The present invention relates generally to mixing impellers, and in particular to mixing impellers which are rotated by a motor-driven drive shaft for mixing a liquid material having various solid materials entrained therein that may tend to accumulate on a leading edge of the impeller.
Mixing impellers are in wide use in industry. Examples of industrial mixing impellers include designs which have a central hub and two, three, four or more radially extending blade type structures. These blades may be flat, angled, and in some cases have a wing or propeller shape. Typically, the impellers extend radially outwardly from a motor-driven shaft and are submerged inside a material to be mixed. Oftentimes the impellers are in an at least partially liquid mix which is being confined in a vessel, which may be holding the material in a batch process or a continuous process.
In some mixing applications, an undesirable phenomenon occurs wherein various solid materials that are entrained in the liquid material being mixed will tend to accumulate on a leading edge of the impeller and form lumps, strings, or so-called “rags.” One way to understand this phenomenon is to consider impellers used on boats, which will capture weeds that adhere to a leading edge of the boat propeller and impede its operational efficiency. Similarly, a ceiling fan often accumulates dust on its leading edge which will form into elongated filaments or streams.
A similar phenomenon occurs, particularly, for example, in the case of mixing impellers used for wastewater or sewage water treatment, wherein the material being mixed often has various types of crud, solid particulates, hair and other non-dissolving material. As the water is being treated, these materials may tend to adhere to the leading edge of existing impellers, which reduces the flow over the impeller type, and reduces the efficiency of the impeller and may cause overload, vibration and possible damage to the equipment.
In many industrial applications, the impellers are so-called “axial flow” in which the liquid in the region of the impeller is being pumped in the direction generally parallel to the axis of the drive shaft (perpendicular to the direction of the extensions of the blades). In other instances, the impellers may be the so-called “radial flow” type, in which the material is generally being urged radially outwardly away from the drive shaft in a direction parallel to the direction of the extensions of the blades. Some impellers have been known to utilize a circular base having paddles radially extending outwardly therefrom.
In view of the foregoing, it is desirable to have a “weedless” mixing impeller that can mitigate, at least to some extent, the effect of the development of “rags” or other collections adhering to the leading edge of the impeller, or to any edge of the impeller.
Some aspects of some embodiments of the invention provide a mixing impeller that can mitigate, at least to some extent, the effect of the development of “rags” or other collections adhering to the leading edge of the impeller, or to any edge of the impeller.
Accordingly, the present invention is an impeller blade formed of a central base portion having a center axis. At least a pair of impeller blades is extended outwardly from the central base portion. According to one aspect of the invention, a leading edge is formed on each of the impeller blades, with each leading edge being defined by an outer periphery of the central base portion. Each impeller blade includes an extension, with each extension projected from the corresponding impeller blade opposite of the leading edge.
According to another aspect of the invention, each leading edge is formed having at least a portion that forms a continuous curve with a radius decreasing outwardly toward a radial tip of the corresponding impeller blade, wherein the continuous decreasing radius curve of each leading edge is formed by a portion of an ellipse centered on the center axis. According to another aspect of the invention, a short axis of the ellipse is approximately equal to a long axis thereof divided by approximately three and one-half.
Other aspects of the invention are detailed herein.
The foregoing aspects and many of the attendant advantages of this invention will become more readily appreciated as the same becomes better understood by reference to the following detailed description, when taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, wherein:
A detailed illustrative embodiment of the present mixing impeller device is disclosed herein. However, techniques, systems and operating structures in accordance with the present mixing impeller device may be embodied in a wide variety of forms and modes, some of which may be quite different from those in the disclosed embodiment. Consequently, the specific structural and functional details disclosed herein are merely representative, yet in that regard, they are deemed to afford the best embodiment for purposes of disclosure and to provide a basis for the claims herein which define the scope of the present mixing impeller device. The following presents a detailed description of an illustrative embodiment of the present mixing impeller device.
In the Figures, like numerals indicate like elements.
Here, four impeller blades 18 are illustrated, each having a projecting extension 20; however, fewer or more, impeller blades 18 may be provided. Impeller blades 18 may be symmetrically disposed around center axis 16 of central base portion 14. As disclosed herein, impeller blade 10 is optionally of a unitary design. Such a design is convenient to form from a single flat plate which is cut to the desired outline shape, and impeller blade extensions 20 are bent by a suitable mechanical process.
However, in some cases, for example, in the case of large size impellers, it may be desirable to fabricate impeller 10 from a plurality of parts that are welded together or otherwise attached to each other. For example, individual blade extensions 20 are optionally welded on at an angle to corresponding impeller blade 18, and/or central base portion 14 itself and associated impeller blades 18 may be made of individual components each with an associated blade extension 20.
Alternatively, impeller 10 is optionally fabricated by welding together multiple plates. The plates may be configured so they are welded together end-to-end, thus creating a flat central base portion 14, or they may be fabricated to overlap each other and thus be stacked on each other. In such a case, central base portion 14 would have a greater thickness equal to the number of stacked plates. If the thickness of the plates is relatively thin overall, then it may be sufficient to have the thickness of central base portion 14 having steps formed where the plates overlap.
Central base portion 14 has a plurality of leading edges 22, with the number of leading edges 22 corresponding to the number of impeller blades 18. Each leading edge 22 extends from central base portion 14 at a transition location 24 of a next adjacent blade extension 20 outwardly to a radial tip 26 of corresponding impeller blade 18.
As illustrated here, each leading edge 22 has continuous instantaneous radius decreasing from a maximum instantaneous radius R as it extends from transition location 24 of one blade extension 20 to a minimum instantaneous radius r at radial tip 26 of corresponding impeller blade 18.
As disclosed here, leading edge 22 of each impeller blade 18 is formed as approximately one-quarter of an ellipse 28 having a long axis 30 equal to a diameter D of impeller 10 and a short axis 32 approximately equal to impeller diameter D divided by 3.5, expressed as D/3.5. Alternatively, the divisor by which the dividend (impeller diameter D) is divided is between about three (3) and four (4), whereby the relationship may be defined as D/3, or D/4 or another divisor between 3 and 4. Other suitable designs for leading edge 22 of impeller blade 18 that are defined by an outer periphery of central base portion 14 having at least a portion that forms a continuous curve having a radius decreasing outwardly toward radial tip 26 of corresponding impeller blade 18, regardless of either the specific divisor or the specific relationship between decreasing radius and diameter D of impeller 10, are also contemplated and may be substituted without deviating from the scope and intent of the present invention. Each leading edge 22 is centered on center axis 16 of central base portion 14, whereby each ellipse 28 is positioned having an offset 34 equal to one-half of ellipse short axis 32, expressed as D/7. Accordingly, leading edge 22 of each individual impeller blade 18 does not form a spiral as described in U.S. Pat. No. 7,473,025 of Richard Howk entitled “Mixing impeller with spiral leading edge,” which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
Rather, leading edge 22 forms a portion of a continuous elliptical shape with continuous instantaneous radius R, r decreasing outwardly from adjacent to center axis 16 toward radial tip 26 of corresponding impeller blade 18. A benefit of this continuous outwardly decreasing instantaneous radius R, r shape is an effectively “weedless” impeller 10 that operates in dirty products with leading edges 22 minimizing accumulation of “rags”: weeds, hair, strings, solid particulates, and other non-dissolving matter, on blades 18.
The angle between leading edges 22 and the material being mixed, the “angle of attack,” is a small angle adjacent to center axis 16 of central base portion 14, but continuously gradually increases to a larger angle toward radial tip 26 of corresponding impeller blade 18, such that leading edge 22 tends to be in shear with the material being mixed and tends not to collect “rags.”
Impeller 10 is disclosed herein by example and without limitation as having a the angle of attack gradually increasing continuously along its length toward radial tip 26 of corresponding impeller blade 18 from a minimum angle of attack a as it extends from transition location 24 of one blade extension 20 to a maximum angle of attack A at radial tip 26 of corresponding impeller blade 18. However, in other embodiments, it may be only a portion of leading edge 22 that has this gradual change in angle of attack. In such instances, some parts of leading edge 22 may be simply arcuate (circular) around instantaneous radius R, r of leading edge 22. Also, the continuous elliptical arc described herein is alternatively composed of adjacent straight segments approximating the elliptical arc shape of ellipse 28.
Outer side edges 36 of individual blade extensions 20 projected from impeller blades 18 are substantially straight or slightly arcuate. Here, outer side edge 36 are illustrated as being an arcuate shape resulting from initial formation of impeller flat plate 12, and thus outer side edges 36 are geometric continuations of diameter D of impeller 10. Inner side edges 38 of individual blade extensions 20 are illustrated as a portion of ellipse 28 of leading edge 22. However, outer and inner side edges 36 and 38 can also have other shapes, and for example, individual blade extensions 20 rather than being a relatively rectangular flat extension, as illustrated, are alternatively triangular, trapezoidal, or another non-rectangular shape. Alternative shapes may be particularly advantageous where individual blade extensions 20 are separately formed from central base portion 14 and independently welded or otherwise joined onto impeller blades 18.
As disclosed herein, impeller 10 includes a central aperture 44 along center axis 16 through central base portion 14, through which drive shaft S can pass. Hub 42 is aligned with central aperture 44. Hub 42 is affixed onto central base portion 14, both axially and rotationally, by any of many suitable attachment methods. For example, hub 42 is optionally welded or bolted to central base portion 14. Alternatively, hub 42 is optionally formed integrally with central base portion 14 of impeller 10. Here, hub 42 includes an optional keyway 46 mateable with a mating key (not shown) on drive shaft S. Hub 42 may include a threaded aperture 48 for receiving a set screw (not shown) for interlocking the key between drive shaft S and keyway 46 of impeller hub 42. Other suitable designs for hub 42, as well as attachment methods suitable for both axially and rotationally affixing hub 42 onto central base portion 14, are also contemplated and may be included and/or substituted without deviating from the scope and intent of the present invention.
According to one embodiment, strong backs 50 are affixed, as by bolting or welding, to individual impeller blades 18 for assuring rigidity of impeller 10.
An advantage of the embodiment disclosed herein is simplicity and ease of manufacture. Flat sheet material may be cut, and then blade extensions 20 bent from plane P of central base portion 14. Of course, other manufacturing methods may be utilized, and as discussed above, entire impeller 10 can be integral, or formed of a plurality of individual components which are attached together.
An advantage of the disclosed manufacturing method is that a single set of flat impeller blanks 12 can be cut out, and then different ones can have each of their blade extensions 20 bent to different pitch angles X, permitting easy, test, adjustment, or adaptation of impellers 10. Different power factors or performance are possible from the same blank 12 simply by varying the pitch angle X at which blade extensions 20 are bent.
In this disclosure, the word “impeller” is used to refer to the entire structure of impeller 10, which includes central base portion 14 that forms leading edges 22, as well as blade extensions 20. Of course, individual blade extensions 20 may be considered as blades, and are also referred to as flow inducer portions. The selection of the term “impeller” to describe the entire structure of impeller 10, the use of the term “blade” to describe individual extensions 18, and the use of “extension” to describe components 20 angled from plane P is for convenience and not intended to limit the scope of the description in any way. Also, the term “blade” 18 refers to the flat structure that comprises leading edges 22, or to the structure other than blade extensions 20.
While the preferred and additional alternative embodiments of the invention have been illustrated and described, it will be appreciated that various changes can be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. Therefore, it will be appreciated that various changes can be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. Accordingly, the inventor makes the following claims.
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