The present invention relates to a device for the continuous treatment of at least one food or non-food raw material, and more particularly the treatment of solid-liquid mixtures, for example such as particulate and/or powdery mediums with aqueous or organic mediums, or solid-gas mixtures, as well as solid-liquid-gas mixtures.
The solids are for example particles, grains, flakes, flours or others, as well as fragmented lignocellulose products for temperature-controlled mixing and impregnation.
The treatment of this type of raw material for example consists of mixing and/or preheating, and/or hydration, and/or precooking and/or cooking of the raw material.
This type of treatment is for example done in a device having an elongated vat, with a single or double wall and which may or may not be pressurized. This vat defines a mixing chamber comprising at least one inlet orifice for the raw material and at least one outlet orifice for the treated material at the opposite ends of the vat, respectively.
In the mixing chamber, the vat contains, between the inlet orifice and the outlet orifice, one or two parallel shafts provided with generally separated blades that can be inclined. These blades are designed to agitate the raw material and, due to their incline, to perform the mixing and cause the material to progress from the inlet orifice toward the outlet orifice. The vat may include orifices or injectors for a liquid, the liquid for example being water or oil or any other liquid, or for steam designed to heat and moisten the raw material. EP-A-0,264,069 provides an example of such a treatment vat.
Generally, the intensity of the mixing and the filling level in the vat are adjusted by inclining the moving blades in the mixing chamber and by the speed of rotation of the shafts. The orientation of the blades may be positive if, by rotating them, they tend to advance the material from the inlet orifice toward the outlet orifice, and the orientation of said blades may be negative if, on the contrary, the blades tend to slow the progression of the material inside the mixing chamber. The greater the number of blades oriented negatively, i.e., opposing the progression of the material toward the outlet orifice, the greater the mixing intensity and the filling level in the mixing chamber, which most often do not exceed 40% to 60% of the volume of the vat.
This poor filling level causes a poor exchange between the steam, the liquids and the raw material, such that the output of the device is not excellent.
The effectiveness of the treatment device is adjusted by mechanically modifying the orientation of the blades of the shafts. This blade-by-blade adjustment is a lengthy and tedious operation relying on the operator's know-how, and requires that the device be stopped and completely cleaned, thereby leading to significant production losses each time an adjustment is necessary. The compromise of the orientation of the blades in the negative direction and in the positive direction to ensure sufficient treatment of the raw material does not allow quick and effective auto-emptying of the device and requires a major manual cleaning operation each time the formulation or production is changed.
The invention aims to propose a device for continuously pretreating a raw material that avoids these drawbacks and makes it possible to improve output.
The invention therefore relates to a device for continuously treating a raw material made up of solid-liquid or solid-gas or solid-liquid-gas mixtures, as defined in claim 1.
Other features of the device according to the invention are specified in dependent claims 2 to 11.
The invention also relates to a treatment installation, as defined in claim 12.
The invention further relates to uses of the aforementioned treatment device, as defined in claims 13 to 16.
Other features and advantages of the invention will emerge from the detailed description thereof provided below, for information and non-limitingly, in reference to the appended figures, in which:
The device 10 comprises an elongated vat 11 defining a mixing chamber 15 including at least one inlet orifice 12 for the raw material at a first end and an outlet orifice 13 for the treated material at the other end. Thus, during use, material inserted into the mixing chamber 15 through the inlet orifice 12 travels through the mixing chamber from one of its ends to its opposite end along the vat, from where it exits the mixing chamber through the outlet orifice 13.
Between the inlet 12 and outlet 13 orifices, respectively, the mixing chamber 15 of the vat 11 contains at least one agitating shaft 16 provided with blades 17. As explained in more detail hereafter, the blades 17 of the shaft(s) 16 make it possible to agitate the raw material so as to mix it continuously while causing it to progress from the inlet orifice 12 toward the outlet orifice 13.
In the example embodiment shown in
In the event the vat 11 contains a single shaft 16, that vat is in the shape of a simple tube.
The vat 11 includes a single or double wall and the vat 11 may or may not be pressurized.
As shown in
As shown in
The treatment device 10 also includes a mixing screw 25 for the bottom of the vat, in other words arranged in the mixing chamber 15, at the bottom thereof, as shown in
In the example embodiment shown in the figures, the treatment device 10 also includes a complementary screw 30 with two directions of rotation positioned below the outlet orifice 13 of the vat 11 extending perpendicular to the mixing screw 25. The complementary screw 30 is positioned in a sheath 31 that includes, substantially below the outlet orifice 13 of the vat 11, an emptying valve 32 that may be opened or closed, as will be seen later.
In the event the device 10 is used as a pretreatment device, the complementary screw 30 makes it possible to transfer the pretreated material from the outlet orifice 13 of the vat 11 toward a subsequent treatment machine, not shown. This complementary screw 30 is rotated in both directions by an electric motor 33 (
This subsequent treatment machine is formed by an extrusion machine with one or more screws by a cooker or a reactor or by any other suitable machine.
The raw material is introduced through the inlet orifice 12 inside the vat 11, and that raw material is mixed with the various ingredients introduced into the mixing chamber 15, by the blades 17 rotated by the shafts 16. The raw material, during mixing thereof, progressively advances toward the outlet orifice 13.
In the so-called normal operating configuration, the mixing screw 25 is rotated by the motor 26 to push the raw material toward the upstream direction of the treatment device 10, i.e., toward the inlet orifice 12, in the direction opposite the progression of that raw material from the inlet orifice 12 toward the outlet orifice 13.
Driving the mixing screw 25 in the opposite direction makes it possible to adjust the treatment of the raw material more effectively and flexibly depending on the raw materials to be treated. The action of this mixing screw 25, which slows the flow of the raw material due to its countercurrent effect and based on its speed of rotation, and through turbulence makes it possible to increase the filling level in the vat 11 and thus to regulate the residence time of the raw material in the mixing chamber 15 of the vat 11. This regulated action of the residence time of the material in the mixing chamber 15 is particularly remarkable in the case where, in the presence of two shafts 16 provided to perform dispersive axial mixing of the material, the mixing screw 25 is situated substantially midway between these two shafts, as shown in
This greater mixing flexibility and effectiveness of the treatment device associated with an improved filling level of the mixing chamber 15, greater than 50%, or even strictly greater than 60%, contributes to reducing losses and obtaining more or less homogenous hydration of the particles of the raw material to be treated, and therefore better energy output of the pretreatment device.
The mixing screw 25 constitutes an additional adjustment means that is accessible without stopping the treatment device, which is obtained by acting on the speed of said mixing screw 25, thereby making it possible to adjust the operating parameters without losing time or raw material. Consequently, the adjustment of the incline of the blades 17 of each shaft 16 is no longer an essential adjusting element and no longer needs to be modified for each treated material.
In the so-called emptying configuration, the vat 11 of the treatment device 10 is optionally connected to a cleaning system (not shown), and the mixing screw 25 is driven in an opposite direction of rotation such that said mixing screw 25 pushes the material from the inlet orifice 12 toward the outlet orifice 13 of the vat 11. This arrangement makes it possible to evacuate the material contained in the treatment device 10 easily, which saves time when cleaning the vat.
In the so-called normal operating configuration, the complementary screw 30 is rotated by the motor 33 in the positive direction so as to transfer the pretreated material between the outlet orifice 13 of the vat 11 toward the extrusion machine in the direction indicated by the arrow F1 in
In the so-called emptying configuration, the complementary screw 30 is rotated in the negative direction so as to evacuate, in the direction of the arrow F2, the solid or liquid residue contained in the vat 11, the emptying valve 32 being in the open position.
In the situation for changing material to be pretreated without performing intermediate cleaning of the vat, the complete emptying of said vat using the screw 25 reduces the risk of cross-contamination.
Lastly, the device may be coupled with an automated cleaning system to improve the production and hygiene conditions, in particular during the phases for changing material and/or stopped phases.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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11510017 | Feb 2011 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2012/052133 | 2/8/2012 | WO | 00 | 8/7/2013 |