The present invention relates generally to disposal of biological waste, for example including wastewater sludge and livestock mortalities.
Safe and efficient disposal of biological waste remains a challenge in many industries, such as in agriculture, where cost efficient and environmentally sound approaches to livestock mortality management are needed, and in wastewater treatment, where similar needs exist for disposal of sewage sludge.
Prior solutions have included composting of such livestock mortalities and sewage sludge into soil additives, for example as evidenced by Applicant's own Biorotor Composter for livestock mortalities, manure and plant waste. However, the composting process is relatively time consuming, and leaves room for improved and alternative solutions to the biological waste disposal problem.
In response to such need, Applicant has developed a novel dehydrator for biological waste materials.
According to one aspect of the invention, there is provided a dehydrator apparatus for dehydrating biological material, said apparatus comprising:
Preferred embodiments of the invention will now be described in conjunction with the accompanying drawings in which:
The biological material dehydrator 10 of the first illustrated embodiment is generally composed of an enclosed external housing 12, an internal vessel 14 disposed within the housing 12, an agitator 16 disposed within the vessel 14, a hot air intake 18 for feeding a stream of heated air into the housing 12, an exhaust outlet 20 for exhausting the introduced air from the housing after heating the interior space of the housing and its contents, a drive system 22 for driven operation of the agitator, a loading inlet 24 opening into the housing for introduction of biological material into the vessel, and an unloading outlet 26 for discharging of material from the vessel to an exterior of the housing.
The external housing 12 has first and second ends 28A, 28B spaced horizontally apart in a longitudinal direction L, and first and second sides 30A, 30B spaced horizontally apart in a transverse direction T that is perpendicular to the longitudinal direction L. A skeletal framework of the housing includes a skeletal subframe at each end 28A, 28B that is composed of two upright frame members 32 horizontally spaced apart in the transverse direction and defining respective corners of the housing, a lower cross member 34 horizontally interconnecting the upright frame members 32 at bottom ends thereof, an upper cross member 36 horizontally interconnecting the upright frame members 32 at top ends thereof, and an intermediate cross member 38 horizontally interconnecting the upright frame members 32 at intermediate elevation thereon between the upper and lower cross members. The skeletal framework further includes longitudinal frame members that interconnect the subframes at the two ends of the housing, including a pair of transversely spaced apart lower longitudinal frame members 40 running horizontally corner to corner of the housing at respective sides thereof in generally coplanar relation to the lower cross members 34 of the subframes to delimit therewith a rectangular base of the housing, and a pair of transversely spaced apart upper longitudinal frame members 42 running horizontally corner to corner of the housing at respective sides thereof in generally coplanar relation to the upper cross members 34 of the subframes to delimit a rectangular roof area of the housing.
Each side of the housing 30A, 30B is enclosed by a respective sidewall 44A, 44B of the housing, which in the illustrated example is constructed in modular fashion by a series of insulated wall panels 46 whose upper and lower ends are fastened in place to the upper and lower longitudinal frame members 42, 44. A roof 48 closing off the top of the housing likewise features a series of insulated roof panels 50 laid out horizontally between the upper longitudinal frame members 42 and fastened thereto at opposing ends of each roof panel 50. However, instead of forming a full-span roof spanning entirely from one end of the housing to the other like the insulated wall panels of the housing, the insulated roof panels 50 constitute only a closed central region of the roof that resides centrally between the loading inlet 24 and the exhaust outlet 20, both of which also resides at the top of the housing in the illustrated embodiment.
In the illustrated example, the exhaust outlet 20 comprises a chimney or flue-like exhaust duct 52 installed in an offset manner from a longitudinal midplane P of the housing, for reasons explained herein further below. To facilitate the offset position of the exhaust duct 52, the roof has a pitched plenum section 54 situated adjacent a respective end 28B of the housing. The pitched plenum section 54 slopes upwardly from one side 30A of the housing and past the longitudinal midplane P thereof toward the opposing side 30B housing, before then angling back down to meet with the upper longitudinal rail 42 at this side 30B of the housing. This downwardly angled part 56 of the plenum section 54 adjacent to side 30B of the housing forms the outlet of the plenum section 54 to which a bottom end of the exhaust duct 52 is coupled. The exhaust duct 52 initially slopes outwardly and upwardly from the outlet of the plenum section, and in the illustrated example then has an elbowed section 52A that transitions into a vertically upright remainder of the duct 52B.
As best shown in the transverse cross-section of
The drive system 22 installed at the first end 28A of the housing for driven rotation of the agitator 16 features a motor 64 operably coupled to a gearbox 66 in driving relation thereto. An output gear of the gearbox 66 drives a chain 68 that is entrained around both said output gear of the gearbox and a corresponding drive gear mounted on a respective end of the agitator's longitudinal shaft 58, as can be seen in
The subframe at each end of the housing 12 is internally lined with an insulated end wall 72A, 72B of the housing, and these insulated end walls cooperate with the insulated roof 48 and the insulated side walls 44A, 44B, and with whatever floor or ground surface the base of the housing is placed upon, in order to fully enclose the interior space of the housing in which the trough 14 is contained. The only ingress and egress points from this otherwise fully enclosed interior space of the housing are therefore the air intake 18, the exhaust outlet 20, the loading inlet 24 and the unloading outlet 26. In air intake 18 comprises an intake duct 74 penetrating the end wall 72A of the housing at the first end 28A thereof that is also occupied by the drive system 22, and that is neighboured by the roof-situated loading inlet 24. The loading inlet penetrates through the roof of the housing to allow gravitational dumping of biological material into the trough 14, whose open top end underlies the loading inlet. The unloading outlet 26 penetrates the end wall 72B of the housing at the opposing second end 28B thereof. The first and second ends 28A, 28B of the housing 12 are thus also referred to herein as the loading and unloading ends of the housing, since these are the respective ends at or adjacent which biological material is loaded into the trough, and subsequently unloaded therefrom after being dehydrated therein.
The dehydration of the biological material loaded into the trough is achieved using heated air supplied through the air intake 18 from an outside heated air source, which is preferably, but not limited to, a biomass furnace, which may for example be the biomass furnace disclosed in Applicant's U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 63/056,170, filed Jul. 24, 2020, the entirety of which is incorporated herein by reference. An exterior section 74A of the intake duct 74 residing outside the housing is thus connected to the hot air output of the biomass furnace to receive a stream of heated air therefrom, preferably a forced air stream encouraged into the housing 12 via one or more fans installed in the intake duct, and/or or somewhere upstream thereof, whether as part of the dehydrator or furnace, or as an inline component installed somewhere between the furnace and the dehydrator. As best seen in
Each sidewall of the air distribution channel 76 (“channel wall”, for brevity) has a series of outlet holes 78 therein at longitudinally spaced positions therealong, preferably at or adjacent a top end of the channel wall that joins up to the trough's curved bottom wall 14A. In the first illustrated embodiment, the outlet holes 78 are elongated slot-shaped cutouts in the top edge of the channel wall, between which intact portions 80 of the channel wall connect to the bottom wall of the trough, as best seen in
With reference to
In the illustrated example, instead of the upper ends of the trough sidewalls 14B spanning fully to the roof and thereby rendering the top of the trough closed by the roof, the trough sidewalls are each supported in hanging fashion at a spaced distance below the housing roof 48 by one or more elongated support channels 82. In the illustrated embodiment, each sidewall 14B of the trough is supported by two such support channels 82, each spanning from a respective one of the housing's end walls 72A, 72B to a mid wall 84 of that housing 12 that lies parallel to those end walls 72A, 72B at a longitudinal midpoint of the housing that is situated half way therebetween. Each support channel 82 is bolted, welded or otherwise attached to the mid wall 84 and a respective one of the end walls, whereby the support channel 82 is suspended in bridging fashion therebetween. Bent mounting flanges at the ends of the support channels 82 can be seen at 82A in
The interior arm 85 is spaced inwardly from the trough sidewall 14B, and at a lower end of the arm 85 that is spaced below the outwardly-bent top end 86 of the trough sidewall 14B, the arm 85 has two bends, one that first turns outwardly toward the sidewall 14B of the trough, and another that then turns downwardly along the sidewall 14B of the trough in abutted contact against the interior surface thereof. The second bend thus forms a connection flange 88 of the support channel 82 at which the support channel is attached to the sidewall 14B of the trough, for example by bolts 90, rivets, welding or other means. The trough is thereby supported in hanging fashion by this connection flange 88 that is situated at an elevationally spaced distance below the outwardly-bent top ends 86 of the trough's sidewalls 14B. Meanwhile the first bend of the support channel's interior arm 85 defines a lower lip 92 of the support channel 82, which juts inwardly from the trough sidewall 14B at the inner surface thereof. This lower lip 92 of each support channel 82 has a series of air admission openings 94 therein at regularly spaced intervals in the longitudinal direction L of the housing. Accordingly, heated air flowing upwardly inside each lateral airspace of the housing can cascade over the outwardly-bent top end 86 of the respective trough sidewall 14B, and flow downwardly through the space between the inner surface of the trough sidewall 14B and the interior arm 84 of the support channel, and then into the trough interior via the air admission openings 94 in the lower lip 92 of the support channel.
Airflow through these air admission openings 92 is adjustable via movement of the upper ends 86 of the trough sidewalls 14B, which in the illustrated embodiment is achieved by way of a series of threaded actuators 96 attached to each trough sidewall 14B at spaced apart locations in the longitudinal direction L of the housing. An inner end 96A of each threaded actuator 96 is attached to a down-turned outer rim 98 of the outwardly-bent top end 86 of the respective trough sidewall 14B. The threaded actuator penetrates through an inner side of the upper longitudinal frame member 42 on the corresponding side of the housing. In the illustrated embodiment, each upper longitudinal member 42 is an angle iron having a top horizontal leg 42A on which the insulated roof panels 50 are seated, and an inner/lower vertical leg 42B depending downward from the top horizontal leg 42A at an inner end thereof nearest the longitudinal midplane P of the housing. The threaded actuator 96 penetrates through an opening in this inner/lower vertical leg 42B so as to place an outer end of the threaded actuator 96 outside the housing's interior space at a location just above the top ends 46A of the housing's insulated wall panels 46. This enables external access to each actuator 96 by an operator of the dehydrator.
In the illustrated example, each threaded actuator 96 has an externally threaded stud that penetrates the upper longitudinal frame member 42 and connects to the down-turned rim 98 of the outwardly-bent top end 86 of the trough sidewall 14B, and an internally threaded nut 100 that is mated with the threaded stud at the outer end of the actuator to serve as a tool-operated driver thereof. Advancement of the nut 100 on the threaded stud pulls outwardly on the downturned rim 98 of the trough sidewall's outwardly-bent top end 86. As shown in
Referring to
Accordingly, outward pulling of the top ends 86 of the trough sidewalls 14B by tightening of the threaded actuators 96 increases airflow into the trough interior through the air admission openings 92, and inward relaxation of the top ends of the trough sidewalls back toward their normal default positions reduces the size of both the gap spaces 108 and the effective cutout spaces, thereby reducing the airflow into the trough 14. The movable flaps 104 therefore serve as movable dampers for controlling airflow into the trough 14. Overall airflow of heated air from the biomass furnace or other external heated air source through the dehydrator is thus as follows: admission of heated air into housing 12 through the exterior section 74A of the intake duct 74, and direction of all such heated air into the enclosed under-vessel airspace of the central air distribution channel 76 underneath the trough 14 for longitudinal airflow along the underside of the trough floor in heat exchange relation therewith, laterally outward redirection of the heated air from the central air distribution channel 76 into the lateral airspaces of the housing through the outlet holes 78 in the channel walls; flow of the heated air upwardly through these lateral airspaces in heat exchange relationship with the sidewalls 14B of the trough; admission of this heated air into the trough interior via the air admission openings 92 provided on the trough side walls by the trough-supporting support channels 82; interaction of this trough-admitted heated air with the biological material in the trough in order to both heat and aerate said biological material, and eventual exit of the heated air from the housing via the exhaust outlet 20 installed at the roof of the housing.
The offset position of the exhaust duct 52 accommodates such optional inclusion of a loading tray 118 atop the roof of the housing so that the tray fits within the footprint of the housing in both the receiving and dumping positions, instead of requiring placement of the loading tray in an alternative position that would avoid a centrally located exhaust duct but would increase the overall footprint of the dehydrator. To load an animal mortality into the dehydrator, the loading tray 118 originally starts in the receiving position of
In other implementations, instead of a loading tray 118, biological material may be fed into the dehydrator by a loading conveyor, for example a belt conveyor or auger, whether feeding directly into the loading inlet 24, into a grinder 112, or into a feed hopper installed over the loading inlet or grinder. For example, sewage sludge from a wastewater treatment site may be fed into a larger scale version of the dehydrator by such a loading conveyor, and then dehydrated within the dehydrator. The final dehydrated biological material is unloaded from the dehydrator through the unloading outlet 26, and can then conveyed to a container or other depository by an unloading conveyor 126. The resulting dehydrated product, having been suitably heated for a long enough period in dehydration cycle to kill all pathogens from the source sludge, can then be buried, spread in a field or otherwise disposed of, or used as a soil additive or for other final purpose.
A typical dehydration cycle may involve one or more repetitions of a mixing sequence that comprises, in sequential order:
In other words, the mixing sequence comprises two active agitation periods that are characterized by driven operation of the agitator in opposing directions, with intervening passive resting periods, whereby the biological material is periodically agitated in the active periods, but left sitting static in the trough during the intervening rest periods so that the heated air can heat and aerate the periodically agitated material, thereby drying the material and killing pathogens therein. While the forging sequence has the agitation/advancement period as the first of the two active agitation periods, the order thereof may be reversed.
The dehydrator can be operated in batch or continuous fashion. In batch operation, biological material is introduced to the dehydrator in a desired batch volume that does not exceed the capacity volume of the trough. The dehydration cycle then comprises execution of a plurality of the aforementioned mixing sequences, until a user-specified cycle time has lapsed. The overall cycle time can be selected according to the particular biological material, the volume thereof in the dehydrator, and desired characteristics of the final dehydrated product derived from the dehydration process. For example, smaller scale dehydrators for processing livestock mortalities may use a cycle time in the order of 12-36 hours, whereas larger scale dehydrators for sewage sludge may use a longer cycle time in the order of 2 to 4 days. On completion of the dehydration cycle, a full-unloading step is then executed, during which the agitator is operated in the advancing direction long enough to force all of the biological material from the trough through the unloading outlet 26, while the unloading conveyor 126 is simultaneously run in order to carry the full trough worth's of dehydrated material from the dehydrator to the destination container or other depository. The destination container or depository may be a stationary one for on-site storage, or a holding container of a transport vehicle for transporting the final dehydrated product to a remote off-site location.
In continuous operation, the dehydrator is loaded with source biological material in a volume limited only by the available trough capacity, and a first dehydration cycle is executed in the same fashion described for batch operation. At the end of the first dehydration cycle, rather than performing a full-unloading step like that described for batch operation, a partial-unloading step is instead executed. Here, operation of the agitator 16 in the advancing direction, and simultaneous operation of the unloading conveyor 126, is performed only long enough to some, and not all, of the previously loaded biological material from the dehydrator through the unloading outlet 126. Instead of emptying the entire trough, this only opens up some available space at the inlet end of the trough. During this partial-unloading step, more biological material may be added to the trough through the loading inlet, e.g. by powered operation of a loading conveyor in simultaneous fashion with the advancingly operated agitator.
From hereon, the continuous operation of the dehydrator then involves execution of a modified mixing cycle, either on a continuously repeated basis, or in regularly or periodically alternating fashion with the standard mixing cycle described above for batch operation. The modified mixing cycle, like the standard mixing cycle, involves the same alternating repetition of active advancing and retracting agitator periods with intervening passive rest periods, but differs in that the agitation/advancement period is an extended agitation/advancement period of greater time duration than the agitation/reversal period, and in that the unloading conveyor 126 is operated during each extended agitation/advancement period, as is the loading conveyor that feeds into the loading inlet 24, if such a loading conveyor is included in the given dehydrator installation. Accordingly, with each execution the modified mixing sequence, the material already in the trough is pushed further in the forward direction than it is pulled back in the rearward direction. During each extended agitation/advancement period of the modified mixing cycle, a fully-dehydrated volume of the biological material at the outlet end of the trough 14 is pushed through the unloading outlet 26 into the unloading conveyor 126, while newly available trough space is opened up at the inlet end of the trough 14 to accommodate introduction of fresh new biological source material through the loading inlet 24. The dehydrator can thus be operated on a continual basis, where fresh biological source material is introduced at the loading inlet 24 any time that fully dehydrated biological material is being discharged through the unloading outlet 26 as part of the extended agitation/advancement step of the modified mixing sequence. As mentioned above, in continuous operation, each of the second and subsequent mixing cycles may be of the modified type with the extended agitation/advancement period causing discharging of material through the unloading output, or the second and subsequent mixing cycles may comprise a combination standard mixing cycles regularly or periodically intervened by a modified mixing cycle.
A programmable logic controller (PLC) or other programmable controller is preferably connected to one or more powered components of the dehydrator installation, including at least the agitator motor 64, and preferably also including a drive motor of the unloading conveyor 126, and a drive motor of the loading conveyor (if included), or optionally the actuator 120 of the lifting tray 118 (if included). The controller can therefore be used to at least partially automate batch or continuous operation of the dehydrator, particularly to control operation of at least the agitator motor 64, and preferably also the drive motor of the unloading conveyor 126, and the drive motor of the loading conveyor (if included), or optionally the actuator 120 of the lifting tray 118 (if included). A human operator may program the controller to set different operational parameters of the dehydrator, including any one or more of the following: agitator run time for the active agitation/advancement period; agitator run time for the extended active agitation/advancement period; agitator run time for the active agitation/reversal period; rest time duration for the passive resting periods between the active agitation periods; quantity of mixing cycles to perform; frequency of modified mixing cycles (e.g. run modified mixing sequence every N number of mixing cycles, where N=0 denotes no modified mixing cycles for batch operation; N=1 denotes running of only mixed modified cycles during continuous operation; N=2, 3, 4, etc. denotes running a modified mixing cycle every second, third, fourth mixing cycle, etc. during continuous operation); and a final agitator run time for the full-unloading step after the completed dehydration cycle.
So for example, if a user sets a 5 minute agitator run time for both of the active agitation periods, a 25 minute rest time duration, a zero frequency for modified mixing cycles, a mixing cycle quantity of 24, and a final agitator run time of 30 minutes, this will be effective to perform a batch operation with a 24 hour dehydration cycle:
The programmable controller therefore gives the operator full and total control over the type of operation to run (batch vs. continuous), timing of the mixing cycles, quantity of mixing cycles, timing of periodic material discharge from the dehydrator in continuous operation (and the optionally accompanying automated introduction of fresh material at the loading inlet during each such periodic discharge), and the resulting overall dehydration cycle time dictated by the other timing and frequency values.
While the first illustrated embodiment has the exhaust duct laterally offset to one side of the housing to accommodate optional installation of a loading tray that spans a substantial length of the housing in the receiving position, such offset placement of the exhaust duct could be omitted in instances where no loading tray installation is intended, or where the loading tray length relative to the housing length is such that the loading tray can fit entirely between the loading chute 116 and the exhaust outlet 20 in the receiving position of the loading tray. Also, while the illustrated embodiments adopt a parallel-flow configuration, where the overall travel-through direction in which biological material moves longitudinally through the dehydrator from the loading inlet to the unloading outlet matches the airflow direction in which the heated air flows through the dehydrator from the air intake 18 to the exhaust outlet 20, the dehydrator could be reconfigured with a counter-flow configuration in which the material travel-through direction opposes the airflow direction. In the first illustrated embodiment, the parallel-flow configuration elegantly accommodates operational roof-based placement of the both the loading inlet 24 and the exhaust outlet 20 in non-interfering relationship to one another.
The purpose of the lower air shield 130 is to help concentrate the heated air from the air distribution channel 76′ into in close immediate adjacency with the bottom wall 14A of the trough, and prevent or limit dissipation of this heated air to outer extremities of the housing material, away from its intended targets (the vessel, and its contents). Similarly, at least one purpose of the upper air shield 132 may be to create a barrier between the interior space of the trough 14 and the exhaust outlet 20 that must be circumnavigated by heated air introduced to the trough 14 at the region thereof underlying the exhaust inlet in order for such air to reach the exhaust outlet 20, thus increasing the overall amount of time that the heated air dwells within the housing 12′, to maximize its heating and aeration effects on the trough 14 and its contents.
The lower air shield 130 is saddle shaped in cross-sectional planes lying orthogonally of the longitudinal direction, in which planes the trough 14 likewise possess its U-shaped profile. The saddle-shaped lower air shield 130 resides externally of the curved bottom wall 14A of the trough 14, and is centered on the same rotational axis R as the trough's curved bottom wall 14A. On any imaginary radial line emanating from that rotational axis R, the saddle-shaped lower air shield 130 resides at slightly greater radial distance from the rotational axis R than the curved bottom wall 14A of the trough, whereby a gap space 134 exists between the lower air shield 130 and the trough's curved bottom wall over the full angular span of the lower air shield 130 around the rotational axis R. In the illustrated example, the lower shield spans a full, or nearly full, 180-degree span around the rotational axis R, whereby the two top ends of the lower shield's saddle shape reside at or near a horizontal plane denoting a horizontal diameter of the agitator shaft 58. The lower air shield 130 thus neighbours the semi-cylindrical bottom wall 14A of the trough over a full, or nearly full, arcuate span thereof. The lower air shield 130 thus stops short off, or at least doesn't fully cover, each of the trough's two upper side walls 14B. Unlike the semi-cylindrical bottom wall 14A of the trough 14, the saddle-shape of the neighbouring lower air shield 130 is not smoothly curved, at least in the illustrated embodiment, though it may be so curved in other embodiments. Instead, the saddle shape of the illustrated lower air shield 130 is composed of a plurality of linear segments, each corresponding to a planar region of the bent sheet metal, which linear segments are laid out on an arc-like path around the rotational axis R.
A central bottom segment 130A of the lower air shield 130 doubles as a top wall of the air distribution channel 76′ in this embodiment, as opposed to the preceding embodiment in which the curved bottom wall 14A of the trough 14 doubled as the top wall of the air distribution channel 76′, whereby the bottom wall 14A of the trough 14 in that preceding embodiment was directly exposed to the interior of the air distribution channel 76′. In the present embodiment, the heated air in the air distribution channel 76′ instead feeds into the gap space 134 between the lower air shield 130 and the bottom wall 14A of the trough via a series of outlet holes 78′ provided in the top wall 130A of the air distribution channel 76′. In further differentiation from the preceding embodiment, the present embodiment lacks outlet holes 78 in the sidewalls of the air distribution channel 76′, whereby none of the heated air from the air distribution channel 76′ is dissipated laterally outward therefrom toward lateral extremities and bottom outside corners of the housing 12′, which dissipation is not effective to the intended purpose of this heated air supply, namely to warm the trough 14 and heat and aerate the contents thereof. The lower air shield 130 serves to confine the heated air, as it leaves the air distribution channel 76 through the top wall outlet openings 78′ thereof, in close adjacency to the bottom wall 14A of the trough 14 for optimally purposeful warming effect thereon.
The top ends of the saddle-shaped lower air shield 130 that reside outside the trough near where the curved bottom wall 14A thereof meets the two sidewalls 14B thereof reside in spaced relation from the trough 14 so that the heated air introduced to the gap space 134 between the lower air shield 130 and the trough 14 can escape this gap space at each side of the trough 14 at the upper terminus of the lower air shield 130. Here, the heated air rises upwardly along the side walls 14B of the trough 14 to gain entry to the interior of the trough 14 in the identical manner described of the earlier embodiment, via air admission openings in the support channel 82 and damper controlled cutouts 102 in the sidewalls 14B of the trough 14. As shown in the illustrated example, the topmost segments 130B of the lower air shield 130 may be of in-turned character jutting inwardly toward the trough 14 from the second-topmost segments 130C of the lower air shield. As a result, the gap space 134 between the lower air shield 130 and the trough is smallest at this upper terminus of the lower air shield 130 where the heated air escapes this gap space 134, thus denoting a constriction point in the overall heated airflow path, which constriction helps increase the dwell time of the of heated air in the shielded gap space 134 for optimal warming effect on the bottom wall 14A of the trough 14. As shown, the in-turned topmost segment 130B of the lower air shield 130 at each side of the trough 14 may be closely neighboured by mated-together flanges 136 of the trough's bottom wall 14A, and respective sidewall 14B. Such closely neighbouring relation of these flanges 136 to the in-turned topmost segment 130B of the lower air shield 130 may increase the constricting effect on the heated airflow escaping the gap space 134 between the trough 14 and the lower air shield 130, further contributing to the increased dwell time of such heated air.
The upper air shield 132 spans across the open top of the trough 14 over a partial longitudinal span thereof starting from a distal end of the loading inlet (meaning the end thereof furthest from the first end 28A of the housing 12′), and extending past the exhaust outlet 20′. This way, heated air entering the trough 14 at the area thereof underlying the upper air shield 132 is not in direct fluid exposure to the exhaust outlet 20′, which in the present embodiment is equipped with an exhaust fan 138 for actively drawing air out of the housing 12 through the exhaust outlet 20. Accordingly, by providing a barrier between the exhaust outlet 20 and the directly underlying area of the trough 14, the upper air barrier 132 ensures that heated air admitted to the trough 14 at this outlet-underlying area thereof is ensured some dwell time in the trough interior 14 for effective warming and aeration of the trough contents, before such air is eventually exhausted from the housing 12′ via the exhaust outlet 20′.
In the present embodiment, mid-region placement of the exhaust outlet 20′ at a location nearer to a longitudinal center of the housing 12′ than to either end 28A, 28B thereof serves to help evacuate the humid air from the trough 14 in a more uniform fashion over the full length of the trough, as opposed to end-adjacent placement of the exhaust outlet 20 of the earlier embodiment. The upper air shield 132 also contributes to this uniform evacuation of the humid air, by spreading the suction effect of the exhaust fan 138 out over a greater area the housing 12 than the concentrated suction that would occur at the area of the trough 14 directly beneath the exhaust outlet 20 in the absence of the upper air shield. While desirable not to concentrate the entire suction effect direction on the outlet-underlying area of the trough, hence the inclusion of the shield, it is nonetheless still desirable to achieve at least some degree of air extraction at this top-shielded area of the trough, for example to again promote uniformity of the air extraction over the full trough length, and also to extract dust or other airborne contaminants from this top-shielded area, in contribution to a self-cleaning action of the dehydrator 10′. For such purpose, the illustrated example of the upper air shield 132 has two sets of exhaust holes 140 therein, each comprising a series of exhaust holes 140 arranged in a singular row running longitudinally of the upper air shield 132 at a short distance laterally inwardly from a nearest one of the upright side walls 14B of the trough.
A central span 132A of the upper air shield 132 between the two sets of exhaust holes 140 is a solidly intact span of unperforated character lacking any such holes therein, and denotes a majority of the upper air shield's overall width. In the illustrated example, this central span 132A of the upper air shield is of has a peaked tent-like shape whose uppermost apex is centered over the rotational axis R of the agitator shaft 58. A convex underside of the peaked central span 132A faces the agitator and the curved bottom wall 14A of the trough and a convex topside of the peaked central span 132A faces the insulated roof 50′ of the housing 12′. The exhaust holes 140 in the illustrated example reside at lower bends 142 of the upper air shield 132 where laterally-opposing bottom ends of the peaked central span 132A meet with up-turned laterally-outer wings 132B of the upper air shield 132, which are of obliquely inclined orientation. In the illustrated example, each laterally-outer wing 132B of the upper air shield terminates with a down-turned mounting flange 144, of obliquely declined orientation, which mates with a matchingly angled of the insulated roof's interior for mounted attachment thereto, and/or to the respective trough-supporting support channel 82 at the corresponding side of the trough. The peaked shape of the upper shield maintains a more consistent spacing between the agitator tines 62 and the upper air shield 132 throughout the range of their arcuately sweeping movement over the agitator shaft 58 during rotation around the rotational axis R thereof than if the upper air shield were simply flat. That said, the shape of the upper air shield and the mounting details thereof may vary in other embodiments.
In addition to the difference that the air distribution channel 76′ feeds into the shield gap space 134 through outlet holes 78′ in the top of the channel 76′, the air distribution channel 76′ of this embodiment also differs from that of the earlier embodiment in that the cross-sectional area of the air distribution channel reduces, over at least part of its length, in a direction moving away from the intake duct 74 and toward the second end 28B of the housing. This encourages a more uniform airflow velocity and pressure throughout the length of the air distribution channel 76′ for easier airflow balancing. The tapered reduction of the air distribution channel's cross-sectional flow area may be achieved through upward inclination of a bottom wall of the air distribution channel, and/or through laterally inward angling of the sidewalls of the air distribution channel 76′. Such upwardly inclined angling of the bottom wall of the air distribution channel 76′, optionally in stages, as can be seen in
Since various modifications can be made in my invention as herein above described, and many apparently widely different embodiments of same made, it is intended that all matter contained in the accompanying specification shall be interpreted as illustrative only and not in a limiting sense.
This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. Nonprovisional patent application Ser. No. 17/378,947, filed Jul. 19, 2021, which claims benefit under 35 U.S.C. 119(e) of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 63/079,626, filed Sep. 17, 2020, both of which are incorporated herein by reference in their entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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63079626 | Sep 2020 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 17378947 | Jul 2021 | US |
Child | 18514407 | US |