The invention relates to an apparatus for the conversion of kitchen waste grease and oil to a landfill acceptable solid material. A grease collection cartridge has an inlet for receiving kitchen waste grease, a mixing baffle within the cartridge and a package within the cartridge containing a reactant to solidify the grease and oil into soap.
Oil/grease and solid waste containment removal or recovery systems are well known in the prior art. Over the past 30 years there has been a steady move toward requiring facilities for servicing kitchen grease-bearing water flows. Sewer system lines can be clogged from the oil/grease materials put into the sewer systems from food handling facilities.
This has led more and more sewer authorities to require programs to control handling and storage of fats, oils and grease waste materials. These programs regulate food handling facilities and the manner in which they process oil/grease and solid waste material. The object of many of these programs is to ensure food handling facilities remove as much of the oil and grease as possible from the effluent flow, thereby releasing only grey water and solids into the sewer system.
There are many and very different kinds of oil/grease separators known in the art. Once the grease and oil have been removed from the effluent water, and the grey water has been directed to the sewer, storage and handling of the removed oil and grease is a costly and complicated process. The oil and grease removed from the effluent water must be stored in a separate system that cannot empty into the sewer system lines. Consequently, underground storage containment units have been utilized, as well as aboveground storage containment units. These storage units require servicing and periodic maintenance.
Servicing typically consists of having a maintenance contractor pump the oil/grease from the storage container and haul it to an approved facility. These storage systems may have sensors and elaborate computer generated signals to the maintenance facilities in order to ensure the grease and oil are removed before the storage unit overflows. In the absence of sensors that automatically sense when the storage unit needs servicing, humans must check the storage container periodically. The job of checking the grease level in the storage container may be a distasteful job, and in some cases the task may be ignored. The appropriate storage and removal to an acceptable waste receiving facility is as important in the process as the initial separation of the oil and grease from the effluent water of commercial kitchen sinks.
Landfills limit the kinds of waste material that can be stored in landfills and have stringent rules defining acceptable storage items. Oils that are liquid at room temperature and the residual water content of the commercial kitchen sink waste make the removed products quite liquid. As a result, grease and oil waste products removed from commercial kitchen effluent flows are typically not permitted to be disposed of in landfills because they remain so liquid as to fail what is known as the “paint filter” test.
Consequently, there is a need in the art for the conversion of the oil/grease waste material into a substance that does not require special handling or storage in a special removal facility, but rather that can be placed within sanitary landfills just like other ordinary garbage.
The present invention fulfills one or more of these needs by providing an apparatus that converts the oil/grease waste from commercial kitchens into a landfill acceptable solid, does not require costly storage systems and is easy to maintain.
An apparatus for conversion of kitchen waste grease to a landfill acceptable solid includes a grease collection cartridge having an inlet for receiving kitchen waste grease, a mixing baffle within the cartridge and a package within the cartridge containing a reactant to solidify the oil/grease waste. The collection cartridge may include a plastic lid with a handle and a bearing surface. A motor rotates the mixing baffle within the collection cartridge by engaging the driveshaft of the mixing baffle. The baffle acts as a paddle to mix the contents of the cartridge. The plastic lid further includes a safety micro switch actuator that prevents operation of the motor when the collection cartridge is not in place.
The collection cartridge typically has a cylindrical, plastic composite body with a plastic base. The plastic base may have a key on the exterior of the base. The key prevents rotation of the collection cartridge when it is in place in a notch within a cartridge holder assembly. The mixing baffle may be made of plastic and include a main shaft that has a “z” shaped cross section. The plastic base of the collection cartridge has a plastic bearing for the “z” shaped main shaft. The “z” shaped main shaft includes an interlock to a slot of the gear drive of the motor driving the mixing baffle. The mixing baffle may have openings and louvers located at the lower edges of the openings. The mixing baffle typically extends to two sides of the main shaft, and the louvers face opposite each other on the main shaft. The mixing baffle may include an attachment arm that is made of plastic and attached to the “z” shaped main shaft of the mixing baffle.
The attachment arm includes an attachment means to attach a package containing a reactant on the arm. The package is made of water-soluble material and contains a sufficient amount of a reactant (such as sodium hydroxide (lye)) selected to react with the grease in the cartridge to form a solid, like soap.
Once the grease placed in the cartridge is turned into a solid, the cartridge and its contents are disposable. In one embodiment, the cartridge has a sidewall that is made of spiral wound paper tube, and the tube has a water impervious plastic lining.
The invention also provides a cartridge holder assembly, which may be constructed of rotomolded plastic. The cartridge holder assembly is hollow and may also serve as a grease storage tank, to store liquids prior to transfer to the grease collection cartridge. The cartridge holder assembly may include an inlet valve that is connected to an oil/grease separation unit. When the inlet valve is opened, grease may be transferred from the oil/grease separator unit into the cartridge holder assembly. The cartridge holder assembly further typically includes a cartridge locating keyway notch. This cartridge-locating notch may be in the bottom of the cartridge holder assembly and prevents rotation of the grease collection cartridge when the key of the cartridge is placed within the cartridge holder assembly's notch.
The cartridge holder assembly typically includes a motor and a pump driven by that motor. The pump/motor draws water and grease from the cartridge holder assembly into the grease collection cartridge. The motor also rotates the mixing baffle in the grease collection cartridge. The rotation of the mixing baffle mixes water and reactant within the grease collection cartridge to form a liquid reactant that reacts with grease to form a solid such as soap. In one embodiment, the pump/motor is pivotally mounted to the top of the cartridge holder assembly so the motor drive shaft can be rotated down into position engaging the shaft of the baffle.
The cartridge holder assembly typically includes a water inlet to allow water into the cartridge holder assembly. The water inlet may include a solenoid valve that controls the flow of water into the cartridge holder assembly. The cartridge holder assembly may also have a heater, to provide sufficient heat to keep the grease in flowable form. The heater may be an immersion type heater or an external, wrap-style heater.
The cartridge holder assembly may include sensors. The sensors include a “grease full” sensor which signals when the cartridge holder assembly contains a quantity of grease appropriate to be transferred into the grease collection cartridge. The cartridge holder assembly may include a “water full” sensor that signals when the cartridge holder assembly contains a desired amount of water. The cartridge holder assembly has an air vent near its top.
The cartridge holder assembly may include an oil and grease inlet that is connected to an oil/grease separator. The oil/grease separator receives effluent water from a commercial kitchen sink or other grease source. The oil/grease separator separates oil and grease from the effluent water. The separated oil and grease are then transferred from the oil/grease separator through the oil and grease inlet into the cartridge holder assembly for storage until there is a sufficient amount of oil and grease to be transferred into the grease collection cartridge to be processed.
These and other aspects of the present invention will become apparent to those skilled in the art after reading the following description of the preferred embodiments when considered with the drawings.
In the following description, like reference characters designate like or corresponding parts throughout the several figures. It should be understood that the illustrations are for the purpose of describing preferred embodiments of the invention and are not intended to limit the invention thereto.
As best seen in
As seen in
A motor assembly includes a frame 93 pivotally mounted at 95 to the top of the assembly 52. As seen in
Adjacent the shaft 37 is the termination of the transfer tube 99 that delivers water, then oil/grease from the assembly 52 to the cartridge, entering through the opening bounded by the bearing surface 36. The frame 93 includes a safety micro switch 42 that prevents operation of the motor 39 when a grease collection cartridge 12 is not in place within the cartridge holder assembly. The safety micro switch 42 closes the electrical circuit when the plunger 96 of the lid engages it. When a cartridge 12 is put in place within the cartridge holder assembly 52 and the frame 93 is lowered, the switch 42 is pushed closed, engaging the electrical circuit of the motor 39 to the closed position to permit the motor to operate. The cartridge holder assembly 52 also includes a cartridge locating keyway notch 56. The cartridge-locating notch 56 is located in the bottom of the cartridge holder assembly 52 and prevents rotation of the grease collection cartridge 12 by engaging the key 48 when the cartridge is placed within the cartridge holder assembly 52 and the motor is actuated.
The frame 93 includes a pump 38 driven by the motor 39. A suction line 65 extends from a lower portion of the tank 52 to the pump 38. Due to the stratification of grease above the water in the tank 52 and the low position of the intake to the line 65, the pump initially pumps water from the tank into the grease collection cartridge 12, followed by grease. The water dissolves the package 32, releasing the reactant, which dissolves in the water under the agitation of the rotating baffle. When the grease is delivered to the cartridge 12, it is mixed with the reactant by the rotating baffle. As the pumping proceeds, the motor 39 rotates the mixing baffle 14 in the grease collection cartridge 12. The rotation of the mixing baffle 14 mixes grease, water and sodium hydroxide (lye) within the grease collection cartridge 12. The sodium hydroxide becomes a liquid reactant that combines chemically with the grease and oil to turn the mixture into soap. The dissolution of sodium hydroxide is strongly exothermic, so once the process starts, the continued pumping of water and grease and their mixing preferably proceeds promptly to prevent excess temperatures by providing a large heat sink of water, grease and then soap.
As seen in
The tank 52 includes sensors to indicate when certain conditions are met. A “grease full” sensor 66 signals when the cartridge holder assembly 52 contains a quantity of grease appropriate to be transferred into the grease collection cartridge 12. A “water full” sensor 67 signals when the cartridge holder assembly 52 contains the desired quantity of water. These signals are sent to a control system 61 such as a programmable logic controller which controls the engagement of the electrical components as discussed below. The control system may also be provided by a series of relays or “and gates.” Similar features are included in the embodiment of
The various structures disclosed herein for receiving the cartridge are generally “receivers.”
Referring to
The motor 39 is activated to pump the water and grease into the grease collection cartridge 12, and simultaneously the motor 39 rotates the mixing baffle 14. The water dissolves the reactant package 32, permitting the sodium hydroxide (lye) to mix with the water and then the grease. The mixing baffle 14 is rotated for a sufficient amount of time until the mixture of water, oil and sodium hydroxide (lye) turn into soap. As the soap solid forms, the viscosity of the mixture increases, ultimately to the point that the baffle meets so much resistance that it no longer turns. The drive shaft of the motor will then rise above the shaft of the baffle, causing the switch 42 to open, and deactivating the motor. Alternatively, the motor may be provided with a slip clutch and/or a timer or a current sensor that senses a rise in the current to the motor caused by the physical resistance, and cuts off the power supply. The grease collection cartridge 12 containing the soap can then be removed from the assembly and thrown into a container to be transported to a landfill for disposal.
Certain modifications and improvements will occur to those skilled in the art upon reading the foregoing description. For example, the cartridge and its baffle can be made of any suitable material that is water impermeable and low enough in cost so as to be disposable. The baffle can take various shapes and be made of various materials. In fact, if desired, the baffle and its associated drive motor can be dispensed with if another mixing arrangement is substituted, such as a shaker for the cartridge. In another embodiment, the grease may be directed into a flaccid bag that is kneaded to mix the grease and reactant. Other agitation means can be a bubbler to introduce air into a lower portion of the cartridge to rise as bubbles through the liquids. Another option is the use of ultrasonics. The liquids may be introduced other than through the top of the cartridge.
In some cases it may be preferably to mechanically emulsify the oil/grease and water before pumping than into the reactant-containing cartridge. The options for mixing the fluids as disclosed herein are means to agitate.
As noted, the tank that discharges the oil/grease into the cartridge can be part of the housing for the cartridge, or separate. The pump may be eliminated if other means to deliver oil/grease and water are substituted, such as gravity feed or a suitably arranged siphon. Also, the oil/grease and water supplies into the tank may take various forms, including the delivery of some water with the oil/grease, eliminating the need for a separate water supply. The heater may be run continually, under timer control, or be turned on in response to a sensed grease presence. A delay circuit may be included to start the pump/motor a few seconds or minutes after the cartridge is in place and the tank 52 is appropriately full of grease and water.
It should be understood that such modifications and improvements have been omitted for the sake of conciseness and readability, but are properly within the scope of the following claims.
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