This invention relates to a method of pulverisation or atomisation with centrifugal ejection of a substance including at least a liquid component, placed on a rotary body driven at a suitable speed of revolutions. In the continuation, the words “pulverisation” and “atomisation” are used as synonyms to indicate the formation of a fog of droplets.
The aerosol obtained with such a method can be directly useful, for example in the applications of paint, pulverisation of manure or other substances used in agriculture, pulverisation in the atmosphere for example to treat the ambient air against insects, bad smells, germs etc.
In other applications, the aerosol is intended to undergo a subsequent treatment of drying (“spray-drying”), or of solidifying (“spray-cooling” or “prilling”), in particular for microencapsulation purposes. A solid pulverulent product is obtained, which can be a finished product, or on the contrary an intermediate average product intended to undergo at least a later treatment or transformation.
Thus, the present invention relates moreover to a broader method including a pulverisation operation associated with an operation for the treatment of aerosol with a gas flow to obtain a product in powder form.
The present invention also relates to a pulverisation head or atomisation for the implementation of one or the other method.
This present invention also relates to processing apparatus using a pulverisation head and associating with it means to apply a treatment for the aerosol particles.
The invention relates in particular to monodisperse aerosols or powders. One thus names the aerosols or the powders of which substantially all particles (droplets or respectively grains) have substantially the same dimension (the same diameter if one accepts that the particles are spherical) that one wishes to be able to choose. The invention also relates to the aerosols or the powders with polydispersity known as controlled or mastered. One thus names the aerosols or the powders of which substantially all particles have a dimension (diameter) pertaining to a relatively narrow range. The invention also relates to pluridisperse aerosols or powder, i.e. of which almost all particles have one or the other regardless of predetermined dimensions (diameters), or belong to one or the other of any narrow ranges of predetermined sizes (diameters).
One knows of preparation methods of a composition capable of drying or solidifying (composition intended to be put in solid form) for the production of monodisperse powders or with controlled polydispersity for agro-alimentary, nutritional, cosmetic, pharmaceutical applications and fine chemicals, implementing the production of drops for obtaining monodisperse solid products or with controlled polydispersity.
One knows of preparation methods of a drying or solidifying composition and production of micro-encapsulated powders for agro-alimentary, nutritional, cosmetic, pharmaceutical applications and fine chemicals.
The microencapsulation methods are mainly of two types:
The co-drying method consists in co-pulverizing in an atomisation tower one or more liquids, while injecting at the same time a powder flow likely to be used as support and/or diluent with the liquid product to dry.
For the production of aerosols, the EP 0 446 134 B1 teaches to deposit a liquid in the center of rotation of an ejection surface extending to an edge of peripheral ejection. The ejection surface and in particular the ejection edge have a symmetry of revolution around the rotation center. By the centrifugal effect, the substance forms on the surface of ejection a liquid layer which slides towards the edge of ejection. When it arrives at the edge of the disc, the layer can split into ligaments regularly distributed on the periphery. In their turn, the ligaments split in droplets. The document also teaches that such an aerosol can be made monodisperse by applying to the liquid a vibratory stimulus. The more the frequency is raised, the more the droplets obtained are fine. Other parameters also condition the diameter of the droplets, in particular the viscosity of the liquid, its temperature, its flow, the diameter and the number of revolutions of the ejection surface, the nature and the surface quality of the ejection face, the configuration of the ejection edge, etc.
Pulverisation by centrifugal ejection on a rotary body makes it possible to carry out high flows with relatively simple means without being exposed to the risks of blocking presented by other techniques such as the nozzles.
However, the means of vibratory stimulus employed according to the above mentioned document are perfectible in terms of cost, and/or effectiveness, and/or range of realizable frequencies.
The WO 2005/102 537 teaches to insert a vibrator between the rotary body and its drive motor in order to assign to the rotary body the vibration thanks to which the generated aerosol is monodisperse.
Taking into account the mass to undergo vibration, and relatively low sympathetic vibration frequency of the vibrating part, the vibratory energy to be provided is relatively important and the practically achievable maximum frequency relatively weak. This device does not make it possible to obtain the smallest sizes of droplets that may be requested in practice.
According to these two documents, the surface of ejection is turned in the essentially opposite direction to the rotary drive motor. The substance to be pulverized arrives on the surface of ejection by the opposite side to the motor. This establishment is penalizing in certain installations because it requires fluidic, electrical and/or mechanical connections on both sides of the plane of formation of the aerosol.
The WO 2006/131 629 describes an autonomous pulverisation device with revolving disc. In certain versions intended to float on a water level, the drive shaft is hollow and is used as ascending supply pipe axially crossing the motor and the rotary body to exit by an opening to the surface of the rotary body directed in a basically opposite direction to the motor.
The known pulverisation heads do not make it possible to obtain droplets or particles comprising several components, such as for example mixtures, structured or not, or structured particles, for example encapsulated, etc
Another limitation of the methods and known pulverisation heads relates to the flow of liquid which they are able to pulverize. There exists a need, in particular industrial, to produce higher flows with pulverisation heads by centrifugation.
There also exists a need to prepare agro-alimentary, nutritional, cosmetic, pharmaceutical compositions and fine chemicals, personalized by their monodisperse character or with controlled polydispersity whose diameter can be selected between 20 and 2000 μm, and in particular micro-encapsulated, and this, in a reliable and relatively simple way to facilitate the use of the products being used to prepare these compositions, to improve their stability in time, to mask undesirable tastes, to confer properties to them with delayed effect, or of controlled bioavailability.
There exists a need to improve the production methods of preparation of agro-alimentary, nutritional, cosmetic, pharmaceutical compositions and fine chemicals.
The aim of this invention is to provide solutions to all or part of the problems thus posed in comparison with the state of the art and in particular to widen the field of application of pulverisation or atomisation by rotary body.
According to the first aspect of the invention, the method for generating an aerosol from at least one substance, in which:
Such a vibration is much less energy consuming than the techniques known previously because the mass to be vibrated is weaker. Moreover, the vibration according to the invention corresponds to a distortion of the rotary body. The elastic coefficient characterizing this distortion can be very high. The conjunction of a low vibratory mass and a high elastic coefficient corresponds to a definitely increased sympathetic vibration frequency. Vibration frequencies of about 100 Khz, or even higher, become achievable. It is in particular advantageous to apply a frequency of stimulus close to the sympathetic vibration frequency associated with the mode of distortion which is activated by the stimulus. The structure according to the invention thus makes it possible to obtain a monodisperse aerosol with a very small size of droplets, for example 0.02 mm.
According to another characteristic of the invention, one carries out thanks to a pulverisation head to rotary body a composite aerosol by feeding the head with several components. These components can be substances which one separately deposits in the center of respective surfaces of ejection. Surfaces of ejection can have a common peripheral edge. The substances can then mix when they cross the common edge of ejection, then form droplets containing a mixture, homogeneous or not, of these substances. At least two surfaces of ejection can also each have their own peripheral edge, so that each surface of ejection forms its own droplets. If one applies a vibratory frequency to support a predetermined size of the droplets, this size can be different, or on the contrary equal, for the two substances. It is also possible to mix the components before depositing them in the center of a common surface of ejection, or at the time to deposit them in the center of a common surface of ejection. One of the components can be a powder and the other a liquid. The particles of the powder roll on the surface of ejection by covering itself with the liquid component, then are ejected in the form of coated particles intended either to preserve their heterogeneity, in particular for the manufacture of micro-encapsulated particles, or to evolve to a different form, for example by dissolution of the solid particle in the liquid which coats it, or by chemical reaction between the two components.
The invention also considers pulverisation heads equipped with at least two surfaces of ejection, for example the two opposite faces of the same rotary body or of the faces of several rotary bodies. One can feed the at least two surfaces of ejection with a same substance to double or multiply the production of aerosol. One can also feed various surfaces of ejection with different substances, solid, liquid or gas to increase the possibilities as regards combinations of substances. In particular, it is envisaged to be able to feed each surface of ejection independently from the others, and to be able to regulate the flow and granulometry of aerosol associated with each surface independently with those associated with other surfaces. One can also configure surfaces of ejection and/or the edges of ejection differently each from each other. For example, a surface of ejection can be smooth, another grooved, an edge of ejection can be continuous, another notched.
The invention also aims the manufacture of powders by forming an aerosol by centrifugal ejection of one or more substances on one or more rotary surfaces of ejection, and nearly simultaneous treatment of this aerosol by a gas flow which meets the zone of formation of the aerosol. The gas flow can be a flow of air, for example to dry the droplets and to thus transform them into solid pellets.
The flow of treatment can have a substantially coaxial tubular form with the rotary body of ejection, and meet the zone of formation of the aerosol all around the body of ejection.
According to another aspect of the invention, the pulverisation head includes:
According to a characteristic of the invention, in a pulverisation head functioning by centrifugal ejection of at least one substance on a surface of rotary ejection, the routing means are at least partly arranged inside a hollow shaft of the rotary body starting from a drive motor. The routing means can channel separately in the hollow shaft, preferably by concentric conduits, at least two distinct substances or components which one can then make a mix in the hollow shaft or on the contrary that one can lead each one separately to respective faces of ejection. A surface of final ejection, turned in the opposite direction to the motor, can be crossed by an opening of the central routing through which emerges the interior space of the hollow shaft or a conduit lodged within it. A surface of ejection turned towards the motor and/or lodged between two rotary bodies following one another axially, can be associated to openings of routing installed through the wall of the hollow shaft or associated with at least one routing path formed around the motor and emerging through an annular slit opposite to the junction of the surface of ejection with the hollow shaft. This aspect of the invention makes it possible to lodge the driver motor between the rotary bodies on the one hand and the source(s) of substance on the other hand. One thus avoids the need for connections coming through the side of the rotary body opposite the motor. The pulverisation head can then form a monobloc compact unit relatively easy to install in its industrial environment.
Preferably, the drive means, routing means, and stimulus means are entirely located on the same side compared to the surface of ejection.
According to another aspect of the invention, the apparatus for producing a pulverulent substance is characterized in that it includes an enclosure, at least one pulverisation head according to the invention, assembled in the enclosure, of the means to generate a gas flow of treatment which meets the zone of formation of the aerosol in the enclosure, and at least one opening of collection of the processed substance and used process gas.
There can be a pulverisation head, for example in central position, or several heads, for example three pulverisation heads laid out in triangle.
This invention relates in particular to the agro-alimentary, nutritional, cosmetic, pharmaceutical compositions and of fine chemicals, and more particularly those obtained by the circulation of a product or several products, of which at least one of the products is liquid, within one or several enclosures and dispersed via a vibrated turning disc, in the form of monodisperse drops or with polydispersity controlled in a heated gas fluid that circulates to the contact of these drops and allowing through drying by drive, the production of monodisperse solid particles or with controlled polydispersity, and in particular micro-encapsulated ones. These particles can be simple or composite. At the time of the drying operations, it is possible that the surface of the dry particles presents craters inducing a more or less significant porosity influencing directly the properties of wettability and instantaneity of solubilization of the monodisperse particles or with controlled polydispersity.
This invention also relates to the agro-alimentary, nutritional, cosmetic, pharmaceutical compositions and of fine chemicals, and more particularly those obtained by the production, using at least one vibrating rotary body (such as disc), of liquid and/or solid particles, monodisperse or with controlled polydispersity, of which at least one of the components is liquid, within an enclosure in the form of drops in a gas fluid whose temperature is selected lower than the melting point, for the freezing and production of monodisperse solid particles or with controlled polydispersity, whose diameter can in particular be selected between 20 and 2000 μm and in particular able to be micro-encapsulated. These particles can be simple or composite.
Another form of the invention includes an initial implementation of one or the other of the methods described above to put in the form of monodisperse spheres or spheres with controlled polydispersity one or more active ingredients having initially a nonspherical heterogeneous form and a polydisperse granulometry, then a second implementation of one or the other of the methods described above to micro-encapsulate these spheres.
Another form of the invention relates to the microencapsulation of solids divided on a nanometric scale which one integrates in a lipidic matrix with high melting point to produce monodisperse particles or with controlled polydispersity of which one can choose the diameter between 20 and 2000 μm.
As an example, this invention relates to the monodisperse compositions containing one or several thermosensitive active ingredients such as pro-biotics, presenting characters of revivability directly according to a residence time at a temperature included between 30° C. and 90° C. However the thermosensitive character of such compositions limits the choice of the fat contents at high melting point being appropriate for their microencapsulation. The mixture of pro-biotics with the molten fat contents should not be exposed for a too long time at a lethal temperature. In a surprising way it was noted that the method described above makes it possible to reduce the time of contact of a pro-biotic medium with the molten fat contents at values ranging between 10 to 1000 milliseconds (preferably between 15 and 100 milliseconds), and to obtain, starting from musts of fermentation presenting initial concentrations in pro-biotics ranging between 105 and 1012, monodisperse dry compositions or with controlled polydispersity, whose diameter can be selected between 20 and 2000 μm, pro-biotics starting from pure phylum or mixtures of phylums presenting rates of revivability ranging between approximately 104 to 105 and approximately 1011 to 1012, which thus corresponds to lower losses to a log. Each particle presents uniform characteristics allowing the division of a batch in many homogeneous sub-batches and with the same characteristics as the “master” batch, and remarkable flow properties.
Very homogeneous calibration and granulometry being able to be very fine make it possible to reduce considerably the soak time of the sensitive substances to heat while guaranteeing, better than previously, physicochemical and biological qualities of the product obtained.
As another example, this invention relates to the pulverulent compositions based on one or several essential oils presenting a monodisperse character or with controlled polydispersity, whose diameter can be selected between 20 and 2000 μm, micro-encapsulated according to the method of the invention by concomitant injection of a matrix containing fat contents at high melting point, without contact between the essential oils and the molten fat contents make modifications or distortions through an over-long exposure to a too high temperature of the lightest volatile fractions of the essential oil or of the mixture of essential oils. The monodisperse character or with controlled polydispersity of the products obtained makes it possible to control penetration or distribution rates; thus in the cosmetic field, the use of such preparations of essential monodisperse oils brings additional guarantees against the risks of crossing the epithelial barrier for applications known as medicine of improvement; one thus mainly eliminates the problems arising from the nanoparticles in the field of cosmetics and the result of these ultra fine particles able to cross aleatory the dermic barrier with risk of penetration in underlying vital tissue. (See “Nano derm research project” financed by the European Commission). In a surprising way, the structure of the solid particles obtained appears as perfectly spherical spheres, whose average D diameter can be generally between 20 and 2000 μm, with a span ranging between 0.12 and 0.25 (the meaning of the word “span” will be specified further).
As another example, this invention relates to compositions containing one or several enzymes having a monodisperse granulometry or granulometry with controlled polydispersity whose diameter can be selected between 20 and 2000 μm and from which the enzymatic function must be protected either by a mass microencapsulation or/and by a film forming matrix; as a specific example, the SOD, enzyme with an antioxidant function, papain etc . . . .
These enzymes or mixtures of enzymes may also be used in human or animal feed or within the framework of integrated methods. They present, thanks to the invention, rates of resistance to the compression which are homogeneous from one particle to another. After passing in compressing presses for the production of pellets intended for animal feeds one observes a rate of distortion of the enzymatic activity largely lower than than one observes for products obtained by uncontrolled polydisperse granulometry.
As other examples this invention relates to the compositions of extracts of plants or pharmaceutical active ingredients with monodisperse granulometry or granulometry with controlled polydispersity, presenting characters of reinforced or preserved bioavailability, and as such by the control of the selection of monodisperse granulometry or granulometry with controlled polydispersity or the mix of several monodisperse granulometry or granulometry with controlled polydispersity of which the diameter (s) may be selected between 20 and 2000 μm.
As another example, this invention relates to the compositions of pre-biotics of a monodisperse nature or controlled polydispersity nature whose granulometry is selected to optimize the kinetics of fermentation. As an example the production of a powder of monodisperse lactulose stable and instantaneously dispersible makes it possible to obtain homogeneous pre-biotic effects in the production of yoghurts with added monodisperse lactulose powder or lactulose powder with controlled polydispersity whose diameter can be selected between 20 and 2000 μm.
As another example, this invention relates to the compositions of powders of monodisperse vitamins or vitamins with controlled polydispersity and in particular of liposoluble vitamins (examples: riboflavin, Vitamin E, Vitamin D3): less distortion of the vitamin activity at the time of the “prilling” operations (solidification by freezing).
As other examples, this invention relates to the compositions based on flavanoids, sterols, phytosterols, carotenoids, poly-unsaturated fatty acids (examples: asthaxanthine, hesperidin, Ω3, Ω6).
As another example, this invention relates to compositions presenting one or more active ingredients included in a lipidic compound with high melting point, with an additional effect of “visual marker with active effect”. Such compositions are typically intended to be maintained in suspension in shampoos, lotions and creams.
According to another example, this invention relates to the compositions of mineral substances in the form of liquids or suspensions (slurry) such as ceramics, rare earths, talc, monodisperse or with controlled polydispersity making it possible to optimize the properties of compressibility, porosity and sintering, as well as the same properties after calcination.
As an example, this invention relates to gelling compositions containing gums (arabic gum, guar gum, alginates, carrageenans) of animal or vegetable gelatin, and polysaccharides in gelling matter.
As an example, this invention relates to the aromatic or scenting compositions with safeguarding of the lightest volatile fractions thanks to a better microencapsulation of the top flavor. This is particularly interesting for fresh natural products where the top notes are particularly fragile and volatile.
The examples mentioned above can also be combined between them for nutritional, food, cosmetic, pharmaceutical applications or fine chemicals.
The invention thus proposes, in particular, a method of preparation of a agro-alimentary, nutritional, cosmetic, pharmaceutical composition and fine chemicals, comprising the stages consisting in:
The mixture typically takes place in a central channel of addiction with a residence time which can be modified by adjustment or choice of the length of the central channel; at output of channel the mixture rolls on itself on the vibrating disc with an uninterrupted coating effect by the judiciously selected film forming product.
In the same way and in a surprising way, the association of a disc or another vibro-rotary body and a drying tower initially conceived and equipped to carry out drying operations by atomisation either by means of nozzles or of turbines, makes it possible to produce co-drying operations for obtaining monodisperse powders or powders with controlled polydispersity and/or for the improvement of the standard span (one will later define the concept of span). This association can if required consist in integrating a vibro-rotary disc, in particular with central channel, on an atomisation tower known as simple effect, a dual effect tower, known as with W bottom, a multiple purpose tower integrating a fluidization level at bottom of tower, and one or more vibro-fluidizers. The method consists of the original design of a vibro-rotary disc unit integrating the systems of powder injection (of granulometry multidisperse or monodisperse or with controlled polydispersity) in a fog of monodisperse drops or drops with controlled polydispersity in order to obtain particles presenting of the concentrations uniformly distributed to the scale of each monodisperse particle or particle with controlled polydispersity.
The monodisperse size or with controlled polydispersity of the particles thus obtained makes it possible to avoid the risks of heterogeneous effects related to the differential kinetics of transfer of the micro-encapsulated active ingredients, dependant on particles which are either too large and thus do not pass the requested barrier, or too small and cross too quickly or even cross higher thicknesses, for example at the level of the epithelial cells of the intestine, or even at the level of the derm for external actions.
It is thus possible, for example, to target a dimension of final monodisperse particles of 70 μm in size with a span of 0.15, guaranteeing a given threshold of penetration and/or a speed of intra-membrane transfer optimized by taking account of the required kinetics of bioavailability.
From a statistical point of view, the dispersion degree of a sampling of N particles of Di diameter is commonly characterized by a normal Gaussian distribution whose standard deviation α is described below:
α≦0.2
The expression “monodisperse particles” indicates, according to the invention, particles whose average size presents a standard deflection coefficient of a Gaussian distribution 0.05≦α≦0.1 equivalent to a Span: 0.25≦Span≦1.
The expression “particles with controlled polydispersity” indicates, according to the invention, particles whose average size presents a standard deflection coefficient of a Gaussian distribution 0.1≦α≦0.4, equivalent to a Span: 0.25≦Span≦1.
As described in the table below, the known apparatuses, whether they function by drying of droplets drawn into a carrier gas or cooling of droplets by a carrier gas, if they are equipped with traditional devices of pulverisation with nozzles, turbines disk or perforated heads, do not make it possible to obtain monodisperse particles and seldom particles with controlled polydispersity with a span lower than 1.
On the contrary, the invention allows manufacture of all these solid particles, or in the course of solidification, with or without microencapsulation, and whose span lies between 0.12 and 1.
The apparatus aim of the invention provides aerosols with a monodisperse dispersion or with controlled polydispersity.
With regard to the application in the encapsulation by solidification of droplets of liquid by cooling by a carrier gas, the variation of the parameters will concern:
One determines the quantity of liquid or powder which one injects, according to at least one characteristic of the composition to obtain. This characteristic typically comprises thermo-resistance (enzymes, vitamins, thermosensitive bioactives molecules of plant extracts), the revivability (live micro-organisms, bacteria, yeasts, moulds), the retention of the volatile molecules (essential oils, aromas, perfumes), oxidation (fat contents, oils, waxes, oleoresins), the antibiotic capacity (essential oils, antibiotics), the prevention of the formation of bad tastes by destruction or modification of the composition under the effect of the temperature (prevention of the formation of burnt flavour, reactions of Maillard), etc
The invention still has as an aim, according to another of its aspects, a new apparatus resulting from the association of a system of production of monodisperse aerosols or with polydispersity controlled instead of the systems of pulverisation by nozzles or turbines traditionally equipping the atomisation towers, the spray-cooling or prilling towers or any other equipment necessary to the pulverisation of a liquid composition in a gas. This apparatus is intended for the preparation of compositions intended for agro-alimentary, nutritional, cosmetic, pharmaceutical applications and fine chemicals, including an active substance of a biochemical, chemical or mineral nature, solubilized in an aqueous or organic phase, or mixtures of these substances, of which pulverisation in a gas flow, able to be for example air, makes it possible to obtain micro-encapsulated solid particles, of a monodisperse nature or controlled polydispersity, with a span lower than 1.
According to other aspects of the invention, there exist many possible configurations making it possible to associate the system of production of monodisperse aerosols or with polydispersity controlled with an atomisation or prilling tower.
Among the major advantages of the invention, the new apparatuses aim of the invention provides performance as regards productivity (ratio of dry input matter to output matter) higher than 95%, compared to the standard materials known to the expert whose yield ranges between 85% and 95%. This surprising report was carried out by measuring the rate of fine particles (thus loss of matter) in the carrier gas. One found a rate much lower than 200 mg/Nm3 of gas, whereas standard units of drying tower type by atomisation, or spray-cooling towers or prilling towers equipped normally with cyclones lead at exit of cyclones to values ranging between 200 and 400 mg/Nm3 of gas.
Another benefit of the invention is the homogenization of the modes of heat transfers attached to the monodispersion of drops in a laminar gas flow during the changes of state such as evaporation or solidification with possible energy saving. The extremely homogeneous size of the droplets makes it possible to proportion with precision the thermal contribution with the just sufficient value. One thus minimizes the thermal stress of the particles while saving energy and while being certain that all the droplets are completely treated.
Taking into account the very great dimensional homogeneity of the produced particles, the invention often makes it possible to exempt complex systems such as primary and secondary cyclones in series, filters bags, air washers, etc, normally essential to separate the fine particles at exit.
In all cases, even if it proves to be necessary to install such systems for safety reasons, the invention makes it possible to reduce their size very significantly. And one minimizes in any event the loss in matter constituted of fine particles.
Other characteristics and benefits of the invention will still arise from the description hereafter, relative to nonrestrictive examples.
At the appended drawings:
In the example represented in
Shaft 12 is integrally linked to the rotation of the rotor 14 (
Interior space 21 of the tubular shaft 12 constitutes a delivery route for the substance to be pulverised. It emerges by an opening 22 through the face 23 of the disc 11 which is turned contrary to the motor 16. Opening 22 widens in a trumpet shape to form a transition curve between the cylindrical interior wall of shaft 12 and the planar surface 23.
The face 23 of the disc constitutes, in a manner known per se, a centrifugal ejection face for the substance to be pulverised. By centrifugal effect due to rotation of disc 11, the substance to be pulverised arriving by the opening 22 forms a thin layer on the ejection face 23. The substance is then projected radially by centrifugal effect beyond the peripheral ejection edge 24 of the ejection face 23. The edge 24 is circular, centered on axis 13. Radially beyond the edge 24, the thin layer splits typically into liquid ligaments then into droplets. The edge 24 can be smooth, as represented, or have regular notches to encourage the formation of a flow line at the end of each notch. The ejection face 11 can be smooth or grooved.
In a manner known per se, a vibration maintained in the disc 11 has the effect of producing droplets which are all substantially of the same size. According to this invention, the vibration consists of making the area of the ejection edge 24 vibrate relative to the central part of disc 11 and shaft 12. Such a mode of vibratory deformation is illustrated in
Such a mode of vibratory deformation typically presents a very high sympathetic vibration frequency, which may reach 100 kHz or even more. For efficiency and energy cost reasons, it is technically advantageous to maintain the vibration of the disc in the vicinity of its sympathetic vibration frequency. In addition, the frequency of vibration is a parameter which allows regulation of the gauge of the drops produced. Consequently, the head according to the invention having a very high sympathetic vibration frequency makes it possible to produce particularly small drops, with for example a diameter of 20 micrometers.
The sympathetic vibration frequency of a vibration depends in particular on the elastic stiffness of the body undergoing the vibratory deformation and on the mass moved by the vibration. It is thus possible to choose the sympathetic vibration frequency of the disc during its manufacture, and to manufacture different discs having different sympathetic vibration frequencies.
To maintain the vibration of the disc 11 under operation, piezoelectric cells 26 have been fixed to face 27 of the disc 11 which is turned towards the motor 16, i.e. the opposite face to the ejection face 23. As schematically represented in
As shown in the
The pulverisation head includes moreover a means of delivering the substance to be pulverised. The delivery means include the interior space 21 of shaft 12. In the example represented where the ejection face 23 is turned to the bottom while the substance to be pulverised moves downwards in the interior space 21 of shaft 12, the internal diameter of shaft 12 is chosen to be sufficiently small so that the substance, according to its viscosity, does not fall axially from the device by gravity, but remains on the contrary in capillary contact with interior surfaces of shaft 12, in particular of sleeve 37, and of the opening 22, and with the ejection face 23.
If the substance to be pulverised is made of only one constituent, or several constituents mixed beforehand, one can connect the end of shaft 12 opposite the disc 23 with the delivery tube of a proportioning pump via a revolving connection. The pump sends the substance into the interior space 21 of shaft 12, with a flow which can be regulated.
In the more sophisticated example which is represented in
The two tubes 38, 39 emerge in the interior space 21 of the hollow shaft 12 at a certain distance below this side of the opening 22, so that, along this distance, the interior space 21 constitutes a mixing zone for the two constituents. The mixing action is reinforced by the rotation of shaft 12 and the two tubes. Preferably, the axial position of the two tubes is adjustable by telescopic sliding motion in the shaft. This makes allows regulation of the length of the mixing zone.
One of the two constituents can be a powder. In a first typical version, the powder has a much finer particle size than the droplets to be produced by pulverisation. The other constituent is then typically a matrix which will join together in each droplet a large number of powder particles. In another typical version, the particle size of the powder is close to that of the aerosol to be produced. For example, the powder is made up of monodisperse or controlled polydisperse spherical balls, manufactured in advance by means of a first use of the invention, constituting a pulverisation followed by solidification by drying or freezing. In this case of a coarser powder, the mixture arriving on the ejection surface forms a thin layer of liquid constituent in which the powder particles roll before being ejected to form the aerosol droplets, each of which comprising a powder grain coated with the liquid component. The liquid component for example is intended to form an encapsulating film around the powder particle.
Under operation, one regulates or chooses the parameters, in particular the flow of the substance, or the respective flows of the components, their respective temperature, the diameter and the elastic stiffness of the disc, the vibration frequency, the surface quality of the disc, etc according to the nature of the components, the size of the droplets to be produced, and the quantities to be produced per unit of time.
The examples represented in
In the example represented in
In the example represented in
The vibro-rotary disc of the pulverisation head represented in
The substances to be pulverised are frequently heated to reduce their viscosity. Moreover, the two walls 49, 51 form a thermal barrier which tends to prevent evacuation of the heat produced by the motor 16. For these two reasons, the presence of the annular conduit 48 around the motor 16 can harm the cooling of the motor 16. To improve this, the motor 16 is assembled in a hollow jacket 53 in which circulates a liquid coolant. The liquid arrives in the jacket 53 and leaves the jacket 53 by connections 54. At the end toward disc 11, the jacket 53 forms a dome 57 which covers the corresponding end of the motor 16. The dome 57 comprises a central opening 58 crossed by the tubular shaft 12 with a certain clearance. The jacket 53 can for example be installed around the casing 17 represented in
According to another characteristic of the embodiment of
Under operation, the substances which are conveyed respectively for one or the other of the two ejection faces 23, 47 mix when they cross the ejection edge 24.
The embodiment of
There are now two vibro-rotary discs 71, 72 having as their shared center the general axis 13, and which are both integrally linked to the hollow shaft 12. The discs are represented full but they could be made hollow, as in
Under operation, the two substances feeding the two ejection faces of each disc mix when they arrive at the shared ejection edge 84 or 85 of that disc. The aerosol obtained typically comprises a mixture of droplets resulting from the nearer disc and droplets resulting from the further disc. This embodiment is useful to produce a great quantity of droplets of the same nature if the discs are fed with identical substances, or of two different natures if otherwise. One can regulate or choose the production and/or functional parameters relating to each disc and the associated substances so that the mixture of substances is in a determined ratio in the aerosol.
Even if the discs are fed with the same substances, one can make each disc produce droplets of a different size by choosing different parameters for the two discs.
The distribution in full feature is known as “monodisperse”. Almost all the particles have a diameter very close to the central value Dpq which is at the same time the value for which one finds the greatest number of particles.
The distribution in mixed feature is known as “controlled polydisperse”. It resembles the previous distribution, but the diameter values are less well gathered close to the central value Dpq.
The expert defines a parameter called “span” which characterizes a distribution such as those represented in
Span=(D90−D10)/D50
In which:
D90 is the interval of values (diameters) in which one finds 90% of the particles by volume closest to the central value,
D10 is the interval of values (diameters) in which one finds 10% of the particles by volume closest to the central value, and
D50 is the interval of values (diameters) in which one finds 50% of the particles by volume closest to the central value.
In
Span≈2.5αv
There also exists the following relation between the span and the standard deviation in volume σv:
Span≈(2.5σv)/D50
The more uniform the particle size, the lower the span value.
Within the framework of the invention, particle size is considered monodisperse when the span lies between 0.12 and 0.25. Particle size is considered controlled polydisperse when the span lies between 0.25 and 1.0. These values are very strict because the performances offered by the pulverisation method according to the invention are much higher than those permitted by current known methods. The best known methods claim obtaining monodisperse particle sizes for spans which are generally not lower than 1.0.
The supply of material to be pulverised to the head 104 is schematized by a tank 106 followed by a proportioning pump 107. The vibro-rotary disc 11 of the head 104 is in the interior space of the enclosure. The ejection surface of disc 11 defines a plan 108 of centrifugal droplet ejection. This plane extends perpendicular to axis 13, 113 at a certain distance below the higher wall 102.
The head 104 is surrounded by an air distributor 109, of known type, which produces all around the head 104, towards the interior of enclosure 101, a flow of air 111, of general tubular form. The treatment flow 111 meets the ejection plane 108 in the droplet formation zone and thus draws the droplets downwards away from the plane 108.
In this example, it is a flow of hot air which dries the droplets which then come to accumulate on the bottom 112 of the enclosure, from where they are recovered through an opening 114 and means of evacuation 116. Arrows 117 illustrate that the bottom of the enclosure can comprise means for a secondary injection of air producing a fluidised bed for the particles coming to gather on the bottom 112.
In the example represented, the tower is of W-bottomed type. This means that the bottom 112 presents along axis 113 a conical dome 117 pointing towards the interior of the enclosure and whose top consists of an opening 118 of evacuation of used, i.e. moist, air generated by the drying of the particles. At least one other air exit 119 can also be envisaged in the upper area of the side wall of the enclosure. Thanks to the invention, the used air contains virtually no fine particles. It is therefore not necessary to pass the used air through a dust removal or separation system. On the contrary, according to a characteristic of the invention, this used air is sent directly to the first stage 121 from a heat exchanger 122, preferably without even passing through a filter. The second stage 123 of the heat exchanger 122 is crossed by new air intended to feed the distributor 109. At the exit of the second stage 123, the new air is propelled by a fan 124, passes through a filter 126 and then a heater 127.
In the heat exchanger 122, the used air yields its heat to the new air 123. Thus, the heater 127 need only provide a little heat to regulate the temperature of the airflow 111.
As shown in
The circle D represents the introduction of the carrier gas, which can be cold for the solidification of the aerosol in the spray-cooling version or hot in the version for drying by atomisation, via the ventilator 124.
The circle E represents the introduction of the secondary carrier gas, for the drying and/or final cooling of the stabilized final composition obtained, solid or in the course of solidification via a ventilator 137.
A cyclone 138 separates all or part of the finished product F, i.e. the composition in powder form, which is recovered, and the carrier gas G that is evacuated.
An external fluidized vibrating bed 139 can also be envisaged, which would allow the recovery of all or part of the finished product H, i.e. the composition in powder form, by the bottom of the tower.
One could even envisage a powder batcher 141 to add in the pulverisation zone a solid substance in powder form I intended to stabilize the final solid composition. In reference to
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0801608 | Mar 2008 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/FR09/50510 | 3/25/2009 | WO | 00 | 1/27/2011 |