks to exploit the benefits of using channeled or grooved chutes in apparatus for delivering a plurality of product streams to an inspection station, but to reduce the risk of bunching and thereby maintain the efficiency of the inspection even at high bulk flow rates. According to the invention, a chute for use in this manner in sorting or inspection apparatus has an upper and a lower end, and comprises a first section with a smooth surface at the chute upper end, and a second section formed with grooves or channels, extending toward the lower end of the chute. We have found that the smooth surface of the first section allows pieces in the product stream to separate from one another such that by the time they reach the second section, they are more uniformly spaced. In this way, the risk of bunching is reduced.
In a chute according to the invention, the first and second sections are normally directly adjacent such that the product on the chute flows directly from the first section onto or into the second section. The smooth surface of the first section can have its lower edge directly over and contiguous with the walls of the channels or grooves in the second section. With this arrangement, the pieces in the product stream can move smoothly from the first to the second section, while remaining substantially in contact with one or other component at all times.
In its simplest form, the first section in a chute according to the invention comprises a plate disposed over a portion of the second section such that the channels or grooves in the second section extend toward the chute upper end beneath the first section. Conveniently, the first section can comprises a flat plate, and the second section an array of parallel channels or grooves in a plane parallel to another plate. However, either or both of the first and second sections can have a curved or undulating profile, with different combinations of profiles offering advantages in various applications of the invention. The first section typically extends at least 20% of the length of the chute from its upper to its lower end. Normally though, it will not extend more than 50% of the chute length.
Sorting apparatus using a chute according to the invention will as noted above, normally have an optical system at the sorting station. Suitable optical sorting systems are described in the patents referred to above. At the upper end of the chute a feed station normally comprises a horizontal conveyor carrying product from a hopper or other reservoir to be fed to the chute. Typically, the conveyor is a vibration conveyor, effecting some separation of the product pieces before they are fed to the chute.
As noted above, the invention is equally useful in inspection apparatus in which product in the stream leaving a chute is inspected for the purposes of data retrieval rather than sorting. Similar inspection mechanisms can be employed as are used in sorting apparatus of the kind just referred to. Such inspection is useful to gather attributes about the product flowing through the machine such as broken or distorted product pieces.
Grooved or channeled chutes are particularly suited to product with a relatively high concentration of defective product. One application of the invention is in “re-sorting” processes which involves two stages. In the first stage, only very high quality product is accepted by allowing quite a lot of good to be rejected with the poor quality product. The reject from this first pass, which has a higher concentration of defective product, is then sorted again to recover most of the good product. Channeled chutes are normally used for this second pass. Typically, less than 10% of the entire product stream is subjected to a second sort.
Chutes of the present invention are useful in apparatus for sorting and inspecting a wide range of products including for example, coffee beans and rice. Product having a generally elongate shape will of course tend to align themselves naturally in channels or grooves, but the channels and grooves are also effective for controlling the movement of product having widely different shapes.
The invention will now be described by way of example and with reference to the accompanying schematic drawing wherein:
As shown in
A typical chute according to the invention will have a width of around 300 mm, and a length of around 1200 mm. The length of the first section will normally be at least 20%, and preferably no more than 50% of the overall chute length. In the embodiment of
The chutes described each consist of two sections made from different materials. However, both sections could equally be formed or machined from a single piece of material provided a smooth transition from one section to another can be assured. The second section can also be made up of separate components or even individual channels assembled or merely grouped together and mounted on the apparatus of which the chute is a part. Profiles for the first section different from those particularly described can also be used, to give different degrees of lateral and translational separation of product before it reaches the second channeled or grooved section of the chute.
We have conducted tests which demonstrate particular improvement in sorting performance, i.e., less bunching in the channeled second section of the chute, at relatively high flow rates; for example, at flow rates of the order and exceeding 1000 kg per hour in a typical 300 mm chute of the kind referred to above. It was particularly beneficial in sorting long grain rice, as the smooth first section allows the product pieces to freely separate, both laterally and in the direction of flow, before engaging the channeled second section.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
0416717.7 | Jul 2004 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/GB05/00424 | 2/8/2005 | WO | 1/29/2007 |