The present invention relates to refining discs and plate segments for refining discs, and more particularly to the shape of the bars that define the refining elements of the discs or segments.
Disc refiners for lignocellulosic material, ranging from saw dust to wood chips, are fitted with refining discs or segments. The material to be refined is treated in a gap defined between two refining discs rotating relative to each other. The material moves in the grooves formed by the bars located on the disc surfaces, both in a generally radial plane, providing a transport function, and out of plane, providing a mechanism for material stapling on the leading edges of the crossing bars. The instantaneous overlap between the bars located on each of the two disc faces forms the instantaneous crossing angle. The crossing angle has a vital influence on the material stapling or covering capability of the leading edges.
Conventional bar geometries, particularly parallel straight line, radial straight line, and curved in the form of inviolate arcs on circular evolutes, show a change of bar crossing angle with respect to radial position within refining zones. Parallel straight-line patterns show furthermore a change of bar angle with respect to peripheral position within a field of parallel bars.
Since bar crossing angle is a determining factor for covering probability, a variation in bar angle leads to a variation in covering probability as well. Therefore an inhomogeneous distribution of material in the gap as a function of radial and angular position is unavoidable by conventional bar designs. Representative patents directed to particular configurations of bars and grooves on segments for refiner plates, include: U.S. Pat. No. 6,276,622 (Obitz), “Refining Disc For Disc Refiners”, Aug. 21, 2001; U.S. Pat. No. 4,023,737 (Leider et al.), “Spiral Groove Pattern Refiner Plates”, May 17, 1977; and U.S. Pat. No. 3,674,217 (Reinhall), “Pulp Fiberizing Grinding Plate”, Jul. 4, 1972.
In order to provide a uniform covering along the length of the bars independent of radial or angular position the bars should be shaped in a form that provides constant bar crossing angle regardless of position.
Accordingly, the object of the present invention is to provide a refining element bar shape with the desired feature of constant bar and thus constant crossing angle to promote a more homogeneous refining action.
A refiner disc or refiner plate segment wherein the bars assume the shape of a logarithmic spiral satisfies the foregoing object of the invention.
The invention may thus be characterized as a refining disc having a working surface, a radially inner edge and a radially outer edge, the working surface including a plurality of bars laterally spaced by intervening grooves and extending generally outwardly toward the outer edge across the surface, wherein the bars are curved with the shape of a logarithmic spiral.
From another aspect, the invention can be characterized as a disc refiner including first and second opposed, relatively rotatable refining discs which define a refining space or gap, the first and second discs each having a plate with a radially inner edge, a radially outer edge, and a working surface including a plurality of bars generally extending outwardly toward the outer edge across the surface, wherein the plurality of bars on at least the first disc are curved with the shape of a logarithmic spiral during operation of the refiner. Each of the bars on the first disc will be crossed in the refining space by a plurality of bars on the second disc, thereby forming instantaneous crossing angles. For each of the bars on the first disc, the crossing angle is a substantially constant nominal angle. Preferably for each of the plurality of bars on the first disc, all instantaneous crossing angles are within +/−10 degrees of the nominal crossing angle.
An additional feature of the logarithmic spiral is the variability of groove width, i.e., the distance between adjacent bars with respect to radial position. This makes the grooves open up in the direction of stock flow, which prevents plugging of the grooves with fibers and tramp material.
The invention may be described mathematically. Using polar coordinates r and φ, the following transformation function to Cartesian coordinates would apply:
x=r·cos φ
y=r·sin φ
r
2
=x
2
+y
2
The general shape of the logarithmic spiral bar is represented by
r=a·e
k·φ
k=cot α
k=0→circle
where “a” is a scale parameter for r and α (alpha) is the intersecting angle between any tangent to the curve and a line through the center (generatrix) of the coordinate system.
In the case of alpha=90 deg or −90 deg, the tangent of the curve in any point would be orthogonal to the generatrix, and the curve is therefore a circle with radius a.
This unique bar shape provides not only identity for individual bar angles but also the so-called cutting or crossing angle assumes the same identity throughout the whole refining zone.
The invention includes a method for manufacturing a set of opposed plates including the steps of forming a pattern of bars and grooves that substantially conform to the foregoing mathematical expressions.
The preferred embodiment of the invention will be described with respect to the accompanying drawings, in which:
A feed conduit 26 delivers a pumped slurry of lignocellulosic feed material through inlet opening 30 on either side of the casing 12. At the rotor, the material is re-directed radially outward through the coarse breaker region 32 whereupon it moves along the first grinding face 16 and a third grinding face 34 juxtaposed to the first face so as to define a right side refining zone 38 therebetween. Similarly, on the left side of the rotor 14, material passes through the left refining zone 40 formed between the second grinding face 18 and the juxtaposed grinding face 36.
A divider member 42 extends from the casing 12 to the periphery, i.e., circumference 44, of rotor 14, thereby maintaining separation between the refined fibers emerging from the refining zone 38, relative to the refined fibers emerging from the refining zone 40. The fibers from the right refining zone are discharged from the casing through the discharge opening 46, along discharge stream or line 56, whereas the fibers from the left refining zone 40 are discharged from the casing through opening 48 along discharge line 58.
Thus material to be refined is introduced near the center of a disc, such that the material is induced to flow radially outwardly in the space between the opposed refining plates, where the material is influenced by the succession of groove and bar structures, at a “beat frequency”, which is dependent on the dimensions of the grooves and the bars, as well as the relative speed of disc rotation. The material tends to moves radially outward, but the shape of the bars and grooves is intentionally designed to produce a stapling effect and a retarding effect whereby the material is retained in the refining zone between the plates for an optimized retention time.
Although the gap between plates where refining action occurs is commonly referred to as the “refining zone”, the opposed plates often have two or more distinct bar and groove patterns that differ at radially inner, middle, and outer regions of the plate; these are often referred to as inner, middle, and outer “zones” as well.
In accordance with the present invention, the further variable of the bar-crossing angle is maintained substantially constant. This is accomplished by the bars substantially conforming in curvature to the mathematical expressions set forth in the Summary. In particular, during operation of the refiner each of the bars on the first disc will be crossed in the refining space by a plurality of bars on the second disc, thereby forming instantaneous crossing angles, and for each of the bars on the first disc, the crossing angle is a substantially constant nominal angle. To the extent the invention is not perfectly implemented, a significant benefit relative to the state of the art can still be achieved when the instantaneous crossing angles in a given refining zone are within +/−10 degrees of the nominal crossing angle.
With reference to
Each refining disc segment can be considered as having a radially inner end 58, a radially outer end 60, and a working surface therebetween, the working surface including a plurality of bars 62 laterally spaced by intervening grooves and extending generally outwardly toward the outer end across the surface. Preferably all, but at least most, of the bars are curved with the shape of a logarithmic spiral.
As is common for both low and high consistency refining of wood chip or second stage material, the bars on a plate formed by the segments of
This particular and unique shape provides the advantage of the independence of bar angle from the location of the bar on the plate in a particular refining zone. Since the particular shape of the logarithmic spiral guarantees the bar intersecting angle with lines through the center of the plate to be constant, no bar angle and therefore crossing angle variation in the course of the relative movement of rotor and stator segments occurs. Since bar angle has a significant impact on refining action and bar covering probability, any variation of bar and crossing angle will result in a variation of refining action. The invention achieves maximum homogeneity of refining action by minimizing bar angle variation.
The width of the groove between two adjacent logarithmic spiral bars is variable and increases with radial distance by the nature of the curve. Thus the groove width at the ID of zone 68 is smaller than on the OD of the zone, the OD of the outer edge 60 of the plate in this case. Therefore the open area available for stock flow increases disproportional with increasing radius. This feature provides increased resistance against plugging in comparison to parallel bar designs, where no groove width variation occurs.
With reference again to the mathematical expressions appearing in the summary above, and the associated
The mathematical expression for the shape of the logarithmic spiral bar, defines any given bar which in the limit, is a line of infinitesimal thickness such that the location of any given point on the line is a function of the angular position (phi) of the point relative to a reference radius or diameter through the center (along the generatrix of the coordinate system) and the intersecting angle (alpha) between the tangent to the curvature of the bar at the point, and the generatrix. This mathematical relationship is used in a practical sense, to design functional bar patterns.
This would typically be performed in a computer assisted design (CAD) system which is readily programmed to incorporate the mathematical model and which has an output that can translate the mathematical modeling of the segment, to equipment for producing a tangible counterpart from a segment blank. This would proceed by having one spiral curve calculated in radial increments, thereby establishing the “mother” of all the other bars, by determining the starting radius as well as the starting angle (arrived at by adding a constant to the calculation result). The one full curve (representing the leading edge of the “mother” bar) will be located somewhere on the segment. In a CAD system, the curve will not necessarily be a mathematically continuous, full logarithmic spiral but rather can be approximated by a spline fit. The accuracy of the spline depends on the radial increments selected. Moreover, the first few points on the spline, close to the inside diameter of the segment, may not match closely to the theoretically logarithmic spiral, but this artifact of the CAD system has little adverse consequence if limited to the small radius at the inside diameter. The typical CAD system (e.g., AutoCad®) then allows the user to offset the trailing edge of the mother bar, thereby giving the bar a selected width which is established from the inner to the outer radius of the segment. The mother bar can then be copied and rotated to fill the segment. For example, the user can specify the bar width at a given radius, the number of bars for the segment, or the minimum desired groove width at a given radius, etc.
It should be appreciated that, in view of modern manufacturing techniques, the term “logarithmic spiral” as used herein, although based on a mathematical expression, may in practice only approximate the mathematical expression through a series of straight or curved lines each of which is relatively short as compared with the full length of the curve from the inner to the outer radius of the segment, or from the inner radius to the outer radius of a given zone in the segment. Similarly, a reasonable degree of latitude should be afforded the inventor in reading the term “logarithmic spiral” on the shape of curved bars according to which one of ordinary skill in the relevant field of endeavor would recognize an attempt to maintain conservation of the bar crossing angle in the radial direction on a given segment, or within the zone of a given segment. The benefit of the present invention can be realized to a significant extent relative to the prior art, even if the logarithmic spiral is merely approximated, e.g., if the crossing angle is maintained within +/−10 degrees from the radially inner end to the radially outer end of a given bar.
Variations of the invention can be readily understood without reference to other drawings. For example, in the context of the invention as implemented in a refiner, a first refining disc faces a second relatively rotatable refining disc with a refining space there between. Either both or only one of the first and second discs has a shape and surface with an inner end and an outer end including a plurality of bars generally extending outwardly toward the outer end across the surface, with the plurality of bars being curved with the shape of a logarithmic spiral. If both discs have segments with curved bars following the same logarithmic spiral, constant bar crossing angles will be achieved. If the facing discs both have logarithmic spiral bar curvature, but with different parameters alpha, some design variability for specialty purposes can be achieved. If only one disc has a logarithmic spiral bar curvature, and the facing disc has a conventional bar pattern, the result will still advantageously reduce bar crossing angle variation relative to two facing discs having the same such conventional pattern.
In another embodiment the logarithmic spiral bar curvature is present in fewer than all the radial zones.
Other implementations of the logarithmic spiral concept are shown in
Although the invention herein has been described with reference to a particular, preferred embodiment, it is to be understood that these embodiments are merely illustrative of the principles and applications of the present invention. It is therefore to be understood that numerous modifications can be made to the illustrative embodiments and that other arrangements may be devised without departing from the spirit and the scope of the present invention.
This is a divisional of U.S. application Ser. No. 10/476,779 filed Nov. 5, 2003, which was the national stage application based on International Application PCT/US03/12417 filed Apr. 22, 2003, which claims. priority under 35 U.S.C. Sec. 119(e) from U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/375,531 filed Apr. 25, 2002.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60375531 | Apr 2002 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10476779 | Nov 2003 | US |
Child | 12214087 | US |