The prior art contains devices that dispense foams. Foams are useful in diverse contexts ranging from firefighting to dispensing cleaners.
Foams are not commonly used for the application of fluid chemicals such as herbicides to plants. The usual method is to use spray equipment that turns fluid mixtures into a spray of drops. Drops are sprayed on various parts of the plant such as foliage and stems. Drops are also sprayed on cut surfaces such as cut stumps of woody species and brush.
Spraying drops of chemical mixtures on plants, however, can cause problems. Many of the drops of fluid may not reach the target plant. The spray pattern of a spray nozzle will not always match the target at a given moment of spraying, and some drops will pass by targeted foliage, stems, etc., and hit the ground, desirable plants, etc. In addition, drops, especially fine ones, may drift or otherwise move out of the spray pattern after being dispensed and move off-target.
If drops do reach the target, not all of them will evade plant defenses and enter the plant's internal system. Fine drops that reach the target can dry quickly, and the active ingredient in the dried spray on the leaf may not be absorbed as efficiently by the plant. Large drops may contact the target plant surfaces and bounce, roll, or drip off. Lastly, small and medium-sized drops may coalesce on surfaces into large ones and behave like large ones and not stay on the plant surface.
In addition, spray equipment, especially large agricultural spray equipment often uses high pressure—up to approximately 20 bar (290 psi). With increasing pressure, spray equipment—tanks, hoses, nozzles, etc., all must be more robust to handle the pressure. High pressure can pose hazards to people if components malfunction. Higher pressures also increase the chance for drift.
These and other problems with conventional spray equipment increases purchase and maintenance costs, heightens the risk of drift, spills, and hazards to people and the wider environment.
To overcome these shortcomings of spray systems, other dispensers have been developed. For example, some devices wipe liquid chemical mixtures onto plants. These are used mostly for wiping herbicides onto plants. Generally, a wiper is brought in direct contact with or close to a plant, and the herbicide mixture is transferred from the wiper surface to the plant.
Wiper systems typically use absorbent materials: sponge foam, rope, fabric sheets, canvas, or even carpet. The simplest are handheld wick systems where an herbicide solution is wicked from a bottle to a sponge applicator mounted in the bottle cap. The operator daubs the herbicide solution onto a plant surface.
More sophisticated systems can have spray booms encased or partially covered with canvas or be mounted inside rotating drums with absorbent material. The absorbent material is then sprayed on the inside, and the herbicide soaks through the material to the outer surface which acts as the wiping surface.
Herbicide application with wipers can have advantages over prior art spray systems: drift can be virtually eliminated. Another advantage with applying fluids such as herbicides with wipers is that lower pressure can be used. This mean that tanks, hoses, etc., need not be so heavily reinforced; equipment can be less prone to breakdown or premature wear. It can also mean that the wiping action can deliver the solution with less force to the target. This may reduce rebound or deflection off a leaf or other plant surface.
The prior art wiper devices, however, suffer from a number of shortcomings. It can be difficult to control the saturation of the wiping surface. If the wiping surface becomes over-saturated it can drip excessively. In fact, liquid herbicide can even pour from the wiping surface. If a saturated sponge of fabric material is tilted, liquid herbicide can sometimes pour from the lowest portion. On the other hand, if the wiping surface becomes too dry, insufficient herbicide will be transferred to the target weed. To control drippage but ensure adequate application, the operator must be very skilled at regulating how much liquid is directed to the wiping surface, how fast the wiping surface is wiped across the target plants, and the height of the wiping surface in relation to the target plant.
Another major shortcoming with prior art wiping systems is that the wiping surfaces of the devices can become clogged or plugged. After repeated saturation, the wiping surface can become can become crusty and stiff, especially if the carrier contains hard water or the herbicide has suspended solids. Plant debris, dirt and other foreign matter can further clog the wiping surface. Plant matter such as burs, stickers, thorns, leaves, and even broken branches and stems can become stuck on wiping surfaces. When the absorbent surfaces of prior art wipers come in contact with these “sticky” plant parts and with dust and dirt, absorbent surfaces can quickly become plugged. Unfortunately, dirt and organic matter may reduce performance of certain herbicides such as those containing glyphosate.
Cleaning can be very difficult with prior art wiping systems. Absorbent surfaces may require repeated flushing with wash water. This wash water has to be contained and prevented from contaminating surface waters, cultivated crops, or natural ecosystems.
Foams can offer advantages over liquid sprays and wiping systems. Foams can volatilize less readily than the fine or even medium sized drops from sprayers. This means foam application systems can offer the same advantage that wiping systems offer in reducing spray drift.
Foams also can cling tenaciously to surfaces such as plant foliage. In contrast larger drops dispensed from spray systems or wiping systems may not adhere well to plant surfaces. Moreover, foams can increase the amount of surface area covered by a given amount of herbicide.
Devices have been developed to dispense foams. Many of these devices, however, have shortcomings when it comes to applications to plants. Many fail to adequately mix a gas (typically air) with the liquid herbicide solution, and the dispensed fluid is just a foam solution in which the solution is mostly water and lacks bubble structure. Such foam solutions have low expansion ratios and drain rapidly.
In addition, many foam dispensers use relatively high pressures. High pressures can make it difficult to ensure most of the fluid is dispensed as foam. Instead, some of the fluid can be ejected as fine drops (which can drift) thereby minimizing the advantages of the foam. In addition, the use of higher pressures can necessitate more robust materials and material thicknesses for the dispenser making it more expensive and heavier. Finally, high pressures can make foam quality less consistent, especially with hand powered equipment that may cause pressure irregularities.
The purpose of the present invention is to overcome the limitations in the prior art dispensing system particularly as they relate to the application of fluid chemicals to plants.
The present invention generally relates to a device for dispensing foam onto plants, soils, and other objects. The device can be especially useful for spraying and wiping foams containing agricultural chemicals onto weeds. Many other uses are also possible including ones not involving plants or plant care.
According to a first illustrative example of the invention, a dispenser for dispensing foam comprises: a supply line in which a foamable solution flows under pressure and which comprises a gas inlet, a wand, a mixing chamber, and a nozzle, wherein the gas inlet introduces a gas into the foamable solution, the mixing chamber helps process the foamable solution into a foam, and the nozzle ejects the foam.
According to variations of this first example, the gas can be introduced proximally to the mixing chamber in the supply line; the mixing chamber can be located distally on the wand; the mixing chamber can contain a mixing medium, or the supply line can further connect a hose proximate to the wand.
In addition, with this example, foam may be ejected from the nozzle with a pressure between 0.5 and 20.0 psi; with a pressure between 0.5 and 15.0 psi; with a pressure between 0.5 and 10.0 psi; or with a pressure between 0.5 and 5.0 psi.
According to a second illustrative example of the invention, a dispenser for dispensing foam comprises: a wand fluidly connected to a nozzle for ejecting a foam and a wiper attached to the wand, the wiper being for temporarily retaining ejected foam and making the foam available for wiping the foam onto a target surface.
According to variations of this second example, the wiper can have a primary wiping surface that is impervious; the wiper can comprise a flat piece; the wiper can have a primary wiping surface that has an area greater than 4 cm2; the wiper can be a cage; the wiper can be a cage, the cage being tubular with at least one open end; the wiper can be a cage, the cage being tubular with no open end; the wiper can be a cage, the cage being rotatable on a longitudinal axis; the wiper can be a cage, the cage being a mesh material; the wiper can be a spatula; the wiper can be an elongated member; the wiper can be an elongated member; the wiper can be an elongated member and the nozzle can eject foam along a substantial portion of the length of the elongated member; or the wiper can be an elongated member and further comprise a cage covering at least a portion of the elongated member.
In addition, with this second example, foam may be ejected from the nozzle with a pressure between 0.5 and 20.0 psi; with a pressure between 0.5 and 15.0 psi; with a pressure between 0.5 and 10.0 psi; or with a pressure between 0.5 and 5.0 psi.
According to a third illustrative example of the invention, a dispenser comprises: a pressurized dispenser for dispensing a foam comprising: a supply line for moving a foamable solution, fluidly connected to a removable cartridge containing a porous mixing medium for mixing the foamable solution into a foam.
According to variations of this third example, the mixing medium can be a wad of material; the cartridge can be a hollow tube with at least one screen enclosing at least one end of the tube; or the cartridge can be a hollow tube with a screen enclosing each end of the tube.
According to a fourth illustrative example of the invention, a dispenser for dispensing foam comprises: an elongated tube and a nozzle in the wall of the tube for ejecting foam from the tube.
According to variations of this fourth example, the nozzle can be in a discrete portion of the tube; the nozzle can be elongated; the tube can have a firm wall; the tube can be horizontally positionable during dispensing; the tube can be horizontally and fixedly positionable during dispensing; the nozzle can eject foam along a substantial portion of the length of the tube; the nozzle can eject foam along most of the length of the tube; the tube can comprise two longitudinal halves and wherein the nozzle can be located in one of those halves; the nozzle can have an orifice that varies in size or orifices that vary in size along the length of the tube in order to eject foam more evenly along the tube; the dispenser can be operated by hand; the dispenser can further comprise a wiper attached to the dispenser, and the nozzle can eject foam onto a surface of the wiper; the dispenser can further comprise a wiper attached to the dispenser, and the nozzle can eject foam onto a surface of the wiper and where the wiper can further comprise a cage; the dispenser can further comprise a wiper attached to the dispenser, and the nozzle can eject foam onto a surface of the wiper and where the wiper can further comprise a rotatable cage; or the wiper can comprise a cage tubular in shape that covers at least a portion of the tube.
In addition, with this example foam may be ejected from the foam ejection system with a pressure between 0.5 and 20.0 psi; with a pressure between 0.5 and 15.0 psi; with a pressure between 0.5 and 10.0 psi; or with a pressure between 0.5 and 5.0 psi.
According to a fifth illustrative example of the invention, a dispenser for dispensing foam comprises: a boom and a foam ejection system for ejecting foam from the boom.
According to variations of this fifth example, the foam can be ejected evenly along a substantial portion of the length of the boom; the foam can be ejected evenly across most of the length of the boom; the boom can have a wiper or series of wipers attached to it and on which ejected foam can be retained and making the foam available for wiping the foam onto a target surface; the wiper can extend along a substantial portion of the length of the boom; the wiper can be made of an impervious material; the wiper can be made of a pervious material; the wiper can be made of a flexible material; the boom can have a wiper attached to it and the wiper can comprise a cage and the foam can be ejected into the cage.
In addition, with this example the foam ejection system may eject foam with a pressure between 0.5 and 20.0 psi; with a pressure between 0.5 and 15.0 psi; with a pressure between 0.5 and 10.0 psi; or with a pressure between 0.5 and 5.0 psi.
According to a sixth illustrative aspect of the invention, a dispenser for dispensing foam comprises: an elongated nozzle for ejecting foam into an elongated cage, making the foam available for wiping onto a target surface.
According to variations of this sixth example, the cage can be tubular with at least one open distal end; the cage can be tubular with no open end; the cage can be rotatable on a longitudinal axis; or the cage can be a mesh material.
In addition, in this example foam may be ejected with a pressure between 0.5 and 20.0 psi; with a pressure between 0.5 and 15.0 psi; with a pressure between 0.5 and 10.0 psi; or with a pressure between 0.5 and 5.0 psi.
According to a seventh illustrative example of the invention, a pressurized dispenser for dispensing foam comprises a nozzle for ejecting the foam having at least two orifices wherein the orifices are spaced sufficiently far apart as to eject at least two distinct streams of foam.
According to variations of this example, the nozzle can comprise at least three orifices; and the at least 3 orifices can vary in size.
In addition, with this example the nozzle may eject foam with a pressure between 0.5 and 20.0 psi; with a pressure between 0.5 and 15.0 psi; with a pressure between 0.5 and 10.0 psi; or with a pressure between 0.5 and 5.0 psi.
This summary is not intended to describe each illustrated embodiment, object, advantage, or use of the present invention. The figures and descriptions that follow more particularly exemplify these embodiments.
Below are descriptions of the drawings according to various embodiments of the invention.
One embodiment concerns a pressurized tank foam dispenser 100 as shown in
The example discussed in
The supply tank 101 can be of varying sizes. This dispenser 100 is one that might typically be carried by a user by the pump handle 107 or slung on the back of an operator 108 and carried by a strap 109 as shown in
The tank 101 and supply line 110 can be pressurized in the same way prior art tank sprayers are commonly pressurized. The user grasps the pump handle 107 and pumps it up and down to add air to the tank 101 to pressurize it. This can pressurize the tank 101 and the portion of the supply line 110 up to the wand handle 111 where the shut-off valve (not shown) can be located and controlled by the wand lever 112. (The supply line 110 can include fluid in the dip tube 114, the hose 103, the wand 104, the outlet assembly 105 (up to the nozzle 113), and fittings and connectors in between.)
Unlike prior art pressurized tank systems that typically operate best with pressures ranging from approximately 0.68 to 2.07 bar (approximately 10 to 30 psi), the present invention can generally require very low pressures to generate and dispense high quality foam. The pressure for this dispenser 100 can generally range from 0.5 to 20 psi and more preferably from 0.5 to 15 psi; and still more preferably from 0.5 to 10 psi. For some uses, the most preferable range can be from approximately 0.5 to 5 psi. Therefore the tank 101, pump head 102, hose 103, hose fitting 119, and wand 104 in this example could be less robust than prior art ones.
Once the tank 101 is filled with a liquid 118 (such as an herbicide solution or other foamable liquid) and pressurized, it can be operated. By depressing the wand lever 112, the operator 108 can cause liquid to be drawn through the bottom of the dip tube 114a. In operation when the wand lever 112 is depressed, the supply line 101 can be pressurized up to the nozzle 113 because the system can be made to be airtight up to the nozzle 113. The purpose of the nozzle 113 can be to control the direction or characteristics of the flow of the foam 133.
The dip tube 114 of the present invention can have a vent 117. The purpose of the vent 117 can be to introduce pressurized air from the headspace 116 into supply line 110 to help create foam of high quality. The vent 117 can preferably be positioned on the dip tube 114 so that it is located in the headspace 116 when the tank 101 is filled with liquid. The vent 117 should remain above the liquid level during use of the dispenser 100 in order to prevent the liquid 107 in the supply tank 101 from entering the vent 117.
The dip tube 114 can have an inside diameter of approximately 2 to 10 mm depending on various factors such as the volume of liquid desired to be dispensed and the size of the dispenser 100. For most hand carried dispensers 100, the vent 117 can be a very small, round opening in the wall of the dip tube 114—e.g., the vent 117 might have a diameter between approximately 0.3 mm and 2 mm and more preferably between 0.6 mm and 1.5 mm and even more preferably between 0.7 mm and 1.3 mm.
If the vent 117 is too large, the dispenser 100 may create poor quality foam and slow foam production. If the vent 117 is too small, insufficient air will be mixed the solution 107 and the foam may become watery. Small changes in the size of the vent 117 can make big differences in foam quality. Therefore, it is important that the vent 117 be properly sized.
Dip tubes in the prior art have typically been made of pliable or elastic materials such as certain plastics. A material often used for dip tubes is extruded polyethylene. Use of such materials makes sense for many reasons besides just cost. For instance, if a stiffer or more rigid material such as brass tubing were used for dip tubes, the dip tubes could be easily become bent and crimped or otherwise permanently deformed, for example when screwing-on or screwing-off the pump head 102 for filling the tank 101.
Although pliable materials such as polyethylene have worked reasonably well for standard sprayers, they have not worked so well for foam dispensers that have vents in their dip tubes for foam production. To create the dip tube vents in prior art foam dispensers, manufacturers have generally drilled into that soft, elastic polyethylene of the dip tube to create a vent. However, materials like polyethylene can be very difficult to drill with precision. The drill can distort the shape of the plastic making imperfections in the vent; and the plastic from the drilled opening—the chips or swarf—may not separate cleanly from the surrounding plastic, leaving dangling pieces of plastic. Problems may result: First, it can be difficult to maintain tight tolerances in creating the vent during production. Second, the size of the vent can change during usage of the sprayer. For example, the dangling pieces of swarf may change position during use of a dispenser. Or, imperfections in the vent surfaces can collect matter such as particles in the solution and possibly obstruct the opening. Third, even if an opening were drilled with precision to create an undistorted hole in a prior art dip tube, usage, cleaning, etc., can create wear in the sides of the vent and change the dimensions of the prior art vent.
To correct these shortcomings, the dip tube 114 of the present invention can have vent 117 formed with precision. To do this, a vented connector 115, in this example a tube splicer made of metal (e.g., brass or stainless steel) can be inserted between two sections 114a, 114b of the dip tube 114. The vent 117 can be formed in the wall of the connector by drilling or other means. A vent 117 sized at 0.9 mm with a 0.32 mm ID dip tube 114a worked well in usage trials.
Thus, when the dispenser 100 is activated (in this example, by depressing the lever 112 on the wand handle 111), liquid is drawn into the dip tube 114. As the liquid passes through the vented connector 115, air from the headspace 116 can be drawn into the dip tube 114 and mixed with the liquid. This can create a fluid stream with some bubbles (probably of varying sizes and quality). The fluid can then enter the hose and then the proximate end 106a of the wand 104. Thus, the vent 117 can act as a gas inlet to the supply line 110 by introducing a gas (typically air stored in the headspace 116) into the supply line 110.
In this example, the distal end 106b of the wand 104 has an outlet assembly 105 with a mixing chamber 122. The mixing chamber 122 can have an enclosure 123 creating a void 124 into which a cartridge 125 can be inserted as shown in
The cartridge 125 can contain a mixing medium 127 such as stainless steel wool. The cartridge 125 can be from about 1 to 30 cm in length for many applications; and more preferably from about 2 to 15 cm; and still more preferably from about 3 to 8 cm. The diameter can be from about 0.2 to 4 cm for many uses and more preferably from 0.5 to 2. Different dimensions could be appropriate for dispensers of different sizes.
A mesh screen 128a can enclose the proximate end and another mesh screen 128b the distal end of the cartridge 125. The screens 128a, 128b can be made of a variety of materials, e.g., metal wire cloth, plastic. For example, during usage trials, a 304 Stainless Steel Wire Cloth Disc, 60×60 Mesh was found suitable for both the proximate and distal screens 128a, 128b.
The cartridge 125 can be held within the mixing chamber enclosure 123 by a retainer 129—in this instance the retainer 129 is an O-ring. The retainer 129 should preferably hold the cartridge 125 in place when, for instance, the mixing chamber 122 is not attached to the wand 104. When the mixing is attached to the wand 104, the retainer 129 can form a seal and help ensure that fluid in the supply line 110 does not bypass the mixing medium 127 inside the cartridge 125. The mixing chamber 122 can be attached to the wand tube 121 in various ways such as by a first threaded connection 130. Distal attachments can also be connected to the mixing chamber 122 by a second threaded connection 131.
During usage trials, it was found that the mixing medium 127 should preferably be packed in the cartridge 125 relatively loosely. In addition, fine steel wool (316 stainless steel, fine grade available from McMaster Carr) produced drier foam with smaller bubbles than coarse steel wool. Therefore, fine steel wool is preferable to coarse as the mixing medium 127 in the cartridge 125. For a cartridge 125 with a body having a finished length of approximately 5.0 cm and an inside diameter of approximately 1 cm, a wad of fine steel wool weighing approximately 0.2 g distributed relatively uniformly throughout the volume of the cartridge 125 produced excellent foam.
To manufacture the cartridge 125, one of the screens 128a, 128b can be installed on the cartridge tube 126. For example, the distal screen 128b can be heat welded on. Next, the appropriate amount of mixing medium 127 can be installed in the tube 126. The mixing medium 127 can be manipulated to ensure the mixing medium 127 is distributed relatively uniformly inside the tube 126. The proximate mesh screen 128a can be mounted, e.g., by heat welding.
The cartridge 125 for containing the mixing medium 127 offers a number of advantages. First, the cartridge 125 can help ensure consistency in the installation of the mixing medium 127. The contents of the cartridge 125 can be easily viewed if the tube 126 is made of a translucent or clear material. During viewing (and before closure with both screens 128a, 128b) the mixing medium 127 can be manipulated to ensure proper installation. Also, any part of the mixing medium 127 that extends outside the cartridge 125 such as strands of steel wool extending through the mesh screens 128a, 128b can easily be trimmed to ensure that those strands do not affect seals or connections.
Second, the cartridge 125 can be easily removed for inspection, cleaning, or replacement by the user. If the retainer 129 is removed, the cartridge 125 can be sized to easily slide out of the mixing chamber enclosure.
Third, with the cartridge 125, the operator 108 doesn't have to directly handle the mixing medium 127 during removal and reinstallation for inspection, cleaning, and maintenance. Handling mixing medium 127 such as steel wool can be unpleasant—strands can poke skin; it can also result in breakage and loss of strands which can in turn affect dispenser performance when reinstalled.
Fourth, the cartridge 125 makes reinstallation of the mixing medium 127 into the mixing chamber 122 much easier. Without the cartridge 125, a mixing medium 127 like steel wool would have to be carefully packed to ensure uniform distribution in the mixing chamber void 124. The cartridge 125 makes reinstallation simple because it helps ensure the mixing medium 127 retains its desired shape and distribution. Fifth, the cartridge 125 can be disposable. Mixing medium 127 can be difficult to clean if clogged or contaminated. By having a cartridge 125, a clogged cartridge 125 can easily be removed and a new one installed—even in the field. Sixth, the cartridge 125 can help ensure that the mixing medium 127 is fully contained within the mixing chamber enclosure. For instance, the tube and the screens 128a, 128b can help prevent mixing medium 127 from migrating downstream during use. Seventh, a user could select from a range of cartridges (not shown) a particular cartridge 125 to produce desired foam qualities. For example, a user might select a cartridge 125 with a very small amount of mixing medium 127 made with coarse steel wool for one use and a cartridge 125 with tightly packed fine steel wool for another use.
During operation, when the fluid reaches the mixing chamber 122 it can be conditioned by the mixing medium 127. After conditioning in the mixing chamber 122, the foam can travel through a nozzle 113 consisting in this example of a single orifice 120. As shown in
This outlet assembly 105 can be used for foliar applications—where foam is applied to a target plant 160 from a distance (not shown). That distance should preferably be close—from touching the target surface to roughly 10 cm. For example, a small glob of foam 133 can be projected under low pressure at a target surface such as on plant foliage. Such applications can be quite precise and can generate very little mist or off-target foam spray. For such uses, the pressure used might be approximately 5 to 10 psi.
As shown in
With wiping, as it is understood here, the wiping surface can but need not directly contact the target surface. For instance, the foam 133 can be gathered on the nozzle 113—in and around the nozzle orifice 120 and on the nozzle face 132—in this example the surface on the perimeter of the nozzle orifice 120.
Alternatively, the pile of foam 133 on the nozzle 113 can simply be brought in contact with the target surface and be transferred to the target without any direct contact between the nozzle 113 and the target. For such uses, the pressure used might be approximately 0.5 to 5 psi.
The dispenser 100 can have distinct advantages over prior art dispensing systems. One key advantage is that the nozzle orifice's 120 wide opening can limit the amount of destruction of the bubble structure of the dispensed foam 133. If foam 133 is dispensed through conventional spray nozzles, small drops of liquid can be dispensed along with any foam 133 that has been produced. These small drops can easily drift or otherwise move off-target. This may occur with prior art dispensers because the small orifices, high pressures, and pressure changes can destroy foam bubbles before they are dispensed.
Another advantage of the dispenser 100 over prior art systems is that it can utilize low pressure. Testing was done using a pressure gauge attached to a prototype resembling the dispenser 100. A foamable solution was used containing tap water and 0.8% 225DK (a surfactant available from Jarchem Industries, Newark N.J. It was found that pressures in the dispenser 100 below 20 psi were preferable for wiping; pressures below 15 psi were more preferable; and pressures below 10 psi were still more preferable. (Moreover, in many cases where accuracy was critical, pressures below 5 psi are most preferable.) At these low pressures, high quality foam was produced, and foam could more easily be retained on the wiping surface. At higher pressures, in contrast, foam was ejected in a stream and did not easily collect on the wiping surface.
Another advantage of the dispenser 100 over prior art systems is that the wand 104 can be used to reach a target surface such as the leaves of a low-lying target weed as shown in
Still another advantage of dispenser 100 is the location of the mixing chamber 122. By having the mixing chamber located distally on the wand 104, the foamable solution is conditioned near where it will be ejected from the nozzle 113. This means the foam will be less likely to break down or be destroyed by extended travel through the supply line 110. In addition, there may be pauses between uses of the dispenser 100. During those pauses, the foam can break down. A distally place mixing chamber 122 reduces the amount of foam 133 that can be broken down in the supply line 110 when the dispenser 100 is not in use.
The outlet assembly 105 shown in
In addition the nozzle face 132 may provide a relatively small wiping surface on which foam 133 can collect as shown in
It should be noted that the dispenser 100 related to
In use, foam 233 can be dispensed from the nozzle 113 onto the paddle 238, and the paddle face 238a can function as the primary wiping surface. The paddle face 238a can then be wiped across target surfaces such as foliage, since most of the foam 233 will be ejected onto it.
The paddle 238 can be made of different materials. For example, it can be made of an impervious material such as a rubberized material, similar to that used for floor mats. This means primarily one side of the paddle 238 would be used for wiping. Having a pervious material such as a mesh would mean both sides could be used for wiping. The paddle 238 material would preferably be flexible.
Unlike the wiping surface of the dispenser wand 104 shown in
A different outlet assembly 305 mounted on a wand 304 is shown in
The cage 340 as shown in
The members 341 in this example can be made of metal wire with cross-members, e.g., 341a attached to longitudinal members 341b. The members 341 can be attached to each at points of intersection, e.g., by spot welding. The members 341 can form a round nose at the distal end 345.
The members 341 in this example might preferably be about 1 to 3 mm in diameter. If a stiff material such as a stiff metal were used as components, the cage 340 could form a stiff structure that would under normal use not bend significantly.
Having a relatively stiff frame for the wiper 339 can be preferable for certain applications. In
Another way the wiping technique can be used with the wiper 339 is shown in
As shown in Position 2, the cage 340 is being drawn in a direction that is generally perpendicular to the longitudinal axis 346 of the cage 340. As the cage 340 is brought near or brought in contact with the target foliage 360, foam 333 can be transferred to the foliage 360. Once the foam 333 contacts the foliage 360, the foam 333 can be transferred to the foliage 360. Some foam 333 and liquid will continue to cling to the cage 340 and some will transfer to the foliage 360 as shown in Position 2. In addition, as shown in Position 2, movement of the cage 340 across the foliage can bend the foliage. This bending can bunch up the foliage creating a greater surface area for transfer of foam 333 to the foliage. As shown in Position 3, after the wiping action has been completed, foam 333 clings to the target foliage 360.
The transfer of the foam from a wiper such as a cage to a target plant can be controlled in various ways: First, the level of foaminess can be varied by changing the make-up of the foamable solution. For example, more foaming agent can be added, generally making the foam 333 foamier, i.e., have more entrained air. Second, the mixing medium 127 can be changed to produce a foam 333 with a different quality (such as by changing the cartridge style as discussed above). Third, the amount of foam 333 ejected into the cage 340 can be varied. For example, the operator 108 can dispense a small glob of foam 333 with a short press of the lever 112 or continuously dispense foam 333 with a long press of the lever 112.
Fourth, the way in which the wiping action is done can change the application—for instance, pressing down very lightly and using the wiper's distal end 345 can dab a very small amount of foam for a precision application on a target plant 360. Pressing down 367c harder on the foliage and slowing the wiping action may cause more foam 333 to be transferred.
Other techniques can be used to change the way foam 333 is transferred to foliage: foam 333 can be dabbed on (not shown) the foliage 360; the wiper 339 can be brought down on the tips of foliage 360—thereby allowing more foliage tips to enter inside the cage 340 and the transfer of foam 333 can take place inside the cage 340. The wiper 339 can be moved in many different direction or in different patterns to transfer foam 333. This makes the dispenser equipped with the wiper 339 highly versatile in wiping foams created from liquid mixtures such as ones containing herbicides. (Note that many of these same techniques for controlling the transfer of foam to a target plan can be used with the other examples of wipers detailed above and below.)
The transfer of the foam 333 can also be varied by the amount of pressure in the dispenser 100 for ejection of foam 333 into the cage 340. Generally, the pressures used could be similar to those for dispenser discussed above in relation to
The wiper 339 and cages in general can offer other advantages. First, the wiper 339 shown in
Second, by controlling ejected foam 333, the wiper 339 not only can prevent excessive foam 333 from being applied to a target surface. It can also save the foam 333 within and on the structure of the cage 340 for later application to another target plant. Moreover, the collected foam 333 can be saved in the form of the cage 340 (i.e., in this example in the shape of a rod or solid tube) for a substantial period of time. The dispenser can also produce foam 333 that does not quickly break down or collapse. For example, foam 333 ejected into the cage 340 can be held for multiple seconds or even minutes without dripping liquid from the cage 340. This can be highly advantageous. It can allow a user to make spot treatments of target plants in different locations without dripping herbicide onto desirable vegetation or other non-target surfaces. This contrasts with prior art wiping systems that can drip profusely between spot applications.
Third, the wiper 339 can form the foam 333 in a desirable shape for wiping purposes. In this example, as mentioned above, the cage 340 can form the foam 333 in an elongated, rod-like shape. This rod-like shape can be advantageous for providing a large wiping surface that can wipe foam 333 along the length 346 of the wiper 339 as shown in
Fourth, the wiper 339 can provide a structure that limits slippage of the foam 333 from the wiping surface. For example, the foam 333 ejected onto the paddle 238 wiping surface discussed above may likely slip as the foam 333 drains and liquid collects on the paddle face 238a. The cage 340 however provides a three-dimensional structure for the foam 333 to attach to. The cage 340 structure can limit foam 333 slippage because the cage 340 can more readily contain the foam 333.
Fifth, the wiper 339 can effectively be used to deposit, stretch, and spread foam 333 over a target surface 360. Foam 333 can be deposited when excess foam 333 easily transfers from the cage 340 to a target surface. The stretching can occur as foam 333 that is clinging more tightly to the cage members 341 is stretched between those members 341 and the plant surface 360. The spreading can occur as foam 333 which has already been transferred to the target surface 360 is spread over a larger area of that target surface 360. In this way, the cage 340 can be used much like a spatula.
Sixth, the wiper 339 can both support the foam 333 but still have large openings 342 for the transfer of foam 333. The vast majority of the frame's envelope (which can be considered the divide between the interior and exterior of the cage 340) can be openings 342 thus allowing ready transfer of the foam 333 from almost any side of the cage 340. In this way the wiping surface can be larger than the surface area of the cage members 341.
Seventh, the elongated structure of the wiper 339 can easily be horizontally positionable by the operator (not shown) during dispensing so that the length of the wiper 339 is largely parallel to the ground. This has the advantage of creating a broader area for wiping. Instead of being limited to treating largely one plant at a time such as with wiper 139 and 239, the elongated structure of wiper 339 allows the potential to treat multiple plants at once, especially if a sweeping motion is used while wiping. (Many of the advantages listed here apply to wipers listed below.)
In addition, the wiper 439 can have other differences. The cage members 441 can be made of a flexible material such as spring steel wire similar to the wires used for a whisk. (Many other materials such as nylon or plastic string may also be suitable.) In addition, the cage members 441 need not be attached to each other distally (for example, with spot welds or cross members as discussed above). Such a wiper 439 might be useful for certain applications. For instance, it might be especially useful for precision dabbing of foam 433 on plant surfaces 460 using the cage's distal end 445. If very little of the foam 433 were intended to be transferred to a target, then the cage 440 could be lightly brushed against or brought near the target. On the other hand, if the operator 108 wished to transfer more foam herbicide, the cage 440 of such a wiper 339 could be pressed against the target 460.
The slot 566 can widen towards the distal end 545 where pressure can be lower inside the wiper 539. This can help equalize the amount of foam released on the proximal 544 and distal ends 545 of the wiper 539. This can also make for a release of an even amount of foam along the slot. The slot 566 can preferably extend along a substantial portion of the length of the tube 565. For most uses, the tube 565 can preferably be about 1 to 8 cm in diameter and can preferably have a length of about 3 to 30 cm. For this example, the slot can preferably be about 0.1 mm to 2 mm wide and about 1.0 to 29 cm in length. Thus, the slot 566 and tube 565 can make up an elongated nozzle 513 that ejects an elongated stream of foam 533.
The tube 565 can preferably be made of a stiff material such as brass, stainless steel, or plastic tubing. Generally, it is preferable, when the wiper 539 is brought in contact with a plant, that the wiper 539 bend the plant as opposed to the plant bending the wiper 539. In addition, the wiper 539 is preferably deployed in a horizontal position. It would not be preferable to have the distal end 545 sag. Crack-resistant polyethylene tubing having an ID of ⅜ in. and OD of ½ in. available from McMaster Carr has a suitable stiffness for most uses. In addition, the tube 565 should be firm and not collapse; otherwise the tube could collapse or kink in use. Again, a straightened piece of the polyethylene tubing just described would be suitable.
One advantage of this wiper 539 is that foam 533 can be ejected along a substantial portion of the surface of the wiper 539. In contrast wiper 339 above and wiper 639 below, eject foam at the proximate end of the wiper. Especially with wiper 339, having a nozzle 313 only on the proximate end can lead to foam 333 bunching up on the proximate end. This bunched up, plug of foam 333 can prevent foam from being deposited along a substantial portion of the wiper 339. By having an elongated nozzle 513 that can eject foam along a substantial portion of the wiper 539, this problem is alleviated.
An additional feature of the wiper 539 is that when very low pressure is used, the wiper 539 can retain the foam more readily on the surface of the tube 565. With very low pressure, e.g., 0.5 to 5 psi, the foam can gather on the tube 565 without being ejected away from it. Testing has shown that even if the nozzle 513 is pointed downward as shown in
This dispenser 700 can be used for many kinds of applications, especially smaller jobs. One advantage of this dispenser 700: If the dispenser 700 is used and foam remains in the extension tube 770, that foam will eventually drain and liquid will form in the tube 770. This would normally create a dripping problem. The extension tube 770, however, can be positioned with its curvature pointing upward. Although the extension tube 770 can flex, it can have a memory and return to this position. The advantage of the upward curvature is that when the dispenser 700 is put down in an upright position shown in
The wiper 839 could be used in fields, in pastures, and for other larger herbicide application jobs. When a pasture is grazed, for example, weeds are often ignored by the livestock because they are unpalatable and thus grow taller than the forage crop. The wiper 839 could be pulled across tall weeds. In other instances, weeds can be spot treated with the wiper 839 or, if weeds dominate an area, the entire area can be treated.
The position of the boom pole 872 could be preferably be adjustable by an operator (not shown). This could allow, for example, the boom 871 to be raised upward 867a or lowered 867c so that weeds of different heights could be targeted. Motors, hydraulics, manually operated mechanisms, etc. (not shown), could be used to adjust and fix the boom 871 position. Preferably the height of the boom 871 can be adjusted in such a way that the longitudinal axis 846 of the boom 871 and wiper 839 stays generally parallel to the ground 874, i.e., positioned horizontally.
The boom 871 can have foam ejection system for ejecting foam 833 along the length of the boom 871 onto a series of wiping members such as 841a, 841b, 841c. In this example, the system can comprise a series of outlet assemblies The first outlet assembly 805a can be supplied with fluid through a unit hose 803a. (805b represents the nine additional outlet assemblies, all of which can resemble the first outlet assembly 805a.) A mixing chamber 822 can condition the foamable liquid into a foam 833 and the foam can be ejected from a nozzle 813. The group of three wiping members 841a, 841b, 841c can be located below nozzle 813.
The outlet assemblies 805a and 805b can be configured to eject foam at even rates, thereby ensuring that all parts of the wiper 839 are supplied with equal amounts of foam. However, the system could also allow flow to individual outlet assemblies 805a, 805b to be increased if one portion of the wiper was wiped clean due to heavy weed infestations.
The wiper 839 can be designed to have a length suitable for the intended tasks and for the vehicle on which it is mounted. A shorter wiper (approximately 25 cm to 1.5 m might mount to a hand-pulled cart or small robot (not shown), a slightly longer one to an ATV or small tractor (approximately 50 cm to 4 m), and an even longer one (approximately 2 m to 10 m or more) to a large trailer, tractor, or spray rig for field use (not shown). For a larger wiper (not shown), multiple supply lines supplying foam to multiple sections of a wiper may be desirable. For an even larger device, having multiple wipers mounted on a folding boom (not shown) may be preferable.
The bracket 885 can be made of a relatively stiff material such as metal or hard plastic. The mat 884 can be a substantially two-dimensional piece having more flexibility. The mat 884 might for example be made of a rubberized material that flexes (having for example the flexibility of a typical rubber doormat.) The mat 884 is preferably impervious and non-absorbent. Thus, most of the foam 833 would remain on the mat face 884a and this would be beneficial since the vehicle's primary direction of movement would be forward. Thus, the bulk of the foam 833 would be available for being wiped onto target plants (not shown) while the vehicle 873 moves forward.
In another example (not shown) the bracket 885 and mat 884 could be removed. This would allow the nozzles to drizzle or spray foam without a wiper 839a. This might be suitable when the entire path the boom 871 takes needs to be treated. For example, if a lawn were being fertilized with a foam fertilizer, this might be a useful configuration because it would eject foam evenly along a substantial portion or most of the length of the boom 871.
The cage 840 can be made of various materials. A plastic mesh similar to the mesh discussed below, for example, in relation to wiper 1539 and
The example shown in
The mixing chamber 922 can be configured almost identically to the mixing chamber 122 discussed in the above examples. However, the nozzle 913, instead of a single large orifice 120, can have one or more orifices. In this example, the nozzle 913 has two orifices, 920a, 920b. The orifices 920a, 920b can be approximately 2 mm in diameter and approximately 1 to 2 cm apart and can produce two streams of foam 933. In using a prototype with an outlet assembly similar to outlet assembly 905, it was found that relatively low pressures below 15 psi could create streams of foam 933 that could project approximately 1 to 4 meters. Moreover, the foam 933 could be dispensed with minimal creation of fine drops that have the potential to drift.
The streams of foam 933 created by the outlet assembly 905 shown in
The wiper 1139 can have a hollow elongated tube 1165 with a closed distal end 1145. Foam 1133 can fill the tube 1165 and be released onto the wiping surface (which can be the entire exterior surface of the tube 1165) from a series of holes identified as 1120a to 1120h in the wall of the tube 1165. (The entire series of holes, 1120a to 1120h can be considered an elongated nozzle 1113.) The holes 1120a to 1120h can get larger towards the distal end 1145 where pressure can be lower inside the tube 1165. This can help equalize the amount of foam released through the holes 1120a to 1120h on the proximal 1106a and distal ends 1106b of the tube 1165. The tube 1165 can be rotated 1180 and locked in place with a lock nut 1136.
The wiper 1139 can also be used to drizzle or spray foam onto target foliage, depending how much pressure is used. To drizzle foam onto target plants (not shown), the assembly 1105 can be held some distance from the target foliage—in most cases, somewhere between a few centimeters and a meter (at least for a device held in the hand). Moderately low pressure, between, e.g., 5 and 10 psi might be used. Such moderate pressure can prevent foam from bunching up on the wiper 1139. Drizzling foam from the assembly 1105 can be a very useful way to rapidly apply foam herbicide to target foliage. Drift can be greatly minimized even in windy conditions because the thick streams of foam ejected from the outlet assembly 1105 are heavy and are ejected under low pressure. In addition, for more precision—near a desirable plant for instance—the foam can be wiped onto the leaves of the target weed under low pressure, e.g., from 0.5 to 5 psi. This makes this wiper 1139 highly versatile.
An additional feature of the wiper 1139 is that the tube 1165 can be rotated 1180 into different positions. A lock nut 1136 can lock the tube 1165 into the desired position. This can, for example, allow the nozzle 1113 to point in a forward 1167b, upward 1167a direction as shown in
The cage 1240 shown in
The advantages these wipers 1239 and 1239a can be several. First, unlike wiper 339 shown in relation to
Alternatively the partial cage 1340 can be rotated 1380 to the position shown in
Advantages of the partial cage 1340 shown in
The wiper 1539 can be very useful for spot treatments. Manufacturing of the wiper 1539 can be economical. In addition, the flexibility of the cage 1540 can allow it to be smashed against surfaces (not shown) in order to expel most of the foam from the cage 1540. Foam can easily be expelled from the structure because the gauge of the mesh is so thin.
The mesh tube 1740 can cover most of the tube 1765. Preferably it covers all the tube since foam released from the nozzle should preferably remain in the cage 1740. The cage 1740 can be open on the end. When foam is ejected (not shown) from the nozzle 1713, it can fill the cage 1740. This cage 1740 is preferably made of very flexible and stretchy material such as light gauge plastic mesh (similar to that used for produce bags).
Other embodiments (not shown) could be configured differently than as described above. Various components of one embodiment could be integrated into another. The dispenser systems could be powered for example with electricity or gas. The dispenser systems could be robotic and operated by a computer. Many of the dispensers shown have a tubular structure. The tubes need not be round; they can be different shapes including square, rectangular, oblong, etc.
While the above-discussed embodiments of the present invention generally relate to foam herbicide, a foamable pesticide dispenser and associated methods of using a dispenser to apply foamed solutions such as pesticide formulations to plants, the invention is not so limited. The dispenser, for example, may be useful for other purposes, such as the application of foamable growth stimulants, nutrients or other chemicals. It may be useful for applying mixtures to objects other than plants. For example, it may be useful for applying cleaners, disinfectants, preservatives, treatments, etc., to food preparation surfaces, windows, walls, etc. The invention should be understood to encompass these other uses although such other uses may not be discussed below.
The invention has been described with reference to various and specific non-limiting embodiments, examples and techniques. It will be understood by one of ordinary skill in the art, however, that reasonable variations and modifications may be made with respect to such embodiments and techniques without substantial departure from either the spirit or scope of the invention defined by the following claims. For example, while suitable sizes and parameters, materials, packaging and the like have been disclosed in the above discussion, it should be appreciated that these are provided by way of example and not of limitation as a number of other sizes and parameters, materials.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62061487 | Oct 2014 | US | |
62038807 | Aug 2014 | US |