Carpet Recycling Process and Method
20210138480 ยท 2021-05-13
Inventors
Cpc classification
B02C23/38
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B02C19/0056
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B02C23/36
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B02C18/0084
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B02C2201/06
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B02C23/36
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B02C18/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B02C23/38
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B09B3/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A carpet recycling method is disclosed. In a toroidal flow pulper, pieces of carpet are disintegrated in a quantity of liquid to form a slurry of fibrous carpet materials and carpet ash. At least a portion of the fibrous carpet materials are separated from the slurry, and the separated fibrous carpet materials are dried. At least a portion of the carpet ash is isolated from the slurry, and the isolated carpet ash is dried. Thus, a first output comprising dried separated fibrous carpet materials is produced, and a second output comprising dried carpet ash is produced.
Claims
1. A carpet recycling method comprising the operations of: dividing a carpet into a plurality of pieces; in a toroidal flow pulper, disintegrating the pieces of carpet in a quantity of liquid to form a slurry of liquid, fibrous carpet materials, and carpet ash; performing a first separation operation to separate at least a portion of said liquid and carpet ash from said fibrous carpet materials; drying said fibrous carpet materials; isolating at least a portion of said carpet ash from said liquid; and drying said isolated carpet ash; whereby a first output comprising dried separated fibrous carpet materials and a second output comprising dried carpet ash are produced.
2. The method of claim 1, said operation of dividing the carpet into a plurality of pieces comprising shredding the carpet into a plurality of pieces less than three inches by three inches in area.
3. The method of claim 2, said operation of dividing the carpet into a plurality of pieces further comprising: in at least one crushing mill, crushing the shredded carpet; and removing a portion of crushed carpet ash from the shredded and crushed carpet.
4. The method of claim 3 further comprising the operation of, after the first separation operation: refining the fibrous carpet materials to liberate at least a portion of the carpet ash remaining in the fibrous carpet materials following the first separation operation; and performing a second separation operation to separate at least a portion of the liberated carpet ash from the fibrous carpet materials.
5. The method of claim 4, wherein said second separation operation comprises, in a basket centrifuge, spinning the fibrous carpet materials in order to separate liquid and liberated carpet ash from the fibrous carpet materials by density.
6. The method of claim 5, wherein said toroidal flow pulper comprises: a tank sized and shaped to receive said carpet and said quantity of liquid; and a pulper in fluid communication with said tank.
7. The method of claim 6, wherein said toroidal flow pulper further comprises: a stationary stator; and a rotatable rotor having a plurality of blades defined thereon, said rotor being nested within and cooperating with said stator to define a reduction and attrition zone therebetween, said rotor being coupled to a drive shaft, said drive shaft being in operable communication with a motor configured to rotate said drive shaft and said rotor; whereby rotation of said rotor in relation to said stator operates to shear said carpet while simultaneously drawing said liquid and said carpet into and through said reduction and attrition zone, thereby disintegrating said carpet to form said slurry.
8. The method of claim 7, said operation of disintegrating carpet being performed by: placing said carpet and said quantity of liquid in said tank of said toroidal flow pulper; rotating said rotor in relation to said stator; pumping said carpet and said liquid through said reduction and attrition zone, thereby shearing said carpet; and recirculating said sheared carpet and said liquid to said tank.
9. The method of claim 8 further including the operation of packaging said dried separated fibrous carpet materials into transportable units.
10. The method of claim 9, said operation of packaging said dried separated fibrous carpet materials being performed by compacting said dried and separated fibrous carpet materials into a pellet.
11. The method of claim 10, said operation of separating at least a portion of said liquid and carpet ash from said fibrous carpet materials comprising: placing said slurry in a screening chamber defining a series of apertures sized to allow said liquid and said carpet ash to pass through said apertures but to limit said fibrous carpet materials from passing therethrough; agitating said screening chamber; and applying additional liquid to an interior of said screening chamber to urge said liquid and said carpet ash through said apertures.
12. The method of claim 11, said operation of isolating at least a portion of said carpet ash from said liquid comprising: placing said liquid and carpet ash in a hydrocyclone defining a conically-shaped chamber adapted to rotate about a central axis thereof; rotating said chamber of said hydrocyclone, thereby urging circulating separation of said at least one portion of said carpet ash from said liquid of said slurry; and allowing said at least one portion of said carpet ash to fall from a lower portion of said chamber.
13. The method of claim 12, said operation of drying said isolated carpet ash being performed by processing said isolated carpet ash through at least one of a vacuum filter and a thermal drying apparatus.
14. The method of claim 13 wherein at least one of said operations of drying said separated fibrous carpet materials, isolating at least a portion of said carpet ash from said slurry, and drying said isolated carpet ash produces a third output comprising said liquid, said method further comprising the operation of directing said third output to said toroidal flow pulper for use in disintegrating additional carpet.
15. The method of claim 14, wherein an output of liquid and carpet ash from said first separation operation is combined with an output of liquid and liberated carpet ash from said second separation operation to form a combined liquid and carpet ash output.
16. The method of claim 15, further comprising the operation of filtering the combined liquid and carpet ash output to form an output of filtered liquid and an output of carpet ash.
17. The method of claim 16, further comprising the operation of directing the filtered liquid to the toroidal flow pulper for use in disintegrating additional carpet.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE SEVERAL VIEWS OF THE DRAWINGS
[0019] The above-mentioned features of the invention will become more clearly understood from the following detailed description of the invention read together with the drawings in which:
[0020]
[0021]
[0022]
[0023]
[0024]
[0025]
[0026]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0027] A carpet recycling process and method, in accordance with several features of the present general inventive concept, is disclosed herein and in the accompanying figures. One embodiment of a carpet recycling process and method is shown schematically at 10 in
[0028] With reference to
[0029] With reference to
[0030] Referring now to
[0031] Referring to
[0032] It will be understood that, whereas certain prior art devices having blade assemblies are not suitable for disintegrating wet carpet, the toroidal flow pulper 18 as described above and in the accompanying figures can disintegrate carpet that starts wet or dry into carpet fibers and carpet backing without becoming tangled and jamming. However, it will also be understood by one of skill in the art that the degree to which the pre-processed carpet 16 is further sheared by the toroidal flow pulper 18 may vary depending upon a large number of factors, including but not limited to the relative size of the various components of the toroidal flow pulper 18, the speed at which the rotor 26 rotates in relation to the stator 24, the selected size of the reduction and attrition zone 28, the initial sizes of the pieces of pre-processed carpet 16 that are achieved through the above-discussed pre-processing operation, and the number of times the pre-processed carpet 16 is recirculated through the reduction and attrition zone 28. However, it will generally be recognized that the toroidal flow pulper 18 as described above and in the accompanying figures is capable of dividing carpet into pieces having sizes as large as a few square inches in area, and is also capable of disintegrating the carpet 16 into its component mixed carpet fibers and carpet ash, and is further capable of reducing the size of the fibers themselves. Accordingly, with regard to use of the above-discussed toroidal flow pulper 18 manufactured and sold by Bolton Emerson Americas, LLC and marketed under the brand name Tornado to accomplish the disintegration operation 12 of the method 10, in several embodiments of the method 10, such disintegration 12 of the pre-processed carpet 16 is accomplished by further processing the pre-processed carpet 16 through the toroidal flow pulper 18 for approximately five (5) to ten (10) minutes with the rotor 26 rotating at approximately four hundred thirty (430) rounds per minute. In one embodiment, the pre-processed carpet 16 is processed through the toroidal flow pulper 18 for six (6) minutes with the rotor 26 rotating at approximately four hundred thirty (430) rounds per minute.
[0033] Referring to
[0034] The first separation device 48 may include one or more of any of a variety of known devices which are suitable to accomplish separation 50 of the mixed carpet fibers from at least a portion of the mixture of water 14 and carpet ash, including but not limited to various types of liquid presses, such as for example a belt press, a filtration device, a screening device such as a dewatering screen, or the like. For example, in several embodiments, the first separation device 48 is provided by a washer comprising generally a screening device and a water supply. However, it is not the intention of the applicant to limit the method 10 of the present general inventive concept to use of any particular type of device to accomplish separation 50 of the mixed carpet fibers from the mixture of water 14 and carpet ash.
[0035] In some embodiments, the first separation device 48 is provided by a washer comprising a screening device which includes generally a screening chamber that is lined with a series of apertures sized to separate the carpet fibers from the carpet ash. It will be recognized that the particular aperture sizes can vary without departing from the scope or spirit of the present general inventive concept. However, it will be understood that the apertures are generally sized to substantially retain the carpet fibers within the screening chamber while permitting smaller carpet ash particles and liquid to pass therethrough. For example, in one embodiment, the apertures defined by the screening chamber are each sized to approximately one (1) micron.
[0036] Referring to
[0037] Following the separation operation 50, the carpet fibers are subjected to further refinement 100 in order to further remove carpet ash and other backing materials from the carpet fibers, and to further shorten the carpet fibers. In several embodiments, this refinement is performed by beating the carpet fibers in the presence of liquid in order to further separate the carpet ash and backing materials and to promote dissolution of the non-carpet fiber components of the carpet into the liquid. In several embodiments, the refinement operation 100 is performed using a conical refiner 106 of the type known to one of skill in the art. It will be recognized that numerous other types of devices exist which may be used to accomplish the refinement operation 100 without departing from the spirit and scope of the present general inventive concept. In several embodiments in which a conical refiner 106 is used, the conical refiner includes generally a chamber having metal bars mounted around the inside thereof. The above-discussed carpet fibers that have been subjected to the first separation operation 50 are pumped into the chamber of the conical refiner 106 at high pressure in order to create an abrasive effect, thereby abrading the carpet fibers with the metal bars. This abrasive beating of the carpet fibers may, in various applications, result in shortening of the carpet fibers, and may also result in separation of additional carpet ash from the carpet fibers and/or dissolution of the carpet ash into the liquid remaining in the carpet fiber mixture. One conical refiner that has been used with success is manufactured and sold by Bolton Emerson Americas, LLC and is marketed under the brand name CLAFLIN. However, it is not the intention of the applicant to limit the method 10 of the present general inventive concept to use of any particular type of device to accomplish refinement 100 of the carpet fibers.
[0038] Following the above-discussed refinement operation 100, the refined carpet fibers are subjected to a second separation operation 102. Similar to the first separation operation 50 described above, the second separation operation 102 is configured to separate at least a portion of the liquid containing the separated and dissolved carpet ash and other backing components from the refined carpet fibers. And, similar to the first separation operation 50 described above, the second separation operation 102 may be accomplished using a separation device which may include one or more of any of a variety of known devices which are suitable to accomplish separation of the carpet fibers from at least a portion of the mixture of water and carpet ash, including but not limited to various types of liquid presses, such as for example a belt press, a filtration device, a screening device, or the like. In several embodiments, the second separation operation 102 is accomplished by transferring the refined carpet fibers to second separation device 104, such as for example any of the various types of devices described above with regard to the first separation operation 50. In several embodiments, the second separation device is a centrifuge, such as for example a basket centrifuge. However, it will be understood that numerous other devices are suitable for providing the second separation device 104, and such devices may be used without departing from the present general inventive concept. In one embodiment in which the second separation device 104 is a basket centrifuge, the basket centrifuge spins the carpet materials in order to separate water from the fibrous carpet materials by density. Specifically, the moisture-bearing fibrous materials are spun in the basket centrifuge such that the moisture is urged to the bottom of the basket centrifuge and the less-dense fibrous materials collect near the top of the basket centrifuge.
[0039] In various other embodiments, the second separation operation 102 is accomplished using various other types of separation devices. For example, in one embodiment, the second separation operation 102 is accomplished by, following the above-discussed refinement operation 100, returning the refined carpet fibers to the same first separation device 48 that was used in the above-discussed first separation operation 50 and repeating the above-discussed washing and screening operations. In other embodiments, the second separation operation 102 is accomplished using an additional second separation device 104 selected from one or more of the various types of devices described above with regard to the first separation operation 50. In any case, the second separation operation 102 produces a relatively clean mass of refined carpet fibers which may, in many embodiments, retain a significant moisture content, sometimes as much as ninety (90) percent or more by weight.
[0040] With reference again to
[0041] In an optional step following the operation of drying 52 the fibrous carpet materials, the dried carpet fibers are packaged 78 into transportable units. In some embodiments, the mixed carpet fibers are collected from the drying device 76 and transferred to a suitable packaging device 80, such as for example a compacting apparatus. In some embodiments, a bailer (not shown) is utilized whereby a collection of mixed carpet fibers are placed in a compacting zone where a compacting member compresses the carpet fibers into a bale that can be circumferentially tied and easily loaded onto a pallet or like transporting unit, or into a pellet that can be easily stacked and transported. In their compacted state, the mixed carpet fibers can then be easily transported for further use, such as for example for use as starting material in various industries. In any case, following drying 52 of the mixed carpet fibers, an output 96 of dried mixed carpet fibers is produced.
[0042] With reference to
[0043] In several embodiments, the filtration device 88 is provided by a hydrocyclone which includes a conically-shaped container which is adapted to spin about a central axis of the conically-shaped container, such that upon receiving the mixture, such spinning of the hydrocyclone encourages circulating separation of the carpet ash from the liquid. More specifically, because the carpet ash in the mixture has a density greater than water, spinning of the hydrocyclone encourages the carpet ash to fall through the bottom of the hydrocyclone while the water in the mixture is retained therein. In several embodiments, the state of the carpet ash falling through the bottom of the hydrocyclone is a moist solid. Thus, it will be understood that, while the hydrocyclone serves to isolate the solid particles from a portion of the water in the mixture, the solid particles may contain a certain quantity of moisture. However, those skilled in the art will recognize numerous other devices which may be used to accomplish the filtration device 88 without departing from the spirit and scope of the present general inventive process.
[0044] Referring again to
[0045] After isolating the carpet ash 84, the carpet ash is dried 90 in order to purge it of any remaining moisture. Thus, an output of dried carpet ash 98 is produced. In some embodiments, the primarily-solid carpet ash that is isolated 84 by the isolation device 88 is then transferred to a carpet ash dryer 92, such as for example a rotary vacuum filter. The rotary vacuum filter filters the semi-solid mixture by rotating an apertured drum inside of a housing. Washing water is introduced to clean the semi-solid mixture which is urged by a vacuum force against the exterior of the rotating drum, within the housing. The liquid accompanying the solid carpet ash, as well as the washing water introduced inside the housing, is sucked through the apertured, rotating drum, leaving only solid particles adhered against the exterior of the apertured drum. The solid ash may then be preserved while the water may be collected as output water and recycled back to the toroidal flow pulper 18 as discussed above. In one embodiment, after processing the carpet ash through the rotary vacuum filter as discussed above, the carpet ash is then sent to a thermal drying apparatus where electric heat and air cooperate to create a blow-drying effect that is applied directly to the carpet ash. However, numerous suitable devices and configurations for drying 90 the carpet ash to create the output of dried carpet ash 98 will be readily apparent to one of suitable skill in the art, and such other devices and configurations may be used without departing from the spirit and scope of the present general inventive concept. The separated and dried carpet ash may, optionally, be combined with the additional carpet ash separated from the carpet during the above-discussed pre-processing operation.
[0046] From the foregoing, it will be recognized that a carpet recycling method has been provided in accordance with various embodiments of the present general inventive concept. Specifically, the carpet recycling process enables a user to recycle carpet pieces and harvest at least two outputs, namely, an output of mixed carpet fibers and an output of predominantly calcium carbonate carpet ash. In several embodiments, the mixed carpet fibers recovered by the carpet recycling method disclosed herein contain an ash content that is less than five (5) percent, which presents a significant improvement over other known carpet recycling methods.
[0047] While the present invention has been illustrated by description of several embodiments and while the illustrative embodiments have been described in detail, it is not the intention of the applicant to restrict or in any way limit the scope of the appended claims to such detail. Additional modifications will readily appear to those skilled in the art. The invention in its broader aspects is therefore not limited to the specific details, representative apparatus and methods, and illustrative examples shown and described. Accordingly, departures may be made from such details without departing from the spirit or scope of applicant's general inventive concept.