The invention relates to a method for the mechanical processing of pigments and pharmaceutically active substances.
The techniques of wet-chemical synthesis are primarily used for producing the aforementioned products. The respective pigments of the pharmaceutically active substances are precipitated out in the pure form, wherein these precipitates are subsequently treated in filtering units and dried in thermal driers.
Agglomerates develop during the drying process, meaning the pigments and pharmaceutically active substances are not present in the required fine powdery form. Rather, the pigments and pharmaceutically active substances are present in the form of non-uniform agglomerates, which can range in size from μm to cm. A comminuting of these agglomerates is difficult because of the differences in their structures. However, a conveying, metering out or further processing of the pigments and pharmaceutically active substances is only conditionally possible in the agglomerated state.
It is therefore the object of the present invention to provide a method for producing high-quality pigments or pharmaceutically active substances in powdery form.
This object is solved with the features disclosed in claim 1. Advantageous embodiments and useful modifications of the invention are described in the dependent claims.
The method according to the invention is used for the mechanical processing of pigments or pharmaceutically active substances that are present in the form of particles. The particles in the form of a raw product are classified during a first processing step. Particles classified as fine in the classifier are then discharged as acceptable products. Large particles that remain as residual material in the classifier are supplied to a device in which the particles are comminuted during a second processing step.
The method according to the invention is used to produce powdery pigments and pharmaceutically active substances, which can easily be processed further because of their defined and narrow particle-size distribution. In particular, the method according to the invention is designed to achieve an effective breakup of most of the agglomerated pigments and pharmaceutically active substances.
It is critical for the method according to the invention that these particles are classified prior to the comminuting operation. During the classification, fine particles which already have the desired small particle sizes are classified as acceptable materials and are removed from the processing, meaning they are no longer supplied to the comminuting device. The device is therefore supplied only with large particles which accumulate in the classifier as residual matter. Since the fine particles are no longer fed to the device, any agglutination or clogging of the device caused by these particles is avoided. A further critical advantage is that owing to the initial classification, the device is supplied only with the material share containing large particles and not the total amount of the raw material. As a result, only a small portion of the raw products must be processed inside the device, thus making it possible to select a correspondingly low capacity for the device.
Claim 4 describes a particularly advantageous form of the method for comminuting the particles. In general, these particles are in the form of a plug and are shot with the aid of a pressure pulse against a baffle plate, wherein the plug is shot through a pipe and then flies freely outward from the pipe and toward the baffle plate. The pressure of the pulse, preferably a compressed air pulse, drops in the process and, in turn, causes a lowering of the temperature during the comminuting process at the baffle plate. Damaging thermal effects on the particles are thus avoided, especially the agglutination of the particles. A favorable thermal behavior of this type is a specific feature of the method as disclosed in claim 4. In contrast, a temperature increase generally occurs during comminuting processes in arrangements such as pinned disk mills and the like.
The invention is explained in the following with the aid of the drawings, which show in:
The sequence of method steps for the mechanical processing of these raw products is shown in
A classifier K and a device 1 are the essential components for realizing the method illustrated in
In a first classification step, the raw products are classified inside a classifier K. The particles 2 that are classified as fine particles in the classifier K are then discharged from the processing operation as acceptable products. Corresponding to the design of the classifier K, for example embodied as screening machine, fine particles 2 up to a maximum diameter are discharged as acceptable products. The particle-size spectrum for the acceptable products, which are removed from the raw products, is shown schematically in
During the classification, large particles 2 remain in the classifier K in the form of residual material. The residual particles 2 that remain in the classifier K are given the reference X in
Reference 3 in
The particle-size spectra in
In principle, the particle flows with references X, X′, shown in
A particularly advantageous embodiment, shown in
The arrangement shown in
Analog to the diagram according to
The particles 2, which are comminuted in the device 1, are preferably discharged from the device by means of an air flow. Inside the precipitator A, the particles 2 are precipitated out of the air flow and are collected in the temporary storage P1, which can again be embodied as a container. The amount X′ of comminuted particles 2 is then recycled from the container back to the classifier K, preferably discontinuously and at predetermined time intervals.
The device 1 shown in
The comminuting chamber 3 is provided with a circular flange 5 at the open upper end, with thereon positioned baffle plate 6 that is preferably composed of steel and embodied as a circular disk. The baffle plate 6 contains a predetermined number of openings 7. For the exemplary embodiment shown herein, the openings 7 are round bore holes. A discharge pipe 4 adjoins each of the openings 7.
The baffle plate 6 can be installed easily on the device 1 by mounting it on the circular flange 5. In particular, the baffle plate 6 can be exchanged without requiring an involved assembly and can be replaced with different baffle plates 6 having differently arranged openings 7.
Two pipes 8, 8′ inside the comminuting chamber 3 extend parallel to the longitudinal axis of the comminuting chamber 3. In principle, it is also possible to provide only one pipe 8 or 8′, wherein a larger number of pipes 8, 8′ can also be provided.
The pipes 8, 8′ are positioned directly adjacent to each other in the center of the comminuting chamber 3 and discharge into the bottom 9 of this chamber. The exit openings on the upper ends of the pipes 8, 8′ are positioned at a predetermined distance to the baffle plate 6.
An opening 10 is provided in the side wall of the comminuting chamber 3. Via this opening 10, the inside space of the comminuting chamber 3 is filled up to a specified filling level with the particles 2 to be comminuted. With the arrangement according to
Two feed pipes 11, 11′ empty into the bottom 9 of the comminuting chamber 3. The upper sections of these feed pipes 11, 11′ extend parallel to the sections of pipes 8, 8′ that project past the comminuting chamber 3. The lower ends of the feed pipes 11, 11′ are curved, thereby extending toward the pipes 8, 8′, wherein respectively one feed pipe 11, 11′ empties into one pipe 8, 8′. Owing to this embodiment of the pipes 8, 8′, a portion of the particles 2 is guided from the comminuting chamber 3 via the feed pipes 11, 11′ into the lower ends of the pipes 8, 8′ and forms a plug 12 with a specified filling level. In
Respectively one pressure pulse unit 13, 13′ with a valve 14, 14′ adjoins the lower end of each pipe 8, 8′. The plug 12 at the lower end can thus be subjected to a pressure pulse of a predetermined level and duration via the pressure pulse unit 13, 13′. Gas with a predetermined gas pressure is present at the valve 14, 14′ for generating the pressure pulse, wherein the gas is preferably air. Alternatively, an inert gas, a cryogenic gas, or hot gas can also be used. An abrupt opening of the valve 14, 14′ causes the gas to flow with explosive force into the pipe 8, 8′ above, thereby shooting the plug 12 through the pipe 8, 8′ and against the baffle plate 6. The pressure pulse level typically is in the range of 5 bar to 10 bar. With pressure pulses of this type, the plug 12 can reach movement speeds ranging from 70 m/s to 100 m/s.
In the exemplary embodiment shown in
By opening the valve 14 of the respective pressure pulse unit 13, the plug 12 in the left pipe 8 is shot upward, wherein the snapshot in
After exiting the respective pipe 8, 8′, the plug 12 impacts with the baffle plate 6, wherein the movement direction for the present embodiment is perpendicular to the surface of the baffle plate 6.
It is critical that the duration of the pressure pulse is selected to be shorter than the movement time for the plug 12 inside the respective pipe 8, 8′, so that the plug 12 is no longer admitted with the pressure pulse while traveling the distance between the exit opening of pipe 8, 8′ and the baffle plate 6. An undesirable fanning out of the particles 2 before the particles 2 impact with the baffle plate 6 is consequently avoided, so that the shape of the plug 12 is at least nearly preserved until the particles 2 impact with the baffle plate 6. Owing to the fact that the particles 2 impact in a compact form with the baffle plate 6, the reaction force exerted by the baffle plate 6 propagates through all particles 2 in the plug 12, thereby achieving an efficient and complete comminuting of the particles 2 as a result of the shearing forces acting upon the particles 2.
The particle sizes and the size distributions for the comminuted particles 2 can be predetermined by suitably dimensioning the diameters of the pipes 8, 8′ and through a suitable selection of the number and sizes of the openings 7 in the baffle plate 6.
A control unit that is not shown herein is used to control the pressure pulse units 13, 13′ and to generate with predetermined timing sequences of pressure pulses. The pressure pulse units 13, 13′ are preferably controlled such that a plug 12 is shot alternately from the left or the right pipe 8 or 8′ against the baffle plate 6. The cycles for filling the pipes 8, 8′ with the individual plugs 12 are in the range of seconds or even milliseconds, so that the clocking rate for the pressure pulses can be selected correspondingly high. In this way, the individual plugs 12 are shot quickly and one after another against the baffle plate 6, so that a quasi continuous comminuting process and a correspondingly high throughput can be achieved with the device 1.
Following the shooting of a plug 12 from one of the pipes 8, 8′, the respective pipe 8, 8′ is filled once more with particles 2 via the respective filling pipe 11, 11′, so as to form a new plug 12. It is advantageous in this case that the shock wave resulting from the shooting of a plug 12 shakes up the particles 2 in the comminuting chamber 3, so that these are consequently supplied at an increased speed to the feed pipe 11, 11′, thereby aiding the re-loading of the pipe 8, 8′ to form a plug 12. This loading function is further reinforced by the excess pressure in the upper part of the comminuting chamber 3, which exists when the plug 12 impacts with the baffle plate 6.
In contrast to the exemplary embodiment shown in
A further difference is that feed extensions 17, 17′, which are positioned at an angle to the pipes 8, 8′, discharge into the lower ends of the pipes 8, 8′ in which the respective plugs 12 are located. The valves 14, 14′ for the pressure pulse units 13, 13′ that are not shown in further detail herein are located inside these feed extensions 17, 17′.
The longitudinal axes of the feed pipes 8, 8′ can extend in a horizontal plane that is oriented perpendicular to the longitudinal axis of the device 1 or, as shown in
The final difference to the exemplary embodiment shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2004 045 895.2 | Sep 2004 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP05/10035 | 9/17/2005 | WO | 00 | 3/22/2007 |