The present invention relates generally to scraper blades for scraped-surface heat exchangers. More particularly, the present invention relates to materials and shapes for scraper blades and scraper methods used with scraped-surface heat exchangers.
The scraped-surface heat exchanger (SSHE) is a well-established device used in continuous-flow heating or chilling of foodstuffs, pharmaceuticals, lubricants, and other materials requiring such thermal alteration (i.e., “products”). An additional effect of the use of an SSHE is stirring of products, which can involve combining ingredients, whipping gases into liquid materials, and other alterations to products. As currently manufactured, a representative SSHE can have a heat exchanger tube some 6″ in diameter and roughly ten feet in length and can have a motor that provides on the order of four horsepower. SSHEs can be made that can operate in a horizontal or vertical position. Some are designed to be shifted to vertical orientation before disassembly for inspection and scraper blade exchange. The SSHE has met with excellent market acceptance, as a serviceable tool for modern industry.
An exemplary SSHE consists of a set of concentric layers, where the outermost layer is metal-skinned thermal insulation for safety, energy economy, thermal uniformity, and process control. Inside the insulation is the outermost pressure tube. Next inward is a chamber into which the thermal control medium—e.g., live steam, ethylene glycol, ammonia, fluorocarbons, or another heat exchange fluid—is introduced. The next inward layer is a second chamber, through which the product to be heated or cooled is forced. The innermost layer is a drive shaft that carries the scraper blades.
Continuous pressure keeps the product flowing longitudinally through the SSHE and prevents uncontrolled air from getting into the SSHE. Relative rotation between the drive shaft and the rest of the structure causes the scraper blades to scrape the product away from the thermally controlled product-chamber surface (i.e., the “scraped surface”). Scraping a layer of product away from the surface in a completely filled environment causes another portion of product to contact the scraped surface. The combination of forced flow and scraping determines the amount and duration of direct exposure of product to the scraped surface so that the cooling or heating meets process needs.
The scraper blades are free to pivot out from their connection to the drive shaft towards the thermally controlled scraped surface, until the leading edge of the blades contacts the scraped surface against which the blades are held by resistance from the fluid flow properties of the product when the drive shaft is rotated. Multiple blades staggered at different radial and axial orientations along the drive shaft provide enough overlap to ensure that the entire inner surface of the heat transfer tube is scraped continuously. A drive motor and appropriate mechanism provide torque for the relative rotation of the SSHE parts. Suitable seals prevent leakage and contamination.
Typically, the scraped surface must meet some or all of the following requirements. It must be chemically compatible with both the product being processed and the thermal control medium. It typically also must be suitable for contact with food or pharmaceuticals if the product is intended for human use. It must be reasonably efficient in transferring heat to and from the thermal control medium and the product involved. It is also generally desirable for the scraped surface to be significantly harder than the scraper blade, since the scraped surface is much more expensive and difficult to service and/or replace than the blades.
The scraper blades also typically must meet certain requirements. Various styles and materials for scraper blades have been used since the introduction of the SSHE. For example, blades have been made from stainless steel and other metals by machining them from flat stock. Such blades can show a wear pattern that leaves a feathered edge of blade material projecting outward along the scraping surface. Maintenance of blades to remove feathering requires disassembling the SSHE and grinding the blades to the original profile. After several grindings, the blades become too short to maintain a working angle of attack against the scraped surface that is within the acceptable range, so that the blades must be discarded. An additional consideration for metal scraper blades is the requirement that the heat transfer tube surface be extremely hard, which requires special production steps and periodic inspection, adding to production and maintenance costs.
Some plastics have proven suitable for blades, but are limited by the temperatures and friction environment of the SSHE. One, polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE, commonly known by the Dupont® tradename of Teflon®) is FDA and/or USDA recognized for use on foods and other critical materials. However, PTFE cannot be molded, but must be machined, making it useful for prototypes but in some instances less desirable for mass production. Other plastics, such as Polyoxymethylene (Acetal) and Polyphenylene sulfide (PPS) can be significantly more long-wearing than PTFE in some applications and are injection moldable, which lowers cost if demand is sufficient. Most plastics considered for SSHE applications wear away without leaving a feather edge like metal, so such blades do not require sharpening. Being softer than stainless steel or nickel, they obviate the need for a hard inner surface coating on the SSHE heat transfer tube. Fillers—finely divided fiberglass, carbon filaments, and even talc—can improve some plastics' mechanical properties. A few fillers are FDA/USDA approved.
A disadvantage of the plastic blades described above is that even the most suitable of the plastics often exhibit more rapid wear than metal blades. This can obligate users to halt process operations more often than periodic maintenance requires, just to inspect or replace blades. Such halts, adding extra cooldown, cleanup, disassembly, and other maintenance steps, can add cost and interfere with production. Further, many plastics are not recognized by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) or the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) for use on foods, either in virgin form or with fillers.
Accordingly, it is desirable to provide a scraped-surface heat exchanger scraper blade that combines desirable manufacturability and scraping performance and improved blade life while having desirable SSHE properties.
It is an advantage and feature of some embodiments of the present invention to provide a scraped-surface heat exchanger scraper blade that combines desirable manufacturability and scraping performance and improved blade life while having desirable SSHE properties. Another advantage and feature of some embodiments of the invention is to provide a scraped-surface heat exchanger scraper blade with a profile that provides a generally constant angle of attack with respect to the heat transfer tube surface throughout the working life of the blade.
In one aspect, the invention provides a scraper for use in a scraped-surface heat exchanger having a drive shaft rotating relative to a scraped surface wherein the blade and/or scraping means has a first end with a mounting feature and/or mounting means for mounting to the drive shaft, and a second end with an edge for scraping contact against the scraped surface, and moreover wherein the blade and/or scraping means has a curved inward facing surface proximate the edge.
In another aspect, the invention provides a scraped surface heat exchanger using such a blade and/or scraping means.
In another aspect, the invention provides a method for scraping processed product from the inner surface of a heat transfer tube. The method of manufacturing a scraper blade for a scraped surface heat exchanger includes the step of forming a blade, having a first end with a mounting feature for mounting to a drive shaft of the heat exchanger, and a second end having an edge for scraping contact with a scraped surface of the heat exchanger, the blade having a curved inward facing surface proximate the edge.
There have thus been outlined, rather broadly, the more important features of the invention in order that the detailed description thereof that follows may be better understood, and in order that the present contribution to the art may be better appreciated. There are, of course, additional features of the invention that will be described below and which will form the subject matter of the claims appended hereto.
In this respect, before explaining at least one embodiment of the invention in detail, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited in its application to the details of construction and to the arrangements of the components set forth in the following description or illustrated in the drawings. The invention is capable of other embodiments and of being practiced and carried out in various ways. Also, it is to be understood that the phraseology and terminology employed herein, as well as the abstract, are for the purpose of description and should not be regarded as limiting.
As such, those skilled in the art will appreciate that the conception upon which this disclosure is based may readily be utilized as a basis for the designing of other structures, methods and systems for carrying out the several purposes of the present invention. It is important, therefore, that the claims be regarded as including such equivalent constructions insofar as they do not depart from the spirit and scope of the present invention.
A preferred embodiment of the present invention provides a scraper blade injection—molded from a food-safe, high-temperature, high-stiffness, highly wear-resistant thermoplastic. The scraper blade in embodiments of the invention is preferably made at least partially or wholly from PEEK material. As used herein, “PEEK” refers to ketone polymer materials known as e.g., polyaryletherketones, including the materials known in the trade as PAEK, PEK, PEEK, and/or PEKK. As used herein, PEEK refers to all materials in the family of these ketone polymers. An example of these materials is the material sold under the brand name PEEK™ available from Victrex PLC. In another aspect the preferred embodiment has a blade shape that regardless of the material used can improve performance compared to conventional shapes, for example by maintaining a more constant angle of attack over its useful life. In some instances, the PEEK material choice offers the potential for reduced system stresses, longer maintenance intervals, and increased uniformity in products processed using blades of this shape.
An additional property of the preferred scraper blade embodiment is the positioning of the pin connection point 18, which is the pivot axis for the blade 26 with respect to the pin 30. The pin 30 used for the pivot axis 50 is preferably the same as in the prior art so that the scraper blade 26 then can be a direct exchange for conventional flat blades. The blade's pivot axis 50 is located quite close to the surface of the drive shaft on many SSHE models. In the preferred blade 26, the pivot axis 50 is preferably offset from the overall center line of the blade body, generally designated by line L in
A curved blade 26 as shown in
The preferred blade 26 is preferably molded from PEEK, which provides good injection molding capability and a combination of food safety, thermal range, mechanical toughness, and low coefficient of friction against typical scraping surfaces. In addition, the reliability and toughness of PEEK not only permit the complex blade shape of the blade, but also establish feasibility of its use for extreme temperatures, high pressures, caustics, and other applications that could otherwise require metal blades instead of plastics. However, blades having a shape according to the invention can be made from other materials, and can be fabricated by processes other than injection molding.
The scraper blade bottom curve 42 shown in the preferred embodiment in
In addition to the concentric-cylinder heat exchanger designs discussed herein, an SSHE can employ an eccentric heat transfer tube, that is, one in which the tube is not concentric with the drive shaft, or in which the tube is noncylindrical. In these cases, the angle, and even the curvature, of the scraped surface of the heat transfer tube at the point of contact with the scraper blade can vary continuously, so the wear pattern on the friction surface of the scraper blade can be different from that of the concentric design. The heel of the scraper blade acquires greater curvature in these systems, and, since the curvature exceeds that of the scraped surface of the heat transfer tube, the contact pressure is greater, leading to the potential for more rapid wear, which is generally traded off against the potential for superior scraping performance with particular types of materials. For a preferred embodiment of the present invention, the shape of the top surface 44 of an unused blade—the surface closest to the heat transfer tube—can be such that the contact line remains the line furthest from the pivot at every drive shaft position. Once the blade is used, it will wear so that the line of contact is not the edge except at the extreme of travel.
The many features and advantages of the invention are apparent from the detailed specification; thus, it is intended by the appended claims to cover all such features and advantages of the invention which fall within the true spirit and scope of the invention. Further, since numerous modifications and variations will readily occur to those skilled in the art, it is not desired to limit the invention to the exact construction and operation illustrated and described. Accordingly, all suitable modifications and equivalents may be resorted to, that fall within the scope of the invention.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20040099405 A1 | May 2004 | US |