The application relates generally to power-driven conveyors and more particularly to conveyor systems and associated methods for using conveyor belts to unstack and separate a bulk supply of flat packages and non-flat packages.
In the postal and parcel industries, envelopes are culled from a bulk flow of packages that include envelopes, boxes, tubes, and other mail. Typically, the culling is performed by postal workers who manually pluck envelopes from a mass flow of packages. This work is labor intensive.
One version of a conveyor system embodying features of the invention comprises a conveyor belt having a conveying surface advancing packages up an incline from a lower end to an upper end. Stop elements extend across the width of the conveying surface of the conveyor belt at spaced apart locations along the length of the conveyor belt to block packages sliding down the inclined conveying surface. The conveyor belt advances up the incline with a continuous pulsing motion to help unstack stacked packages on the conveying surface.
In another aspect of the invention, a method unstacking packages being conveyed up an incline comprises: (a) arranging a conveyor belt having spaced apart stop elements extending across the width of the conveying surface at spaced apart locations along the length of the conveyor belt on an incline from a lower end to an upper end; (b) advancing the conveyor belt up the incline in a continuous pulsing motion to cause packages stacked atop other packages on the conveying surface to slide downward on the conveying surface of the conveyor belt on the incline; and (c) stopping the downward slide of the previously stacked packages with the stop elements.
These features and aspects of the invention, as well as its advantages, are described in more detail in the following description, appended claims, and accompanying drawings, in which:
A conveyor system for culling flat packages from a bulk supply of packages to separate flat packages from non-flat packages is shown in
The incline conveyor shown is an inclined conveyor belt 18 having stop elements 20, such as short flights, extending across the width of the belt at regular intervals along its length. The stop elements may extend across the entire width as shown or may extend across half the width staggered from the left-side half to the right-side half of the belt. The stop elements divide the conveying surface of the inclined belt 18 into bins 22, each containing a batch of packages received from the bulk flow supplied by the infeed conveyor. The incline conveyor is inclined off horizontal at an inclination angle α that is sufficient to allow larger non-flat packages and even flat packages at the top of a stack to tumble or slide backward until they reach the stop elements. The inclined conveyor belt 18 advances up the incline with a continuous start-and-stop motion. The jerky, pulsing motion of the belt also helps in the unstacking and unshingling of stacked packages. Rubber or other high-friction pads or areas on the inclined belt's conveying surface may be used instead of flights to serve as stop elements. The pads provide enough friction to prevent packages from sliding past.
The inclined conveyor belt 18 drops packages off its upper end onto a tilted conveyor belt 24. The tilted conveyor belt can be realized as a flat rubber belt or a modular plastic friction-top belt, such as an INTRALOX® Series 1400 Friction Top belt or an INTRALOX® Series 900 Diamond Friction Top belt manufactured and sold by Intralox, L.L.C. of Harahan, La., U.S.A. The outer conveying surface 26 of these modular high-friction belts is largely covered by a high-friction elastomer. As an alternative, the tilted belt may be made high-friction by texturing a normally low-friction outer conveying surface. In any event, the outer surface's frictional characteristics, such as the coefficient of friction the belt presents to the bottoms of packages, and the tilt angle β of the belt are selected to hold flat packages F whose bottoms rest on the outer conveying surface to the belt, while allowing non-flat packages N to tumble downward from an elevated side edge 28 of the tilted belt across the belt and past a lower side edge 29. Of course, flat packages that are stacked atop other packages or that drop to the tilted conveyor on edge are likely to fall past the lower side edge along with the tumbling non-flat packages. The tilted conveyor belt 24 conveys the retained flat packages F in a direction of belt travel 30. A horizontal collection conveyor 32 parallel and adjacent to the lower side edge 29 of the tilted conveyor belt 24 receives all the non-flat packages N and the few flat packages that tumble off the tilted belt and conveys them in the direction of belt travel 30. Both the tilted conveyor belt 24, which conveys mostly flat packages, and the horizontal conveyor 32, which conveys mostly non-flat packages, feed those initially separated packages onto a culling conveyor 34 to provide further culling if necessary.
Although the high-friction outer conveying surface of the tilted conveyor belt described constitutes one kind of retention means used to prevent flat packages from sliding off the lower side edge of the tilted conveyor belt, other retention means may be used. For example, a raised barrier 33 upstanding from the outer conveying surface 26 and extending along its length near the lower side edge 29 of the tilted conveyor belt 24 is another retention means that could be used to catch the flat packages and prevent them from sliding off the lower side edge. If a raised barrier is used, the conveying surface does not necessarily have to exhibit high-friction characteristics. The height of the barrier can be slight, as long as it is high enough to stop flat packages whose bottoms are sitting on the outer conveying surface from sliding past. The barrier may be continuous along the length of the tilted conveyor belt, or it may be segmented.
The culling conveyor 34 includes a roller conveyor belt 36 (also shown in
A culling element in the form of an elongated powered roller 54 extends along the length of the culling conveyor in the upstream portion and is aligned laterally closer to the elevated side edge 28 of the tilted conveyor belt 24 than with the horizontal conveyor 32. The powered roller is rotated continuously in the direction indicated by arrow 56 in
To prevent flat packages from encountering the powered roller 54, which would tend to eject a flat package out of the gap the wrong way, the powered roller is outfitted with a guide 66 having a bottom surface 68 that prevents flat packages F passing through the gap from contacting the roller, as shown in
To further help pull flat packages F through the vertical gap under the powered roller 54, one or more powered ejection rollers 72, 73 with axes of rotation 74 parallel to the powered roller 54, may be positioned at the first side of the roller belt 36. The ejection rollers draw the flat package F in the gap with a pinch point 76 between each other and pull the flat package through the gap and eject it onto the flat-package collection chute 64. In this way, the ejection rollers supplement the belt rollers 38 in moving flat articles through the gap under the powered roller 54. Both ejection rollers may be powered to counterrotate as indicated by arrows 78, 79 in
In some instances, only the upstream portion 41 of the final culling conveyor 34 may be required. But if a lot of side-by-side packages present a problem, the downstream portion 43 can be used with a similar powered roller 55 to form a two-stage culling conveyor. The downstream powered roller 55 extends along the length of the downstream portion of the culling conveyor laterally offset from the upstream power roller 54 and closer to the second side 45 rotating in the opposite direction to lift the side-by-side non-flat packages that were blocked by other packages from engaging the upstream powered roller. The belt rollers 38 in the downstream portion push the conveyed packages toward the second side of the roller belt with the blocked, side-by-side, non-flat packages the first to hit the downstream powered roller. Except that flat packages in the downstream portion are passed under the rollers onto a collection chute 65 at the second side of the conveyor, the powered rollers in both portions operate similarly. The taller non-flat packages that cannot pass through the vertical gaps between either powered roller and the belt rollers are confined by the powered rollers to the roller belt 36 and exit off its exit end 80. Thus, the conveyor system automatically separates flat packages from non-flat packages.
Another version of a culling conveyor is shown in
Although the invention has been described in detail with respect to one version, other versions are possible. For example, the incline conveyor could deposit packages onto the tilted conveyor belt over the upstream end of the tilted conveyor belt rather than over its elevated side. As another example, more powered-roller portions could be added to the culling conveyor to provide more opportunities to remove side-by-sides. And the culling conveyor could comprise one roller conveyor belt with upstream actuating rollers arranged to rotate the belt rollers in one direction and downstream actuating rollers arranged to rotate the belt rollers in the opposite direction, or the culling conveyor could comprise upstream and downstream conveyor belts whose rollers are actuated to rotate in opposite directions. Furthermore, the culling conveyor can be used independently of the incline, tilted, and horizontal collection conveyors, and vice versa. So, as these few examples suggest, the scope of the claims is not meant to be limited to the details of the specific version used to describe the invention.
This application is a continuation application of co-pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/018,006, filed Sep. 4, 2013, which is a divisional of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/040,919, filed Mar. 4, 2011, now U.S. Pat. No. 8,528,742, which claims the priority of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/311,610, “Package-Culling Conveyor System and Method,” filed Mar. 8, 2010. All these prior applications are incorporated into this application by reference.
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Child | 14018006 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Child | 14925497 | US |