The present invention relates to processing of bulk materials. More particularly, the present invention relates to separation of liquids from bulk materials and to a screw press arrangement for separating liquids from bulk materials such as livestock manure.
Numerous industries utilize compression devices such as screw press liquid separators to remove liquid from bulk materials such as wood chips, livestock manure, byproducts of food processing operations, or other fibrous materials. The screw press liquid separators are based on the principle of a screw rotating inside a cylindrical or conical cage, sometimes referred to as a screw cradle, that forces the bulk material from the inlet of the screw to an output in a manner that compresses the bulk material. The cage can be equipped with holes, usually conically drilled, or slots or bars arranged in such a fashion as to provide for drainage of the liquid that is squeezed from the bulk material.
The various uses of screw press liquid separators involve a number of mechanisms for creating pressure between the chamber and the shaft bearing flights. The inner diameter of the chamber may be cylindrical, conical, or may contain restricted areas. All of these features together with variations in the diameter of the shaft or diameters of the flutes on the shaft can produce changes in the pressure exerted on the wood chips or other material being treated in the screw press liquid separator. The chamber of the plug screw feeder may be comprised of bars, screens or be solid depending upon whether the screw press liquid separator is being used to drive off excess water from materials such as livestock manure or being used to refine materials such as wood chips or both remove excess fluid and refine the materials. In various applications the pressure and throughput are controlled by the voids if any in the chamber, the restrictions in the chamber, the shaping of the shaft or flutes and the torque applied to the screw feeder. Numerous examples of screw press liquid separators are known in the art.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,515,776 discloses a worm screw press having drainage perforations in the press jacket. The size of the shaft for the worm screw increases in cross-sectional area in the flow direction of the drained liquid.
U.S. Pat. No. 7,357,074 is directed to a screw press with a conical dewatering housing with a plurality of perforations for the drainage of water from bulk solids compressed in the press. A perforated casing or jacket is used.
U.S. Pat. No. 3,394,649 discloses a worm press used for the dewatering of sludges or cellulose pulp suspensions and comprises a hollow worm shaft having apertures at the end of the pressure zone. Through these bores still further liquid can be drained into the hollow shaft, this liquid draining inside the shaft in a direction opposite to the conveyance direction.
United States Published Patent Application 2016/0176141 is directed to a screw press having two opposing discharge doors that are pivotally mounted to the discharge end of the housing and are movable within a volume defined by the first and second discharge guides. The discharge doors are biased towards closure against the discharge end of the housing. Paddles are affixed to and radially extend from the shaft at a position beyond an arc defined by pivotal motion of the discharge doors.
These prior-art worm screw configurations appear to operate for their intended purposes. There is room for improvement of a screw press used for separation of liquids from bulk materials.
According to one aspect of the present invention a screw press liquid separator includes an elongated housing having an inlet end and a discharge end, a screw cradle in the form of a sieve disposed within the housing having a material inlet disposed at the inlet end of the housing, a screw formed on a shaft and disposed within the screw cradle, a motor rotatably coupled to the shaft, the screw extending from the inlet end of the screw cradle to a discharge end of the screw cradle, a pair of opposing discharge doors pivotally mounted to the discharge end of the housing and movable within a volume defined by the first and second discharge guides, the discharge doors driven to positions that maintain a substantially constant pressure on bulk material being driven by the screw towards the discharge end of the housing.
According to an aspect of the invention, the positions of the discharge doors are controlled by fluid under pressure, the pressure of the fluid controlled by a feedback loop that acts to maintain current drawn by the motor at a substantially constant value.
According to an aspect of the invention, a section of the screw cradle mechanically coupled to the vibrator motor is vibrationally isolated from other sections of the screw cradle.
According to an aspect of the invention, a wear bushing is mounted on the shaft at a location between a discharge end of the screw and the discharge end of the screw press, the diameter of the wear bushing increasing towards the discharge end of the screw press.
The invention will be explained in more detail in the following with reference to embodiments and to the drawing in which are shown:
Persons of ordinary skill in the art will realize that the following description of the present invention is illustrative only and not in any way limiting. Other embodiments of the invention will readily suggest themselves to such skilled persons.
Attention is now drawn to
The screw press 10 is mounted on a base such as a frame 12, which may be formed, for example, from a steel I-beam.
The screw press 10 is driven by a motor 18, which in one exemplary embodiment is a 15 HP, 1800 rpm electric motor. The motor 18 is coupled to a reducer gear assembly 20 that turns a shaft 22 through a coupler 24. In the embodiment depicted in these drawing figures, the reducer gear assembly 20 reduces the rotational speed delivered to the shaft 22 to 20 rpm. Shaft rotational speeds between about 15 rpm and about 50 rpm would be typical for different embodiments of the present invention although lower speeds and higher speeds are possible depending on the dimensions of the screw press 10 as well as the nature of the bulk material being processed. The end of the shaft 22 closest to the coupler 24 is supported through a liquid seal 26. A distal end of the shaft 22 is supported by a bearing 28.
A screw 30 (seen in
A wear bushing 32 is mounted on the shaft 22 proximate to the discharge end 34 of the screw press 10 past the end of the screw 30. A cross-sectional view of a typical wear bushing 32 in accordance with this aspect of the invention is shown in
The driven end of the screw 30 communicates with an inlet hopper 36 into which the bulk material from which the liquid is to be separated is introduced. At the right side of the hopper 36 the screw is disposed within a screw cradle 38. In the illustrative embodiment shown in
Section 38a of the screw cradle 38 is fixedly mounted to a vertical member 44 of the frame at its right side by, for example, nuts and bolts passed through end flanges 46 as shown in
The left end of the section 38a of the screw cradle 38 is also mounted at an end flange 46 to a vertical member 50 of the frame 12 through a similar vibration isolation gasket 48, the view of which is obscured in
The inlet hopper 36 may be sized differently for different applications of the screw press of the present invention depending on, for example, the nature of the bulk material being processed. A drain pan (shown in side view at reference numeral 52 in
The section 38b of the screw cradle 38 is vibrated by at least one vibrator motor 54 mounted to its outside surface by, for example, brackets 56 as shown in
An upper guide plate 58 (shown in
According to another aspect of the present invention, pressure of the bulk material being processed in the screw press 10 is regulated by applying force towards closure to the discharge doors 62 and 64. The force is applied to the discharge door 62 is controlled by, for example, a pneumatic ram 66 and the amount of force applied to the discharge door 64 is controlled by a pneumatic ram 68. The piston 70 of pneumatic ram 66 is coupled to a control arm 72 at pivot 74 and the piston 76 of pneumatic ram 68 is coupled to a control arm 78 at pivot 80. Control arm 72 is pivotally mounted to discharge door 62 and control arm 78 is pivotally mounted to discharge door 64. The back end of pneumatic ram 66 is coupled to a support member 82 extending from the frame 12 at pivot point 84 and the back end of pneumatic ram 68 is coupled to a support member 86 extending from the frame 12 at pivot point 88. Persons of ordinary skill in the art will appreciate that the present invention contemplates use of fluids other than a gas, as well as other means such as electromagnetic force, to actuate the ram.
The amount of force applied to the discharge doors 62 and 64 is controlled by a pair of air control lines connected to each of pneumatic rams 66 and 68. Air control lines 90 and 92 are shown connected to pneumatic ram 66 in
The amount of force applied to discharge doors 62 and 64 by pneumatic rams 66 and 68, respectively, is controlled to maintain a desired pressure on the bulk material being forced through screw press 10 by the screw 30. In accordance with one aspect of the present invention, the amount of current drawn by the motor 18 is monitored. The current drawn by motor 18 varies as a function of the pressure on the bulk material being forced through screw press 10 by the screw 30 which constitutes the load on motor 18. If the pressure on the bulk material being forced through screw press 10 by the screw 30 decreases, the motor current will decrease and if the pressure on the bulk material being forced through screw press 10 by the screw 30 increases, the motor current will increase. The current drawn by the motor 18 is sensed and the motor current is maintained at a constant value by regulating the air pressure provided to pneumatic rams 66 and 68 to position the doors 62 and 64 to control the pressure on the bulk material being forced through screw press 10 by the screw 30.
Referring now to
Spaced apart metal bars 108 running in a direction parallel to the shaft 22 that carries the screw 30 form the slot sieve portion of the screw cradle 38.
The two clamshell halves 40a and 40b that form each of screw cradle sections 38a and 38b are fastened together, and may be, for example, bolted together along edge flanges 46 using bolts 110 and nuts 112 (nuts along the top and bottom edge flanges 42 of sections 38a and 38b are indicated at reference numerals 112 in
Referring now to
Referring now to
At reference numeral 134 the motor current i is set to provide a desired pressure to drive the pneumatic rams to position the discharge doors 62 and 64 of the screw press to exert a desired pressure on the bulk material being driven through the screw press. At reference numeral 136 the desired air pressure is applied to the pneumatic rams and at reference numeral 138 the motor is started, the vibrator motor is started, and bulk material is fed into the screw press.
At reference numeral 140 the current being drawn by the motor is measured. If the measured motor current is below the set current i, at reference numeral 142 the pressure is increased. If the measured motor current is above the set current i, at reference numeral 144 the pressure is decreased. The process indicated in
While embodiments and applications of this invention have been shown and described, it would be apparent to those skilled in the art that many more modifications than mentioned above are possible without departing from the inventive concepts herein. The invention, therefore, is not to be restricted except in the spirit of the appended claims.