Roller sifting and dispersing machine

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6257414
  • Patent Number
    6,257,414
  • Date Filed
    Wednesday, December 8, 1999
    24 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, July 10, 2001
    22 years ago
Abstract
A roller sifting or dispersing machine for the classification or dispersing of wood chips, fibers, or similar materials and to the utilization of an above-described roller sifting or dispersing machine. The roller sifting machine includes annular grooves and annular crosspieces. An outer sheathing surface of each annular crosspiece is provided with adjoining teeth in the circumference direction. The front tooth-side in the direction of rotation is steeper than the adjoining tooth back-side. The crosspiece and teeth of a roller also form a gradient that is opposed to the adjacent roller but has the same gradient height. The leading tooth sides of the circulating teeth create a pitching effect on the particles of the material to be sifted so that clogging of the roller set are avoided and an accelerated movement towards the exit end is achieved. By the continuous opposing movement of the teeth, clogging of these openings for the passage of chips is avoided. Also, the separation effectiveness can be regulated by modification of the roller revolution speed.
Description




FIELD OF THE INVENTION




The invention generally relates to a roller sifting or dispersing machine for the classification or dispersing of wood chips, fibers, or similar materials and to the utilization of an above-described roller sifting or dispersing machine.




BACKGROUND SECTION




The problems arising in sifting and classification, as well as a pertinent portion of the state of the art, are described in EP 0 328 067. This published patent protects rollers whose sheathing surface is provided with tapering projections separated by tapering indentations. Neighboring rollers are arranged such that the outer ends of the projections are always opposite each other and are separated by an axially parallel gap; this gap defines the thickness of the chips to be sifted.




The prior art machine is described in U.S. Pat. 2,566,267. Here the annular grooves with a flush base as well as the crosspieces with a flush sheathing surface are always oblique to the roller axis.




SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION




The objective of the invention is to improve the sifting/classification effectiveness of the prior art described machine.




The objective is achieved by the fact that the annular grooves as well as the annular crosspieces that separate them, are located perpendicular to the surface of the roller axis, and the outer sheathing surface of each annular crosspiece is provided with adjoining teeth in the circumference direction; the front tooth-side in the direction of rotation is steeper than the adjoining tooth back-side, whereby, in the axial view, the crosspiece and teeth of a roller form a gradient that is opposed to the adjacent roller but has the same gradient height.




The leading tooth sides of the circulating teeth create a pitching effect on the particles of the material to be sifted/dispersed, so that clogging of the roller set are avoided and an accelerated movement, especially of the coarse matter, towards the exit end is achieved. Active impulses are generated only on the leading tooth-side while the particles falling on the tooth-backs essentially slide off. By the continuous opposing movement of the teeth, clogging of these openings for the passage of chips is avoided. In addition, the separation effectiveness can be regulated by modification of the roller revolution speed. For this, several sequentially switched roller sets with variable drives may be provided.




It is also possible to influence the separation efficiency by choosing different radial tooth-heights. Thus, the crosspiece teeth of the last rollers may exhibit maximal tooth height.




Fundamentally, it is possible to shape the bottom of each annular groove as a flat surface. For certain applications, however, is has proven advantageous for the bottoms of each annular groove to be provided with contiguous teeth in the circumference direction whose contours correspond to the crosspiece teeth, whereby the teeth of the annular groove are offset by a fraction of a tooth-width and tooth-backs slightly overlap the crosspiece teeth in the radial direction.




To avoid jamming of particles of the sifting material in the grooves, it is useful that the teeth of the groove are offset by less than one half of the tooth width in the rotation direction.




The previously described pitching effect is especially effective when the leading tooth-side makes an angle of about 45 degrees with the radius of the tooth-base.




It is further advantageous if a top-view rectilinear gap is provided between two adjacent rollers, such gap having a size of about 0.2× the height of the tooth. This relationship results from the determination that the gap size depends on the load on the teeth, where the loading with large teeth is higher than with fine teeth.




An especially favorable production process of the rollers can be achieved when each roller consists of individual pre-fabricated rings drawn on a roller body, where the roller body may consist of solid rods or thick walled pipe. The rings may have the same width, e.g. 3 mm, whereby the rings forming the annular grooves have an outside diameter only about 2 mm smaller than the outer diameter of the rings forming the annular crosspiece. For the construction of larger openings for the passage of chips, two or more identical rings may be arranged next to each other.




In view of the above, the invention concerns a roller sifting or dispersing machine for the classification or dispersing of wood chips, fibers, or similar materials, having at least one roller set that consists of several rollers arranged axially in parallel next to each other and having the same rotation direction; these rollers form a roller bed that extends in a longitudinal direction transverse to the rollers and has a feeding end for the material to be sifted/dispersed, as well as an exit end for the coarse material. Each roller turns toward the exit end with its upper side defining the roller bed; the roller is equipped with numerous annular grooves evenly spaced in the axial direction and separated by annular crosspieces; these grooves and crosspieces form the outer sheathing of the roller and adjacent rollers are arranged such that the crosspieces of one roller are opposite the grooves of its neighbor, thus being largely closed along their circumference when viewed along the roller bed surface, but having openings for the passage of chips in the direction perpendicular to the roller bed surface.




Other features of the invention as well as their utilization possibilities are the subject of the dependent claims and will be further clarified by embodiment examples that will point out further advantages of the invention.











BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS




The drawings serve as examples of embodiment forms of the invention. The drawings show:





FIG. 1

shows a top view of a sifting or dispersing machine;





FIG. 2

shows a detail marked in

FIG. 1

on a larger scale and schematic depiction.





FIG. 3

shows a detail of a horizontal cross-section of a roller set of a sifting and dispersing machine, in which each roller consists of individual pre-fabricated rings drawn on a roller body;





FIG. 4

shows a horizontal cross-section of a left orientation of a roller according to

FIG. 3







FIG. 5

shows a front view in solid lines of a larger diameter ring to which a ring of a smaller diameter is adjoined and shown by dotted lines;





FIG. 6

shows a he detail noted in

FIG. 5

on a larger scale;





FIG. 7

shows a schematic representation of a perpendicular section of a deck-layer dispersing machine with a roller sieve arranged over a wind chamber;





FIG. 8

is a representation according to

FIG. 7

, the deck-layer dispersing machine with the dosing roller arranged over the wind chamber;





FIG. 9

shows a deck-layer dispersing machine with an installation for the supplemental loosening of the chip stream;





FIG. 10

is a representation according to

FIG. 7

, a middle layer dispersing machine with a roller sieve arranged over a bunker;





FIG. 11

shows a embodiment form according to

FIG. 10

with a modified roller sieve arrangement and





FIG. 12

shows a deck-layer-roller dispersing head according to

FIG. 9 and

, on the upper part of the figure, a size distribution diagram achievable by the use of this roller dispersing machine.











DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION





FIG. 1

shows a roller sifting or dispersing machine for the classification or distribution of wood chips, fibers, or other similar materials. Illustrated is a roller set


1


constituted of several rollers


3


in an axially parallel arrangement and having a common rotation direction


2


; these rollers make up a roller bed that extends longitudinally at right angle to the rollers and is provided with an input end A for the materials to be sifted or dispersed and an output end for the coarse materials. The upper side of each roller


3


, which defines the roller bed surface, turns toward the output end B and is provided with numerous axially equi-spaced annular grooves


4


(see

FIG. 2

) that are separated by annular crosspieces


5


which constitute the outer sheathing surface of the roller


3


. The annular grooves and the annular crosspieces are perpendicular to the surface of the roller axis


6


whereby adjoining rollers


3


are arranged so that the annular crosspieces


5


of one roller


3


are opposite the annular grooves


4


of the other roller, thus forming a largely closed surface, if viewed from the top of the roller bed surface, yet forming openings for the passage of chips


7


, as can be seen from FIG.


2


. Thereby the width b of the annular cross members


5


are at most as large as that of annular grooves


4


. In particular,

FIG. 2

shows that in a top view a rectilinear slot


8


is formed between adjoining rollers


3


.




According to the embodiment forms depicted in

FIGS. 3

to


5


, the roller


3


consists of individual pre-fabricated rings


10


,


11


drawn on the roller body


9


. Here the roller body


9


can be made of solid rods or of thick-walled pipe material.

FIGS. 3 and 4

especially show that rings


10


of a greater diameter form the annular crosspieces


5


, while rings


11


of a lesser diameter form annular grooves


4


when placed between rings


10


.




The outer sheathing surface of each annular crosspiece


5


as well as the floor of each annular groove


4


, is equipped with teeth


12


placed next to each other circumferentially; the tooth leading side


12




a


in the direction of rotation


2


is shaped more steeply than the tooth back edge


12




c


leading to the base


12




b


of the following tooth side


12




a


. Here the tooth leading side


12




a


makes an angle of about 45 degrees with the radius r of the tooth base


12




b


. This angle is shown as alpha in FIG.


6


.

FIG. 6

also indicates that each tooth-back


12




c


of the annular member teeth


12


makes an angle of 3 to 6 degrees (angle gamma) with the tangent of their revolution circle.




The teeth


12


of the annular grooves


4


are shaped similarly to those of the annular cross members


5


, but are radially offset by a fraction of a tooth part t, preferably less than one half of tooth part t.

FIG. 5

indicates that the annular crosspiece teeth


12


slightly overlap the axially adjacent tooth backs


12




c


. As viewed in the axial direction, the annular crosspiece teeth


12


form a gradient


13


, which is shown schematically in FIG.


3


. To achieve an optimally even distribution of the chips over the width of the roller bed, it is appropriate that this gradient


13


be in the opposite direction to that of the gradient of the adjoining roller, but have the same gradient height.




According to

FIGS. 3 and 4

, rings


10


and


11


are braced in the axial direction by front view right and left handed nuts


14




a


and


14




b


. For a definitive connection of rings


10


and


11


to the roller body


9


, the rings may be equipped with a cam


15


to fit in a groove extending the whole length of the roller body


9


. In a useful alternate method, not shown in detail in the drawing, an inclined protuberance may be provided on the roller body


9


on which rings


10


and


11


, provided with the proper internal slot can be inserted.




The separation operation of the roller sifting or dispersing machine according to the invention can be modified by changing the roller rotation velocity. In addition, two or more identical rings


10


/


11


can be placed next to each other in the axial direction to create larger openings


7


for the passage of chips. Thereby the width b of a ring


10


or


11


may, for example, be 3 mm. With an outside diameter D of about 60-70 mm (deck-layer machine) each ring


10


/


11


is provided with 16-20 teeth


12


, and with an outside diameter of about 70-80 mm (middle layer machine) each ring


10


/


11


is provided with about 14-24 teeth. Wide dispersing machines have outside diameters of up to 100 mm. The radial tooth height h depends on the application and amounts to about 1-3 mm in deck-layer machines and about 2-8 mm in middle layer machines. The annular groove teeth are offset to the crosspiece teeth by an angle (beta) of about 4 degrees in the rotation direction


2


.




According to

FIG. 4

, each roller


3


is housed at both ends in bearing


16


. The roller surface is abrasion resistant, preferably chrome plated.





FIG. 7

shows a deck-layer dispersing machine


17


with a chip bunker


18


for the reception of the sifted/dispersed material


19


, with a bunker tape


20


that transports the sifted material


19


in the direction of the arrow, to a discharge location having equalization rollers


21


in chip bunker


19


and a spine roller


22


. A wind chamber


24


equipped with sieves


23


is provided underneath the discharge location; the chamber is equipped with an air register


25


and an air blower


26


.




Located below the described belt discharge of the bunker belt


20


, is a roller set


1


according to the invention that functions as a roller sifter, i.e. having chip-passing openings


7


of equal size and serving for the separation of coarse material


27


, which has traveled roller set


1


from input end A to output end B; the coarse material is discarded onto the screw conveyor


28


.





FIG. 8

primarily differs from the deck-layer dispersing machine


17


of

FIG. 7

, in that here the roller set


1


functions as a dosing installation i.e. serves as a classifier of the dispersed material. The size of the chip-passing openings of

FIG. 2

increases from A to B.




Any coarse material is also discarded in the screw conveyor


28


.





FIG. 9

depicts a deck-layer dispersing machine in which the chip stream is loosened mechanically and pneumatically. The chip bunker


18


corresponds essentially to that shown in

FIG. 7

with its built-ins


20


,


21


,


22


. The sift/dispersed material


19


is conveyed from the bunker belt


20


through the equalizing rollers


21


and further conveyed as an equalized height layer and at the end of bunker belt


20


is transferred onto a roller set


1


with assistance of pin roller


22


, which may also be a rotating brush. In a clear gap below the roller set


1


is the usual form belt


31


that travels in the direction of the shown arrows i.e. against the conveying direction


33


of roller set


1


. A coarse material screw conveyor


28


is located at the end of roller set


1


. To achieve a supplemental pneumatic loosening of the chip stream, the space between the roller set


1


and the form conveyor


31


is equipped with an air suction device


34


that moves air against the conveying direction


35


of roller set


1


.




Thus, a free suction channel


35


is formed between the start A of roller set


1


and the air suction device


34


shown at the right of

FIG. 9

above the form conveyor


31


. The air suction device


34


produces air velocities from 0.9 to 1.7 meters/sec. Under roller set


1


and above form conveyor


31


. Thereby we obtain pneumatic loosening of the chip stream in addition to the mechanical loosening by roller set


1


.





FIG. 10

depicts a middle-layer dispersing machine


29


. Here the sift/dispersed material


19


to be introduced in the chip bunker is first passed on a roller set


1


that acts as a roller sieve and already removes the coarse material and conveys it to the screw conveyor


28


. The sifted material is captured by a transport belt


30


and conveyed to the chip bunker


18


. The sift/dispersed material


19


coming from the bunker belt


20


is separated into two partial streams by means of a device that is of no detailed interest here and then reaches form belt


31


, as is shown in

FIG. 7 through 9

.




The embodiment form according to

FIG. 11

differs from that of

FIG. 10

essentially by the fact that the sift/dispersed material


19


passing through the roller set


1


acting as a roller sieve immediately falls in the chip bunker


18


.





FIG. 12

shows, on its lower portion, a schematic representation of an installation according to

FIG. 9

where the chip stream should be loosened both mechanically and pneumatically. The sift/dispersed material (not shown in detail) is conveyed in the usual manner by a bunker belt


20


and at the end of the belt is transferred to a roller set


1


with the aid of a rotating brush


32


. In a clear space under the roller set


1


is the usual form belt


31


that travels in the direction of the shown arrow i.e. in the direction opposite to the conveying direction


33


of roller set


1


; to achieve the distribution pattern shown in the upper portion of

FIG. 12

a free suction channel


35


is created between the start A of roller set


1


and the external air suction device


34


above the form belt


31


, whose length is at least that of the roller set


1


. In addition to the mechanical loosening effected by roller set


1


we obtain a supplementary pneumatic loosening that results in the distribution diagram shown in the upper part of FIG.


12


. This diagram has resulted from a revolution velocity of 325 RPM of the dispersed rollers


3


and an air suction velocity of 1.1 meters/sec. The dispersing occurred over a time period of 30 seconds with form belt


31


stationary.




The distribution diagram indicates that while the maximum dispersed -height still occurs under the first dispersed rollers of the roller set


1


, this maximum is significantly lower than that achieved without an air suction device that leads to significant stretching of the distribution diagram over the form belt, whereby the stretching generated by air suction extends well into the bunker belt


20


.




The invention concerns a roller sifting or dispersing machine for the classification or dispersing of wood chips, fibers, or similar materials, having at least one roller set composed of several rollers axially aligned in parallel and having the same rotation direction; together, these rollers form a roller bed that extends longitudinally at right angles to the rollers and is equipped with an input end for the material to be sieved and an output end for the coarse material, whereby each roller's upper side turns toward the output end; the rollers are equipped with numerous annular grooves axially equi-spaced and separated by annular crosspieces that form the outer sheathing surface of the roller. Adjacent rollers are arranged so that the annular cross members of one roller are opposite the annular grooves of the other roller, thus being largely closed along their circumference when viewed along the roller bed surface, but having openings for the passage of chips in the direction perpendicular to the roller bed surface. For improved sifting or classification the invention proposes that the annular grooves as well as the annular crosspieces be located perpendicular to the roller surface and that the outer sheathing surface of each annular crosspiece be equipped with circumferentially aligned teeth whose leading sides are shaped more steeply than their back edges leading to the base of the following tooth side, whereby an axial view of the annular crosspiece teeth is seen as a gradient that is in the opposite direction to that of the adjacent roller but is of the same height.



Claims
  • 1. A roller sifting or dispersing machine for the classification or dispersing of wood chips, fibers, or similar materials, the roller sifting or dispersing machine comprising:at least one roller set composed of several rollers aligned axially parallel and having a same rotation direction; a roller bed formed by the rollers, the roller bed extending longitudinally at a right angle to the rollers and being provided with an input end for introduction of the material to be processed and an output end for coarse material, each of the rollers having an upper side which turns toward the output end; each of the rollers comprising a plurality of annular grooves, the annular grooves being axially equi-spaced and separated by annular crosspieces forming an outer generating surface of each of the rollers, the annular crosspieces of one roller being arranged opposite the annular grooves of an adjoining roller thus forming in a top view onto the roller bed openings for the passage of chips, which openings having a substantially closed circumference, wherein the annular grooves and the annular crosspieces are located in planes perpendicularly to a roller axis, and the outer generating surface of each annular crosspiece includes circumferentially aligned teeth having a rotation direction leading tooth flanked shape steeper than a tooth back flank inclined to a base of a following tooth side, whereby axially the annular crosspiece teeth of a roller form a gradient that is opposite to that of the adjoining roller but includes a same gradient height.
  • 2. The roller sifting or dispersing machine according to claim 1, wherein the tooth leading flank of the annular crosspiece teeth forms an angle of about 45 degrees with the radius of the tooth base.
  • 3. The roller sifting or dispersing machine according to claim 1, wherein each tooth back of the annular crosspiece teeth forms an angle of 3 to 6 degrees with the tangent of their revolution circle.
  • 4. The roller sifting or dispersing machine according to claim 1 wherein located on the bottom of each annular groove are circumferentially aligned teeth whose contours correspond to those of the annular crosspiece teeth, whereby the teeth of the groove are circumferentially offset against the annular crosspiece teeth by a fraction of a tooth pitch and radially slightly overlap the tooth backs of the axially adjoining annular crosspiece teeth.
  • 5. The roller sifting or dispersing machine according to claim 4, wherein in the rotation direction, the teeth of the annular grooves are offset against the teeth of the annular crosspiece by less than half of a tooth pitch.
  • 6. The roller sifting or dispersing machine according to claim 1, wherein the width of the annular crosspieces is at most as wide as the width of the annular grooves.
  • 7. The roller sifting or dispersing machine according to claim 1, wherein the width of the annular crosspieces is about 3-9 mm.
  • 8. The roller sifting or dispersing machine according to claim 1, wherein a rectilinear slot (top view) is created between two adjoining rollers, having a size of about 0.2× tooth height.
  • 9. The roller sifting or dispersing machine according to claim 1, wherein the radial tooth-height is about 1-8 mm.
  • 10. The roller sifting or dispersing machine according to claim 1, wherein the annular crosspieces have an outer diameter of about 60-80 mm and have sixteen to twenty four teeth.
  • 11. The roller sifting or dispersing machine according to claim 1, wherein the annular crosspieces and grooves are applied to a single roller body consisting of a solid rod or of heavy-wall pipe.
  • 12. The roller sifting or dispersing machine according to claim 1, wherein each roller is composed of axially clamped rings jointly applied.
  • 13. The roller sifting or dispersing machine according to claim 1, wherein each roller consists of single pre-fabricated rings fitted on the roller body.
  • 14. The roller sifting or dispersing machine according to claim 13, wherein the rings are braced in the axial direction by (front view) right and left-handed nuts.
  • 15. The roller sifting or dispersing machine according to claim 13, wherein to obtain a positive locking connection between the rings and the roller body, an inclined protuberance is provided on the generated surface of the roller body, on which protuberance the rings, provided in their inner ring contour with an appropriate slot, are inserted.
  • 16. The roller sifting or dispersing machine according to claim 13, wherein for the formation of larger chip passage openings two or more identical rings are axially arranged next to each other.
  • 17. The roller sifting or dispersing machine according claim 1, wherein each roller is housed at both ends in bearings.
  • 18. The roller sifting or dispersing machine according to claim 1, wherein the roller surface is abrasion resistant, preferably chrome-plated.
  • 19. The roller sifting or dispersing machine according to claim 1, wherein the separation effect can be regulated by modification of the roller revolution velocity.
  • 20. The roller sifting or dispersing machine according to claim 1, wherein there at least two roller sets, whereby, in the conveying direction, the rollers of the second set have wider annular grooves and annular crosspieces than those of the first roller set.
  • 21. The roller sifting or dispersing machine according to claim 20, wherein the second roller set is located at a lower level than the first roller set.
  • 22. The roller sifting or dispersing machine according to claim 1, further comprising a form belt continuously running opposite to the convening direction of the roller set and located beneath the roller set, wherein to achieve a supplemental pneumatic loosening of the chip stream, an air suction device is attached to provide a countercurrent air stream in the space between roller set and form belt.
  • 23. The roller sifting or dispersion machine according to claim 22, wherein between the input end of the roller set and the air suction device and above the form belt, a free suction channel is created, whose length is at least as long as the roller set.
  • 24. The roller sifting or dispersing machine according to claim 22, wherein the air suction device produces air velocities of 0.9-1.7 meters/sec. below the roller set and above the form belt.
  • 25. The roller sifting or dispersing machine according to claim 1, is used as a roller sieve in a deck-layer dispersion machine above a wind chamber.
  • 26. The roller sifting or dispersing machine according to claim 1, is used as a dosing roller in a deck-layer dispersion machine above a wind chamber and/or a suction channel.
  • 27. The roller sifting or dispersing machine according to claim 1, is used as a roller sieve above a chip bunker of a middle layer dispersing machine.
Priority Claims (1)
Number Date Country Kind
198 57 498 Dec 1998 DE
US Referenced Citations (2)
Number Name Date Kind
2966267 Dunbar Dec 1960
4871073 Berry et al. Oct 1989
Foreign Referenced Citations (1)
Number Date Country
0328067 Jul 1994 EP