An optical sensor is used to identify particular materials carried on a conveyor belt. The material is launched off the end of the conveyor and travels along a trajectory path into a far bin. Particular objects identified by the optical sensor are knocked out of their normal trajectory into a different near bin via a blast of air from a high pressure air nozzle.
A cross-flow air separation system comprises a conveyor configured to project material out over an end of the conveyor generally along a trajectory path into a far receiving bin. An optical sensing system is configured to identify particular objects in the projected material. The primary air ejection system, which operates perpendicular to the material flow, is configured to eject identified objects from the trajectory path into the near receiving bin. A second cross air current system is configured to generate a second airstream parallel to the material flow that reduces air resistance for the materials projected along the trajectory path. The second airstream reduces certain aeronautic phenomena that would cause some of the projected materials to unintentionally fall into the wrong receiving bin.
It may be desirable to separate certain objects or materials from the material stream 26. For example, plastic, aluminum, steel, and glass objects may need to be separated from other recyclable or non-recyclable materials, such as paper, Old Corrugated Cardboard (OCC), textiles, food waste, yard debris, wood, concrete, rocks, etc. Further, the different plastic, aluminum, steel, and glass objects may all need to be separated. In one example described below, polyethylene terephthalate (PET) and/or high density polyethylene (HDPE) objects 28 are separated from other materials in material stream 26. Of course, any variety of different objects 28 may need to be separated from the rest of material stream 26.
Theoretically based on gravity and conveyor speed, all the materials 26 would be projected from conveyor 24 at the same speed and travel generally along the same trajectory path 34. With this information a computer system (not shown) attached to optical sensor 14 can detect and calculate the location of different objects 28 after being projected through the air off the end of the conveyor 24.
The speed of conveyor 24 is selected so that all of the materials 26 are launched out over the end of conveyor 24 into a far bin 30B and onto a conveyor 32B. The optical sensor 14 is programmed via software in the computer system to detect the shape, type of material, color or levels of translucence of particular objects 28. For example, the computer system connected to optical sensor 14 may be programmed to detect the type of plastic material associated with plastic bottles.
Any objects 28 having the preprogrammed types of materials are detected by the optical sensor 14 when passing through a light beam 16. The computer system connected to the optical sensor 14 sends a signal activating a high pressure ejection air nozzle 20. The ejection nozzle 20 releases a blast of air 22 that knocks the detected objects 28 downward out of normal trajectory path 34 into near bin 30A and onto conveyor 32A. The other materials 28 continue to travel along trajectory path 34 into the far bin 30B and onto conveyor 32B.
Referring to
The projection of objects 26 and/or air blasts 22 may also create air turbulence 42 that alters the normal trajectory path 34 of other objects 26B. For example, the air disturbance 42 may push down, raise up, or tumble relatively light objects 26B. This air disturbance 42 causes the objects 26B to deviate out of the normal trajectory path 34 and unintentionally drop into the near bin 30A.
Other objects may collide into each other while being launched from conveyor 24. For example, an object 26A may run into or slightly attach onto bottle 28A while being projected from conveyor 24. The frictional force created when object 26A comes in contact with the bottle 28A may cause object 26A to deviate out of trajectory path 34 and unintentionally drop into near bin 30A.
The optical air separation system 12 may also use large bins 30A and 30B to catch the different separated materials 28 and 26, respectively. One possible disadvantage of large bins is that slight variances in the normal trajectory path 34 can cause objects to fall into the wrong bins. Accordingly, any of the trajectory disturbances described above are more likely to cause material to fall into the wrong bin.
As described above, one cause of trajectory path deviation is the different aerodynamic characteristics of the different materials 26. The cross air current 50 prevents these projected materials from having to fight dead air, which equates to wind resistance or lack of aerodynamics. As previously shown in
However, the cross air current 50 shown in
In certain embodiments, the speed of material 26 coming off of conveyor 24 and the corresponding speed of cross air current 50 may both be between 7-12 feet per second (FPS). It has been discovered that approximately 10 FPS on the infeed material conveyor 24 provides good separation of material into a single layer as the material 26 is being carried and launched off of conveyor 24. The 10 FPS projection speed also provides controlled launching of the material 26 along trajectory path 34. Of course other conveyor speeds and cross air current speeds may be used depending on the material being separated and the configuration of the cross air current system 48.
In one embodiment, the air knife 52 generates a cross air current 50 that is either substantially parallel to the trajectory path 34, in line with the trajectory path 34, or possibly in a slightly upward intersecting direction with trajectory path 34. The air nozzle 52 can be rotated or moved so that the cross air current 50 is aligned in a variety of different directions with respect to trajectory path 34. The alignment of air current 50 in relationship to trajectory path 34 may be changed according to the type of materials 26 that need to be separated, the speed of conveyor 24, the height of the conveyor 24 above bins 30, the size of bins 30, etc.
In one embodiment, the mid-range airspeed of cross air current 50 is approximately equal to the mid-range travel speed of material 26. The location 27 of the mid-range airspeed is approximately half way between the air bar 22 where the ejection air nozzle 20 blasts downward air pressure and the splitter plate 31 that separates the first near bin 30A (
The speed of air, coming off the face of the air knife 52 is much faster than 10 FPS. This is required due to the compressibility of air which creates exponential reduction in speed compared to distance off the air knife face. It has been discovered that air speeds of 20,000 to 30,000 FPS with air knife system pressures of 25-35 inches of water provide the necessary force and speeds to properly interface with the material traveling at 10 FPS off the end of the conveyor. Thus the air speed off the face of the air knife may have to be faster than the mid-range air speed, in order to obtain the desired air speed at location 27. Of course, these speeds and pressures can vary in different embodiments according to the types of materials that need to be separated.
Referring to
Another trajectory issue described above in
The cross air current 50 creates a layer of continuously flowing air that effectively blazes a path through the air turbulence 42 allowing the material 26B to continue along trajectory path 34 into the correct far bin 30B. The cross air current 50 effectively carries away some of the air turbulence 42 resulting in more surgical, higher precision blasts of air 22 from ejection air nozzle 20. An analogy would be throwing a rock into a quiet pond versus throwing a rock in a swift river. The rock creates large wide spreading ripples in the quiet pond. However, the rock creates much less noticeable disturbance in the swift river.
The air blasts 22 generated by the ejection air nozzle 20 have more force than the cross air current 50. Therefore, the air blasts 22 can still blast through the cross air current 50 and push certain detected objects 28A downward into the near bin 30A. At the same time, the material 26 around the ejected object 28A is more insulated from the air blasts 22 by the layer of cross air current 50 and is therefore less likely to deviate out of trajectory path 34.
The cross air current 50 offsets these friction forces by helping all of these objects to flow e along the trajectory path 34A at the same speed. The cross air current 50 in
The plastic bottles 28A are blasted down into near bin 32A by the ejection air nozzle 20 as described above. Attached to the bottom of the near bin 32A is a vertical air chamber 62A. This air chamber transports the material via gravity and potentially other pneumatic forces depending on how the system is tuned, down to the main horizontal air chamber #62D. Once the objects 28A transfer into air chamber 62D, the air 86A from blower 68 carries the objects 28A up through air chamber 62B into bin 61.
Due to the nature of the pneumatic transfer system 60, the air flow 86A going through the venturi 64 can create a vacuum in vertical air chamber 62A. The downward air flow 86B created by the vacuum can undesirably draw relatively light material down into the near bin 30A. The cross air current 50 offsets some of this downward air flow 86B further allowing material to travel over near bin 30A and drop into far bin 30B.
The two air flow controllers 64 and 88 control the amount of air allowed to pass through air chambers 62A, 62B, and 62D respectively, by varying the size of the opening in the air chambers 67 and 65, respectively. The second air flow controller restricts air flow 86C through the air chamber 62B causing back pressure back up into air chamber 62A. The back pressure eliminates some or all of the previous downward air flow 86B (
The combination of air flow controllers 64 and 88 can further be arranged so that a positive upward air flow 86E blows back up through air chamber 62A into the near bin 30A. This positive upward air pressure 86E can work separately, or in combination with cross air current 50, to help carrying light material over near bin 30A and into the far bin 30B. As the opening 65 between air chamber 62D and air chamber 62B is made smaller by air flow controller 88, more back pressure air flow 89E is created in air chamber 62A. Additional positive upward air flow 86E can be created by further reducing the size of the opening 65 with air flow controller 88 and/or increasing the size of the opening 67 in air chamber 62A with the air flow controller 64.
In another embodiment, another air chamber (pipe) 62C taps off of pipe 62B at the main outlet of the blower 68 and provides the air flow for the cross air current 50 output by the air knife 52. A third air flow controller (venturi) 82 is located in pipe 62C and is used for controlling the amount of cross air current 50 output by air knife 52.
The same blower 68 can be used for providing the cross air current 50 to air knife 52 and for generating the air flows 86 in air chambers 62A 62B and 62D. Using the same air supply from blower 68 self balances the different air flows 50, 86A, 86B, and 86C.
For example, it is easier to adjust or synchronize multiple different air flows when they all originate from a common air supply 68. Since there is one common air supply used for all of these air flows, increasing the cross air current 50 coming from air knife 52, for example, will correspondingly reduce some of the air flow 86A. This in turn can reduce the upward air flow 86E in air chamber 62A. Similarly, reducing the amount of air allowed into air chamber 62C can increase the amount of positive air flow 86E moving vertically up from air chamber 62A. Accordingly, the entire air control system self balances to provide more predictable material trajectory and transfer control.
Having described and illustrated the principles of the invention in a preferred embodiment thereof, it should be apparent that the invention may be modified in arrangement and detail without departing from such principles. I/we claim all modifications and variation coming within the spirit and scope of the following claims.