SEED TREATMENT FACILITIES, METHODS, AND APPARATUS
20170215331 · 2017-08-03
Inventors
- Greg A. Reineccius (Shakopee, MN, US)
- Jaco Ernest VAN DER WESTHUIZEN (Lakeville, MN, US)
- Alan W. GEISS (Kansas City, MO, US)
- Bradley W. MAY (Cary, NC, US)
- Tharacad S. RAMANARAYANAN (Cary, NC, US)
- Marc Jean-Marie Andrieux (Magny les Hameaux, FR)
Cpc classification
G06Q10/087
PHYSICS
G06Q10/0631
PHYSICS
G06K7/10237
PHYSICS
International classification
G06K7/10
PHYSICS
G06Q10/06
PHYSICS
G06Q10/08
PHYSICS
Abstract
A seed treatment system having a central computerized data store, a user interface, and network connections from the data store to a plurality of retail facilities and a plurality of agricultural produce suppliers. Each retail facility having a seed treatment system configured to uniformly treat batches of seeds with any of a variety of precisely measured chemical formulations. The seed treatment apparatus having a treatment applicator coupled to a plurality of dispensing stations. Each dispensing stations having a pump in fluid communication with a container disposed on a scale. The pump and scale of each dispensing station coupled to a system controller. The system controller is coupled to the data store, configured to provide on-demand agricultural seed treatments to the applicator and chemical usage data from each station to the data store. The data store configured to provide centralized remote monitoring inventory control, supply chain monitoring, and container recycling compliance.
Claims
1. A method of treating seeds at a retail seed treatment facility for delivery of the treated seeds to retail customer, the method comprising: selecting a recipe; simultaneously dispensing liquid seed treatment formulations at individualized flow rates from a kegs through two or more respective fluid lines in accord with the recipe; providing a flow of a controlled amount of seed through the seed treater, combining the respective fluid lines into a combined fluid line and the combined fluid line providing the combined fluid to the seed treater for spraying onto the flow of the controlled amount of seed, mixing the treated seed in a rotating cylinder; one of delivering the seeds to the retail customer at the retail seed treatment facility or delivering the seeds to the retail customers planting location, or temporarily storing the seeds for pickup by the retail customer.
2. The method of claim 1, further comprising controlling the particularized individual flow rates from each keg based upon the recipe stored in a programmable system controller, the programmable system controller in communication with a pump at each of the two or more kegs.
3. The method of claim 1, further comprising placing each keg of the two or more kegs on a keg station that includes a scale for measuring the weight of each keg as the fluid is dispensed an.
4. The method of claim 3 further comprising comparing with the programmable system controller an expected particularized flow rate as provided by each pump to a controlled flow rate based upon the decreasing weight of the fluid in each respective keg as the fluid therein is dispensed.
5. The method of claim 1, further providing a controlled rate of flow of water to the combined fluid line in accord with the recipe and varying said rate of flow of water based on at least one of the following: the ambient humidity and the moisture content of the seeds being treated.
6. The method of claim 1, further comprising controlling the spraying of the combined fluid substantially only while the seed is falling.
7. The method of claim 1, further comprising printing a report at the retail seed treatment facility based on data from the programmable system controller, the report including pricing and quantities of liquid seed formulations applied, and providing the report to the customer.
8. The method of claim 1, further comprising sending data regarding the treated seed to a remote location by way of a network and storing data regarding the treated seed for access at future planting seasons.
9. The method of claim 1, further comprising providing the two or more kegs with a capacity of from 5 to 50 gallons.
10. The method of claim 1, further comprising periodically stirring each of the two or more kegs by way of a stirrer motor.
11. A method of treating seeds at a seed treatment facility the method comprising: selecting a recipe from a user interface connected to a programmable system controller; simultaneously dispensing liquid seed treatment formulations individualized as controlled by the programmable process controller and in accord with the selected recipe from a two or more dispense stations as selected by the programmable process controller from a bank of dispense stations to the seed treater, each dispense station having a pump controlled by the programmable process controller and a scale connected to the programmable process controller to monitor weight of the fluid at said dispense station, whereby the dispensing is provided by operation of the pumps at the pump stations selected by the programmable process controller; verifying the operation of each pump by simultaneously monitoring the weight of the fluid during the operation of each said pump; treating seeds in the seed treater controlled by the programmable process controller; limiting the seed treatment fluid going to the seed treater to fluid lines extending from the bank of dispense stations.
12. The method of treating seeds at a seed treatment facility of claim 11 further comprising combining each respective fluid line from each dispense station into a combined fluid line at a manifold in proximity to the seed treater.
13. The method of treating seeds at a seed treatment facility of claim 11 further comprising monitoring the depletion of kegs containing the fluid by the programmable process controller at each dispense station and when empty or approaching empty replacing the particular keg with another keg not empty of fluid and inputting data relating to the placement into the programmable process controller.
14. A method of controlling the containment of seed treatment liquid formulations comprising: receiving liquid formulations of seed treatment chemicals in a two or more kegs from a chemical distribution location at a use location geographically separate from the chemical distribution location, inserting a dispense heads into a two or more the kegs and mechanically pumping the liquid simultaneously in a measured proportional rate according to a recipe directly from the two or more kegs to a continual flow seed treater, the continual flow seed treater having a manifold mounted thereto for combining.
15. The method of claim 14 further comprising shipping a two or more kegs to the use location and connecting the two or more kegs to the seed treater such that contents from more than one of the two or more kegs can simultaneously be pumped to the seed treater.
16. The method of claim 14, further comprising sending over the internet recipes of particular formulations of the contents of the kegs to the seed treater.
17. The method of claim 14, further comprising monitoring the decreasing weight of the kegs during the pumping of the contents of the respective kegs to the seed treater.
18. The method of claim 17 wherein the monitoring of the weight step comprises: electronically generating and sending weight data on as the weight of the respective kegs decreases as the contents is pumped.
19. The method of claim 14 further comprising installing each of the two or more kegs on a keg station that includes a scale whereby the weight of each of the kegs may be monitored.
20. The method of claim 14 further comprising the step of monitoring the pumping of each of the kegs by controlling and monitoring a pump dispensing the contents from each particular keg.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0037] The embodiments of the present invention may be more completely understood in consideration of the following detailed description of various embodiments of the invention in connection with the accompanying drawings, in which:
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[0084] While the present invention is amendable to various modifications and related forms, specifics thereof have been shown by way of example in the drawings and will be described in detail. It should be understood, however, that the intention is not to limit the present invention to the particular embodiments described. On the contrary, the intention is to cover all modifications, equivalents, and related embodiments falling within the spirit and scope of the present invention.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0085] Crop seeds can be treated with a variety of components or formulations such as fertilizer, herbicide, fungicide, insecticide, or any of a variety of combinations of these chemicals, typically along with a colored dye or other indicator that the seed is treated. A seed treatment recipe or combination of formulations can vary due to the needs of a farmer who will plant the seed, the type of seed, and the seed-growing environment. Environmental factors can include, the geographic planting region, soil types, the potential presence of specific plant diseases or pests, climate, growing season, etc. A farmer may need to account for some or all of these variables when selecting seeds and requesting seed treatments prior to planting.
[0086] Due to the variety of seed types and chemical treatment formulations that are available it is not efficient or necessarily practical to produce or maintain an inventory of treated seeds with all possible combinations of seed and seed-treatments that are be desired to accommodate the widest possible variety of seed-treatment requests. Due to the potentially hazardous nature of some chemicals it is important that only an appropriate amount of chemical treatment be applied to a batch of seeds, that all appropriate regulations be followed in the handling and application of chemical formulations, and that exposure of the chemicals to humans or the external environment be limited to the extent feasible. Therefore, it would be advantageous to a seed retailer to be able to treat a wide variety of seeds with any of a number of chemical treatment formulations at the retailer's point of sale in an on-demand fashion with a safe and contained treatment system.
[0087] Referring to
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[0089] The pump 108 for each of the plurality of keg stations 104 can provide chemical treatment from each keg 106 to a seed treatment application apparatus 200. In an embodiment pump 108 can be a peristaltic pump, or roller pump, or another appropriate type of positive displacement pump. The system controller 102 can be coupled to a user-interface 112 such as a graphical touch-screen that can provided a user or operator of the seed treatment system 100 with a variety of menus, alerts, alarms, data-entry fields, and other options to configure or operate the system 100. The system controller can also be coupled to a local weather monitoring station 107 on site or off site that can provide the system with the ambient temperature, relative humidity, and atmospheric pressure. An emergency stop button or switch can be coupled to the system controller 102 to allow an operator to immediately halt the treatment process in case of an emergency or other system failure.
[0090] Referring to
[0091] In an embodiment the reporting facility 122 can manage and track the location, use, and contents of each individual keg 106 that has been registered with the facility 122. Each keg 106 includes a bar code or RFID tag to uniquely identify each individual keg, drum, or other chemical container. An RFID tag can be embedded in a barcode label affixed to each keg 106 to provide redundant or additional information. The identification information encoded on each keg 106 by a bar code label or RFID tag can include information such as the manufacturer of the contents of the keg, the batch or lot number associated with the contents of the keg, the size or capacity of the keg, the weight of the keg when empty, the weight of the keg when assembled with a pre-installed stirring apparatus, the actual amount of chemical product contained within the keg as provided by the manufacturer or chemical supply company, the density of the contents of the keg, a check digit to authenticate or error-check the identifying data, a unique keg serial number, or other useful identifying information or data.
[0092] A seed company can utilize real-time access to the seed treatment system 100 to modify, replace, or update seed treatment recipes or formulations. Treatment information for every batch of seeds can be transmitted from the treatment controller 102 to a data storage point at an individual seed company, into a cloud-based data store, or reporting facility 122, through a network 120.
[0093] In an embodiment system 100 can be configured to only produce batches of treated seed in accordance with pre-programmed recipes, or recipes that are purchased or downloaded from the remote data storage and reporting facility 122. In an alternate embodiment system 100 can be configured to allow customized or unique recipes to be programmed directly into the system 100 through the user-interface 112 or by coupling the system controller 102 to a personal computer, a tablet computer, a removable non-volatile media storage device or other computer readable medium. The capability of the system 100 to lock-out unauthorized recipes and otherwise control the administration of the system can be accomplished with a security log-in mechanism or other access control that can prevent unauthorized access or modification to the system 100 and its configuration while still providing access to individual users or operators that can initiate, monitor, and complete the batch treatment process. The system controller 102 can also be configured to record a user-id associated with an individual user that is operating the system 100 such that a database record for each batch of treated seed can include the user-id of the individual associated with that batch.
[0094] The tracking and management of each keg 106 can also provide for first-in first-out (FIFO) management of individual chemical formulations. For example, if a retail location receives separate deliveries of identical chemical formulations at different times the system 100 can require that the older chemical formulation to be placed on a keg station 104 before the newer, second to arrive, keg. In this manner the efficacy of the chemicals is managed and monitored. Alternatively, if an individual keg is stored in an inventory for a period of time longer than desired to ensure the efficacy of the chemical formulation, the system 100 can prevent the use of that keg if an operator attempts to use the chemical formulation after it has expired. In one embodiment the system 100 can instruct the operator to return the keg to an appropriate chemical recycler or the original chemical supplier. In one embodiment the system can notify the chemical supplier, through a network connection 120 to a central data store, of the location of each keg that contains an expired product.
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[0096] Accurate weight measurements of the keg 106 and its contents can be obtained through the use of a motion sensor 231 at a dispense station, see
[0097] Generally, a keg station 104 can include a modular platform or station that includes a scale 110 or load-cell 195 to continuously or periodically measure the weight of a keg 106 and its contents, an accurate variable-flow pump 108 configured to transfer specific amounts of fluid from a keg 106 to an applicator manifold 136, a stirrer assembly 138 that includes a motor and stirrer-coupler 140 coupled to a stirring apparatus 142, an air release or removal valve 144 that can prevent gas build-up in the fluid lines to manifold 136 and remove any air introduced into the line, a keg coupler 148, associated piping or tubing to deliver the contents of an individual keg 106 to the seed treatment apparatus 200, and a junction box 149. Air can be inadvertently introduced into the line during the mating of a keg coupler 148 and associated piping or tubing to an individual keg 106. Due to the generally low delivery rate of some chemical formulations it is desirable to deliver the contents of each keg 106 to the seed treatment apparatus 200 without any air in the delivery lines. The presence of any more than a trivial amount of air in a line can prevent the uniform application of the desire chemical treatments. An air removal valve 144 can also be mounted on the back plate.
[0098] Coupler 148 can be a quick connect coupling device that is self-sealing, for example, a commercially available RSV (Reusable Stainless Valve) closed chemical system coupler as produced by Micro Matic USA, Inc. of Sparks, Nev. Coupler 148 can include a return port that allows any over flow from air removal valve 144 to be returned into keg 106.
[0099] Keg station 104 can also include a station controller 130 coupled to a pump 108 that can operate to remove the chemical contents from the keg 106 through coupler 148. The station controller 130 can be electrically coupled to the system controller 102. The system controller can provide the station controller 130 with commands directing the operation of pump 108. Commands can include pump speed, pumping duration, and pump direction. “Pump” when used herein, unless the context specifically indicates to the contrary, includes pump controllers and motors associated with the pump. The station controller 130 can transmit pump or station data to the system controller 102. Station data can include weight measurements supplied by the scale 110 to the station controller 130.
[0100] Seed treatment chemicals can be distributed in drums or kegs 106 with a capacity of approximately fifteen gallons, although other sized kegs of approximately five to sixty gallons can also be accommodated by various embodiments. Kegs or drums with a capacity of greater than approximately fifty-five gallons may call for larger or additional load cells in scale 110. Kegs 106 are generally configured to reduce the potential for spillage or contamination and provide a safe and convenient mechanism for transport. Kegs of 15 or 30 gallons are particularly suitable. Polymers, particularly polyethylene is a suitable material for the kegs. Each keg 106 can be labeled or coded with a bar-code, quick response (QR) code, a Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) tag, or other unique identifier that can include or reference information such as the chemical contents, weight, formulation, batch number, lot number, manufacturer, capacity, owner, or status of the keg and its contents.
[0101] Each keg can include a separate stirrer coupler 140, a coupler 148 that can be in fluid communication with a down tube or dip tube 144 in the keg 106, and a fill port 151. The stirrer 142 and stirrer-coupler 140, along with the coupler 148 can be installed prior to filling the keg. Once filled with a chemical treatment component the fill port 151 can be sealed such that fluid can only be withdrawn from the keg 106 through the coupler 148. In this manner the keg can remain sealed during transit and use, preventing or minimizing any risk of spillage or contamination of the contents of the keg 106.
[0102] Keg station 104 can include a reader that is electronically coupled to the station controller 130 or the system controller 102. In various embodiments of the invention the reader can comprise a bar code scanner, a RFID tag reader, a QR code reader, or any other appropriate inventory identification or monitoring equipment. In the example of an RFID tag reader, the reader 132 can be coupled to the keg station 104 such that only a single keg 106 can be positioned such that an RFID tag disposed on the keg 106 can be read by the reader 132. The reader can provide the RFID tag data from keg 106 to the station controller 130 or the system controller 102. The link between the reader 132 and the station controller 130 or the system controller 102 can be wired or wireless. In an alternate embodiment the reader 132 can comprise a wireless bar code scanner that is in electronic communication with the system controller 102. The system controller 102 can be configured to require that the reader 132 identify a keg 106 when it is placed on the scale 110 prior to the activation of pump 108. In this manner the system controller can update an inventory database, a batch report, and monitor the chemical formulation contained in each keg 106 at each station 104.
[0103] Keg 106 can also include an internal stirrer mechanism 142 to accommodate chemicals that must be stirred or agitated prior to application. The stirrer mechanism 142 can include a stirring port 140, an example of which is depicted in
[0104] The station controller 130 can include a timer or timing mechanism that can be configured or programmed to activate individual keg 106 stirrer mechanisms 142 at periodic or preset intervals. For example, a specific chemical at a specific keg station could require ten-minutes of stirring once every hour. A second chemical in a keg 106 mounted at a second keg station could require a one-hour period of stirring prior to application. The station controller 130 can be configured to accomplish both requirements with a periodic stirring of the first chemical every hour, and with a daily timer that activates the second keg stirrer at 7 AM, one-hour prior to beginning a programmed 8 AM batch application.
[0105] As a chemical fluid is pumped out of a keg 106 the fluid can pass through a filter 150 that can remove particulate matter before entering the pump 108. The pump 108 can then direct the fluid through an air-removal valve 144 that can prevent the formation of air pockets in a fluid line that connects the keg station 104 to the manifold 136 and ultimately to the application apparatus 200.
[0106] In one embodiment, the fluid lines 147 between the keg and the treatment apparatus 200 are clear or translucent, allowing the operator to confirm that a desired chemical, optionally treated with a colored dye, is present in each line. In a situation where a new line is installed or where a line is empty, possibly due to cleaning or the repurposing of a keg station 104 from one chemical to a different chemical, the operator can prime the system by directing the system controller 102 to operate the pump 108 associated with the empty line until the line is filled with fluid. In an alternative embodiment, optical, capacitive, or flow sensors 149 can be included at each keg station 104 or at the manifold 136 to monitor and validate the presence of fluid in each fluid supply line. These sensors could be coupled to individual station controller 130 associated with the supply line, or to the system controller 102. In either configuration the sensors can be monitored during the seed treatment process to monitor and verify the presence of each desired chemical formulation in the supply lines.
[0107] Referring to
[0108] Referring to
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[0110] The system controller 102 and the station controller 130 can be coupled with a bi-directional communication channel or protocol that requires both the system controller 102 and the station controller 130 to acknowledge the other prior to the beginning of a treatment application. This configuration can provide the system controller 102 with a mechanism to verify the presence and working operation of each station controller 130 on a plurality of keg stations 104. Similarly, the loss of communication in either direction between the system controller 102 and any individual station controller 130 can cause an alert or alarm to be issued. The presence of an alert may require operator action or result in an automated pause or shutdown of a batch treatment application. Treatment can be paused or temporarily suspended by stopping each pump 108 on each station 104, as well as stopping the flow of seed into or through a seed treatment apparatus.
[0111] Referring to
[0112] Additional seed-treatment apparatus disclosure is provided in U.S. Patent Publication No. 2011/0027479, incorporated herein by reference.
[0113] The seed treatment apparatus 200 can be connected to a system controller 102 with a processor that is coupled to a control panel or touch screen 112 for monitoring or operating the system. The system controller can control the seed wheel, the atomizer wheel or bowl, and the rotation drum.
[0114] Such a seed treatment apparatus 200 coupled to a system controller 102 can be configured to proportion both amounts of seed and treatment products to the polishing drum 208 or mixing chamber in order to provide for minimal treatment product waste and consistent treatment product application. The seed treatment system 200 can include sensors, flow meters, and/or controls to monitor/control both the flow rates of the treatment products coming out of the pumps 108 and the metered volume of seeds entering or exiting the chemical applicator 206. Based upon a pre-programmed recipe system 100 can automatically adjust the flow rates of the treatment products based on the volume of seeds to be treated that are supplied to apparatus 200 at a given time in order to control the amount of treatment product applied to the seeds. Thus, if a flow sensor sensing the flow rate of the treatment products and a seed sensor sensing the volume of seeds indicate that the ratio of flow rate to volume is not within a desired amount of a predetermined optimal ratio or a range of ratios, the system 100 can automatically adjust the flow rate of seeds and/or the volume of chemical treatment product. This provides a more accurate distribution of treatment product to the seed than previously possible because the correlation of volume of seeds to amount of treatment product is consistently maintained.
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[0117] A communications failure between one or more keg stations 104 and the system controller 102 can be reported at the user interface 112, to a back-office reporting center 190, or directly to a customer service center 182. The programmable system controller 102 can include a wired network interface 192 that provides a reliable connection to the Internet or a private network. In the case of an Internet or other wired network failure, a properly quipped system 100 can send an error indication via a secondary network such as a cellular-telephone modem 194.
[0118] The system controller 102 can also report errors or failures of the treatment application apparatus equipment 200. For example, indications of a seed wheel motor failure or indications of a drum motor failure can be reported or logged by the system controller 102. Other communications between the system controller 102 and the treatment apparatus 200 can include commands to start or stop a flow of seed or if appropriately equipped, to select one of several bins or containers of different seed varieties. In this manner a fully-automated seed treatment recipe that includes both the chemical formulations as well as the seed variety can all be controlled by the system controller 102.
[0119] The system controller 102 can deduce various errors in the operation of individual keg stations 104. For example, if a fluid supply line between the treatment application apparatus 200 and an individual keg station 104 were to become clogged or blocked such that the pump 108 was unable to draw a chemical out of the keg 106, the system controller 102 can detect the blockage. In the situation where the pump 108 being operated, the scale 110 should report a decrease in the weight of keg 106 proportional to the speed of operation of the pump 108. If no decrease in the weight of keg 106 is detected despite the operation of pump 108 an alert can be raised or alternatively the system controller 102 can stop any active batch treatment process until the blockage is removed. Similarly, if the pump 108 or pump motor were to fail or otherwise be unable to withdraw fluid from keg 106 the system controller 102 can issue an alert or alarm. Any alert or alarm that is generated due to a failure condition detected by system controller 102 can be reported to the data store 180 as well as an appropriate service center 182 or service department 184. These reports can be in the form of repair tickets that indicate the location, type, time and potential resolution if any, of the alert or alarm.
[0120] In one embodiment the system controller 102 can adjust the speed of a pump 108 at an individual keg station 104 to adapt to a gradual buildup of material in a filter 150 that can cause the actual flow rate of a chemical formulation in a keg 106 to decrease given a constant pump speed. In the situation where the pump 108 being operated, the scale 110 should report a decrease in the weight of keg 106 proportional to the speed of operation of the pump 108. If the decrease in the rate of change of the weight of keg 106 decreases over a period of time where the speed of operation of pump 108 is constant an alert can be raised or alternatively the system controller 102 can increase the speed of the pump 108 to compensate for the decrease in flow (rate of change of the weight of the keg) thereby maintain the treatment formulation consistency for an active batch treatment process. In this manner the system 100 can self-calibrate by correlating the speed of each pump 108 at each keg station 104 with the change in weight of the keg 106 during pump operation. The self-calibration can be combined with the density of the contents of the keg 106, obtained by the reader 132 scanning an RFID tag or barcode, to provide consistent and accurate seed treatment.
[0121] Individual transactions can be logged by the system 100 and held locally in an internal database on computer readable storage coupled to the system controller 102. The transactions can also be reported to the data store 180 in real-time or in periodic communication or synchronization intervals. Examples of transactions include receipt of seed or chemical treatment inventory, replenishment orders, seed treatment forecasts, and seed treatment application information for individual batches.
[0122] The back office system 190 can include Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP), Business Intelligence (BI), Electronic Data Interchange (EDI), Supply Chain Management (SCM), or other software programs or resources that can provide additional forecasting or inventory management information. Additionally, the back office system 190 can provide: advanced shipment notifications, demand planning based on seed treatment forecasts, replenishment orders, and seed treatment batch information converted to seed company invoice or electronic statements/bills.
[0123] The back office system 190 can provide “Business Object Dashboards” to support internal chemical supplier functions such as inventory supply chains for chemical formulation components, equipment efficiencies, equipment service information and records, and additional analysis and reporting to support sales and marketing efforts.
[0124] Software updates can include code pates that are specific fixes to isolated issues, or a complete new release of the software. Additionally, system maintenance announcements can be provided to inform or remind the system operator of maintenance issues or bulletins.
[0125] Alerts can be communicated to one or more reporting centers by the system controller. An individual load scale failure and its rack location number. The rack location number of an individual load cell or scale failure to properly return to zero during calibration process can be on example of an alert to both the local user at the user interface 112 and the equipment service department 184. A pump failure can generate a similar notification that includes the locate of the system 100 installation, the rack location number of the pump, the amount of time the pump has been in service, the number of total gallons of fluid delivered through the pump, and the type of formulation contained in the keg 106 at the station 104 can all be included in a report to the customer service center 182 for both customer assistance, technical troubleshooting, and engineering reliability data analysis.
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[0128] Information related to customers can also be transmitted to individual locations, for example if an order for a specific type, quantity, and treatment for a batch of seed is placed on-line with a seed company, that information can be forwarded to the retail see treatment location closest to the individual customer for advance fulfillment and/or delivery. Finally, location specific information, such as inventory data, contact information, alerts, repair status, and the like can be communicated between the data store 180 and each local treatment system.
[0129] Embodiments of system 100 can include a graphical user interface (GUI), optionally with a touch screen panel suitable for an industrial or retail environment. The GUI can include a plurality of screens that provide a user/operator with a variety of options, commands, and information necessary to operate and monitor the system 100.
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[0133] The calibration steps of zeroing a station scale are shown in
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[0143] Embodiments of system 100 can include an interface to manage and view data related to both retail seed-treaters and end product customers of treated seed.
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[0153] The system bus 1018 can be any of several types of bus structure(s) including the memory bus or memory controller, a peripheral bus or external bus, and/or a local bus using any variety of available bus architectures including, but not limited to, Intelligent Drive Electronics (IDE), Peripheral Component Interconnect (PCI), Universal Serial Bus (USB), and Small Computer Systems Interface (SCSI).
[0154] The system memory 1016 includes volatile memory 1020 and nonvolatile memory 1022. The basic input/output system (BIOS), containing the basic routines to transfer information between elements within the computer 1012, such as during start-up, is stored in nonvolatile memory 1022. By way of illustration, and not limitation, nonvolatile memory 1022 can include read only memory (ROM), programmable ROM (PROM), or flash memory. Volatile memory 1020 includes random access memory (RAM). Computer 1012 also includes removable/non-removable, volatile/non-volatile computer storage media, for example disk storage 1024.
[0155] It is to be appreciated that
[0156] A user enters commands or information into the computer 1012 through input device(s) 1036. Input devices 1036 include, but are not limited to, a pointing device such as a mouse, stylus, touch pad, keyboard, microphone, scanner, digital camera, web camera, and the like. These and other input devices connect to the processing unit 1014 through the system bus 1018 via interface port(s) 1038. Interface port(s) 1038 include, for example, a serial port, a parallel port, and a universal serial bus (USB). Output device(s) 1040 use some of the same type of ports as input device(s) 1036. Thus, for example, a USB port may be used to provide input to computer 1012, and to output information from computer 1012 to an output device 1040. Output adapter 1042 is provided to illustrate that there are some output devices 1040 like monitors, speakers, and printers, among other output devices 1040, which require special adapters. The output adapters 1042 include, by way of illustration and not limitation, video and sound cards that provide a means of connection between the output device 1040 and the system bus 1018. It should be noted that other devices and/or systems of devices provide both input and output capabilities such as remote computer(s) 1044.
[0157] Computer 1012 can operate in a networked environment using logical connections to one or more remote computers, such as remote computer(s) 1044. The remote computer(s) 1044 can be a personal computer, a server, a router, a network PC, a workstation, a microprocessor based appliance, a peer device or other common network node and the like, and typically includes many or all of the elements described relative to computer 1012. For purposes of brevity, only a memory storage device 1046 is illustrated with remote computer(s) 1044. Remote computer(s) 1044 is logically connected to computer 1012 through a network interface 1048 and then physically connected via communication connection 1050. Network interface 1048 encompasses wire and/or wireless communication networks such as local-area networks (LAN) and wide-area networks (WAN). LAN technologies include Fiber Distributed Data Interface (FDDI), Ethernet, and the like. WAN technologies include, but are not limited to, point-to-point links, circuit-switching networks like Integrated Services Digital Networks (ISDN) and variations thereon, packet switching networks, and Digital Subscriber Lines (DSL).
[0158] An embodiment of the present invention provides for the reclamation of kegs 106 and any chemical residue or unused formulation contents upon the substantial depletion of the chemical formulation. By recording the weight of the original contents in a full keg 106 prior to use, monitoring and recording the use of the chemical formulation through continuous weighing during the application, and recording the weight of a keg 106 upon its removal from a station 104 and return to a processing facility can provide for the verification of keg integrity, and the content formulation quality. The recycling or reclamation of the keg 106, the keg stirrer components and/or any keg port or valve components can reduce the overall cost of chemical formulation distribution. Environmental protection through proper handling of the keg 106 and its contents through the distribution cycle from filling, delivery, use, return and reclamation is provided by an embodiment of the present invention that includes the tracking of each individual keg 106. The tracking of each keg 106 can be accomplished by maintaining an inventory database of each keg 106 that includes a location and a unique identifying number, bar code, or RFID tag data, for each keg 106. Loss prevention of excess chemical and kegs can be tracked, monitored, and remedied because a complete audit trail of the location of each keg 106 and its contents is maintained.
[0159] An embodiment of the present invention includes a method of tracking the use of a chemical formulation by providing a varying nominal quantity of chemical formulation in each keg or container and recording that nominal quantity in each container. For example a chemical provider can fill a container, the container having a unique identifier and an actual capacity greater than an indicated capacity, with a nominal amount of a chemical formulation above the indicated capacity and record an original weight of the container and the chemical formulation in the container. By recording the unique identifier and the original weight of the container the chemical provider can maintain a database of information including the precise amount of chemical formulation that was prepared and distributed in the container to a customer.
[0160]
[0161] This is an exemplary fixed length barcode, however, some keg formulations can have a different length batch number and may not have the serial number portion at the end of the bar code. In one embodiment of the invention a fixed ten character batch number is padded with leading zeroes and a four character serial number is used.
[0162] The Global Trade Item Number (GTIN) will typically be 14 characters. The entire GTIN-14 can be used to identify the material and can include several sub-parts or fields. The first digit encodes the package size, zero represents smallest saleable unit, in this case a fifteen-gallon keg. The next seven digits represent the GS1 Company Code, for example 0785740 is the code for Bayer Crop Science. The next five digits represent the UCC product code, in this example 12938 is the code for Allegiance FS310 1X15GAL DRM US. The last digit is a check digit, 8 in this example.
[0163] The use of an embodiment of a chemical application system, such as seed treatment system 100, can provide the chemical provider with a mechanism to remotely monitor the withdrawal of the chemical formulation from the container and record a quantity of the chemical formulation withdrawn from the container by monitoring the change in weight of the container as the chemical formulation is withdrawn. Upon receipt of the returned container after the quantity of the chemical formulation is withdrawn from the container the chemical provider can again weigh the container and record a received weight of the container and any remaining amount of the chemical formulation in the container. By comparing the received weight of the container and the weight of the quantity of the chemical formulation withdrawn from the container to the original weight of the container the chemical provider is able to determine if the chemical formulation was tampered with, spilled, diluted, or otherwise used in a manner inconsistent with the environmental or contractual requirements.
[0164] The generation of a report including the unique identifier of the container, the chemical formulation, the customer, the distributor, the original weight of the container, the nominal amount of a chemical formulation, the withdrawn quantity of the chemical formulation, and the received weight of the container can provide an audit trail that enables an investigation of any irregularities in the handling or use of the chemical formulation.
[0165] Embodiments can provide instructions that discourage any manual access to liquid seed treatment chemicals, such as by opening and manually pouring the chemicals out, thereby reducing the likely hood that any chemical is spilled or contaminated. Instructions can be provided to maintain a closure on the kegs when not placed on a keg station and coupled to an appropriate quick-connector.
[0166]
[0177]
[0185] In one embodiment the process depicted in
[0186] The embodiments above are intended to be illustrative and not limiting. Additional embodiments are within the claims. In addition, although aspects of the present invention have been described with reference to particular embodiments, those skilled in the art will recognize that changes can be made in form and detail without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention, as defined by the claims.
[0187] Persons of ordinary skill in the relevant arts will recognize that the invention may comprise fewer features than illustrated in any individual embodiment described above. The embodiments described herein are not meant to be an exhaustive presentation of the ways in which the various features of the invention may be combined. Accordingly, the embodiments are not mutually exclusive combinations of features; rather, the invention may comprise a combination of different individual features selected from different individual embodiments, as understood by persons of ordinary skill in the art. Embodiments of the present invention also have application in areas other than seed treatment, such as applications where a precise custom blending of liquid products are desired or required. For example, custom blending can be provided with an embodiment of the present invention, without being coupled to a seed treatment apparatus. A custom seed-treater, or a seed company entity, can utilize a recipe that calls for the blending of several components. The recipe can be transmitted over a network to an embodiment of the present invention, which in turn will precisely release materials from their respective kegs to a common receptacle, whereupon the components are collected to create the custom blended seed-treatment composition. At that or a later time, the custom blended seed treatment composition can be stored or transferred. When desired, the composition can be supplied in to the proper portion to an appropriate system. That system can be equipped to coat the seeds, whereupon the custom blended mixture is applied to the seeds, or some other appropriate use or application.
[0188] Any incorporation by reference of documents above is limited such that no subject matter is incorporated that is contrary to the explicit disclosure herein. Any incorporation by reference of documents above is further limited such that no claims included in the documents are incorporated by reference herein. Any incorporation by reference of documents above is yet further limited such that any definitions provided in the documents are not incorporated by reference herein unless expressly included herein.