The present invention is related to cutting up containers made of plastics or the like, in particular polyethelentereftalate (PET) bottles, into ribbons. PET containers are used and disposed on a large scale and may be industrially recycled. The present invention enables containers to be cut up and immediately used as prime material for a variety of uses. The ribbon thus obtained helps to solve domestic problems, replacing prime materials for use as wires, strings or chords, or industrial problems such as straps for packaging. The ribbon may also be useful for designing and making articles taking into account its technical, dimensional and aesthetic features. The ribbon is useful for manual work usually carried out with threads and may be applied to processes for making baskets, mats and knitting with needles or weaving with a loom. Other processes may be carried out after the cutting process such as heat-forming for erasing the plastic memory of its former shape, giving it new shapes and technical features and broadening its potential as prime material for new uses and articles. The invention helps dispose containers since the volume thereof is drastically reduced when processed according to the present invention.
A large marginal section of the population in big cities makes a living on selling trash found on the streets at very low market prices. We have developed tools within this social-economic context to provide alternative responses to this problem.
The object is to give a suitable technological response that will add value to activities concerning collection and sale of domestic trash and/or to the needs of other socially vulnerable sectors (unemployed, disables, base community undertakings, etc.) by generating economically sustainable microbusinesses.
Different materials are currently used for making containers of all types. A large part of the containers manufactured for containing products are made using different varieties of plastics. Polyethylenetereftalate is particularly used in view of its advantages over polyene, polyethelene and polypropylene. Polyethylentereftalate, usually known as PET, is a plastic resin that came into use in the last decade. PET containers are characterised by their recyclability. Properties like their impermeability to gas and lack of cementing have made them become widely used for carbonated drink bottles and syphons.
PET then became used for other products, such as oils, mayonaise, cosmetics, etc. Not only did these properties influence the choice of PET by both industry and the consumer. Their lightness compared to the purchased product, about 50 times lighter, and fundamentally their ease of safe handling by users, relative to the risk of breakage, were decisive in generalizing their usage.
From the point of view of the environment, it is the resin that lends itself most to recycling. These containers are identified on the bottom with the number 1 surrounded by three arrows forming a triangle. Recycled PET is not used for new drink or food containers in permanent contact. Other environmental benefits of this resin is the drastic reduction in energy consumed in transportation, the simplicity of processes and the relatively low temperatures required to transform PET into new products, again recyclable.
The post-usage recycling techniques are fundamentally three:
Although all PET containers may be recycled according to one of the fore-mentioned methods, there are other lesser known methods and uses. PET as well as other plastics may be bundled and used as filler in low parts of rural roads or for adding volume to engineering works.
PET is not biodegradable. Therefore, its widespread consumption and scarce reuse pose serious environmental pollution problems, affecting cleanliness in cities and tourist resorts and blocking urban drainage systems.
Although well developed, the PET industrial recycling technology does not fulfill its environmental purpose because scarcely a small percentage of used PET containers are recycled. Recycling began in Argentina during 1996. In 1997, an equivalent of 18,000,000 units were recycled. Processing was mostly carried out on post-industrial PET and, to a lesser degree, on post-consumption PET coming from “returnable” beverage bottles. The low value of unprocessed containers and the volume requirements associated to transport logistics costs result in that districts with systems for classifying domestic waste and recovery plants, used PET containers are destined to sanitary filling. From the economic point of view, this represents an enormous waste of potentially usable prime material of excellent quality. Another serious problem concerns medium and small communities, geographically apart, wherein prospects of recycling are limited by the volumes available and costs of transport towards centres having the necessary infrastructure available.
One of the most important factors limiting recycling is the lack of simple mechanical methods, which the present invention remedies, for post-consumption recycling for direct re-use of the containers in the same place they are consumed. None of the methods described hereinabove nor the means useful for recycling container plastic material by washing, grinding and compacting or the processes that submit the material to figgerent temperatures, etc. enable the PET to be reused immediately.
Instead of grinding, scissors may be used for cutting PET material up into ribbons to be recycled manually, such as for yarning. Cutting using scissors generates irregular ribbons and is a slow and cumbersome process. Furthermore, scissor leave cut marks on the ribbons where each cutting cycle begins and ends, the cycle depending on the length of the scissor blades. These marks are stress points which weaken the ribbon when tensed, where the ribbon may eventually fail and break. Both for resistence and aesthetic reasons, it is important to prevent the formation of these marks.
A distant antecedent of the tool of the invention is the implement developed by the gauchos (Pampa cowboys) for cutting leather into strips. The gaucho instrument is moved along the leather to cut it into laces which were knitted or intertwined for designing lassoos, whips, reigns and horse mouthepieces.
Systems used heretofore may be generally classified according to the cutting instrument per se into two big groups: simple and articulated. The simple tools carry out there purpose by the sharp edge applying a lateral force. If only one side has the sharp edge, the material is be cut in one direction only or, if both edges are sharp, the material is cut in divergent directions. Although formed with multiple parts (grip-blade-handle-rod) which are clearly distinct, it can be said that they are practically integrated. On the other hand, articulated tools operate by the combined effort of their (moving) blades which pivot about the shaft holding them together and which causes them to converge on the object being cut up. In comparison with the static and integrated structure of the former, simple tools, the articulated tools are characterised by the mobility of their blades by pressing in opposite directions. Examples of simple tools are the knife and the axe; of articulated tools: pliers and scissors.
A tool for reprocessing containers, or other hollow objects having a wall thickness, of a cuttable material. The tool is particularly useful for cutting PET in view of the strength of this material. The containers are cut into ribbons of selected heights and widths in an orderly manner. The invention further includes a process for cutting such containers by means of the use of the tool.
A novel feature of the tool and instrument of the invention is that the cutting action is not the result of the blade movement but rather the blade slitting through the object being cut, such that the contact points progressively approaching produce the same effect as in the articulated tools but with less effort. The tool enjoys features of both the simple and the articulated groups but, at the same time, it is different in that the material being processed is moved against the blade, the latter being held stationary, unlike scissors.
The tool of the present invention enables the plastics to be reused immediately by orderly cutting the PET material up into ribbons of selectable width and thickness (constant dimensions), This method is simpler and more economical than any known industrial cutting or grinding process. The ribbons resulting from this method are suitable for manual work, such as in yarning, wherein this type of ribbon is heretofore obtained using scissors as mentioned hereinbefore.
The tool of the present invention may impact the quality of life of the entire population and, in particular, of small and middle-sized communities where these types of containers pose a serious environmental problem.
Ways of putting this and other subject-matter and advantages of this disclosure into practice will become more clearly apparent by reference to the following detailed description and to the attached drawings of the preferred embodiments of this disclosure, which are merely examples and in no way a limitation, wherein:
In the above tool drawing
The Tool:
As illustrated in
Another embodiment takes into consideration the wear of the blade 1.
The toolhead is made of any suitable material such as wood, plastics, metal or combination thereof. The toolhead may be integrated to a grip or handle 8 forming a single piece, as illustrated in
The slot 3-4 or 11 is at the top of the toolhead and is a housing of the tool for the container to be cut. The width of the slot is dimensioned so that the object to be cut may penetrate down to the bottom thereof whereas the length of the slot should be sufficient to stabilize the container during the cutting process. The depth of the slot influences the bottle stability during the cutting process, the deeper the slot the stabler the container. The bottom 7 of the slot defines the lower edge of the resulting ribbon.
The slot bottom may be varied in order to regulate the ribbon width, basically in one of four ways:
The tool may be manufactured in one of several ways to serve its purpose. Typically, a “U”-shaped opening 6 may be cut out in a wooden block to make the toolhead, as illustrated in
An alternative manufacturing embodiment is to use two wooden blocks (
As illustrated in
A preferred embodiment of the tool includes several slots 21-23 for adjusting the lower cutting level at the ribbon output side, e.g. a lower level 21, a medium level 22 and a higher level 23, in combination with the different depth of the slots 14, 15 and 16 at the ribbon input side, as shown in
All the embodiments provide a tool which is safe to use. However, additional means may prevent accidents and risks of a user getting cut. User protection means may include “U”-shaped cylindrical profiles 9 or like means hooding the portion of the cutter blade projecting from the tool, as illustrated in
The grip or handle may otherwise be arranged perpendicular to the toolhead such that the blade and its cutting edge are protected from the grip and out of risk to the user, as illustrated in
The Process:
PET containers formally comprise a cylindrical main body, a conical funnel or neck connecting a spout to the main body and a base or bottom closing off the other end. The main body is a cylindrical surface of a constant or variable generatrix according to the bottle design. A flat ribbon may be obtained from this part of a right-cylindrical container having a straight generatrix or an otherwise specially-shaped ribbon when the container has a different shape.
During the cutting process, the tool travels through the cylinder main body following a spiral path of like diameter and axis. The length of the ribbon depends on the number of turns traveled by the cutting tool which, in turn, depends on the height of the cylindrical main portion of the container and the set width of the ribbon.
The following example describes the cutting process for a beverage PET bottle. First, the label is removed (
Cutting begins by first tilting the cylinder axis relative to the blade plane, so that only the sharp edge thereof contacts the edge of the open container cylinder at an angle suitable for penetration (
It is also possible to first cut the cylinder with a knife or scissors and then thread the cut ribbon end into the tool slot.
Soon after cutting begins, the ribbon end comes out through the output side of the tool slot. Thereafter, the user may continue the process by pulling the ribbon through the slot (
As illustrated in
The ribbon is pulled until the tool reaches the end of the spiral cutting path through the main body of the container, continuing thereafter on the container bottom (
The Ribbon:
The recyclable material obtained from this process is a spiraling flat ribbon. The material and colour of the ribbon is that of the bottle or container material. The ribbons produced by the process just described hereinabove may be immediately used for recycling the plastic material.
The cylinder body between the container bottom and the funnel converging towards the spout is deemed the useful part of the container which may be processed, since it provides the more even and flatter ribbon. If the main body of the container is not cylindrical, an even and flat ribbon may generally still be obtained except for imperfections resulting from the particular shape of the container body which will be evident in the resulting ribbon.
The length of the ribbon, i.e. the distance from end to end, is determined by the surface area of the container cylinder and the width set by the tool. The area of a main elongated face of the ribbon is the same as the surface area of the container cylinder such that the length of the ribbon is inversely proportional to the ribbon width set by the tool.
Of course, changes, variations and aggregations may be made to the multiple embodiment describe above, without departing from the scope nor the spirit of the invention. The same has been described by way of preferred embodiments specifically for PET bottles, however those skilled in the art may suit it to other applications without departing from the purview of the invention as set forth in the appended claims. For instance, the base or bottom of the container may be cut off initially instead of the funnel, such that the cutting process continues through the funnel after cutting the main cylinder body up into the ribbon.
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P030101651 | May 2003 | AR | national |
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