The present disclosure relates generally to material screening. More particularly, the present disclosure relates to screening members, screening assemblies, methods for fabricating screening members and assemblies and methods for screening materials.
Material screening includes the use of vibratory screening machines. Vibratory screening machines provide the capability to excite an installed screen such that materials placed upon the screen may be separated to a desired level. Oversized materials are separated from undersized materials. Over time, screens wear and require replacement. As such, screens are designed to be replaceable.
Replacement screen assemblies must be securely fastened to a vibratory screening machine and are subjected to large vibratory forces. Replacement screens may be attached to a vibratory screening machine by tensioning members, compression members or clamping members.
In the past, screen assemblies were made of metal and/or a thermoset polymer. The material and configuration of the screen assemblies are specific to screening applications. For example, due to their relative durability and capacity for fine screening, metal screens are frequently used for wet applications in the oil and gas industry. Traditional thermoset polymer type screens also can be used in wet and dry screening applications.
Fabricating thermoset polymer type screens is relatively complicated, time consuming and prone to errors. Typical thermoset type polymer screens that are used with vibratory screening machines are fabricated by combining separate liquids (e.g., polyester, polyether and a curative) and then filling a screen mold with the mixed liquids. The liquids chemically react and cure over a period of time in a mold. Once cured, the screen is then removed from the mold. The cure time in the mold is typically measured in hours. In some instances, it can take ten hours or more before the screen is sufficiently cured to be removed from the mold.
When one wishes to create a screen that has both fine openings and a relatively large open screening area, it is necessary to make the screen surface elements quite fine. The screen surface elements are the solid parts of the screen between the openings. In some instances, it is necessary to fabricate the screens such that the screen surface elements have thickness or width dimensions as small as 40-100 microns. This means the passages in the mold likewise must have a width or diameter of 40-100 microns. It can be difficult and time consuming to ensure that the mixed liquids used to form the screen completely fills all the very fine voids and passageways of the mold. Doing so may require special movements, high pressures and complicated handling procedures.
All too often, the liquid used to form the screen does not reach and fill all the cavities in the mold. One flaw in the resulting screen (e.g., a hole, i.e., a place where the liquid did not reach) will ruin the entire screen. Also, one small rip or tear that is caused when the screen is removed from the mold also will ruin the screen. This is particularly problematic when one is making a relatively large screen (e.g., two feet by three feet or larger), and a single small imperfection ruins the entire screen.
When one considers the manufacturing process used to make thermoset screens, it is the cure time that takes the longest and that is typically the limiting factor in terms of rate of production. The cure time is similar whether one is making a small screen or a large screen. For that reason, it makes little or no sense to make multiple small thermoset screen and then spend additional time joining the small thermoset screens together to make a larger thermoset screen assembly. Instead, it make sense to simply manufacture thermoset screens in the actual desired size, as this results in the fastest production rate.
In addition, conventional cast thermoset plastics cannot be melted or reshaped after they are cured. For that reason, it is difficult to join together multiple smaller thermoset screens to make a larger thermoset screen assembly. This is another reason why those of skill in the art tend to simply make thermoset screen in the desired size, rather than fabricating multiple smaller thermoset screens and then assembling them together to make a larger thermoset screen assembly.
Thermoset polymer screens are relatively flexible and are often secured to a vibratory screening machine using tensioning members that pull the side edges of the thermoset polymer screen away from each other and secure a bottom surface of the thermoset polymer screen against a surface of a vibratory screening machine. To prevent deformation when being tensioned, thermoset polymer assemblies may be molded with aramid fibers that run in the tensioning direction (see, e.g., U.S. Pat. No. 4,819,809). If a compression force were applied to the side edges of a typical thermoset polymer screen. it likely would buckle or crimp, thereby rendering the screening surface relatively ineffective. However, it may be possible to attach a thermoset polymer screen to a rigid plate or subassembly that allows the thermoset polymer screen to be used in compression mounted applications.
In contrast to thermoset polymer screens, metal screens are rigid and may be compressed or tensioned onto a vibratory screening machine. Metal screen assemblies are often fabricated from multiple metal components. The manufacture of metal screen assemblies typically includes fabricating a screening material, typically using multiple layers of a woven wire mesh. In some instances, such as where the screen assembly will be used in a compression mounted application, the manufacturing process can further include fabricating an apertured metal backing plate and bonding the screening material to apertured metal backing plate. The layers of wire cloth may be finely woven with openings in the range of approximately 30 microns to approximately 4000 microns. The entire screening surface of conventional metal assemblies is normally a relatively uniform flat configuration or a relatively uniform corrugated configuration.
Critical to screening performance of screen assemblies (thermoset polymer assemblies and metal type assemblies) for vibratory screening machines are the size of the openings in the screening surface, structural stability and durability of the screening surface, structural stability of the entire unit, chemical properties of the components of the unit and ability of the unit to perform in various temperatures and environments. Drawbacks to conventional metal assemblies include lack of structural stability and durability of the screening surface formed by the woven wire mesh layers, blinding (plugging of screening openings by particles) of the screening surface, weight of the overall structure, time and cost associated with the fabrication or purchase of each of the component members, and assembly time and costs. Because wire cloth is often outsourced by screen manufacturers, and is frequently purchased from weavers or wholesalers, quality control can be extremely difficult and there are frequently problems with wire cloth. Flawed wire cloth may result in screen performance problems and constant monitoring and testing is required.
One of the biggest problems with conventional metal assemblies is blinding. A new metal screen may initially have a relatively large open screening area but over time, as the screen is exposed to particles, screening openings plug (i.e., blind) and the open screening area, and effectiveness of the screen itself, is reduced relatively quickly. For example, a 140 mesh screen assembly (having three layers of screen cloth) may have an initial open screening area of 20-24%. As the screen is used, however, the open screening area may be reduced by 50% or more.
Conventional metal screen assemblies also lose large amounts of open screening area because of their construction, which includes adhesives, backing plates, plastic sheets bonding layers of wire cloth together, etc.
Another major problem with conventional metal assemblies is screen life. Conventional metal assemblies don't typically fail because they get worn down but instead fail due to fatigue. That is, the wires of the woven wire cloth often actually break due to the up and down motion they are subject to during vibratory loading.
Drawbacks to conventional thermoset polymer screens also include lack of structural stability and durability. Additional drawbacks include inability to withstand compression type loading and inability to withstand high temperatures (e.g., typically a thermoset polymer type screen will begin to fail or experience performance problems at temperatures above 130° F., especially screens with fine openings, e.g., approximately 43 microns to approximately 100 microns). Further, as discussed above, fabrication is complicated, time consuming and prone to errors. Also, the molds used to fabricate thermoset polymer screens are expensive and any flaw or the slightest damage thereto will ruin the entire screen and require replacement, which may result in costly downtime in the manufacturing process.
Another drawback to both conventional metal and thermoset polymer screens is the limitation of screen surface configurations that are available. Existing screening surfaces are fabricated with relatively uniform opening sizes throughout and a relatively uniform surface configuration throughout, whether the screening surface is flat or undulating.
There is a need for versatile and improved screening members, screening assemblies, methods for fabricating screening members and assemblies and methods for screening materials for vibratory screening machines that incorporate the use of injection molded materials (e.g., thermoplastics) having improved mechanical and chemical properties.
Embodiments of the present invention provide a screen assembly that includes injection molded screen elements. Injection molded screen elements provide many advantages in screen assembly manufacturing and vibratory screening applications. In certain embodiments of the present invention, screen elements are injection molded using a thermoplastic material. Individual ones of the screen elements are attached together to form a larger screen assembly. This allows one to create a screen assembly of virtually any size or shape from a plurality of smaller screen elements.
In many of the examples which follow, the screen elements are square or rectangular in shape. However, the screen elements could be triangular, trapezoidal, circular or virtually any other shape. A screen assembly could be created by attaching a plurality of the same size and shaped screen elements together. Alternatively, one can create a screen assembly by attaching together a plurality of screen elements where the screen elements have different sizes and/or different shapes.
As a general rule, the larger the screen element the easier and faster it is to assemble a complete vibratory screen assembly. However, the larger the screen element, the more difficult it is to injection mold extremely small structures, i.e. the structures forming the screening surface elements between the screening openings. The screen elements are designed to be large enough for efficient assembly of a complete screen assembly structure, yet small enough that they can be rapidly injection molded.
The size of the individual screen elements may also be influenced by the desired characteristics of the screen element or the resulting screen assembly. For example, when one is attempting to form a screen assembly where the screen surface elements have very fine dimensions, such as 40-100 microns in width, the passages in the injection mold used to make the screen elements must have correspondingly narrow dimensions. Injecting plastic or synthetic material into such a mold so that the injected material completely fills the mold cavities before becoming solid can be difficult, particularly if the distance the material must travel through the mold is great. For this reason, in some instances it makes sense to keep the overall dimensions of the mold, and the corresponding screen element, fairly small so that the plastic injected into the mold need not travel very far through the mold during the molding process. This ensures that the plastic fully fills the cavities in the mold before solidifying.
One can balance the desire for a large screen element against the need to form very fine screen surface elements by using molds that are relatively small in a first dimension and relatively large in a second dimension, such as rectangular molds. One can then inject material into the mold so that the material travels through the passages in the mold in the small-dimension direction. This keeps the distance traveled by the material in the mold short, which helps to ensure the mold cavities are fully filled before the material solidifies.
So long as the overall dimensions of the screen elements are kept relatively small, it is possible to form screen elements via injection molding where the screen elements have very fine or narrow screen surface elements, resulting in screen elements with a high open screening area. For example, it is possible to form screen elements with screen surface elements having a width or thickness of 40-100 microns. Such screen elements can exhibit an open screening area of 15-40% of the overall screening area.
Open screening area is a critical feature of vibratory screen assemblies. The average usable open screening area (i.e., actual open area after taking into account the structural steel of support members and bonding materials) for traditional 100 mesh to 200 mesh wire screen assemblies may be relatively high before the screens are placed into use. Traditional mesh wire screens, however, blind fairly quickly in the field which results in the actual opening screening area being reduced fairly quickly. It is not uncommon for traditional metal screens to blind within the first 24 hours of use and to have the actual open screening area reduced by 50%. In contrast, plastic or synthetic screens elements formed by injection molding tend to not blind and can provide much higher open screening area values for extended periods of time.
Traditional wire assemblies also frequently fail as a result of wires being subjected to vibratory forces which place bending loads of the wires. Injection molded screen assemblies, according to embodiments of the present invention, in contrast, rarely fail because of a loss of structural stability. In fact, screen assemblies according to embodiments of the present invention have extremely long lives and may last for long periods of time under heavy loading. Screen assemblies according to the present invention have been tested for months under rigorous conditions without failure or blinding whereas traditional wire assemblies were tested under the same conditions and blinded and failed within days.
In embodiments of the present invention a thermoplastic is used to injection mold screen elements. As opposed to thermoset type polymers, which include liquid materials that chemically react and cure under temperature, use of thermoplastics is often simpler and may be provided, e.g., by melting a homogeneous material (often in the form of solid pellets) and then injection molding the melted material. Not only are the physical properties of thermoplastics optimal for vibratory screening applications but the use of thermoplastic liquids provides for easier manufacturing processes, especially when micro-molding parts as described herein.
The use of thermoplastic materials to form screen elements provides screen assemblies that exhibit excellent flexure and bending fatigue strength. Thermoplastics are ideal for parts subjected to intermittent heavy loading or constant heavy loading, as is encountered with vibratory screens used on vibratory screening machines. Because vibratory screening machines are subject to motion, the low coefficient of friction of the thermoplastic injection molded materials provides for optimal wear characteristics. Indeed, the wear resistance of certain thermoplastics is superior to many metals. Further, use of thermoplastics as described herein provides an optimal material when making “snap-fits” due to its toughness and elongation characteristics. The use of thermoplastics in embodiments of the present invention also provides for resistance to stress cracking, aging and extreme weathering.
The heat deflection temperature of thermoplastics can be in the range of 200° F. With the addition of glass fibers, this can increase to approximately 250° F. to 300° F. or greater. The introduction of glass or carbon fibers also can increase rigidity, as measured by Flexural Modulus, from approximately 400,000 PSI to over approximately 1,000,000 PSI. All of these properties are ideal for the environment encountered when using vibratory screens on vibratory screening machines under the demanding conditions encounter in the field.
Various materials may be incorporated into the screen elements depending on the desired properties of the embodiments. Thermoplastic polyurethane (TPU) may be incorporated into embodiments, providing elasticity, transparency, and resistance to oil, grease, and abrasion. TPU also has high shear strength. These properties of TPU are beneficial when applied to embodiments which will be subjected to high vibratory forces, abrasive materials and high load demands. Different types of TPU may be incorporated into embodiments depending on the material being screened. For example, polyester-based TPUs may be incorporated into screen assemblies used for oil and/or gas screening because the esters provide superior abrasion resistance, oil resistance, mechanical integrity, chemical resistance and adhesion strength. Poly-ether based TPUs may be incorporated into mining applications where hydrolysis resistance (a property of ether based TPUs) is important. Materials for embodiments may be selected or determined based upon a variety of factors, including performance properties of each material and costs associated with using the materials.
The materials used to form screen elements may be selected to have high temperature tolerance, chemical resistance, hydrolytic resistance, and/or abrasion resistance. Screen elements may incorporate materials, such as TPUs, providing the screen elements with a clear appearance. Clear screen elements may allow for efficient laser transmission through the screen elements for laser welding purposes.
Disclosed herein are embodiments of screen assemblies formed from many individually injection molded thermoplastic screen elements that are bonded together, such as by thermoplastic welding or other methods, to form a large screening surface In some embodiments, reinforcement fibers may be added to the structure to provide added strength, particularly in tension. The reinforcement fibers may be fibers or wire that is partially or completely embedded within the material of the screen elements. Such reinforcement fibers can help the screen assembly withstand tensioning loads imposed by the mounting elements used to secure a screen assembly to a vibratory screening machine.
As explained above, it would be possible to form multiple small screen elements by casting thermoset materials in a mold. Such thermoset screen elements could then be attached to one another via fasteners or adhesive to form a larger screen assembly. But that process has many drawbacks that making that approach unattractive, particularly when compared to screen elements made by injection molding a thermoplastic.
For example, the time required to cast a small screen element with thermoset materials is measured in hours. In contrast, one can form a small screen element by injection molding a thermoplastic in seconds.
Also, once a screen element has been cast with thermoset materials it is no longer possible to re-melt or re-form the screen element. As a result, the only way to attach together multiple thermoset screen elements is via the use of adhesives or mechanical fasteners.
In contrast, injection molded thermoplastics and injection molded thermoplastic screen elements may be re-melted and welded together at their edges. Welding and other heat and non-heat-based techniques may be used to form a strong bond between individual injection molded thermoplastic screen elements, all without the use or adhesives or mechanical fasteners. Heat welding, friction stir welding and ultrasonic welding techniques may be used to join together multiple individual injection molded thermoplastic screen elements to form a large screen assembly.
The re-melting qualities of injection molded thermoplastics also allows reinforcement fibers to be easily added to a thermoplastic screen assembly. This can be accomplished by remelting selected portions of a thermoplastic material of the screen assembly and inserting reinforcement fibers into the melted portions of the thermoplastic screen assembly. Also, as will be described below, two or more thermoplastic screen elements may be joined together by melting the side edges of the screen elements, bringing the side edges together, and then allowing the melted portions to cool and solidify. When this sort of a process is conducted to fasten together multiple thermoplastic screen elements to form a larger screen assembly, one or more reinforcing fibers can be positioned between the melted side edges of the thermoplastic screen elements as the screen elements are brought together. This results in the reinforcing fiber(s) being encapsulated into the larger structure at locations between the individual screen elements during the process of fastening the screen elements together.
It would be virtually impossible to incorporate reinforcement fibers into the material of thermoset screen elements after the thermoset screen elements have been formed. Thus, it is impossible to add reinforcement fibers to a screen assembly formed of thermoset screen elements. The only way to get reinforcement fibers into thermoset screen elements is to insert them into the mold before the thermoset material is introduced. While this might work to get reinforcement fibers into individual thermoset screen elements, if multiple thermoset screen elements are to be attached together to form a larger screen assembly, once cannot get individual reinforcement fibers to run throughout the structure across multiple ones of the thermoset screen elements. For all these reasons, it is impossible to effectively add reinforcement fibers to a screen assembly formed of a plurality of thermoset screen elements in the same way that it is possible with thermoplastic screen elements.
Systems and methods for taking advantage of injection molded thermoplastic melting qualities to form large thermoplastic screening assemblies are described below. These systems and methods can include incorporating reinforcement fibers into the material of the screen elements that make up a screen assembly.
As illustrated in
Screen elements may be made from various materials depending on the desired properties of the resulting screen assembly. Thermoplastic polyurethane (TPU) may be incorporated into embodiments of the screen elements and screen assemblies, providing elasticity, transparency (where helpful or necessary), and resistance to water, chemicals having varying pH, oil, grease, and abrasion. TPU also has high shear strength. These properties of TPU are beneficial when applied to embodiments of the screen elements and screen assemblies, which are subjected to high vibratory forces, abrasive materials and high load demands.
The material used to form the screen elements of a screen assembly may be selected to have high temperature tolerance, chemical resistance, hydrolytic resistance, and/or abrasion resistance. Screen elements may incorporate materials, such as TPUs, providing the screen elements with a clear appearance. Clear screen elements may allow for efficient laser transmission through the screen elements for laser welding purposes. However, where laser welding will not be used, the screen elements could be opaque and/or colored. Various different colorants could added to the TPU material to produce screen elements in different colors, where the color may be indicative of various properties of the screen elements. For example, a first color could be used for screen elements having screening openings of a first size, and a second color could be for screen elements having screening openings of a second different size.
In some embodiments, the thermoplastic screen elements may be joined together through welding, wherein two or more thermoplastic screen elements are joined together using heating, pressure, and cooling. “Welding” in this context means causing the material of portions of two screen elements to at least partially melt, bringing the melted portions of the two screen elements together and then allowing the material to cool so that the material of the two screen elements is fused or joined together.
To begin the welding process, the surfaces of the thermoplastic screen elements that are to be joined together, such as adjacent side surfaces 10222 or adjacent end surfaces 10220, are heated to their melting point, or thermoplastic state. This could be a temperature at or above about 380° F. Each thermoplastic material has its own melting point, which may range between for example, 300° F. and 1050° F. The adjacent side surfaces, such as side surface of screen element 10216a and screen element 10216b are then pressed or otherwise held together until the material cools. Pressure applied to the screen elements 10216a, 10216b to push the side surfaces together allows the material along the seam 10310 to bond.
In some embodiments, the welding process may employ hot air plastic welding, where hot air is used to heat the thermoplastic. In some embodiments, a hot iron welding process may be used to cause the thermoplastic material along the edges of a screen element to melt. In this type of a process, a heated element such as a heated blade, iron or some other type of heated device is brought adjacent to or in contact with edges of the thermoplastic screen elements to melt the thermoplastic material at the edges.
In some embodiments, a laser or light welding process may employ electromagnetic radiation such as laser light to melt the thermoplastic material at the edges. In yet other embodiments, friction stir welding may be used to join the thermoplastic screen elements together. In friction stir welding, heat is generated by friction between a rotating tool and the adjacent surfaces of the thermoplastic screen elements.
In some embodiments, the weld extends from a top surface of the screen element to the bottom surface of the screen element. In some embodiments, the weld depth extends only partway between the top surface and the bottom surface. In some embodiments the weld depth extends from the top surface or the bottom surface part of the way towards the opposite surface of the screen elements.
In some embodiments, computer numerical control (CNC) machines may automate the welding of the screen elements. Multiple screen elements may be placed into a jig or other form and a CNC machine may control a heating tool such as a laser or other light radiation tool, a heating element, friction stir welding tool, or other some other type of welding tool to melt edges of adjacent screen elements along the seams.
In one exemplary process a heating element in the form of a soldering iron is heated to between 40° and 1000° F. Adjacent edges of two screen elements are pressed together and the heating element is moved along the joint or seam 10310, melting the thermoplastic material on the adjacent edges of the screen elements. In some instances, the heating element is brought adjacent to but not touching the seam, and the heating tool is then moved along the seam to cause the material of the two screen elements to melt and fuse together. In other instances the heating element could be brought into contact with material of the two screen elements at the seam, and the heating element would then be dragged along the seam to cause the material of the two screen elements at the seam to melt and fuse together. Regardless, the screen elements are held together while the material cools. Once cool, the two screen elements are joined together. For example, as shown in
The process of forming a screen assembly may continue by welding additional screen elements onto the first three screen elements shown in
In the embodiments depicted in
As discussed herein, individual screen elements may be of many different sizes, for example, 1″×1″, 1″×6″, 1″×5″, 2″×5″, 4″×5″, etc. Regardless, a plurality of screen elements can be welded or joined together to make sub-assemblies, and multiple sub-assemblies can be joined together to make a larger screen assembly.
For example,
After or while forming a thermoplastic screen assembly from a plurality of screen elements, one or more reinforcement fibers may be embedded into the screen assembly.
The reinforcement fibers 10610 may be sandwiched between two adjacent screen elements when the screen elements are joined together. Alternatively, or in addition, reinforcement fibers 10610 may be embedded into reinforcement members of the screen elements.
In the embodiment illustrated in
Reinforcement fibers 10610 can be embedded in the reinforcement members 10230, 10232, 10234 of the individual screen elements 10216 after multiple screen elements 10216 have been joined together to form a screen assembly 10500 like the one shown in
In some embodiments, a reinforcement fiber 10610 may be embedded into the reinforcement members of the screen elements 10216 by localized heating of the reinforcement members to cause a portion of the reinforcement members to melt. The reinforcement fiber 10610 is then pressed into the melted portion of the reinforcement members. In some embodiments, a heating element such as a soldering iron may be used to press the reinforcement fiber 10610 into the reinforcement members as the soldering iron melts the material of the reinforcement members. In some embodiments, an elongated heating element that extends all or a portion of the length of the screen assembly 10500 may be brought adjacent to or in contact with a set of adjoining reinforcement members of multiple screen elements. The heating element then simultaneously melts the material of multiple ones of the reinforcement members. After the reinforcement members are melted, a reinforcement fiber is pressed into the melted material to embed the reinforcement fiber into the material of the reinforcement members. In some embodiments, the reinforcement fiber 10610 may be placed along an edge of such an elongated heating element. Then, the elongated heating element may press a length of reinforcement fiber 10610 into the reinforcement members as the heating element melts the reinforcement members.
Other methods may be used to melt the thermoplastic of the screen elements in order to embed a reinforcement fiber 10610 in the material of the screen elements. For example, laser or light radiation may be used to cause localized melting of the material of the screen elements so that a reinforcement fiber 10610 can be embedded therein. In some embodiments, hot air also may be used to melt the material of the screen elements.
In some embodiments, such as when the melting point of the reinforcement fiber is greater than the melting point of the thermoplastic material in which it is embedded, the reinforcement fibers themselves may be heated above the melting point of the thermoplastic material of the reinforcement members. The heat of the fiber can then be used to melt the thermoplastic material as the heated fiber is pressed into the reinforcement members of the screen elements, or perhaps into a seam joining two or more screen elements.
In some embodiments, the reinforcement fiber is an aramid fiber, such as Kevlar. In some embodiments, metal strands are intertwined with the aramid fiber to form the reinforcement fiber. In some embodiments, the reinforcement fiber is stainless steel or other metal in either a solid core or stranded form. In some embodiments, the reinforcement fiber is a metal rod. In some embodiments, the reinforcement fiber is a yarn.
In some embodiments, embedding the reinforcement fibers into the thermoplastic material of the screen elements may involve only pressing the reinforcement fiber into a top or bottom surface of the screen elements, such as along a reinforcement member, so that the reinforcement fiber is only partially encapsulated in the thermoplastic material of the screen elements. In other embodiments, the reinforcement fibers are fully encapsulated in the thermoplastic material of the screen elements.
Embedding the reinforcement fibers 10610 into the material of the reinforcement members of the screen elements can prevent the reinforcement fibers 10610 from blocking any of the screening openings of the screen elements. Also, fully embedding the reinforcement fibers 10610 into the material of the screen elements or the screening assembly prevents the reinforcement fibers from being brought into contact with the material being screened by the screen assembly or the portions of the screening machine upon which the screen is mounted. Contact between the material to be screened or the screening machine and the reinforcement fibers 10610 tends to wear away and damage the reinforcement fibers 10610, particularly because the screen assemblies are being vibrated with respect to the material to be screened. Thus, it is desirable to fully embed the reinforcement fibers in the material of the screening assembly, where possible.
If it is not possible to fully embed the reinforcement fibers into the material of the screen elements, then it is preferable to partially embed the reinforcement fibers into the bottom surface of the screen assembly. If portions of the reinforcement fibers are exposed on the top surface of the screen assembly, the reinforcement fibers will be exposed to the material being screened while the screens are being vibrated. The relative motion between the screen assembly and the exposed portions of the reinforcement fibers and the material being screened will tend to wear away and/or damage the reinforcement fibers. On the other hand, if the exposed portions of the reinforcement fibers are located on the bottom surface of the screen assembly, far less damage occurs to the reinforcement fibers during use.
In some embodiments, the screen elements may be molded to include one or more grooves that are configured to receive one or more reinforcement fibers.
When grooves 10240/10242/10244 are molded into a bottom surface of the screen elements, they facilitate embedding reinforcement fibers into the material of a screen assembly. Once the screen assembly has been formed by attaching multiple screen elements together, the grooves of the screen elements will align across the length and/or width of the screen assembly. Reinforcement fibers can then be laid into the aligned grooves and heat can be selectively applied to partially melt the material of the screen elements in and around the grooves to cause the reinforcement fibers to become embedded into the material.
In some instances, the reinforcement fibers will become fully embedded in the material of the screen elements. In other instances, the fibers will be partially embedded into the material of the screen elements, but the exposed portions of the reinforcement fibers will be located on the bottom surface of the screen assembly where damage is less likely to occur. The material being screened will fall down through the screening openings of the screen elements. Because any exposed portions of the reinforcement fibers will be located on the bottom surfaces of the sides or ends of the screen elements, or on the bottom surface of a reinforcement member, the exposed portions of the reinforcement fibers will be effectively shielded from the material being screened. Thus, any wear of damage to the exposed portions of the reinforcement fibers is minimized.
As mentioned above, reinforcement fibers 10610 could also be located between adjacent edges of the screen elements as the screen elements are joined together to form a screen assembly or sub-assembly.
As illustrated in
The number of reinforcement members that are embedded in a screen assembly is selected to provide the screen assembly with sufficient tensile strength to withstand the tensioning forces that are applied to the screen assembly to mount and hold the screen assembly on the screening machine during screening operations. Because the screen assembly can be subjected to significant acceleration and vibratory forces, the tension used to hold the screen assembly on the screening machine can be significant. If a screen assembly is constructed as described above in connection with
As illustrated in
Multiple screen elements 10217 like the one depicted in
In some embodiments, the reinforcement fibers 10610 are embedded into the reinforcement members of the screen elements. However, in some applications it may not be possible to encapsulate the entire length of a reinforcement fiber 10610 in the thermoplastic material of the screen elements. Thus, some interim portions of a reinforcement fiber 10610 may not be encapsulated by the thermoplastic material. This can happen, for example, when the reinforcement members of the screen elements do not fully align along the entire length of a reinforcement fiber 10610.
In alternate embodiments, only one or only a few reinforcement fibers may follow a serpentine path that traverses multiple rows of screen elements within a screen assembly or sub-assembly. In the embodiment illustrated in
As shown in
A continuous fiber that traces out a serpentine path may be embedded into a screen assembly as discussed above with respect to
In some embodiments, stiffening rods may be embedded in the screen assemblies in a direction perpendicular to the orientation of the reinforcement fibers. When the ends of a screen assembly are placed in tension, the screen assembly has a tendency to contract in a direction perpendicular to the tension direction. Stiffening rods that are embedded in the screen assembly and that extend in a direction perpendicular to the tension direction helps to prevent sagging or hammocking of the screen between support members which will underly the screen assembly when it is mounted on a screening machine. The stiffening rods also may help to reduce the contraction, or “hourglassing,” of the screen assembly in the direction perpendicular to the tensioning direction. The stiffening rods can be formed from any suitable materials including metal and fiberglass. In some instances, the stiffening rods may be formed of a synthetic or plastic material having a different and harder composition than the synthetic or plastic material used to form the screen elements.
The hook strips 11100 may extend along opposite edges of the screen assembly and may each have a U-shaped channel that can be attached to a tensioning mechanism. The hook strips 11100 may also be formed with cast-in structural members and/or may include other structural members. Hook strips 11100 may be formed in a U-shape or any other suitable shape for attachment to a vibratory screening machine. In an exemplary embodiment, hook strips 11100 may include a formed member, e.g., a metal member that is bent to a desired shape, e.g., a U-shape. The formed member may be attached to the body of a screen assembly 10500 by heating, pressing, mechanical fasteners, chemical bonding, molding and/or any other suitable attachment method/arrangement.
The hook strip 11100 can be formed of various different materials. In some embodiments, the hook strip 11100 could be formed of a metal material. In other embodiments, the hook strip 11100 could be formed of a synthetic or plastic material. In some embodiments, each hook strip 11100 could be an injection molded element made from thermoplastic. In that event, the hook strip 11100 could be attached to a screen assembly by the melting and joining methods described above in connection with attaching screen elements to each other. Also, in instances where a portion of a hook strip 11100 is molded or formed from a synthetic material, a stiffening element may be embedded in the hook strip 11100 to provide greater structural rigidity. The stiffening element could be formed from any suitable material including metal, fiberglass or carbon fibers.
When provided, ends of the reinforcement fibers running through a screen assembly are attached to the hook strips 11100. Attaching the reinforcement fibers to the hook strips 11100 allows the tensioning forces that are applied by the hook strips 11100 to be partially borne by the reinforcement fibers. This can be accomplished in a variety of different ways.
In some embodiments, the ends of the reinforcement fibers are attached to the hook strips 11100 via an adhesive and/or a mechanical attachment device. If the hook strips 11100 are formed of a molded synthetic material, it may be possible to embed the reinforcement fibers into the material of the hook strips 11100 in much the same way that the reinforcement fibers are embedded into the material of the screen elements that make up the screen assembly, as described above. Indeed, one or more grooves may be molded into the material of the hook strips 11100 to facilitate embedding the reinforcement fibers into the material of the hook strips 11100.
If a screen assembly includes one or more reinforcement fibers that are embedded into the screen assembly in a serpentine fashion, then the hook strips 11100 are attached to the screen elements that make up the edges of the screen assembly in such a way that the tensioning forces applied by the hook strips 11100 can be borne by the embedded reinforcement fiber(s).
In use, a screen assembly 10500 is mounted on a vibratory screening machine in a well-known manner. More specifically, the screen assembly 10500 is mounted on a screen deck bed of a vibratory screening machine. Channel-shaped draw bars of a tensioning mechanism of the vibratory screening machine are received within the hook strips 11100, and the draw bars tension the screen assembly to secure the screen assembly 10500 to the screen deck of the vibratory screening machine. The tension applied by the draw bars also serves to hold the screen assembly 10500 motionless with respect to the screen deck while the screen deck and attached screen assembly 10500 are vibrated during screening operations.
The end borders 11410 provide an interface between adjacent screens when installed on a screening machine. The end borders 11410 may add to the length of the screen assembly 11400 such that the dimensions of a completed screen assembly or assemblies are compatible with the dimensions of a screening machine that uses the screen assemblies. The end borders 11410 also may provide protection for the edges of the outermost screen elements. Although the screen elements are robust with respect to screening materials, they are suspectable to damage from impacts on their edges. The end borders 11410 provide protection from such impacts and other damage to the edges.
Next, in step 1804 side edges of the screen elements are attached to one another to form a screening assembly. The side edges can be joined by various different methods that include fusing the material of the side edges together, bonding or gluing, the use of fasteners and other similar methods. In some embodiments, attaching the side edges of plastic or synthetic screen elements can include heating the edges that will be joined to cause the material at the side edges to at least partially melt, pressing the side edges together, and allowing the material to cool so that the material along the side edges is fused together. The material of the side edges can be at least partially melted as described above. Of course, the side edges can also be joined in a variety of other ways.
In some instances, the method would end after step 1804. In other words, once a sufficient number of screen elements are attached to one another to form a screen assembly having the required size, the method could end and the screen element can be used.
In alternate embodiment, an additional step 1806 is formed to embed one or more reinforcing fibers in the material of one or more of the screen elements. As explained above, reinforcing fibers can be arranged so that they extend in a direction in which the screen assembly will be tensioned in order to secure the screen assembly to a screening machine. The reinforcing fibers can be embedded in the material of the screen elements in various ways, as described above. This can include heating the material of selected portions of selected ones of the screen elements so that the material at least partially melts and pressing a reinforcing fiber into the melted material.
In some embodiments, a plurality of reinforcing fibers are embedded in the material of the screen elements of a screening assembly. In other embodiments one or only a few reinforcing fibers are embedded in the material of the screen elements of a screening assembly in a serpentine fashion so that the one or few reinforcing fibers extend throughout multiple portions of the screen assembly.
In some embodiments, one or more reinforcing fibers are embedded in the material of a screening assembly along seams formed between side edges of the screen elements that make up the screen assembly. This can be accomplished as described in greater detailed below in connection with
In some embodiments, the method will end after step 1806. In other instances, an optional additional step 1808 is performed, where side bars, end bars, compression bars or hook strips are attached along one or more edges of the screen assembly. The side or end bars can be provided to protect what would otherwise be exposed side edges of the screen elements along one exterior edge of the screen assembly. A compression bar could be mounted to an edge of the screen assembly to facilitate compression mounting a screen assembly to a screening machine. Likewise, hook strips could be attached to opposite side edges or opposite end edges of a screen assembly so that the screen assembly can be mounted to a screening machine with a tension mounting system.
The side bars, end bars, compression bars and/or hook strips could be attached to the screen elements of the screen assembly in various ways. Attachment could be accomplished by crimping, mechanical fasteners, chemical or adhesive bonding, or by fusing the material of the screen elements to the material of side bars, end bars, compression bars and hook strips.
In step 1904 subsets of the screen elements are attached to each other to form strips of joined screen elements. This can include joining elongated screen elements end-to-end to form the strips of joined screen elements. The screen elements can be attached to each other in any of the ways previously described.
In step 1906 one or more reinforcing fibers are positioned between the side edges of two strips of joined screen elements. In step 1908 the side edges of two adjacent strips of joined screen element are attached to one another, sandwiching the one or more reinforcing fibers in between the strips of joined screen elements. This can be accomplished by heating the material of the screen elements along the side edges until the material begins to melt or turn from a solid to a liquid. The side edges of the adjacent strips of joined screen elements are then pressed together with the one or more reinforcing fibers sandwiched between the side edges. The material of the screen elements along the side edges is then allowed to cool. As a result, the material of the side edges of the screen elements is fused together to join the strips of joined screen elements. Also, the reinforcing fiber or fibers end up being embedded in the material of the screen elements along the joint or seam formed between the side edges of the strips of joined screen elements. Of course, the strips of joined screen elements can be attached to one another in various other ways, such as with an adhesive or with mechanical fasteners.
The above-described process can be repeated multiple times to add additional strips of joined screen elements to the first two strips of joined screen elements, embedding one or more reinforcing fibers between the existing structure and the new strip of joined screen elements each time a new strip is added. This process allows one to construct a large screen assembly, one strip at a time. In some embodiments, the method ends once a sufficient number of strips of joined screen elements have been attached to one another. In other embodiments, options additional steps can be performed.
In a first optional step 1910, additional reinforcing fibers can be added to a screening assembly after all the strips of joined screen elements have been attached to one another. This could be accomplished by heating selected portions of the screen elements to cause those portions to at least partially melt. One or more reinforcing fibers are then pushed into the heated portions of the screen elements, and the heated portions are allowed to cool and harden. In preferred methods, the reinforcing fibers are inserted far enough into the heated portions of the screen elements that the reinforcing fibers will be fully encapsulated in the material of the screen elements once the material cools and hardens. This optional step 1910 can be performed to add additional reinforcing fibers to the screen assembly at locations between the joints or seams joining the strips of screen elements where other reinforcing fibers are located.
In another optional step 1912, side bars, end bars, compression bars or hook strips are attached along one or more edges of the screen assembly. The side or end bars can be provided to protect what would otherwise be exposed edges of the screen elements along one exterior edge of the screen assembly. A compression bar could be mounted to an edge of the screen assembly to facilitate compression mounting a screen assembly to a screening machine. Likewise, hook strips could be attached to opposite side edges or opposite end edges of a screen assembly so that the screen assembly can be mounted to a screening machine with a tension mounting system.
Here again, step 1912 could include the side bars, end bars, compression bars and/or hook strips being attached to the screen elements of the screen assembly in various ways. Attachment could be accomplished by crimping, mechanical fasteners, chemical or adhesive bonding, or by fusing the material of the screen elements to the material of side bars, end bars, compression bars and hook strips.
When a screen assembly is made as described above, where side edges of screen elements are bonded or fused together, it is possible to repair a damaged section of the screen assembly. For example, if a section of the screen assembly is damaged during use, it is possible to cut out the damaged section and to replace it with a correspondingly sized new section of new screen elements. This could involve cutting out a strip of screen elements that were joined end-to-end and that extend from one side of the screen assembly to the other, where the removed strip includes the damaged section. A similar sized strip of new screen elements that are also joined end-to-end could then be attached to the edges of the remaining portions of the screen assembly in essentially the same way that a screen assembly is made in the first place. The result is a repaired screen assembly that includes a new strip of new screen elements. It would be impossible to conduct this sort of repair on a thermoset screen because once the thermoset material has cured, the edges can no longer be joined to a new repair patch via melting and fusing.
Ideally, a new strip of screen elements that is inserted into a screen assembly to replace a damaged section will include corresponding reinforcement fibers. If that is the case, it may be possible to attach the reinforcement fiber or fibers to the hook ends of the screen assembly that are used to mount the screen assembly to a screening machine.
In some instances where a strip of screen elements is replaced, it may not be possible to include reinforcement fibers in the new strip that is inserted into the screen assembly to replace the damaged section. Similarly, it may not be possible to join ends of one or more reinforcement fibers in the new section to hook ends that are used to mount the screen assembly to a screening machine. That may be acceptable, as the remaining reinforcement fibers may provide sufficient strength to the screen assembly.
In other instances, it may be possible to attach a reinforcement fiber associated with a newly inserted repair strip to the hook ends. This could be accomplished by a heating and fusing operation, via adhesives or via a mechanical attachment mechanism.
When a screen assembly is attached to a screening machine and used to screen materials, one ideally wants the material to be screened to be exposed to the portions of the screen elements that include screening openings as much as possible. When the material to be screened is simply resting against or being vibrated against side portions, end portions and reinforcement members of the screen elements, no screening activity can occur. One way to help keep the material to be screened in contact with the portions of the screen elements that have screening openings is to form the screen assembly such that portions of the screen assembly that do not include screening openings are raised relative to the portions of the screen assembly that include screening openings.
If an entire screen assembly is formed to have top protruding portions 10312 along the joints 10310 that attach strips of the screen elements together, there will be raised portions between the portions of the screen elements that include the screening openings. This will tend to cause the material to be screened to rest in the portions between the top protrusions 10312 where the screening openings are located, thereby aiding the screening process.
The top protrusions 10312 and bottom protrusions 10314 may also be formed via alternate means. For example, once a set of screen elements are joined together by one of the processes described above, a top protrusion 10312 and/or a bottom protrusion 10314 could be an independent element that is added along the seams 10310 between the screen elements. The material of the independent element that forms the top protrusion 10312 and/or bottom protrusion 10314 could be made of the same material as the screen elements, in which case the independent element could be joined to the screen elements along the seams 10310 using methods similar to those discussed above that are used to join the screen elements together. Alternatively, the independent elements that form the top protrusion 10312 and/or bottom protrusion 10314 could be joined to the screen elements along the seams 10310 via alternate means, such as by an adhesive. Also, the independent elements that form the top protrusion 10312 and/or bottom protrusion 10314 could be formed of a different type of material than the material used to form the screen elements.
The foregoing embodiments mainly contemplated screen assemblies that are to be mounted to a screening machine by a tensioning mounting mechanism. One alternate way of mounting a screen assembly to a screening machine is via a compression mounting mechanism. It is possible to use the screen assemblies that are manufactured as described above on a screening machine that includes a compression mounting mechanism so long as the screen assembly includes a support plate.
The support plate includes a first plurality of mounting apertures 350a located along the first side edge 340 and a second plurality of mounting apertures 350b that are located along the second side edge 342. Each mounting aperture 350a, 350b may include an alignment notch 354. The mounting apertures 350a, 350b interact with elements of the compression mounting system to attach a screen assembly that incorporates the support plate 300 onto a screening machine.
The support plate 300 could be formed of metal or synthetic materials. If the support plate 300 is formed from a synthetic material, stiffening elements could be incorporated into or attached to the support plate to provide increased rigidity to the support plate.
The screening layer 20100 can be attached to the support plate 300 in a variety of different ways. In some embodiments, an adhesive, mechanical fasteners, clamps or other devices could be used to attach the screen elements of the screening layer 20100 to the top surface of the support plate 300. In other embodiments, the material of the screen elements of the screening layer 20100 could be melted and fused to the material of the support plate 300. This might be advantageous when the support plate is formed from a synthetic material.
Although the embodiment illustrated in
The first screen element 24102 has first and second side edges 24104 and 24106 that slope outward and downward from the top surface such that the bottom surface has a greater width than the top surface. This first type of screen element 24102 will end up forming the flat portions of a screen assembly, as described below.
The second screen element 24110 also has angled side edges 24112, 24114. The second screen element 24110 will form the upwardly or downwardly protruding portions of a screen assembly, as described below. The angles formed between the side edges 24112, 24114 and the top and bottom surfaces of the screen element 24110 will depend on the desired shape of the screen assembly that is formed with this type of screen element 24110.
As is apparent from the depiction in
The joining of the side edges of the screen elements that form a screen assembly 24100 as depicted in
In alternate embodiments, a flat layer of screen elements can be joined together as described above. Once the side edges of the screen elements are joined together, the layer of joined screen elements could be inserted into a shaped mold having the desired undulations and the material of the screen elements could be heated to near the melting point. By heating the material of the screen elements and applying pressure to the assembly with a shaped mold, one could cause the screen assembly to take on an undulating shape similar to the one depicted in
A damaged screen assembly made as described above could also be repaired by covering over the damaged section. For example, a flat piece of thermoplastic material without apertures could be bonded or fused into place over a damaged section of the screen assembly. Alternatively, the patch could include screening openings. In either event, because the material of the existing screen elements of the screen assembly can be remelted after the screen assembly is formed, it is possible to patch a damaged section of the screen assembly by fusing a patch into place over the damaged section via a heating operation. Of course, adhesives could also be used to bond the patch into place over a damaged section.
Previous methods of joining injection molded screen elements together to form a screen assembly have relied upon the use of subgrids which can be attached together to form the screen assembly. See, for example, U.S. Pat. Nos. 10,046,363; 9,409,209; 10,576,502 and 11,161,150, the contents of all of which are incorporated herein by reference. The screen assemblies disclosed in the listed patents include injection molded screen elements that are mounted on subgrids. The subgrids are then attached to each other with integral fasteners to form screen assemblies.
The apparatus and methods described above, where side edges of injection molded screen elements are fastened together via bonding, fusing or other attachment methods result in a screen assembly that does not require subgrids. Creating a screen assembly by bonding the side edges of screen elements together without the use of subgrids provide numerous benefits.
First, there is no need to manufacture the subgrids, which is a large savings in terms of time and cost. Second, there is no need to spend time and effort attaching the screen elements to subgrids before the screen assembly is created. Instead, as soon as the screen elements have been formed they can immediately be attached to each other via the methods described above to form screen assemblies.
In addition, by eliminating the subgrids the resulting screen assembly is thinner, lighter and more flexible. This makes transportation and shipping easier and less expensive. In some cases, this may also make it easier to install the screen assemblies onto screening machines.
Moreover, the joining methods described above, where the side edges of injection molded screen elements are fused together can result in screen assemblies that have greater strength in tension than screen assemblies that are held together via the fasteners of the subgrids. The ability to add reinforcement fibers to the screen assembly, as described above, can add to that tensile strength. It would have been impossible, or at least very difficult, to add reinforcement fibers to a screen assembly formed using subgrids.
One of the drawbacks of screen assemblies formed using the subgrids was that the integral fasteners used to attach the subgrids together did not ensure that the resulting assembly was free of gaps between the individual elements. The side edges of the screen elements mounted on top of the subgrids were not bonded together. As a result, it was possible for material being screened to fall down between the side edges of the screen elements. Likewise, the subgrids themselves were attached together using integral clip fasteners, but the side edges between the subgrids were not sealed up. As a result, any material that falls down between the side edges of two adjacent screen elements could likewise fall down between the side edges of the subgrids upon which the screen elements are mounted. All of these factors could cause problems with material bypassing the screen elements and falling between the individual elements that make up a screen assembly formed with subgrids.
The problem of material bypassing the screen elements is particularly acute when the screen elements are configured with very small apertures to allow only very small particles to pass through the screens. Unfortunately, gaps between adjacent screen elements and between adjacent subgrids could have sized similar to or larger than the screening openings in the screen elements. This would allow particles that are larger than the screening openings to bypass the screen elements, which is problematic.
All of the above-discussed problems with particles bypassing the screen elements are solved by a screen assembly formed as discussed above because the side edges of the screen elements are bonded or fused together. There are no gaps between screen elements. And because there are no subgrids, there are no corresponding gaps between sides of the subgrids.
In addition, it appears that under some circumstances, the existence of subgrids hinders screening performance. The subgrids hinder movement of the screening surface when under vibration. When the screen elements are not connected to an underlying subgrid, they are more free to move, and they can be moved more rapidly due to the lack of mass associated with the subgrids. Screen elements without subgrids may also move greater distances in each direction under vibration than would be possible with the screen elements are attached to subgrids. All these factors result in a screen assembly being formed of only the screen elements having better overall screening performance than screen elements attached to subgrids.
Screen assemblies that are formed from a plurality of injection molded screen elements as described above have many advantages over screen assemblies formed by casting thermoset materials. As discussed above, it takes far longer to cure a screen assembly via casting of thermoset materials than it would to injection mold a plurality of screen elements and attached them together to form a screen assembly, as described above. The casting of thermoset materials takes hours, sometimes as many as 10 hours, to form a single large screen assembly. In contrast, individual screen elements can be injection molded in seconds, and the time required to injection mold a sufficient number of screen elements to make large screen is still less than an hour. The additional time required to join the injection molded screen elements to form a screen assembly still is nowhere near as long as required to wait for thermoset materials to cure.
In addition, the size of a screen assembly formed by curing thermoset materials in a mold is limited by the size of the mold. In contrast, one can create a screen assembly from a plurality of injection molded screen elements to have virtually any dimensions whatsoever. There are no size limitations imposed by mold sizes.
There are also advantages in terms of waste or scrap. If a single small portion of a screen assembly made via casting of thermoset materials is deformed, or a single small portion of a screen assembly formed by casting thermoset materials is damaged when it is removed from the mold, the entire screen assembly is scrap. And the time required to make the screen assembly is lost. In contrast, if a single small injection molded screen element is deformed, only the small screen element is scrap. And because it is made of thermoplastic, it can be remelted and reused to form a new screen element. The only time lost is the very short time that it took to make the defective injection molded screen element. Because of these factors, the waste in terms of time and scrap when things go wrong is much smaller with injection molded screen elements as compared to casting screen assemblies from thermoset materials.
The disclosed embodiments may be configured for use with various different vibratory screening machines. This includes machines designed for wet and dry screening applications, machines having multi-tiered decks and/or multiple screening baskets, and machines having various screen attachment arrangements such as tensioning mechanisms (under and overmount), compression mechanisms, clamping mechanisms, magnetic mechanisms, etc. For example, the screen assemblies described in the present application may be configured to be mounted on the vibratory screening machines described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 7,578,394; 5,332,101; 6,669,027; 6,431,366; and 6,820,748.
Indeed, the screen assemblies described herein may include side portions, binder bars and hook strips that include U-shaped members configured to receive overmount type tensioning members, e.g., as described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,332,101; side portions or binder bars including finger receiving apertures configured to receive undermount type tensioning, e.g., as described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,669,027; side members or binder bars for compression loading, e.g., as described in U.S. Pat. No. 7,578,394; or may be configured for attachment and loading on multi-tiered machines, e.g., such as the machines described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,431,366. The screen assemblies and/or screen elements also may be configured to include features described in U.S. Pat. No. 8,443,984, including the guide assembly technologies described therein and preformed panel technologies described therein.
Still further, the screen assemblies and screen elements may be configured to be incorporated into the prescreening technologies (e.g., compatible with the mounting structures and screen configurations) described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 8,439,203; 7,578,394; 5,332,101; 4,882,054; 4,857,176; 6,669,027; 7,228,971; 6,431,366; and 6,820,748; 8,443,984; and 8,439,203; which, along with their related patent families and applications, and the patents and patent applications referenced in these documents, are expressly incorporated herein by reference hereto. In the foregoing, example embodiments are described. It will, however, be evident that various modifications and changes may be made thereunto without departing from the broader spirit and scope hereof. The specification and drawings are accordingly to be regarded in an illustrative rather than in a restrictive sense.
This application is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 18/131,564, filed Apr. 6, 2023, which itself claims priority to U.S. Provisional Application No. 63/328,228, filed Apr. 6, 2022, the contents of both of which are incorporated herein by reference and the priority of which is hereby claimed.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 18131564 | Apr 2023 | US |
Child | 18448488 | US |