System and method for transporting items to a packaging station
11130641 · 2021-09-28
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B65G47/70
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65B43/08
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65B25/143
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65B11/004
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65G47/681
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65G37/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65B51/067
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65G47/32
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65B2210/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65B51/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65B5/024
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B65G47/32
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65B11/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65B5/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
System for transporting items to a packaging station comprising at least a first, a second and a third conveyor, said first conveyor configured for transporting arrangements of one or more items in a first transport direction to the third conveyor, said second conveyor configured for transporting arrangements of one or more items in a second transport direction to the third conveyor, said third conveyor configured for transporting said arrangements from the first and the second conveyor in a third transport direction, a fourth and a fifth transport direction towards a packaging station.
Claims
1. A method for transporting items to a packaging station, comprising: preparing at a first arranging station arrangements of one or more items to be shipped, preparing at a second arranging station arrangements of one or more items to be shipped, transporting readily prepared arrangements one at a time either from the first or the second arranging station in a first respectively a second transport direction onto a merge conveyor, transporting arrangements with the merge conveyor towards a packaging station in a third and optionally one of a fourth and a fifth transport direction, wherein the arrangement on the merge conveyor is transported in the third and as necessary the fourth or fifth transport direction to arrive at a transfer position for unloading the arrangement from the merge conveyor, in which transfer positon the arrangement is already aligned with respect to a box to be created for the arrangement at the packaging station.
2. The method according to claim 1, wherein said first, second and third transport directions are substantially parallel to each other and said fourth and fifth transport directions are opposite to each other and substantially orthogonal to said first, second and third transport directions.
3. The method according to claim 1, wherein in case arrangements are ready for being transported onto the merge conveyor at both arranging stations, the arrangement requiring the least movement of the merge conveyor in the fourth or the fifth transport direction is selected for being transported onto the merge conveyor.
4. A method for transporting items to a packaging station, comprising: preparing at a first arranging station arrangements of one or more items to be shipped, preparing at a second arranging station arrangements of one or more items to be shipped, transporting readily prepared arrangements one at a time either from the first or the second arranging station in a first respectively a second transport direction onto a merge conveyor, transporting arrangements with the merge conveyor towards a packaging station in a third and optionally one of a fourth and a fifth transport direction, wherein the merge conveyor transports an arrangement present on it in the third and as necessary in the fourth or fifth transport direction in dependence of the width seen in the fourth or fifth transport direction of a next arrangement to be transported onto the merge conveyor either to a transfer position for unloading the arrangement present on the merge conveyor, in which the arrangement is already aligned with respect to a box to be created for the arrangement at the packaging station, or past such transfer position in which it would be in alignment with the box to be created for the arrangement, in case doing so would still allow to unload the arrangement present on the merge conveyor while at the same time facilitating transporting the next arrangement onto the merge conveyor.
5. A system for automatically packaging items in custom-sized cardboard boxes comprising a first and a second arranging station for arranging one or more items into arrangements to be packaged, a system for transporting items to a packaging station comprising at least a first conveyor, a second conveyor and a third conveyor for transporting the arrangements to the packaging station, said first conveyor configured to transport arrangements of one or more items in a first transport direction onto the third conveyor, said second conveyor configured to transport arrangements of one or more items in a second transport direction onto the third conveyor, and said third conveyor configured to transport said arrangements from the first and the second conveyor in a third, a fourth and a fifth transport direction towards a packaging station, said packaging station supplied with cardboard, said first arranging station formed by or associated with the first conveyor, said second arranging station formed by or associated with said second conveyor, said packaging station comprising structure to cut and crease custom-sized cardboard blanks and structure to fold a respective blank after an arrangement of one or more items has been transported onto said packaging station structure.
6. A method for automatically packaging items in custom-sized boxes comprising: preparing at a first arranging station arrangements of one or more items to be shipped, preparing at a second arranging station arrangements of one or more items to be shipped, transporting readily prepared arrangements one at a time either from the first or the second arranging station in a first respectively a second transport direction onto a merge conveyor, transporting arrangements with the merge conveyor towards a packaging station in a third and optionally one of a fourth and a fifth transport direction, aligning the arrangements with respect to boxes to be created, cutting and creasing custom-sized cardboard blanks for each arrangement, transporting each arrangement onto a respective cardboard blank and folding a respective box from the blank.
7. The method according to claim 6, wherein the arrangement on the merge conveyor is transported in the third and as necessary the fourth or fifth transport direction to arrive at a transfer position for unloading the arrangement from the merge conveyor, in which transfer positon the arrangement is already aligned with respect to a box to be created for the arrangement at the packaging station.
8. The method according to claim 6, wherein the merge conveyor transports an arrangement present on it in the third and as necessary in the fourth or fifth transport direction in dependence of the width seen in the fourth or fifth transport direction of a next arrangement to be transported onto the merge conveyor either to a transfer position for unloading the arrangement present on the merge conveyor, in which the arrangement is already aligned with respect to a box to be created for the arrangement at the packaging station, or past such transfer position in which it would be in alignment with the box to be created for the arrangement, in case doing so would still allow to unload the arrangement present on the merge conveyor while at the same time facilitating transporting the next arrangement onto the merge conveyor.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING
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DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
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(13) In this embodiment, an arrangement of items schematically represented by rectangle 26 is transported towards a fourth conveyor 28 which may also comprise a conveyor belt for transporting items transported onto it by the merge conveyor 20 in the third transport direction 22. With respect to the denominations of the directions, the first, second and third directions all run parallel and could in an x-y-plane be regarded for example as running in x-direction. As the conveyors 12 and 14 are arranged parallel but offset to each other, it has been chosen to use different names (first and second directions) for the respective movement that can be imparted by the conveyors 12 and 14 to an arrangement placed on them. If instead of belts other types of conveyors are used, the paths, along which arrangements are transported by the first and the second conveyor 12, 14 may be curved. However, as the merge conveyer 20 is, in top view, basically rectangular, at least at the point where the arrangements are handed over from the first and second conveyors 12, 14 to the merge conveyor and from the merge conveyor 20 to the fourth conveyor 28 the first, second and third transport directions 12, 14 and 22 are substantially parallel while the fourth and fifth transportation directions 23, 24 are substantially orthogonal thereto and opposite to each other.
(14) Conveyor 20 may move in x- and y-direction, wherein the movement in the x-direction, i.e., the third transport direction 22 parallel to the first and second direction, is mandatory, while a movement in the fourth or fifth direction 23, 24 (the y-direction) is necessary only to bring the respective arrangement on conveyor 20 into a certain transfer position with respect to conveyor 28. As upon handing over the respective arrangement 26 from conveyor 20 onto conveyor 28 both conveyors move in the same direction, it has been decided to denominate this direction with the same name, i.e., the third direction 22. In this conjunction, it should also be noted that upon transferring arrangements from the first or the second conveyor 12 and 14 onto the third conveyor 20 respectively from the third conveyor 20 onto the fourth conveyor 28, the respective conveyors impart movement onto the arrangement in the same direction. In case, as it is preferred, the conveyors are formed by conveyor belts, it means that upon transferring the arrangements the respective conveyor belts run in the same direction at identical speed such that the items of an arrangement are not only pushed onto the next conveyor but are also drawn by it. This also prevents that an arrangement of two or more items is separated due to different speeds of successive conveyors.
(15) The fourth conveyor 28 may already be part of a packaging station where the respective arrangement of one or more items is placed on a custom-sized cardboard blank that has been specifically cut and creased for the respective arrangement of one or more items based on information about the dimensions of the arrangement obtained for example by laser scanners arranged at the end of each of the first conveyor 12 and the second conveyor 14 to scan the maximum outer dimensions of the respective arrangement in order to automatically calculate the minimum inner dimensions a box for the respective arrangement should have. Typically, these scanners are positioned a certain distance upstream to the third conveyor 20 in order to allow ample time to measure dimensions, to calculate movements of the conveyor and dimensions of a box to created and to prepare a corresponding cardboard blank. Likewise, the arranging stations are somewhere upstream of the first and second conveyors and one or several conveyors may be positioned between the arranging stations and the first and second conveyor shown in
(16) The conveyor 28 may also be an “intermediate” conveyor that leads towards a respective packaging station. As known packaging stations, such as for example the one disclosed in WO 2014/117817 A1, allow creating custom-sized boxes or packages very quickly, it has turned out that the limiting factor in the maximum throughput of a respective packaging system is the number of arrangements of items provided to the packaging station in a certain time period. For example, if boxes such as the ones disclosed in WO 2019/081773 A1 are used, it is easily possible to package 1,000 or more arrangements of items per hour. However, preparing a respective number of arrangements is difficult, in particular if some or all of the arrangements comprise more than one item. Conventionally, arrangements are prepared at only one arranging station and are then transported by one or more respective conveyors to a packaging station, where the respective arrangement is placed on a cardboard blank that has been custom-sized for the respective arrangement and which comprises different so called panels that are folded around the arrangement.
(17) The described systems now allow that items are arranged in parallel at two or even more respective arranging stations and are then transported by, in the shown embodiment, a first and a second conveyor towards a single packaging station. Conventional production lines comprise a single conveyor belt, onto which items are put from different production or processing stations, which requires sufficiently long production halls and which typically involves the problem that it is not possible to put an arrangement of several items onto a moving conveyor belt without “destroying” the arrangement in the sense that the items are no longer positioned with respect to each other and the conveyor in the wanted position, as typically in doing so the arrangement undergoes abrupt direction changes and accelerations in two orthogonal directions, namely the direction, in which it is put on the conveyor belt and the moving direction of the conveyor belt. According to various aspects described herein, as the third conveyor can be moved simultaneously in two directions, the total acceleration of the arrangement can be kept low. As mentioned before, it is important not to accelerate the arrangement too quickly as otherwise items may tumble and the respective arrangement may no longer fit into the box to be created. Experiments have shown that the acceleration imparted by the respective conveyors to the arrangements should not increase 1 m/s.sup.2.
(18) As is apparent from the disclosure herein, items may be arranged in parallel at two respective arranging stations, and the respective arrangements are then transported via the conveyors towards a packaging station. In the situation shown in
(19) Returning now to
(20) For the purpose of taking over the arrangement 26 from either one of the conveyors 12 and 14, conveyor 20 is positioned by transversal movement, i.e., movement in the fourth or fifth direction 23, 24 such that its edges 34 and 36 allow a transfer of the respective arrangement on conveyor 12 respectively 14 onto conveyor 20. To ensure this, both conveyors 12 and 14 may advantageously be provided with laser scanners or other type of position and/or 3D scanner allowing to determine the width W of a respective arrangement transported by the conveyors 12 and 14 and to determine its position on those conveyor belts. However, if, as mentioned before, laser scanners or the like are used to determine information for making a box for the arrangement, a control unit controlling the system can use this information also for calculating the movements of the different conveyors.
(21) Once the arrangement 26 has been completely transported onto conveyor 20, conveyor 20 may as necessary move in the fourth or fifth direction 23, 24 in order to transport and align the arrangement with respect to conveyor 28. At the same time, it also transports the arrangement in the third transport direction 22 such that when the arrangement 26 reaches the conveyor 28 it is in a specified transfer position. In the shown embodiment, this transfer position is already a position, in which the arrangement 26 is aligned with respect to a blank for packaging the arrangement. Typically, the system and its components will be set up to be symmetrical with respect to a center line indicated by the dash-dotted line 38 of conveyor 28 such that when the respective center line 40 of the arrangement 26 is aligned with the center line 36, the arrangement 26 would upon transporting it onto a respective blank also be centered between the respective panels forming the sides of a box for the arrangement.
(22) As is also apparent for an expert in the art from the disclosure herein, in case it turns out that it takes longer to prepare a specific arrangement of items for example at the arranging station associated with conveyor 12, it is possible to transport two or more arrangements one after each other from an arranging station associated with conveyor 14.
(23) In the shown embodiment, the conveyors 12, 14, 20 and 28 basically have the same width, i.e., the same dimensions between their respective edges 34 and 36, 42 and 44, 46 and 48, and 50 and 52. If, as will usually be the case, the conveyors are formed by conveyor belts, this allows to use standardized components for the conveyors and hence to decrease cost of manufacture and maintenance. However, typically there will be a certain minimum distance between conveyors 12 and 14 and arrangements like the arrangement 26 may have a width extending beyond half of the width of conveyors 12 and 14 so that even in case an arrangement is positioned close to the adjacent edges 44 and 46 of conveyors 12 and 14, it would not be possible to transport an arrangement of items onto conveyor 20 from one of the conveyors 12 and 14 when conveyor 20 is in a position for transferring the arrangement currently transported by it onto conveyor 28. Thus, in the shown embodiment once the arrangement 26 has been transported onto conveyor 28, conveyor 20 would have to move in the fourth direction 23 respectively fifth direction 24 in order to be able to accept a new arrangement from conveyor 12 or conveyor 14. In order to even further increase the throughput of a packaging system fed with arrangements of one or more, in a preferred embodiment 10′ shown in
(24) In the embodiment 10′ shown in
(25) However, if an arrangement is very wide, it may still be necessary to slightly move conveyor 20 towards the respective conveyor 12 or 14. In the situation shown in
(26) In the situation shown in
(27) In the situation shown in
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(29) Depending on the width W1 and W2 of arrangements 64 and 66 exemplarily conveyed by the conveyors shown in
(30) In the situation shown in
(31) The embodiment 10″ allows that arrangement 64 is transported as shown in
(32) In the situation shown in
(33) In the situation shown in
(34) In the situation shown in
(35) In the situation shown in
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(38) In
(39) In this embodiment, the first conveyor and the second conveyor 14 serve as “queueing conveyors” where arrangements can wait for being transported onto merge conveyor 20. The scanners 108, 110 are arranged between the respective arranging station 102, 104 and the respective first queueing conveyor and second queuing conveyor 14. Downstream of the queueing conveyors is the merge conveyor 20 that can receive items from both queueing conveyors. After the merge conveyor 20 there are another two conveyors 28, followed by the align conveyor 80, which is followed by another conveyor 82. Below the conveyors are the cardboard tracks. Below the align conveyor 80 and the conveyor 82 is a cut and crease unit 116 for creating a custom-sized cardboard blank in a manner known in the art.
(40) The system comprises a control unit (not shown) for optimizing the transverse offsets of the merge conveyor 28 and the align conveyor 80 to maximize the overall throughput of the system. If, as shown e.g. in
(41) Another example of said optimization could be that in a situation where the number of arrangements supplied through conveyors 12 and 14 differs a lot. In such a situation the control system may be adapted to decide to take multiple arrangements from either conveyor 12 or conveyor 14 successively instead of doing it alternately. In that case a repositioning cycle may often be needed before the next arrangement from the same conveyor 12 or 14 can be fed onto the merge conveyor 20. Instead of doing the minimal repositioning cycle to allow the next arrangement to be fed onto the merge conveyor 20 the maximum repositioning could be done as well, depending on the arrangements present on conveyors 12 and 14 to be processed. By doing such a maximum repositioning it is possible that two successive arrangements from the same conveyor 12 or 14 can be processed successively, reducing the number of repositioning cycles. The merge conveyor 20 may place the arrangements with a minimum offset off center on conveyor 28, where conveyor 28 performs the full alignment to the center position. Doing one maximum repositioning is typically more efficient than doing two smaller repositioning cycles successively, as the conveyor has to run empty only once.
(42) In a preferred embodiment, the length of the merge conveyor is determined such that the combined acceleration from the accelerations in third and fourth or fifth transport direction does not exceed a predefined maximum acceleration even in case the maximum transport offset in fourth or fifth transport direction has to be made. Typically, the normal conveyor length is laid out such that an arrangement can be stopped and started on the conveyor with the maximum allowed acceleration. On the merge conveyor a concurrent acceleration in perpendicular direction is made, which lowers the maximum acceleration in the third transport direction (e.g., if nominally 850 mm/s.sup.2) is allowed, then 600 mm/s.sup.2 is allowed in both third and fourth or fifth transport direction.
(43) Preferably the transport of an arrangement of one or more items in the fourth or fifth direction is done while the arrangement is being transported in the third direction on the third conveyor. Transportation of an arrangement of one or more items in the fourth or fifth direction can only be done when the arrangement of one or more items is fully on the third conveyor, i.e., it may start when the rear edge of the arrangement is on the third conveyor and it must be finished before the front edge of the arrangement leaves the third conveyor. This means that the available time to transport an arrangement in the fourth or fifth direction also depends on the length of the arrangement. The worst case situation is the case when the longest possible arrangement also has to make the maximum transport offset in the fourth of fifth transport direction. Such a maximum transport offset usually has to be made for the widest possible arrangement, i.e., when the center axis of the arrangement in first or second transport direction has to be aligned with the center axis of the packaging station where the box is created. The transport offset in the fourth and fifth direction is not fully dependent on the width of the arrangement but also depends on the position of the arrangement on the first or second conveyor, i.e., if it is more offset from the center axis of the packaging station a greater transport offset in the fourth of fifth direction has to be made.
(44) Avoiding deceleration and acceleration in the third transport direction on the merge conveyor while the third conveyor is making its movement in the fourth or fifth transport direction would require making the merge conveyor unnecessarily long. This again would have an impact on the throughput if the third conveyor would be dimensioned for the worst case situation. To optimize the throughput of the system, the transport in the third direction can be slowed down if the transport in the fourth or fifth direction cannot be made within the time the arrangement is fully on the merge conveyor. The length of the merge conveyor is therefore determined such that the combined accelerations in third and fourth of fifth direction do not exceed the maximum allowed acceleration for an arrangement of items (the same of course is true for deceleration, which can be regarded as a negative acceleration). Because the third transport direction is orthogonal to the fourth and fifth transport direction, the combined acceleration can easily be calculated by taking the square root of the sum of the squared accelerations in third and fourth or fifth direction. The minimum length for the third conveyor is then the maximum length of an arrangement of one or more items plus the distance it takes to stop the arrangement of one or more items on the third conveyor plus the distance it takes to bring the arrangement of one or more items from standstill back to the nominal transport speed in the third transport direction. A control unit (e.g., programmed computer, microprocessor, microcontroller, motor controller memory) may, once it has calculated the transport offset in fourth or fifth direction, also calculate the amount of delay it has to create in the third transport direction and thus also how much it has to bring down the speed in order to create this delay. The control unit may supply control signals to one or more actuators (e.g., electric motors, solenoids, valves of piston cylinders, etc.) to control direction, speed and/or acceleration of the conveyors.
(45) In a preferred embodiment, the fourth conveyor is positioned symmetrically with respect to the first and second conveyor. However, for certain applications it can be useful if the fourth conveyor is positioned asymmetrically with respect to the first and second conveyor, for example if there is a preferred feed, e.g., an autofeed, which supplies the majority of the arrangements. In this situation, it is possible that for items up to a specific width from the preferred feed the merge conveyor does not need to make a transport in the fourth or fifth direction.
(46) The packaging station may comprise structure known in the art for cutting (which may also include die cutting), like rotating or reciprocating knifes, lasers, die cutters etc. for cutting based for example on information obtained by the aforementioned laser scanners, cardboard blanks from cardboard supplied to the packaging station. The packaging station may further comprise structure known in the art for a creasing, like crease rollers or moving stamps, in order to create crease lines delimiting certain panels on the blank, which in a folded box will form bottom, front, back and side panels, preferably also corner panels and top panels for closing the box. The packaging station may further comprise structure known in the art for folding the cardboard blanks, like moveable grippers and flaps, and preferably also structure for attaching respective panels to each other, like a glue unit for applying hot-melt glue to one or both of overlapping panels, and/or an adhesive strip application unit.
LIST OF REFERENCE NUMBERS
(47) 10, system for transporting arrangements 10′ system for transporting arrangements 10″ system for transporting arrangements 12 first conveyor 12′ first conveyor 14 second conveyor 14′ second conveyor 16 first transport direction 18 second transport direction 20 third conveyor (also called merge conveyor) 20′ third conveyor (also called merge conveyor) 20″ third conveyor (also called merge conveyor) 22 third transport direction 23 fourth transport direction 24 fifth transport direction 25 guiding and positioning structure 26 arrangement of one or more items 28 fourth conveyor 28′ fourth conveyor 30 outer edge of arrangement 26 32 outer edge of arrangement 26 34 edge of conveyor 20 36 edge of conveyor 20 42 edge of conveyor 12 44 edge of conveyor 12 46 edge of conveyor 14 48 edge of conveyor 14 50 edge of conveyor 28 52 edge of conveyor 28 55 distance 56 virtual straight line extending edge 42 58 width of conveyor 12 60 width of conveyor 14 61 distance 62 virtual straight line 62 extending edge 48 64 arrangement 70 item 72 item 74 item 76 item 80 fifth conveyor (also called align conveyor) 82 sixth conveyor 100 system for automatically packaging items 102 arranging station 104 arranging station 106 barcode scanner 108 barcode scanner 110 3D scanner 112 3D scanner 114 cardboard entry for feeding cardboard into the system 116 cut and crease unit L length of arrangement 26 W width of arrangement 26 W1 width of arrangement 64 W2 width of arrangement 66