Not Applicable
Not Applicable
This invention relates to recycling of metal cans, particularly used aluminum cans (UBC). Quantities of cans are collected and formed into bales suitable for transport from a baling area to a smelting facility, including handling and storage of the bales in between their formation and their processing at a smelter.
Recycling of aluminum cans (sometimes referred to as UBC (Used Beverage Cans) is reported to be a most important aspect of the consumer waste stream. It is common to collect empty, commonly “used”, metal cans for recycling of the metal of the cans by converting the cans to their metallic identify. Whereas many locations may be employed to collect a relatively small volume of cans at each of such locations, at some phase of the recycling program, for economic and other reasons, these small quantities of cans are brought together, crushed and pressed together in a baler. Within this baler a relatively large quantity of cans are crushed (e.g. compacted) into individual bales (commonly rectangular in geometry) of crushed cans. Heretofore such bales were bound about their girth by one or more wire binders designed to preclude collapse of the bales. These bales are shipped by truck, railcar or sea container to smelting facilities. After analysis of the cans, the wire binders are removed from the bale and the bales are fed into a shredder where they are broken up into small pieces and processed through a smelter furnace.
Compression of the cans into a bale, commonly of a rectangular geometry provides a cost effective and otherwise efficient mode of transferring a collection of cans to a smelting facility. A major problem encountered in baling of metal cans relates to the binding of the bales as they are formed so that the bales retain their integrity when the bales are expelled from the baler, transported direct to a smelting facility or placed in temporary storage. During such time period the bales are subjected to lifting and transfer using lift forks or like equipment. As noted, heretofore, it has been common to wrap each bale at spaced apart locations along the length of each bale, with metal wire binders (bailing wire) which serve to keep the bale from coming apart during handling, transit or other activities. Such wire remains on the bales until the bales are ready to be introduced into a shredder at a processing center, e.g. a smelter). First, wire when wrapped about the firth of a bale of cans only apply containment pressure against those crushed cans of the bale which are proximate the wires, leaving the portion of the bale outside the holding influence of the wires free to expand and potentially cause collapse of the bale. Second, these wires tend to break or their ends separate, leaving the bales free of the restraint afforded by the wires such that the bales involuntarily dissipate. Third, the loose wires can become entangled with any of many objects, such as the framework of warehouse shelving, or within the processing equipment. In any such event, the cost of processing of the cans is increased due to the loss of time for completion of the overall processing of the cans. Especially of importance of downtime of the processing equipment during which loose wires are untangled from the processing equipment. Fourth, even if the wire binders remain intact, they must be removed before the bale can be introduced into the smelter. Collection and disposal of these wire binders is a further disadvantage with respect to cost of the recycling operation, and even safety of workers which remove the wire binders.
The present inventors have discovered that self-supporting “wireless” bales of crushed metal cans can be obtained through the mechanism of introducing enhanced multiple spaced apart densification forces against the opposite sides of a “being formed” bale of crushed cans. In a preferred embodiment, simultaneously with the application of densifications forces against the sides of a being-formed bale, densification of the central inner portions of the resulting bale is effected by the application of a selected pattern of pressure against the central portion of at least one end of the bale as it is being formed. Such controlled densification of selected regions of the bale, have been found to eliminate the need for wire binders.
With initial reference to
In accordance with the present invention, a self-supporting formed bale 28, free of extraneous inders such as baling wires or the like is pushed by the plannent out of the forward end 38 of the compaction chamber through a rear door 40 of the compaction chamber.
Referring to
As depicted in
Each of the legs 66,68 (typical) of the triangular cross section of each of the grooves 60 extends laterally outwardly of the inwardly disposed apex 72 of the triangle and within the plane of the platten with the apical angle between the legs being about 30 degrees. This construction of the grooves provides a depth (triangular height) of about 3 inches for each groove. The separation distance between adjacent parallel grooves on each of the side edges of the platten is chosen in the depicted embodiment to provide a lateral spacing between apices of adjacent grooves of about 2½ inches. As seen in
As depicted in
Referring to
As seen in
As depicted in
As seen in
Referring to
A first leg 102 of the triangular geometry of each projection extends from one corner edge 104 of the base beam angularly at an angle of about 23 degrees inwardly of the compaction chambers and the second leg of the triangle extends from an opposite corner edge 108 of the base beam at a selected angle so that the distal ends 110,112 of the legs meet and define the apex 118 of the triangular projection of about 34 inches height as measured along the height of the triangle. In this example, each base beam may comprises a steel tube of rectangular cross section and being 3 inches wide and 5 inches deep. Further in this example, each leg of each projection may be 10 feet in length. Like the base, each leg of each elongated projection may be in the form of a steel plate of ½ inch thickness.
The individual ones of these elongated parallel projections are spaced apart from one another by a relatively small gap, of a few inches, for example, thereby defining an elongated groove of triangular cross section defined between adjacent ones of the elongated projections 92, and which extends along the length of a respective one of the opposite side walls 82, 84 of the compaction chamber. Notably, in the depicted embodiment, there are provided five vertically spaced apart individual projections along each of the first and second side walls of the compaction chamber. Further, it is to be noted that these projections define six grooves defined along each of the side walls of the compaction chamber.
As noted hereinabove, the platten of the depicted embodiment is provided with seven parallel grooves per each side edge of the platten (five grooves defined solely by adjacent projections and two top and bottom grooves defined between respective ones of top and bottom projections and the top wall and floor of the compaction chamber as seen in
Referring to
In one embodiment of the present invention, the inventor has found that enhanced densification of the central portion 138 of a bale of metal cans may be effected by means of a compacting element 140 mounted or defined on the face 44 of the platten. In the depicted embodiment seen in
As will be recognized, this enhanced crushing and compaction of the cans along the side walls of the compaction chamber has been found to enhance the densification of the cans adjacent the side walls to the extent that the ultimately formed bale of cans is self-supporting, i.e., the bale remains intact without the use of baling wire or like bale binders. Importantly, the present inventor has found that such bales not only withstand lifting, stacking, hauling and like activities, the bale is readily collapsed at the smelting facility and that the cans are of acceptable mill quality when received at the smelting facility, meaning that the bales are readily broken down and shredded employing pre-existing processing equipment at the smelting facility.
In accordance with one aspect of the present invention, there is provide a method for baling metal cans without the use of anti-bale-collapse binders comprising the steps of
A. defining an array of elongated parallel outwardly opening grooves along each of the side walls of a compaction chamber defined within a can baler,
B. substantially closing one end of each of said grooves with respective ones of an array of projections extending from each of the first and second opposite side edges of a platten, thereby defining an open-face compaction subchambers within each of such grooves, and.
C. moving the platten along length of the compaction chamber whereby the moving projections of the platten compact cans disposed within respective ones of the subchambers into self-supporting grooves defined in a compacted bale of the cans.
In one embodiment of such method for baling metal cans into self-supporting bales without use of bale binders employing a baler having a compaction chamber defined therein, the compaction channel includes first and second opposing side walls, a platten reciprocatably moveable within the compaction chamber for compaction of cans disposed with said channel.
Along each of the side walls of the compaction chamber, there is provided an array of elongated parallel grooves, each being of a generally triangular cross-section geometry, the apex of the triangular cross section of each such groove being adjacent a respective side wall of the channel and the legs of the triangular cross section projecting into the channel with legs of laterally adjacent grooves being joined to one another. The grooves of the first side wall of compaction chamber are horizontally aligned with respective ones of said grooves on the second side wall of the compaction chamber. On each of the side edges of the platten there is defined an array of projections which extend laterally outwardly from their respective side edge, the projections on one side edge of the platten being horizontally aligned with and slidably received within, respective ones of the array of projections on the opposite second side edge of the platten. Those ones of the projections on the first side edge of the platten being disposed in meshing sliding relationship to respective ones of the grooves along the first side wall of the channel and respective ones of the array of projections on the opposite second side edge of the platten being disposed in meshing sliding relationship to respective ones of the grooves along said second side wall of the channel whereby the projections of the platten define respective moving closures of their respective grooves, thereby defining a plurality of open-face elongated subchambers 124 of reducing volume as the platten progresses from its at rest position along the channel through the compaction chamber and into the baling chamber thereby crushing and compacting cans which may enter or be forced into, the grooves along the walls of the compaction chamber with increasing compaction forces being applied to those cans within each subchamber 124 and resultant development of a greater degree of densification of such cans than the degree of densification of the cans that are disposed more centrally of a forming bale of the cans as the platten moves toward and into the baler chamber. In this method, the bales formed are of a nature as preludes the collapse of the formed bale of cans without the use of extraneous binders. (See