Oftentimes bulk materials delivered to jobsites need to be elevated to allow them to be used, delivered to transport, or stored. At elevation, bulk materials are typically routed to chutes or spouts which guide them to silos or other storage; conveyors, augers, or other means of moving the material; or into trailers, trucks, railcars, or other transport vehicles. As jobsite locations can vary, the means for elevating materials must be mobile and able to be set up as needed. Typical methods for elevating bulk materials via mobile material elevators utilize belt conveyors or pneumatic delivery. Downsides to these methods are that conveyors take up a lot of room on a site due to their length and limited incline during operation, whereas pneumatic conveyance is slow and creates significant airborne dust of the material being delivered. Additionally, pneumatic delivery can degrade the material being delivered by breaking the material as the material impacts itself and/or the structure into which it is being delivered.
This invention is different than any prior art in that it addresses the shortcomings of other portable means of elevating materials by utilizing a vertical-standing bucket elevator for conveyance, though other designs such as augers or specialized vertical belt conveyors may be used as well. The uniqueness of this invention is that it makes portable a method of elevating material that is normally a fixed, permanent means of conveyance. The invention is a fully self-contained means of receiving bulk material at a low feeding height typical of truck or railcar hopper delivery, and elevating the material to a height needed for using the material, be it in the oilfield, construction, mining, agriculture, or other fields. At elevation, materials being elevated are directed through a distributor to desired points. The invention utilizes a unit-mounted self-feeder system that swings through an arc of approximately 270 degrees, giving flexibility in positioning so that the unit is not required to be set up in a specific singular manner. Additionally, the feeder is of low profile, allowing the invention to be used with many types of transports that deliver material to the invention for elevation. The capacity of the invention is high, 100+ tons per hour with sand as an example material. Furthermore, because the material is conveyed upward in a bucket where the grains are at rest in relation to each other, and at discharge fall by gravity without being impacted against a solid object at high velocity, the conveyed material is less likely to be damaged by the conveyance process, keeping fines generation to a minimum.
Oilfield hydraulic fracturing is a perfect scenario for use of the present invention, as huge quantities of silica sand are used. The sand is typically pneumatically delivered, but pneumatic delivery releases large quantities of respirable silica dust which, on information and belief, is in the process of being regulated by OSHA to decrease the exposure and subsequent detrimental effects on workers exposed to sand operations at well sites. It is not uncommon for 4 to 6 sand transports to be unloading at one time at frac sites, releasing approximately 1000 cfm per unit of air with silica sand fines for up to 1½ hours for each load of sand delivered to the site. The present invention eliminates the liberation of this high volume of air with silica that is generated by pneumatic delivery. As well, when pneumatically delivered, because the silica sand is blown against the interior plates of the sand trailers commonly used in the industry, it is fractured by impact releasing more fines, with fines being less desirable for frac operations. The present invention reduces the damage to the sand and keeps fines to a minimum with the result being improved frac performance as well as dust mitigation. Additionally, this invention is compatible with the many different and numerous sand storage and distribution units currently built and employed in the fracturing industry, allowing service companies to continue to use equipment they have already paid for without having to replace that existing equipment, providing a substantial economic benefit to the companies.
Other objects, and the many advantages of the present invention, will be made clear to those skilled in the art in the following detailed description of the preferred embodiment(s) of the invention and the drawing(s) appended hereto. Those skilled in the art will recognize, however, that the embodiment(s) of the present invention that are described herein are only examples of specific embodiment(s), set out for the purpose of describing the making and using of the present invention, and that the embodiment(s) shown and/or described herein are not the only embodiment(s) of an apparatus and/or method constructed and/or performed in accordance with the teachings of the present invention. Further, although described herein as having particular application to certain oilfield operations, as noted above, those skilled in the art who have the benefit of this disclosure will recognize that the present invention may be utilized to advantage in many other applications in which large quantities of bulk materials must be elevated, the present invention being described with reference to the oilfield for the purpose of exemplifying the invention, and not with the intention of limiting its scope.
The present invention meets the above-described functions and objectives by providing, in a first embodiment, a bucket elevator trailer comprising a trailer with frame, axles, and wheels, and further comprising a vertical bucket elevator pivotally mounted to the trailer frame; a hydraulic cylinder lift system used to raise the elevator to a first, vertical position and lower the elevator to a second, road-transportable height; hydraulic operated stabilizers, which are preferably gyroscopically controlled, which level the unit assuring true vertical positioning of the elevator; a trailer mounted self-feeder assembly with a hydraulically driven inclined auger; a low-profile under-transport feeder pan hydraulically driven to feed the inclined auger; a rotatable tower mount assembly to which the inclined auger/under transport feeder pan assemblies are attached; a flow path for the material being moved from the top of the inclined auger, into the inside of the tower assembly through the interior of the rotating mount joint, to a chute feeding into the vertical elevator; a hydraulic extension chute which retracts when the elevator is in the second, transport position; a swivel joint between the inclined unit feeder auger and tower assembly through which the material passes; hydraulic cylinders for vertical movement of the inclined auger and the under-transport feeder; a hydraulic rotating mechanism which causes the self-feeder tower assembly to rotate to a first operating position and to stow the assembly in the second position for transport; a distributor mounted to the discharge of the bucket elevator which directs the elevated material into selected spouts which in turn direct the material to desired locations; an engine-driven hydraulic system to provide power to position the elevator, power the elevator, power the self-feeder assembly positioning system, power the self-feeder, power the leveling system, and provide power for other required functions; further comprising the trailer to which the system is mounted and that is provided with racks and holders to transport spouting, pipes, and hoses which convey the material being elevated to a final disposition point. Drag conveyors, belts, and augers are used to further distribute the material which has been elevated to final needed positions.
In a variation of the invention, the bucket elevator discharges at a height where the material vertically conveyed drops after discharge into a single spout or mechanical conveyance (drag chain/auger/belt) leading to a remote distributor, which in turn has multiple spouts attached to fill multiple storage compartments or material use points. This variation uses gravity to distribute the materials being conveyed by the invention to multiple use points rather than a drag chain/auger/other distribution means. The basic invention (portable bucket elevator with self-feeder) remains the same as described earlier and the only change is the discharge equipment and material distribution method.
One variation of the invention described herein is that the truck tractor used to transport the material elevator may be provided with a hydraulic pump system and be connected to the material elevator, negating the need for a motor-driven hydraulic system mounted to the trailer. In this variation, all other facets of the invention remain the same, just the hydraulic source is external rather than on-board.
In another variation of the invention, the transport trailer is built to be significantly shortened at the operational location by uncoupling that part of the trailer ahead of the forward stabilizers and moving the front, or uncoupled, part of the trailer to a staging area away from where the elevating system is being used. This feature may be desired on operating sites which have a limited amount of area for parking the trailer to which the invention is mounted. In one embodiment, the detaching trailer portion is provided with a lift axle which is normally raised, but which is lowered for the trailer size reduction operation, allowing the truck which delivered the unit to remove that part of the trailer described without having to employ any additional equipment to perform this function. There are various arts that can be used to effect trailer separation, but in one embodiment that is new to the industry, this invention uses a trailer frame-wide pilot pin assembly on one half of the trailer which fits into a guide receptacle on the other half of the trailer, making it possible to quickly line up the trailer halves without exact alignment needed when making the connection. The trailer halves are held together using a hydraulic cylinder-positioned clamp which surrounds the mating flanges of the trailer halves on three sides; additionally, hydraulic cylinder actuated locking lugs hold the last flanged side together.
Embodiments of the invention include a unit-mounted, mobile, self-erecting vertical conveyance (bucket elevator (4) in the embodiment shown, but because other systems such as an auger, chain conveyor, or specialty conveyor belts may be used, bucket elevator (4) is referred to herein as a “vertical conveyance” so as to include those, and other systems known in the art). The bucket elevator (4) of the present invention is an improvement over the prior art in that vertical bucket elevators are typically fixed in nature, mounted on concrete pads, and permanently erected by bolting and guying to adjacent structures or to stabilizing points around the elevator—they are not mobile. In addition, typical elevators are lightweight in their construction, as they are not required to self-erect. The bucket elevator (4) of the present invention embodies a pivot point (6) on the side of the elevator around which it rotates and is held in place, rather than a bolted-down base. The elevator (4) of the present invention is raised from its second, transport position to a first, vertical position by hydraulic cylinders (8), which attach to the main frame of the transport trailer (2) and also partway up the vertical leg of the conveyance (4). Due to the dynamic nature of the erection and laydown of the conveyance (4), the construction is substantially heavier than a typical fixed location conveyance and conveyance (4) is further reinforced to resist the forces exerted on it during erection and laydown which is a variance from prior art. As the vertical conveyance (4) is lengthy, it is imperative that it be erected truly vertical because if the inner components (described in detail below) are not vertical, they can rub on the internal walls of the main conveyance structure, wearing out both that structure and the internal movable conveyor components. To effect the vertical erection of the conveyance (4), hydraulic stabilizers (10) attached to the main frame of the unit are utilized; those skilled in the art will also recognized that other structure such as outriggers and jacks may also be used for this purpose and so as used herein, the term “stabilizers” is intended to refer to all such structure that is utilized for this purpose. These stabilizers (10) are controlled manually and/or automatically through electronic controls which utilize a gyroscopic or other types of tilt sensor system to determine true vertical. Alternatively, instrumentation showing vertical inclination and adjusting position-determining jacks, outriggers, or other mechanical means, or sensors are provided for monitoring and controls are operably connected to the stabilizers (10) and/or hydraulic cylinders for vertical conveyance (4) to maintain vertical conveyance (4) in the first, upright position. Because such sensors and controls are known in the art, they are not described in detail here. The stabilizers (10) additionally prevent movement of the unit relative to the ground it is installed on due to wind and/or during operation.
An embodiment of the invention is the main structure of the unit is a trailer (2) which is pulled by a truck tractor (200). Parts of the trailer (2) are the frame, running gear (suspension, axles, tires, and wheels), stabilizers, vertical conveyance lift cylinders and mounts, vertical conveyance mount and pivot, vertical conveyance transport cradle, self-feeder structural mounting, mounting for the self-contained hydraulic system and its components, and lift axle. The axles of the trailer specifically have a mounting spread (70) which allows the vertical conveyance (4) to be erected upright between the axles (see
In the embodiment shown, the functions of the invention are operated with hydraulics. The unit has a self-contained hydraulic power unit (150) which consists of an engine which drives the hydraulic pump, the hydraulic pump and connecting couplers to the engine, a hydraulic tank with filtration, valves for controlling the functions of the systems, plumbing (hoses and pipes), motion control cylinders (main conveyance lift (8), feeder pan motion (38), elevating feeder auger lift (22), self-feeder rotation turntable drive system (20); drive systems for the vertical elevating conveyance, material elevating self-feeder conveyance (22); and the under-transport self-feeder pan (30) drive assembly. In the embodiment shown, the vertical conveyance (4) folds down from the first, vertical position shown in
Another embodiment of the invention differing from prior art is the self-loading feeder (indicated generally at reference numeral (52) in
The feeder pan assembly (30) as embodied herein uses screw conveyors (32, 34) (also referred to herein as augers) to move the material from under the material-supplying transports to inclined conveyance (22). The augers (32, 34) rotate in a manner which at their discharge end allows the material being conveyed to be thrown into the inclined conveyance (22) inlet, which sits between the pan screw conveyors (32, 34).
Alternatively a belt feeder system is used in place of augers (32, 34). Hydraulic motors (36) power the pan screw conveyors (32, 34).
A further embodiment of the present invention is that upon being elevated to the top of vertical conveyance (4), material is discharged through a single outlet or multi-port distributor (40) as shown in
A further embodiment of the invention is the vertical conveyance bucket elevator (4) shown in
A further embodiment of this invention is that, depending on the end use of the material being fed by vertical conveyance (4), it may also be necessary to convey the material that is elevated and delivered. Drag conveyors, belt conveyors, auger screws, and other structure as known in the art and indicated generally in the drawings at reference numeral (80) may be used to move the material horizontally as needed. These secondary conveyors (80) are fed from the discharge distributor (40) via the spouting/pipe/hose (42). An example is distribution of sand to bins in a frac sand trailer—these trailers are long and low to the ground and need to have sand distributed into multiple compartments along their full length rather than from just a single point where the sand drops.
A further embodiment of this invention is that since there are times when the mobile material elevator of the present invention may be used on a working site with limited area, the trailer (2) is optionally provided with a disconnect (90) which allows the rear part (2A) of trailer (2) to uncouple from the forward part (2B) of trailer (2), the forward part (2B) being attached to the pulling truck (200), allowing the uncoupled forward part (2B) and truck (200) to be removed from the working site (
A further embodiment of this invention shown in
Those skilled in the art who have the benefit of this disclosure will also recognize that changes can be made to the component parts of the present invention without changing the manner in which those component parts function and/or interact to achieve their intended result. All such changes, and others that will be clear to those skilled in the art from this description of the preferred embodiment(s) of the invention, are intended to fall within the scope of the following, non-limiting claims.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. provisional application No. 62/118,428, filed Feb. 19, 2015. Application No. 62/118,428 is hereby incorporated into this application in its entirety by this specific reference thereto.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62118428 | Feb 2015 | US |