This invention relates to apparatus for comminuting solid waste materials such as plastic sheet material.
The manufacture and forming of many products from plastic produces significant amounts of plastic waste material. Applicant has previously invented several unique apparatus for comminuting severable waste material, particularly plastic sheet material, into small, rather uniform particles or pieces that can be readily recycled or disposed of in an environmentally acceptable manner. Several generations of product line have been sold by Irwin Research & Development, Inc., under the product name “Chesaw” and have gained commercial success. One such prior invention is the subject of the Irwin, et al., U.S. Pat. No. 4,687,144 granted Aug. 18, 1987. Other such prior inventions are the subject of U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,836,527; 5,860,607; and 5,893,523.
The first prior invention of U.S. Pat. No. 4,687,144 was a vast improvement over various types of hammermills that had previously been used. The hammermills were quite bulky, extremely noisy, and prone to substantial damage when the mill received foreign material that it could not comminute. Although such prior Irwin, et al., invention was a vast improvement and was commercially successful, particularly in view of hammermills, it was rather expensive to manufacture and sometimes noisy in operation when processing certain materials. Furthermore, it was unable to satisfactorily comminute rather high density plastic materials.
The remaining prior inventions identified above were directed to improvements over the invention of U.S. Pat. No. 4,687,144. Such improvements were directed to improving the amount of comminuted material that could be generated in a given amount of time, to improve the manner in which the comminuting apparatus operated, and/or to enhance the ability of the comminuting apparatus to efficiently subdivide pieces of material that are otherwise difficult to comminute.
As an example, U.S. Pat. No. 5,836,527 was an improvement over the invention of U.S. Pat. No. 4,687,144. More particularly, an improved comminuting apparatus is provided which can significantly increase the amount of comminuted material produced in a given amount of time. Such device is relatively less expensive to manufacture, and is quieter to operate. Such apparatus provides an ability to comminute a wider variety of solid waste materials. More particularly, the solid waste comminuting apparatus carries material that is severed in the device via an airstream through a fan. Subdivided pieces of material are directed via the fan to a separator screen which is mounted within a centrifugal housing. The airstream carries small pieces through the separator screen into an outer volute chamber for discharge from the apparatus. Large pieces which are not capable of passing through the separator screen are recycled through a recycle outlet and a recycle conduit back to scissor rolls of the device for further size reduction. However, the complexity of the apparatus and the number of parts needed to construct the apparatus increased over the device of U.S. Pat. No. 4,687,144, which has proven undesirable for certain applications.
As another example, U.S. Pat. No. 5,860,607 is directed to an apparatus for comminuting waste materials, and includes a feed roll for feeding a continuous sheet of waste material into a shear intake manifold at a desired line speed and directing the waste material to scissor rolls. An additional feature includes a screw conveyor for recirculating subdivided pieces of comminuted material. More particularly, a feed roll delivers solid waste material into overlapping scissor rolls at a desired line speed. A pneumatic conveyor, in the form of an Archimedes screw, delivers the subdivided pieces of comminuted material for sorting and reprocessing. However, this improvement also increased the complexity of the comminuting apparatus, requiring a feed roll and a screw conveyor in addition to a pair of scissor rolls.
As yet another example, U.S. Pat. No. 5,893,523 is directed to an apparatus for comminuting waste material having feed roll delivery features. A feed roll is rotatably carried by a frame for directing waste material to a set of overlapping scissor rolls which shear waste material into subdivided pieces as the material passes between the scissor rolls. A separator screen is carried by the frame in association with at least one of the scissor rolls for separating subdivided pieces having a size less than a predetermined size, and for recirculating subdivided pieces having a size greater than a predetermined size. However, a separate feed roll is needed in addition to a pair of scissor rolls.
The present invention provides a vastly improved comminuting apparatus that is not only able to process significantly greater amounts of material in a given time, it is also better able to recirculate and sort severed solid waste material utilizing an apparatus that is formed with a simplified construction having fewer moving parts, proving more reliable, less costly to manufacture, and maintain and repair, and is more efficient to operate. It is also better able to sever a wider variety of different types of materials over a broader range of line speeds, in a feed-controlled manner from a web of material being received from a processing machine. Accordingly, the present invention provides an apparatus that is able to feed solid waste material into the comminuting apparatus in a relatively efficient and cost-effective manner, while also being able to handle a wide variety of severable materials.
The present invention provides a vastly improved comminuting apparatus that is also better able to recirculate and sort severed solid waste material in the separator screen particularly in an apparatus having a simplified construction with fewer parts, which is less costly to manufacture, maintain and repair, and is more reliable. It is also better able to sever the material at a desired speed, or line speed, in a feed-controlled manner from a web of material being received from a processing machine. Accordingly, the present invention provides an apparatus that is able to feed solid waste material into the comminuting apparatus in a feed-controlled manner.
A self-feeding comminuting apparatus is provided having improved access, maintenance and cleaning features.
According to one aspect of the invention, a comminuting apparatus is provided with a housing, at least two intermeshing scissor rolls, a screen, and an access tray. The housing has an entrance opening for receiving waste material and an exit opening for removing subdivided waste material. The scissor rolls are carried within the housing between the entrance opening and the exit opening for subdividing the waste material. The screen is carried by the housing between the scissor rolls and the exit opening. The access tray is provided by the housing and is removably supported downstream of the screen to provide a shear outtake manifold between the screen and the access tray.
According to another aspect, a hatch assembly is provided for accessing inside surfaces of a comminuting apparatus. The hatch assembly includes a frame and a tray. The tray is removably supported by the frame and is configured to retain and release the tray with the frame by respectively latching and unlatching the tray relative to the frame.
According to yet another aspect, a removable sorting screen assembly is provided for a comminuting apparatus. The assembly includes a frame, a screen, a housing member, and a hand-actuatable latch. The screen is carried by the frame for sorting subdivided material. The housing member includes a concave portion defining at least in part a shear outtake manifold, the housing member removably affixed to the frame and configured to cover an opening provided in a housing of the comminuting apparatus. The hand-actuatable latch is configured for latching and unlatching the housing member from the frame.
According to even another aspect, a comminuting apparatus is provided with an enclosure, a frame, cutting knives, a screen, and a drop tray. The enclosure has an entrance opening and an exit opening. The frame is configured to support the enclosure. The cutting knives are supported within the enclosure by the frame. The screen is provided between the cutting knives and the exit opening. The screen is operative to sort subdivided pieces of waste material. The drop tray is provided downstream of the screen and upstream of the exit opening. The drop tray is configured to cover an opening in the enclosure and further provide a shear outtake manifold downstream of the screen. The drop tray has a hand release assembly configured to mate and demate the drop tray with the frame.
Preferred embodiments of the invention are described below with reference to the following accompanying drawings, which are briefly described below.
This disclosure of the invention is submitted in furtherance of the constitutional purposes of the U.S. Patent Laws “to promote the progress of science and useful arts” (Article 1, Section 8).
A preferred embodiment of the invention is illustrated in the accompanying drawings particularly showing a waste comminuting apparatus generally designated with the numeral 10 in
It should be noted that the apparatus 10 is very compact even though the material is progressively reduced in size in several stages to a desired predetermined small size. The predetermined small piece size will generally depend upon the desires of the customer, the end use, and the particular material being comminuted. The solid waste material 12, illustrated in
The apparatus 10 has a general frame 16 that may be self-supported or affixed to other apparatus, such as the discharge of a thermal-forming, or thermoforming, machine, for receiving the solid waste material 12 directly from a thermoforming machine and reducing the material for re-use. Frame 16 generally includes a general enclosure 18 that includes a front wall 20, side walls 22 and 24, a back wall 26, a bottom wall 28, and a top wall 30. Top wall 30 has a material receiving duct 32 having a material entrance 62 (see
Within the enclosure 18, two scissor rolls 50 and 52 are mounted in an intermeshing relationship for rotation in opposite directions, or co-rotation, in coordination with each other to receive the solid waste material 12 after being delivered via scissor roll 50. Scissor roll 50 provides a feed roll, delivering sheet material 12 in a speed controlled manner between scissor rolls 50 and 52 to shear the solid material as the material passes between scissor rolls 50 and 52 (see
Scissor roll 50 is mounted on a shaft 64 that rotates about axis 81 (see
As shown in
As shown in
Each of scissor rolls 50 and 52 includes a plurality of scissor rings 160 in which each of the rings 160 has an outer circular peripheral surface 162 and an inner hexagonal bearing surface 164 that is complementary to the profile of shafts 64 and 66 so that the scissor rings 160 rotate in response to the rotation of shafts 64 and 66 (see
In the preferred embodiment, each of scissor rings 160 has evenly angularly spaced finger knives 170 formed integrally on the scissor rings 160 and projecting radially outward of the surface 162 and forward in the direction of rotation for gripping, puncturing and transversely cutting the solid material 12, as illustrated in
Each of the scissor rolls 50 and 52 further include a plurality of ring spacers 180. Each spacer 180 has a circular outer peripheral surface 182 and an inner hexagonal surface 184 (see
Accordingly, each of the ring spacers 180 has a width that is slightly greater than the width of the spacer rings 160. Each of the spacer rings 160 and ring spacers 180 are alternately positioned on shafts 64 and 66 so that a scissor ring 170 on one scissor roll opposes a corresponding ring spacer 180 on the other scissor roll, creating a circular inter-roll cavity 186 (see
The axes 81 and 83 of the scissor rolls are sufficiently spaced so that there is a slight overlap of approximately one-eighth inch (⅛″) in the profile of the scissor rings so that as they are rotated, the material is sheared by the shearing edges 168 and the finger knife 170 as a profile of the scissor ring 160 moves into the circular inter-roll cavity 186 of the opposing ring spacer 180 (see
As shown in
Material 12, which has passed over flow path 126 and has been directed to scissor roll 52, is thus recirculated via projecting bodies 171 (see
Collected particles 14e, present within tray 84, are then withdrawn through an outlet 118 (see
Additionally, it has been discovered that some of the recirculated pieces 14a–e in recycle manifold 124 are sifted, or passed, in a reverse direction along flow path 127 where they fall backwards, or in reverse, between inner-roll cavities 186 (see
As shown in
As shown in
Intake manifold 122 is configured to receive sheet material from entrance 62 of material receiving duct 32, illustrated in
The outtake manifold 120 includes an outlet 118 (
The apparatus 10 includes a pair of scissor roll drive motor assemblies generally designated with the reference numerals 68 and 70 and illustrated in
More particularly, variable speed drive motor assembly 68 is configured to drive scissor roll 50 (of
More particularly, three-phase AC motor 78 comprises a 15 hp standard electric motor using contactors and fuses. As shown in
In operation, the ability to rotate scissor roll 52 at a substantially constant velocity, while regulating the variable velocity operation of scissor roll 50 enables the controlled metering of material being fed into the apparatus 10 for comminuting relative to the speed with which material is being provided to such apparatus.
As shown in
Furthermore, where belt 94 is utilized, pulleys 91 and 93 are utilized. However, where a chain is utilized, pulleys 91 and 93 are replaced by a pair of sprockets which couple together the respective motor and gearbox.
As shown in
As shown in
Accordingly, scissor roll 50 can be operated as a feed roll that is rotated at a desired speed for a particular material 12 being received within apparatus 10, as shown in
Apparatus 10 further includes a pneumatic conveyor 72, as shown in
The pneumatic conveyor 72 includes a centrifugal fan 110 for generating an airstream of sufficient velocity and volume to remove the subdivided pieces from the shear outtake manifold 120 and to entrain the pieces 14e in the airstream (see
Centrifugal fan 110 communicates with outer volute duct 135 and product outlet 112 for discharging the small particles 14e that have passed through the separator screen 60 via outtake pipe 114.
As illustrated in
During the operation of the apparatus 10, solid waste material 12 is fed into the apparatus 10 through entrances 62 of duct 32 (see
As the delivered material 12 engages rolls 50 and 52, material 12 is gripped by the finger knives 170 (see
After material and subdivided pieces 14a–e are delivered to scissor roll 50, scissor roll 50 in combination with scissor roll 52 further delivers the pieces along screen 60 where small subdivided pieces 14e are separated from the remaining material and pieces. Those subdivided pieces that are larger than the apertures or holes in the separator screen 60 are carried along rolls 50 and 52 where they are delivered between rolls 50 and 52 for further severing and subdividing, or comminuting. The further subdivided pieces are then delivered into recycle manifold section 124. Such further subdivided pieces 14a–14e are then either re-delivered via recycle flow path 126 to recirculation cavity 125 for further delivery and subdividing, or are received in a reverse direction via reverse-direction sort path 127 back along screen 60 where sufficiently small particles 14e are separated out through screen 60 and remaining portions are further subdivided between rolls 50 and 52. The small pieces 14e that pass through the separator screen 60 are directed from the apparatus through the product outlet 118 to a pneumatic conveyor 72 for delivery to final product outlet 112.
The large particles or pieces 14a–14e will be continually recycled through recycle flow paths 126 or 127 until their size is reduced below that of the preselected size of the apertures of the separator screen 60. Screen 60 can be easily replaced in order to provide apertures with a desired size for implementing a desired sort of particles. Screen 60 can be constructed from screen material or any suitable perforated sheet or plate, or other suitable construction.
In compliance with the statute, the invention has been described in language more or less specific as to structural and methodical features. It is to be understood, however, that the invention is not limited to the specific features shown and described, since the means herein disclosed comprise preferred forms of putting the invention into effect. The invention is, therefore, claimed in any of its forms or modifications within the proper scope of the appended claims appropriately interpreted in accordance with the doctrine of equivalents.
This patent application is a continuation application of pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/998,226, filed Dec. 3, 2001, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,695,239 entitled “Self-Feeding Comminuting Apparatus Having Improved Recirculation Features”, naming Jere F. Irwin as inventor, which in turn was a divisional application of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/335,142, filed Jun. 16, 1999, originally entitled “Self-Feeding Comminuting Apparatus Having Improved Drive Motor and Recirculation Features” and later amended to “Self-Feeding Comminuting Apparatus Having Improved Drive Motor Features”, and which is now U.S. Pat. No. 6,357,680 B1, issued Mar. 19, 2002, the disclosure of both of which is incorporated by reference.
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Number | Date | Country |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20040159725 A1 | Aug 2004 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 09335142 | Jun 1999 | US |
Child | 09998226 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 09998226 | Dec 2001 | US |
Child | 10779219 | US |