This application claims the benefit of U.S. Utility patent application Ser. No. 11/345,607 having filing date of Feb. 1, 2006 for “Sludge Processing Apparatus and Method,” which itself claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/649,049 having filing date of Feb. 1, 2005. the disclosures of which are hereby incorporated by reference herein in their entirety, and all commonly owned.
The present invention generally relates to the field of waste products removal, and in particular to an apparatus and method for removing solid and liquid waste products such as sludge from liquid storage tanks.
In today's industrialized, high tech world, we have new products being developed on a regular basis. Large industrial complexes blend, burn, mix, settle, ionize, dispose and utilize various processes in an attempt to eliminate resulting waste products in a low cost controlled manner.
In many cases, manufacturing plants end up with waste product in the form of sludge as the end product following the processing. This sludge can be on the bottom of ponds or as AGS tank bottoms. On occasion, sludge can be found in other locations after being removed from tanks or ponds. Some of the sludge has chemical, BTU, and/or a beneficial reuse value.
There is a need for efficiently and effectively removing sludge from its deposited location to a transport vehicle. One typical process includes use of a vacuum truck for suctioning the sludge. However, non-uniform sludge pieces are known to inhibit the effective removal using such a vacuuming.
By way of further example, many types of sludge such as that found in pulp and paper processing is “hard” and requires a more aggressive action typically used. Further, there is a need to process the sludge from liquor, a part of the normal mill liquor cycle, and return the sludge to a fluidized state such as “black liquor” and place the black liquor into the removal system for burning in a recovery boiler to generate energy, by way of example. There is a further need for portability, using hydraulics as a means of power and a dependable machine can be moved directly into tanks for processing directly at the point of the problem. Yet further, there is a need for processing sludge, from a generally soft state or hard state and delivering it to a vacuum truck which further delivers the processed sludge to a desired location.
In summary, embodiments of the present invention receive sludge in ranges from soft to hard states converts the sludge to a liquid form capable of being pumped. One apparatus according to the teachings of the present invention may comprise a trough carried inclined at an angle sufficient for permitting fluid to flow downstream from a first elevated end of the trough to a second end lower end as a result of gravity, the trough having an open top portion for receiving sludge and a rigid surface at the trough first end. An auger is carried within the trough for conveying sludge placed within the trough, wherein the sludge is driven against the rigid surface by operation of the auger for broking up the sludge through action of the auger forcing the sludge against the rigid surface. A chopper may be carried at the second end of the trough for receiving the sludge from the auger for a chopping of the sludge, and optionally a pump positioned for receiving the sludge from the chopper for removing the sludge therefrom. The apparatus may further comprise a platform, such as a skid, for supporting the trough. The auger may generally extend between the first and second ends of the trough.
A hopper may be positioned for receiving the sludge at a top end thereof and dispensing the sludge from a bottom end thereof into the trough at a location generally between the first and second ends thereof. Cutter blades may be fixed between the top and bottom ends of the hopper, the cuter blades receiving the sludge passing through the hopper and cutting the sludge as a result of the sludge falling through the cutter blades under gravitational forces. Further, a fluid injector may be employed and positioned for injecting a fluid into the trough for diluting the sludge being processed therein. A filter including slats may be positioned between the second end of the trough and the chopper for allowing a preselected size of sludge to enter the chopper. The chopper may comprise a circular chopping blade for chopping the sludge.
A method aspect of the invention may comprise depositing material to be processed into the trough at a location generally between the upstream and downstream ends, operating the auger at a rotational speed and direction so as to force the material received within the trough upstream, continuing to operate the auger for forcing the material against an upstream end surface of the trough for a breaking up thereof, optionally adding fluid to the trough for diluting the material and enhancing a flow of the broken up material downstream under a force of gravity, allowing the diluted material flowing downstream to enter the chopper, chopping the diluted material to a desired consistency, and optionally pumping the chopped material to a desired location. Further, the method may comprise filtering the diluted material prior to the chopping. Yet further, the method may comprise positioning the hopper for receiving the material and depositing the material to be processed into the hopper for the depositing into the trough, and optionally cutting the material prior to depositing the material into the trough.
For a fuller understanding of the invention, reference is made to the following detailed description, taken in connection with the accompanying drawings illustrating various embodiments of the present invention, in which:
The present invention will now be described more fully hereinafter with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which preferred embodiments of the invention are shown. This invention may, however, be embodied in many different forms and should not be construed as limited to the embodiments set forth herein. Rather, these embodiments are provided so that this disclosure will be thorough and complete, and will fully convey the scope of the invention to those skilled in the art.
By way of example for embodiments of the invention, reference is initially made to
With continued reference to
As herein described, the auger 26 is a device for conveying or moving material or liquid by means of a rotating helical flighting 28a. The material such as the sludge 28 is moved along the shaft 32, an axis of rotation. For portion of the auger 26, the helical flighting 26a is enclosed in a covered portion 12t of the trough 12, for other portions, the flighting 26a is only partially encased.
With continued reference to
With continued reference to
With reference again to
With reference to
With continued reference to
As will be understood by those of ordinary skill in the art, the terminology used for the sludge during its processing is arbitrary and is intended to aid the reader is appreciating stages in the processing of the sludge 28. With continued reference to
For one desirable embodiment as herein described with reference to
As will be understood now having an understanding of one embodiment of the invention, a method aspect of the invention includes processing sludge 28 using the portable apparatus 10b as above described. With reference again to
Again, typically an auger is used to convey material in a direction toward a deposition, unlike here where the auger 26 is used to process the sludge and gravity is used to convey the material downstream as a result of the inclined (angle of inclination 18) trough 12. Operation of the apparatus 10 provides for reversing the rotational direction of the auger 26 to enhance flow downstream typically under jammed conditions or to accelerate the downstream flow. The diluted sludge 28d may then be filtered to allow the preselected sized sludge 28e to be chopped into chopped sludge 28d for pumping the chopped sludge 28f a desired location.
By way of further example, in the pulp & paper industry, water injection is used as a cutter—stock for most sludge. When water is used as the diluting fluid 50 in black liquor sludge, hot diluting fluids may be employed to form a soluble mixture of the sludge and diluting fluid. However, within certain limits other liquids such as diesel fuel, kerosene, and the like may be used in other applications.
Hydraulic motors may be employed to power the chopper and the auger. The speeds of rotation adjustable by an operator. By way of example, hydraulic driven positive displacement and slurry pumps may be depending on the product. Positive-displacement pumps help break up the solids and are used when additional breakup and blending of the sludge material is desired. In this manner the processed sludge is removed through a hose.
As a practical note, the apparatus 10 while herein described for use in fluidizing typically dry/hard sludge 28 such as black liquor found in tank bottoms used in the pulp and paper industry, it will come to the mind of those skilled in the art that other uses in other somewhat similar situations are possible. By way of example, operation of the apparatus 10 will quickly fluidize softer sludge typically found in tank bottoms of oil tanks of the petroleum industry. Such tanks are found in oil terminals and their customers who use the #6 oil as an energy source in boilers. The mobility of the apparatus 10, assisted by skids, is desirable for placement in tanks and moats where the sludge accumulates and is an ideal location for liquefying and recycling the sludge. The inclined trough 12 allows the fluidized material to gravity-flow to the lower end for discharge while solidified portions of the sludge continues to be compressed, broken up and shredded until it is liquefied as well.
Several features aid in particle reduction and fluidizing of the sludge, including sharpened blades of the hopper. These blades chop any large clumps that are placed into the hopper prior to their entry into the auger. A loader bucket 66 may be used to place the sludge into the hopper and may be used to force 68 clumps of sludge through the blades 44. As above describe, at the auger 26 end portion at the trough second end 24 and proximate the chopper 52, horizontal blades may be employed for the filter slats to regulate the size of any material that enters the chopper 52.
With the mobility of the unit around the work area hydraulic power is preferred to give the machine adequate power to rotate the auger, the chopper, and the pump. A radial piston hydraulic motor provides adequate power and has been proven to be desirable for the auger and the chopper.
Many modifications and other embodiments of the invention will come to the mind of one skilled in the art having the benefit of the teachings presented in the foregoing descriptions and the associated drawings. Therefore, it is understood that the invention is not to be limited to the specific embodiments disclosed, and that modifications and embodiments are intended to be included within the scope of the appended claims.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11345607 | Feb 2006 | US |
Child | 12325296 | US |