1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to a screw of a solid-bowl screw centrifuge having a screw hub extending along a longitudinal axis and a screw helix surrounding the screw hub. The invention further relates to a use of such a screw in a solid-bowl screw centrifuge.
2. Description of the Related Art
Solid-bowl screw centrifuges are characterised by a drum with a closed or solid bowl. The drum is rotated at high speed, whereby a multiphase mixture situated in the drum can be separated into at least a heavy phase and light phase. The heavy phase is normally a solid phase which is conveyed out of the drum by means of screw. For this purpose, the screw is mounted in the drum rotatably relative thereto and has a screw helix which is arranged around a screw hub. The screw helix sweeps along the inner surface or inner lateral surface of the drum and thus conveys the material of the heavy phase to an axial end region of the drum and there in particular out of a discharge cone. The multiphase mixture to be clarified is thus situated between the inner surface of the drum and the screw hub.
In certain solid-bowl screw centrifuges, a large pond depth is desired, in particular for clarifying reasons. At the same time, however, the pond depth is limited by the diameter of the screw hub and the buoyancy and deposition effects of the mixture or the light phase to be clarified, which result there.
The diameter of the screw hub cannot be reduced to an unlimited degree, since this would negatively affect the rigidity of the screw and its stability.
The object of the invention is to provide a solid-bowl screw centrifuge having a screw, the screw hub of which can be immersed in the mixture to be separated, without disadvantages regarding the rigidity and also aforementioned buoyancy and depositions resulting.
This object is achieved according to the invention with a screw of a solid-bowl screw centrifuge having a screw hub extending along a longitudinal axis and a screw helix surrounding the screw hub, wherein the screw hub is designed with a grid structure in a portion of its longitudinal extent.
In the screw of a solid-bowl screw centrifuge according to the invention, its screw hub or screw body is designed in portions with a grid structure. This grid structure is in principle not closed to the outside, but open and can accordingly be immersed in the pond of the mixture to be clarified circulating in the drum, without problems arising due to buoyancy forces. With the configuration of the grid structure according to the invention, it can be achieved that settling particles which settle from the mixture to be clarified in the direction of the drum inner surface do not adhere to the grid structure. Rather, such particles slide off the grid structure according to the invention radially outwards or into the outer region of the drum. A further advantage of the screw hub according to the invention is that the region in which material to be clarified is released from an inlet pipe in the centre of the drum into the drum can be freely chosen in the axial direction.
In one embodiment, the screw hub has a cylindrical longitudinal portion and at least one conical longitudinal portion. The portion of the screw hub that has a grid structure may be the cylindrical longitudinal portion. The grid structure according to the invention is situated, in this development, in a cylindrical longitudinal portion of the screw and can be produced there accordingly particularly easily and inexpensively.
The conical longitudinal portion of the screw hub may have a closed lateral surface. The conical longitudinal portion that has a closed lateral surface is particularly easy to produce and gives the screw according to the invention high rigidity. The conical longitudinal portion may be of hollow and fluid-tightly closed design, so that no material that is to be or has been clarified can penetrate into its interior.
The screw hub may have at least one longitudinal portion comprising a screw bearing, and this portion of the screw hub may have a closed lateral surface. In this development, the screw bearing is surrounded by a closed lateral surface and accordingly is mounted particularly rigidly mounted, and at the same time is protected from an ingress of material that is to be or has been clarified into its inner bearing region.
The grid structure may have at least one transverse disc that may extend in the shape of an annular disc over the entire circumference of the screw hub.
In one embodiment, the grid structure has at least one longitudinal bar that extends over a transverse disc and may extend over the entire length of the portion in the longitudinal direction. Such longitudinal bars are easy to process and provide an advantageous base frame for the subsequent mounting of a screw hub on the screw hub according to the invention.
In one embodiment, the grid structure has at least one inclined strut that extends oblique to the longitudinal axis between two transverse discs. Such inclined struts can be mounted fixedly with high rigidity between the two transverse discs, in particular by a welded connection. Such connections can be produced very easily, because easily shaped contact surfaces result on the transverse discs.
The inclined strut may project at its end into the adjacent transverse disc. With the projection of the inclined strut into the associated transverse disc, there also results a form-fitting connection, by means of which in particular the grid structure can also be prepositioned.
In one embodiment, a total of three inclined struts are distributed and spaced equally over the circumference of the screw hub. With the three inclined struts, there results surprisingly an advantageous optimum with regard to many factors, such as cost, producibility, rigidity, fatigue strength and functionality with respect to the immersion in the pond.
The invention is also directed to a use of such a screw according to the invention in a solid-bowl screw centrifuge.
In the figures there is depicted a solid-bowl screw centrifuge 10 that extends substantially along a horizontal longitudinal axis 12. The solid-bowl screw centrifuge 10 has an outer housing 14, in which a drum 16 is mounted rotatably about the longitudinal axis 12. By rotating the drum 16 at a high rotational speed, a centrifugal force can be generated therein, by means of which a material to be clarified can be separated into a heavy and a light phase. For this purpose, the drum 16 is supported at a first drum bearing 18 and a second drum bearing 20.
On the drum 16 there is formed an inlet 22 for the material to be clarified as well as an outlet 24 for the heavy phase and an outlet 26 for the light phase. To rotate the drum 16 there is provided a drive 28. The outlet 26 acts as an overflow for the light phase situated radially inwards in the drum 16, so that this phase flows out automatically there provided that a predetermined level, the so-called pond depth, is reached in the drum 16. In order to be able to discharge from the drum 16 the heavy phase situated radially outwards in the drum 16, a screw 30 is provided in the drum 16. The screw 30 is rotated by the drive 28 relative to the drum 16 and the material of the heavy phase is thereby discharged along a cone, formed on the drum 16, radially inwardly and thus to the outlet 24.
For this purpose, the screw 30 has a screw hub 32 that extends along the longitudinal axis 12 and is surrounded radially outwards by a screw helix 34. The screw hub 32 thus serves to support the screw helix 34 in the radial direction, to transmit torque from the drive 28 to the screw helix 34 and in doing so to take up in particular tensile forces and shearing forces.
For this purpose, the screw hub 32 has a cylindrical longitudinal portion 36 and an axially adjoining conical longitudinal portion 38. The screw hub is mounted rotatably by a first screw bearing 40 and a second screw bearing 42. As can be readily seen in
Consequently, a pond depth 52 of this solid-bowl screw centrifuge 10 according to the prior art is substantially limited by the outer radius or the outer diameter of the screw hub 32 to a relatively large radius or diameter.
Illustrated in
The grid structure 56 in the present case is designed by means of twelve longitudinal bars 58 that are arranged over the circumference of the screw hub 32 in the longitudinal direction thereof, i.e. distributed parallel to the longitudinal axis 12 at equal spacings. The preferred number, according to the invention, of longitudinal bars 58 lies between eight and sixteen, in particular between ten and fourteen. The longitudinal bars 58 form radially outwards in each case a bearing surface for the screw helix 34 and are supported radially inwards on transverse discs 60. The longitudinal bars 58 extend over the transverse discs 60 which are oriented transversely to the longitudinal axis 12 and thus form an inner support for the longitudinal bars 58. The transverse discs 60 are designed, radially inwards by means of a central open 62, hollow in the form of an annular disc, so that in particular also the inlet pipe 46 can extend through them.
Between each two transverse discs 60 there extend between two and six inclined struts 64. In the exemplary embodiment according to
In addition to the longitudinal bars 58 and inclined struts 64 which in
In conclusion, it should be noted that all the features which have been mentioned in the application documents and in particular in the dependent claims, despite their formal dependence on one or more specific claims, should also be accorded independent protection individually or in an any arbitrary combination.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2014 111 104 | Aug 2014 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/DE2015/100244 | 6/18/2015 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2016/019944 | 2/11/2016 | WO | A |
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4585551 | Musselmann et al. | Apr 1986 | A |
5261869 | Caldwell | Nov 1993 | A |
5378364 | Welling | Jan 1995 | A |
6605029 | Koch | Aug 2003 | B1 |
8511476 | Cassani | Aug 2013 | B2 |
20130153471 | Cassani | Jun 2013 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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10 2012 004 544 | Sep 2013 | DE |
0 094 022 | Nov 1963 | EP |
9406536 | Mar 1994 | WO |
0218055 | Mar 2002 | WO |
2012014031 | Feb 2012 | WO |
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Entry |
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International Search Report dated Oct. 6, 2015. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20180178223 A1 | Jun 2018 | US |