This invention relates to cotton fiber processing and more particularly to an apparatus and method of separating foreign matter from fibrous cotton that has been ginned from the seed.
Prior methods and apparatus include those such as illustrated in U.S. Pat. No. 6,088,881, incorporated herein by reference, wherein a revolving perforated drum is used to allow air flow through the drum such that a cleaning cylinder may remove cotton fiber from the perforated drum and carry it past a plurality of cleaning grid bars, thereby separating the air flow and removing foreign matter from the fibers, before the fiber is doffed from the cleaning cylinder for subsequent air flow to downstream processing.
However, the perforated revolving cylinder of the '881 apparatus, revolving at velocities to prevent agglomeration of the tufts in the air stream, develops centrifugal forces that cause the fine trash and very short fibers that penetrate the perforations to accumulate on the interior surfaces of the perforated cylinder. These accumulations require the use of compressed air blasts to cause them to move axially out the open ends of the cylinder. While the compressed air blasts provide a solution to this problem of accumulations, the maintenance and cost of the compressed air system detracts from the otherwise excellent performance of the apparatus per the '881 patent.
An apparatus embodying features of the invention is depicted in the accompanying drawing wherein:
It is an object of the present invention to provide an improved method and apparatus for separating foreign matter from tufts of fibrous cotton. A further object of the invention is to eliminate the need for a compressed air system for cleaning a perforated separator cylinder, while maintaining the other features of the '881 patent by the use of a novel revolving separator in combination with a stationary arcuate perforated section.
An improved apparatus and method according to the present invention is illustrated in reference to
Again as may be seen in
In one embodiment outer surfaces 18 are defined by circumferentially spaced apart flexible belt-like strips running generally parallel to the axis of rotation of air separator 17 and generally radial to the axis of rotation. The strips are flexible radially and may be made of soft material to resist damage to the cleaning cylinder 12 or semi-cylindrical stationary surface 16. In another embodiment, spaced outer surfaces 18 are defined by circumferentially spaced apart brush strips running generally parallel to the axis of rotation with the bristles facing outward generally radial to the axis of rotation of the air separator 17. Suitable hub plates 22 hold the hubs 25 of the strips 18 in place forming an open reel. In either embodiment, the strips are preferably set at a deflection angle of the strips approximately 15 degrees backward from radial to the axis of rotation of the rotating separator 17 relative to its direction of rotation.
The conveying air stream C thus passes through the air separator 17 and is exhausted from the cylindrical housing via perforated surface 16 to become exhaust air stream E. It is worthwhile to note that as outer surfaces 18 rotate across perforated surface 16 the surfaces 18 substantially sweep away any accumulations of matter on the stationary separator surface 16 and return any desirable fiber back to the conveying air stream C, proximal to terminal portion 14 of duct 11. To effectively accomplish this, revolving outer surfaces 18 move at velocities that develop centrifugal forces sufficient to cause heavier than air matter revolving with the outer surface 18 to move substantially radially outwardly. Further the hubs or inner surface 25 of the strips 18 are configured to resist accumulation of matter heavier than air thereon, such that the rotation of the hub 25 and surfaces 18 moves such matter outwardly where it may be directed towards cleaning cylinder 12. The rotation of revolving outer surfaces 18 is such that the commingled fiber and foreign matter are exposed to the teeth 13 of the cleaning cylinder 12 while the revolving outer surfaces 18 are rotating toward stationary semi cylindrical surface 16.
As will be understood from the prior art, the rotation of cleaning cylinder 12 carries the tufts past a stripping bar 27 and plurality of cleaning grid bars 23 disposed to separate a major portion of foreign matter from the cleaning cylinder 12, which foreign matter may be disposed via a trash conveyor system for subsequent collection and baling. In the embodiment depicted, foreign matter is disposed via a waste airflow W.
As will also appreciated, a rotating doffing cylinder or brush 24 removes the cleaned tufts from the teeth 13 of cleaning cylinder 12 and delivers the cleaned fibers to duct 26. In the embodiment depicted, the cleaned tufts may be entrained in a doffing air flow D which passes adjacent doffing brush 24 and into duct 26.
The apparatus may be used to process cotton fiber according to the following description. Spaced apart individual tufts of fiber are conveyed in a high speed conveying air stream C to minimize agglomeration of the tufts, first exposing the air stream to revolving separator 17 which is porous to radially inward and outward air flow and revolving at speeds developing centrifugal forces that cause the fiber tufts and foreign matter rotationally moving with the porous revolving separator 17 to resist radially inward movement such that the fiber tufts and foreign are substantially removed from the conveying air C as it passes through the porous revolving air separator 17. Thus, the preponderance of the fiber tufts and foreign matter are delivered directly to revolving toothed cleaning cylinder 12 in close proximity to the revolving separator 17.
A stationary generally cylindrical surface is located downstream of the revolving toothed cylinder 12 relative to the rotation of and proximal to the porous revolving air separator 17. The stationary arcuate surface includes a porous section 16 being porous to air flow there through, but impervious to desirable fiber flow, and preferably contains one or more non-porous sections 15. The rotational movement of the outer surfaces 18 carried by revolving porous air separator 17 proximate stationary arcuate surface sweeps any accumulations of desirable fiber from the upstream side of arcuate stationary surface 15, 16 delivering the fibers back into the conveying air stream C. The periphery of the revolving separator 17 should be porous to radially inward and outward air flow and have means on the radially inward surfaces to prevent the accumulation of matter heavier than air.
Revolving toothed cylinder 12 holds the tufts while revolving past stripping bar 27 and cleaning bars 23 that strip foreign matter from the fiber tufts. A doffing brush or roller 24 revolving proximate and counter to toothed cleaning cylinder 12 removes the cleaned fibers from teeth 13 and delivers the cleaned fiber tufts from the process.
While the forgoing specification describes only a few embodiments of the present invention, the invention is not so limited and is intended to encompass the full scope of the claims appended hereto.
This application claims priority to U.S. provisional application No. 60/950,222, filed Jul. 17, 2007, which is incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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5173994 | Gillum et al. | Dec 1992 | A |
5295283 | Gillum et al. | Mar 1994 | A |
5414900 | Gillum et al. | May 1995 | A |
5909786 | Anthony | Jun 1999 | A |
6088881 | Van Doorn | Jul 2000 | A |
6449804 | Van Doorn | Sep 2002 | B1 |
6615454 | Anthony | Sep 2003 | B1 |
6865781 | Hosel | Mar 2005 | B2 |
20070221248 | Boatman | Sep 2007 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20090172918 A1 | Jul 2009 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60950222 | Jul 2007 | US |