1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to a method and apparatus for densifying polypropylene.
2. Description of the Related Art
It is known to process expanded polystyrene (Styrofoam) by placing the expanded polystyrene into a pre-breaker, which grounds the expanded polystyrene into pieces sized approximately 1 to 2 inches, and then compressing the pieces in a densifier. The densifier comprises a hopper that receives the pieces from the pre-breaker, a force feeder that compresses the pieces into the hopper, and a densifying chamber where a ram deck compresses the pieces against a platen in an exiting plenum to form a densified brick or log. For expanded polystyrene, the ram typically operates with a hydraulic pressure of about 2300 psi, and the platen reacts with a hydraulic pressure of about 1800 psi. The resulting logs are shipped to processors who can use the material, along with virgin polystyrene, to make more Styrofoam.
Expanded polypropylene is typically used for packing automobile and truck parts for shipment. Principal reasons for using expanded polypropylene include minimal static electricity and better cushioning than other materials, such as expanded polystyrene. However, expanded polypropylene is not easily processed like expanded polystyrene and, thus, is typically disposed of in landfills rather than recycled. Federal grants and incentives are provided in an attempt to keep expanded polypropylene out of landfills, and makers of expanded polypropylene now recycle used expanded polypropylene with virgin polypropylene to make polypropylene products. But it is not cost effective to transport expanded polypropylene to recyclers because of its light weight. A semi-trailer full of expanded polypropylene carries a load of about 3000 to 5000 pounds, but a semi-trailer needs to carry a load of about 35,000 to 40,000 pounds to be cost effective. Consequently, users of expanded polypropylene have opted to store used expanded polypropylene in warehouses rather than transport it to recyclers.
Expanded polypropylene must be densified to render transportation of the material cost effective. Prior attempts to densify expanded polypropylene have been unsuccessful. The material has a much stronger memory then expanded polystyrene, for example, and running expanded polypropylene through the Styrofoam densifying process results in logs that fall apart and grow in size after densification.
A method of densifying polypropylene according to one embodiment of the invention comprises reducing expanded polypropylene into relatively small particles and heating and compressing the particles to form densified polypropylene. The expanded polypropylene can be reduced to the small particles by grinding. The expanded polypropylene can be reduced to intermediate pieces prior to reduction to the small particles. The expanded polypropylene can be reduced to the intermediate pieces by pre-breaking. During the heating of the particles, heat can be applied to increase the temperature of the polypropylene to a temperature below the melting temperature of polypropylene yet sufficiently high to weaken the polypropylene bonds and overcome the memory of the material.
An apparatus for densifying polypropylene according to one embodiment of the invention comprises a grinder for reducing expanded polypropylene into relatively small particles and a densifier for heating and compressing the particles to form densified polypropylene. The apparatus can further comprise a pre-breaker to reduce the expanded polypropylene into intermediate pieces prior to being reduced to the small particles by the grinder. The densifier can comprise a ram and platen system that compresses the particles in a densification chamber and a heater that heats the densification chamber and, thereby, the polypropylene in the densification chamber. The apparatus can further include a hopper that collects the particles from the grinder and gravity feeds the particles into the densifier.
In the drawings:
Referring now to the drawings,
According to the illustrated embodiment, the method 10 begins with a pre-break step 20 during which expanded polypropylene parts are broken into smaller pieces. The parts can have any suitable initial size and can be broken into any suitable size smaller than the initial size. For example, the parts can be broken into pieces on the order of about 1 to 2 inches. The parts can be broken into the pieces in any desirable manner, and the pre-break step 20 can be similar to the pre-breaking described above in the background section and known for the densification of polystyrene. The pre-breaking of the parts can employ mechanical and/or chemical means for breaking the expanded polypropylene parts.
The pieces of expanded polypropylene resulting from the pre-break step 20 are then further reduced into smaller particles during a grind step 30. The pieces can be ground or otherwise reduced to any suitable particle size smaller than the size of the pieces, and an exemplary range of sizes for the particles is from about ¼ to ⅜ inches. The pieces can be reduced to the particles in any desirable manner, such as by grinding the pieces, during the grind step 30. The grinding of the pieces into the particles can employ mechanical and/or chemical means for reducing the size of the expanded polypropylene pieces.
The particles of expanded polypropylene resulting from the grind step 30 are then formed into a brick of densified polypropylene during a heat and compress step 40. During the heat and compress step 40, a plurality of the particles are compressed together, thereby reducing and possibly eliminating space between and within the particles. During the compression of the particles, heat provided to particles heats the polypropylene to a temperature less than its melting temperature yet sufficiently high to weaken or otherwise affect the polypropylene bonds and maintain the densified condition. It is also within the scope of the invention to supply heat to the particles before and/or after the compression of the particles in lieu of or in addition to during the compression of the particles. The combination of the particle size, the compression, and the heat enables a lasting densification of polypropylene that overcomes the “memory” of the expanded polypropylene. The heat and compress step 40 results in a mass or brick of densified polypropylene having a density significantly greater than that of the expanded polypropylene prior to the densification method 10.
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A reciprocally movable ram 130 pushes the particles at the bottom of the densification hopper 122 into the densification chamber 126, and a movable platen 132 at or near the end of the densification chamber 126 applies backside pressure to the particles. The ram 130 is movable between a first position where the particles are able to fall to the bottom of the densification hopper 122 in alignment with the densification chamber 126, as shown by example as the solid line ram 130 in
The platen 132 can have any suitable configuration and be mounted in any desirable manner in the densifier 120. For example, the pivot point of the platen 132 can be positioned for a desired pivoting direction. In other words, the platen 132 can pivot in directions other than upwards, such as downwards or sideways, depending on the location of the platen 132 relative to the densification chamber 126. Further, the platen 132 need not pivot but can be configured to move in other manners to accommodate the brick as it moves past the platen 132.
The densifier 120 further includes a heater to add heat to the particles and the forming brick of densified polypropylene in the densification chamber 126. The heat applied to the densification chamber 126 increases the temperature of the polypropylene to a temperature less than its melting temperature to avoid melting of the material but sufficiently high to weaken the polypropylene bonds and overcome the “memory” of the material. The heater can maintain the temperature of the polypropylene within a desired temperature range to achieve the desired densification performance. The heat can be applied to the densification chamber 126 continuously and/or intermittently. Alternatively, heat can be applied to the material directly, either in the densification chamber or before entry into the densification chamber. Preferably, the material will be heated to a temperature 150 to 400 degrees F.
In the illustrated embodiment, the heater is positioned exteriorly of the densification chamber 126 and is in the form of an upper heater 134 located on the upper wall of the densification chamber 126 and a lower heater 136 located on the lower wall of the densification chamber 126. The upper and lower heaters 134, 136 can be located in any suitable position along the densification chamber 126, and as an example, the upper and lower heaters 134, 136 can be located downstream of the maximum extension of the ram 130. The heaters can be any suitable type of heaters, and an exemplary heater is a resistive heater, such as a tube heater encased in a sleeve. In one embodiment, the heaters can comprise six 1000 watt tube heaters, three in the upper heater 134 and three in the lower heater 136. The upper and lower heaters 134, 136 can be controlled to maintain the temperature of the polypropylene at a desired temperature or within a desired temperature range, which can be indirectly measured by monitoring a temperature representative of the polypropylene temperature, such as the temperature at the interface between the upper and lower heaters 134, 136 and the densification chamber walls 124. In the example with about ¾ inch steel densification chamber walls 124, the upper and lower heaters 134, 136 can each be controlled to maintain the interface temperature between about 300° F. and 325° F. Within this range, an exemplary interface temperature is about 325° F. The six 1000 watt heaters can each be run at about 300 W to achieve the desired interface temperature.
The densifier 120 can employ any number, type, and configuration of heater to heat the polypropylene in the densification chamber 126. The actual number, type, and configuration of a heater or heaters will depend on several factors, including the shape and size of the densification chamber, the particular composition of the polypropylene, and the material type and thickness of the densification chamber walls 124. These factors, and others, affect the heat conduction to and through the polypropylene, and it is ultimately the temperature of the polypropylene that is important to control within the preferred range. As stated above, the preferred temperature range is at a lower end sufficiently high to overcome the “memory” of the material, but at a higher end less than the melting temperature of the material to be densified. Further, the heater can be additionally or alternatively located interiorly of the densification chamber walls 124 and/or within the densification chamber walls 124.
Due to the combination of particle size achieved by the grinder 114 and the heat and compression applied by the densifier 120, the apparatus 100 converts the expanded polypropylene into a brick of densified polypropylene that retains its densified state. The brick is formed by a plurality of brick sections, with each brick section being formed during a stroke of the ram 130. The length of each brick section depends in part on the amount of the expanded polypropylene positioned for entry into the densification chamber 126, which, in turn, depends at least in part on whether the force feeder is employed and the force applied by the force feeder. A greater force applied by the force feeder translates into a longer brick section formed by the stroke of the ram 130. In one embodiment, using the force feeder at about 1100 pounds results in a brick section having a length of about 3 inches.
The brick exits the densifier 120 through the densification chamber outlet 128, and a conveyor 138 moves the brick, which can be trimmed, such as by manual removal of a length of brick or by a trimming device, to a desired brick length, to a desired location. Optionally, a trimmed brick length, such as a trimmed brick length about 12-14 inches long, can be banded together to ensure that the multiple brick sections forming the brick length do not separate from each other. Separation of the brick sections due to expansion of the densified polypropylene at joints between adjacent brick sections can be avoided by adjusting operational parameters of the densifier 120 so that the material remains under pressure in the densification 126 for a longer time, thereby completely or nearly completely destroying the memory of the material. In one embodiment, a rate of about 300 pounds per hour of material through the densifier 120 results in a brick length that does not require banding, while a faster rate of about 600 pounds per hour results in a brick length for which banding will help retain the brick sections together. While several parameters can be adjusted to vary the rate of the material through the densifier 120, in one embodiment, the use and force of the force feeder can be adjusted to increase or decrease the rate of the material through the densifier 120. In one example, a skid or pallet of the brick of densified polypropylene weighs about 1500 pounds, which is about ten times more than a skid or pallet of expanded polypropylene.
While the exemplary embodiment of the apparatus 100 has been shown and described as having a single pre-breaker 110, a single grinder 114, and a single densifier 120, it is contemplated to employ more than one of any of these devices to achieve a maximum efficiency of the apparatus 100. For example, two of the grinders 114 can be used to keep pace with the output of the pre-breaker 110, and the piece conduit 112 can be adapted to accommodate such a configuration by branching into two outlets, as in a manifold, with each outlet coupling with one of the grinders 114.
While the invention has been specifically described in connection with certain specific embodiments thereof, it is to be understood that this is by way of illustration and not of limitation, and the scope of the appended claims should be construed as broadly as the prior art will permit.
This application claims priority on U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/991,938, filed Dec. 3, 2007, incorporated herein by reference.