Information
-
Patent Grant
-
6331070
-
Patent Number
6,331,070
-
Date Filed
Monday, October 30, 200024 years ago
-
Date Issued
Tuesday, December 18, 200123 years ago
-
Inventors
-
Original Assignees
-
Examiners
Agents
- Madan, Mossman & Sriram, P.C.
-
CPC
-
US Classifications
Field of Search
US
- 366 314
- 366 197
- 366 241
- 366 199
- 366 208
- 366 209
- 366 242
- 366 244
- 366 245
- 366 205
- 366 247
- 366 261
- 366 331
- 366 200
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International Classifications
-
Abstract
The invention apparatus comprises a mixing vessel closure having rotating mixing blades secured thereto. The mixing blades are driven through an axially engaged and disengaged direct coupling. The closure is mounted on a power base structure for rotation about an axis that is substantially transverse of the mixing blade axis. Additionally, the closure mounting includes a translational drive for linearly raising and lowering the closure at each of two positions about the transverse axis. A portable mixing vessel including a material charge is placed under the vessel closure. The closure is translated down to a sealed cover position over a vessel opening and secured to the vessel. The unitized assembly of the closure and vessel is translated away from a vessel supporting transport base and rotated to a inverted position. The unitized assembly is then translated down to engage a rotatory power transmission coupling. Rotatory power delivered to a fixed axis coupling element is thereby delivered to the mixing blades. At a conclusion of the mixing process, the procedure is reversed and the unitized assembly is rotated and translated back to the supporting transport base. The closure is then released from and translated away from the vessel containing the material mixture thereby leaving the vessel and the mixed material therein free of structural association with the power base.
Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to the machines and material handling methods for homogeneous particle mixing of batch quantities. More particularly, the invention relates to vertical fluidized batch mixers and related batch processes of material handling.
2. Description of the Prior Art
In the production of powder coatings, toners, engineered polymers and color concentrates, ingredient size reduction and homogeneous blending are primary objectives. Also important are the prevention of ingredient resegregation, equipment cleanability and product transfer mobility. For high value products that require extreme constituent control, vertical shaft batch mixers are the tool of choice for most practitioners.
Many processes thrive on high intensity mixing which, definitively, requires a mixing blade tip speed of greater than 20 m/sec. The mixer blade tip velocity for medium intensity mixers is usually defined as within the range of 8-10 m/sec. Driving mixing blades through a large quantity of powdered solids at such blade tip velocities requires a significant magnitude of driving power and correspondingly large drive motors that are supported on the same structure as the mixing vessel. The principle behind high intensity mixing is to generate a large amount of energy in the product using an impeller, when, at the same time, the material is suspended and fluidized by the vortex created in the vessel. Sheared mixing and dispersed mixing take place while energy is exchanged between the mixing blades and the material, between the material and the vessel and between the material particles. Steam, oil and hot or cold water may be circulated through a vessel jacket to induce effective heating or cooling of the material during the mixing process.
Traditional designs for successfully serving these functions such as the Model VFM High Intensity Mixer by Reliance Industries of Stafford, Texas have been difficult to discharge the mixed product and extremely difficult to clean. In some cases, color contamination of less than 0.05% due to inadequate cleaning may waste an entire vessel batch. Consequently, each mixing unit may be unavailable for production for hours during a clean-up period although the actual mixing procedure requires only a few minutes.
Prior art machines designed for operating with simple, interchangeable vessels such as Model RC by Reliance Industries mounts the motor and drive assembly on a head plate that must be rotated to invert the vessel and deposit the mixture ingredients around the mixing blades. The entire pivoted mass, therefore includes not only the motor and drive assembly but also the mass of the vessel and material contents. While mixing is taking place, the consequential load and vibration is carried by bearings necessary to facilitate rotation of the assembly. The magnitude of applied power and mixing intensity is therefore limited.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
An object of the present invention is provision of a material batch mixing system having a rapid recycling time. Relative to a rapid recycle, the invention provides greatly accessible internal structure for reduced cleaning time. A multiplicity of relatively inexpensive mixing vessels and mixing blades facilitates an option to clean mixing vessels and blades off-line between batch mixtures.
Another object of the invention is a batch mixing system that will substantially eliminate cross batch contamination due to inadequate cleaning of common mixing elements and structure and greatly reduces possibilities for resegregation of constituent ingredients.
A further object of the present invention is a high intensity batch mixing system having not only a high recycling rate but also adaptable to an unlimited magnitude of power source and delivery
Also an object of the invention is an improved ratio of equipment capitalization versus product value enhancement. Corresponding with the improved equipment production value is reduce plant floor space devoted to material mixing.
It is also an object of the invention to provide a high intensity mixing machine of rugged construction and requires minimum repair and maintenance albeit is accessible for rapid and easy cleaning.
Another object of the invention is a mixing machine design having no limitation on the size of drive, magnitude of applied power number of transmission drive lines.
In service to these and other objects of the invention is a mixing apparatus in which batch quantities of material constituents to a mixture are combined in a portable vessel having a standardized form and size of top opening. Preferably, such a vessel is transportable to and from a connection position respective to a stationary power unit. The power unit comprises a closure structure that mates with the vessel top opening. Power actuated clamps secured to the closure structure are selectively operable to unitize the vessel with the closure structure.
Secured to the closure structure is a rotary mixing element having a substantially vertical mixing axis. Material agitation elements such as blades, paddles etc. are secured to the end of a driven spindle proximate of the closure structure inside face. The driven face of a rotary power coupling is secured to the outer end of the driven spindle.
Another characteristic of the closure is a power unit mounting structure that will selectively translate the closure vertically to and from a sealed engagement with a vessel top opening. The mounting structure is given sufficient capacity to lift the unitized vessel It and combined mixture ingredients from the vessel delivery support surface. Additionally, the closure mounting structure is rotatable about a laterally transverse axis. Such rotation of the mounting structure inverts the unitized vessel and axially aligns the rotary power coupling with a driving face. Reversed translation of the mounting structure brings the two faces of the rotary power coupling into operative engagement. Such inversion of the vessel deposits the mixture materials intimately upon and about the agitation elements.
The driving face of the rotary coupling is secured to the end of a driving spindle that is preferably driven by a sheave and belt transmission. A fixed position electric motor of substantially any size may be used to drive the belt transmission. The electric motor and belt transmission is secured within the same power unit as the closure mounting structure.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
For a thorough understanding of the present invention, reference is made to the following detailed description of the preferred embodiments, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings in which like elements have been given like reference characters throughout the several figures of the drawings:
FIG. 1
is a schematic elevation showing the invention in partial section and the powered mixing head disengaged from the mixing vessel.
FIG. 2
is a schematic elevation showing the invention in partial section and the powered mixing head clamped and sealed to the mixing vessel.
FIG. 3
is a schematic elevation showing the invention in partial section and the unitized mixing head and mixing vessel lifted for clearance above a portable platform.
FIG. 4
is a schematic elevation showing the invention in partial section and the unitized mixing head and mixing vessel in rotation toward engagement with a powered drive unit
FIG. 5
is a schematic elevation showing the invention in partial section and the unitized mixing head and mixing vessel poised above engagement with a powered drive unit.
FIG. 6
is a schematic elevation showing the invention in partial section and the unitized mixing head and mixing vessel fully engaged with the powered drive unit.
FIG. 7
is a schematic elevation showing one embodiment of the mixing head in partial section.
FIG. 8
is a schematic elevation showing the mixing vessel.
FIG. 9
is a detail showing a co-axial spindle and dual drive for each of independently driven mixing blades.
FIG. 10
is a schematic elevation showing the mixing head combined with the mixing vessel and disengaged from the powered drive unit for cleaning or storage.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
Referring to
FIGS. 1
,
7
and
8
, in particular, the invention comprises a portable mixing vessel
10
. Preferably, a plurality of mixing vessels
10
having substantially interchangeable dimensions are available. As a representative shape, the vessel
10
may include a funneled lower section
20
and a bottom discharge opening that is controlled by a butterfly valve
27
. The vessel opening
21
through which mixture materials are loaded into the vessel is rimmed by a clamping lip
24
. A base plate or flange
29
may support the vessel in an upright position for interface with a transport device.
This particular example of the invention relies upon a hand cart
12
for transport mobility of the vessel
10
from a prior station at which the vessel may be charged with mixture materials and to a subsequent station at which the completed mixture is discharged. It is also preferable to have a plurality of such hand carts available for transport of respective vessels as a progressive flow stream. The several hand carts
12
should have substantially uniform construction features and dimensions to provide a substantially uniform dimension between the floor
13
or other primary support surface and the vessel opening rim
25
.
Those skilled in the art will understand that mixing vessels
10
may be of an infinite variety of shapes. A valved bottom discharge is an optional feature of the preferred combination. Although structural independence of the vessel
10
and hand cart
12
is preferred, there is no particular impediment to an integrated construction. Furthermore, the vessel
10
may be transported to and from the vessel closure assembly
14
by numerous other means such as a conveyor belt or an industrial fork-lift truck.
The vessel closure assembly
14
is shown in greatest detail by
FIG. 7
to include an inner liner
35
supported by outer jacket
36
. The jacket and liner assembly is secured to a closure mount swing plate
40
. Optionally, the jacket/liner relationship may be constructed to circulate steam or chilled water depending on a desired heat environment for the mixing process. The swing plate
40
is pivotally attached to a translation plate
42
by means of a hinge
44
. Rotation of the swing plate
40
about the axis of hinge
44
is controlled by a rack and pinion rotary drive
46
. Vertical translation of the translation plate
42
and hence, the swing plate
40
, driven by hydraulic translation struts
48
.
Dynamic elements of the closure
14
include a driven spindle
32
that is rotatively confined by bearings. Along the length of the spindle
32
proximate of the closure seal lip
33
is a mixing blade assembly
30
. To the outer end of the spindle
32
is a driven face coupling
34
. Preferably, the coupling may be a self-aligning tooth coupling. Clearly, however, other coupling types such as magnetic couplings may be used. Around the closure jacket
36
are a plurality of rotating disc wedges
37
for engaging the underside of the vessel
10
clamp flange
24
. The discs
37
are secured to clamp spindles
38
. The clamp spindles are secured in respective journal bosses that are secured to the outer jacket
36
. Linear actuators
39
acting through bellcranks attached to the clamp spindles
38
rotate the disc wedges
37
into a compressive engagement with the vessel clamp flange
24
to secure the vessel
10
to the closure
14
as a unit.
The power base
18
supports a suitable prime mover
60
such as an electric motor. The motor output shaft carries a belt drive sheave
56
. Conveniently lateral of the motor
60
, a spindle housing
51
is secured to an upper face of the power base housing. The housing
51
confines a rotary drive spindle
50
having opposite implement ends. The lower spindle
50
end carries a driven sheave
54
that is linked to the drive sheave by a cleated power belt
58
.
Procedurally, the process aspect of the invention begins with charging the vessel
10
, usually through the top opening. Those materials that are to be mixed or agitated are deposited into the vessel
10
through the opening circumscribed by the vessel rim
25
. Such charging may occur at the mixing station adjacent to the power base or at a remote location. For purposes of the present description, it will be assumed that the mixture ingredients were charged into the vessel
10
at a remote location and that the charged vessel was carried on the hand cart
12
to the operational station illustrated by
FIGS. 1-6
.
Initially, the translation struts
48
are extended to lift the translation plate
42
to an upper limit. The swing plate
40
is folded out by the rack and pinion rotational drive
46
about the axis of hinge
44
to position the closure
14
above an alignment space for vessel
10
. The upper limit of the translation plate
42
resultantly places the closure seal lip
33
above the vessel opening rim
25
by a prescribed clearance space
26
.
With respect to
FIG. 2
the translation struts
48
are retracted to lower the closure rim
33
physically against the vessel opening rim
25
. Here, a plurality of clamp actuators
39
are engaged to rotate respective disc wedges
37
under the lower lip of the vessel clamp flange
24
thereby unitizing the vessel
10
with the closure assembly
14
. Depending on the particular application for the invention, it may be desirable to engage fluid-tight seals between the closure rim
33
and the vessel rim
25
. Reliance upon fluid tight seals usually requires, in addition, an internal volume vent for the volume confined within the closure
14
and vessel
10
unit.
FIG. 3
illustrates another extension of the translation struts
48
to lift the vessel base plate
29
above the structure of hand cart
12
by a clearance space
28
that is sufficient to permit rotation the vessel/closure unit about the axis of hinge
44
.
FIG. 4
shows the vessel/closure unit at an intermediate rotational position about the hinge
44
axis. As shown by
FIG. 5
, the vessel/closure unit rotation is complete with a contiguous lapping of the swing plate
40
against the translation plate
42
. Here, the respective rotational axes of spindles
32
and
50
are coaxially aligned. However, the translation struts
48
are extended so the driving and driven coupling faces
52
and
34
, respectively, are disengaged by a separation distance
49
.
Finally, the translation struts
48
are again retracted to lower the driven coupling face
34
into torque transmitting engagement with the drive coupling face
52
. Here, the rotational power of motor
60
is engaged to drive the mixing blades
30
through the material that has been transferred by gravity from the base volume
20
of the vessel
10
onto and around the mixing blades.
At the conclusion of the mixing interval, the foregoing sequence is reversed and the released vessel
10
is returned to the original hand cart
12
support position as shown by FIG.
1
. The optional butterfly valve
22
is useful for a convenient gravity discharge of the mixed material from the vessel
10
into a below-floor receptacle not shown.
In the alternative embodiment of the invention illustrated by
FIG. 9
, the mixer blade drive spindle comprises two or more coaxial spindles
70
and
72
respective to independent drive motors and trains. The outer drive spindle
70
is secured to the outer co-axial mixing blade
62
whereas the inner co-axial mixing blade
64
is secured to the inner drive spindle
72
. Each spindle
70
and
72
may be driven by respective motors, transmissions and couplings. Consequently, each blade
62
and
64
may be driven at a respective speed and direction.
Although my invention has been described in terms of specified embodiments which are set forth in detail, it should be understood that the description is for illustration only and that the invention is not necessarily limited thereto, since alternative embodiments and operating techniques will become apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art in view of the disclosure. Accordingly, modifications are contemplated which can be made without departing from the spirit of the described invention.
Claims
- 1. A material mixing apparatus comprising:(a) a mixing vessel end closure having material mixing structure secured thereto for rotation about a mixing axis, said mixing structure having a first rotational drive coupling secured thereto; (b) a second rotational drive coupling for transferring rotary power about a substantially fixed axis to said first rotational drive coupling; and, (c) end closure support structure for translating said end closure substantially parallel with said fixed axis and rotating said end closure about an end closure inversion axis to engage said first rotational drive coupling with said second rotational drive coupling.
- 2. A material mixing apparatus as described by claim 1 wherein said mixing vessel end closure cooperates with a structurally independent mixing vessel to substantially seal an internal mixing volume.
- 3. A material mixing apparatus as described by claim 1 wherein said end closure is rotated about said inversion axis between first and second rotational positions.
- 4. A material mixing apparatus as described by claim 3 wherein said first rotational drive coupling is selectively translated between engagement and disengagement with said second rotational drive coupling when said end closure is positioned at said first rotational position.
- 5. A material mixing apparatus as described by claim 3 wherein said end closure is selectively translated between release and connection positions respective to said independent mixing vessel.
- 6. A material mixing apparatus as described by claim 5 wherein said end closure is rotated from said second rotational position to said first rotational position with said end closure secured to said mixing vessel.
- 7. A material mixing apparatus as described by claim 6 wherein said mixing structure comprises a blade that is secured to a first rotational drive shaft that is driven by said first rotational drive coupling for rotation about said mixing axis.
- 8. A material mixing apparatus as described by claim 6 wherein said mixing structure comprises at least a pair of blades that are secured to a respective pair of first rotational drive shafts, said pair of first rotational drive shafts being coaxially aligned and independently driven.
- 9. A material handling process comprising the steps of:(a) depositing particulate materials in a portable vessel; (b) translating vessel closure structure along a first axis onto said vessel, said closure structure including rotational mixing structure; (c) securing said closure structure to said vessel as a unitized assembly; (d) rotating said assembly to a substantially inverted vessel position; (e) translating the inverted vessel assembly along said first axis to engage a rotary power transmission coupling with said rotational mixing structure; and, (f) rotatively driving said rotational mixing structure through said transmission coupling.
- 10. A material handling process as described by claim 9 wherein said particulate materials are deposited into said vessel at a location removed from said vessel closure structure.
- 11. A material handling process as described by claim 9 wherein said first axis is substantially coincided with a second axis respective to said rotary power transmission coupling at said inverted vessel position.
- 12. A material handling process as described by claim 9 wherein said rotational mixing structure comprises a pair of blades that are rotated independently about a coaxial axis.
- 13. A particulate material mixing procedure comprising the steps of:(a) combining materials including a particulate through an opening in a portable vessel; (b) closing said vessel opening with a cover; (c) providing material mixing structure secured to said cover for rotation about a first axis; (d) securing said cover to said vessel as a unitized assembly; (e) rotating said unitized assembly about a second axis to a substantially inverted vessel position; (f) translating a rotatory power transmission coupling along said first axis into engagement with said mixing structure at said inverted position; and, (g) rotatively driving said mixing structure through the combined materials.
- 14. A particulate material mixing procedure as described by claim 13 wherein rotational driving force for said mixing structure is provided about a third rotational axis, said rotation of said unitized assembly about said second axis positions said first rotational axis substantially coaxially with said third rotational axis.
- 15. A particulate material mixing procedure as described by claim 14 wherein mixed material is removed from said vessel by the sequence including the steps of(a) translating said unitized assembly along said coaxial first and second axes to disengage said rotary power transmission coupling from said mixing structure; (b) rotating said unitized assembly about said second axis to a substantially erect position; (c) translating said unitized assembly onto a support platform; and, (d) releasing said cover from said vessel.
US Referenced Citations (19)
Foreign Referenced Citations (4)
Number |
Date |
Country |
23 62 675 |
Jun 1975 |
DE |
35 12 257 |
Oct 1986 |
DE |
39 30 954-C2 |
Jul 1995 |
DE |
WO 82 04407 |
Dec 1982 |
WO |