Glass manufacturing

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 11912608
  • Patent Number
    11,912,608
  • Date Filed
    Thursday, October 1, 2020
    3 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, February 27, 2024
    2 months ago
Abstract
According to an aspect of the disclosure, a glass manufacturing system includes a hot-end subsystem, including: a submerged combustion melter that melts feedstock to produce molten glass; a stiller that receives the molten glass from the submerged combustion melter and that includes a stilling tank to still the molten glass and that is configured to control outflow of the stilled molten glass to effectively decouple viscosity of the molten glass from the flow rate of the molten glass and thereby control finer molten glass levels; and a finer that is mechanically decoupled from the stiller, and that receives and fines the stilled molten glass to produce fined molten glass. Many other aspects of the system are also disclosed and claimed.
Description

This patent application discloses innovations in glass manufacturing systems and methods that involve submerged combustion melting of feedstock materials into molten glass.


BACKGROUND

A conventional glass factory includes a custom architectural installation specifically designed for glass manufacturing, and a glass manufacturing system supported and sheltered by the architectural installation. With reference to prior art FIGS. 6 through 10, a conventional glass container factory is illustrated and described as an example. Those of ordinary skill in the art would recognize that other glass factories, for example, for producing glass fibers, glass display screens, architectural glass, vehicle glass, or any other glass products, share many aspects with a glass container factory. The example glass factory architectural installation of FIGS. 6 through 10 includes a concrete foundation including a main level or forming floor with a four-feet-thick slab, and a basement below the forming floor for waste glass handling. The architectural installation also includes one or more factory buildings or enclosures on the foundation each including walls, a roof, and an upper level or raised platform above the forming floor.


The glass manufacturing system typically includes three major subsystems that occupy a large volumetric envelope both inside and outside of the factory building. First, a feedstock subsystem includes a “batch house” located outside of the factory building. The batch house towers over the factory building and is generally configured to receive and store feedstock or “glass batch” including raw materials, for example, sand, soda ash, and limestone, and also including cullet in the form of recycled, scrap, or waste glass. Second, a tall and long hot-end subsystem located within the factory building is generally configured to receive the glass batch from the batch house, melt the glass batch into molten glass, form glassware from the molten glass, apply a protective coating to the glassware, and anneal the coated glassware. Third, a cold-end subsystem also located in the factory building is generally configured to apply a lubricious coating to the annealed glassware, inspect the coated glassware, and prepare the inspected glassware for shipping to customers.


The batch house is usually several stories tall, and includes a covered unloading platform and a pit to receive the glass batch from underneath railcars or trucks that arrive loaded with glass batch materials. The batch house also includes multi-story silos to store the glass batch, and glass batch elevators and glass batch conveyors to move the glass batch from the pit to tops of the silos. The batch house further includes cullet pads at ground level to receive and store cullet, crushers to crush cullet to a size suitable for melting, and cullet elevators and conveyors to move crushed cullet to one of the silos in the batch house. The batch house additionally includes batch mixers to mix the glass batch received from the silos, conveyors with scales to weigh and deliver each glass batch material from the silos to the mixers, mixer conveyors to move the glass batch from the mixers to the hot-end subsystem, and dust collectors to collect dust from the various equipment. With reference to FIG. 8, the height of a batch house architectural installation is 96 feet (29.3 meters) above a forming floor level, the width of the batch house architectural installation is 95 feet and one inch (29 meters), and the horizontal depth of the batch house architectural installation is 60 feet (18.3 meters). With reference to FIG. 9, the height of the batch house equipment including the elevators is 93 feet and eight inches (28.5 meters) above a forming floor level, and a vertical depth of a batch house pit or basement is 19 feet and six inches (5.9 meters) below the forming floor level.


The hot-end subsystem includes a multi-story, continuously-operated furnace and a batch charger to charge feedstock materials into the furnace. The furnace melts the glass batch into molten glass, and refines the molten glass, and includes a long, refractory-built tank elevated by the raised platform of the factory building, and also includes a melter section that melts the glass batch into molten glass. The melter section is heated by fuel and oxidant combustion burners that are mounted in opposite sidewalls of a cross-fired furnace or in an end wall of an end-fired furnace. The combustion burners produce long flames over the surface of the molten glass. The melter section may also be heated by bottom-mounted in-melt booster electrodes, and further typically includes bottom-mounted bubblers and/or stirrers to ensure homogeneous mixing, reacting, and complete melting of the different batch materials. In addition to the melter section, the furnace includes a finer section positioned downstream from the melter section. The finer section is connected by a water-cooled throat to the melter section and is constructed to facilitate the thermally- and/or chemically-induced removal of gas bubbles from the glass. The furnace also includes a pair of multi-story, heat-recycling, brickwork regenerators on either side of the tank that receive, hold, and recycle heat from and to the melter section. As for the batch charger, it receives the glass batch from the mixer conveyors and screw feeds or reciprocally pushes the glass batch into the furnace. Typically, the batch charger reciprocably pushes piles of glass batch onto an exposed surface of molten glass in the melter section, and the piles slowly drift away from the charger and submerge into the molten glass.


The furnace operates continuously for many years until it becomes necessary to suspend operation to reconstruct the furnace by replacing worn refractory material inside the furnace with new refractory material. Notably, such relining of the furnace typically requires several months of work at a cost of millions of dollars. Of course, the operation of the furnace can be slowed for downtime when downstream equipment is being changed or repaired, but the furnace must operate continuously, such that glass batch must continue to be charged into the furnace and molten glass must continue flowing out of the furnace, to avoid freezing of glass in corners of the furnace tank and various other issues. During such downtime, the molten glass is dumped to the basement where it is water cooled and carried away for recycling as cullet. The longer such furnace downtime operation occurs, the more energy that is spent unnecessarily.


Also, glass color changes present many challenges to furnace operation. For example, when it is desired to change from a first glass color to a second glass color different from the first, a color transition process normally takes about three to four days, resulting in many days of producing waste glass. And too frequently the color transition process results in various issues that can require up to a week to resolve. For example, glass chemistry reduction/oxidation imbalances lead to excessive glass foaming that can be difficult to bring under control, and/or various commercial variations appear in glass containers initially produced from the transitioned second color glass. Accordingly, the frequency of glass color changes are minimized; about two per year typically, and once per month at most.


Downstream of the furnace, the hot-end subsystem includes a forehearth to receive the molten glass from the furnace, and to cool the molten glass to a uniform viscosity suitable for downstream forming operations. Typically, it takes more than twenty-four hours from the time a given volume of glass batch is introduced into the furnace until the given volume exits the forehearth as chemically homogenized and thermally-conditioned molten glass.


At a downstream end of the forehearth, the hot-end subsystem further includes a gob feeder to receive the molten glass from the forehearth, produce a stream of molten glass, and cut the stream into glass gobs that freefall into gob handling equipment. Gob handling equipment includes a lengthy series of distributors, scoops, chutes, deflectors, and funnels extending over ten feet (3 meters) in height. The gob handling equipment also includes ancillary lubrication equipment that applies lubricants to the gob handling equipment and liquid separators that separate or otherwise process the lubricants.


Downstream of the gob handling equipment, the hot-end subsystem further includes gravity-fed forming molds to receive the gobs from the gob handling equipment and form the glassware from the gobs. Glassware handling equipment located downstream of the molds includes a conveyor to move the glassware downstream of the forming molds, take-out mechanisms to pick up and place the glassware on dead plates, and pushers to push the glassware off the dead plates and onto the conveyor.


Moreover, downstream of molds and glassware handling equipment, the hot-end subsystem includes an annealing lehr at the end of the conveyor to anneal the glassware. The annealing lehr is a long and wide gas-fired oven with a conveyor running longitudinally therethrough and having a pusher to push long, transversely extending rows of containers into the oven.


Finally, the hot-end subsystem includes ancillary equipment including hot-end coating equipment along the conveyor to apply a protective coating to the glassware, roof-mounted furnace ventilators in fluid communication with furnace exhaust ports, and a cullet hopper or bath in the basement beneath the gob feeder to receive rejected gobs, or molten streams of waste glass when the furnace continues to run during a forming equipment changeover or other downtime.


The cold-end subsystem fits within a single story of the factory building, and includes conveyors to carry the annealed glassware downstream of the annealing lehr and to and between cold-end stations. The cold-end subsystem further includes a cold-end coating station to lubricate the glassware, and one or more inspection stations to inspect the coated glassware for any unacceptable commercial variations that will cause the glassware to be scrapped. The cold-end subsystem also includes scrap handling equipment to return the glassware scrap to the batch house, a packaging station to package acceptable glassware together, a palletizing station to palletize the packaged glassware, and a warehouse to store pallets of packaged glassware.


The batch house, furnace, and gob handling equipment require a specialized, dedicated, and permanent architectural installation that is considered a heavy industrial building including a pit, a basement, a reinforced foundation to support heavy furnace brickwork, and one or more three story building(s) that are plumbed with customized plumbing equipment and wired to handle very high industrial voltage electrical systems, which may require a dedicated substation, all of which must be constructed by skilled and expensive outside industrial construction personnel. The time to construct a new glass factory of the conventional type is about two to four years. And a conventional glass furnace cannot be relocated from one plant to another because, once assembled, the furnace can only be broken apart. And even if the conventional glass furnace could be relocated, it would involve a lengthy and cost-prohibitive process of brick-by-brick deconstruction and reassembly.


With reference to FIG. 10, the batch house occupies a large footprint of about 5,700 square feet or about 530 square meters. Also, with reference to FIGS. 8 and 9, the batch house has a large volumetric envelope of about 658,000 cubic feet or about 18,600 cubic meters. With reference again to FIG. 10, the rest of the installation, not including the batch house, but including the hot-end and the cold-end portions, occupies a large footprint of about 22,570 square feet or about 2,100 square meters. Also, with reference to FIG. 7, the rest of the installation has a large volumetric envelope of about 1,557,000 cubic feet or about 44,000 cubic meters.


The production output of such a size for a conventional glass manufacturing system is about 140 tons of glass per day (TPD). In fact, the particular system illustrated in FIGS. 6 through 10 is rated at a 140 TPD production capacity. Accordingly, a capacity-adjusted size of the system can be characterized by the volumetric envelope of the system divided by the production output of the system. For example, a total of 62,600 cubic meters divided by 140 TPD, is about 447 cubic meters per each ton of glass produced per day. Also, the batch house size of 18,600 cubic meters is divided by 140 TPD for a capacity-adjusted size of about 133 cubic meters per each ton of glass produced per day. Further, the rest of the installation has a size of 44,000 cubic meters and is divided by 140 TPD for a capacity-adjusted size of about 314 cubic meters per each ton of glass produced per day. As used in the preceding sentences, the term “about” means within plus or minus five percent.


Although such glass manufacturing systems and methods efficiently produce high-quality products for large-scale production runs, the presently disclosed subject matter introduces a revolutionary glass factory, glass manufacturing system, and individual subsystems and portions thereof that are more compact and economical, at least for smaller scale production runs or incremental additions to existing large-scale production runs.





BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS


FIG. 1 is a front perspective schematic view of a glass factory and glass manufacturing system, in accordance with an illustrative embodiment of the present disclosure, and drawn to scale.



FIG. 2 is another front perspective view of the factory and system of FIG. 1.



FIG. 3 is a rear perspective schematic view of the factory and system of FIG. 1.



FIG. 4 is an elevational schematic view of the factory and system of FIG. 1.



FIG. 5 is a plan schematic view of the factory and system of FIG. 1.



FIG. 6 is a front perspective schematic view of a conventional glass factory and glass manufacturing system, in accordance with the prior art, and drawn to scale.



FIG. 7 is another front perspective view of the factory and system of FIG. 6.



FIG. 8 is a rear perspective schematic view of the factory and system of FIG. 6.



FIG. 9 is an elevational schematic view of the factory and system of FIG. 6.



FIG. 10 is a plan schematic view of the factory and system of FIG. 6.



FIG. 11 illustrates an upper front perspective view of a feedstock subsystem of a glass manufacturing system according to an illustrative embodiment of the present disclosure.



FIG. 12 illustrates an upper rear perspective view of the feedstock subsystem of FIG. 11.



FIG. 13 illustrates an upper front perspective view of the feedstock subsystem of FIG. 11 with an enclosure removed therefrom and also illustrating a portion of a hot-end subsystem of the glass manufacturing system.



FIG. 14 illustrates an upper rear perspective view of the feedstock subsystem of FIG. 11 with the enclosure removed therefrom.



FIG. 15 illustrates a fragmentary perspective view of an upper portion of a majors silo array of the feedstock subsystem of FIG. 11.



FIG. 16 is a top view of the majors silo array shown in FIG. 15.



FIG. 17 is an enlarged top view of a major's silo of the major's silo array shown in FIG. 16.



FIG. 18 is a perspective view of a major's silo carried on a pallet.



FIG. 19 is a fragmentary schematic view of a major's section of the feedstock subsystem of FIG. 11.



FIG. 20 is a fragmentary perspective view of a dosing portion of the majors silo array shown in FIG. 11 and also illustrating a transport bin and cradle for the bin.



FIG. 21 is a perspective view of the transport bin of FIG. 11 and also illustrating a table supporting the cradle and transport bin and a scale therebetween.



FIG. 22 is a fragmentary perspective view of a portion of a minors section of the feedstock subsystem of FIG. 11 and illustrating a minors container array in a habitable third level, dosing equipment in a habitable second level, and pneumatic conveying stations in a habitable first level.



FIG. 23 is a perspective view of a minors container array module of the minors section of the feedstock subsystem of FIG. 11 stacked on top of a minors dosing module of the minors section of the feedstock subsystem of FIG. 11.



FIG. 24 is a top view of two minors container array modules of the minors section of the feedstock subsystem of FIG. 11 and arranged side by side to establish a complete minors array.



FIG. 25 is a perspective view of a small bag pneumatic conveying station module of the minors section of the feedstock subsystem of FIG. 11.



FIG. 26 is a perspective view of a big bag pneumatic conveying station module of the minors section of the feedstock subsystem of FIG. 11.



FIGS. 27 and 28 are perspective views of control equipment modules of the feedstock subsystem of FIG. 11.



FIG. 29 is a perspective view of a control equipment module of the feedstock subsystem of FIG. 11 and a dosing equipment module of the feedstock subsystem of FIG. 11 carried on a single pallet.



FIG. 30 is a fragmentary schematic view of a minors section of the feedstock subsystem of FIG. 11.



FIG. 31 shows an example flow path of an AGV and transport bin.



FIG. 32 shows a transmission section of the system.



FIG. 33 shows a pneumatic hopper of the transmission section.





DETAILED DESCRIPTION

In accordance with an aspect of the present disclosure, a new glass factory and/or glass manufacturing system has a volumetric envelope that is significantly reduced compared to that of conventional glass factories and/or glass manufacturing systems. Also, the new glass factory and/or manufacturing system may include prefabricated modular equipment configurations to facilitate rapid and mobile production capacity expansion in smaller increments and at lower capital cost than conventional glass manufacturing systems. Further, the new glass factory and/or manufacturing system may omit one or more conventional glass manufacturing subsystems or aspects thereof, as described in further detail below.


With reference to FIGS. 1 through 5, a new glass factory 10 is illustrated and described, with reference to a glass container factory 10 as an example. Those of ordinary skill in the art would recognize that other glass factories, for example, for producing glass fibers, glass display screens, architectural glass, vehicle glass, or any other glass products, share many aspects with a glass container factory. Accordingly, the presently disclosed and claimed subject matter is not limited to glass containers, glass container manufacturing systems, and glass container factories and, instead, encompasses any glass products, glass product manufacturing systems, and glass product factories.


The new glass factory 10 includes a new architectural installation 12 and a new glass manufacturing system 11 supported and sheltered by the installation 12. The installation 12 includes a concrete foundation 14 (FIGS. 1 and 3) having a forming floor which generally may include, for example, a four to six-inch-thick slab and at least one melter isolation pad and at least one forming machine isolation pad. Such isolation pads are less than four feet (1.2 meters) in thickness, and may be less than or equal to three feet (0.9 meters) in thickness. With specific reference to FIGS. 1-3, the installation 12 requires no basement below the forming floor, and also includes a factory building 22 on the foundation 14 including walls 24 and a roof 26, and a feedstock building 16 on the same foundation 14 or on its own foundation and including walls 18 and a roof 20. As used herein, the term “basement” includes the lowest habitable level of the glass factory 10 below a forming floor of the factory 10 and can include a first level or a below grade or below ground level portion that may require excavation of earthen material. Also, as used herein, the term “habitable” means that there is standing room for an adult human in the particular space involved and there is some means of ingress/egress to/from the space while walking such as a doorway, stairway, and/or the like. In contrast, according to the present disclosure, no basement is required, such that the architectural installation 12 includes a concrete slab with earthen material directly underneath the slab, wherein the slab establishes the forming floor.


The new glass manufacturing system 11 includes three major subsystems that occupy a volumetric envelope much smaller than conventional systems such that the glass factory 10 likewise requires a smaller volumetric envelope than conventional glass factories. First, a feedstock subsystem 28 is configured to receive and store feedstock or “glass batch.” The glass batch includes glassmaking raw materials, like sand, soda ash, and limestone, and also may include cullet in the form of recycled, scrap, or waste glass. The feedstock subsystem 28 does not require a dedicated conventional three-story batch house or conventional batch house batch elevators, batch mixers, and/or the like. Second, a hot-end subsystem 30 receives the glass batch from the feedstock subsystem 28, melts the glass batch into molten glass, forms glassware from the molten glass, and anneals the coated or uncoated glassware. The hot-end subsystem 30 does not require a massive conventional glass furnace, lengthy conventional gob handling equipment, and/or glassware pick-and-place and pusher equipment. Third, a cold-end subsystem 32 inspects the glassware, packages the inspected glassware for shipping to customers, and stores the packaged glassware before shipping to customers. The cold-end subsystem 32 does not require a large conventional warehouse because the glassware can be made to order instead of being made to stock.


The installation 12 is no more than seventeen meters in height above the forming floor and is otherwise also much smaller than a conventional glass factory. Also, the installation 12, not including the feedstock building 16, is less than two stories (and certainly less than three stories) in height (e.g., the installation is less than thirteen meters tall), thereby enabling use of a light industrial building to be used to enclose the hot and cold end portions of the glass factory 10. As used herein, the phrase “light industrial building” means an architectural installation including a building less than thirteen meters tall and supported on footings surrounding a concrete mat slab, for example, 4 to 6 inches thick, and having earthen material directly underneath the slab.


More specifically, with reference to FIGS. 3 and 5, the feedstock building 16 occupies a smaller footprint of about 3,500 square feet or about 325 square meters. Also, with reference to FIGS. 3 and 4, the feedstock building 16 has a smaller volumetric envelope of about 189,000 cubic feet or about 5,350 cubic meters. With reference again to FIG. 5, the rest of the installation 12, not including the feedstock building 16, but including the hot end and the cold end portions, occupies a smaller footprint of about 12,500 square feet or about 1,160 square meters. The footprint of this portion of the installation 12 may have a maximum length less than about 70 meters, a maximum width less than about 20 meters, and a to maximum height less than about 15 meters. Also, with reference to FIG. 2, the rest of the installation 12 has a smaller volumetric envelope of about 525,000 cubic feet or about 15,000 cubic meters.


The production output of such a size for the new glass manufacturing system 11 may range from 100 TPD to 120 TPD, including all ranges, subranges, values, and endpoints of that range. In fact, the particular system 11 illustrated in FIGS. 1-5 is about 110 TPD. Accordingly, a capacity-adjusted size of the presently disclosed system 11 can be characterized by the volumetric envelope of the presently disclosed system 11 divided by the production output of the system 11. For example, a total of about 20,350 cubic meters divided by 110 TPD, is about 185 cubic meters per each ton of glass produced per day by the glass manufacturing system 11. Also, the feedstock building size of about 5,350 cubic meters is divided by 110 TPD for a capacity-adjusted size of about 49 cubic meters per each ton of glass produced per day by the glass manufacturing system 11. Further, the rest of the installation 12 has a size of about 15,000 cubic meters and is divided by 110 TPD for a capacity-adjusted size of about 136 cubic meters per each ton of glass produced per day by the glass manufacturing system 11. As used herein, the term “about” means within plus or minus five percent.


Therefore, the capacity-adjusted size of the new glass manufacturing system 11 including the feedstock building 16 is less than 200 cubic meters per each ton of glass produced per day by the glass manufacturing system 11, certainly less than 250 cubic meters per each ton of glass produced per day, and much less than the 440+ cubic meters per each ton of glass produced per day of the conventional factory. Accordingly, the capacity-adjusted size of the new glass manufacturing system 11 including the feedstock building 16 is 170 to 204 cubic meters per each ton of glass produced each day, including all ranges, subranges, values, and endpoints of that range. Thus, the capacity-adjusted size of the presently disclosed glass factory 10 may be less than half that of the conventional factory.


Similarly, the capacity-adjusted size of the feedstock building 16 is less than 50 cubic meters per each ton of glass produced per day by the glass manufacturing system 11, certainly less than 75 cubic meters per each ton of glass produced per day, and much less than the 125+ cubic meters per each ton of glass produced per day of the conventional factory. Accordingly, the capacity-adjusted size of the feedstock building 16 is 45 to 54 cubic meters per each ton of glass produced each day, including all ranges, subranges, values, and endpoints of that range. Thus, the capacity-adjusted size of the presently disclosed feedstock building 16 may be less than half that of the conventional batch house.


Likewise, the capacity-adjusted size of the hot-end and cold-end installation 31,33 is less than 150 cubic meters per each ton of glass produced per day by the glass manufacturing system 11, certainly less than 200 cubic meters per each ton of glass produced per day, and much less than the 300+ cubic meters per each ton of glass produced per day of the conventional factory. Accordingly, the capacity-adjusted size of the hot-end and cold-end installation 31,33 of the new glass manufacturing system 11 is 125 to 150 cubic meters per each ton of glass produced each day, including all ranges, subranges, values, and endpoints of that range. Thus, the capacity-adjusted size of the presently disclosed hot-end and cold-end installation 31,33 of the presently disclosed glass factory 10 may be less than half that of the conventional hot-end and cold-end installation of the conventional factory.


Turning first to the feedstock subsystem 28, this portion of the new glass factory 10 facilitates storage and supply of feedstock for the hot-end subsystem 30. Notably, however, the feedstock subsystem 28 need not include a conventional batch house or any one or more of the following conventional batch house elements: a pit to receive glass batch from underneath railcars or trucks, glass batch elevators, or a glass batch mixer.


Instead, the feedstock subsystem 28 is a pneumatically-closed glass manufacturing feedstock subsystem that includes a bulk material storage sub-system 34 (FIG. 5), including an array of majors silos 36 (FIG. 5) and majors pneumatic inlet conduit configured to pneumatically convey bulk material from pneumatic conveying vessels to the array of majors silos 36, and also including an array of minors containers 38 (FIG. 5) and minors pneumatic inlet conduit configured to pneumatically convey bulk material from pneumatic conveying stations to the array of minors containers 38. The feedstock subsystem 28 also includes a bulk material transfer subsystem 40 (FIG. 5) including a transfer bin that pneumatically seals to the majors silos 36 and the minors containers 38 and receives bulk material therefrom, and an automatically guided vehicle configured to move the transfer bin between the arrays 36,38 and the bulk material transfer sub-system 40. The feedstock subsystem 28 also includes a bulk material transmission subsystem 42 (FIG. 5) including a pneumatic hopper that pneumatically seals to the transfer bin and receives bulk material therefrom, and a pneumatic outlet conduit coupled to the pneumatic hopper and configured to transmit bulk material to a glass melting furnace separate from and downstream of the feedstock subsystem 28. The system is pneumatically closed from the pneumatic inlet conduit to the pneumatic outlet conduit. The feedstock subsystem 28 may include the apparatus and involve the methods disclosed in the discussion below regarding FIGS. A-1 through A-23.


As shown in FIG. 5, the majors array 36 includes a plurality of bulk material container systems 44, each including a frame having dimensions less than or equal to an intermodal freight container and including longitudinally extending corner columns, a base including horizontally extending base cross-members, and a silo platform including horizontally extending platform cross-members and a panel coupled to the platform cross-members. A silo is carried within each frame and includes a body having a body lower end and a body upper end, and a spout coupled to the body lower end and including a spout lower end. Utilities are coupled to the upper end of the silo and include a filter, a pressure relief valve, pneumatic conduit, and a level gauge, and dosing equipment is coupled to the spout lower end. Corner columns of adjacent systems are coupled together to establish the silo array. The bulk material container systems 44 are preassembled at an equipment fabricator, are shipped from the fabricator to a product manufacturer in an intermodal freight container, and are erected at the product manufacturer.


As shown in FIG. 5, the minors array 38 includes a plurality of bulk material container systems 46, each including a frame with dimensions less than or equal to an intermodal freight container and including longitudinally extending corner columns, and a container platform including horizontally extending platform cross-members and a panel coupled to the platform cross-members. A plurality of containers is carried within the frame in a partial circumferential array and includes bodies having body lower ends and body upper ends, and spouts coupled to the body lower ends and including spout lower ends. Utilities are coupled to the upper ends of the containers and include filters, pressure relief valves, pneumatic conduit, and level gauges. Dosing equipment is coupled to each spout lower end. Corner columns of adjacent systems are coupled together and the partial circumferential arrays of the containers establish a complete circumferential array of the containers 38.


Additionally, although shown as a separate architectural installation in the drawing figures, at least a portion of the architectural installation of the feedstock subsystem 28 may be integrated with the architectural installation 31,33 of the hot and cold end subsystems 30,32. For example, a majors section of the feedstock subsystem 28 including a majors silo array and the enclosure and foundation portion of the feedstock building 16 corresponding to the majors silo array may be located outside of the architectural installation 31,33 of the hot and cold end subsystems 30,32, and the rest of the feedstock subsystem 28 may be located within the enclosure of the architectural installation 31,33 of the hot and cold end subsystems 30,32 with no increase—and perhaps some decrease—in footprint or volumetric envelope described above. In another example, a weatherproof majors silo array may be located outside of the architectural installation 31,33 of the hot and cold end subsystems 30,32 on a suitable foundation, and access to the majors silo array may be provided by an above ground enclosed tunnel or hallway traversable by automatically guided vehicles.


Turning now to the hot-end subsystem 30 and with reference to FIGS. 4 and 5, this portion of the new glass factory 10 includes a submerged combustion melting (SCM) furnace or SC “melter” 48 to melt the glass batch into molten glass, and a batch charger 50 to receive the glass batch from the feedstock subsystem 28 and charge the glass batch into the SCM furnace 48. The batch charger 50 moves the feedstock directly into the SCM furnace 48, for example, through a side wall, a roof, or a floor of the SCM furnace 48.


In contrast to conventional glass furnaces, SCM furnaces include submerged combustion burners that are mounted in floors or sidewalls of the furnaces and that fire fuel and oxidant mixtures directly into and under the surface of the molten glass. The fuel and oxidant mixtures of the burners produce powerful flows of combustion gases through the molten glass that cause violent sloshing and turbulence of the molten glass, so much so that the furnace tends to shake. The burners produce intense internal shearing forces of the molten glass, thereby causing rapid heat transfer and particle dissolution throughout the molten glass. This is in contrast to the much slower kinetics of a conventional glass furnace in which the molten glass is comparatively still, and heated radiantly with above-melt burners and, in some cases, with in-melt booster electrodes. And although the SCM furnace 48 rapidly produces chemically homogenized molten glass, the glass melt is foamy, having about 30 vol % to 60 vol % entrained gas bubbles.


The relatively high heat-transfer and mixing efficiency of the SCM furnace 48 allows for a fundamentally different melter design than that of a conventional glass furnace. Specifically, an SCM furnace 48 is typically 50% to 90% smaller than a conventional glass furnace by tonnage weight of molten glass holding capacity at steady-state. Because the SCM furnace walls can be externally cooled, the furnace 48 is able to be shut down and emptied, and then restarted, quickly and efficiently when necessitated by production schedules or other considerations. This type of operational flexibility is simply not possible for a conventional glass furnace. Additionally, the SCM furnace 48 may include non-submerged overhead burners to pre-heat the furnace 48 during start-up and, optionally, to impinge on the turbulent molten glass during operation to suppress foaming.


The SCM furnace 48, which is shown in FIGS. 4 and 5, generally includes a tank including a floor, a roof, and a perimeter wall extending between the floor and the roof and establishing an interior to receive feedstock, melt the feedstock into molten material, and contain the molten material produced from the feedstock. The perimeter wall may include a front end wall, a rear end wall, side walls, and angled walls between the side walls and the end walls. In other embodiments, any configuration of the perimeter wall may be used including walls constituting a purely rectangular shape, or a cylindrical wall, or any other suitable configuration. The furnace 48 also includes a batch inlet at an upstream end of the tank, a molten glass outlet at a downstream end of the tank, submerged combustion melting burners extending through the tank (e.g. through the floor) to melt the feedstock into the molten glass in the interior of the tank, and an exhaust outlet through the roof.


In an example embodiment of batch charging, the batch charger 50 (FIGS. 4 and 5) includes a charger conduit including an inlet to receive feedstock and an outlet at an outlet portion of the charger conduit to transmit feedstock, and an auger or other feedstock mover coupled to the charger conduit to convey feedstock in a direction from the inlet toward the outlet. A gate may be detachably coupled to the outlet portion of the charger conduit and configured to be coupled directly to a wall of a melting vessel. The auger may have a helical flight with an outer diameter of varying size. A stripper may be movably carried by the charger conduit and moved by an actuator with respect to the charger conduit to facilitate transmission of feedstock and/or to strip away clogged feedstock and/or molten material. More specifically, the batch charger 50 may include the apparatus and involve the methods disclosed in U.S. Patent Application Ser. No. 63/085,883, filed on Sep. 30, 2020 and which is assigned to the assignee hereof and is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.


In another example embodiment of batch charging, a batch feeding apparatus includes a detachable feeder alcove configured to be coupled to an SCM furnace 48 for providing batch material to the SCM furnace 48 and including at least one side wall and a cover, and a batch feeder sealingly coupled to the cover and that feeds batch material to the feeder alcove. The batch feeding apparatus also may include an extendable panel that extends downwardly below a batch inlet of the feeder alcove to molten glass, and is configured to maintain contact with the molten glass to seal off a feeder alcove interior. Additionally, the batch feeding apparatus may include a heating device, a cleaning device, and/or a storage device. More specifically, the apparatus may include the apparatus and involve the methods disclosed in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 17/039,713, filed on Sep. 30, 2020 and which is assigned to the assignee hereof and is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.


To facilitate a smaller and more flexible glass furnace, construction of the SCM furnace 48 may be modular; including individual fluid-cooled panels fluidically and mechanically coupled together to create a desired shape and size of the furnace 48. The panels can be prefabricated off-site and assembled quickly on-site at the glass factory 10 by coupling panel fluid connectors together and fastening the panels together. Panels can be added to or removed from an existing SCM furnace to expand or reduce the size of the furnace 48. Likewise, panels of an existing SCM furnace can be easily removed and replaced with replacement panels or with reinforced panels at furnace locations experiencing high-wear, such that the furnace 48 can be selectively rebuilt and need not be entirely rebuilt or repaneled during any given repair. The panels include inner plates having internal surfaces and refractory retainers extending from the internal surfaces, outer plates having fluid connectors, sidewalls connecting the inner and outer plates in a fluid-tight manner, and internal baffles tack welded or intermittently connected to and between the plates to define a serpentine fluid conduit that primarily directs fluid to flow through the baffles, but permits fluid to slip between the baffles and the plates to reduce hot spots. The panels are in fluid communication with one another via conduit coupled to the fluid connectors of the outer plates. A refractory material, for instance, an aluminum silicate-based material or a cullet-based material, is cast, sprayed, troweled, or otherwise applied to the internal surfaces of the inner plates, and held thereto via the refractory retainers. More specifically, the SCM furnace 48 may include the apparatus and involve the methods disclosed in U.S. Pub. No. 2021/0094863, which is assigned to the assignee hereof and is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety. Likewise, the SCM furnace 48 may include the apparatus and involve the methods disclosed in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 16/993,825, filed on Aug. 14, 2020 and which is assigned to the assignee hereof and is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.


Additionally, the SCM furnace 48 includes an exhaust system in fluid communication with the interior of the tank via the exhaust outlet thereof, and generally may include a fluid-cooled flue coupled to and in fluid communication with the exhaust outlet of the SCM furnace 48, and a refractory-lined hood coupled to and in fluid communication with the fluid-cooled flue at a downstream end of the flue. The exhaust system also may include a dilution air input conduit coupled to and in fluid communication with the refractory-lined hood. The exhaust system also may include a non-cooled, non-refractory outlet conduit coupled to and in fluid communication with the refractory-lined hood, and a dust cleanout duct coupled to and in fluid communication with the refractory-lined hood. The fluid-cooled flue extends upwardly from the roof of the furnace tank at the exhaust outlet. More specifically, the SCM furnace 48 may include the apparatus and involve the methods disclosed in U.S. Patent Application Ser. No. 63/085,646, filed on Sep. 30, 2020 and which is assigned to the assignee hereof and is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.


The SCM furnace 48 also includes a cooling system skid including a cooling fluid manifold, a cooling fluid source, a pump, conduit, valves, flow meters, regulators, temperature sensors, controllers, and the like, and a pallet or other sub-structure to carry the aforementioned cooling system equipment. The SCM furnace 48 further includes a utility skid including electrical cabling and connectors, prefabricated fuel and oxidizer manifolds, inlets, and connectors, and the like, and a pallet or other sub-structure to carry the aforementioned utility equipment. Of course, the SCM furnace 48 includes SCM burners that may be assembled on site at the glass factory 10 or preassembled to floor panels of the SCM furnace 48.


Installed, the height of the SCM furnace 48 including the exhaust system is less than ten meters tall, and may be less than nine meters tall. Given the relatively small size of the SCM furnace 48, its modularity, and the fact that no basement is needed under the SCM furnace 48, the SCM furnace 48 can be easily relocated to different portions of the factory building, for example, to accommodate reconfiguration of a production line, addition of a production line, or the like. All controls and external connectors may be carried by one panel of the SCM furnace 48. SCM furnace reconstruction requires less than two weeks at a small fraction of the cost of reconstructing conventional glass furnaces. Notably, the SCM furnace 48 need not include in-melt booster electrodes, or bubblers or stirrers because the in-melt burners provide sufficient heat and turbulence to thoroughly melt and mix the glass batch into chemically and thermally homogeneous molten glass. Accordingly, energy expended on such ancillary equipment can be avoided. Also, the SCM furnace 48 does not require use of a reinforced foundation because there are no heavy furnace brickwork regenerators, it does not necessitate use of a two to three story building with a basement, and it does not necessitate roof-mounted furnace ventilators. Accordingly, nearly any light industrial building having a ceiling height of less than 15 meters can now be used to house a glass factory. Similarly, such a building having standard plumbing and 480 volts electrical supply can be used. As just one example, a typical warehouse in an area zoned for light industry could be used.


In an example embodiment of operation of the SCM furnace or SC melter 48, good quality flint glass may be reliably produced. The method involves controlling four specific process parameters of the SC melter 48 that have been determined to have at least some influence on promoting flint glass production. The identified SC melter process parameters include (1) the oxygen-to-fuel ratio of the submerged burners, (2) the temperature of the glass melt maintained in the SC melter 48, (3) the specific throughput rate of molten glass from the SC melter 48, and (4) the residence time of the glass melt. When each of these SC melter process parameters is maintained within a predetermined range, the glass melt and the molten glass extracted therefrom through an outlet of the SC melter 48 exhibit a colorless or nearly colorless visual appearance. In fact, the molten glass obtained from the SC melter 48 can consistently meet exacting flint glass specifications that are often mandated by the commercial container and flat glass articles industries. An oxygen-to-fuel ratio of a combustible gas mixture for the burners ranges from stoichiometry to 30% excess oxygen relative to stoichiometry, a temperature of a glass melt in the SC melter 48 is between 1200° C. and 1500° C., a residence time of the glass melt is maintained between 1 hour and 10 hours, and a specific throughput rate of molten glass discharged from the SC melter 48 ranges from 2 tons per day per meter squared of cross-sectional area of the submerged combustion melter [tons/day/m2] to 25 tons/day/m2. Such SC melter operation may include the apparatus and involve the methods disclosed in U.S. Pub. No. 2021/0246060, which is assigned to the assignee hereof and is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.


The vitrifiable feed material includes a base glass portion that provides primary glass-forming oxides, an oxidizing agent comprising a sulfate compound, and a decolorant comprising either selenium or manganese oxide. The vitrifiable feed material comprises between 0.20 wt % and 0.50 wt % of the sulfate compound, expressed as SO3, and further comprises between 0.008 wt % and 0.016 wt % of selenium or between 0.1 wt % and 0.2 wt % of manganese oxide. The vitrifiable feed material is formulated to be introduced into a glass melt that is contained within a submerged combustion melter and that comprises a total iron content expressed as Fe2O3 in an amount ranging from 0.04 wt % to 0.06 wt % and has a redox ratio that ranges from 0.1 to 0.4. The vitrifiable feedstock may include the materials and involve the methods disclosed in U.S. Pub. No. 2021/0246061, which is assigned to the assignee hereof and is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.


In another example embodiment of operation of the SCM furnace or SC melter 48, a redox ratio of a glass melt can be adjusted in several ways depending on a desired outcome, by controlling one, any combination of two, or three operating conditions of the SC melter 48 that have been determined to have an influence on the redox ratio of the glass melt. The particular SC melter operating conditions include (1) the oxygen-to-fuel ratio of the combustible gas mixture injected by each of the submerged burners, (2) the residence time of the glass melt, and (3) the gas flux through the glass melt. The redox ratio of the glass melt is considered to be “adjusted” when the redox ratio is shifted relative to what is otherwise inherently attributable to the composition of the vitrifiable feed material in the absence of controlling the operating condition(s). The redox ratio may be shifted up (more reduced glass) or down (more oxidized glass) depending on the color of the glass being produced to help minimize the need to include certain redox agents in the vitrifiable feed material. The redox ratio may also be increased to shift the glass melt to a more reduced state, or it can be decreased to shift the glass melt to a more oxidized state, to help transition between glass colorations without necessarily having to alter the quantity of redox agents included in the vitrifiable feed material being fed to the submerged combustion melter. The ability to adjust the redox ratio of the glass melt through control of the operating condition(s) can help achieve certain glass colorations with less reliance on the composition of the vitrifiable feed material, can allow for rapid changes in redox ratio, and can permit modifications to the composition of the vitrifiable feed material that otherwise might not be possible. Such SC melter operation may include the apparatus and involve the methods disclosed in U.S. Pub. No. 2021/0246062, which is assigned to the assignee hereof and is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.


The hot-end subsystem 30 also may include a stilling vessel, stilling chamber, or “stiller” to receive the molten glass from the turbulent confines of the SCM furnace 48, allow the molten glass to settle, and begin the process of fining the molten glass. The stilling vessel receives foamy molten glass discharged from the SCM furnace 48, which has a tendency to have a fluctuating flow rate, and delivers molten glass at a controlled flow rate to a downstream finer. In this way, the SCM furnace 48 can be operated at maximum performance to produce molten glass, and downstream glass fining can be practiced more efficiently, with a minimal size apparatus, and with better overall control, because the molten glass input flow to the finer can be regulated with precision. The stilling vessel can be operated to partially fine and/or reduce the foam content of an intermediate pool of molten glass that pools within the stilling vessel while also preventing heat loss from the glass before delivering the molten glass feed to the downstream finer.


The stilling vessel includes a stilling tank and a feeding spout appended to the stilling tank. To control the flow rate of the molten glass from the feeding spout, movement of a reciprocal needle is controlled to regulate the flow rate (either by mass or volume) through an orifice of the feeding spout. As such, the stilling vessel effectively decouples viscosity of the molten glass from the flow rate of the molten glass, thereby providing improved control of finer molten glass level, e.g., twice as accurate as that of previous SCM and finer arrangements. Without the stilling vessel, the SCM furnace 48 would have to be operated more conservatively and/or the size or length of the finer would have to be significantly increased. The stilling vessel may include the stilling vessel disclosed in U.S. Pub. No. 2021/0094857, which is assigned to the assignee hereof and is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety. The stilling vessel may include the liquid-cooled flow control needle disclosed in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 17/039,734, filed on Sep. 30, 2020 and which is assigned to the assignee hereof and is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.


Additionally, the hot-end subsystem 30 also includes a downstream finer that may be mechanically decoupled from the stilling vessel. The finer serves to fine molten glass including removal of foam or gas bubbles from the surface of the molten glass and from the bulk of the molten glass. A forehearth may be located at a downstream end of the finer to receive fined molten glass from the finer, and condition the molten glass to a uniform viscosity for downstream forming operations, and may include a glass feeder at a downstream end thereof to feed the conditioned molten glass to downstream forming equipment.


In an example fining embodiment, a fining tank includes a housing that defines a fining chamber and contains a molten glass bath in the fining chamber, and that further defines each of a glass inlet, a glass outlet, and an auxiliary access passage, and wherein the molten glass bath flows in a flow direction from the glass inlet to the glass outlet. Unfined molten glass produced in a submerged combustion melter is received into the fining chamber of the fining tank through the glass inlet, the unfined molten glass having a volume percentage of gas bubbles and a density and, upon being introduced into the fining chamber, combining with the molten glass bath. Additive particles are introduced into the fining chamber of the fining tank through the auxiliary access passage, and comprise a glass reactant material and one or more fining agents, wherein the one or more fining agents are released into the molten glass bath upon consumption of the additive particles in the molten glass bath to thereby accelerate the removal of bubbles from the molten glass bath. Fined molten glass is discharged from the glass outlet of the fining tank, having a volume percentage of gas bubbles that is less than the volume percentage of gas bubbles in the unfined molten glass and further having a density that is greater than the density of the unfined molten glass. Such a finer may include one or more of the apparatuses and methods disclosed in U.S. Pub. No. 2021/0094861, which is assigned to the assignee hereof and is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.


In another example fining embodiment, a fining vessel includes a housing that defines a fining chamber, and that has a roof, a floor, and an upstanding wall extending between the roof and the floor, and that further defines an inlet to the fining chamber and an outlet from the fining chamber. The fining vessel also includes a skimmer extending in a direction downwardly with respect to the roof of the housing towards the floor of the housing and further extending across the fining chamber between opposed lateral sidewalls of the upstanding wall. The skimmer has a distal free end that together with corresponding portions of the floor and upstanding wall defines a submerged passageway. A dissolvable fining material component is disposed directly beneath the skimmer, and comprises a mixture of a glass compatible base material and one or more fining agents. Such a finer may include one or more of the apparatuses and methods disclosed in U.S. Pub. No. 2021/0094856, which is assigned to the assignee hereof and is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety. A similar finer includes a plurality of nozzles supported in the floor of the housing directly beneath the skimmer, and being configured to dispense a carrier gas into the fining chamber, the carrier gas including a main gas that contains suspended particles of one or more fining agents. Such a finer may include one or more of the apparatuses and methods disclosed in U.S. Pub. No. 2021/0094858, which is assigned to the assignee hereof and is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.


Downstream of the forehearth, the hot-end subsystem 30 includes a glass feeder that receives the fined and conditioned molten glass from the finer and produces a molten charge therefrom. The feeder may include a bowl or spout at a downstream end of the forehearth to accept molten glass from the forehearth, and a plunger to push molten glass out of the glass feeder spout. Also, the feeder may include an orifice ring being located at an outlet of the spout and cooperating with the plunger to control flow of and perhaps provide heat to the molten glass. In some embodiments, the feeder also may include shears below the orifice ring to cut the molten charge from the molten glass stream.


Downstream of the glass feeder, the hot-end subsystem 30 also may include molten glass handling equipment that may be shorter in vertical height than conventional gob handling equipment, and that may result in greater quality and less commercial variations in glass products. In a first example, a glass charge transporter can be located below the glass feeder, or laterally adjacent to the glass feeder, or even above the glass feeder. The transporter may include a transport cup can be formed of heat resistant material, for example platinum, graphite, and/or other suitable material, or combinations of various materials. The transport cup can be supported by a movable carrier that is configured to transport the molten glass portion away from the feeder axis to the glassware forming sub-system. For example, the carrier can transport the molten glass portion vertically, and/or laterally/horizontally away from the feeder axis, to the glassware forming sub-system. The movable carrier can support one or a plurality of transport cups.


In an additional example embodiment, the glass feeder may involve bottom-feeding of blank molds using vacuum and injection molding techniques. The glass feeder may include a spout, a circumferentially closed conduit in communication with the spout, and a feeder plunger to push a molten glass stream downward from the spout, through the circumferentially closed conduit and upward into a blank mold. This latter example of a glass feeder may include the subject matter disclosed in U.S. Patent Application Ser. No. 63/085,640, filed on Sep. 30, 2020 and which is assigned to the assignee hereof and is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.


Notably, the glass feeder need not be, and preferably is not, a gob feeder, such that the feeder need not, and preferably does not, produce a freefalling gob. Likewise, the hot-end subsystem 30 need not, and preferably does not, include lengthy gob handling equipment (distributors, scoops, chutes, deflectors, and funnels) and related lubrication equipment. In contrast to a large positive vertical height differential (about fourteen feet or about 4.3 meters) between an outlet of a glass charge feeder and openings of forming molds required by conventional systems, the presently disclosed system may occupy zero to two feet (0 to 0.6 meters), including all ranges, subranges, values, and endpoints of that range, of positive vertical height to deliver the molten glass between a molten glass feeder and downstream forming molds. In fact, the distance between the outlet of the glass feeder and the inlets of the forming molds of the presently disclosed system may be negative such that the forming mold inlets may be located above the glass feeder outlet. Accordingly, the glass feeder may require an operational envelope of no more than one or two feet of vertical height, and perhaps zero positive height differential, between the finer and downstream forming molds. Consequently, the molten charge produced by the glass feeder of the present disclosure need not suffer from unequal cooling, damage, or deformity sometimes associated with significant contact with lubricant and gob handling equipment. In fact, the presently disclosed glass feeders and techniques result in molten charges that have relatively improved thermal homogeneity. This tends to result in fewer container commercial variations, and more consistent container wall thickness thereby requiring less container material, and reducing container weight and annealing time due to a thinner average wall thickness of the containers.


Downstream of the glass feeder, the hot-end subsystem 30 further includes forming molds to receive the gobs from the glass feeder and form the glassware from the glass charges. The forming molds may be part of a conventional individual section machine, or may be part of other types of forming machines. Downstream of the forming molds, the hot-end subsystem 30 includes glassware handling equipment, which may include takeout mechanisms to pick up and place the glassware on dead plates, and pushers to push the glassware off the dead plates and onto a conveyor of the glassware handling equipment so that the containers are conveyed downstream for further processing.


Moreover, the hot-end subsystem 30 may include an annealing lehr at the end of the conveyor to anneal the glassware. The annealing lehr may be a conventional lehr, or may be any other type of annealing equipment to anneal the glass containers.


Additionally, the hot-end subsystem 30 may include hot-end coating equipment along the conveyor to apply a protective coating to the glassware before it enters the annealing lehr. Notably, however, the hot-end subsystem 30 need not include conventional ancillary equipment including roof-mounted furnace ventilators, and a cullet hopper or bath in a basement.


Finally, the hot-end subsystem 30 may include a glassware manufacturing waste glass handling system, which can enable the glassware manufacturing system to be contained within a production building without a basement, and wherein cullet, process, and/or shear water can be collected and recycled within the system to minimize cost from environmental disposal. The waste glass handling system includes a sump pit in the forming floor, a waste liquid trench surrounding a glassware forming machine and flowing to the sump pit, and at least one of a cullet material handler or a molten waste glass sluice configured to receive molten glass from the molten glass feeder, hot glassware rejects from the glassware forming machine, and/or molten glass from the SCM furnace 48 and/or the finer. The forming floor may be sloped or crowned from the glassware forming machine to the waste liquid trench. The waste glass material handler may be at least partially recessed in a cullet trench, and may be mounted to the forming floor and disposed at a level of the forming floor. Liquid waste collected by the sump pit is recycled to the system. The waste glass handling system also may include an enclosure over the cullet trench to establish a cullet trench conduit, and steam removal ductwork in fluid communication with the cullet trench conduit to remove steam from the cullet trench conduit. The waste glass handling system further may include a cold cullet return conveyor carried by the forming floor configured to transport cold glassware rejects from a location downstream of an annealing lehr, and a reject conveyor configured to transport hot glassware rejects from the glassware forming machine to the waste glass material handler, and a hot mold charge chute configured to direct rejected mold charges from the glassware forming machine to the waste glass material handler. Because the waste glass handling system is carried by the forming floor, e.g., sits on an upper surface of the forming floor or is carried in a trench in the forming floor, there is no need for a traditional glass factory basement to accommodate waste glass handling equipment. For example, the waste glass handling system may include the waste glass handling system disclosed in U.S. Patent Application Ser. No. 63/085,644, filed on Sep. 30, 2020 and which is assigned to the assignee hereof and is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety. Additionally, recycled, scrap, and waste cullet can be crushed and returned to the feedstock handling subsystem via one or more cullet crushers and cullet return conveyors.


Unlike conventional glass furnaces, the SCM furnace 48 may be operated intermittently such that it need not be run continuously like a conventional glass furnace, although it could be run continuously. The SCM furnace 48 operates until it is desired to suspend operation for any of a number of reasons: to change color of the glass, to change base composition of the glass, to allow time to repair or change downstream forming equipment, or to interrupt production for downtime of any other type. For example, when it is desired to change from a first glass color to a second glass color different from the first, operation of the SCM furnace 48 can be stopped, the molten glass dumped out of the SCM furnace 48 for recycling during a subsequent production run of the first color. This may be facilitated via the cullet handling system discussed above, with or without additional use of a water-cooled roller to help create more surface area on the molten glass to speed cooling and make conveying easier. In any event, operation of the SCM furnace 48 can be restarted with fresh glass batch materials to produce the second color, without the typical operational issues associated with color changes in conventional glass furnaces. Molten glass can also be dumped from the finer and the forehearth through drains provided through sloped bottoms thereof and, again, this may be facilitated via the cullet handling system discussed above, with or without additional use of the water-cooled roller. Accordingly, use of the SCM furnace 48 facilitates a color change to be carried out in less than 30 hours (in contrast to three to five days for conventional arrangements), such that container color changes can be made much more frequently than ever before and there is no need to stockpile weeks or months of inventory of a particular color between color changes.


Turning now to the cold-end subsystem 32, this portion of the new glass factory 10 fits within a single story, and includes conveyors to carry the annealed glassware downstream of the lehr and to and between cold-end stations. The cold-end subsystem 32 may include a cold-end coating station to lubricate the glassware, and includes one or more inspection stations to inspect the coated glassware for any unacceptable commercial variations that result in glassware scrap. The cold-end subsystem 32 also includes scrap handling equipment to return the glassware scrap back to the upstream feedstock subsystem, a packaging station to package acceptable glassware together, a palletizing station to palletize the packaged glassware, and a warehouse to store pallets of packaged glassware. Notably, because there is no need to produce weeks or months of glassware stock of a given color with the new system, the cold-end subsystem 32 does not require a large conventional warehouse and instead, can include a finished glassware storage area on the order of 10% to 20% of the size of a typical warehouse at a glass factory.


The present disclosure provides a mobile and modular glass manufacturing system 11 that can be moved from one standard industrial location to another, completely unlike conventional glass manufacturing systems that require dedicated, customized, permanent glass factory installations. Also, the time to construct the presently disclosed new glass factory 10 is about three to six months. Accordingly, a permanent site and facility in a heavy industrial zone need not be purchased; rather, an existing site and facility for the system 11 can be temporarily leased in a light industrial zone, until it is desirable to relocate the system to another site and facility.


In conjunction with the above description of an illustrative embodiment of a glass factory 10 and glass manufacturing system 11, glassware may be produced by the following glass manufacturing process, which may or may not include all of the disclosed steps or be sequentially processed or processed in the particular sequence discussed, and the presently disclosed manufacturing process encompasses any sequencing, overlap, or parallel processing of such steps, and use of any suitable glass manufacturing system.


A glass manufacturing method includes submerged combustion melting of feedstock into molten glass, stilling the molten glass into stilled molten glass, streaming the stilled molten glass by gravity into a finer, and fining the molten glass into fined molten glass in the finer. The glass manufacturing method also may include conditioning the fined molten glass for downstream forming operations, producing a molten charge from the fined molten glass, wherein the molten charge is not a freefalling glass gob, transporting the molten charge in a manner that excludes use of gob chutes, and forming the molten charge into glassware. In an example embodiment, the transporting step includes feeding the molten charge directly from a glass feeder into a forming mold, and pushing molten glass out of the glass feeder and into and through a circumferentially closed conduit extending between and coupled to the forming mold to communicate molten glass to the forming mold.


Additionally, the glass manufacturing method further may include handling waste glass without using a basement below a forming floor, including collecting waste liquid in a sump pit in the forming floor, collecting waste liquid in a waste liquid trench surrounding a forming machine and flowing to the sump pit, and receiving molten glass streams from a glass feeder and hot glassware rejects from the forming machine in a waste glass handler on the forming floor. Further, the glass manufacturing method may include annealing the glassware, inspecting the glassware, and packaging the glassware. The entire method may be carried out in a volumetric envelope of less than 20,000 cubic meters and has a production capacity of about 110 tons of glass per day, for a capacity-adjusted size of less than 200 cubic meters per each ton of glass produced per day.


Turning now to a detailed description of an embodiment of a feedstock subsystem for the above-described glass manufacturing system, and first by way of additional background, a conventional glass factory includes a custom architectural installation specifically designed for glass manufacturing, and a glass manufacturing system supported and sheltered by the architectural installation. The conventional custom glass factory architectural installation includes a factory building that houses a glass furnace, glass container forming equipment, and the like. The installation also includes a feedstock subsystem that includes a “batch house” located outside of the factory building. The batch house towers over the factory building and is generally configured to receive and store feedstock or “glass batch” materials including glassmaking raw materials, for example, sand, soda ash, and limestone, and also including cullet in the form of recycled, scrap, or waste glass. The batch house is usually about seven stories tall, about 35 meters including above and below floor level, and includes a covered unloading platform and a pit to receive the glass batch from underneath railcars or trucks that arrive loaded with glass batch materials. The batch house also includes multi-story silos to store the glass batch, and glass batch elevators and conveyors to move the glass batch from the unloading systems at bottom of the pit to tops of the silos. The batch house further includes cullet pads at ground level to receive and store cullet, crushers to crush cullet to a size suitable for melting, and cullet elevators and conveyors to move crushed cullet to one of the silos in the batch house. The batch house additionally includes a mixer to mix the glass batch received from the silos, conveyors integrated with scales to weigh and deliver each glass batch material from the silos to the mixer, mixer conveyors to move the glass batch from the mixers to the hot-end subsystem, and dust collectors to collect dust from the various equipment.


The batch house requires a specialized, dedicated, and permanent architectural installation including a pit, and a two to three story building. The time to construct a new glass batch house of the conventional type is about one to two years. And a conventional batch house cannot be relocated from one location to another. The batch house installation occupies a large footprint on the order of 530 square meters, and a large volumetric envelope on the order of 18,600 cubic meters. A batch house installation of this size typically supports a conventional glass manufacturing system with a production output of about 140 tons of glass per day. Accordingly, a capacity-adjusted size of the batch house can be characterized by the volumetric envelope of the batch house divided by the production output enabled by the batch house, which is about 133 cubic meters per each ton of glass produced per day.


Although conventional glass manufacturing batch houses and methods enable efficient production of high-quality products for large-scale production runs, the presently disclosed subject matter introduces a revolutionary glass feedstock subsystem or “batch house” that has a volumetric envelope that is significantly reduced compared to that of conventional batch houses, includes prefabricated modular equipment configurations to facilitate easier installation, and removal and relocation, and may omit one or more conventional batch house subsystems or aspects thereof, as described in further detail below.


With reference to FIGS. A-1 and A-2, a new glass feedstock subsystem or “batch house” A-10 is illustrated and described, with reference to a glass container factory A-12 as an example. Those of ordinary skill in the art would recognize that other glass factories, for example, for producing glass fibers, glass display screens, architectural glass, vehicle glass, or any other glass products, share many aspects with a glass container factory. Accordingly, the presently disclosed and claimed subject matter is not limited to use with glass containers, glass container manufacturing systems, and glass container factories and, instead, encompasses any glass products, glass product manufacturing systems, and glass product factories.


As shown in an example embodiment in FIGS. A-1 and A-2, the batch house A-10 includes an architectural installation A-14 and a batch handling system A-16 supported and sheltered by the installation A-14. The installation A-14 includes a concrete foundation A-18 having a floor A-20 generally having a four to six inches thick mat or slab. The installation A-14 requires no basement and no pit below the floor A-20, and also includes a factory building or enclosure A-22 on the foundation A-18 including walls A-24 and a roof A-26. The installation A-14 is less than three stories and, more specifically, is less than A-15 meters in height above a floor of the installation A-14. The feedstock subsystem A-10 is configured to receive and store feedstock or “glass batch” materials. The glass batch materials include glassmaking raw materials, like sand, soda ash, and limestone, and also may include cullet in the form of recycled, scrap, or waste glass. The feedstock subsystem A-10 does not require conventional batch house elevators, mixers, and/or the like.


The batch house A-10 or feedstock building A-22 occupies a footprint and volumetric envelope much smaller than that of conventional batch houses. The feedstock building A-22 occupies a footprint of about 3,500 square feet or about 325 square meters, and a volumetric envelope of about 189,000 cubic feet or about 5,350 cubic meters. The production output of molten glass that is enabled by a batch house this size is about 110 TPD, such that a capacity-adjusted size of the presently disclosed batch house A-10 can be characterized by the volumetric envelope of the presently disclosed system divided by the production output of the system. For example, the feedstock building A-22 size of 5,350 cubic meters is divided by 110 TPD for a capacity-adjusted size of about 49 cubic meters per each ton of glass produced per day.


With reference to FIG. A-1, the batch handling system A-16 includes pneumatic input conduit A-28 that may extend through one or more walls A-24 of the batch house enclosure A-22 for accessibility to batch transporters, e.g., trucks or rail cars, that bring batch materials to the batch house A-10. The input conduit A-28 has any suitable couplings for coupling to batch transporters in a pneumatically sealed manner, wherein the batch transporters may have pumps, valves, and/or other equipment suitable to pressurize the input conduit A-28 to push batch material into the batch house A-10 and/or the batch handling system A-16 may include pumps, valves, and/or other equipment suitable to apply vacuum to the input conduit A-28 to pull batch material into the batch house A-10.


With reference to FIG. A-2, the batch handling system A-16 includes pneumatic output conduit A-30 that may extend through one or more walls A-24 or the roof A-26 of the enclosure A-22 for transmission to a hot end subsystem A-32 of a glass manufacturing system A-34.


With reference to FIG. A-3, the pneumatic output conduit A-30 is schematically shown coupled to a portion of the hot end subsystem A-32 and is preferably sealingly coupled thereto. For example, the hot end subsystem A-32 may include a receiver hopper A-36, a mixer A-38 in downstream communication with the receiver hopper A-36, a vessel or day bin A-40 in downstream communication with the mixer A-38, a batch charger A-42 in downstream communication with the day bin A-40, and a glass melter A-44 in downstream communication with the batch charger A-42 to receive batch materials from the batch charger A-42 and melt the batch materials into molten glass. The schematically illustrated batch charger A-42 is a top feed charger that dumps batch material into an opening in a roof A-46 of the glass melter A-44. In another embodiment, however, the batch charger A-42 may include a below-melt charger that extends through a side wall, a bottom wall, or a lower corner wall of the glass melter A-44. In yet another embodiment, the batch charger A-42 may be a top feed charger that is configured to feed batch material through a sidewall or a roof of an alcove appended to an upstream portion of the glass melter A-44. The output conduit A-30 has any suitable couplings for coupling to the receiver hopper A-36 in a pneumatically sealed manner.


With reference to FIGS. A-3 and A-4, the batch handling system A-16 includes a base frame A-48 establishing a habitable first or lower level A-50 of the system A-16 and including columns A-52 extending upwardly from the foundation A-18, cross members A-54 connecting the columns A-52, and obliquely angled supports A-56 between at least some of the columns A-52. The base frame A-48 spans a majors section A-58 of the system A-16, a minors section A-60 of the system A-16, and a transmission section A-62 of the system A-16. As used herein, the term “habitable” means that there is standing room for an adult human in the particular space involved and there is some means of ingress/egress to/from the space while walking such as a doorway, stairway, or the like.


In the majors section A-58, the system A-16 also includes a dosing equipment frame A-64 carried on the base frame A-48 to carry silo dosing equipment A-66 and including lower and upper cross members A-68, vertical columns A-70 therebetween, and obliquely angled supports A-72 between at least some of the columns A-70. Also in the majors section A-58, the system A-16 further includes a silo array A-74 carried on the dosing equipment frame A-64 and including a plurality of silo modules A-76.


With additional reference to FIGS. A-5 through A-8, each silo module A-76 includes a frame A-78 that may have dimensions less than or equal to maximum interior dimensions of an intermodal freight container and including longitudinally extending corner columns A-80, a base A-82 including horizontally extending base cross-members A-84, a silo platform A-86 including horizontally extending platform cross-members A-88, a panel A-90 coupled to the platform cross-members A-88, and one or more brackets A-91 coupled to the side wall A-92 of the silo A-94 and to cross members A-84 of the frame A-78. Each silo module A-76 also includes a silo A-94 carried within the frame A-78 and including a body A-96 having a body lower end A-98 and a body upper end A-100, and a spout A-102 coupled to the body lower end A-98 and including a spout lower end A-104, as well as pneumatic conduit A-106 longitudinally carried at each corner of the frame A-78, and utilities A-108 coupled to the upper end A-100 of the silo A-94 and including a filter A-110, a pressure relief valve A-12, pneumatic conduit A-114, and a level gauge A-116. Each silo module A-76 may be pre-assembled, for example, at an equipment fabricator, and then shipped from the fabricator to a glass product manufacturer in an intermodal freight container, and then erected on site at the product manufacturer. As shown in FIG. A-8, a silo module A-76 may be carried on a pallet A-118 suitable for use in an intermodal freight container. Frames A-78 of adjacent modules A-76 are coupled together to connect the array A-74, and an upper-most level A-120 of the array A-74 may be habitable.


With additional reference to FIG. A-9, the inlet conduit A-28 extends upwardly to an upper portion A-122 of the batch house A-10 to an upper portion A-124 of a plurality of majors silos A-76. The inlet conduit A-28 is routed to particular silos A-94 in some cases directly, and in other cases, via upstream branches that direct flow of batch material to downstream valves and inlets of multiple silos. Five inlet conduits A-126 through A-134 are illustrated and correspond to sand, soda, limestone, alumina, and saltcake, i.e., major materials or “majors” for glassmaking. The sand inlet conduit A-126 is directed to four silos, the soda inlet conduit A-128 is directed to three silos, the limestone inlet conduit A-130 is directed to two silos, the alumina inlet conduit A-132 is directed to one silo, and the saltcake inlet conduit A-134 is directed to one silo. A twelfth silo is a dust recovery silo A-136 that is not coupled to the inlet conduit A-28 but is coupled to an internal conduit A-138 that receives recovered dust from other equipment of the batch handling system A-16. The silos A-94 are coupled to dosing equipment A-66 that is carried by the dosing equipment frame A-64 beneath the silo array A-74 and that is connectable to a movable batch dosing container or transport bin A-140 to dose appropriate amounts of batch materials into the transport bin A-140.


With reference to FIG. A-10, the dosing equipment A-66 may be supported by the dosing equipment frame A-64 by brackets A-142 and includes a receiver A-144 for coupling to the spout A-102 of the lower end A-100 of a corresponding silo A-94, and conduit, valve(s), augers, and/or other equipment suitable to move and dose batch material to docking equipment that is adapted to dock the dosing equipment A-66 to the transport bin A-140 to allow flow of batch material from the dosing equipment A-66 to the transport bin A-140 without being exposed or open to the surrounding environment. The transport bin A-140 may include one or more normally closed closures A-146 at a bin inlet A-148 to prevent the batch material in the transport bin A-140 from being open to the surrounding environment. The door A-150 is shown as open for illustrative purposes.


With reference to FIG. A-11, the transport bin A-140 is shown carried by a transport bin cradle A-152 supported on a frame or table A-154 separate from the cradle A-152 and having a platform A-156 and legs A-158 depending from the platform A-156 to support the platform A-156. The cradle A-152 may be supported on a weigh scale A-160, which in turn is supported on the table A-154.


With reference to FIG. A-4, the system A-16 also includes an automatically guided vehicle (AGV) A-162 separate from the table A-154. The AGV A-162 is traversable between the legs A-158 of the table A-154 and under the platform A-156 of the table A-154, and is raisable from a lowered position to lift the table A-154 with the scale A-160 and transport bin A-140 and cradle, and carry and move same among locations under the silos A-94 and dosing equipment A-66 to receive batch material from the silos A-94 via the dosing equipment A-66, and to further move the transport bin A-140 to the minors section A-60 of the system A-16 to receive minors therefrom, and, ultimately, to move the transport bin A-140 to a transmission station. Of course, the AGV A-162 is lowerable, for example, to move around without the transport bin A-140.


With reference to FIGS. A-12 and A-13, a fragmentary portion of the minors section A-60 is shown and includes the base frame A-164 housing minors small bag unloaders A-166, a minors dosing equipment module A-168 carried on the base frame A-164 and partially establishing a habitable second or intermediate level A-170 of the minors section A-60 of the system A-14, and a minors container module A-172 carried on the minors dosing equipment module A-168 and establishing a habitable third or upper level A-174 of the minors section A-60 of the system A-16.


Each minors container module A-172 includes a frame A-176 with dimensions less than or equal to maximum interior dimensions of an intermodal freight container and including lower and upper cross members A-178, vertical columns A-180 therebetween, and obliquely angled supports A-182 between at least some of the columns A-180, and a container platform A-184 supporting the containers A-186. Each container module A-172 also may include a plurality of containers A-186 carried within the frame A-176 in a partial circumferential array A-188 wherein the containers A-186 receive minors from the minors unloaders A-166 via pneumatic conduit A-190 that include any suitable couplings for coupling to the unloaders A-166 and the container modules A-172 in a pneumatically sealed manner. The containers A-186 include bodies A-192 having body lower ends A-194 and a body upper ends A-196, and spouts coupled to the body lower ends A-194 and including spout lower ends, and utilities A-198 coupled to the upper ends A-194 of the containers A-186 and including filters, pressure relief valves, pneumatic conduit, and level gauges.


Each minors dosing module A-168 includes a frame A-200 with dimensions less than or equal to maximum interior dimensions of an intermodal freight container and including lower and upper cross members A-202, vertical columns A-204 therebetween, and obliquely angled supports A-206 between at least some of the columns A-204, and an equipment platform A-208 carried by the cross members A-202 and supporting minors dosing equipment A-210. The minors dosing equipment A-210 is supported by the dosing equipment frame A-200 and includes a receiver A-212 for coupling to the spout A-102 of the lower end A-98 of a corresponding silo A-94, and conduit, valve(s), and augers, and/or other equipment suitable to move and dose batch material to docking equipment that is adapted to dock the dosing equipment A-210 to the transport bin to allow flow of batch material from the dosing equipment A-210 to the transport bin A-140 without being exposed or open to the surrounding environment.


Corner columns and/or cross-members of adjacent minors container and dosing equipment modules A-168, A-172 are coupled together and partial circumferential container and dosing equipment arrays A-214, A-216 establish a complete circumferential array A-218 as shown in FIG. A-14. The array of minors containers may be adjacent to the array of majors silos in a downstream direction.


With reference to FIG. A-15, a small bag unloader module A-220 includes a frame A-222 with dimensions less than or equal to maximum interior dimensions of an intermodal freight container and including lower and upper cross members A-224, vertical columns A-226 therebetween, and obliquely angled supports A-228 between at least some of the columns A-226, and a bag unloader platform A-230 supporting one or more bag unloaders A-166 and associated pneumatic transfer conduit and equipment A-232 constituting one or more pneumatic conveying stations A-234 that pneumatically convey batch material minors to the array of minors containers A-218.


Similarly, with reference to FIG. A-16, a big bag or bulk unloader module A-236 includes a frame A-238 with dimensions less than or equal to maximum interior dimensions of an intermodal freight container and including lower and upper cross members A-240, vertical columns A-242 therebetween, and obliquely angled supports A-244 between at least some of the columns A-242, and a bulk unloader platform A-246 supporting one or more bulk unloaders A-248 and associated pneumatic transfer conduit and equipment A-250.


Likewise, with reference to FIGS. A-17 and A-18, control room and electrical room modules A-252, A-254 include frames A-256, A-258 with dimensions less than or equal to maximum interior dimensions of an intermodal freight container and including lower and upper cross members A-260, A-262, vertical columns A-264, A-266 therebetween, and obliquely angled supports A-268, A-270 between at least some of the columns A-264, A-266, and platforms A-272, A-274 supporting control panels and associated equipment A-276, A-278.


With additional reference to FIG. A-19, multiple modules A-168, A-254 may be carried, for example, end to end, on a pallet A-280 suitable for use in an intermodal freight container.


With reference to FIG. A-20, the AGV A-162 is configured to move the transport bin A-140 among locations under the minors containers A-186 and dosing equipment A-210 to receive batch material from the minors containers A-186 via the dosing equipment A-210, and to further move the transport bin A-140 to the transmission station A-62. The minors may include magnesium, potassium, sulfur, chromium, iron, cobalt, titanium, barium, strontium, nickel, chromium, manganese, copper, tin, bismuth, carbon, selenium, and/or vanadium.


With reference to FIG. A-21, an example flow path A-282 of the AGV A-162 and transport bin A-140 is illustrated. In the example flow path A-282, and among the majors, alumina is collected first, sand is collected second, limestone is collected third, saltcake is collected fourth, recycled dust is collected fifth, and soda is collected sixth. In the example flow path A-282, and following collection of the majors, minors are collected last at one or both of two stations each corresponding to one half of the circumferential minors container array A-218. Then the AGV A-162 carries the transport bin A-140 to the transmission station A-62 for transmission through the outlet conduit A-30 to the hot end A-32 of the glass manufacturing system A-34.


With reference to FIGS. A-22 and A-23, a transmission section A-62 of the system A-16 includes a batch transmission station A-284. The station A-284 may include a transfer bin handler A-286 including a transfer bin elevator A-288 including elevator columns A-290 and an elevator carriage A-292 translatable along the elevator columns A-290 and carrying movable pins, and a transfer bin conveyor A-294 including conveyor rails A-296 and a conveyor pallet A-298 translatable along the conveyor rails A-296 and carrying stationary locators. The station A-284 also includes a pneumatic hopper A-302 that may be located below the transfer bin conveyor A-294 and having a sealingly closeable inlet A-304, and a pneumatic conveying sub-system A-306 including an air pump, valves, and/or other equipment suitable to pressurize and push batch material to a downstream location. A pneumatic conduit A-308 may be coupled to the air pump and/or to the pneumatic hopper A-302 to convey bulk material out of the pneumatic hopper A-302 and through the outlet conduit A-30. The pneumatic hopper A-302 includes the normally closed inlet A-304 that is configured to receive batch material from a normally closed outlet of the transport bin A-140. The transport bin A-140 and/or the pneumatic hopper A-302 include one or more actuators or other devices suitable to open the normally closed inlet A-304 and outlet. Although the illustrated embodiment includes the separate pneumatic hopper A-302 to convey batch material downstream, in other embodiments, the transport bin A-140 can be adapted similarly to the pneumatic hopper A-302 such that it is configured to convey batch material downstream through the outlet conduit A-30 directly from the transport bin A-140.


Those of ordinary skill in the art would recognize that the batch handling system A-16 is pneumatically closed between the pneumatic input conduit A-28 and the pneumatic output conduit A-30. This is in contrast to conventional systems where batch material is open to the surrounding environment. The phrase “pneumatically closed” means that the path, and the batch materials following that path, from inlet conduit A-28 to outlet conduit A-30 is/are enclosed, although not necessarily always sealed air-tight, and not openly exposed to the surrounding environment.


Moreover, although the drawings illustrate a 3×4 array configuration of twelve silo modules, the presently disclosed modular designs permit larger or smaller arrays, for example, 2×3, 4×6, or any other desired array size and configuration. Likewise, although the drawings illustrate a circular array of six minors containers, the presently disclosed modular designs permit larger or smaller arrays, for example, a square array of four minors containers, a matrix array of two rows of four minors containers for a total of eight minors container, or any other suitable configuration and size array. Additionally, the modules A-168, A-172, A-220, A-236, A-252, A-254 may share common exterior dimensions such that the modules A-168, A-172, A-220, A-236, A-252, A-254 can be carried together on a common pallet A-118, A-280, and can be easily aligned with one another to facilitate positioning and assembling them together on site. In fact, many of the modules may have identical exterior dimensions. In this regard, each of FIGS. A-3, A-4, A-13, A-14, and A-19 are to scale. Additionally, those of ordinary skill in the art will recognize various other characteristics of the modules A-168, A-172, A-220, A-236, A-252, A-254, and other aspects of the system A-16, from the drawings themselves.


There thus has been disclosed a glass manufacturing system and method, that fully satisfy one or more of the objects and aims previously set forth. The disclosure has been presented in conjunction with several illustrative embodiments, and additional modifications and variations have been discussed. Other modifications and variations readily will suggest themselves to persons of ordinary skill in the art in view of the foregoing discussion. For example, the subject matter of each of the embodiments is hereby incorporated by reference into each of the other embodiments, for expedience. The disclosure is intended to embrace all such modifications and variations as fall within the spirit and broad scope of the appended claims.

Claims
  • 1. A glass manufacturing system, comprising: a hot-end subsystem, including: a submerged combustion melting furnace that melts feedstock to produce molten glass;a finer that receives and refines the molten glass from the submerged combustion melting furnace to produce fined molten glass;a forehearth that conditions the fined molten glass to a uniform temperature and viscosity for downstream forming operations;a glass feeder that receives the conditioned molten glass from the forehearth and produces a molten charge therefrom;a forming machine including a forming mold that receives the molten charge and forms glass product from the molten charge; andan annealing lehr that receives and anneals the glass product; anda cold-end subsystem, including: an inspection station downstream of the annealing lehr; anda packaging station downstream of the inspection stationwherein the hot-end subsystem and the cold-end subsystem produce between 95 and 126 tons of glass per day, and are encompassed by an installation having a capacity-adjusted size of less than 440 cubic meters per each ton of glass produced per day.
  • 2. The glass manufacturing system set forth in claim 1, further comprising: a feedstock subsystem, including: a batch material storage sub-system;a batch material transfer sub-system; anda batch material transmission sub-system to transmit batch material from the feedstock subsystem to the hot-end subsystem,wherein the capacity-adjusted size is less than 200 cubic meters per each ton of glass produced per day.
  • 3. The glass manufacturing system set forth in claim 1, wherein the glass feeder is not a gob feeder and does not produce a freefalling gob.
  • 4. The glass manufacturing system set forth in claim 1, wherein the glass feeder feeds the molten glass directly into the forming mold.
  • 5. The glass manufacturing system set forth in claim 4, wherein the glass feeder cuts the molten glass upstream of the forming mold to establish the molten charge in the forming mold.
  • 6. The glass manufacturing system set forth in claim 1, wherein a vertical height differential between an outlet of the glass feeder and an open end of the forming mold is less than three meters.
  • 7. The glass manufacturing system set forth in claim 1, wherein the installation has a maximum length less than about 70 meters, a maximum width less than about 20 meters, and a maximum height less than about 15 meters.
  • 8. A glass factory comprising: the glass manufacturing system set forth in claim 1; andan architectural installation including: a forming floor carrying the forming machine,walls,a roof, andexcluding a basement.
  • 9. The glass factory set forth in claim 8, wherein the architectural installation includes a light industrial building.
  • 10. The glass manufacturing system set forth in claim 1, wherein the hot-end subsystem and the cold-end subsystem produce between 100 and 120 tons of glass per day, and wherein the capacity-adjusted size is less than 300 cubic meters per each ton of glass produced per day.
  • 11. The glass manufacturing system set forth in claim 1, further comprising a feedstock subsystem.
  • 12. A glass factory comprising: the glass manufacturing system set forth in claim 11; andan installation including a feedstock building that includes a foundation, walls, and a roof, wherein the height of the feedstock building is less than seventeen meters tall.
  • 13. The glass factory of claim 12, wherein the installation also includes a factory building that includes a forming floor carrying the forming machine, walls, and a roof, wherein the height of the factory building is less than thirteen meters tall.
  • 14. The glass factory of claim 13, wherein the forming floor includes a four to six inch thick slab and one or more isolation slabs less than four feet thick.
  • 15. A glass factory comprising: the glass manufacturing system set forth in claim 1; andan installation including a factory building that includes a forming floor carrying the forming machine, walls, and a roof, wherein the height of the factory building is less than thirteen meters tall.
  • 16. The glass factory of claim 15, wherein the forming floor includes a four to six inch thick slab and one or more isolation slabs less than four feet thick.
US Referenced Citations (532)
Number Name Date Kind
324495 Walton et al. Aug 1885 A
443898 Colquhoun Dec 1890 A
1143317 Proeger Jun 1915 A
1378460 Hopkinson May 1921 A
1451707 Miller Apr 1923 A
1484907 Schram Feb 1924 A
1552497 Noble Sep 1925 A
1554195 Bergman Sep 1925 A
1608326 Lawson Nov 1926 A
1712205 Good May 1929 A
1742098 Rankin Dec 1929 A
1761229 Pedersen Jun 1930 A
1834631 Mulholland Dec 1931 A
1840532 Rowe Jan 1932 A
1853002 Howard Apr 1932 A
1853003 Howard Apr 1932 A
1919152 Peiler May 1933 A
2001766 Brown May 1935 A
2010334 Stewart Aug 1935 A
2275155 Mongan, Jr. Mar 1942 A
2354807 Fox et al. Aug 1944 A
2479805 Batchell Aug 1949 A
2484925 Baker et al. Oct 1949 A
2569779 Porter Oct 1951 A
2773111 Arbeit et al. Dec 1956 A
2808446 Lambert Oct 1957 A
2836934 McLaughlin Jun 1958 A
2955948 Silverman Oct 1960 A
2982522 Hamilton et al. May 1961 A
3030736 Penberthy Apr 1962 A
3248205 Marceau Apr 1966 A
3260587 Marceau Jul 1966 A
3442633 Perry May 1969 A
3486882 Raguin et al. Dec 1969 A
3511629 Bauer et al. May 1970 A
3563683 Hess Feb 1971 A
3580714 Lucek May 1971 A
3580976 Buss May 1971 A
3592623 Shepherd Jul 1971 A
3607195 Horio et al. Sep 1971 A
3659029 de Bussy Apr 1972 A
3697000 Giberson, Jr. Oct 1972 A
3725022 Mills Feb 1973 A
3732086 Heyne May 1973 A
3738792 Feng Jun 1973 A
3754885 Bowman Aug 1973 A
3764287 Brocious Oct 1973 A
3833354 Thummler et al. Sep 1974 A
3967943 Seeley Jul 1976 A
3983309 Faulkner et al. Sep 1976 A
4047918 Heithoff Sep 1977 A
4061487 Kiyonaga Dec 1977 A
4115089 Metz et al. Sep 1978 A
4125352 Gellert Nov 1978 A
4103391 Boggum et al. Dec 1978 A
4197109 Frazier et al. Apr 1980 A
4208201 Rueck Jun 1980 A
4225443 Harris et al. Sep 1980 A
4226564 Takahashi et al. Oct 1980 A
RE30674 Wenda et al. Jul 1981 E
4277277 Propster Jul 1981 A
4282020 Wheaton Aug 1981 A
4298374 Savolskis et al. Nov 1981 A
4312655 Pack Jan 1982 A
4313722 Yigdall Feb 1982 A
4313747 Barton Feb 1982 A
4318872 Romano Mar 1982 A
4350512 Krumwiede Sep 1982 A
4351054 Olds Sep 1982 A
4351252 Shindome et al. Sep 1982 A
4374645 Monteyne Feb 1983 A
4539034 Hanneken Sep 1985 A
4545800 Won et al. Oct 1985 A
4549893 Hindman et al. Oct 1985 A
4553998 Jones Nov 1985 A
4557743 Claes et al. Dec 1985 A
4571149 Soroka et al. Feb 1986 A
4592770 Pearman et al. Jun 1986 A
4632687 Kunkle et al. Dec 1986 A
4704153 Schwenninger et al. Nov 1987 A
4762544 Davey Aug 1988 A
4780121 Matesa Oct 1988 A
4780122 Schwenninger et al. Oct 1988 A
4830651 Smith May 1989 A
4877449 Khinkis Oct 1989 A
4882736 Pieper Nov 1989 A
4890241 Hoffman et al. Dec 1989 A
4900333 Bos Feb 1990 A
4921521 Kremenets May 1990 A
4953752 Tousignant et al. Sep 1990 A
4986844 Fenton Jan 1991 A
5030594 Heithoff Jul 1991 A
5032163 Balestra Jul 1991 A
5037246 Okano et al. Aug 1991 A
5057133 Chen et al. Oct 1991 A
5069704 Boutier et al. Dec 1991 A
5071340 LaBianca Dec 1991 A
5073183 Hammond et al. Dec 1991 A
5116399 Lauwers May 1992 A
5301620 Nagel et al. Apr 1994 A
5413154 Hurst, Jr. et al. May 1995 A
5415323 Fenelon Jun 1995 A
5426663 Lythgoe Jun 1995 A
5447547 Goldfarb et al. Sep 1995 A
5579705 Suzuki et al. Dec 1996 A
5588978 Argent et al. Dec 1996 A
5630369 Edlinger May 1997 A
5620491 Puhl et al. Aug 1997 A
5706851 Lopez-Gomez et al. Jan 1998 A
5718737 Mosch Feb 1998 A
5765489 Hugentobler et al. Jun 1998 A
5785940 Carroll et al. Jul 1998 A
5811044 Rote et al. Sep 1998 A
5921771 Kobayashi Jul 1999 A
5922097 Kobayashi et al. Jul 1999 A
6032492 Kammonen Mar 2000 A
6059028 Kincheloe et al. May 2000 A
6059070 Cudicio et al. May 2000 A
6086361 Higashi et al. Jul 2000 A
6113874 Kobayashi Sep 2000 A
6116170 Yamada et al. Sep 2000 A
6119484 Takei et al. Sep 2000 A
6125658 Maugendre et al. Oct 2000 A
6125660 Gorobinskaya et al. Oct 2000 A
6210157 Kobayashi Apr 2001 B1
6237369 LeBlanc et al. May 2001 B1
6266390 Sommer, Jr. et al. Jul 2001 B1
6269852 Muhr Aug 2001 B1
6316748 Ide Nov 2001 B1
6339610 Hoyer et al. Jan 2002 B1
6349570 Coates et al. Feb 2002 B1
6366353 Brown et al. Apr 2002 B1
6408650 Boulos et al. Jun 2002 B1
6460376 Jeanvoine et al. Oct 2002 B1
6477862 Wacke Nov 2002 B1
6588233 Nattermann Jul 2003 B2
6588234 Kiefer et al. Jul 2003 B1
6705118 Simpson et al. Mar 2004 B2
6715319 Barrow et al. Apr 2004 B2
6722161 LeBlanc Apr 2004 B2
6735237 Duch et al. May 2004 B2
6739152 Jeanvoine et al. May 2004 B2
6776011 Hayes et al. Aug 2004 B2
6810689 Romer et al. Nov 2004 B2
6871514 Muschik et al. Mar 2005 B2
6883349 Jeanvoine et al. Apr 2005 B1
6888917 Sommer, Jr. et al. May 2005 B2
6927186 Hulme et al. Sep 2005 B2
6969044 Delzer et al. Nov 2005 B2
7017371 Juul et al. Mar 2006 B2
7017373 Bauer et al. Mar 2006 B2
7062912 Penfornis et al. Jun 2006 B2
7162892 Smith et al. Jan 2007 B2
7165927 Doherty et al. Jan 2007 B2
7273583 Rue et al. Sep 2007 B2
7332203 Hernandez Feb 2008 B2
7351929 Afsari et al. Apr 2008 B2
7355140 Afsari et al. Apr 2008 B1
7384230 Pfeiffer et al. Jun 2008 B2
7409838 Kobayashi Aug 2008 B2
7412849 Bonitz et al. Aug 2008 B2
7441999 Nakao et al. Oct 2008 B2
7528957 Lewis et al. May 2009 B2
7578988 Jacques et al. Aug 2009 B2
7584632 House et al. Sep 2009 B2
7682123 Bachrach Mar 2010 B2
7699602 Boatwright et al. Apr 2010 B2
7735338 Mueller et al. Jun 2010 B2
7753639 Hoshino Jul 2010 B2
7771153 Doherty et al. Aug 2010 B2
7854144 DeLamielleure et al. Dec 2010 B2
7900476 Lehman et al. Mar 2011 B2
7905940 Edlinger Mar 2011 B2
7924414 Mound Apr 2011 B2
7955574 Fryxell et al. Jun 2011 B2
7972104 Shiwaku et al. Jul 2011 B2
7992412 Yoshida et al. Aug 2011 B2
8056364 Sakai et al. Nov 2011 B2
8091387 Iguchi et al. Jan 2012 B2
8136373 Sasaki et al. Mar 2012 B2
8181486 Yoshida et al. May 2012 B2
8196432 Jacques et al. Jun 2012 B2
8197172 Doherty et al. Jun 2012 B2
8222170 Ikenishi et al. Jul 2012 B2
8357459 Tachiwana et al. Jan 2013 B2
8425173 Lert et al. Apr 2013 B2
8436268 Afsari et al. May 2013 B1
8456633 Lewis et al. Jun 2013 B2
8498320 Kim et al. Jul 2013 B2
8561430 Palmieri et al. Oct 2013 B2
8561652 Bordere et al. Oct 2013 B2
8573006 Macleod et al. Nov 2013 B2
8573007 Sakamoto et al. Nov 2013 B2
8585341 Oren et al. Nov 2013 B1
8650908 Brown et al. Feb 2014 B2
8650914 Charbonneau Feb 2014 B2
8656741 Brown Feb 2014 B2
8656742 Lockhart et al. Feb 2014 B2
8661852 Leister et al. Mar 2014 B2
8689588 Hirayama et al. Apr 2014 B2
8696010 Toebes et al. Apr 2014 B2
8707738 Sakamoto et al. Apr 2014 B2
8707739 Huber et al. Apr 2014 B2
8707740 Huber et al. Apr 2014 B2
8769992 Huber Jul 2014 B2
8783067 Bauer Jul 2014 B2
8783068 Macleod et al. Jul 2014 B2
8785337 Barton et al. Jul 2014 B2
8806893 Isono et al. Aug 2014 B2
8833107 Ringuette et al. Sep 2014 B2
8839644 Brown et al. Sep 2014 B2
8857218 Brown et al. Oct 2014 B2
8864365 Rodgers Oct 2014 B2
8869564 Gross et al. Oct 2014 B2
8875544 Charbonneau Nov 2014 B2
8893528 Ringuette et al. Nov 2014 B2
8899224 Cowles Dec 2014 B2
8902422 Chesner et al. Dec 2014 B2
8919801 Toebes et al. Dec 2014 B2
8951029 Wilkie Feb 2015 B2
8973405 Charbonneau et al. Mar 2015 B2
8979070 Keizer et al. Mar 2015 B2
8991215 Shock et al. Mar 2015 B2
8997525 Shock et al. Apr 2015 B2
9010073 Stamm Kristensen et al. Apr 2015 B2
9021838 Charbonneau et al. May 2015 B2
9044117 Daburger et al. Jun 2015 B2
9073691 Morimoto et al. Jul 2015 B2
9073692 Morimoto et al. Jul 2015 B2
9096452 Charbonneau et al. Aug 2015 B2
9096453 Charbonneau Aug 2015 B2
9096457 Leese et al. Aug 2015 B2
9126741 Ellis et al. Sep 2015 B2
9133051 Brown et al. Sep 2015 B2
9145319 Mobley et al. Sep 2015 B2
9156394 Toebes et al. Oct 2015 B2
9188333 Galley et al. Nov 2015 B2
9206068 McGinnis et al. Dec 2015 B2
9206071 Leese et al. Dec 2015 B2
9212078 Bratton et al. Dec 2015 B2
9227780 Krohn Jan 2016 B2
9227865 Shock et al. Jan 2016 B2
9290400 Kunisa et al. Mar 2016 B2
9321591 Lert et al. Apr 2016 B2
9324894 Dogimont et al. Apr 2016 B2
9327903 Toebes et al. May 2016 B2
9394192 Villeroy De Galhau et al. Jul 2016 B2
9428330 Lopez Aug 2016 B2
9468131 Brandt et al. Oct 2016 B2
9481592 Huber et al. Nov 2016 B2
9492831 Charbonneau et al. Nov 2016 B2
9493372 Lefrere et al. Nov 2016 B2
9505556 Razumov Nov 2016 B2
9505646 Huber Nov 2016 B2
9533905 Charbonneau et al. Jan 2017 B2
9533906 Charbonneau Jan 2017 B2
9539927 Fitzgerald et al. Jan 2017 B2
9567157 Scudder et al. Feb 2017 B2
9573831 Charbonneau et al. Feb 2017 B2
9576831 Hatano et al. Feb 2017 B2
9580344 Charbonneau Feb 2017 B2
9587825 Lefrere et al. Mar 2017 B2
9592959 Kinugawa et al. Mar 2017 B2
9598306 Leese et al. Mar 2017 B2
9611164 Jeanvoine et al. Apr 2017 B2
9617075 Porat Apr 2017 B2
9620397 Doherty et al. Apr 2017 B2
9643869 Shock et al. May 2017 B2
9643870 Huber May 2017 B2
9643871 Cowles et al. May 2017 B2
9650277 Charbonneau et al. May 2017 B2
9656903 McGinnis et al. May 2017 B2
9676644 Shock et al. Jun 2017 B2
9688178 Pham Jun 2017 B2
RE46462 Huber et al. Jul 2017 E
9700175 King Jul 2017 B2
9731990 Baker Aug 2017 B2
9731991 Dalstra Aug 2017 B2
9752389 Pham et al. Sep 2017 B2
9776194 Schindler Oct 2017 B2
9776813 McMahon Oct 2017 B2
9776901 Huber et al. Oct 2017 B2
9776902 Mobley et al. Oct 2017 B2
9802850 Ohmstede et al. Oct 2017 B2
9810363 Ganzer et al. Nov 2017 B2
9815726 Huber Nov 2017 B2
9822027 Wang et al. Nov 2017 B2
9827683 Hance et al. Nov 2017 B1
9834894 Reed et al. Dec 2017 B1
9840430 Shock et al. Dec 2017 B2
9856162 Lindig et al. Jan 2018 B2
9862538 Pham et al. Jan 2018 B2
9881823 Doherty et al. Jan 2018 B2
9902639 Mobley et al. Feb 2018 B2
9930837 Rowling Apr 2018 B2
9932258 Clark Apr 2018 B1
9938093 Sherwood et al. Apr 2018 B2
9956609 De Saro et al. May 2018 B1
9957184 Huber et al. May 2018 B2
9982884 Huber et al. May 2018 B2
10011510 Demott et al. Jul 2018 B2
10029934 Wang et al. Jul 2018 B2
10041666 Luka et al. Aug 2018 B2
10059535 Herman et al. Aug 2018 B2
10059536 Tomioka et al. Aug 2018 B2
10065798 Borders et al. Sep 2018 B2
10077200 Ferrari Sep 2018 B2
10077610 Pham et al. Sep 2018 B2
10081565 Shock et al. Sep 2018 B2
10099391 Hance et al. Oct 2018 B2
10112860 Kobayashi et al. Oct 2018 B1
10118852 Wang et al. Nov 2018 B2
10125041 Sorg et al. Nov 2018 B2
10138151 Cai et al. Nov 2018 B2
10141212 Doherty et al. Nov 2018 B2
10147627 Doherty et al. Dec 2018 B2
10167146 Johnston Jan 2019 B2
10167220 Boughton et al. Jan 2019 B2
10167221 De Angelis et al. Jan 2019 B2
10173915 Rue et al. Jan 2019 B2
10196294 Faulkinbury Feb 2019 B2
10202239 Razumov Feb 2019 B2
10233105 Faulkinbury et al. Mar 2019 B2
10246362 Huber Apr 2019 B2
10265871 Hance et al. Apr 2019 B2
10280000 Sullivan et al. May 2019 B2
10280001 Oki et al. May 2019 B2
10322960 Martin et al. Jun 2019 B2
10337732 Faulkinbury et al. Jul 2019 B2
10381251 Doherty et al. Aug 2019 B2
10392285 Charbonneau et al. Aug 2019 B2
10442614 Lucas et al. Oct 2019 B2
10479255 Krenek et al. Nov 2019 B2
10507992 Tackett et al. Dec 2019 B2
10526136 Hawkins et al. Jan 2020 B2
10569242 Stegemoeller et al. Feb 2020 B2
10584393 Dry et al. Mar 2020 B2
11084749 Rashley et al. Aug 2021 B2
20020025244 Kim Feb 2002 A1
20020162358 Jeanvoine Nov 2002 A1
20040065115 Mueller et al. Apr 2004 A1
20040168474 Jeanvoine Sep 2004 A1
20040196887 Schmidbauer et al. Oct 2004 A1
20040206124 Jeanvonine et al. Oct 2004 A1
20040206125 Schenk et al. Oct 2004 A1
20040224833 Jeanvoine et al. Nov 2004 A1
20050236747 Rue et al. Oct 2005 A1
20052367471 Rue et al. Oct 2005
20060062870 Cyphert et al. Mar 2006 A1
20060122450 Kim et al. Jun 2006 A1
20060243301 LeMond et al. Nov 2006 A1
20070014185 Diosse et al. Jan 2007 A1
20070204654 Fukumoto et al. Sep 2007 A1
20070212546 Jeanvoine et al. Sep 2007 A1
20080057275 Grzesik et al. Mar 2008 A1
20080096754 Thomsen et al. Apr 2008 A1
20080103039 Jones May 2008 A1
20080110207 Fukuda et al. May 2008 A1
20080178537 Spangler et al. Jul 2008 A1
20080187686 Rodriguez Cuartas Aug 2008 A1
20080256981 Jacques et al. Oct 2008 A1
20080276652 Bauer et al. Nov 2008 A1
20090008410 Kosich Jan 2009 A1
20090011290 Chudnovsky et al. Jan 2009 A1
20090078410 Krenek et al. Mar 2009 A1
20090107181 Sakai Apr 2009 A1
20090176639 Jacques et al. Jul 2009 A1
20090215607 Dejneka et al. Aug 2009 A1
20090235695 Pierrot et al. Sep 2009 A1
20090255296 Viada Oct 2009 A1
20100089383 Cowles Apr 2010 A1
20100193077 Nelson et al. Aug 2010 A1
20100199721 Antoine et al. Aug 2010 A1
20100229980 Achenbach et al. Sep 2010 A1
20100233772 Achenbach et al. Sep 2010 A1
20100251772 Itoh et al. Oct 2010 A1
20100284768 Olin-nunez et al. Nov 2010 A1
20100307196 Richardson Dec 2010 A1
20110061642 Rouchy et al. Mar 2011 A1
20110083473 Engels et al. Apr 2011 A1
20110098171 Pedeboscq et al. Apr 2011 A1
20110197635 McDermott et al. Aug 2011 A1
20110236845 Aoki et al. Sep 2011 A1
20110236846 Rue et al. Sep 2011 A1
20110308280 Huber Dec 2011 A1
20120011890 Sakai et al. Jan 2012 A1
20120070252 Waltert Mar 2012 A1
20120077135 Charbonneau Mar 2012 A1
20120144863 Shinohara et al. Jun 2012 A1
20120159991 Dejneka et al. Jun 2012 A1
20120210751 Rue et al. Aug 2012 A1
20130048148 Matye Feb 2013 A1
20130066951 Charboneau et al. Apr 2013 A1
20130086949 Charboneau Apr 2013 A1
20130086950 Huber et al. Apr 2013 A1
20130133373 Lafon et al. May 2013 A1
20130239618 Ishikawa et al. Sep 2013 A1
20130260980 Touslee et al. Oct 2013 A1
20130276481 Kobayashi et al. Oct 2013 A1
20140007622 Shock et al. Jan 2014 A1
20140007623 Charbonneau Jan 2014 A1
20140017499 Yamamoto Jan 2014 A1
20140041322 Pham et al. Feb 2014 A1
20140044508 Luharuka et al. Feb 2014 A1
20140090421 Shock et al. Apr 2014 A1
20140090423 Charbonneau et al. Apr 2014 A1
20140090424 Charbonneau et al. Apr 2014 A1
20140116089 Yuasa et al. May 2014 A1
20140144185 Shock et al. May 2014 A1
20140165655 Nakagawa Jun 2014 A1
20140356608 Lentes et al. Dec 2014 A1
20140371116 Hojaji et al. Dec 2014 A1
20150013386 Villeroy De Galhau et al. Jan 2015 A1
20150044003 Pham Feb 2015 A1
20150044004 Pham et al. Feb 2015 A1
20150135775 Charbonneau et al. May 2015 A1
20150166403 Yamamoto Jun 2015 A1
20150175464 Lefrere Jun 2015 A1
20150191304 Herman et al. Jul 2015 A1
20150203286 Ness Jul 2015 A1
20150225187 Razumov Aug 2015 A1
20150291465 Cowles et al. Oct 2015 A1
20150307382 Wang et al. Oct 2015 A1
20150307389 He et al. Oct 2015 A1
20150336834 Mobley et al. Nov 2015 A1
20150344344 Kobayashi et al. Dec 2015 A1
20150344345 Kobayashi et al. Dec 2015 A1
20150360856 Oren et al. Dec 2015 A1
20150368039 Cochrum et al. Dec 2015 A1
20160002084 Charbonneau et al. Jan 2016 A1
20160002091 Leese et al. Jan 2016 A1
20160039433 Oren et al. Feb 2016 A1
20160060154 Cowles et al. Mar 2016 A1
20160075586 Charboneau et al. Mar 2016 A1
20160075587 Baker Mar 2016 A1
20160083279 Cai et al. Mar 2016 A1
20160107914 Baker et al. Apr 2016 A1
20160130095 Oren et al. May 2016 A1
20160145139 Fredholm et al. May 2016 A1
20160153654 Richardson, III Jun 2016 A1
20160168001 Demott et al. Jun 2016 A1
20160207814 Demott et al. Jul 2016 A1
20160207817 Hojaji et al. Jul 2016 A1
20160244279 Oren et al. Aug 2016 A1
20160251152 Krupa Sep 2016 A1
20160297065 Lopez Oct 2016 A1
20160297605 Lopez Oct 2016 A1
20160340219 Miller Nov 2016 A1
20170007622 Giliyar et al. Jan 2017 A1
20170008086 Jones Jan 2017 A1
20170008795 Charbonneau et al. Jan 2017 A1
20170015579 Charbonneau et al. Jan 2017 A1
20170044040 Madeni et al. Feb 2017 A1
20170057855 Swiler et al. Mar 2017 A1
20170059153 Baker et al. Mar 2017 A1
20170059154 Luka et al. Mar 2017 A1
20170073262 Charbonneau et al. Mar 2017 A1
20170107139 Baker et al. Apr 2017 A1
20170113958 Charbonneau et al. Apr 2017 A1
20170158544 Shock et al. Jun 2017 A1
20170203989 Shock et al. Jul 2017 A1
20170240450 Meng et al. Aug 2017 A1
20170253518 Sorg Sep 2017 A1
20170259311 Benichou et al. Sep 2017 A1
20170284872 Cowles et al. Oct 2017 A1
20170341965 Claussen Nov 2017 A1
20180002120 Allegretti et al. Jan 2018 A1
20180002213 Demott et al. Jan 2018 A1
20180002214 Gullinkala et al. Jan 2018 A1
20180009693 Demott et al. Jan 2018 A1
20180016174 Demott et al. Jan 2018 A1
20180022628 Demott et al. Jan 2018 A1
20180029915 Huber Feb 2018 A1
20180044214 Huber Feb 2018 A1
20180057387 Faulkinbury Mar 2018 A1
20180058770 Adrian et al. Mar 2018 A1
20180065877 Faulkinbury Mar 2018 A1
20180065878 Dalstra Mar 2018 A1
20180105446 Faulkinbury et al. Apr 2018 A1
20180111866 Macphee et al. Apr 2018 A1
20180118600 Francis, Jr. et al. May 2018 A1
20180141127 Richard May 2018 A1
20180141752 Nakanishi et al. May 2018 A1
20180155231 Kenyon et al. Jun 2018 A1
20180237322 Lewis Aug 2018 A1
20180237323 D'Agostini et al. Aug 2018 A1
20180243800 Kumar et al. Aug 2018 A1
20180244554 Mighton et al. Aug 2018 A1
20180283789 Kobayashi et al. Oct 2018 A1
20180313532 Luka et al. Nov 2018 A1
20190023484 Shin Jan 2019 A1
20190084861 Takahashi et al. Mar 2019 A1
20190106273 Hess et al. Apr 2019 A1
20190112214 Sorg et al. Apr 2019 A1
20190119038 Komelsen et al. Apr 2019 A1
20190127147 Wagner et al. May 2019 A1
20190129371 Wagner et al. May 2019 A1
20190129399 Wagner et al. May 2019 A1
20190135555 Wagner et al. May 2019 A1
20190161376 Faulkinbury et al. May 2019 A1
20190161377 Cowles et al. May 2019 A1
20190177200 Huber Jun 2019 A1
20190183037 Czapka et al. Jun 2019 A1
20190194053 Demott et al. Jun 2019 A1
20190217258 Bishop Jul 2019 A1
20190218044 Keskitalo et al. Jul 2019 A1
20190241356 Schaffner et al. Aug 2019 A1
20190256281 Cochrum et al. Aug 2019 A1
20190263701 Shock et al. Aug 2019 A1
20190264912 Faulkinbury et al. Aug 2019 A1
20190276225 Warren et al. Sep 2019 A1
20190284076 Wang et al. Sep 2019 A1
20190284079 Wang et al. Sep 2019 A1
20190291141 Koyanaka et al. Sep 2019 A1
20190322505 Tengvert et al. Oct 2019 A1
20190337832 Francis, Jr. et al. Nov 2019 A1
20190337834 Demott et al. Nov 2019 A1
20190352208 Demott et al. Nov 2019 A1
20200031639 Rauwolf Jan 2020 A1
20200047997 Van Staalduinen Feb 2020 A1
20200079584 Hawkins et al. Mar 2020 A1
20200079674 Demott et al. Mar 2020 A1
20200095060 Hawkins et al. Mar 2020 A1
20200102147 Sullivan et al. Apr 2020 A1
20200109075 Demott et al. Apr 2020 A1
20200118853 Harasaki Apr 2020 A1
20200199990 Friesen Jun 2020 A1
20200262641 Friesen Aug 2020 A1
20210094861 Wang et al. Apr 2021 A1
20210246060 Vempati et al. Aug 2021 A1
20210246061 Vempati et al. Aug 2021 A1
20220098076 Holmes et al. Mar 2022 A1
Foreign Referenced Citations (79)
Number Date Country
2142840 Sep 1993 CN
204125342 Jan 2015 CN
205115275 Mar 2016 CN
10569307 Jun 2016 CN
106746541 Feb 2017 CN
107555764 Jan 2018 CN
21184132 Aug 2020 CN
2044237 May 1971 DE
2825528 Dec 1979 DE
19526212 Jan 1997 DE
19644673 Apr 1998 DE
102006025512 Dec 2007 DE
102008006572 Jul 2009 DE
0555171 Aug 1993 EP
1118597 Jul 2001 EP
2243747 Oct 2010 EP
2578547 Oct 2013 EP
2685170 Jan 2014 EP
3088369 Nov 2016 EP
3138820 Mar 2017 EP
3388399 Oct 2018 EP
1037414 Feb 1998 ES
411768 Jun 1910 FR
474628 Mar 1915 FR
1306851 Nov 1961 FR
230598 Mar 1925 GB
281382 Nov 1927 GB
803457 Oct 1958 GB
1157010 Jul 1969 GB
1269060 Mar 1972 GB
1422449 Jan 1976 GB
2114968 Sep 1983 GB
2355981 May 2003 GB
2430451 Mar 2007 GB
S61044728 Mar 1986 JP
S6199017 May 1986 JP
H09263409 Oct 1997 JP
11035338 Feb 1999 JP
2009120456 Jun 2009 JP
2017065965 Apr 2017 JP
6792810 Nov 2020 JP
WO9838136 Sep 1998 WO
WO02100741 Dec 2002 WO
WO2004026776 Apr 2004 WO
WO2004063729 Jul 2004 WO
WO2013188167 Dec 2013 WO
WO2013188167 Dec 2013 WO
WO2014057126 Apr 2014 WO
WO2014189506 Nov 2014 WO
WO 2016120350 Aug 2016 WO
WO2016176073 Nov 2016 WO
WO201709117 Jan 2017 WO
WO 2017185571 Nov 2017 WO
WO2017223034 Dec 2017 WO
WO 2018026775 Feb 2018 WO
WO 2018050678 Mar 2018 WO
2018094678 May 2018 WO
WO 2018094678 May 2018 WO
WO2018108323 Jun 2018 WO
WO2018170392 Sep 2018 WO
WO2019206438 Oct 2018 WO
WO2019072992 Apr 2019 WO
WO201972992 Apr 2019 WO
WO2019072992 Apr 2019 WO
2019154434 Aug 2019 WO
WO2019154434 Aug 2019 WO
2019199588 Oct 2019 WO
2019206437 Oct 2019 WO
2019206438 Oct 2019 WO
WO2019199588 Oct 2019 WO
WO2019206437 Oct 2019 WO
2019238673 Dec 2019 WO
WO2019238673 Dec 2019 WO
2020019064 Jan 2020 WO
WO2020019064 Jan 2020 WO
2020074242 Apr 2020 WO
WO2020074242 Apr 2020 WO
WO2020106539 May 2020 WO
WO2022072405 Apr 2022 WO
Non-Patent Literature Citations (32)
Entry
PCT Invitation to Pay Additional Fees,PCT Int.Serial No. PCT/US2021/053259, Int. Filing Date: Oct. 1, 2021 Applicant: Owens-Brockway Glass Container Inc. dated May 19, 2022.
PCT Invitation to Pay Additional Fees, Where applicable, Protest Fee, Int. App. No.; PCT/US2021/053252, Int. Filing Date: Oct. 1, 2021, dated Jan. 20, 2022.
PCT Search Report and Written Opinion, Int. Serial No. PCT/US2021/053252, Int. Filing Date: Oct. 1, 2021, Applicant: Owens-Brockway Glass Container Inc., dated Mar. 14, 2022.
Int. Search Report and Writ Opinion, Int. Serial No. PCT/US2020/053202, Int. Filing Date: Sep. 29, 2020, Applicant: Owens-Brockway Glass Container Inc., dated Dec. 3, 2020.
S. Laux, et al., Advanced Heat Recovery for Oxy-Fuel Fired Glass Furnaces with Optimelt Plus Technology, Praxair Optimelt Plus Presentation, 2016.
Int. Search Report and Writ Opin, Int. Serial No. PCT/US2021/052753, Int. Filing Date: Sep. 30, 2021, Applicant: Owens-Brockway Glass Container Inc., dated Apr. 25, 2022.
Int. Search Report and Writ Opin, Int. Serial No. PCT/US2021/052762, Int. Filing Date: Sep. 30, 2022, Applicant: Owens-Brockway Glass Container Inc., dated Mar. 25, 2022.
Int. Search Report and Writ Opin, Int. Serial No. PCT/US2020/039096, Int. Filing Date: Jun. 23, 2020, Applicant: Owens-Brockway Glass Container Inc., dated Nov. 2, 2020.
8185PCT Int. Search Report, Int. Serial No. PCT/US2013/042254, Int. Filing Date: May 22, 2013, Applicant: Johns Manville.
8185PCT Int. Preliminary Report on Patentability, Int. Serial No. PCT/US2013/042254, Int. Filing Date: May 22, 2013, Applicant: Johns Manville.
Int. Search Report and Writ Opin, Int. Serial No. PCT/US2020/053204, Int. Filing Date: Sep. 29, 2020, Applicant Owens-Brockway Glass Container Inc., dated Feb. 1, 2021.
Int. Search Report and Writ Opin, Int. Serial No. PCT/US2020/053394, Int. Filing Date: Sep. 30, 2020, Applicant: Owens-Brockway Glass Container Inc., dated Dec. 7, 2020.
Int. Search Report and Writ Opin, Int. Serial No. PCT/US2021/045313, Int. Filing Date: Aug. 10, 2021, Applicant: Owens-Brockway Glass Container Inc., dated Nov. 12, 2021.
Int. Search Report and Writ Opinion, Int. Serial No. PCT/US2021/052567, Int. Filing Date: Sep. 29, 2021, Applicant: Owens-Brockway Glass Container Inc., dated Mar. 17, 2022.
PCT Int. Search Report and Writ Opinion, Int. App. No.: PCT/US2021/052792, Int. Filing Date: Sep. 30, 2021, Applicant: Owens-Brockway Glass Container Inc., dated Jan. 24, 2022.
PCT Search Report and Writ Opinion, Int. Serial No. PCT/US2021/017647, Int. Filing Date: Feb. 11, 2021, Applicant: Owens-Brockway Glass Container Inc., dated Jun. 4, 2021.
PCT Search Report and Writ Opinion, PCT Int. Serial No. PCT/US2021/017578, PCT Int Filing Date: Feb. 11, 2021, Applicant: Owens-Brockway Glass Container Inc., dated May 27, 2021.
PCT Search Report and Writ Opinion, PCT Int. Serial No. PCT/US2021/017654, PCT Int. Filing Date: Feb. 11, 2021, Applicant: Owens-Brockway Glass Container Inc., dated May 28, 2021.
Ingredient Masters Inc. website, Bulk Bags (FIBC Bulk Bags), https://www.ingredientmasters.com/bulk-bags/ , Date: May 16, 2019.
PCT Search Report and Writ Opinion, Int. Serial No. PCT/US2021/053264, Int. Filing Date: Oct. 1, 2021, Applicant: Owens-Brockway Glass Container Inc.,dated Feb. 4, 2022.
PCT Search Report and Writ Opinion, Int. Serial No. PCT/US2021/053252, Int. Filing Date:Oct. 1, 2021, Applicant: Owens-Brockway Glass Container Inc., dated Mar. 14, 2022.
PCT Search Report and Writ Opinion, Int. Serial No. PCT/US2021/053261, Int. Filing Date:Oct. 1, 2021, Applicant: Owens-Brockway Glass Container Inc., dated Apr. 12, 2022.
U.S. Notice of Allowance, U.S. Appl. No. 11/684,972, filed Mar. 12, 2007, Title: Non-Hazardous Bulk Material Analyzer System, dated Dec. 6, 2010.
Int. Preliminary Report on Patentability, Int. Serial No. PCT/US2015/041543, Int. Filing Date: Jul. 22, 2015, Applicant: Halliburton Energy Services, Inc., dated Jan. 23, 2018.
Int. Preliminary Report on Patentability, Int. Serial No. PCT/US2016/044496, Int. Filing Date: Jul. 28, 2016, Applicant: Halliburton Energy Services, Inc. dated Jan. 29, 2019.
U.S. Office Action, U.S. Appl. No. 16/308,945, filed Dec. 11, 2018, dated Apr. 13, 2020.
Int. Search Report and Writ Opinion, Int. Serial No. PCT/US2021/052930, Int. Filing Date: Sep. 30, 2021, Applicant: Owens-Brockway Glass Container Inc., dated Jan. 31, 2022.
Int. Search Report and Writ Opinion, Int. Serial No. PCT/US2021/052525, Int. Filing Date: Sep. 21, 2021, Applicant: Owens-Brockway Glass Container Inc., dated Feb. 11, 2022.
Int. Search Report and Writ Opinion, Int. Serial No. PCT/US2021/053266, Int. Filing Date: Oct. 1, 2021, Applicant: Owens-Brockway Glass Container Inc., dated Apr. 14, 2022.
“Modular Process Skid”, Wikipedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Modular_process_skid&oldid=834074661, May 9, 2018.
International Search Report and Written Opinion, Int. Application No. PCT/US2021/053261, Int. Filing Date: Oct. 1, 2021, Applicant: Owens-Brockway Glass Container Inc., dated Apr. 12, 2022.
PCT Invitation to Pay Additional Fees, PCT Int.Serial No. PCT/US2021/053246, Int. Filing Date: Oct. 1, 2021, Applicant: Owens-Brockway Glass Container Inc. dated May 19, 2022.
Related Publications (1)
Number Date Country
20220388884 A1 Dec 2022 US
Provisional Applications (4)
Number Date Country
63085640 Sep 2020 US
63085883 Sep 2020 US
63085646 Sep 2020 US
63085644 Sep 2020 US
Continuation in Parts (6)
Number Date Country
Parent 17039734 Sep 2020 US
Child 17061302 US
Parent 17039713 Sep 2020 US
Child 17039734 US
Parent 16993825 Aug 2020 US
Child 17039713 US
Parent 16788609 Feb 2020 US
Child 16993825 US
Parent 16788631 Feb 2020 US
Child 16788609 US
Parent 16788635 Feb 2020 US
Child 16788631 US