Agricultural fertilizers are commonly produced by mixing phosphorus, potash and other minerals with nitrogen, and the fertilizers are used to feed crops which either feed livestock or are processed into food for feeding people. However, since we may eventually run out of easy-to-obtain nutrients to feed livestock and people, the nutrients being used today need to be recycled.
Virtually all solid or semi-solid manure, such as that generated by chickens and turkeys and livestock, is land applied before a crop is planted. This results in too many nutrients being leached into the environment. For example, most large chicken layer facilities store all the dry manure inside a building until it is applied to crop land before the crop is planted, either in the Fall or in the Spring of the year. As a result, a large amount of nitrogen and parts of other nutrients are leached either into the ground water and/or into streams, rivers and lakes, polluting the water sources and systems. Large lagoons are also used to store the water that has been used to clean eggs before they are delivered to stores, and this water is usually treated as a waste product which must be disposed of at a significant cost.
The present invention is directed to a method and apparatus which efficiently produces flowable or liquid nutrients from dry nutrients and which may be applied to a growing crop by use of the method and apparatus disclosed in applicants' published U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/296,679. For example, the present invention provides for receiving a dry poultry manure, or any other dry material having a nutrient that would enhance crop production, and feeds the material through a system that mixes the proper amount of water or other liquid with the dry material to produce the correct flowable fertilizer to be applied to a growing crop. The system mixes or blends the dry material with water and/or other liquid nutrients at a ratio that results in a flowable fertilizer which is used to feed the growing crop when the mix is applied to a growing crop using the method and apparatus disclosed in the above published patent application. As a result, there is significantly less chance that the mix will leach away into adjacent streams and ground water.
The method and apparatus of the invention may also be used to add municipal sludge or waste to dry livestock or poultry manure to produce a fertilizer which has the correct analysis for a growing crop and thereby provide a responsible and profitable way to apply municipal waste to crops. In order to create the exact fertilizer for a certain crop, it may be necessary to add a commercial fertilizer to the flowable mixture. The system may also be equipped with a device that analyzes the flowable mixture as it exits the machine or apparatus. A computer can then take the analysis and be programmed to adjust the ratio of liquid and dry manure or commercial fertilizer which needs to be added and mixed with the blender to create the best or optimum flowable fertilizer to be delivered to the crop.
In summary of the invention, a dry fertilizer or other dry nutrient material is continuously fed at a controlled rate into an auger or other conveyor which weighs the material as it is being conveyed into a mixing hopper or blender, and a controlled supply of liquid is added to the blender. A programmed computer controls the supply of dry material and liquid fed into the blender according to an analysis of each material and liquid to be blended together. The program also controls rotation of mixing members or blades in a chopper or grinder or the blender so that the blender apparatus will deliver the correct ratio of material and liquid and create the optimum fertilizer for the growing crop. However, all functions or components of the apparatus or machine could also be manually operated to achieve the same result. The final flowable fertilizer is pumped to a holding tank or directly to the flexible drag hose used in equipment disclosed in the above published patent application to be applied to the growing crop.
The blender 35 has vertically spaced stationary cutting members or blades 38 spaced between a series of rotary cutting members or blades 42 mounted on a vertical shaft 44 driven by a variable speed hydraulic motor 45. The blender 35 also receives a supply of flowable liquid through a conduit or line 48 having a flow meter 50 and a control valve 52. The blender 35 chops and mixes or blends the dry fertilizer material from the weighing conveyor 20 with the liquid received through the conduit 48 to produce a flowable fertilizer or material which is discharged through the bottom outlet 54 of the blender into a liquid manure pump 55 such as a manure pump produced by Cadman Power Equipment Ltd. in Courtland, Ontario. For example, ten pounds of dry turkey litter or manure can be blended with two gallons of water or liquid waste to produce about three gallons of flowable fertilizer material. Similarly, five pounds of dry chicken manure can be blended with one gallon of water or liquid waste to produce a flowable fertilizer or material.
While all of the motors and valves may be manually controlled, preferably a computer controlled controller 60 may be connected to control the motors 15, 25 and 45 and is also connected to receive weight information from the load cells 28. The valve 52 and pump 55 may also be controlled by the controller 60. As a result, the motor 15 supplies a consistent and uniform flow of dry fertilizer from the charging hopper 10 into the weighing conveyor 20, and the controller 60 also controls the motor 25 in response to the weight of material in the conveyor 20 as determined by the load cells 28 to provide a controlled predetermined flow of the dried fertilizer material from the weighing conveyor 20 into the blender 35. The analysis of the dry fertilizer supplied to the hopper 10 may be entered into the computer controlled controller 60 along with the analysis of the liquid supplied through the valve 52 and flow meter 50 in the line 48.
Thus the controller 60 controls the ratio of the dry fertilizer and liquid fed into the blender 35 to create the correct or optimum flowable fertilizer for a standing crop. The controller 60 may also be programmed for adding a dry or liquid commercial fertilizer, if desired, to obtain the ideal final analysis for the flowable material discharged from the blender 35 through the outlet 54 into the pump 55. The discharged flowable fertilizer is pumped by the pump 55 through a flexible conduit or hose 65 into a holding tank or to the inlet of a drag hose carried by a reel, as disclosed in the above published U.S. patent application.
It is also within the scope of the invention to use an inclined belt or chain conveyor operated by a variable speed hydraulic motor to feed the dry fertilizer from a bottom hopper which receives the fertilizer. The hopper controls the flow of fertilizer onto an inclined upper conveyor having a portion which is supported by load cells for weighing the fertilizer being fed into the blender. The speed of the conveyor drive motor is controlled by the controller 60 according to the weight and flow rate of the dry fertilizer desired in the blender 35. The operator of the apparatus may also control the apparatus manually by reading the load cells and flow meter, making the calculations and manually adjusting flow rates of dry fertilizer and liquid.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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62213684 | Sep 2015 | US |