COCONUT HARD SHELL GRANULES SOFTENING METHOD
20220145534 · 2022-05-12
Inventors
Cpc classification
E01C13/083
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
International classification
Abstract
A method of softening coconut shell material, includes submerging the coconut shell material in water to produce clean crumb material, boiling the clean crumb material in a salt solution to produce boiled crumb material, steaming the boiled crumb material to produce steamed crumb material, first soaking the steamed crumb material in a solution of water and an alkali material to produce soaked crumb material, second soaking the soaked crumb material in a salt solution to produce second soaked crumb material, rinsing the second soaked crumb material with a stable alkaline solution to product softened wet crumb material, and storing the softened wet crumb material.
Claims
1. A method of softening coconut shell material, comprising: submerging the coconut shell crumb material in water to produce clean crumb material; boiling the clean crumb material in a salt solution to produce boiled crumb material; steaming the boiled crumb material to produce steamed crumb material; first soaking the steamed crumb material in a solution of water and an alkali material to produce soaked crumb material; second soaking the soaked crumb material in a salt solution to produce second soaked crumb material; rinsing the second soaked crumb material with a stable alkaline solution to product softened wet crumb material; and storing the softened wet crumb material.
2. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein submerging the coconut shell material in water comprises submerging the coconut shell material in natural water.
3. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein boiling the clean crumb material in a salt solution comprises boiling the clean crumb material in a solution of natural water and salt having a concentration of at least 30 grams of dissolved salt per liter of water.
4. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein boiling the clean crumb material in a salt solution comprises boiling the clean crumb material in a solution of natural water and salt having a concentration in the range of 33 to 50 grams of dissolved salt per liter of water.
5. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein boiling the clean crumb material comprises boiling the clean crumb material for at least an hour.
6. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein steaming the boiled crumb material comprises steaming the boiled crumb material for at least eight hours.
7. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein steaming the boiled crumb material comprises steaming the boiled crumb material in a pressurized vessel.
8. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein first soaking the steamed crumb material comprises soaking the steamed crumb material in a solution of sodium hydroxide and water having a concentration of sodium hydroxide of 20%.
9. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein second soaking the first soaked crumb material in a salt solution comprises second soaking the first soaked crumb material in a solution have a concentration of magnesium chloride of 5%.
10. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein rinsing the second soaked crumb material comprises rinsing the second soaked crumb material with a solution of water, distilled vinegar at a concentration of 25%, muriatic acid and sodium carbonate as required to have a stable alkalinity in the range of 100 to 150 parts per million.
11. The method as claimed in claim 1, further comprising aging the softened wet crumb material before storing.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0004]
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[0006]
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[0009]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE EMBODIMENTS
[0010] The use of infill in synthetic turf fields is governed by the Synthetic Turf Council (www.SyntheticTurfCouncil.org), which has produced several documents including “Guidelines for Synthetic Turf Performance,” published in December, 2011, and “Guidelines for Crumb Rubber Infill Used in Synthetic Turf Fields,” which were approved in October of 2010. Any material replacing the crumb rubber infill will need to meet the same or similar requirements. One issue that arises is that even if the material is intended as infill, it ends up on top of the turf and will come into contact with the people on the field. It is also somewhat intrusive ending up in shoes, equipment bags, inside players' clothes, etc. High levels of contact between the crumb and the users will occur.
[0011] While the use of recycled tires as the infill material has some advantages, concerns have been raised about the health effects of tire crumb. Tire crumb is not just used as infill for sporting fields, but is also used as cushioning material in playgrounds. The EPA began a study in 2016 about the health concerns of tire crumbs (www.epa.gov/tirecrumb).
[0012] Coconut hard shell material can meet the above standards without the health concerns, being an all-natural substance. Coconut shell has high lignin and cellulose content, and the casing contains materials that resistant to bacteria and fungi. Other uses of coconut shell exists, including in the manufacture of mosquito coils, incense sticks, in plywood manufacturing as a phenolic extruder, and as filler in the manufacture of resin glue.
[0013] As used here the term “coconut crumb’ means one or more particles of the hard inner shell of a coconut cut down to particles typically having a size in the range from 4-7 millimeters, inclusive, but may include any crumbs of smaller than 10 mm. The term “coconut chips” means one or more particles of the hard outer shell of a coconut cut down to particles having a size in the range from 20 to 40 mm, inclusive, by may include any crumbs larger than 20 mm. These ranges are estimates but are intended to differentiate between particles that are 20 mm or larger, which are called chips, and particles that are 7 mm or smaller, call crumb. The term “coconut crumb infill” and “coconut crumb” are intended to be interchangeable.
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[0017] The process starts with the coconut shells being run through some sort of shredding or break down machine at 42, such as a hammer mill and/or a shredder to produce coconut chips and waste material, referred to as ‘fines’ 44. This process typically reduces the coconut shells to chip sizes in the 20-40 millimeter range. The resulting material is then screened at 46 in which the material that is not of the right size, fines, 48, is either designated as waste material, but may be used in other processes. Some of it may be returned to the beginning of the process at 40 for reprocessing.
[0018] A conveyor 50 then moves the coconut chips 52 to a second break down process at 54. One should note that the embodiment shown in
[0019]
[0020] Some embodiments of the process may rely only upon a single hammer mill as the breakdown machine, with the hammers changed between the breaking down of the shells into coconut chips and coconut crumb. The user can also adjust the rotor speed to be coordinated with the screen type to ensure the output meets a size specification. For shredders, it may involve changing the size of the blades. Some embodiments may use two of one type of a break down machine such as two hammer mills or two shredders. Some of the embodiments may rely upon a combination of different types of break down machines, using one type to produce coconut chips and another type to turn the chips into crumb.
[0021] Returning to
[0022] Other methods of reducing or breaking down the coconut outer shells to the hard granular crumbs are of course possible. For example, instead of using a hammer mill, one could employ a shredder as shown in
[0023]
[0024] Any method that reduces the size of the coconut husks to the crumb size without leaving any sharp corners or loose material behind will suffice to convert the coconut husks into coconut crumbs. These are then useful as infill in the synthetic turf as shown in
[0025]
[0026] In this manner, one can use an environmentally friendly, where otherwise waste product of coconut shells replaces the non-biodegradable tire crumbs currently in use on synthetic turf fields, referred to here as coconut crumb infill. The hard shells of the coconuts do not absorb water in a significant amount when wet, has antifungal characteristics, and while they will over time degrade, it is much less expensive and cost effective to replace them. The material is organic, sustainable, renewable, and safe for people and pets.
[0027] In some applications, it may be desirable to soften the hard shell coconut crumb infill. As mentioned above, the hard shells do not absorb water in a significant amount, so softening the coconut crumb shell infill material can become an issue. One method involves using solutions of water with various salts, acids and/or bases, as added ingredients to soften the crumb infill material.
[0028] As used here, the term “natural water” refers to untreated water, with not softening agents or purifiers added. Initially, the process cleans the coconut hard shells, referred to here as the shells, by submersion in water. In one embodiment, the water is natural water.
[0029] The shells are then boiled for at least one hour in a salt solution. In one embodiment the salt concentration is at least 30 grams of salt or more per liter of water. In another embodiment, the salt concentration is between 30-50 grams of salt per liter of water, and the water may be natural water. After boiling, the shells are steamed for at least eight hours.
[0030] After steaming, the shells undergo a first soaking in an alkali solution of water and an alkali material, such as sodium hydroxide (NaOH) or one of its hydrates such as sodium hydroxide monohydrate, all of which are referred to here as sodium hydroxide. The water may comprise natural water. The solution with the coconut material in it will typically have a pH in the range of 5.8 to 6.8, prior to the addition of the alkali material.
[0031] The shells then undergo a second soaking in a salt solution of 5% magnesium chloride (MgCl.sub.2) or other salt, including other halide salts, for at least an hour. After soaking, the shells are rinsed with a solution of natural water, and a mix of acids and bases to ensure stable alkalinity of the solution between 100 to 150 ppm. In one embodiment, the acids include distilled vinegar at a concentration of 25%, and muriatic acid (HCl), and the base or alkali materials may comprise soda ash also known as sodium carbonate (Na.sub.2CO.sub.3).
[0032] Once rinsed, the shell material is then aged and stored, stored, wet with no drying.
[0033] It will be appreciated that variants of the above-disclosed and other features and functions, or alternatives thereof, may be combined into many other different systems or applications. Various presently unforeseen or unanticipated alternatives, modifications, variations, or improvements therein may be subsequently made by those skilled in the art which are also intended to be encompassed by the below claims.