The disclosure relates to a tubular bag machine comprising a dosing device as used for the packaging of filling material.
The tubular bag machine is formed in the manner of a twin-tube tubular bag machine and is thus equipped with two longitudinal sealing elements for forming two parallel film tubes. These two film tubes are each sealed transversely in the tubular bag machine by means of two transverse sealing jaws which are moveable against each other and which thereby transversely seal the film tube, such that two strands of tubular bags can be produced continuously or intermittently. Before the tubular bags are sealed, the tubular bags are filled with the filling material by means of one filling device each. After the tubular bags have been sealed transversely, the individual tubular bags are separated from each other by means of a separating element.
In known twin-tube tubular bag machines, a dosing device is disposed upstream of the filling device. Portions of the filling material are each separated in the dosing device in order to fill the two filling devices of the twin-tube tubular bag machine with the prespecified quantities, for example a prespecified filling weight, a prespecified filling volume or a prespecified filling amount. In the known tubular bag machines, the dosing device operates synchronously to the tubular bag machine in order for the filling device to be able to fill the amount of filling material required for the filling of the tubular bag at each exact required point in time. This synchronous operation between the dosing device and the tubular bag machine increasingly leads to problems.
A first disadvantage of the synchronous operation between the dosing device and the tubular bag machine is that each little process interference during the dosing in the dosing device leads to a standstill or to an idle cycle in the twin-tube tubular bag machine. In particular in the case of high-performance tubular bag machines with a performance of more than 400 tubular bags per minute, maintaining the synchronicity between the tubular bag machine and the dosing device is extremely complex. To provide for the required dosing power, high-performance dosing devices must be used, which are quite expensive and high-maintenance.
Another disadvantage of the synchronous operation between the tubular bag machine and the dosing device is that according to the known state of the art, the dosing device must be disposed above the filling device. Since the dosing device requires an ever-increasing assembly space for maintaining the required dosing performance, the height of the space required for the assembly of the tubular bag machine with the dosing device disposed above it increases continuously.
Based on this state of the art, it is therefore the object of the disclosure to propose a new twin-tube tubular bag machine which prevents the disadvantages of the state of the art mentioned above.
Advantageous embodiments of the disclosure are the subject matter of the dependent claims.
The fundamental concept of the twin-tube tubular bag machine according to the disclosure is based on a transfer element having several transfer containers being provided between the two filling devices of the twin-tube tubular bag machine and the dosing device. In other words, the dosing of the necessary filling quantity of the filling material is no longer carried out by directly dispensing the filling material from the dosing device into the two filling devices of the tubular bag machine. Instead, the transfer element comprises an input station, in which the prespecified filling quantities for each filling of the individual tubular bags are transferred from the dosing device to one transfer container each. Subsequently, the transfer containers are transported to two dispensing stations along a transfer line. Then, the transfer containers are emptied into the dispensing stations and the filling material is transferred from the transfer containers to the two filling device of the tubular bag machine. Subsequently, the transfer container returns to the input station along a return transfer line where it can be filled once again by the dosing device.
As a result, the dosing process is decoupled from the tubular bag filling process by means of the transfer element, such that the dosing device and the tubular bag machine no longer necessarily have to be operated synchronously. This decoupling in particular allows that interferences in one of the two processes do not directly cause an interference in the other process. Additionally, the transfer element allows the dosing device to operate irrespective of the position on the tubular bag machine, such that a position of the dosing device above the filling device of the tubular bag machine is not necessarily required.
The disclosure can also decrease the height at which the product is dropped and increase the performance of the process. The protection of fragile products is also increased. Transfer containers whose diameter is not consistent can be used in order to increase the emptying speed. By decoupling the dosing process and the bag-filling process, the speed of the filling process can be increased by optimized speed controls and improved opening methods.
It is especially advantageous if the distance between the two dispensing stations is adaptable. In this manner, the geometry of the dispensing stations can be matched to the adaptable geometry of the twin-tube tubular bag machine. In particular when the distance between the filling devices is changed, this can be compensated by changing the distance between the two dispensing stations. In general, any type of tubular bag machine can be combined with the transfer element. When using a vertical twin-tube tubular bag machine, disposing the transfer element between the dosing device and the tubular bag machine is especially advantageous.
The filling device can generally have any form. According to a preferred embodiment, the filling device is realized in the manner of a forming tube, the film tube being guided on the outer surface of the forming tube. Under the influence of gravity, the filling material can then be filled into the still unsealed tubular bag from above through the internal cross section of the forming tube.
There are different embodiments for each dosing device to be used. Generally, any gravimetric or volumetric dosing device or any dosing device using a metering method can be used. Depending on how the dosing is carried out, a weighing scale or a screw conveyor or a meter or a volume dosing element can be used as a dosing device.
In view of the dosing process being decoupled from the tubular bag filling process, it is especially advantageous if the transfer element is controlled by a separate control system. This transfer control system can control the transfer process in the input station irrespective of the transfer process in the dispensing station, such that the two processes are truly decoupled.
In view of correcting little process interferences, it is especially advantageous if the transfer control system can change the conveying speed of the transfer containers along the transfer line and/or along the return transfer line. In particular short delays in the area of the dosing can easily be compensated by means of such speed variations in order to ensure that the pre-dosed amount of the filling material in the dispensing station is timely dispensed, even in the event of little process interferences.
It is especially advantageous if the transfer control system can change the conveying speed of individual transfer containers irrespective of the conveying speed of the other transfer containers.
In order to be able to also compensate for larger process interferences and related process deviations between the dosing process and the tubular bag filling process, the transfer element can be equipped with at least one buffer. In this buffer, at least one filled or unfilled transfer container can be stored temporarily. In the event of a little process interference which, for example, prevents the transfer container from being filled on time, the transfer container temporarily stored in the buffer can be extracted and introduced to the transfer line or the return transfer line. In particular, it can be advantageous to provide a buffer upstream of each dispensing station.
In the basic form of the disclosure, a dosing device is connected to a twin-tube tubular bag machine by means of the transfer element. According to a preferred embodiment, however, the transfer element comprises at least two input stations, at each of which filling material can be transferred from a dosing device to the transfer containers. In this manner, the required dosing performance can in particular be distributed among several dosing devices, such that for example a high-performance twin-tube tubular bag machine comprising two or more dosing devices can be provided with the pre-dosed filling quantities. The individual dosing devices can then each have a correspondingly smaller dosing performance, such that high-performance dosing devices are not required in particular for the dosing of high-performance twin-tube tubular bag machines.
The dosing of the filling material by means of several dosing devices and their transfer to the transfer containers at a minimum of two different input stations is in particular advantageous if the tubular bags are to be filled with a mixed filling, for example a nut mix. To mix this filling, different filling materials can be transferred to the transfer containers at the different input stations, whereby the individual transfer containers then receive the corresponding, desired mix of the filling material when arriving at the dispensing station. By individually dosing the sub-components which make up the mix, the dosing accuracy of the proportions of the sub-components in the mix is moreover increased.
Alternatively or additionally to using several input stations, the transfer element can also comprise more than one paring of two dispensing stations. At each pairing of two dispensing stations each, the filling material or the material mix can be transferred from the transfer containers to the filling devices of different twin-tube tubular bag machines. By means of corresponding transfer elements, even complex transfer systems, in which a plurality of possibly different dosing devices can be linked to a plurality of different tubular bag machines, can be formed in this manner, thus enabling an optimized capacity alignment between the dosing capacities and the filling capacities.
Different embodiments of the disclosure are schematically illustrated in the drawings and are described in an exemplary manner hereinafter.
A dosing device 07 is disposed upstream of twin-tube tubular bag machine 01, said dosing device 07 being formed in the manner of a dosing screw 08 having a corresponding drive in the illustrated embodiment. By suitably driving dosing screw 08, a prespecified filling volume of the filling material can be discharged from a filling material funnel 09.
A transfer element 10 is disposed between twin-tube tubular bag machine 01 and dosing device 07. Transfer element 10 comprises an input station 11 and two dispensing stations 12. Transfer containers 13 of dosing device 07 can be filled with the pre-dosed amount of the filling material in input station 11. Subsequently, transfer containers 13 are transported along a transfer line 14 to dispensing stations 12. Transfer containers 13 are emptied into dispensing station 12, such that the prespecified amount of the filling material falls into the open tubular bags from above through filling devices 04. In this case, transfer containers 13 are filled in input station 11 irrespective of the emptying of transfer containers 13 in dispensing stations 12, such that a synchronicity between the dosing process in dosing device 07 and the tubular bag filling process in tubular bag machine 01 is no longer required. By varying the conveying speed of transfer containers 13 along transfer line 14, synchronicity deviations between the two processes can be easily compensated.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2019 103 184.2 | Feb 2019 | DE | national |
This application represents the national stage entry of PCT International Application No. PCT/EP2020/052802 filed on Feb. 5, 2020, which claims the benefit of German Patent Application No. IO 2019 103 184.2 filed on Feb. 8, 2019, the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference for all purposes.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2020/052802 | 2/5/2020 | WO | 00 |