ROTOR FOR INTERNAL BATCH MIXER
20230321872 · 2023-10-12
Inventors
Cpc classification
B29C64/118
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29B7/28
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29B7/22
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B33Y30/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C48/59
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B33Y50/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B29B7/28
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B33Y30/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B33Y50/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
There is provided a rotor for use in an tangential internal batch mixer, the rotor comprising a main body configured to rotate about a rotor axis, a wing extending from the main body, and arranged helically about a portion of the main body, the wing comprising a wing tip surface, a first portion of the wing tip surface extending between a first edge and a second edge of the wing, wherein the first edge comprises a first helix angle and the second edge comprises a second helix angle, the first helix angle being different to the second helix angle.
Claims
1. A rotor for use in a tangential internal batch mixer, the rotor comprising: a main body configured to rotate about a rotor axis, a wing extending from the main body, and arranged helically about a portion of the main body; the wing comprising a wing tip surface, a first portion of the wing tip surface extending between a first edge and a second edge of the wing; wherein the first edge comprises a first helix angle and the second edge comprises a second helix angle, the first helix angle being different to the second helix angle.
2. The rotor of claim 1, the wing comprising a third edge and a fourth edge, a second portion of the wing tip surface extending between the third edge and the fourth edge, the third edge comprising a third helix angle and the fourth edge comprising a fourth helix angle.
3. The rotor of claim 2, wherein the width of the second portion of the wing tip surface varies between a first width W5 and a second width W3, and a width of the first portion of the wing tip surface varies between W3 and a third width W1, where W1 is greater than W3 and W3 is greater than W5.
4. The rotor of claim 2, wherein the third helix angle is different from the fourth helix angle.
5. The rotor of claim 2, wherein the fourth helix angle is greater than the third helix angle, the third helix angle is greater than the second helix angle, and the second helix angle is greater than the first helix angle.
6. The rotor of claim 2, wherein the value of the second helix angle minus the value of the first helix angle is greater than the value of the fourth helix angle minus the value of the third helix angle.
7. The rotor of claim 1, wherein the wing is a long wing.
8. The rotor of claim 7, further comprising a second wing extending from the main body, and arrange helically about a portion of the main body wherein the second wing is a short wing.
9. The rotor of claim 8, the second wing comprising a fifth edge and a sixth edge, a wing tip surface extending between the fifth edge and sixth edge; wherein the fifth edge comprises a fifth helix angle and the sixth edge comprises a sixth helix angle, the fifth helix angle being different to the sixth helix angle.
10. The rotor of claim 9, wherein the fifth helix angle is greater than the sixth helix angle.
11. The rotor of claim 7, further comprising a short wing.
12. The rotor of claim 7, further comprising a second long wing.
13. The rotor of claim 1, wherein the rotor further comprises one or more coolant channels for passing coolant through.
14. A tangential internal batch mixer for mixing materials, the mixer comprising: a mixing chamber for mixing the material; and first and second rotors configured to rotate in opposite directions, each rotor comprising: a main body configured to rotate about a rotor axis, a wing extending from the main body and arranged helically about a portion of the main body; the wing comprising a wing tip surface, a first portion of the wing tip surface extending between a first edge and a second edge of the wing; wherein the first edge comprises a first helix angle and the second edge comprises a second helix angle, the first helix angle being different to the second helix angle.
15. A computer program comprising computer executable instructions that, when executed by a processor, cause the processor to control an additive manufacturing apparatus to manufacture a rotor comprising: a main body configured to rotate about a rotor axis, a wing extending from the main body, and arranged helically about a portion of the main body; and the wing comprising a wing tip surface, a first portion of the wing tip surface extending between a first edge and a second edge of the wing; wherein the first edge comprises a first helix angle and the second edge comprises a second helix angle, the first helix angle being different to the second helix angle.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
[0045] Specific embodiments of the present invention will now be described, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
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[0071] Referring to
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[0073] The first and second long wings 504a, 504b have the same axial length L1, where L1 is less than L. Axial length L1 may be, for example, approximately 50% of the axial length L of the rotor 501. The first long wing 504a originates at a point a first axial distance from the first end 502a of the rotor 501, and the second long wing 504b originates at a point a second axial distance from the second end 502b of the rotor 501. In the embodiment shown, the first and second axial distances are the same, L3. L3 may be, for example, approximately 15% of L. However, it will be appreciated that these distances may differ in other embodiments. The first and second long wings 504a, 504b may each extend approximately 130 degrees. For example, the first long wing 504a may originate at an angular position of approximately 155-165 degrees and may terminate at approximately 285-295 degrees. The second long wing 504b is a reflection of the first long wing 504a through an axis perpendicular to the axial rotor axis and is separated by 180 degrees.
[0074] The first and second short wings 505a, 505b may each extend approximately 80 degrees. For example, the first short wing 505a may extend from the first end 502a of the rotor 501, at, for example, an angular position of approximately 200-210 degrees, and may terminate at approximately 120-130 degrees (e.g. extends approximately 80 degrees). The second short wing 505b may extend from the second end 502b of the rotor 501, and is a reflection of the first short wing 505a through an axis perpendicular to the axial rotor axis and is separated by 180 degrees. The first and second short wings 505 have the same axial length L4, where L4 is less than L1 and L. L4 may be approximately 25% of the axial length L of the rotor 501. The wing length L4 of the short wings 505 is larger than the first and second distances L3. This can help prevent a ring of material from forming at either end of the rotor 501 during mixing. Again, such an arrangement in length of L4 relative to L3 is optional.
[0075] As can be seen in
[0076] As can be seen in
[0077] As described above, the wings 504, 505 are of helical configuration. The leading edge 507 of the long wings 504 comprise two helix angles α, α1. The trailing edge 508 of the long wings 504 also comprise two helix angles β, β1. A first edge 530 has first helix angle α, the first edge 530 aligned with a first portion of the leading edge 507. A second edge 531 has second helix angle β, the second edge 531 aligned with a first portion of the trailing edge 508. A third edge 532 has third helix angle α1, the third edge 532 aligned with a second portion of the leading edge 507. A fourth edge 533 has fourth helix angle β1, the fourth edge 533 aligned with a second portion of the trailing edge 508.
[0078] The first, second, third and fourth edges 530, 531, 532, 533 have axial length L1/2 (e.g. half the axial length L of the wing). That is, with reference to
[0079] The first edge 530 and the second edge 531 are opposite one another, defining a first portion 509a of the wing tip surface therebetween. That is, the first portion 509a of the wing tip surface 509 extends between the first edge 530 and the second edge 531. Similarly, the third edge 532 and fourth edge 533 are opposite each other, defining a second portion 509b of the wing tip surface therebetween. That is, the second portion 509b of the wing tip surface 509 extends between the third edge 532 and the fourth edge 533. The first portion 509a has a greater area than the second portion 509b. Each of the different shapes of the two portions 509a, 509b of the wing tip surface 509 provide different mixing properties for the rotor 501.
[0080] In the embodiment shown, each of the first α, second β, third α1 and fourth β1 helix angles are different to each other. In an embodiment, β1>α1>β>α. Additionally, in an embodiment, (β−α)>(β1−α1). The difference in the helix angles leads to differing wing tip surface 509 widths (where wing tip surface widths are sometimes referred to as land widths). For example, as can be seen in
[0081] It will be appreciated that any value of angle may be used such that a difference in tip width is achieved at different parts of the wing 504. In a specific embodiment, α=28 degrees, β=49 degrees, α1=60 degrees, and β1=63 degrees. Other values are possible. Additionally, while the long wings 504 of the rotor 501 have been described as having two different helix angles in both the leading and trailing edges, it will be appreciated that the long wing may have additional helix angles along each of the leading or trailing edges.
[0082] Referring now to the short wings 505, in the embodiment shown, the leading edge 507 of the short wings 505 comprise a fifth edge 534 that has a fifth helix angle α2 along substantially the entire wing length L4 of the short wing 505. The trailing edge 508 of the short wings 505 comprise a sixth edge 535 that has a sixth helix angle β2 along substantially the entire wing length L4. Unlike the long wings 504, the leading and trailing edges 507, 508 of the short wings 505 each have a constant helix angle. In the embodiment shown, the fifth angle α2 is greater than the sixth helix angle β2, which helps divert material away from the dust seals and back to the centre of the mixing chamber. Additionally, the difference in the helix angle leads to a variation in the tip width (W1, W6, W5) along the length of the short wing 505. As can be seen in
[0083] The change in width of the wing tip surface 509 along the long wings 504 is more clearly shown in
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[0085] The change in width of the wing tip surface 509 along the short wings 505 is more clearly shown in
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[0087] As can be seen in
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[0089] As described above, a tangential mixer such as that shown in
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[0094] The orientations between the rotors may be chosen so as to increase or decrease wing tip to wing tip interaction. The orientation may be chosen depending on the particular material being mixed or phase of the mixing cycle. For example, some materials may benefit from a maximum wing tip to wing tip interaction, and so a 0:180 orientation may be used. Other materials may require less wing tip to wing tip interaction, and so an orientation between 0:90 and 0:180, or between 0:0 and 0:90 may be chosen.
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[0096] A further advantage of wings having a tapered tip is that they allow variation in the three components of flow (front, side and gap) along the length of the rotor wing. This may be beneficial with materials that mix better with a narrow wing tipped rotor, but also require the advantages provided by a wide tipped rotor, such as increased front and side flow.
[0097] As described above, tangential rotors typically generate higher shear (and hence higher temperatures) when compared with inter-meshing rotors. For example, depending on the specific materials being mixed, the temperature may be within a range of about 90-200 degrees C. By increasing the area of the wing tip from a normal narrow tip as shown in
[0098] The rotor 501 may be manufactured using any suitable method. For example, the rotors may be formed by casting, machining, or a mixture of both. In some examples, the rotors may be designed on CAD, and a 3D CAD file may be generated and used to create a pattern to enable a steel casting to be poured with an all over machining allowance. A CNC machining program may be used control a machining tool to machine the steel casting to a required finish size.
[0099] Alternatively, the rotor 501 may be formed using an additive manufacturing process. A common example of additive manufacturing is 3D printing; however, other methods of additive manufacturing are available.
[0100] As used herein, “additive manufacturing” refers generally to manufacturing processes wherein successive layers of material(s) are provided on each other to “build-up” layer-by-layer or “additively fabricate”, a three-dimensional component.
[0101] Additive manufacturing methods enable manufacture to any suitable size and shape. For example, additive manufacturing can create complex geometries without the use of any sort of tools, molds or fixtures, and with little or no waste material. Any suitable additive manufacturing method may be used. Examples may be Direct Selective Laser Melting (DSLM), Selective Laser Melting (SLM), Direct Metal Laser Melting (DMLM), Direct Metal Laser Sintering (DMLS), or Material Jetting (MJ). Additive manufacturing processes typically fabricate components based on three-dimensional (3D) information, for example a three-dimensional computer model (or design file), of the component. Accordingly, examples described herein not only include products or components as described herein, but also methods of manufacturing such products or components via additive manufacturing and computer software, firmware or hardware for controlling the manufacture of such products via additive manufacturing.
[0102] The structure of the rotor 501 may be represented digitally in the form of a design file. A design file, or computer aided design (CAD) file, is a configuration file that encodes one or more of the surface or volumetric configuration of the shape of a product. That is, a design file represents the geometrical arrangement or shape of the product. Design files can take any appropriate file format. For example, design files may be in the Stereolithography or “Standard Tessellation Language” (.stl) format which was created for stereolithography CAD programs of 3D Systems, or the Additive Manufacturing File (.amf) format, which is an American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME) standard that is an extensible markup-language (XML) based format designed to allow any CAD software to describe the shape and composition of any three-dimensional object to be fabricated on any additive manufacturing printer. Further examples of design file formats include AutoCAD (.dwg) files, Blender (.blend) files, Parasolid (.x_t) files, 3D Manufacturing Format (0.3mf) files, Autodesk (3ds) files, Collada (.dae) files and Wavefront (.obj) files, although many other file formats exist.
[0103] Design files can be produced using modelling (e.g. CAD modelling) software and/or through scanning the surface of the rotor 501 to measure the surface configuration of the rotor 501. Once obtained, a design file may be converted into a set of computer executable instructions that, once executed by a processer, cause the processor to control an additive manufacturing apparatus to produce a rotor 501 according to the geometrical arrangement specified in the design file. The conversion may convert the design file into slices or layers that are to be formed sequentially by the additive manufacturing apparatus. The instructions (otherwise known as geometric code or “G-code”) may be calibrated to the specific additive manufacturing apparatus and may specify the precise location and amount of material that is to be formed at each stage in the manufacturing process.
[0104] The code or instructions may be translated between different formats, converted into a set of data signals and transmitted, received as a set of data signals and converted to code, stored, etc., as necessary. The instructions may be an input to the additive manufacturing system and may come from a part designer, an intellectual property (IP) provider, a design company, the operator or owner of the additive manufacturing system, or from other sources. An additive manufacturing system may execute the instructions to fabricate the rotor using any of the technologies or methods disclosed herein.
[0105] Design files or computer executable instructions may be stored in a (transitory or non-transitory) computer readable storage medium (e.g., memory, storage system, etc.) storing code, or computer readable instructions, representative of the product to be produced. As noted, the code or computer readable instructions defining the rotor that can be used to physically generate the rotor, upon execution of the code or instructions by an additive manufacturing system. For example, the instructions may include a precisely defined 3D model of the rotor and can be generated from any of a large variety of well-known computer aided design (CAD) software systems such as AutoCAD®, TurboCAD®, DesignCAD 3D Max, etc. Alternatively, a model or prototype of the rotor may be scanned to determine the three-dimensional information of the rotor.
[0106] Accordingly, by controlling an additive manufacturing apparatus according to the computer executable instructions, the additive manufacturing apparatus can be instructed to print out the rotor.
[0107] In light of the above, embodiments include methods of manufacture via additive manufacturing. This includes the steps of obtaining a design file representing the rotor and instructing an additive manufacturing apparatus to manufacture the rotor in assembled or unassembled form according to the design file. The additive manufacturing apparatus may include a processor that is configured to automatically convert the design file into computer executable instructions for controlling the manufacture of the rotor. In these embodiments, the design file itself can automatically cause the production of the rotor once input into the additive manufacturing device. Accordingly, in this embodiment, the design file itself may be considered computer executable instructions that cause the additive manufacturing apparatus to manufacture the rotor. Alternatively, the design file may be converted into instructions by an external computing system, with the resulting computer executable instructions being provided to the additive manufacturing device.
[0108] Given the above, the design and manufacture of implementations of the subject matter and the operations described in this specification can be realized using digital electronic circuitry, or in computer software, firmware, or hardware, including the structures disclosed in this specification and their structural equivalents, or in combinations of one or more of them. For instance, hardware may include processors, microprocessors, electronic circuitry, electronic components, integrated circuits, etc. Implementations of the subject matter described in this specification can be realized using one or more computer programs, i.e., one or more modules of computer program instructions, encoded on computer storage medium for execution by, or to control the operation of, data processing apparatus. Alternatively or in addition, the program instructions can be encoded on an artificially generated propagated signal, e.g., a machine-generated electrical, optical, or electromagnetic signal that is generated to encode information for transmission to suitable receiver apparatus for execution by a data processing apparatus. A computer storage medium can be, or be included in, a computer-readable storage device, a computer-readable storage substrate, a random or serial access memory array or device, or a combination of one or more of them. Moreover, while a computer storage medium is not a propagated signal, a computer storage medium can be a source or destination of computer program instructions encoded in an artificially generated propagated signal. The computer storage medium can also be, or be included in, one or more separate physical components or media (e.g., multiple CDs, disks, or other storage devices).
[0109] Although specific embodiments of the invention have been described above, it will be appreciated that various modifications can be made to the described embodiments without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention. That is, the described embodiments are to be considered in all respects exemplary and non-limiting. For example, specific values have been provide for various angles and relative lengths of the rotor wings 504, 505. It will however be appreciated that other angles and lengths may be used.