The present invention relates to the processing of fluids and solids. More particularly, the invention relates to the use of liners in material processing apparatus.
Fluids and solids processing is performed in a variety of equipment units, and it includes heating, cooling, mixing, blending, chopping, slurring, conveying, frothing of liquids, etc. Such equipment units are operated in industrial production lines and laboratories, and in home kitchens. Illustrative examples of such apparatus include food processors, mixers, dough kneaders, milk frothers, blenders, and conveyors. A processing unit typically comprises a container in which the ingredient food and beverage material(s) are processed and held, and a processing head, functionally placed in several optional positions within the container, and coupled to a driving system.
Current processing procedures unavoidably require cleaning the internal walls or working surfaces of the processing equipment, and exhibit severe drawbacks in respect of which the following considerations should be taken into account:
To date, the art has not provided means for addressing all such drawbacks, and the cleaning derived problems strongly and negatively affect production lines, as well as home users. It is therefore an object of the present invention to provide a system capable of preventing the fouling of processing equipment by the processed materials, thereby eliminating the need to clean them after each cycle or periodically, and the problems related thereto.
WO 2017/125913 of the same inventors hereof relates to a functional shielding layer for processing apparatus, comprising a shielding liner manufactured externally to the processing equipment. The liner, which is made of a polymer suitable for the processed material, is then placed inside the processing equipment (a mixer bowl for instance) and mechanically attached to the working surfaces that usually come in contact and are fouled by processed material.
While the abovementioned shield is useful and effective, it requires adaptation to the shielded equipment when manufactured, and then delivery to the equipment. It would therefore be highly desirable, and this is an object of the present invention, to provide a method and system that streamlines the manufacturing and delivery of a shielding layer to the processing equipment. This problem is solved by the invention, inter alia, by providing for the in situ production of a protective liner. By spraying and curing a protective layer directly on the working surfaces, absolute geometrical fitting is achieved, for any complex device structure, as well as adherence to the working surface.
In an aspect, the invention relates to a system for the in situ production of a liner suitable to shield active surfaces of apparatus for the processing of liquids and/or solids from coming into contact with, and being fouled by, the processed materials, comprising:
The data pertaining to the surface to be sprayed can be acquired by scanning and mapping apparatus, which may be integrated in the system or may be separate, or the data pertaining to the surface to be sprayed is obtained from pre-prepared data such as, for example, processing device manufacturing CAD file.
The system of the invention is provided with curing apparatus, which comprises an energy source, such as for instance a UV light source, or a heat source.
The above and other characteristics, objects and advantages of the invention will be better understood from the description of embodiments thereof, with reference to the appended drawings.
In the drawings:
In the context of this application the terms “coating”, “liner” and “shield,” are used interchangeably.
The system of the invention comprises optical acquisition apparatus such as a 3D scanner and/or an imaging device suitable to inspect the entire surface to be shielded, to acquire data relative thereto, and to feed such data to the control unit. Data acquisition can be done either from an equipment catalog predefined in the computer/control unit, which can be updated from time to time, or by operating the optical acquisition apparatus. With reference to
The tank/container 103 of the liner material contains the sprayable coating material. The required values for the controllable valve 104, pump/regulator unit, 105, and spraying nozzles 106 are fed into the control unit 101, either manually by an operator, or automatically from a database containing data for the specific equipment. Such pre-determined parameters take into account the liner thickness to be set, sprayed beam diameter and flow specification, and their determination is well within the scope of the skilled person. Control unit 101 determines the spraying head motion rate, distance and orientation from the processing equipment's working surfaces, according to the physical parameters of the liner to be obtained.
Depending on the polymer used, different curing procedures are employed. For instance, UV curable polymers will require irradiating the surface of the equipment on which the material was sprayed, for a period of time necessary for performing the curing step. The required values for curing activity (energy density, dimensions of beam) are fed into control unit 101. These pre-determined parameters are evaluated considering the liner thickness that has been sprayed. Control unit 101 determine the curing head 110 energy source to be selected, the motion rate and distance and orientation from the container's walls to achieve a solid ready-to-work liner in the required time. Polymers suitable for use with the invention will be recognized by the skilled person. Some illustrative examples of such polymers are:
1. Radiation-driven cured materials based on (e.g.) hybrid or IPN systems, where the main film forming material is a naturally based polymer (e.g. polysaccharide/protein), mixed with a UV curable resin, susceptible to chain polymerization via photo initiation, as well as direct food contact approved allyl monomers such as TPGDA, TMPTA and TMPEOTA.
2. Spontaneously cured materials film forming natural materials (e.g. soluble starch, WPI, gelatin, alginate) that are pre dissolved in water, then added with an emulsifier (e.g. glycerol), followed by the addition of an unsaturated fatty acid (e.g. oleic or linoleic acids). In some cases an emulsion is generated via homogenization, and oxygen is removed to reduce the risk of crosslinking and the film is allowed to dry and cure. In some cases alkyd autoxidation reaction with air oxygen is the drive for the crosslinking reaction and the use of catalysis allows fast curing.
3. Also exemplary commercial material that may be employed include those described in http://watersoluble.green-cycles.com/wp-content/u ploads/2019/12/Dossier-Ingles. Of, which are biodegradable, water-soluble, harmless, non-toxic, compostable, customizable, offering a variety of mechanical properties, thickness, temperature, formats, sizes. Green cycles polymeric material can be conveniently supplied in liquid form.
The system of the invention can be, in one particular embodiment, movable. In the illustrative embodiment of
A variety of embodiments of this system can be provided by integrating any combination of the following functional, technical, physical and materialistic characteristics, properties and parameters—following the same basic materials and functionality:
The above detailed description relates to an embodiment having an add-on system assembled as an add-on remote unit, whose components do not physically touch the processing equipment, with only the sprayed material, curing and mapping beams and peeling gripper contacting the equipment's active surfaces. In another embodiment of the invention the elements described above are integrated as a sub-system, and the liner production components is pre-designed to optimally and functionally be embedded in the processing equipment hardware and control unit.
In yet another embodiment of the invention, if shielded surfaces geometry and dimensions are acquired from the device manufacturer CAD file upfront, the mapping head can be eliminated, since it is unnecessary unless the system serves other processing units not having that file or prior knowledge.
In yet another embodiment of the invention the processing head coverage is devised such that linear 3D motions is controlled by the control unit (101) but rotation can be applied by the processing head itself.
The following process schemes will further illustrate the invention through illustrative coating and coating removal examples.
Liner Coating
1. Central control unit drives scanner control unit to initiate scanning and/or mapping of target food processing device;
2. central control unit initiates the robotic control unit;
3. The robotic control unit triggers the robotic arm motion, moving (3a) the scanner that is attached to it. The spatial definitions of the volume to be scanned are pre-fed into the central control unit;
4. The scanner control unit operates the scanner, and (4a) the scanner is driven into the food device and (3-D) scans and maps it;
5. The food device topography data is acquired by the scanner, where it is transformed into a mapping file;
6. This mapping file is sent to the central control unit, where it is transformed into an in-food-processing-device trajectory for the robotic arm to which the payload (spraying head and curing gun) is attached to, to ensure full active face masking;
7. This trajectory is fed into the robotic control unit;
8. Spraying material flux parameters and curing parameters are fed (or extracted from memory) into the central control unit—and sent to properly set the (8a) controllable valve and (8b) curing gun parameters;
9. Masking process is triggered by the central control unit, by triggering the various control modules:
10. The robotic arm is sent into motion following the previously set trajectory, carrying the spraying head and the curing gun;
11. Material starts to flow from the liquid polymer material tank to the controllable valve, and through it (11a) to the spraying head;
12. The spraying head is activated;
13. The curing gun is activated;
14. Liner forming starts:
15. Robotic control unit terminates (15a) the robotic arm motion when reaching the end of the pre-defined trajectory, sends termination signal (15b) to the central control unit, which sends shutdown signals to the controllable valve (15c), to the spraying head control unit (15d) and to the curing gun control unit (15e).
Liner Peeling
At the end of material processing, the shielding liner must be removed. This can be performed in many ways, e.g., mechanically, manually, chemically, etc.
1. After food products are removed from the processing container, an energy intense beam (e.g. from the existing curing gun operated with higher intensity) is sent along a pre-determined spiral trajectory, based on the initial mapping of the container active surface performed by the 3-D scanner/mapper.
In the exemplary liner peeling process according to one embodiment of the invention shown in
18. A peeling gripper is attached to the robotic arm adjacent to the curing gun, replacing the spraying head;
19. central control unit loads the cutting parameters into the curing gun control unit, including the delay between cutting and actual peeling;
20. central control unit loads the pre-determined slitting motion trajectory into the robotic control unit;
21. curing gun is activated;
22. robotic arm is triggered into motion;
23. robotic arm payload (curing gun and peeling gripper) is driven into the working space;
24. curing gun is cutting the spiral slit along the predetermined required path;
25. peeling gripper is activated;
26. peeling gripper grasps the edge of the formed strip, and peels the liner material.
Finishing Activities
After removal of the liner, additional finishing activities may be performed according to one embodiment of the invention, to ensure proper removal of the liner material and sanitation of the equipment. The steps performed according to a particular embodiment are as follows:
The numerals shown in
47. central control unit loads the pre-determined sanitation motion trajectory into the robotic control unit;
50. central control unit loads the sanitation parameters into the curing gun control unit.
53. curing gun is activated;
56. robotic arm is triggered into motion;
58. robotic arm is driven into the food device space;
59. curing gun is activated to flood the walls with sanitizing irradiation.
All the above description of embodiments of the invention have been provided for the purpose of illustration and are not intended to limit the invention in any way, except as defined in the appended claims.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/IL2020/050467 | 4/26/2020 | WO | 00 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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62839814 | Apr 2019 | US |