This invention relates to a piezoelectric self-cleaning apparatus designed to keep liquid processing path clear.
Mechanical pumps move chemicals through liquid processing path. These pumps can be adversely affected by clogging if the media(s) harden when the pump is off for too long a period or if particulates fall out of suspension due to various factors (such as pressure and temperature changes). Additionally, the pump can be damaged by media blends separating while in the feed system, causing failure of the engineered chemical effects (such as in water or waste purification, oil/gas drilling, drug dispensing and food additives).
The present invention relates to a piezoelectric self-cleaning apparatus, such as a chemical injection pump. The chemical injection pump is self-cleaning by employing, either as an integral part or as an added part, a piezoelectric actuator that implosively cleans the pump. This is accomplished by exciting the piezoelectric actuator (in a range from Hz to MHz) at various frequencies specific to the chemical or blend of chemical in the apparatus.
More specifically, this invention relates to a liquid delivery system providing a liquid processing path and a piezoelectric actuator connected to or integral with the liquid processing path to enhance removal of unwanted solids from the liquid processing path or to maintain a blend, mix and/or integrity of the chemical so that it does not precipitate particles, crystallize, separate or come out of solution. In this invention, the piezoelectric actuator can be a transducer for cleaning the liquid path or a piezo-material vibrating disc operating at selected frequencies to maintain a blend, mix and/or integrity of the chemical, so that it does not precipitate particles, crystallize, separate or come out of solution.
Additionally this invention provides a method to remove unwanted solids from a liquid processing path to prevent the unwanted solids from clogging a liquid processing path in the pump head. This invention involves providing a piezo-material transducer within the inlet for a pump head, and also providing a modulated DC voltage at a desired frequency and voltage level to the piezo-material transducer to generate acoustic waves in the liquid to remove unwanted solids from a liquid processing path, wherein the liquid is a chemical. The piezo-material transducer can be provided as an integral part of the inlet or connected to the inlet of a pump head.
This invention further provides a method to maintain a blend, mix and/or integrity of the chemical, so that it does not precipitate particles, crystallize, separate or come out of solution, by providing an at least one piezo-material vibrating disc located in the outlet of the pump head and providing a modulated DC voltage at a desired frequency and voltage level to the piezo-material vibrating disc to generate acoustic waves to maintain a blend, mix and integrity of a chemical in solution, wherein the chemical does not precipitate particles, crystallize, separate or come out of solution. In the preferred embodiment the at least one piezo-material disc is a plurality of piezo-material discs.
This invention further provides a computer controlled apparatus to prevent unwanted solids from clogging a liquid processing path or to maintain a blend, mix and/or integrity of a liquid chemical, wherein the liquid chemical does not precipitate particles, crystallize, separate or come out of solution. This apparatus includes a piezoelectric actuator connected to or integral with the liquid processing path, a central processing unit programmed to control the delivery of DC voltage to the piezoelectric actuator at a desired frequency and voltage level to generate acoustic waves in the liquid, to remove unwanted solids from a liquid processing path or to maintain a blend, mix and/or integrity of the chemical so that it does not precipitate particles, crystallize, separate or come out of solution, wherein the liquid is a chemical; and means to transmit the modulated voltage to the piezoelectric actuator.
For a fuller understanding of the nature and desired objects of the present invention, reference is made to the following detailed description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawing figures.
The present invention may be understood more readily by reference to the following detailed description of the invention. It is to be understood that this invention is not limited to the specific devices, methods, conditions or parameters described herein, and that the terminology used herein is for the purpose of describing particular embodiments by way of example only and is not intended to be limiting of the Claimed invention. Also, as used in the specification including the appended Claims, the singular forms “a,” “an,” and “the” include the plural, and reference to a particular numerical value includes at least that particular value, unless the context clearly dictates otherwise. Ranges may be expressed herein as from “about” or “approximately” one particular value and/or to “about” or “approximately” another particular value. When such a range is expressed, another embodiment includes from the one particular value and/or to the other particular value. Similarly, when values are expressed as approximations, by use of the antecedent “about,” it will be understood that the particular value forms another embodiment.
The present invention relates to a piezoelectric self-cleaning apparatus, such as a chemical injection pump. The chemical injection pump is self-cleaning by employing either as an integral part or as an added part, a piezoelectric component that implosively cleans the pump head. Various advanced materials can be used for this purpose including, for example, lead zirconate titanate (PZT), polyvinylidene difluoride (PVDF), and Lithium Niobate. These piezoelectric materials can be used to make pump parts and assemblies that form part of the pump head and can either be driven between hertz to megahertz range or be electronically resonated in the kilohertz frequency range. These parts can be either automatically or periodically actuated for implosive cleaning of unwanted materials that form as a residue in the pump. Additionally the piezoelectric parts can be electronically driven at various frequencies specific to the chemical or blend of chemicals in the apparatus, such as a pump, to maintain particles or a specific chemical blend from precipitating or separating out of an emulsion while in the apparatus.
A piezoelectric transducer is a transducer composed of a piezoelectric material, such as a crystal, that converts an electrical signal to a mechanical or acoustic signal and vice versa. In this invention, a piezo-material component integral with an inlet for a pump head functions as a transducer. The piezo-material is actuated by providing a modulated DC voltage at the desired frequency and voltage level, which is sufficient to generate acoustic waves in the liquid to remove unwanted solids from a liquid processing path. The desired frequency and voltage values are selected based on the specific application, such as cleaning or chemical mixing. Power supplies for the piezo-materials can range from power densities up to 10 w/sq·cm and frequencies up to 10 MHz depending on the applications of interest. Power supplies are standard commercial systems that would be known to those that understand the art.
The term driving frequency means the frequency of the driving force. The driving force is an external force and in this invention this is the modulated DC voltage. The piezo-material voltage is defined as the voltage required to actuate the piezo-material. Driving frequency is the frequency of the driving force. The driving force is an external force applied to the oscillator. Voltage and frequency combination is generated using industry standard piezoelectric power supplies.
The piezoelectric self-cleaning apparatus can be used with a variety of chemical, some examples include: sodium hypochlorite, aluminum sulfate, sulphuric acid and caustic polymer phosphate. Sodium hypochlorite is used in water purification.
The frequency ranges contemplated by this invention include: sub-KHz frequency range where resonant effects from piezo material geometries can be used, 20 to 40 KHz frequency range to provide relatively fast cleaning (minutes) for large and simple geometric surfaces, 40-70 KHz frequency range for surfaces with complex geometries, 70 KHz to 10 MHz frequency range for specialty operations such as the fine, gentle cleaning of surfaces and mixing of chemicals. In one embodiment, the piezo-material transducer 5 is used for cleaning process with 40 KHz or less frequencies.
In this embodiment, lead zirconate titanate is coated with a protective coating preferably, titanium oxide (or any other oxide or nitride) coating which allows the piezo-material transducer 5 to be chemically inert with respect to the chemical being pumped such as sodium hypo-chlorite in all concentrations (or other aggressive chemicals), as known to one skilled in the art. See Bharat Shushan Springer Handbook of Nanotechnology, Volume 2 (hereby specifically incorporated by reference).
In the embodiment shown in
The piezo-material transducer 5 can be integral or an add-on to a module of a chemical pump or the chemical pump itself with its own micro-controller with an embedded software program that based upon time and control of frequencies will allow the sweep and duration of the cleaning frequency based upon the “standard” known ultrasonic KHzs used, but also have a sub-routine around each standard frequency that sweeps through +/−5% either side of the frequency.
In one embodiment, the piezo-material vibrating disc 20 will also have a connection block 21 made of a silver/ceramic composite pad for wire attachment 25 and 27 to drive the piezo-material vibrating disc 20 to vibrate in this embodiment at megahertz frequencies (high frequency) specific for a chemical such as the common sodium hypochlorite concentrations (5 to 12% sodium hypo solutions) provided for water purification. The intent for driving at high frequency for the specific chemical (or concentration of chemical) is to generate acoustic waves in a given chemical or concentration to as to maintain an ideal blend, mix and/or integrity of the chemical so that it does not precipitate particles, crystallize, separate or otherwise degrade the intended effect of the pumped chemical.
In this embodiment, piezo-material vibrating disc 20 will also have a connection block 21 made of a silver/ceramic composite pad for wire attachment 25 and 27 to power the piezo-material vibrating disc 20 to resonate in that piezo-material vibrating disc 20 has a connection block 21 on the outer wall 22 of the piezo-material vibrating disc 20 for soldering directly on to the surface of the piezo-material vibrating disc 20 a plurality of electrical connectors 25 and electrical leads, 27 as necessary to apply voltage to the piezo-material vibrating disc 20, connected to a microprocessor based programmable control 40. The piezo-material actuator 5 has a connection block 10 on the outer wall 12 of the piezo-material transducer 5 for soldering directly on to the surface of the piezo-material transducer 5 a plurality of electrical connectors 15 and electrical leads 17 as necessary to apply modulated DC voltage to the piezo-material actuator 5 to achieve the current density and frequency necessary to drive the piezo-material actuator 5 to ultrasonically clean the pump head 30.
The vibrating frequencies of the plurality of piezo-material vibrating discs 20 will be at higher frequencies than the piezo-material transducer 5. These higher frequencies will maintain fluid blends at a wetted pump head 30 surface. These higher frequencies are actuated and controlled via the microprocessor 40 once an hour for a selectable and programmable duration, in this embodiment. The purpose here is to ‘kiss’ the wetted material walls with a much gentler high frequency to keep the all boundary layers vibrating and maintain the chemical in solution.
The piezo-material transducer 5 and the array of piezo-material vibrating discs 20 can be made integrally with the pump head 30. The main pump body 31 as shown, is representative of all chemical bodies in general (which have many different physical shapes/size). The pump head 30 is a part of the main pump body 31 but because the fluids pumped pass through the pump head, 30 the main pump body 31 encompasses it and the pump motor (or prime mover) (Not shown).
Alternatively, the piezo-material transducer 5 and piezo-material vibrating discs 20 could be a separate assembly manufactured to be an add on for all the chemical metering pumps installed in the market place or as an add on for all chemical metering pumps built without self-cleaning ultrasonics and or specific chemical or chemical concentrations resonance.
A microprocessor 40 based programmable control allows for various ‘blocks’ of frequencies to be powered, controlled for optimum cleaning and vibrating ‘tuning’ effect and also to sweep through a range of frequencies for both cleaning the pump head 30 and/or vibrating the plurality of discs 20 for many different chemical or blends of chemicals. A microprocessor 40 based programmable control provides the ability to tune to and sweep through ideal cleaning frequencies and to tune to the desired frequencies of individual chemicals or blends of chemicals. This is accomplished using the same micro-controller 40 with sub-routines controlling specific (and preset selectable or user commanded) vibrating frequencies.
Now referring to
Now referring to
A ¾″ chlorinated polyvinyl chloride pipe segment with scaling due to Sodium Hypochlorite, was exposed to 40 KHz frequency for 1-2 minutes using an 80 W power supply to successfully clean the pipe. A piezoelectric material (PZT) was used to generate the 40 KHz frequency in the system. Higher power can be used for larger pipe diameters and higher frequencies can be used for gentler cleaning or mixing of chemical blends within the pipe.
These and other aspects, features and advantages of the invention will be understood with reference to the detailed description herein, and will be realized by means of the various elements and combinations particularly pointed out in the appended Claims. It is to be understood that both the foregoing general description and the following detailed description of the invention are exemplary and explanatory of preferred embodiments of the invention, and are not restrictive of the invention, as Claimed.
This patent application Claims the benefit of U.S. provisional patent application No. 61/673,865 under 35 U.S. §119(e) (hereby specifically incorporated by reference).
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