Provided is a rheometer attachment. More particularly, provided is a material processing device adapted for attachment to a rheometer.
In applications involving exotic and/or experimental materials, the batch sizes of materials to be handled are often very small. Often, conventional laboratory-scale material handling devices are inappropriate for very small batch handling because of a lack of appropriate measurement sensitivity.
Some material handling involving very small batches involves measurement sensitivities on the order of those provided by some modern commercial rheometers. Some modern commercial rheometers specialize in sophisticated and highly sensitive load and displacement measurements.
It remains desirable to provide material processing devices capable of handling very small batch sizes with the measurement sensitivity appropriate to very small batches.
Provided is a rheometer attachment which may comprise a material processing device. The material processing device may be adapted for removable engagement with a rheometer. The material processing device may comprise a first rotatable shaft, a second rotatable shaft, a processing element, and a material holding vessel. The processing element may be engagable with the first rotatable shaft or the second rotatable shaft. The material holding vessel may comprise a cavity.
Provided is a method for processing materials which may comprise the steps of removably engaging a material processing device with a rheometer, introducing material to be processed to the cavity, and processing the material with the material processing device. The material processing device may comprise a first rotatable shaft, a second rotatable shaft, a processing element, and a material holding vessel. The processing element may be engagable with the first rotatable shaft or the second rotatable shaft. The material holding vessel may comprise a cavity.
Provided is a rheometer attachment which may comprise a material processing device. The material processing device may be adapted for removable engagement with a viscoelastic rotational rheometer. The material processing device may comprise a material holding vessel, a first rotatable shaft, a second rotatable shaft, and a processing element. The material holding vessel may comprise a cavity. The volume of the cavity may be equal to or less than about 5 ml. The cavity may be adapted to be maintained at a controlled temperature or controlled pressure. The first rotatable shaft may be adapted to be rotated by the viscoelastic rotational rheometer. The processing element may be detachably engagable with the first rotatable shaft or the second rotatable shaft. The processing element may be adapted to be substantially contained by the cavity. The processing element may comprise a mixing element, or an extrusion element, or both a mixing element and an extrusion element.
Reference will be made to the drawings,
As used herein, a rheometer is any material testing device adapted to characterize the rheological and/or physical behavior of deformable material specimens and comprised of a driving means and a load sensing means or any combination of load application means and displacement sensing means. Rheometers include shear rheometers and extensional rheometers. Some rheometers are viscoelastic rheometers. In certain embodiments viscoelastic rheometers are adapted to measure the viscoelastic properties of a deformable material, are adapted to generate steady motion, are adapted to generate oscillatory motion, and are adapted to sense steady loads and/or oscillatory loads in a manner consistent with characterizing the strain and time dependent behavior of a deformable material. Some rheometers are rotational rheometers. Some research rotational rheometers are capable of measuring torque at levels on the order of 10̂-9 Nm. Some quality control rheometers are capable of measuring torque at levels on the order of 10̂-5 Nm. The term rheometer also applies to any type of universal testing machine or similar device, whether electromechanically or servohydraulically driven, adapted to convert linear motions and load sensing capabilities to rotational motions and torque sensing capabilities by mechanical translation means. Those skilled in the art will recognize that any other type of high-resolution, sensitive physical material testing device comprised of one or more displacement driving/sensing means and one or more load application/sensing means are also encompassed by the term rheometer.
As used herein, a material holding vessel is any vessel having a cavity adapted to accept material for processing and to retain material during processing. In certain embodiments, the material holding vessel comprises a removable or openable closure element adapted to permit user control of communication of the cavity with the environment. Without limitation, the material holding vessel can comprise a bowl, pot, cup, tub, chemical reactor chamber, or biochemical reactor chamber. Without limitation, a closure element may comprise a lid, stopper, cork, valve, or plug. In certain embodiments, material holding vessel is open to the environment. In certain embodiments, the material holding vessel is a mixing vessel adapted to hold material during mixing processes. In certain embodiments, the material holding vessel is an extruder barrel adapted to hold material during extrusion processes. In certain embodiments the capacity of the material holding vessel will be about equal to or less than 5 ml.
As used herein, a bearing is a device to permit rotational motion between two parts. Without limitation bearings comprise, roller bearings, ball bearings, fluid bearings, magnetic bearings, jewel bearings, journal bearings, bushings, and combinations thereof.
As used herein, a coupler is a device to permit transmission of work. Without limitation, couplers comprise gear trains, wheel and pulley assemblies, gear and chain assemblies, rollers, mechanisms, mechanical linkages, hydraulics, pneumatics, generator and motor assemblies, and combinations thereof. In certain embodiments a coupler varies the torque, angular displacement, force, displacement, or other components of the transmitted work.
As used herein, a work transmission element can be any operational connection which transmits work. Without limitation, in certain embodiments, a work transmission element comprises a shaft, fluid connection, torque converter, lock-up torque converter, mechanical clutch, inductive clutch, magnetic clutch, cable, or combinations thereof.
In certain embodiments and without limitation, a rheometer attachment comprises a device detachably or fixedly engagable to a rheometer, the device comprising a chassis detachably or fixedly engagable to the motor or to the motor and the transducer of a commercial rheometer. In certain embodiments and without limitation, the chassis comprises a first shaft adapted to accept work from the motor, a second shaft operatively engaged with the first shaft, and shaft elements comprising mixer elements, extrusion screws, gear pump elements, grinder elements, stirrer elements, agitator elements, or other material processing tools, operatively engaged with each shaft. In certain embodiments and without limitation, the device comprises a material holding vessel comprising a cavity adapted to hold material being operated upon.
In certain embodiments, a rheometer attachment can comprise a material processing platform 51 comprising of a plurality of shafts 52 and 53 with shaft elements 54 and 55 capable of immersion within a temperature and/or pressure controlled environment 56 as shown in
Without limitation, shaft elements 54 and 55 can be configured in a variety of different shapes and sizes that can be constructed from a variety of different materials, which may include, but are not limited to, metal, metalloid, metal oxides, plastic, polymer, resin, rubber, ceramic, glass, cement, stone, graphite or related carbon structure materials, wood, cellulose, or any possible alloy or composite combination of said materials. Without limitation, the surfaces of shaft elements 54 and 55 can also be configured with any variety of prepared surface textures, coatings and finishes that may include, but are not limited to, precision machined surfaces, ground surfaces, mechanically roughened surfaces, serrated surfaces, porous surfaces, knurled surfaces, chemically treated surfaces, chemically functionalized surfaces, acid etched surfaces, polymer coatings, metal oxide coatings, adhesive coatings, metal sprayed surface coatings, plasma coated surfaces, composite coatings, high velocity oxygen fuel coatings, aluminum oxide, silicon carbide and other inorganic or organic particulate textured coatings in order to affect the adhesion of material samples to the shaft element surfaces during the treatment or processing of deformable materials. Since the adhesion or gripping properties of the shaft element surface is dependent upon the material in contact with said surface, any number of shaft element surfaces hereafter referenced may be specifically configured to promote or deter sample adhesion of a given material. Those skilled in the art will recognize other conceivable materials of construction and/or surface textures and coatings and combinations thereof may exist for use in the fabrication of the shaft elements.
In certain embodiments, shafts and shaft elements can also be configured to allow for radial and/or axial load monitoring during operation of the rheometer attachment. In the non-limiting example depicted in
In the non-limiting example depicted in
In the non-limiting embodiment depicted in
Shaft element 55 and/or 54 can be made to rotate by driving the rotation of shaft 53 and/or shaft 52 such that both shaft elements 54 and 55 can be made to counter-rotate relative to one another in a fixed plane of reference as depicted in
A rheometer attachment can be adapted to perform as a mixer, extruder, grinder, gear pump, chemical batch reactor, biochemical batch reactor, or any other material processing or transmission device.
The shaft elements can be configured as detachably or fixedly engaged mixing blades and/or rotor elements such that a rheometer attachment can be configured as a single rotor batch mixer, a multi-rotor batch mixer or a batch reactor. In certain embodiments, multi-rotor batch mixer devices are capable of mixing and compounding blends of liquids, solids, semi-solids, and/or viscoelastic media. In certain embodiments a batch reactor may be adapted to react gaseous ingredients with other materials. Without limitation, in certain embodiments a batch reactor may be adapted to react gaseous ingredients with other materials in a gas-phase polymerization reaction. Said mixing rotor elements can be configured of any type of material in any size or shape which may include but are by no means limited to sigma blades, ribbon blades, z-blades, Banbury blades, CAM blades, roller blades, whisk elements, paddle blades, pin rotors, beater pins, impeller blades, turbine blades, vane blades, kneader elements, screw elements, gear pump elements, grinder elements, or any other conceivable type of mixing rotor element known to those skilled in the art.
In the non-limiting embodiment shown in
A material holding vessel 208 comprises a cavity. The material holding vessel can comprise an open vessel, a multi-lobed, closed container with a sealable port capable of allowing for the introduction of ingredients during the mixing procedure, or other cavities with other sorts of fluid communication properties with the environment. The material holding vessel may comprise an oven or controlled heating and/or cooling means to control the operating temperature of the cavity and the materials therein. The material holding vessel may comprise sensors for measurement of physical or chemical properties. Without limitation, sensors for measurement of physical or chemical properties may comprise sensors for the measurement of temperature, pH, or oxygen. Those skilled in the art will recognize that other conceivable variations of material holding vessel may exist. In the non-limiting embodiment shown in
With further reference to the non-limiting embodiment shown in
In certain embodiments, device 201 can be wholly accommodated within an oven chamber of a commercial rheometer and/or mixer elements 211 and 212 can be immersed within a temperature controlled mixing chamber.
In the non-limiting embodiment shown in
In the non-limiting embodiment shown in
In the non-limiting embodiment shown in
Without limitation, in embodiments in which coupler 207 is configured to generate the relative counter-rotational motion of shafts 203 and 204, rotation of the work transmission element 213 drives the motion of the orbital coupler 222 and the orbital rotation of the chassis assembly about the axis of the orbital bearing element 221 resulting in operation of the device 201 in the manner of Motion 2C. Without limitation, in embodiments in which coupler 207 is configured to generate the relative co-rotational motion of shafts 203 and 204, rotation of the work transmission element 213 drives the motion of the orbital coupler 222 and the orbital rotation of the chassis assembly about the axis of the orbital bearing element 221 resulting in operation of the device 201 in the manner of Motion 2F.
In the non-limiting embodiment shown in
In the non-limiting embodiment shown in
In the non-limiting embodiment shown in
Without limitation, in embodiments in which coupler 207 is configured to generate the relative counter-rotational motion of shafts 203 and 204, rotation of the work transmission element 219 drives the orbital motion of material holding vessel 208 and the attached chassis 202 via linkage 224 about the axis of the orbital bearing element 221 such that the orbital coupler 222 drives the counter-rotation of the mixer elements 211 and 212 resulting in operation of the device 201 in the manner of Motion 2C. Similarly, when the coupler 207 is configured to generate the relative co-rotational motion of hub shafts 203 and 204, the device 201 operates to produce Motion 2F.
In the non-limiting embodiment shown in
The transducer shaft 218 engages the transducer device 217 to shaft 203. Shaft 203 is rotatably mounted in chassis 202 by bearing 205 and is further engaged with shaft 204. Shaft 203 is engaged with and transmits torque to shaft 204 by coupler 207. Shaft 204 is rotatably mounted in chassis 202 by bearing 206. Mixer elements 211 and 212 detachably or fixedly engage shafts 203 and 204. Mixer elements 211 and 212 are contained within the material holding vessel 208. Material holding vessel 208 engages motor 216 through work transmission element 219.
Without limitation, in embodiments in which coupler 207 is configured to generate the relative counter-rotational motion of shafts 203 and 204, rotation of the work transmission element 219 drives the orbital motion of the material holding vessel 208 and the attached chassis 202 via linkage 224 which subsequently drives the counter-rotation of the mixer elements 211 and 212 resulting in operation of the device 201 in the manner of Motion 2B. Similarly, when the coupler 207 is configured to generate the relative co-rotational motion of hub shafts 203 and 204, the device 201 operates to produce Motion 2E.
In certain embodiments, a rheometer attachment comprises a multi-axis screw extruder. In certain embodiments, a rheometer attachment comprises a multi-axis screw extruder that is adapted for conveying, pumping, mixing and/or compounding blends of liquids, solids, semi-solids, and/or viscoelastic media. Without limitation, in embodiments in which the rheometer attachment comprises a multi-axis screw extruder, the rheometer attachment comprises extruder elements. Without limitation, extruder elements can comprise any type of material in any size or shape including feed screws, injection screws, blow-molding screws, segmented screws, mixing screws, hybrid screws, kneading screws, variable flight depth screws, intermeshing screws, gear pump elements, or any other conceivable type of extruder screw element known to those skilled in the art. In certain embodiments in which the rheometer attachment comprises a multi-axis screw extruder, the material holding vessel 208 is adapted to operate as a temperature controlled extruder barrel.
In the non-limiting embodiment shown in
Screw elements 311 and 312 are detachably or fixedly engaged to, respectively, shafts 303 and 304 and are adapted to rotate with their respectively engaged shaft. Material holding vessel 308 is engaged with chassis 302 by connector linkage 324. Material holding vessel 308 is adapted to at least partially accept screw elements 311 and 312. The screw elements 311 and 312 are adapted to expel material from the material holding vessel 308 by forcing the material through the extrusion die 320 as screw elements 311 and 312 rotate. In certain embodiments, material holding vessel 308 comprises a feed hopper (not shown) adapted to facilitate the introduction of material into the material holding vessel 308. In certain embodiments, material holding vessel 308 comprises an extrusion die 320 adapted for shaping material as it is expelled from the material holding vessel 308.
In certain embodiments, the extruder device 301 is a detachable fixture for use in conjunction with a combined motor and transducer rheometer 314. The extruder device 301 may be engaged with the combined motor and transducer device 315 of the rheometer 314 by a work transmission element 313 that operably connects the combined motor and transducer device 315 of the rheometer 314 to shaft 303. In certain embodiments, the extruder device 301 is adapted to convey, combine, and/or pump ingredients or materials contained in the extruder barrel 308 through extrusion die 320 by counter-rotational motion of screw elements 311 and 312 in a manner consistent with the shaft rotations described by Motion 2A. In certain embodiments, the extruder device 301 is adapted configured to convey, combine, and/or pump ingredients or materials contained in the extruder barrel 308 through extrusion die 320 by co-rotational motion of screw elements 311 and 312 in a manner consistent with the shaft rotations described by Motion 2D.
In certain embodiments, the extruder device 301 can be wholly accommodated within an oven chamber of a commercial rheometer and/or the extruder barrel can be independently temperature controlled to allow for the controlled temperature extrusion of fluids, semi-solids or molten materials.
In the non-limiting embodiment shown in
In certain embodiments, a rheometer attachment can be made to operate along a base reference axis not parallel with the axes of the load sensing means and motion generation means of a commercial rheometer. In the non-limiting embodiment shown in
In the non-limiting embodiment shown in
In certain embodiments, the rheometer attachment comprises only a single detachable rotor element such as a single blade mixer or single screw extruder made to operate along a base reference axis not parallel with the axes of the load sensing means and motion generation means of the rheometer.
While the rheometer attachment has been described above in connection with the certain embodiments, it is to be understood that other embodiments may be used or modifications and additions may be made to the described embodiments for performing the same function of the rheometer attachment without deviating therefrom. Further, the rheometer attachment may include embodiments disclosed but not described in exacting detail including, but not limited to, grinders, gear pumps, chemical batch reactors, biochemical batch reactors, and other forms of material processing devices not specifically mentioned herein but known to those skilled in the art. Further, all embodiments disclosed are not necessarily in the alternative, as various embodiments may be combined to provide the desired characteristics. Variations can be made by one having ordinary skill in the art without departing from the spirit and scope of the rheometer attachment. Therefore, the rheometer attachment should not be limited to any single embodiment, but rather construed in breadth and scope in accordance with the recitation of the attached claims.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60990140 | Nov 2007 | US | |
61060175 | Jun 2008 | US |