A pinch valve is a valve operable with a flexible tubing or hose, and which is capable of pinching the tube or hose using a tube-pinching mechanism. Pinch valves are typically full bore, linear action valves that can be used in an off/on manner. Some pinch valves, however, can be used in a variable position or throttling service.
Pinch valves are used in many medical and pharmaceutical applications. They are also used in food dispensing applications because a main advantage of pinch valves is that they facilitate cleanliness, excellent drainage, and ease of cleaning. In addition to cleanliness, another advantage of pinch valves is their operation speed. Most pinch valves are simply on-off valves; they open and close a flexible tube using a pinch bar that moves between two positions. Moving a pinch bar through two, fixed locations can be done quickly, especially if the pinch bar is moved by an electrically-actuated solenoid.
Electromechanical closure of a pinch valve is typically accomplished by activating a solenoid to draw a spring-biased bar or gate against an elastomeric sleeve or tube, thereby cutting off fluid flow through the tube or sleeve. Some prior art pinch valves are fluid actuated wherein the pinching action is accomplished by air or hydraulic pressure placed on the elastomeric sleeve or tube.
A problem with prior art pinch valves, especially those used with dairy products, is that they do not facilitate the installation and removal of a bulk container. Stated another way, prior art pinch valves typically require disassembly to install and/or remove a tube passing through them and also for cleaning.
In one embodiment, the liquid containers 112, 114 and 116 are formed of a rigid plastic. Each one has a top opening as described in the aforementioned co-pending patent application and is thus refillable. Each container has two opposing side walls, a front side and an opposing rear side, a top having a refill opening and a bottom. Barely visible in
As described below, a pinch valve configured for use with the liquid dispenser 10 is comprised of a tube pinching device and an electrically powered solenoid or other linear actuator. The tube pinching device is preferably comprised of a pinch bar described in the applicant's co-pending patent application serial number 13/169,509 entitled, “Pinch Bar,” filed on Jun. 27, 2011, and which is also incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
Three handles 200A, 200B and 200C are shown in
Each handle 200A, 200B and 200C is attached to an elongated rod 300, which extends into a lower panel 111 that extends across the front of the dispenser. A spring device, not visible in the figures because it is inside the Pinch Bar, biases the elongated rod 300 and the handle 200 attached to the rod 300, inwardly vis-à-vis the cabinet 100. Stated another way, the bias force from a spring inside the Pinch Bar urges the rod 300 and handle 200 in a direction that is away from a user of the dispenser 10 and toward the rear side 108 of the cabinet 100.
As described in the aforementioned co-pending patent application, each handle 200 is formed to also provide a relatively narrow pinching edge 206. The spring bias force is thus directed through a relatively narrow area defined by the pinch edge 206, which faces a fixed valve body, not readily visible in
The pinching edge or surface 206 is preferably a narrowing of a side or edge of the handle 200 that faces a valve body surface. Such an edge can have different cross sections or profiles, such as those shown in
An important aspect of the aforementioned “Pinch Bar” is that the valve closing force can be overcome electrically or manually. The open central region 202 is thus large enough to allow at least one human finger to be inserted into the central region 202 to facilitate pulling the handle 200 and the pinching edge 206 away from a valve body against which the pinch surface 206 applies a pinching, closing force to a flexible tube 128.
In an alternate embodiment, the elongated rod 300 can be bent or “L-shaped” as shown in
As used herein, the terms “spring” and “spring device” refer to any device that returns to an original shape after being compressed or stretched. Because of their ability to return to their original shape, springs are used to store energy. A spring can be formed as a coil or a strip. A twisted or twistable rod or bar can also act as a spring and sometimes referred to as torsion bar. A torsion bar is a flexible spring that can be moved about its axis via twisting. It works by resisting the torque placed on it. When one end of the bar is affixed to an object that cannot be moved, the other end of the bar is twisted, thus causing torque to build up. When this happens, the torsion bar is resistant to the torque and will quickly go back to its starting position once the torque is removed.
A spring device in the pinch bar portion of the pinch valve 350 exerts a valve closing force on the pinching surface 206 through the elongated rod 300, also not visible, both of which comprise the aforementioned “Pinch Bar.” In order for the pinch valve 350 to be opened electrically, and thereby dispense liquids electrically, a solenoid/linear actuator 370 is utilized. The solenoid/linear actuator 370 is a device configured to provide a force directed against the base portion 706 of the spring stop 700 of the pinch bar 360. The force applied by the solenoid 370 is thus in a direction that is opposite the direction of the valve closing force, i.e., forwardly and away from the rear 108 of the cabinet and toward the front 106 where a person would operate the liquid dispenser 10. The valve opening force provided by the linear actuator 370 is applied to the base portion 706 through a push rod 380 that is mechanically coupled to the armature of the linear actuator 370 but not connected or mechanically attached to the Pinch Bar. The push rod 380 is not attached or connected to the Pinch Bar so that enables the Pinch Bar to be physically removed from the horizontal lower panel 111.
As described in the applicant's co-pending patent application Ser. No. 12/885,641 entitled “Pinch Valve” and which was filed Sep. 20, 2010, and which is incorporated by reference, each solenoid can be computer controlled and is able to drive a corresponding push rod 380A, 380B and 380C forwardly, i.e., in a direction that is away from the back side 108 of the cabinet 100 and into the bottom end or base portion 706 of a pinch bar 360 responsive to an electric signal applied to the solenoid. The valve opening force provided by the solenoids thus acts in a direction that opposes the valve closing force because it acts in a direction that is away from the rear side 108 of the cabinet 100 and toward where a person using the liquid dispenser would be standing and operating the pinch valves to dispense liquids.
The channel 816 in the front face 806 of the heat sink 800 is considered herein to be a concavity, inasmuch as the channel 816 is concave vis-à-vis the front face 806. The channel 816 has a width 818 as shown, and a depth 820 sufficient to receive a flexible tube 128 that extends from a container 112, 114 and 116 and restricts the tube's side-to-side translation as the tube is pinched and un-pinched.
The back face 810 of the heat sink 800 has a second, horizontally-oriented channel 826, which is also considered herein to be a concavity. The cross sectional shape of the second channel 826 (when viewed from either side) is an arc of a circle. The second channel 826 has a depth and a width configured to mate with the outside surface of a length of tubing (not shown but well known in the art) which carries a heat transfer fluid, such as a compressed and cooled gas used in a refrigeration system evaporator coil. In another embodiment, a tube fit into the second channel 826 carries a hot liquid. The mechanical attachment of a refrigeration coil or a heating coil into the second channel 826 provides a direct thermal and mechanical coupling of the heat sink 800 to a heat-absorption fluid or a heat source fluid.
In another embodiment, the back face 810 is smooth and has attached to it, the cold side of a Peltier device, not shown but well known in the art. In another embodiment, the channel 826 formed in the back face 810 has an electric heating element attached to it, which provides heat energy into the heat sink 800. In yet another embodiment, a smooth back face 810 has the hot side of a Peltier device attached to it, which also provides heat energy into the heat sink 800. Regardless of whether the heat sink 800 back face 810 is attached to a source of heat energy or a heat sink, the direct, mechanical coupling of the heat sink 800 to a heat transfer device, such as an evaporator coil, a Peltier device, or a heating element, significantly improves heat transfer to and from liquids in a flexible tube 128 that abuts the front face 806/822.
As described in the co-pending Pinch Valve application, the pinch bar shown in
In
The foregoing description is for purposes of illustration only. The true scope of the invention is set forth in the appurtenant claims.
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