Liquid color gravimetric metering apparatus and methods

Abstract
Apparatus and methods for delivering liquid color to a plastic resin processing machine include a scale for weighing a container of liquid color, a pump for removing liquid color from the container, controller for actuating pushers in the pump in a sequence whereby a first pusher is displaced to squeeze the delivery tube while a second and third pusher are not displaced thereby permitting liquid color to flow through the tube from the supply to a first position of tube squeezing, whereupon a second pusher is displaced to squeeze the tube and substantially trapped liquid color in the tube at the first and second position of tube squeezing, whereupon the first pusher permits liquid color to flow through the tube pass the first position of tube squeezing and the third pusher squeezes the tube and thereby forces at least a portion of the trapped liquid color material through the tube pass the first position of tube squeezing thereby supplying liquid color to the plastic resin processing machine at a predetermined rate according to a selected recipe to produce plastic parts having desired characteristics.
Description

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS


FIG. 1 is a front elevation of liquid color gravimetric metering apparatus in accordance with the invention, with a container of liquid color depicted partially broken away to illustrate liquid color contained therewithin.



FIG. 2 is a front elevation of a multiple pusher liquid color pump for use as a part of the liquid color gravimetric metering apparatus of this invention and for use in practicing certain of the method aspects of this invention, where the front cover of the pump has been removed to reveal interior details.



FIG. 3 is a broken front elevation of the lower portion of the pump illustrated in FIG. 2, with a liquid color delivery tube removed from within the pump housing and shown outside the pump housing some of the internal components of the pump illustrated in a different position.



FIGS. 4A through 4F are schematic depictions of three pushers forming portions of the pump, which pushers are illustrated in FIGS. 2 and 3.



FIG. 4A depicts the pushers at an initial position at which all three pushers are retracted and are ready to begin one cycle of pusher movement for pumping liquid color.



FIG. 4B depicts the pushers at positions at which a first pusher has advanced to squeeze the liquid color delivery tube closed while the second and third pushers have not been displaced, thereby permitting liquid color to flow through a squeezable tube from the supply to a first position of tube closure.



FIG. 4C depicts the pushers at positions with a second pusher having additionally been displaced to squeeze the liquid color supply tube closed and thereby trap liquid color in the tube between the first position of tube closure defined by the first pusher and a second position of tube closure defined by the second pusher.



FIG. 4D depicts the pushers at positions at which the first pusher has retracted, the second pusher remains in place to keep the liquid color supply closed at the second position of tube closure and a third center pusher has been displaced to squeeze the liquid color supply tube and thereby forcedly squeeze some of the trapped liquid color through the tube past the first position of tube closure thereby supplying liquid color to a plastic resin processing machine.



FIG. 4E depicts the pushers at positions at which the second pusher remains displaced to continue squeezing the liquid color supply tube closed while the third pusher has completed travel towards the liquid color supply tube thereby completing squeezing of the liquid color supply tube and forcing substantially all of the liquid color which had been trapped within the liquid color supply tube downstream of the seal position of tube closure out of the liquid color tube towards a plastic resin processing machine for consumption of the liquid color.



FIG. 4F depicts the pushers at positions at which the second and third pushers have retracted, the first pusher has advanced to squeeze the liquid color supply tube closed at the first position of tube closure thereby permitting liquid color to flow into the tube from the supply to the first position of tube closure whereupon the cycle of pusher movement for supplying liquid color through the liquid color supply tube to a plastic resin process machine may repeat.





DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS AND BEST MODE KNOWN FOR PRACTICE OF THE INVENTION

Referring to the drawings in general and to FIG. 1 in particular, apparatus for delivering liquid color to a process machine is designated generally 10. Apparatus 10 includes a scale, designated generally 12, a container of liquid color where the container is designated generally 14, a pump, which is preferably a triple pusher pump and is designated generally 16, and a controller designated generally 18, with container 14, pump 16, and controller 18 all being supported by a stand designated generally 20.


A liquid color supply line 22 leads from the interior of container 14 to supply liquid color to triple pusher pump 16 at the inlet thereto, which has not been numbered in the drawings to enhance drawing clarity. Liquid color furnished by triple pusher pump 16 exits triple pusher pump 16 via liquid color supply line 24, which preferably leads directly to a resin material process machine such as an extruder or an injection molding press.


As further illustrated in FIG. 1, container 18 desirably has a lid 26. If desired, container 18 may be of the type disclosed in published U.S. patent applications 2003-0142580 and 2005-0052945 whereby a diaphragm pump is within container 14, at the bottom thereof, thereby to furnish liquid color from container 14 at a very moderate pressure for input to triple pusher pump 16.


A signal line 52 carries a signal indicative of the sensed weight of container 14 and any liquid color therewithin, as determined by scale 12, to controller 18. Controller 18 includes push buttons 54 for programming controller 18 so as to operate triple pusher pump 16 and to furnish the desired amount of liquid color via liquid color supply line 22 to a process machine of interest according to the recipe for material for fabrication of the finished plastic parts of interest. Output lines 54, only one of which has been numbered in FIG. 1, but three of which connect controller 18 to triple pusher pump 16, provide electrical signals from controller 18 to solenoid actuated air valves within triple pusher pump 16, to control operation of triple pusher pump 16 and furnish liquid color via liquid color supply line 22 at the preselected rate.


Referring to FIG. 2 where triple pusher pump 16 is illustrated with the front panel of the pump housing removed in order that the interior components of triple pusher pump 16 may be viewed, pusher pump 16 includes three pushers, designated 28, 30, 32 respectively. Pushers 28, 30, 32 act against and squeeze liquid color supply line 22 in an ordered sequence thereby to control flow of liquid color through supply line 22 and to pump liquid color to a plastic resin process machine such as an extruder or an injection molding press via liquid color supply line 22. Each of first, second and third pushers 28, 30, 32 is connected to and actuated by a piston-cylinder combination, where first, second and third piston-cylinder combinations have been designated 34, 36, 38 respectively as being associated with first, second and third pushers 28, 30 and 32.


First piston-cylinder combination 34 has been shown with the exterior of the cylinder portion of the combination cut away to reveal the inner workings of piston-cylinder combination 34. As visible in FIG. 2, piston-cylinder combination 34 includes a cylinder designated 56 and a piston 58, where piston 58 is in a form of a relatively flat plate.


Piston cylinder combination 34 further includes a piston return spring 60, which is preferably of spiral configuration and slidably contacts the curved interior of cylinder 56, serving to return piston 58 to a vertically extreme upwards position when pressurized air is not furnished to piston-cylinder combination 34.


A first solenoid designated generally 40 actuates a first air valve designated generally 46 to supply compressed air via a line 61 to first piston-cylinder combination 34, thereby to push piston 58 downwardly. Fixed to piston 58 is a connecting rod 62 to which first pusher 28 is affixed, at the end of connecting rod 62 remote from piston 58. First, second and third piston-cylinder combinations 34, 36, 38 rest on plate 66 and are retained in position thereon by suitable nut and bushing combinations, one of which is designated 64 in FIG. 2. Connecting rod 62 passes slidably within nut-bushing combination 64 as connecting rod 62 reciprocates responsively to downward force resulting when air is applied to the upper side of piston 58 and, once that air pressure is relaxed, when return spring 60 urges piston 58 upwardly into the position in the position illustrated in FIG. 2.


In comparing FIG. 2 with FIG. 3 it is evident that liquid color supply line 22 may be removed from housing 68 in which pump 16 is enclosed. Such positioning of liquid color supply line 22 outside of housing 68 is illustrated in FIG. 3.


Controller 18 is programmable so as to permit any desired sequence, within any reasonable range of speed, of operation of piston-cylinder combinations 34, 36, 38 thereby to permit any desired sequence of squeezing or unsqueezing of liquid color supply line 22 when positioned within housing 68 in the general manner illustrated in FIG. 2.


First and third pushers 28, 32 are configured outer peripheries that are curved, and would appear as cylinders if viewed from the side in FIGS. 2 and 3, facing towards liquid color supply line 22. These curved outer peripheries are designated 70 in FIGS. 2 and 3. The curved outer peripheries 70 of pushers 28, 32 facilitates pushers 28 and 32 operating as off-on valves as respecting flow of liquid color through liquid color supply line 22. Specifically, curved peripheries 70 permit pushers 28, 32 to act as off-on valves defining first and second positions of tube closure, with a first position of tube closure being directly beneath pusher 28 and the second position of tube closure being directly beneath pusher 32. The curvature of surfaces 70 contacting liquid color supply tube 22 when pushers 28 and 32 are positioned against tube 22 and have squeezed tube 22 closed means tube 22 is closed only over a very short length, immediately beneath pushers 28 and 32, when either of those pushers are actuated by their associated piston-cylinder combination 34 or 38.


Contrasting, third pusher 30 has a surface 72 facing liquid color supply tube 22 that is flat. Surface 72, being flat, results in liquid color within the portion of tube 22 directly beneath pusher 30 and along the entire length of surface 72 running parallel to liquid color supply line 22, being pushed out of liquid color supply line 22 when third pusher 30 is actuated by associated piston-cylinder combination 36 and pusher 30 squeezes liquid color supply line 22 completely closed, thereby forcing all liquid color material within liquid color supply line 22 beneath the projected area of pusher 30 towards the outlet of liquid color supply line in the direction indicated by arrow B in FIG. 2. Actuation of a given solenoid such as solenoid 40 by controller 18, via a signal sent to solenoid 40 through line 54, opens valve 46 thereby allowing pressurized air from a remote source, which is furnished to valve 16 but not shown in the drawings, to be applied to the upper surface of piston 58 thereby actuating, for example, pusher 28 and forcing pusher 28 against liquid color supply line 22 thereby to close liquid color supply line 22 at a position at first tube closure.



FIGS. 4A through 4F depict one desired and preferred sequence of operation of pushers 28, 32, 30 to pump liquid color through liquid color supply line 22.


In FIG. 4A pushers 28, 30, 32 are all at an initial position, at which all three pushers 28, 32, 30 are retracted and are ready to begin one cycle of pusher movement for pumping liquid color through liquid color supply line 22. Arrow A denotes that liquid color is entering liquid color supply line 22 and Arrow B denotes liquid color exiting liquid color supply line 22 after passing the position of pushers 28, 32, 30.


Referring to FIG. 4B, first pusher 28 has advanced to squeeze liquid color supply line 22 closed at a position to first tube closure while second pusher 32 and third pusher 30 have not been displaced. Accordingly, liquid color continues to flow into liquid color supply line 22 from a supply of liquid color as indicated by Arrow A, but the liquid color cannot flow past the first position of tube closure defined by the intersection of first pusher 28 with liquid color supply line 22, since first pusher 28 has squeezed liquid color supply line 22 closed.


Next, as illustrated in FIG. 4C, second pusher 32 has been displaced to squeeze liquid color supply line 22 closed thereby to define a position of second tube closure, and thereby has trapped liquid color in the segment of liquid color supply line 22 between the first and second positions of tube closure as defined by first pusher 28 and second pusher 32 having squeezed liquid color supply line 22 closed at the positions shown. Such squeezing and resulting closure of liquid color supply line 22 traps a portion of liquid color between the two positions of liquid color supply line closure, as illustrated in FIG. 4C, between pushers 28 and 32.


Next, first pusher 28 is retracted by release of the air pressure through deactuation of the associated solenoid 40 and action of return spring 60 pushing piston 58 in cylinder 56 upwardly, thereby raising first pusher 28 away from and out of contact with liquid color supply line 22, as illustrated in FIG. 4D. At the same time, third pusher 30 is actuated, begins to travel downwardly, and encounters liquid color supply line 22 as illustrated in FIG. 4D. This encounter begins to compress liquid color supply line 22 as illustrated in FIG. 4D thereby beginning to push liquid color out of that segment of liquid color supply line 22 in the direction indicated by Arrow B in FIG. 4D. This liquid color can only move in the direction of Arrow B in FIG. 4D due to the continued presence of second pusher 32 in the position illustrated in FIG. 4D whereby second pusher 32 has closed liquid color supply line 22 at the position of second tube closure. Therefore, there is only one direction that liquid color can travel in response to the tube being squeezed by third pusher 30.


As depicted in FIG. 4E, third pusher 30 continues its downward travel, continuing to squeeze liquid color supply line 22 more and more closed, thereby continuing to force liquid color that was within liquid color supply line 22 below the umbrella of third pusher 30, out of liquid color supply line 22, in the direction indicated by Arrow B in FIG. 4E. As was the case illustrated in FIG. 4D, continued presence of second pusher 32 squeezing liquid color supply line 22 closed as illustrated in FIG. 4E results in liquid color within liquid color supply line 22 being able to move only in a single direction, indicated in Arrow B in FIG. 4E.


Once third pusher 30 has completed squeezing the liquid color that is within tube 22 below the umbrella of pusher 30, first pusher 28 is actuated thereby closing liquid color supply tube 22 at a position of first tube closure, where first pusher 28 has squeezed liquid color supply tube closed, thereby preventing passage thereby of any liquid color. Second pusher 32 and third pusher 30 have been retracted by deactuation of their associated solenoids, which are not numbered in FIG. 2, with the result that second and third pushers 30, 32 have retracted to a position above and out of contact with liquid color supply line 22. As a result, liquid color again fills the portion of liquid color supply line 22 up to the position of first tube closure defined by pusher 28, with the liquid color coming from the supply in the direction indicated by Arrow A in FIG. 4F. From this position the pumping cycle may repeat. Note that the orientation and positions of first, second and third pushers 28, 32, 30 is identical in FIGS. 4F and 4B.


During operation of the liquid color gravimetric metering apparatus, controller 18 continuously monitors the weight of container 14 and any liquid color contained therein. Controller 18 detects steady loss of weight by container 14 and compares the actual weight readings with expected weight readings that have been programmed into controller 18 based on a requested usage rate of liquid color for a given recipe of resin material being processed into finished parts. Controller 18 then adjusts the speed of pump 16 accordingly, by adjusting the rate of performance of the sequential operation of pushers 28, 32, 30 as described above, so that the desired amount of liquid color is always supplied by pump 16 at the rate needed for a given material recipe. Hence, pump 16 is controlled to run faster or slower in order to maintain the desired rate of liquid color use, based on feedback information as to loss of weight of container 14 as detected by scale 12.

Claims
  • 1. Apparatus for delivering liquid color to a plastic resin process machine, comprising: a) a scale for continuously supporting and weighing a container of liquid color;b) a pump for removing liquid color from the container, comprising: i) a housing;ii) three pushers within the housing, positioned side by side respecting one another;iii) a compressible tube for transporting liquid color from the container to the machine;iv) the tube being insertable into the housing in a position at which each pusher, when displaced, squeezes the tube against the housing interior, with the side by side positioning of the pushers resulting in the pushers serially contacting the tube when displaced; andc) a controller for repeatedly actuating the pushers in sequence whereby a first pusher is displaced to squeeze the tube closed while a second and a third pusher are not displaced thereby permitting liquid color to flow through the tube from the supply to a first position of tube closure, then the second pusher is displaced to squeeze the tube closed and trap liquid color in the tube between the first position of tube closure and a second position of tube closure, then the first pusher is permitted to return to its undisplaced position thereby permitting liquid color to flow through the tube past the first position of tube closure and the third pusher is displaced to squeeze the tube and thereby force at least a portion of the trapped liquid color through the tube past the first position of tube closure, thereby supplying liquid color to a plastic resin material processing machine at a predetermined rate according to a selected recipe to produce plastic parts having desired color characteristics.
  • 2. A method for supplying liquid color to a plastic resin material process machine, comprising: a) weighing a container of liquid color; andb) transporting liquid color from the container to the plastic resin process machine, responsively to changes in weight of the container
  • 3. The method of claim 2 in which weighing the container further comprises continuously supporting the container.
  • 4. The method of claim 2 wherein the weighing is performed continuously.
  • 5. The method of claim 3 wherein the weighing is performed continuously.
  • 6. Apparatus for delivering liquid color to a plastic resin process machine, comprising: a) a scale for weighing a container of liquid color;b) a pump for removing liquid color from the container and supplying the liquid color to the plastic resin process machine; andc) a controller for regulating the pump to supply liquid color to the plastic resin process machine at a predetermined rate according to a selected recipe to produce plastic parts having desired characteristics, in response to changes in sensed weight of the container determined by the scale.
  • 7. Apparatus of claim 6 wherein the scale continuously weighs the container.
  • 8. Apparatus of claim 6 wherein the scale supports the container.
  • 9. Apparatus of claim 7 wherein the scale supports the container.
  • 10. A method for delivering liquid color to a plastic resin process machine, comprising: a) weighing a container of liquid color;b) removing liquid color from the container by actuating ones of a serially disposed set of pushers in sequence whereby a first pusher is displaced to squeeze the closed a compressible tube for transporting liquid color from the container to the machine while a second and a third pusher are not displaced thereby permitting liquid color to flow through the tube from the supply to a first position of tube closure, then the second pusher is displaced to squeeze the tube closed and trap liquid color in the tube between the first position of tube closure and a second position of tube closure, then the first pusher is permitted to return to its undisplaced position thereby permitting liquid color to flow through the tube past the first position of tube closure and the third pusher is displaced to squeeze the tube and thereby force at least a portion of the trapped liquid color through the tube past the first position of tube closure, thereby supplying liquid color to a plastic resin material processing machine at a predetermined rate according to a selected recipe to produce plastic parts having desired color characteristics.
  • 11. The method of claim 10 further comprising performing the weighing continuously.
  • 12. The method of claim 10 further comprising performing the actuating repeatedly.
  • 13. A method for supplying liquid color to a plastic resin material process machine, comprising: a) weighing liquid color; andb) pumping the liquid color to the plastic resin process machine responsively to changes in weight of the liquid color.
  • 14. The method of claim 13 wherein the weighing is performed continuously.
  • 15. The method of claim 13 wherein the pumping is performed continuously.
  • 16. Apparatus for delivering liquid color to a plastic resin process machine, comprising: a) a scale for weighing a container of liquid color; andb) a pump for removing liquid color from the container and supplying the liquid color to the plastic resin process machine in response to changes in sensed weight of the container determined by the scale.
  • 17. Apparatus of claim 16 wherein the scale continuously weighs the container.
  • 18. Apparatus of claim 16 wherein the scale supports the container.
  • 19. Apparatus of claim 17 wherein the scale supports the container.
  • 20. A method for delivering liquid color to a plastic resin process machine, comprising: a. weighing a container of liquid color;b. removing liquid color from the container by repeatedly actuating ones of a serially disposed set of pushers in sequence including: i. displacing a first pusher to squeeze the closed a compressible tube for transporting liquid color from the container to the machine; whileii. retaining a second and a third pusher from displacement thereby permitting liquid color to flow through the tube from the supply to a first position of tube closure,iii. displacing the second pusher to squeeze the tube closed and trap liquid color in the tube between the first position of tube closure and a second position of tube closure,iv. returning the first pusher to its undisplaced position, thereby permitting liquid color to flow through the tube past the first position of tube closure, andv. displacing the third pusher is displaced to squeeze the tube and thereby force at least a portion of the trapped liquid color through the tube past the first position of tube closure,
  • 21. The method of claim 20 further comprising performing the weighing continuously.
CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED PATENT APPLICATION

This patent application discloses subject matter in common with U.S. patent application Ser. No. ______, filed concurrently herewith, entitled “Multiple Pusher Liquid Color Pump”, submitted in the name of Stephen B. Maguire.