Grease trap with safety barrier
11267726 · 2022-03-08
Assignee
Inventors
- William C. Batten (Asheboro, NC, US)
- Zachary Michael Rubeor (Greensboro, NC, US)
- Erwin F. Hani (Fletcher, NC, US)
Cpc classification
B01D21/0066
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01D17/12
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01D17/0214
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C02F1/40
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
B01D21/2483
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C02F2103/32
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C02F2103/002
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
International classification
E03F5/16
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
C02F1/40
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
B01D17/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01D17/12
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A grease trap for separating waste from wastewater includes a tank having an outer wall, bottom and open top. An inlet invert in the tank receives incoming wastewater, and an outlet invert removes water from the tank. The tank has a cover on the open top, and the cover has a hatch. A barrier spans a diameter of the open top below the cover and has an opening vertically below the hatch. A divider divides the tank into an upper chamber and a lower chamber and has a hole for allowing FOG into the upper chamber from the lower chamber, the hole being colinearly aligned with the hatch and the opening in the barrier.
Claims
1. A grease trap for separating waste from wastewater comprising: a tank having an outer wall, bottom and open top; an inlet invert in the tank for receiving incoming wastewater; an outlet invert for removing water from the tank; a cover on the open top having a hatch; and a barrier spanning a diameter of the open top below the cover and having an opening vertically below the hatch.
2. A grease trap as claimed in claim 1 wherein the barrier is extensive enough to prevent a child from falling into the tank if the cover is removed from the tank.
3. A grease trap as claimed in claim 1 wherein the tank has a divider that divides the tank into an upper chamber and a lower chamber and that has a hole for allowing FOG into the upper chamber from the lower chamber, the hole being colinearly aligned with the hatch and the opening in the barrier.
4. A grease trap as claimed in claim 3 wherein the outlet invert has a receiving end below the divider.
5. A grease trap as claimed in claim 3 wherein the outlet invert, inlet invert, and divider include separate pieces that are mounted in the tank.
6. A grease trap as claimed in claim 5 wherein the divider is a bottom of an insert tank that nests within the tank having a multilayer outer wall.
7. A grease trap as claimed in claim 1 wherein the top of the tank has an intermediate lid for the top, an extension collar configured to be supported on the intermediate lid, an upper lid and ground level lid on the extension collar.
8. A grease trap as claimed in claim 7 further comprising a sensor for sensing a FOG level in the tank and having a tether suspended from the upper lid, the sensor being positioned at the intermediate lid.
9. A grease trap as claimed in claim 1 wherein an opening in the barrier has an interior gasket.
10. A grease trap as claimed in claim 1 wherein the cover is affixed to an intermediate or an upper lid.
11. A grease trap as claimed in claim 1 wherein the cover is molded with a recess to receive the hatch so that the hatch and cover are flush when the hatch is closed.
12. A grease trap for separating solids from wastewater comprising: a tank having an outer wall, a bottom downwardly sloping from a perimeter to a central location; an inlet invert in the tank for receiving incoming wastewater; and an outlet invert for removing water from the tank the tank also acting as a solids collector for collecting solids in wastewater that are heavier than water, the inlet invert opening above the bottom so that solids in the wastewater gravitationally separate towards the bottom as wastewater with reduced solids discharges from the container through the outlet invert; a cover on the open top having a hatch; and a barrier spanning a diameter of the open top below the cover and having an opening colinearly aligned with the hatch and the central location of the bottom of the tank.
13. A grease trap as claimed in claim 12 wherein the barrier is extensive enough to prevent a child from falling into the tank if the cover is removed from the tank.
14. A grease trap as claimed in claim 13 wherein the tank has a divider that divides the tank into an upper chamber and a lower chamber and that has a hole for allowing FOG into the upper chamber from the lower chamber, the hole being colinearly aligned with the hatch and the opening in the barrier.
15. A grease trap as claimed in claim 14 wherein the outlet invert has a receiving end below the divider.
16. A grease trap as claimed in claim 15 wherein the outlet invert, inlet invert and divider include separate pieces that are mounted in the tank.
17. A grease trap as claimed in claim 16 wherein the divider is a bottom of an insert tank that nests within the tank having a multilayer outer wall.
18. A grease trap as claimed in claim 17 wherein the top of the tank has an intermediate lid for the top, an extension collar configured to be supported on the intermediate lid, an upper lid, and ground level lid on the extension collar.
19. A grease trap as claimed in claim 18 wherein the cover is affixed to the intermediate or upper lid.
20. A grease trap for separating waste from wastewater comprising: a tank having an outer wall, a bottom and an open top; an inlet invert in the tank for receiving incoming wastewater; an outlet invert for removing water from the tank; a cover on the open top having a hatch, the cover being molded with a recess to receive the hatch so that the hatch and cover are flush when the hatch is closed; a barrier spanning a diameter of the open top below the cover and having an opening vertically below the hatch, the opening in the barrier having an interior gasket; and a divider that divides the tank into an upper chamber and a lower chamber and that has a hole for allowing FOG into the upper chamber from the lower chamber, the hole being colinearly aligned with the hatch and the opening in the barrier.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The invention will be better understood by a reading of the Detailed Description of the Examples of the Invention along with a review of the drawings, in which:
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EXAMPLES OF THE INVENTION
(7) The grease trap 10 shown in
(8) The insert tank 14 has a divider 20 dividing the volume within the outer tank into an upper chamber 21 and a lower chamber 23. A hole 24 in the divider 20 allows FOG to rise into the upper chamber 21 from the lower chamber 23. The insert can provide multiple levels of dividers, such as those disclosed in International patent application no. PCT/US2019/054390.
(9) A tube 22 or outlet invert extends the outlet flow path 18 downward so that flow path begins as the entrance 28 to the tube 22 below the divider 20, which helps assure that only grey water quite free of FOG exits the outlet 44. The outlet invert, inlet invert and divider may include separate pieces that are mounted in the tank 12. The tank 12 has a bottom that slopes downwardly from the perimeter to a central location 13.
(10)
(11)
(12) The opening 304 preferably, in some examples, has an interior wiper or gasket 306, so that as the pumper's straight tube is withdrawn after pumping, FOG and the like clinging to the tube can be wiped off, to minimize messiness. The gasket 306 can also inhibit the release of malodorous vapors from the ullage of the tank while the tube is inserted.
(13)
(14) The barrier for the tank can be used in a wide variety of grease traps and/or solids collectors, and in particular in traps constructed and/or operated as disclosed in the patent publications listed below, the disclosures of which are incorporated herein by reference: Passive Grease Trap Using Separator Technology, U.S. Pat. No. 9,932,247, 3 Apr. 2018; Passive Grease Trap Using Separator Technology, U.S. Pat. No. 7,367,459, 6 May 2008; Passive Grease Trap With Pre-Stage For Solids Separation, U.S. Pat. No. 7,641,805, 5 Jan. 2010; Passive Grease Trap Using Separator Technology, U.S. Pat. No. 7,540,967, 2 Jun. 2009; Non-Contact Sensor For Determining A F.O.G. Level In A Separator, US2021/089686, 3 Jun. 2021. The last-mentioned publication is a counterpart to WO 2019/089686, 9 May 2019.
(15) Plastic pipe connections to the grease trap inlet and outlet can be made using the methodology and apparatus disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 8,002,139 entitled “Method Of Joining A Plastic Tube To Another Tube,” the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference. For example, a connection to source of effluent such as a kitchen dishwasher or sink can terminate as a pipe end 42 (as seen in
(16)
(17) The sensor 230 can be raised or lowered by the tether 232. This mounting arrangement allows the sensor 230 to be raised so that it can be periodically serviced, such as by replacing batteries. The tether 232 can include a data communication cable to the electronics box 310 to enable FOG height data to be available for local reading or transmission. This sensor enables the height of the FOG layer floating on top of the gray water in tank to be monitored. When the FOG thickness is great enough, the grease trap can be pumped to remove the FOG, collected solid matter, and water in the tank.
(18) The barrier provides a safety measure to prevent falling into the tank when the cover is removed. Similarly, the presence of the hatch in the cover reduces the need to remove the cover to pump the tank, again reducing the risk of falling into the tank. Preferred embodiments use both measures to provide an extra measure of safely.
(19) Certain modifications and improvements will occur to those skilled in the art upon reading the foregoing description. It should be understood that all such modifications and improvements have been omitted for the sake of conciseness and readability but are properly within the scope of the following claims.