The invention relates to a device for processing materials, in particular for mixing, kneading, fibrillating, grinding and disintegrating, comprising a container enclosing a vertical container chamber with a product inlet at the top thereof, a stator with concentric gear rings arranged about a vertical axis, and a rotor with a plurality of arms having teeth meshing with the teeth of adjacent gear rings.
German Patent 36 41 413 describes a device for processing materials comprising a stator configured as an inner cone provided with gear rings. The stator cooperates with a rotor having arms projecting from a hub. Each of these arms bears teeth meshing with the teeth of the gear rings of the stator. With each turn of the rotor, the material to be processed is transported farther outward by one stage, while being subjected to an intensive shear effect, mixing and redistribution. The rotor arm and the subjacent container chamber of the upright device allow for a permanent rearrangement of the material from the inside to the outside and provide for a multiple processing of dry and/or highly viscous matter so that the device is of excellent utility for the intensive mixing, kneading, fibrillating, disintegrating and similar processes important in industrial production. The upright arrangement of the housing facilitates the material's falling back from the periphery toward the center of the device.
It is the object of the invention to develop a device of the above type with regard to an improvement of the guiding of the product.
In the present invention a guiding funnel is arranged in the container chamber above the rotor, the centric funnel opening of the guiding funnel having a smaller diameter than the rotor. The guiding funnel directs the material succeeding from above to the stator/rotor funnel to the center of the container and thus maintains the material in the active range of the tools. Moreover, it is made sure that the material gets into the active region of the tools in the vicinity of the axis, where It is moved outward on the inner cone of the stator while being processed by the teeth of the stator and the rotor. The guiding funnel thus guides the product into the active region of the device near the axis of the device.
Preferably, the funnel opening extends vertically into the rotor, i.e. into the area covered by the rotor arm movement. This means that the inner opening of the guiding funnel is at a lower level than the top edges of the rotor arms.
In a preferred embodiment of the invention the guiding funnel has an outer surface that is less steep that the inner surface. The outer or bottom surface of the guiding funnel, together with the inner cone surface of the stator, forms an annular space in which the product pushing outward is retained. Following this material retention is an expansion of the product due to the ever increasing diameter. Such a configuration of the guiding funnel promotes the redistribution and mixing of the material in the active region of the tool.
According to a preferred development of the invention the rotor has an axle stub projecting upward from a hub and bearing a feed screw. The feed screw conveys the product on its way from the top down and generates an additional pressure in the central region of the container. The feed screw is particularly well suited for the processing of heavily flowing products and viscous pastes. The diameter of the feed screw should suitably be somewhat larger than the diameter of the funnel opening.
The device of the present invention is also useful for the wet grinding of materials. The cooperating gear rings cause a pre-supply of energy into the material fed into the container from above, while heat is simultaneously dissipated through the housing.
In an advantageous embodiment of the invention the container is closed by a bottom wall having a receptacle for a carrier insert of the stator carrying the gear rings. The carrier insert is removably arranged in the receptacle. For cleaning or maintenance purposes, the carrier insert can be removed from the bottom wall as a whole towards the inside of the container after the rotor has been removed. Then, the stator can be dismantled and is available for cleaning, repair or maintenance. It is not necessary to dismantle the entire container. Rather, the container only has to be opened to have access to the carrier insert. This is done by taking off a lid of the container. The bottom wall is an integral part of the container and does not have to be removed. With the carrier insert removed, the container may also be subjected to cleaning and maintenance.
It is possible to replace the stator as a whole together with the carrier insert and the gear rings and to replace it with a new stator, for example, when the gear rings are worn or damaged.
In addition, the gear rings may be mounted to the carrier insert so as to be removable therefrom, each individual gear ring of the stator being adapted to be removed from the carrier body and to be replaced. Thus, repair work is considerably facilitated and economized, in particular in cases of broken teeth, since only the defect gear ring must be exchanged.
According to an advantageous development of the invention, each arm of the rotor consists of a carrier bar and a matching engaging toothed rack of hard metal. The carrier bar and the mesh in a matching fashion, i.e. positively, with either the carrier bar or the toothed rack being the embracing member and the respective other element forming the inner member of the meshing engagement. Thereby, it is achieved that the toothed rack and the carrier bar are each pressed against each other along a surface, whereby the pulling force applied upon rotation of the rotor is distributed over a surface. As known, hard metal is a brittle material with low strength against tensile stresses and bending stresses. The invention achieves that no major tensile or bending stresses occur in the toothed bar. Such stresses only occur in the carrier bar that may be made of steel of great tensile strength.
It is another advantage that the toothed rack can be assembled to the carrier bar under different orientations. If, given a rotation of the rotor in a first sense of rotation, the front edges of the teeth of the toothed rack are worn down, the operation of the device can be continued if the rotation follows a second sense of rotation opposite to the first sense of rotation. In this way, the very expensive hard metal toothed bar is used more efficiently.
The following is a detailed description of an embodiment of the invention with reference to the drawings.
In the figures:
The device comprises a container 10 having a diameter of 600 mm, for example, and being mounted vertically upright on a column 100. As illustrated in
The container 10 comprises an upper container portion 110 closed at the top end with a lid 111. Contiguous to the lower end of the container portion 110, seen in side elevational view, is a trapezoidal transition wall 15 ending in a bottom wall 11. Below the bottom wall a barrier liquid housing 112 is provided to which a supply line and a discharge line for barrier liquid is connected. The barrier liquid housing 110 is supported by the column 100.
The container 10 is supported by vertical posts 113 whose lower ends are fastened to the base 101 and whose upper ends bear rubber buffers 114. Supporting bearings 115 are mounted to the container portion 110, which rest on the rubber buffers so that the container 10 is suspended from the posts 113, so to speak.
As illustrated in
Although
The container portion 110 is detachably connected with the truncated lower portion 130 through a flange connection 131. The flange connection 131 is retained by power tighteners 132 that may be opened to dismantle the container.
The lower portion 130 is provided with blind flanges 133 for fastening measuring instruments. An overflow 134 is provided at the outer wall of the container portion 110.
In the center of the container lid 111 a product inlet 136 is provided through which the product to be processed is fed vertically into the container 10. Moreover, other inlet nozzles 137 through which additives can be supplied. Finally, an inspection opening 135 is provided at the lid 111. An access opening is closed by a door 138 in the lid 111 (FIG. 2).
A channel 154 extends through the bottom wall 11 of the housing 10 to an connector 155 for draining residuals. Via the channel 154 fluid sinking to the lowest point of the container chamber 50 is drained from the container chamber.
As is evident from
The rotor 13 comprises a hub 26 fastened on the shaft 12 and a plurality of arms 27 projecting radially from the hub. The arms 27 have downward directed teeth 29 meshing with teeth 28 of the gear rings 20 of the stator. The teeth 28 project upward from each of the gear rings 20. The teeth 29 of the rotor 13 engage the gaps between the gear wheels 20 of the stator 17. The teeth 28 of each gear ring 20 are spaced circumferentially.
The teeth 28 and 29 consist of wear-resistant material, in particular hard metal. In the stator 17, the carrier rings 30 with the integrally formed teeth 28 are made of hard metal.
The working surface 18 of the stator 17 formed as an inner cone continues outward with substantially the same cone angle in the transition surface 33 of the transition wall 15 so that the material that has passed the teeth 18, 29 is pressed upward and outward along the working surface 18 and the transition surface 33. As illustrated in
In addition, the toothed rack 55 is fixed with screws 56 passed through bores 57 of the support bar 63, their thread being screwed into a threaded insert 58 sunk into the toothed rack 55. The threaded insert 58 is made of steel and is soldered into the toothed rack 55. By loosening the screws 56 provided at regular intervals along one arm 27, the toothed rack 55 can be dismantled.
It is possible to replace individual toothed racks 55 of one or more teeth are damaged. To this end, the rotor 13 can be dismantled from the shaft 12 and pulled off towards the interior of the container.
During operation of the device the front edges of the teeth 29—seen in the direction of rotation—are worn particularly heavily. When the front edges of the teeth are worn down, the toothed rack 55 is taken from the support bar 53 and inserted in a turned around orientation with the former front edges now being directed rearward, the reversible drive of the shaft 12 is adjusted to the inversed rotation and the rotor 13 is driven in the opposite sense of rotation. Thus, both the teeth of the rotor 13 and those of the stator 17 can be used twice. The exploitation of the expensive hard metal is thereby improved.
The carrier rings 30 of the stator 17 that form the oblique working surface 18 overlap such that the respective outer carrier ring partly covers the adjacent inner carrier ring of smaller diameter and holds the same down in the respective recess of the carrier insert 19. The outermost ring 30a that holds down the adjacent inner carrier ring 30 is made of stainless steel and has no teeth. It is held at the carrier insert 19 by a screw. The outer ring 30a thus forms the blocking element for all carrier rings 30.
The carrier insert 19 can be taken from the receptacle 16. This is done by pushing screws (not illustrated) that are screwed into threaded bores 60 in the bottom wall 11 and which push against the underside of the carrier insert 19. For example, a total of four threaded bores 60 for pushing screws are equally distributed in the bottom wall 11. By turning the pushing screws uniformly, the carrier insert 19 is pushed up into the container chamber 50. Before this happens, the rotor 13 must be removed, of course. This is effected by loosening the screw 61 that retains the rotor 13 on the shaft 12. For access to the screw 61, the closing stopper 41 is unscrewed from the shaft stub 40.
After the stator 17 has been taken from the container 10, each individual gear ring 20 can be loosened from the carrier insert 19. To this end, each gear ring 20 is associated to a threaded bore 68 within the carrier insert (
Inside the container 10, a guiding funnel 34 is mounted at a distance from the transition wall 15. The guiding funnel 34 has a funnel-shaped inner surface 35 terminating in a funnel opening 36 at the lower end of the guiding funnel. The funnel opening 36 protrudes from above into the chamber defined by the arms 27 of the rotor and it has a smaller diameter than the rotor 13. The material fed and following into the container from above is concentrated towards the area of the hub 26, i.e. towards the central area, by the funnel opening 36. There, the material gets between the arms 27 of the rotor 13 and arrives in the area of the teeth.
The guiding funnel 34 has an outer surface 37 that is less steep than the inner surface 35. Thus, the guiding funnel 34 has a thickness increasing with the diameter. The outer surface 37, together with the transition surface 33, forms an annular gap 38 in projection of the arms 27 of the rotor 13. The height of the annular gap 38 decreases outward. In the annular gap 38, the outward conveyed material piles up so that the transport action by the teeth 28, 29 is met with a resistance. Thus, the shearing, grinding and mixing action of the teeth is reinforced.
In projection of the shaft 12, the hub 26 is provided with an upward protruding shaft stub 40 that is tubular and is closed by a closure 41. The shaft stub 40 bears a feed screw 42 with one or two threads. Upon rotation of the driven shaft 12, the feed screw conveys from the top down, i.e. towards the hub. 26. The diameter of the feed screw 42 is slightly larger than that of the funnel opening 36. The feed screw 42 generates an increased pressure in the center, i.e. around the rotor 13.
Although a preferred embodiment of the invention has been specifically illustrated and described herein, it is to be understood that minor variations may be made in the apparatus without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention, as defined by the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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201 14 251 U | Aug 2001 | DE | national |
201 14 253 U | Aug 2001 | DE | national |
201 14 250 U | Aug 2001 | DE | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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1794972 | Mayer | Mar 1931 | A |
Number | Date | Country |
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36 41 413 | Dec 1986 | DE |
2607724 | Jun 1988 | FR |
6-106089 | Apr 1994 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20030042344 A1 | Mar 2003 | US |