The present invention is related to the recycling techniques of the diverse members constituting a tire, and more particularly, it is related to a machine for obtaining rubber pellets from used tires.
Nowadays, due to the constant growing of the number of vehicles, the tire disposal has increased year to year. It is estimated that in Mexico 30 million of tires are yearly disposed of, and in the United States, about a tire per habitant, representing one of the most severe pollution problems in last times, moreover considering the great complexity to store, destroy or to find a useful purpose for such big volumes of waste tires. One main reason for this problem is the physicochemical properties acquired by the tires when vulcanized, making their removal, recycling or transformation highly complicated.
In Mexico, typically the used tires are found on the streets, abandoned lands, sky open waste disposals, and in few cases, in sanitary waste fills. For this reason said fills turn quickly into a health problem, since pests, such as rats and mosquitoes, are developed therein.
Recently, used tires as boilers fuel has been used by the Cement Industry, since tires are mainly formed by hydrocarbons and have a high heat capacity very similar to the fossil fuels used in this Industry, and even higher than coal. Tires are incinerated at temperatures of about 1450° C., which according to this Industry, assures a complete combustion without residues, such as soot and other pollutants. At the present time however, only a restricted amount of tires for this purpose is allowed.
The use as filling material in highways and bridges has been a further application for used tires, however, due to their physical and chemical features, this use in particular is very limited.
Regarding tires recycling, there are technologies where the main materials from which the tire is manufactured are recovered, i.e., rubber, polymeric and steel fibers and cords. These recovered materials are mainly used to make new tires, to manufacture carpets, waterproofs, cast iron, cork and rubber agglomerates, shoe soles, etc. Moreover, the old tires are re-vulcanized with new rubber. When recycling tires, these are divided, trimmed or pulverized to obtain particles, strips, sheets or pellets capable of being incorporated in the above mentioned products and processes.
Certainly, however, due to the particular structure of a tire, having within polymeric and steel cords between the rubber layers, its recycling results complicated, thus, the obtainment of particles, mainly pellets, having a homogeneous structure, is not a simple or direct task.
In order to deeply explain the above, it is worth mentioning that a tire has a structure having two main defined parts; a tread being the tire-to-ground contact point, and the sidewalls which allows the tire to be mounted on a rim.
In relation to the above, the tread is conformed by an inner layer and an outer layer, which is properly the tire-to-ground contact point. The inner layer is mainly comprised by a carcass or frame, having within a sealant rubber layer, polymeric fiber cords layers coated with rubber, and depending on the tire type, stabilizing belts. On the other hand, the outer layer is essentially comprised of rubber, with ribs, grooves, stripes and shoulders being provided therein, forming the tire pattern.
To better describe the inner layer, it is to be mentioned that the carcass or frame is comprised at its most inner part by the sealant rubber layer, which as being impermeable to air, functions to retain it. Over the sealant rubber layer, polymeric material cord layers, such as rayon, polyester, nylon or steel being coated with rubber to avoid any friction therebetween, are disposed. Finally, at the most outer part of the carcass, and over the polymeric or metallic cords, there are optionally the stabilizing belts, having as main function to provide stability and uniformity to the tread when the tire is spinning at high speeds, thus contributing to the strength, lower wearing, traction and tire driving. Steel is the most common material used in the stabilizing belts, since provides force and stability to the tread without adding too much weight to the tire.
Now, regarding the second of the main parts forming the tread, i.e., the outer layer, it is to be mentioned that the grooves provided in said outer layer are designed to leak water and residues, to cool the tire, and to generate traction avoiding lateral slipping of the vehicle. In addition, the grooves are designed to eliminate the noise caused by the air passing through the channels. On the other hand, the stripes included on the tread have the function of increasing the tire refrigeration or cooling, and to contribute to its traction ability. While the shoulders join the tread with the sidewalls, the shoulders are designed taking into consideration the sidewalls flexion, resulting in a perfect setting of the tread on the ground. Moreover, the shoulders help to the weight transfer over the tire, when a vehicle gets into a curve.
On the other hand, as mentioned above, the sidewalls are the second basic structure of a tire, each one including a flange forming the inner ring thereof. The sidewalls of the tire are joined to the tread through the shoulders, and they are conformed by high fatigue strength rubber compounds. In addition, cords of steel may be present within, providing a higher strength.
Moreover, the flange is formed by ring-shaped steel wires. To prevent corrosion, the wires are coated with copper and are insulated with rubber compounds to avoid any friction. The flange acts to anchor the tire to the rim and it should have high breaking strength, so that the flange is filled with a hard rubber compound to support the tire mounting difficulties. During the tire manufacturing, the flanges are joined to the sidewalls when the assembling process occurs being completely joined thereafter by the vulcanization process.
Once explained the basic structure of a tire, it is to be mentioned that there are in the prior art, machines which allow separating the two main parts comprising a tire, such as the Mexican Patent No. 188,444 granted to the same inventor as of the machine being described in the present specification. Said patent is related to a tire cutting machine, whereby it is possible to separate efficiently the sidewalls from the tread allowing to decrease the volume occupied by the used tires. However, said patent does not mention how to process the separated parts to obtain homogeneous particles or pellets capable of being recycled in the above mentioned process and products.
U.S. Pat. No. 3,817,463 discloses a tire shredding machine, wherein the tire is fed completely to said machine and which is shredded by two pairs of rollers, one pair disposed bellow the other. Particularly, after passing the first pair of rollers, the shredded fragments are immediately fed to the second pair. The tire shred is very random resulting in highly heterogeneous fragments. Further, this machine does not consider the need of previously separating the flange from the tire, being one of the hardest elements of a tire. A randomized shred will need a high energy consumption to shred the tire flange and other hard parts thereof.
U.S. Pat. No. 3,931,935 discloses another shredding machine, wherein the tire is fed completely making a non-logic cut thereof, i.e., diverse cutting means make indistinct cuts.
Likewise, in the prior art, U.S. Pat. No. 4,613,087 discloses a machine having the purpose of cutting used tires; said machine employs a structure having a cylindrical anvil roller rotationally mounted therein. Further, the machine employs a pair of blade rollers in the structure, rotating in a parallel axis with respect to the pivoting axis of the anvil roller, said blade rollers are angularly spaced apart from each other with respect to the anvil roller axis, such that the tires pass by the anvil roller between the blade rollers, thus obtaining rhombus-shaped, almost rectangular-shaped, tire cuts. However, this machine as others existing does not consider the tire structure, since the tires are fed to the machine as a whole, i.e, without separating the sidewalls from the tread, resulting in a high energy consumption, besides the fact that the rhombus-shaped rubber cuts obtained are not uniform due to the randomized cut, then the cords and fibers protrude from the rhombus cuts, which may harm the personnel working with them, and not being appropriate for recycling purposes, particularly when they have to be mixed with other substances.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,115,983 is another important prior art document to be mentioned because it discloses a machine comprising a pair of platforms to hold the tire, wherein the tire rubber is cut by high pressure fluids. However, the high operating costs involved with high pressure fluids is the most important inconvenience of this kind of machines besides it is required a cleaning and recirculation process for the fluid used in the machine operation.
In the U.S. Pat. No. 6,036,128 a tire shredding machine is disclosed, which includes a safety hood and cutting elements, the main feature of said machine being the feeding of half-tires, specifically, the tire is diametrically divided in two parts, such that each half includes a tread portion and sidewalls. However, since these parts are not removed from the tire, non-homogeneous particles are obtained.
In the International Patent Application No. PCT/IB2006/000861, filed by the same inventor as the machine that will be described below, a process of cutting efficiently and logically the tire elements is described, considering the sidewalls and tread structure, however, a machine of great capacity is still necessary, which allows an intensive and organized tire cutting.
As seen, the prior techniques are limited to a random shred of the used tires, or alternatively, by means of expensive machines, which do not provide a logical cut to obtain the maximum benefit of the parts constituting the tire, such that they can be recycled. Further, such techniques do not distinguish the particular structural relationship between the rubber, the polymeric cords and the metallic cords in the tire. In other words, the prior art machines carry out a raw and random cut, while what is required is a precise and organized cut to form rubber pellets capable of being recycled or mixed with other particles.
In the light of the above, the overcoming of the drawbacks of the existing shredding or recycling machines for used tires has been pursued, and to provide a machine for obtaining rubber pellets from used tires, wherein said machine makes precise and logic cuts over the main parts of a tire, i.e., the tread and sidewalls, obtaining homogeneous rubber pellets capable of an easy management in recycling processes.
Particularly, the machine for obtaining rubber pellets from used tires of the present invention comprises a frame; a first pair of cutting rollers including a pivoting axis to be rotationally mounted on the frame, such that a roller is spaced apart from the other and rotates in an opposite direction, wherein at least one roller includes cutting discs, each disc being spaced apart from the other disc at a predetermined distance to cut a tire segment feed in the gap formed between both rollers in strips form.
A plurality of elongated guides are provided in the machine, each one having a fixed end attached to the frame and a free end moving between two cutting discs, causing that the strips being cut to be moved away from the first pair of cutting rollers.
The cut strips coming from the first pair of cutting rollers are received by feeding means, which align them one following the other; these strips are processed by a second pair of cutting rollers that include a pivoting axis to be rotationally mounted on the frame, such that a roller is spaced apart from the other and rotates in the opposite direction, the second pair of rollers receive the strips coming from said feeding means, wherein at least one roller of the second pair includes cutting discs, each disc being spaced apart from the other disc at a predetermined distance in order to cut the strips width-wise, thus obtaining rubber pellets.
The tire segment comes either from the tire tread or from the sidewalls. Preferably, when the segment comes from the sidewalls, the flange may be first removed before the segment is to be fed to the machine, since this is one of the hardest parts of the tire.
Referring to the above, it is to be noted that an important advantage of the machine of the present invention is the precise cuts made thereby, since the first pair of cutting rollers cut in an homogeneous manner the tire segment as strips, which in turn are also homogeneously cut as rubber pellets by means of the second pair of cutting rollers. Contrary to the prior art, the machine of the present invention carries out precise cuts on the tire, and non indistinct and random cuts which consume a great amount of energy.
In a preferred embodiment of the machine of the present invention, the cutting rollers of the first pair are spaced apart one above the other, defining an upper roller and a lower roller, the upper roller includes cutting discs while the lower roller has a rough surface with microgrooves. Cutting discs of a single edge are preferred for this embodiment.
In a further embodiment, both cutting rollers from the first or second pair of cutting rollers include cutting discs, being double edge cutting discs.
In another embodiment of the present invention, the machine additionally comprises means to sharpen the cutting discs of said first or second pair of cutting rollers, wherein the first sharpening means are mounted on the frame and are contacted by the cutting discs when the edge thereof needs to be recovered.
In a further aspect of the machine of the present invention, the machine for obtaining rubber pellets from used tires additionally comprises means to support the roller axis which includes the cutting discs in said first or second pair of cutting rollers. This feature has the object of maintaining a continuous separation between said rollers of the first or second pair, avoiding their distortion, obtaining homogeneous rubber pellets.
As may be seen from the above, an object of the present invention is to provide a machine for obtaining rubber pellets from used tires, wherein the main parts of the tire are uniformly and systematically cut.
Another object of the invention is to provide a machine for obtaining rubber pellets from used tires, wherein the pellets are homogeneous, and without any tire cord or fiber protrude therefrom, such that said fibers and cords remain encapsulated within the pellet.
The novel aspects considered characteristics of the present invention are set forth particularly in the appended claims, however, the operation together with other objects and advantages of the machine of the present invention will be better understood when reading the following detailed description of certain preferred embodiments in conjunction with the appended drawings, in which:
Being convenient to describe the general structure of a tire in order to explain the advantages and the reasons of the elements arrangement of the machine of the present invention, reference is made to
On the other hand, the outer layer 22 has a tread block 26 and shoulders 27 to connect the tread 20 to the sidewalls 30. Particularly, it can be noted that the inner edge of the sidewalls 30 is formed by a flange 31 which allows the tire 10 to resist the mounting and demounting operations of the tire 10 to a rim. The flange is one of the hardest parts of a tire, thus first it is convenient to separate it before any segment from the sidewalls be introduced to the machine described below.
Once the general disposition of a tire has been described, reference is made particularly to
The machine 100 is fed with tire segments 1, coming from the tread or the sidewalls, the tire segment may be as long as the total length of the tread or as wide as an entire tire sidewall, however, preferably segments from about 20 cm to about 50 cm in length are used. Previously, the separation of the tread from the sidewalls can be made by the machine described in Mexican Patent No. 188,444.
At the frame 110, a first pair of cutting rollers 121 and 121 are rotationally mounted, such that one roller is set and spaced apart above the other, i.e., an upper cutting roller 121 and a lower cutting roller 122 are defined. Both cutting rollers 121 and 122 rotate in opposite directions, wherein the tire segment 1 is fed to the gap formed between both cutting rollers 121 and 122, and it is pulled thereby as said cutting rollers rotate in opposite directions. From this first pair of rollers, the upper cutting roller 121 includes cutting discs 131, which are apart from each other at a predetermined distance in order for the tire segment be cut in strips 11, as said first pair of cutting rollers 121 and 122 rotate.
An enlarged guide 141 may be seen in
Once the tire segment has been cut in strips 11, these require an additional width-wise cutting for obtaining rubber pellets 12. To this end, the strips 11 are received by feeding means, which in the embodiment being described, is a hopper 150 with a descending surface 151 and an elongated outlet 152, which makes the strips 11 to be aligned one following the other at the outlet 153 to be received by the next elements of the machine 100, being the second pair of cutting rollers 161 and 162. Alternatively the feeding means of the present invention may be also a pivotable and slanting platform, wherein a batch of strips 11 be received, then the platform pivots and slants in order to feed a strip on the top of the other to the second pair of cutting rollers 161 and 162.
In order to cut the strips 11 in pellets 12, the second pair of cutting rollers 161 and 162 are rotationally mounted to the frame 110 such that they are side-by-side. These cutting rollers 161 and 162 receive one-by-one the strips 11 from the hopper 150. Additionally, both rollers 161 and 162 of the second pair of cutting rollers rotate in opposite directions and one of them, particularly the cutting roller 161, also has cutting discs 131 that cut the strips 11 at all-wide, thereby obtaining the rubber pellets 12.
As seen from
Referring again specially to
Now reference is made to
Now reference is made to
On the other hand, the other roller, i.e., roller 162 of the second pair of cutting rollers also has a rough surface with microgrooves so the strips 11 can be supported, and to prevent their movement when being cut width-wide by the cutting discs 131. Each one of the cutting discs 131 is mounted on the roller 161 axis, the cutting discs 131 are laterally spaced apart from each other at a predetermined distance to cut the strips to obtain pellets with an average size of from about 3.18 mm to about 76.20 mm (from about ⅛ to about 3 inches).
In this section of the machine 100, the strips 11 are fed and guided between the second pair of cutting rollers 161 and 162 by means of a feeding nozzle 116 conformed by two slanted plates being arranged one in front of the other.
Now reference is made to
In turn,
Now reference is made to
Reference is made to
In a further embodiment, the arrangement of the cutting discs illustrated in
In an embodiment of the machine of the present invention, the same can comprise means to support the axis of each one of the rollers of said first pair or second pair of cutting rollers, preventing the deformation thereof, thus maintaining a homogeneous cut over the tire segment being cut in strips.
Reference is now made to
In the additional embodiment, the machine may comprise first means to sharpen the cutting discs 231 of the first or second pair of cutting rollers. This feature can also be explained from
Now reference is made to
The adjusting means comprises: an end bearing 180, wherein an axis end 123 of the upper cutting roller 121 is received; a bearing base 181, slidably mounted on the frame 110 to freely move in the vertical direction, and wherein the end bearing 180 is housed; a threaded rod 182 disposed vertically with respect to the frame 110, the lower end of said rod freely goes into the bearing base 181, but is anchored to said base by means of a retainer 184. The upper end of said rod 182 is fixed to the frame 110, such that the bearing base 181 remains separated underneath the frame 110.
Another part of the adjusting means are the elastic means such as the helical spring 183 covering the threaded rod portion 182 remaining between the bearing base 181 and the frame 110. The base 181 allows a slight ascendant movement of the end bearing 180, and consequently, of the axis 123 of the upper cutting roller 121, with the purpose of feeding tire segments of variable thickness, but additionally, the helical spring 183 exerts a descendant pressure over the bearing base 181 and as a consequence, said pressure is transmitted to the upper cutting roller 121 making the tire segment to be pressed against the lower roller 122.
Now then,
Likewise, in this second embodiment of the machine, the strips 11 having been cut by the cutting discs 131 are received by a pair of extraction rollers 196 and 197 rotationally mounted to the frame 110 such that one roller is set and spaced apart above the other, in other words, there is an upper extraction roller 196 and a lower extraction roller 197. Both extraction rollers 196 and 197 rotate in opposite directions, wherein the strips 11, which have been cut by the first pair of cutting rollers 121 and 122, are pulled and trapped by the extraction rollers 196 and 197 as they rotate. The extraction rollers 196 and 197 eject the strips 11, which still need to be cut width-wise to obtain the pellets 12. For this purpose, strips 11 coming from the extraction rollers, are received in the hopper 150 (
Emphasizing on
As in the case of the feeding rollers from
Summarizing, the machine of the present invention makes a selected and logic cut allowing an appropriate cut of a tire, while consuming less energy by cutting manner with respect to any other prior art machine. The machine has a processing capacity of about 200 to 500 tires per hour, i.e., from 6,000 to 12,000 tires per day.
Although in the above description are shown and described some preferred embodiments of the present invention, many possible modifications thereto are possible, for example the cutting discs type or the feeding means conveying the strips towards the second pair of cutting rollers wherein they are cut in pellet form. Therefore, the present invention shall not be considered limited to the above description but for that established in the prior art and for what is set forth in the appended claims.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB2008/001838 | 7/15/2008 | WO | 00 | 4/18/2011 |