The invention relates to refiners, and more specifically to a ring and disk refiner that reduces solid material to a particulate form.
There exists a need in many industries to reduce large pieces of solid material to a particulate form. For instance, in managing wood and tree waste, it is desirable to grind stumps, branches, and wood scraps into smaller wood chips. Wood chips are more easily and efficiently transported, stored, and used for a variety of purposes. In other instances, it is desirable to reduce large pieces of waste material, such as plastic, for recycling or disposal.
Refiners of various size and operation are generally available for performing this function. One style of refiner includes a refining chamber defined by a sidewall and a bottom floor at one end of the sidewall. An annular ring in the same plane and surrounding the bottom floor is attached to the sidewall and rotates with the sidewall. For instance, reissue U.S. Pat. No. Re. 36,486 and U.S. Pat. No. 5,927,624, assigned to the assignee of the present invention, disclose a comminuter, or refiner, of this style. Inside the comminuter chamber, a rotatably-mounted toothed disk impacts solid material introduced into the chamber and reduces the material to particulate form.
The comminuter, or refiner, disclosed in the above-noted patents operates by rotating both the chamber sidewall and the toothed disk, usually in opposite directions. The rotation of the sidewall imparts rotational motion to the solid material placed in the chamber. As the material in the chamber rotates with the chamber sidewall, the material comes into contact with the rotating toothed disk. The teeth on the disk impact the material and thereby rip and tear the material into successively smaller pieces. The annular portion of the bottom of the chamber that rotates with the sidewall typically includes a screened exit through which the material, once refined to a particular size, may pass out of the chamber.
During the refining process, the solid material being refined may be thrown about within the comminuting chamber, particularly when the comminuting chamber is only partially filed. Portions of the material may ricochet off the rotating sidewall and fly out of the open top end of the comminuting chamber. To address this problem, reissue U.S. Pat. Re. 36,486 and U.S. Pat. No. 5,927,624 describe a curtain assembly mounted on top of a hopper stationed above the comminuting chamber. However, the curtain assembly can be complicated to assemble and partially blocks the opening of the hopper, adding some difficulty to loading material into the comminuter. Solid shrouding has also been suggested but that also partially blocks the opening of the hopper and/or comminuting chamber.
Screened exits in the comminuting chamber regulate the size of material that can exit the chamber. U.S. Pat. No. 5,927,624 describes an annular screened exit comprised of a series of grate segments. The grate segments have a plurality of holes, the size of which determine the particle size that can exit the chamber. When the operator desires to change the size of the particulate matter exiting the chamber, the comminuter must be stopped and unloaded, the grate segments removed and replaced with other grate segments having holes of a different size or configuration. Significant downtime of the machine thus occurs every time a change of particulate size is desired.
There is, therefore, a need in the prior art for a refiner with a refining chamber that better confines the material placed in the chamber to prevent it from inadvertently being thrown out. There is also a need for a refiner that is capable of changing the size of particulate matter exiting the refiner in a manner that is faster and easier than hitherto known. These needs, and other shortcomings in the prior art, are addressed by the present invention discussed herein.
The present invention provides a refiner that is configured to reduce solid material to a particulate form. A preferred embodiment of the invention includes a refiner chamber that has a rotatable sidewall and a bottom disposed across an end of the sidewall. An exit hole is defined in the bottom of the chamber through which particulate material may pass. A toothed disk is rotatably mounted within the chamber to engage the solid material and reduce it to particulate form.
In one aspect, a refiner constructed according to the invention may have a refiner chamber that includes one or more baffles attached to the chamber sidewall. The baffles form one or more surfaces that extend inward into the chamber. The baffles are preferably designed to engage the solid material that has been introduced into the chamber and help move the material toward the rotating toothed disk. The baffles also function to limit the ability of material thrown about within the chamber from being inadvertently thrown out of the chamber. Solid material ricocheting off of the chamber sidewall hits the baffles and is directed downward back into the chamber. The baffles may be oriented on the chamber sidewall at an angle relative to the rotational axis of the chamber and/or at an angle relative to the chamber sidewall.
In another aspect, a refiner constructed according to the invention may have a moveable gate that can be positioned during the operation of the refiner chamber to change the size of the exit hole and thus regulate the size of particulate material exiting the chamber. An operator operating the refiner may communicate a signal to a motor connected to the movable gate to move the gate into a desired position. A gate indicator may further be provided to indicate to the operator the relative position of the particle size gate. In one embodiment, the gate indicator is a bar connected to the mechanical linkage that moves the gate. Depending on the position of the gate, the gate indicator moves relative to markings on the refiner. Electronic gate indication may also be provided.
The refiner chamber may further indicate attachments secured to the bottom of the chamber to assist in the refining process. In one aspect, a riser plate may be positioned next to the rotating toothed disk to direct solid material onto the disk. Smaller, refined material falls toward the floor and is swept under the riser pate toward the exit hole. In another embodiment, one or more floor combs may be used to direct solid material upward toward the toothed disk while permitting smaller, particulate matter to be swept between the floor combs toward the exit hole. A significant advantage of the riser plate and floor combs is that they effectively limit the amount and/or size of solid material that engages the rotating disk and thus function to reduce the possibility of solid material being jammed between the toothed disk and the chamber sidewall, especially when the disk and sidewall are rotating in the same direction. The natural sorting action provided by the floor attachments helps separate the solid material yet to be refined from the particulate material that has been refined. To further help move the solid material within the chamber toward the toothed disk, the chamber sidewall may include one or more cleats and/or or pusher bars that extend from the lower end of the sidewall into the chamber. Scraper plates attached to the lower end of the sidewall may also be used to scrape material collecting at the exit hole and prevent it from clogging the exit hole.
The foregoing aspects and many of the attendant advantages of this invention will become more readily appreciated as the same become better understood by reference to the following detailed description, when taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, wherein:
A refiner constructed in accordance with the present invention may be embodied in a variety of forms. Typically, a refiner will include a refiner chamber, a cutter disk, an engine that powers the refiner chamber and cutter disk, and a conveyor that carries away the refined material that has exited the refiner chamber.
The refiner 10 depicted in
The refiner 10 further includes a conveyor 22 that collects and carries away particulate material discharged from the refiner chamber 12. The conveyed particulate material may be deposited in a pile on the ground, in the bed of a truck, etc. Conventional components may be used to construct the conveyor 22 including belt systems, augers, or other mechanisms capable of conveying the particulate matter from the refiner chamber 12. See, e.g., the reciprocating screening conveyor described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,000,554, assigned to the assignee of the present invention and incorporated by reference herein.
The refiner chamber 12 shown in
The lower rim 36, in this embodiment, provides a supporting surface on which the chamber 12 rotates. In this embodiment, the lower rim 36 rests upon a low-friction wear-resistant surface, here pads 38, that are in turn supported by a rim 42 of a refiner pan. The pads 38, in one embodiment, are formed with a polytetrafluoroethylene surface material (for example, a fluoropolymer manufactured by DuPont under the trademark Teflon). Teflon pads 38 may be attached to the rim 42 by an adhesive and/or fasteners or mounting brackets 44. In this embodiment, the Teflon pads remain in place while the refiner chamber 12 and lower rim 36 rotate horizontally on the upper surface of the Teflon pads 38. In other embodiments of the invention, the low-friction wear-resistant surface may be comprised of materials other than Teflon and may also extend over the entire surface of the refiner pan rim 42. Other alternative bearing surfaces may also be used, including wheel-shaped or spherical bearings that roll with or against the rotating chamber 12.
Because the refining action inside the chamber 12 can be somewhat violent, the refiner 10 is preferably built to provide some lateral and vertical clearance for movement of the refiner chamber 12. In the embodiment depicted in
Material to be refined, such as wood scraps, stumps, plastic material, or other solid material, are fed into the refiner chamber 12 through the open top end of the chamber 12.
The refining action of the refiner 10 is provided by rotating both the chamber sidewall 50 and a toothed disk 56 mounted in the chamber 12. For simplicity of illustration, the teeth on the disk 56 are not shown. However, a toothed disk suitable for use in the invention is shown and described in reissue U.S. Pat. No. Re. 36,486, incorporated in its entirety by reference herein. A plurality of cutting teeth are secured at spaced intervals around the periphery of the disk 56 and project outwardly and/or upwardly therefrom at various angles. In a preferred embodiment, the refiner chamber 12 and the toothed disk 56 rotate in the same direction. However, as discussed later herein, the refiner chamber 12 may be configured to rotate in a direction opposite to that of the refiner disk 56. The refiner 10 may also be constructed to rotate the refiner chamber 12 in a forward and reverse direction, as needed.
The rotating sidewall 50 imparts rotational motion to solid material that has been introduced into the refiner chamber 12. When the material comes into contact with the rotating toothed disk 56, the teeth on the disk impact the material, and thereby rip and shred the material into a particulate form.
In the embodiment shown in
Various protrusions on the interior of the sidewall 50 shown in
The toothed disk 56 preferably rotates at a much higher speed than the chamber sidewall 50. The teeth on the disk 56 may thus impact the solid material numerous times as it is held by the cleats 62 and rotated with the sidewall 50. The particulate matter refined from the solid material drops to the floor 52 and is thrown or swept toward the exit hole 60. Larger chunks of material not reduced to particulate form in a pass by the rotating toothed disk 56 are rotated around the refiner chamber 12 and brought again into contact with the toothed disk 56.
To help separate larger pieces of solid material from the refined, particulate material, one or more attachments may be secured to the floor 52, preferably in a location next to the rotating disk 56. In the embodiment shown in
When the riser plate 64 is positioned at the incoming feed side of the toothed disk 56, solid material that is rotated toward the toothed disk 56 encounters the riser plate 64 which directs the solid material upward toward the teeth on the disk 56. Particulate matter that is refined from the solid material falls towards the floor and may pass under the riser plate 64 toward the exit hole 60. The riser plate 64 thus assists in the refining action by helping position the solid material between the toothed disk 56 and the sidewall 50, while helping separate the smaller particulate matter on the floor 52 from the larger solid material. The riser plate 64 also helps limit the amount and/or size of solid material that is held between the toothed disk 56 and the sidewall 50, which may reduce the power consumption of the refiner and further reduce the possibility of damage to the refiner by solid material jamming the toothed disk 56.
The refiner chamber 12 may further include one or more baffles 70 that project radially inwardly from the chamber sidewall 50 into the chamber 12. In
Additional projections from the chamber sidewall 50 into the chamber are shown in
As depicted in
The back edge 82 is preferably rounded downward towards the hole 60 and curve to the underside of the floor 52. Providing a rounded edge for the back edge 82 helps limit the amount of refined and semi-refined material that may wrap around the back end 82 and clog up the hole 60. To further reduce the amount of material that may catch and collect on the back edge 82, the chamber sidewall 50 may further include one or more scrapers 74. The scrapers 74 may be formed of a metal plate that projects radially inwardly from the chamber sidewall 50 along the bottom edge of the chamber 12. In
It should be noted that the baffles 70 shown in
Inside the chamber 12 as shown, a riser plate 64 connected to a mounting plate 66 on the chamber floor 52 helps direct solid material towards the rotating toothed disk 56 and limit the amount and/or size of solid material engaging the disk 56. Refined material exits the chamber 12 through the exit hole 60.
The toothed disk 56 may be rotated by any conventional means. In the embodiment depicted in
Particulate matter that exits the chamber 12 through the hole 60 is directed by a guide plate 100 toward a conveyor system 22. In the embodiment depicted in
A preferred embodiment of the invention includes a moveable gate 110 that can be positioned away from or over part or all of the exit hole 60 to regulate the size of particulate matter exiting the chamber 12. To avoid undue complexity in the drawing, the toothed disk 56 is not illustrated but generally extends over the particle size gate 110 in a plane above the gate 110.
The leading edge of the gate 110 is preferably all or partially protected by a guard plate 112 that is secured to the floor 52. The guard plate 112 extends over the leading edge of the particle size gate 110 and thus defines a slot between the guard plate 112 and the floor 52 through which the particle size gate 110 may move. In one aspect, the guard plate 112 helps prevent solid and particulate matter from collecting around and under the particle size gate 110 and possibly jamming its operation. Guard plates may be positioned to protect other edges of the particle size gate 110 as well.
In the embodiment shown in
A significant advantage of this embodiment of the invention is that the size of particulate matter exiting the refiner chamber 12 may be adjusted on-the-fly while the refiner 10 is operating. In contrast to the prior art where, to regulate the particle size, the refiner 10 must be shut down to remove and replace the exit screens, the present invention allows the machine to continue operating while the particle size is regulated. The refiner 10 may be configured with a button, lever, switch, or the like, that the operator of the refiner may use to communicate with the hydraulic actuator 122. In yet another embodiment, a wireless remote control may be provided to the operator to communicate with the hydraulic actuator 122. The operator may thus be standing at a location remote from the operating refiner 10 and regulate the particle size via remote control. The particle size is regulated by adjusting the position of the particle size gate 110 over the exit hole 60.
The gate 110 may also be secured to the floor 52 using releasable fasteners. When the fasteners are released, the gate may be moved to a desired position, and when fastened, the gate 110 is secured to the floor 52. In one embodiment, the releasable fasteners may be comprised of bolts that, when loosened, release the gate 110 to be moved, and when tightened, secure the gate 110 to the floor 52.
To indicate to the operator of the refiner 10 the relative position of the particle size gate 110, a gate indicator may be provided. In
Further illustrated in
While the floor combs 130, 132, 134 are shown with a triangular cross-section, other cross-sectional shapes may be used. For instance, the floor combs 130, 132, 134 may be formed of flat plate material having a rectangular cross-section. Moreover, while three floor combs are shown in
Positioned on the upper rim 34 of the refiner chamber 12 is an optional rim scraper 136 and breaker bar 138. The rim scraper 136 scrapes material that may have collected on the upper rim 34 and moves the material inward into the refiner chamber 12. For example, tree waste that is introduced into the chamber 12 may include branches that catch on the upper rim 34. The rim scraper 136 lays flat on or next to the upper rim 34 and scrapes such material into the chamber 12.
The optional breaker bar 138 shown in
As with other embodiments of the invention, the chamber sidewall 50 imparts rotational motion to the solid material in the chamber 12. In this instance, the solid material rotates in a generally clockwise direction. The refiner chamber 12 shown in
To illustrate further alternative embodiments, the refiner chamber 12 in
Other exit holes may include one or more grate segments 152 that lie on an underlying framework. The grate segments have a plurality of holes formed therein and provide a screening function for the material being refined. The size of the holes in the grate segments 152 determines the particle size that will exit the chamber 12.
While the exit holes 150 and 152 may not be used in a preferred embodiment of the invention, they are nevertheless described herein to demonstrate the flexibility of the invention to address different refining needs in the industry. U.S. Pat. No. 5,927,624, assigned to the assignee of the present invention and incorporated by reference herein, describes additional floor attachments that may be used in the refiner chamber of the present invention. By engaging and reorienting the solid material being refined in the chamber, the floor attachments improve the efficiency of the refiner.
Another floor attachment that may be advantageously used in a refiner chamber of the present invention forms a false floor above the bottom of the chamber. The attachment may be comprised of a planar member of any shape that allows solid material in the chamber to come into contact with the toothed disk. For example, the planar member may be crescent shaped with an outside curvature roughly approximating the curvature of the sidewall, and an inside curvature roughly approximating the curvature of the toothed disk. The attachment makes an effective floor in the refiner chamber that is higher than the true bottom of the chamber, but it need not cover the entire surface of the chamber bottom. The toothed disk may rotate above, below, or in the same plane as the false floor attachment. The attachment itself may be slanted or curved across its surface, as desired, especially to agitate and direct the solid material in the chamber toward the rotating toothed disk.
Various embodiments of the invention have been illustrated and described above. It will be appreciated that changes can be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. For example, the particle size gate 110 may be driven by mechanisms other than a driver bar 118 and hydraulic actuator 122 as described, including a manual mechanical adjustment of the gate position from the outside chamber. In another embodiment, a motorized, a motorized or manually-driven mechanism may be directly linked to the shaft 114 or to the particle size gate 110 itself. The gate 110 itself may be located above, below, or in the same plane as the floor 52. Alternative gate designs include multiple plates that cooperate to control the size of the exit hole 60. For example, the plates may be positioned to rotate inwards in the manner of a camera lens to constrict the size of the exit hole 60.
In yet a further embodiment of the invention, a smaller, recessed chamber may be defined in the floor 52 in which the rotating toothed disk is located. The toothed disk 56 may thus rotate above, below, or in the same plane as the floor 52. A cylindrical sidewall and a floor with one or more exit holes may be used to define this smaller chamber in which the toothed disk 56 rotates. The space beneath the disk 56 is used to collect and discharge the particulate matter. To increase the feed size of the refiner 10, the refiner 10 may additionally include a funnel or hopper positioned above the refiner chamber 12 to collect solid material and direct the solid material into the chamber 12. The funnel or hopper may rotate with the sidewall or remain stationary. In view of these and other alternative embodiments of the invention, it should be understood that the scope of the invention is not limited to the particular embodiments shown and described herein, but should be determined from the following claims and equivalents thereto.
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