The invention concerns a handling facility at a seaport or inner harbor, especially for ISO containers, with a container terminal arranged alongside a wharf, consisting of individual storage modules arranged in rows, and at least one loading facility interacting with the storage modules for the cargo handling to and from a ship lying at the wharf, wherein at least one elevated stacking crane per storage module takes charge of the receiving, the horizontal transporting, and the stacking of the containers and interacts with cross transporters acting independently of each other and able to travel on a different horizontal level transverse to the individual storage modules, being responsible for the horizontal transporting of containers between the storage modules.
For the handling of ISO containers between various kinds of means of transportation, such as ships, trains or trucks, loading facilities are used that must ensure a largely trouble-free handling of less than cargo lots with high throughput rate. The central component of a container handling facility is usually a container yard, which breaks up the streams of less than cargo lots and thereby ensures that the various means of transportation are serviced as needed. Servicing of the various types of transportation according to their arrival and needs requires an optimized layout of the entire handling facility.
A container yard of this category is known from DE-A-100 02 915. The loading boom of a mobile harbor crane extends from the region of the ship being unloaded into the region of at least one transfer station, forming an interface between the mobile harbor crane and the storage modules of the container yard, where the container is put down. At least one stacking crane per storage module, which is monitored and controlled by an executive yard logistics system, picks up the container that was put down by the mobile harbor crane at the particular transfer station and undertakes thereafter the horizontal transport and the stacking of the container in the container yard. In this way, it is possible to eliminate the horizontal transport between ship and container yard that occurs in traditional automated facilities and that usually is accomplished with manual or automated transport vehicles. The stacking crane itself is conventionally configured as an elevated bridge crane with a trolley and it typically spans one storage module of the container yard. Preferably, the familiar container yard is divided into at least two regions centrally to the container yard, depending on the characteristics of the yard, and the stacking cranes travel across both regions.
The storage modules of the familiar container yard are joined together by means of two cross transporters, acting independently of each other and able to travel on different horizontal levels transverse to the individual storage modules, which are likewise monitored and controlled by the executive yard logistical system. In this way, the fully automatic stacking cranes operating in the individual storage modules can transport the containers either directly from the transfer stations to the corresponding storage modules or to one of these two cross transporters. The cross transporters either actuate a different storage module or exit points where the containers enter and exit trucks.
The above-described container yard system is especially well suited and designed to enable a fully automatic operation of the terminal even by operators of rather small handling facilities. However, the handling efficiency of the terminal is greatly limited by the only two cross transporters that can be used, especially when one cross transporter is blocked by intersections when one cross transporter is traveling and at the same time the other cross transporter is being loaded by the stacking crane. For larger facilities, this constitutes a sizable disadvantage, limiting the throughput efficiency and the availability of the loading equipment.
Starting from a handling facility as described above, the problem of the present invention is to substantially increase the handling efficiency and the performance of an automated container terminal.
To solve this problem, a handling facility of the generic type is proposed, being characterized in that a number of more than two cross transporters, depending on the size of the container terminal, can move on the same level beneath the transport level of the stacking cranes and above the truck loading lanes on at least one railway extending transversely to the storage modules into the region of interim storage stations assigned to each storage module, each of them being arranged sideways and parallel to the railway of the cross transporter and forming interfaces between the stacking crane and the cross transporters. According to the invention, the number of cross transporters in the compact container terminal is increased, thereby enhancing the handling efficiency at this point. The cross transporters move on a single level, i.e., there is no longer any overlapping with one cross transporter moving and another cross transporter being loaded by the crane at the same time. The interim storage station that forms the interface between stacking crane and cross transporter can hold several containers per storage module. Stacking crane and cross transporter operate entirely independently of each other. The loading and unloading of trucks is possible over the entire region of the terminal at the loading lanes. The performance of the overall terminal is enhanced.
According to one favorable feature of the invention, each cross transporter is outfitted with a transfer or receiving device for handling of a container to or from an interim storage station. As a result, the cross transporter is not loaded directly by the stacking cranes, but instead is serviced from the interim storage station, which is arranged parallel to the railways.
In one embodiment of the invention, the transfer or receiving device consists of a load carrier for the container that can shift or travel transverse to the direction of travel of the cross transporter into the region of the interim storage station. Preferably, the load carrier is designed as a linear propelled shunt car, which can travel on a railway arranged on the cross transporter. The linear propulsion can come from any conventional drive unit, such as chain drive, rack and pinion gear, piston and cylinder units, or the like.
In order to enable a smooth transfer of the container placed on a load carrier to the interim storage station, according to another feature of the invention the interim storage stations configured as angle brackets reach freely at least in part across the railway and the cross transporter, so that the load carrier can travel underneath the interim storage station when the cross transporter is positioned beneath the interim storage station, and open slots running sideways are provided in the angle brackets in the direction of the load carrier, which are engaged by vertical lifting devices for the container that are arranged on the load carrier and that reach underneath the support points of the container. Preferably, the vertical lift devices of the load support are configured as hydraulic piston and cylinder units, which are arranged at the standard spacing of the corner fittings of ISO containers on the load support.
The load supports take up two end positions on the cross transporters. In the first end position, in which the load supports are located underneath the interim storage station configured as angle brackets, the containers are lifted up or set down in the interim storage station by activating the hydraulic load supports. Only when the load carrier has arrived at its second end position alongside the interim storage station by linear shifting on the cross transporter and the load supports have been hydraulically lowered can the cross transporter proceed, with or without a container.
An especially high handling efficiency can be achieved when, according to an especially important feature of the invention, two railways running parallel to each other traverse the container yard transverse to the storage modules, and are joined together at the head side by change-over devices for the cross transporters, in order to enable a switching of the cross transporters from one of the railways to the other parallel railway. Thanks to this arrangement, both railways can be optimally utilized in closed circuit, and the cross transporters traveling on a common level and in a fixed direction of turning cover the entire width of the yard and reach any given storage module, and at the end points on the top side of the railways they can be switched to return on the parallel railway. The cross transporter itself is not loaded directly by the stacking crane, but is automatically serviced from the interim storage stations, which are arranged parallel to the railways.
Because the railways travel across the entire width of the container yard, the truck driving lanes according to the invention can travel underneath the railways and the truck loading lanes can travel underneath next to the interim storage stations. In this way, loading and unloading of trucks is possible at the loading lanes over the entire width of the terminal.
According to the invention, the change-over devices each consist of a bridge-like steel structure with lengthwise running rails, whose gauges correspond to those of the railways for the cross transporters, and are outfitted with rail travel mechanisms at the front end, which can travel on elevated railways transverse to the railways of the cross transporters at the head side and between the two parallel railways of the cross transporters and move into end positions where the rails on the bridge-like steel structure are aligned with one of the railways for the cross transporters.
Since the cross transporter should drive onto and off from the change-over device as jolt-free as possible, before the cross transporter passes over, the gaps provided between the railways of the cross transporter and the change-over device are automatically closed with corresponding horizontally and vertically positioned adapters.
Preferably, the interim storage stations are secured with the vertical legs of the angle brackets to the side of the girders for the railways and are designed to accommodate up to four containers per storage module. In this way, a sufficient buffer function of the interim storage station is achieved.
The novel handling facility for a container terminal at seaport or inner harbor satisfies the indicated conditions. Within the container terminal, a continuous distribution of the containers to all storage modules is possible by means of cross transporters. A rather large number of cross transporters travels on preferably two parallel railways with two change-over devices at the head stations, which enable a switching of the cross transporters and improve their availability. The cross transporters are timed to travel in a single fixed direction of turning and on the same horizontal level. The cross transporters are not directly loaded by the stacking cranes, they are automatically serviced from the interim storage stations, which are arranged parallel to the railways. There are at least four truck loading and driving lanes underneath the railways and the interim storage stations, so that a large number of trucks can be serviced at the same time.
In summary, the following benefits over the state of the art result:
A sample embodiment of the invention is depicted in the drawing and shall be described hereafter. It shows:
The cross transporters 18 move on the parallel laid railways 21 and 22 through the container yard. In the region of the yard entrance or exit 12, the first change-over device 19, which travels on a railway 23, enables the switching of the cross transporter from one railway to the other. Position 24 shows one possible direction of travel (here depicted counterclockwise) for the movement of the cross transporters.
Similar to the first change-over device 19 at the yard entrance or exit 12, the second change-over device 20 at the turning station 13 takes over the function of track switching for the cross transporters 18.
At the left side of
At the right side of the drawing one notices the load carrier 18.2 on the cross transporter 18 in the “interim storage station” position. The container 17 stands with its corner fittings 17.1 on four activated hydraulic load supports 18.4, which penetrate into the slotlike openings in the horizontal angle leg of the interim storage station, arranged at the standard spacing of the container corner fittings. In this position, the interim storage station 16 can be loaded and unloaded.
A second cross transporter 18 is located at the first change-over device 19. This enables transport via the railway 23 to the parallel running second railway 22. Underneath the railways 21 and 22 and the interim storage station 16, a sufficiently high clearance remains for trucks, such as 9.3. The situation at the turning station 13 with the second change-over device is configured similar to the yard entrance or exit 12.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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103 07 579.8 | Feb 2003 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP04/01291 | 2/12/2004 | WO | 10/28/2005 |