This invention relates generally to the field of feed processing systems and more particularly to systems and methods for combining additives with feed.
Many livestock producers use processed feed to raise livestock, such as poultry, cattle, swine, sheep and dairy and beef cattle, rather than unprocessed feed or allowing the animals to graze on open pastures. Processed feed allows producers to achieve greater production in less space and at lower operating costs. In addition to the advantage of raising a larger number of animals on less land, processed feed allows producers to tailor the feed's nutrition qualities for specific types of animals. Thus, not only can more animals be produced on less land, processed feed also enables the animals to grow larger and healthier.
Grain-processing facilities typically combine a number of ingredients, such as wheat, barley and corn, mix them together and mill them to produce an animal feed product. Many grain-processing facilities operate continuously, thus, the milled grain is often moved throughout the system by means of conveyers or augers. Once milled, the feed is subject to various refining processes. For example, the feed may be combined with other materials, cooked, dried or made into flakes or pellets. Often feed is combined with various additives, such as liquid additives, conditioners, supplements, medicines and micro ingredients. Typically, these additives are metered and mixed into the feed through direct liquid injection by means of a micro ingredient machine or a liquid chemical pump, and then they are mixed in large chambers or containers, as a batch process; this process often leads to uneven distribution of the additive on the feed.
Different additives require different processing. For example, certain additives are heat sensitive and must be added to the feed after it is cooked; other additives can be mixed with the feed at any appropriate time in the process.
Additives work optimally in certain animals at particular concentrations. Thus, it is desirable to efficiently and uniformly distribute the additives into the feed. Uniform distribution of the additive into the feed prevents the livestock from consuming too much or too little of the additive. For example, a feed with an uneven distribution may have negative effects on the animals to which it is fed because some animals may get fed too much additive while others get fed too little additive. The animals that ingest the feed with too high a concentration of additives may be harmed, or the excess additive may pass through the animal without achieving its desired effect. Likewise, an animal that ingests feed with too little an additive content is not receiving the benefits intended by the additive. Thus, efficient uniform application insures that the animals will ingest the proper amount of additive and the additive will perform optimally.
The present disclosure relates to a system and method for applying a liquid additive to a material stream. In one embodiment, the material stream enters a mix housing, which defines a mix chamber, and is pushed through the mix chamber by an actuating device contained therein. Adjacent the mix housing is a spray housing, which defines a spray chamber. The material stream passes through a volume created by a portion of the mix chamber that is in fluid communication with the spray chamber. A nozzle, connected to a liquid additive line and an air line, is coupled to the spray housing. The nozzle creates a fog of liquid additive in the spray chamber and in a volume of the mix chamber adjacent the spray chamber. The fog of liquid additive gets deposited on the material stream. As the material continues through the mix chamber, the actuating device mixes the additive into the feed stream.
Referring now to the drawings in which similar elements are numbered identically throughout, descriptions of embodiments constructed according to the principles of the present disclosure are provided. Referring now to
The mix housing 4 has a length 30, a width 23 and a height 22. The length 30 can be any operable length required to move the material stream 25 from one point in the process to another. The length 30 has a first end 27, a midsection 28, and a second end 29. The material stream 25 enters the mix housing 4 at the first end 27 and exits the mix housing 4 at the second end 29. In one embodiment, mix housing 4 has a width 23 ranging from 1 foot to 8 feet. In another embodiment, mix housing 4 has a width 23 that ranges between about 2 feet and 5 feet. In yet another embodiment, the mix housing 4 has a width 23 of about 3 feet. In another embodiment, the mix housing 4 has a height 22 that ranges between about 1 and 5 feet. In another embodiment, the mix housing 4 has a height 22 that ranges between about 1.5 and 3.5 feet. In yet another embodiment, the mix housing 4 has a height 22 of about 2 feet.
The mix housing 4 constructed according to the principles of the present disclosure can have many different shapes. For example, the mix housing 4 can be rectangular, trapezoidal, tubular, cylindrical, U-shaped, or any other shape that can define a mix chamber 5. The mix housing 4 can also be constructed from any suitable material. Such materials would be recognized by those skilled in the art and chosen depending on the specific requirements of the system. For example, however, the mix housing could be made of plastic, metal, fiberglass, composite material, wood or any other suitable material.
Referring now to
In one embodiment, the spray housing 1 is a rectangular box having a length 21, a height 19 and a width 20. In one embodiment the length of the spray housing 1 can range from about one half foot to 8 feet. In another embodiment, the length 21 of the spray housing 1 is between about 1 and 5 feet. In another embodiment, the length 21 of the spray housing 1 is between about 2 to 4 feet. In yet another embodiment, the length 21 of the spray housing 1 is about 3 feet. The width 20 of the spray housing 1 in one embodiment, ranges between about 1 foot and 5 feet. In another embodiment, the width 20 of the spray housing 1 ranges between about 1 foot and 2 feet. And in yet another embodiment, the width 20 of the spray housing 1 is about one and a half feet. The height 19 of the spray housing 1 can be selected in combination with the spray nozzle 8 so the spray exiting the spray nozzle 8 covers material stream 25. The height 19 of the spray housing 1, in one embodiment, ranges between about a half of a foot and 4 feet. In another embodiment, the height 19 of the spray housing 1 ranges between about 1 to 3 feet. In yet another embodiment, the height 19 of the spray housing 1 is about 1 to 2 feet.
The spray housing 1 made according to the principles of the present disclosure may be made of many different materials. For example, the spray housing 1 may be made of metal, plastic, fiberglass, composite material, wood or a combination of materials. The spray housing 1 may also be many different shapes. For example, the spray housing 1 may be rectangular, triangular, trapezoidal, U-shaped, spherical, tubular, or any other shape that can define a spray chamber 2. In another embodiment, the spray housing may include a spray housing door 39, which provides access to the spray chamber 2.
Spray housing 1 is located adjacent the mix housing 4 such that the liquid additive 16 is deposited onto the material stream 25 early enough to allow material stream 25 sufficient time to mix in the mix chamber 5. In one embodiment constructed to the principles of the present disclosure, spray housing 1 is located adjacent the mix housing 4 between the first end 27 and the midsection 28 of the mix housing 4. While, it should be noted that the spray housing 1 can be located anywhere adjacent the mix housing 4, it is preferred for the spray housing 1 to be positioned to allow the material stream 25 to be sufficiently mixed in the mix chamber 5 before exiting the mix housing 4 at the second end 29.
In one embodiment, spray nozzle 8 is coupled to the spray housing 1 such that it sprays a mixture of air and liquid additive 16 through the spray chamber 2 and into the mix chamber 5 and gets deposited on the material stream 25. In an alternative embodiment, spray nozzle 8 could spray only a liquid additive 16. Alternatively, there could be a plurality of spray nozzles that spray the liquid additive 16, or a mixture of liquid additive and air, through the spray chamber 2 and into the mix chamber 5 onto the material stream 25. The type of spray nozzle 8 used can be any type of nozzle that produces a fine mist or fog that will substantially fill the volume of the mix chamber 5 adjacent the spray housing 1, such that the liquid additive 16 gets deposited on the material stream 25. In one embodiment of the present disclosure, the spray nozzle 8 uses is a “UNIJET 9510” made by Spraying Systems Company. In an embodiment made according to the principles of the present disclosure, the spray nozzle 8 provides a fan of liquid additive 16 having a width about the size of either the smaller of the spray chamber opening 3 or the mix chamber opening 6 when it reaches either opening. Alternatively, the spray nozzle 8 sprays a fan of air and liquid additive that is about the width of the material stream 25 passing through the mix chamber 5.
The spray or fog ejected from the spray nozzle 8, in one embodiment, has particle sizes ranging from 1 to 100 microns in diameter. In another embodiment, the particle size ejected from the spray nozzle can be from about 10 to 80 microns in diameter. In yet another embodiment, the particle size ejected from the spray nozzle 8 could be between about 30 and 50 microns in diameter.
Referring still to
Referring now to
In one embodiment, the chemical pump 14 is operatively connected to a control unit 24 such that the control unit 24 regulates the amount of additive 16 that the additive pump 14 provides to the spray nozzle 8. It will be apparent to one skilled in the art to select the appropriate equipment depending on the system requirements. Alternatively, the additive pump 14 can be manually adjusted to provide the required flow rate for a desired composition of additive 16 and material 25.
In one embodiment an air source 13 supplies the nozzle 8 with air connected through air line 12. An air filter 10, an air regulator 11, and a valve 9 can be connected between the air source 13 and the spray nozzle 8 along the air line 12. In one embodiment, the valve 9 and the air regulator 11 may be operatively connected to a control unit 24, which regulates the valve 9 and the air regulator 11 to control the air supply in the system 26. One skilled in this art can select the appropriate equipment depending on whether the system 26 is automated or manually controlled. For example, in an automated system, valve 9 could be a solenoid valve. The flow parameters of the system 26 are determined based upon the desired composition of the material stream 25. It will be apparent to one skilled in the art how to manipulate these parameters according to the desired composition of the material stream 25. Alternatively, valve 9 and air regulator 11 can be manually adjusted.
Additionally, the control unit 24 could also include a computer 31, including a modem, capable of monitoring, recording, controlling, and displaying the system parameters, such as, flow rates, temperatures, volumes, pressures and concentrations. In this example embodiment, the control unit 24 could be operatively connected to the air regulator 11, a valve 9, an air flow meter 33, an additive flow meter 34, the pump 14, a material stream meter 35, an additive concentration meter 34, the actuating device 7, and the steam chest thermometer 38. The control unit 24 could be operatively connected to a remote workstation 32, either via a wire 36 or wirelessly using transmitter/receiver devices 37. From the workstation 32 the operator could monitor the system parameters in real time, or review stored values to determine what certain parameters were at any given time. An example of such a system is described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,347,468, issued to Rupp et al, is incorporated by reference into this disclosure.
Referring now to
In one embodiment, a nozzle 8 is coupled to the spray housing 201. The nozzle 8 creates a fog of a mixture of air and additive 16 in the spray chamber 202. The fog travels through the spray chamber opening 203, the mix chamber opening 206, and into the mix chamber 205 such that it is deposited onto the batch material 225 as the actuating device 207 mixes the batch material 225. The actuating device 207 can be a mixing paddle(s) or any type of mixing apparatus used in a mix housing 204 known to one skilled in the art to sufficiently mix the batch material 225 such that the fog of air and liquid additive 16 is sufficiently mixed into the batch material 225. It should be recognized that the parameters of the spray housing 201, such as the material out of which it is made and its shape are similar to the spray housing 1 described above. The size of the spray housing 201 can be any appropriate size, which would be apparent to one skilled in the art, depending on the application for which it is to be used. In choosing the size, one skilled in the art should consider the length, width and height of the spry housing 201 and the mix housing 204 along with the spray nozzle 8. Such elements should be chosen such that the additive 16 is deposited uniformly onto the batch material 225 as the batch material 225 is mixed.
Referring now to
In another embodiment, a nozzle 8 is coupled to the spray housing 301. The nozzle 8 creates a fog of a mixture of air and additive 16 in the spray chamber 302. The fog travels through the spray chamber opening 303, the mix chamber opening 306, and into the mix chamber 305 such that it is deposited onto the batch material 325 as the actuating device 307 mixes the batch material 325. The actuating device 307 can be a mixing paddle(s) or any type of mixing apparatus used in a mix housing 304 known to one skilled in the art to sufficiently mix the batch material 325 such that the fog of air and liquid additive 16 is mixed into the batch material 325. The remaining elements in
It is to be understood that even though numerous characteristics and advantages of various embodiments of the present disclosure have been set forth in the foregoing description, together with the details of the structure and the function of various embodiments of the disclosure, this disclosure is illustrative only and changes may be made in details, especially in matters of shape, size and arrangement and parts within the principles of the present disclosure, to the full extent indicated by the broad general meaning of the terms in which the appended claims are expressed.
This is a continuation application of co-pending application Ser. No. 10/440,432, filed on May 16, 2003, which application is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20070211564 A1 | Sep 2007 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10440432 | May 2003 | US |
Child | 11748223 | US |