This disclosure relates generally to mixers for mixing fluids, and more particularly, to mixer impellers for such mixing devices.
Mixer impellers are used to mix, blend and agitate fluids and fluids with suspended solids in tanks or other vessels. Mixer impellers typically are mounted on a shaft driven by a motor that may be located outside the tank or vessel.
A mixer impeller may include a hub, adapted to be mounted on the shaft, and a plurality of blades extending radially outwardly from the hub in a plane perpendicular to the axis of rotation of the shaft and hub. The blades may be formed integrally with the hub, or alternatively, the blades may be bolted to flanges formed on the hub.
In a typical configuration, a mixer impeller is mounted on a shaft oriented vertically and centrally within a cylindrical tank so that the mixer impeller is concentric with the circular inner walls of the tank. Alternatively, a mixer impeller may be mounted on a shaft that extends sidewardly through a wall of a tank or vessel.
It is often desirable to design a mixer impeller such that the blades thereof maximize pumping efficiency, which is the ratio of the axial thrust developed by the impeller blades to the horsepower required to rotate the shaft. Accordingly, radial and rotational fluid flow resulting from operation of the impeller should be minimized. By increasing the efficiency of a mixer impeller, the horsepower required to achieve a given mixing rate may be reduced, thereby saving energy and equipment costs necessary to achieve a given performance level.
In addition, a higher efficiency impeller can achieve the same mixing effect with a smaller blade length, thereby reducing equipment costs. It is also desirable to design a mixer impeller wherein the mixing efficiency varies minimally relative to changes in the ratio of the impeller diameter to tank diameter, for applications in which the impeller is mounted concentrically within a cylindrical mixing tank.
This disclosure is directed to a high-efficiency mixer impeller and blade configurations thereof. In one aspect, the mixer impeller may include a central hub and a plurality of blades attached to and extending radially outwardly from the hub. The blades may be oriented such that the leading edges thereof are inclined upwardly from trailing edges thereof. Each of the blades has a root attached to the hub, a tip, and a first crease that may extend along substantially an entire length of the blade dividing the blade into a leading portion and a trailing portion, the leading and trailing portions may meet at the crease such that the leading portion is angled downwardly from the trailing portion.
Each blade may include a tip portion of the leading portion is separated from the remainder of the leading portion by a second crease that extends from a point on the leading edge of the leading portion between the root and the tip diagonally from the leading portion to the tip. The second crease intersects the tip at a point spaced from a point where the first crease intersects the tip. The tip portion meets the remainder of the leading portion such that the tip portion is angled downwardly from the leading portion.
In one aspect of the mixer impeller design, each of the blades may be cambered, in which the leading portion of the blade may make an angle of about 155° with the trailing portion of the blade along the first crease. In another aspect, the tip portion of each blade may make an angle of about 13.5° with the remainder of the leading portion of the blade. In a third aspect, the trailing portion of each blade may taper in width toward the blade tip.
The blades may be mounted on or otherwise extend from the hub such that a portion of the leading edge of each blade extending along the tip portion makes an angle of about 2° with a plane perpendicular to an axis of rotation of the hub. It may be desirable to bevel the leading edge of each blade of the impeller at an angle of about 45°.
The camber formed by the leading and trailing portions of the blades of the impeller meeting at an angle at the first crease may enable blades to be made of relatively thinner sheet material than, for example, an impeller having flat blades. Use of thinner material may enable smaller diameter shafts and smaller drive motors to be used to generate a given thrust, thus providing savings in equipment costs and energy required to operate a mixer utilizing the impeller.
As shown in
As shown in
As shown in
Leading portion 34 may include a second crease 40 that may be generally linear and extend from a point 42 along the leading edge 38 between the root 26 and tip 28 to a point 44 on the tip that is spaced from the point 46 at which the first crease 32 intersects the tip 28. Crease 42 may form a bend line for tip portion 48, which is a part of the leading portion 34 and may be generally flat.
Thus, as shown in the figures, leading portion 34 is substantially flat and includes a tip portion 48 which itself is substantially flat and is angled relative to the remainder of the leading portion. As shown in
The camber formed by leading and trailing portions 34, 36, respectively, along first crease 32, adds beam strength to the blade 24 and enables the blade to be made from relatively thinner material than would be required to make a substantially flat blade that could withstand substantially the same loading.
The trailing portion 36 includes a trailing edge 50 that may taper in width toward the tip 28 from a point beginning at 52. The tapered portion 54 of the trailing edge 50 may begin at point 52, which may be located along the length of the blade 24 at a point comparable to point 42 for second crease 40. By tapering the width of the trailing portion 36, the power draw of the impeller may be reduced with only minimal decline in pumping capacity of the impeller 12.
The intersection points 46, 44 of the first and second creases 32, 40, respectively, preferably may be spaced from each other to facilitate fabrication of the blade. Such a spacing does not diminish the process performance of the mixer impeller 12 significantly.
The first crease 32, as shown in
As shown in
The disclosed blade design provides advantages of high efficiency while being capable of being made lighter and using thinner gauge sheet material. The camber formed by bending the blade along the first crease 32 adds beam stiffness to the blade, while the tip portion 48 increases the efficiency of the impeller blade 24 without significantly decreasing the pumping capacity of an impeller 12 having such blades. These features may enable the mixer impeller 12 to be made of thinner material than prior art impellers having substantially flat blades, which reduces material costs in fabricating the impeller and enables use of a thinner impeller shaft, also a cost savings.
The increased efficiency and performance characteristics of the mixer impeller 12 (see
The power number Np for a comparably sized prior art impeller—specifically, the impeller described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,052,892—is shown as broken line M in the graph of
As shown in
As shown in
As shown in
In conclusion, the curves of
While the forms of apparatus herein disclosed constitute preferred embodiments of the invention, it should be understood that the claimed invention is not limited to these precise forms, and that modifications and variations thereof may be made without departing from the scope of the invention.