Device for metering and dispensing powdered filling material into containers

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6283176
  • Patent Number
    6,283,176
  • Date Filed
    Monday, April 3, 2000
    24 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, September 4, 2001
    23 years ago
Abstract
A device for metering and dispensing powdered filling material into containers has two filling wheels, which are disposed one after the other in the feed direction of the containers. At least the filling wheels are comprised of ceramic material and, in comparison to conventional filling wheels, have a reduced number of metering bores as well as a smaller structural size. In order to adjust the metering quantity, the filling wheels each have an adjusting disk, which cooperates with metering plungers. The two filling wheels and the two metering disks are respectively driven by a servomotor. The device according to the invention is distinguished by means of a compact design and an operation that is suitable in the pharmaceutical field.
Description




BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION




The invention relates to a device for metering and dispensing powdered filling material into containers of the type known from DE 33 28 820 C2. The known device has a metal filling wheel for the powder. The manufacturing costs of a filling wheel of this kind are very high due to the large number of recesses that are required as weight saving measures and due to the desired precision of the bores for the metering pistons. Furthermore, the abrasion resistance of such a filling wheel and its ability to be cleaned or sterilized are critical when it is used in the pharmaceutical field. With the known device, it is also necessary to manually adjust each metering piston individually in its radial position if a different metering quantity is desired. Such an adjustment therefore requires a relatively large amount of time and requires trained personnel.




OBJECTS AND ADVANTAGES OF THE INVENTION




The device according to the invention for metering and dispensing powdered filling material into containers, has the advantage over the prior art that its filling wheel is relatively easy to manufacture, is easy to manipulate due to its light weight, and fulfills high demands with regard to the wear resistance and the ability to be cleaned or sterilized.




Other advantageous embodiments of the device according to the invention are defined in the claims. A particularly compact design and a high-performance of the device can be achieved if a number of filling wheels are disposed one after the other in terms of the feed direction of the containers. In this instance, a reduced number of metering pistons is disposed in each filling wheel in comparison to the use of a single filling wheel so that due to the larger angular intervals between the individual metering pistons, a reduced filling wheel diameter is permitted. If the filling material quantity is also reduced to half the amount when two filling wheels are used, then the filling wheel diameter can be additionally reduced due to the lower metering chamber volume.




A central and synchronous adjustment of the metering volume of the metering pistons can be achieved by means of an adjusting disk which cooperates with all of the metering pistons of a filling wheel simultaneously. In order to permit an automatic adjustment of the metering volume without additional manual interventions or adjustments on the filling wheel, in a preferred embodiment, the provision is made that the adjusting device and the filling wheel are coupled by means of a respective servo drive mechanism. It is therefore possible to operate the two servo drive mechanisms synchronously during normal operation and to drive the two servomotors asynchronously for a short time in order to adjust the metering pistons.











BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS




An exemplary embodiment of the invention is shown in the drawings and will be explained in detail below.





FIG. 1

is a perspective, partially sectional depiction of a part of a device for metering and dispensing a powdered filling material into containers,





FIG. 2

is a longitudinal section through the device according to

FIG. 1

,





FIG. 3

is a simplified section in the plane III—III in

FIG. 2

,





FIG. 4

is a front view of a filling wheel, and





FIG. 5

is a detail of the filling wheel according to

FIG. 4

, in a sectional view.











DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS




The device


10


shown in the figures is used to meter and dispense powder


1


into containers


2


such as bottles, vials, or the like in the field of the pharmaceutical industry. The device


10


has a cyclically driven feed unit


11


for the containers


2


, which is not shown in detail and feeds the bottles in spaced relation along under a filling unit


12


. The filling unit


12


has a filling chamber


13


for the powder


1


and this chamber is defined by a front and rear filling chamber wall


14


,


15


. Above the filling chamber


12


there is a larger storage container for the powder


1


, which storage container is not shown because it is not essential to the invention. A so-called filling nodule


17


is inserted into the filling chamber


12


and forms two powder supply chambers


18


that are disposed symmetrically to each other. A star-shaped agitator


19


is supported so that it can rotate in each powder supply chamber


18


and assures the supply of powder


1


to filling wheels


20


disposed underneath the agitators


19


, which is why the filling nodule


17


has a respective recess


22


in the vicinity of the filling wheels


20


.




The two filling wheels


20


, which will be described in more detail below, are disposed one after the other in terms of the feed direction of the containers


2


, which is indicated with the arrow


23


, wherein their spacing corresponds to an integral dividing distance of the containers


2


in the feed unit


11


. The filling wheels


20


are each encompassed in a form-fitting manner by a respective multi-part protective plate


24


and these plates are fastened inside the filling chamber housing


25


. Between the protective plates


24


and the filling chamber


13


, a doctor blade


26


is disposed on the outside of the filling nodule


17


and a spring-loaded sealing clamp


21


is disposed on the opposite side in relation to the agitator


19


. The doctor blades


26


, which are made of plastic or ceramic, rest against the circumference surface of the filling wheels


20


in order to strip away powder


1


protruding beyond the circumferential surface. In order to prevent falling powder


1


from contaminating the device


10


, the inner chamber of the filling chamber housing


25


is also equipped with a suction device that is not shown.




As can be seen from

FIG. 3

, in its upper region, the filling wheel


20


is disposed between the two filling chamber walls


14


,


15


. In order to permit a seal between the two filling chamber walls


14


,


15


and the filling wheel


20


, the two filling chamber walls


14


,


15


each have a recess


27


,


28


disposed on the side oriented toward the filling wheel


20


into which is inserted an annular disk-shaped sealing plate


29


made of ceramic material or a cup-shaped ceramic seal


32


that is acted on with spring force by a spring


31


. The filling wheel


20


is fastened in a rotationally fixed manner to a first drive shaft


34


, which is embodied as a hollow shaft and passes through the one filling chamber wall


14


in a bore


35


. The drive shaft


34


is supported in two bearings


36


,


37


. Between the two bearings


36


,


37


, a first gear


38


is fastened to the first drive shaft


34


in a rotationally fixed manner and engages with a second gear


39


. The second gear


39


in turn is coupled to the agitator


19


by means of a shaft


41


which passes through the one filling chamber wall


15


. A first toothed belt gear


42


is disposed on the end of the drive shaft


34


opposite from the filling wheel


20


. The two first toothed belt gears


42


disposed on the drive shafts


34


of the filling wheels


20


have a first toothed belt


43


wound jointly around them and this belt is coupled to a first servomotor


45


by means of another toothed belt gear


44


. As a result of the first servomotor


45


being coupled to the two filling wheels


20


, these filling wheels are moved synchronously by the first servomotor


45


.




The drive elements of the filling unit


12


disposed on the back side of the device


10


are preferably accommodated in a common machine housing


47


(

FIG. 1

) and can be height-adjusted as a unit in order to adapt to different container sizes, for which purpose openings with sealing collars


48


are embodied in the machine housing


47


. In addition, it should be emphasized that this embodiment can only be seen in

FIG. 1

, while the functional disposition and embodiment of the drive elements of the device


10


are shown in FIG.


3


.




The two filling wheels


20


are respectively comprised of ceramic material and have four metering bores


49


disposed offset from one another by 90°. Metering plungers


53


are disposed in the metering bores


49


, which extend from the circumferential surface


51


of the filling wheels


20


to a central recess


52


. The metering plungers


53


, which are comprised of stainless steel, have a screen


54


at their upper end. They have a central suction bore


55


, which feeds into a lateral recess


56


. The lateral recess


56


cooperates with a suction conduit


57


or an ejection conduit


58


, which is embodied in the one filling chamber wall


15


and the sealing plate


29


, and is connected to a negative pressure source or overpressure source that is not shown. Whereas the suction conduit


57


in the filling chamber wall


15


is comprised of an arc-shaped slot which covers an angular range of approximately 180° from the upper metering position until just before the transfer position aligned with the container


2


, the ejection conduit


58


is only embodied in the filling chamber wall


15


and in the sealing plate


29


in the vicinity of the transfer position.




The metering plungers


53


(

FIG. 5

) are supported so that they can slide in the metering bores


49


in order to adapt to different quantities of filling material, wherein a seal


59


is inserted into a corresponding recess of the metering plungers


53


, which seals the metering plunger


53


in relation to the metering bore


49


. The sizes of the lateral recess


56


and the suction conduit


57


or the ejection conduit


58


are adapted to the adjustment range of the metering plungers


53


so that even in the two extreme positions of the metering plungers


53


, a sufficiently great overlap is assured. The adjustment of the metering plungers


53


takes place by means of adjusting pins


61


, which are preferably comprised of ceramic and engage in a lateral bore


62


embodied in the lower region of the metering plungers


53


. The central regions


63


of the adjusting pins


61


are disposed inside recesses


64


of the filling wheels


20


, while the ends of the adjusting pins


61


protruding from the filling wheels


20


protrude into sliding tracks


65


of an adjusting disk


66


. As can be seen best in

FIG. 4

, the sliding tracks


65


are respectively embodied as arc-shaped and are disposed offset from one another. It is essential that the distance of the sliding tracks


65


from the recess


52


respectively changes along the sliding tracks


65


so that in the event of a rotation of the adjusting disk


66


in relation to the filling wheel


20


, all of the adjusting pins


61


guided in the sliding tracks


65


are moved the same amount radially inward or outward, as a result of which the adjustment of the metering plungers


53


in the metering bores


49


can be simultaneously changed in order to adjust the metering volumes in the desired manner.




On the side oriented toward the filling wheel


20


, the adjusting disk


66


has a shoulder


67


, which protrudes into the recess


52


of the filling wheel


20


and is supported so that it can rotate in this recess. The adjusting disk


66


is connected in a rotationally secured fashion to a second drive shaft


70


by means of a screw


68


and this drive shaft


70


is supported in two bearings


71


inside the first drive shaft


34


and on the side opposite from the filling wheel


20


, protrudes from the first drive shaft


34


with a shaft stub


72


. A second toothed belt gear


73


is fastened to the shaft stub


72


and is coupled to a second servomotor


75


by means of a second toothed belt


74


that is common to both adjusting disks


66


and has teeth on both sides.




A compression spring


76


is disposed between the second toothed belt gear


73


and the near end face of the first drive shaft


34


and presses the adjusting disk


66


, together with the filling wheel


20


, against the sealing plate


29


. Finally, the device


10


also has an exhaust nozzle


77


connected to an overpressure source for each filling wheel


20


(FIGS.


1


and


2


). In terms of the rotation directions of the filling wheels


20


, which are labeled


78


and


79


in

FIG. 2

, these exhaust nozzles


77


are disposed 90° after the delivery position of the powder


1


, which delivery position is aligned with the containers


2


.




The above-described device


10


functions as follows: the containers


2


are cyclically fed under the filling wheels


20


by the feed unit


11


and are aligned with these filling wheels. Basically, two operating types of the device


10


must be distinguished from each other below. In the first type of operation, the entire desired filling quantity of powder


1


is introduced into the containers


2


by a single one of the two filling wheels


20


. In this instance, the forward feed of the feed unit


11


is such that only every other container


2


comes to a stop under the first filling wheel


20


or under the second filling wheel


20


. However, the second type of operation, in which half of the filling material quantity is respectively introduced into each container


2


by each of the two filling wheels


20


, is preferable. As a result, on the one hand, the metering volume required in each filling wheel


20


is reduced and on the other hand, the number of metering bores


49


on the filling wheel


20


can be reduced, both of which permit a smaller structural size of the filling wheels


20


. In addition, since both filling wheels


20


are driven by a common servomotor


45


, the increased cost of the device


10


in comparison to conventional devices is kept within limits since two filling wheels with a smaller diameter replace one filling wheel with a larger diameter.




It is common to both operating types of the device


10


that depending on the position of the metering plungers


53


, a predetermined quantity of powder


1


travels into the metering bores


49


when these bores are disposed in the vicinity of the recess


22


of the powder supply chamber


18


. This takes place by means of the negative pressure prevailing in the suction bores


55


by means of the suction conduit


57


. Powder


1


which protrudes or adheres beyond the circumference surface


51


of the filling wheels


20


is stripped away by means of the doctor blade


26


during the subsequent rotation of the filling wheel


20


.




In all movements of the filling wheel


20


, it is essential that the two servomotors


45


,


75


drive the filling wheel


20


and the adjusting disk


66


cyclically and synchronously so that the positions of the metering plungers


53


in the filling wheel


20


remain unchanged. If the filling wheel


20


is disposed in the transfer position that is offset in relation to the recess


22


by 180°, then the suction bores


55


are disposed in the vicinity of the ejection conduit


58


so that with the aid of compressed air, powder


1


which was previously disposed in the metering bores


49


is ejected into the containers


2


. As explained above, the filling wheel


20


is rotated cyclically. In the exemplary embodiment, the filling wheel


20


is respectively rotated by 90° in the rotation direction


78


,


79


so that in the stop position that comes 90° after the transfer position, powder


1


possibly still adhering in the metering bore


49


can be blown out of the metering bore


49


by means of the exhaust nozzle


77


. This assures that in each metering event, there is no more powder


1


in the metering bores


49


, which increases the metering precision and prevents the metering plungers


53


from becoming clogged with powder


1


.




If the metering volume in the filling wheels


20


needs to be changed, then this takes place by means of a short, asynchronous operation of the two servomotors


45


,


75


. The new desired metering quantity is preferably input into the control unit of the device


10


by means of an input unit. Then, during a stop phase of the filling wheels


20


, the device temporarily triggers to servo drive mechanism


75


while the other servo drive mechanism


45


remains at rest. As a result, the position of the adjusting disk


66


in relation to the filling wheel


20


changes in the desired manner and consequently, so does the position of the metering pistons


49


. Then both servomotors


45


,


75


are once again driven in a synchronous fashion.




In a modified embodiment of the invention, which is not shown, a check weigher is disposed between the two filling wheels


20


and is used to determine the filling quantity that is metered in by means of the first filling wheel


20


. Furthermore, the two adjusting disks


66


each have a separate drive mechanism. With a device that is modified in this fashion, it is now possible to meter different quantities of filling material by means of the two filling wheels


20


. It would thus be conceivable to meter in 90% of the desired filling quantity by means of the first filling wheel


20


, while the second filling wheel


20


, depending on the result determined by the check weigher, meters in the remaining 10%. In this manner, the metering precision can be increased, wherein simultaneously, by virtue of the fact that the two filling wheels


20


also have a common drive mechanism, the cost is only increased by means of the additional servomotor for the one adjusting disk


66


and by means of the check weigher.




The foregoing relates to a preferred exemplary embodiment of the invention, it being understood that other variants and embodiments thereof are possible within the spirit and scope of the invention, the latter being defined by the appended claims.



Claims
  • 1. A device (10) for metering and dispensing powdered filling material (1) into containers (2), comprising a cyclically operating transport unit (11) for the containers (2), a storage chamber (18) for the filling material (1), and a plurality of cyclical, horizontally revolving filling wheels (20) disposed one after another in a feed direction (23) of the containers (2), each of said plurality of cyclical, horizontally revolving filling wheels (20) have radially disposed receiving bores (49) for metering pistons (53) which are adjustable in terms of their position in the receiving bores (49) in which a position of the metering pistons (53) can be changed by means of a central adjusting device, said central adjusting device has an adjusting disk (66) that rotates in relation to a drive shaft (34) of the filling wheels (20), and a spiral-shaped guide track (65) for each metering piston (53) is embodied in the adjusting device and is engaged by a guide pin (61) that is connected to the metering piston (53), and the filling wheels are made of one of steel or ceramic material.
  • 2. The device according to claim 1, in which the metering disk (66) is connected to an adjusting shaft (70), which is disposed inside the drive shaft (34) of the filling wheels (20), which drive shaft is embodied as a hollow shaft.
  • 3. The device according to claim 2, in which the drive shaft (34) of the filling wheels (20) and the adjusting disk (66) are respectively coupled to a servo drive mechanism (45, 77).
  • 4. The device according to claim 3, in which the filling wheels (20) cooperate with one of a plastic or ceramic stripping body (26) for protruding filling material (1).
  • 5. The device according to claim 2, in which the metering pistons (53) are comprised of one of stainless steel with a screen (54) or of air-permeable ceramic.
  • 6. The device according to claim 1, in which the drive shaft (34) of the filling wheels (20) and the adjusting disk (66) are respectively coupled to a servo drive mechanism (45, 77).
  • 7. The device according to claim 6, in which the filling wheels (20) and the adjusting disks (66) are jointly driven by a single servo drive mechanism (45, 77), which is respectively coupled to the filling wheels (20) and the adjusting disks (66) by means of a respective toothed belt (43, 74).
  • 8. The device according to claim 7, in which the guide pins (61) are comprised of one of stainless steel or ceramic.
  • 9. The device according to claim 7, in which the filling wheels (20) cooperate with one of a plastic or ceramic stripping body (26) for protruding filling material (1).
  • 10. The device according to claim 6, in which the metering pistons (53) are comprised of one of stainless steel with a screen (54) or of air-permeable ceramic.
  • 11. The device according to claim 10, in which the filling wheels (20) cooperate with one of a plastic or ceramic stripping body (26) for protruding filling material (1).
  • 12. The device according to claim 6, in which the filling wheels (20) cooperate with one of a plastic or ceramic stripping body (26) for protruding filling material (1).
  • 13. The device according to claim 1, in which the metering pistons (53) are comprised of one of stainless steel with a screen (54) or of air-permeable ceramic.
  • 14. The device according to claim 1, in which the guide pins (61) are comprised of one of stainless steel or ceramic.
  • 15. The device according to claim 14, in which the filling wheels (20) cooperate with one of a plastic or ceramic stripping body (26) for protruding filling material (1).
  • 16. The device according to claim 1, in which the filling wheels (20) cooperate with one of a plastic or ceramic stripping body (26) for protruding filling material (1).
Priority Claims (1)
Number Date Country Kind
199 15 259 Apr 1999 DE
US Referenced Citations (2)
Number Name Date Kind
4671430 Dinius Jun 1987
4949766 Coatsworth Aug 1990