Dispensing system for cakeable materials
10286365 ยท 2019-05-14
Assignee
Inventors
- David Guy (Maple Grove, MN, US)
- Jeffrey D. Johnson (Edina, MN, US)
- Paul Freeberg (South St. Paul, MN, US)
- Terry Goeman (Minnetonka, MN, US)
- Lyle Enderson (Anoka, MN, US)
Cpc classification
Y10T137/4891
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
B01F21/22
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01F21/221
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
Abstract
A dispensing system for delivery of a dispersant from a canister containing an erodible but cakeable water dispersant wherein the cakeable water dispersant in a one piece caked condition falls to a bottom of a divergent walled canister so the water flowing through a bottom portion of the canister continues to maintain erodible contact with the dispersant as the water disperant is consumed.
Claims
1. A dispensing system for controlled delivery of cakeable dispensable materials to a body of water comprising: an inline dispenser having a chamber with a closed top end; a dispensing canister having a central axis located in said chamber with said dispensing canister having an internal compartment formed by an interior sidewall that flares radially outward in a downward direction a fluid inlet fitting in the inline dispenser for directing water upward into the dispensing canister; a fluid outlet fitting in the inline dispenser for directing water out of the dispensing canister; a cakeable dispersant located in said dispensing canister chamber, said dispensing canister interior sidewall with the interior sidewall comprising a non interfering sidewall with a top portion of the of the non interfering sidewall having a smaller cross sectional dimension than a bottom portion of the non interfering sidewall for the cakeable dispersant located at the top portion of the dispensing canister to fall to the bottom portion of the dispensing canister; and a single fluid inlet port located at a peripheral edge of the dispensing canister and offset from the central axis, said fluid inlet port located at a bottom of a diverging funnel shaped inlet extending outward from the bottom portion of the dispensing canister and a single fluid outlet port located at a peripheral edge of the dispensing canister and offset from the central axis with a bottom of a diverging funnel shaped outlet extending outward from the bottom portion of the dispensing canister with the fluid inlet port of the dispensing canister in fluid communication with the fluid inlet port of the inline dispenser and the fluid outlet port of the dispensing canister in fluid communication with the fluid outlet port of the inline dispenser whereby a fluid flowing through the inline dispenser can at least be partially diverted through the cakeable dispersant falling to the bottom portion of the dispensing canister.
2. The dispensing system of claim 1 wherein the canister has a frusto conical shape.
3. The dispensing system of claim 1 wherein the cakeable dissolvable dispersant comprise a mineral, a pesticide, a corrosion control chemical, a water scale treatment chemical or a chemical to control a biofilm in a water treatment system.
4. The dispensing system of claim 1 wherein a bottom fluid inlet of the canister is spaced from a bottom fluid outlet of the canister so that a fluid flowing through the canister flows past the cakeable dispersant at the bottom portion of the canister chamber.
5. The dispensing system of claim 1 wherein the sidewall of the canister is smooth.
6. The dispensing system of claim 1 wherein the cakeable dispersant comprise a cakeable dissolvable dispersant that remains in a caked condition as a portion of the cakeable dissolvable dispersant is eroded by the flow of water through the canister.
7. The dispensing system of claim 6 wherein the cakeable dissolvable dispersant has a shape that conforms to the sidewall of the canister.
8. The dispensing system of claim 7 wherein the cakeable dissolvable dispersant has a specific gravity greater than one.
9. The dispensing system of claim 8 wherein the cakeable dissolvable dispersant erodes from a bottom surface of the cakeable dissolvable dispersant while a side surface of the cakeable dissolvable dispersant maintains in contact with an interior sidewall of the canister.
10. The dispensing system of claim 9 wherein the interior sidewall of the canister is in contact with a side surface of the cakeable dissolvable dispersant.
11. The dispensing system of claim 10 wherein the cakeable dissolvable dispersant has a weight that causes the cakeable dissolvable dispersant to migrate toward a bottom of the canister as a bottom portion of the cakeable dissolvable dispersant is eroded by water flowing through the bottom of the canister.
12. A dispensing canister for maintaining a correct delivery rate even though a dispersant therein may form a dispersant bridge within the dispensing canister comprising; a housing having a chamber therein with the chamber defined by a closed top member and a bottom member; a flared non interfering sidewall joining the top member to the bottom member with the sidewall diverging from the top member to the bottom member, said non interfering sidewall allowing a caked dispensing material which bridges from side to side of the canister, to fall into a flow path through the bottom of the canister where the caked dispensing material is contacted by water flowing through the bottom of the canister; and a diverging bottom inlet and a converging bottom outlet in the bottom member of the dispensing canister for directing a fluid into an underside of a caked dispensing material in the chamber whereby the caked dispensing material in an undissolved state falls toward the bottom of the chamber as material is eroded from the underside of the caked dispensing material.
13. A dispensing system for controlled delivery of cakeable dispensable materials or non-cakeable materials that have difficulty in falling to a bottom of a dispenser where the materials can be dispensed into a body of water comprising: an inline dispenser having a canister chamber; a fluid inlet in the inline dispenser for directing water upward into the canister chamber; a fluid outlet in the inline dispenser for directing water downward out of the canister chamber; a canister located in said canister chamber, said canister having a flared, non-interfering sidewall with a top portion of the canister having a smaller cross sectional dimension than the bottom portion of the canister; a cakeable or a non-cakeable dissolvable dispersant located in said canister chamber; a fluid inlet and a fluid outlet on the canister comprising a screen or open bottom portion of the canister whereby a fluid flowing through the inline dispenser valve can at least be partially diverted proximate the cakeable or the non-cakeable dispersant in the canister chamber.
14. A dispensing container for maintaining a stable dispersant delivery rate as a bridgeable dispersant contained therein is incrementally decreased through a fluid flowing through the container comprising: a housing having a top end and a bottom end with an internal downwardly diverging non interfering sidewall extending from said top end to said bottom end to form a downwardly diverging dispersant compartment therein; a fluid dissolvable bridgeable dispersant that adheres to itself in the presence of a fluid to form a dispersant bridge located within the dispersant compartment with the dispersant extending laterally across said downwardly diverging dispersant compartment and in contact with the internal downwardly diverging non-interfering sidewall but without adhering to the sidewall so that a weight of the dispersant is sufficient to gravity feed the dispersant to a bottom of the dispensing container whether the dispersant is in either a bridged condition or a non bridged condition; a peripheral fluid inlet passage located at the bottom of the dispenser container with said fluid inlet passage directing the fluid into the fluid dissolvable bridgeable dispersant in the dispersant compartment to thereby incrementally carry dispersant away from a bottom end of the dispersant compartment; and a peripheral fluid outlet passage located in said housing for transporting the fluid with the dispersant therein out of the dispenser container.
15. The dispensing container of claim 14 wherein the internal downwardly diverging non-interfering sidewall forming the dispersant compartment therein having a bottom cross sectional area larger than a top cross sectional area of the dispersant compartment.
16. The dispensing container of claim 14 wherein the top end of the housing and the internal downwardly diverging non-interfering sidewall are closed and the bottom end has an inlet and an outlet port for water to flow therethrough.
17. The dispensing container of claim 14 wherein a specific gravity of the dispersant is greater than a specific gravity of the fluid so that the weight of the dispersant causes the dispersant to fall into the fluid at the bottom of the dispersant compartment.
18. A method of incrementally delivering a dispensable material into a body of water containing a water dispensable material when the dispensable material has a tendency to bridge as a fluid flows through a bottom portion of the water dispensable material comprising: placing the water dispensable material into a dispensing cartridge having a smooth internal side wall that continually diverges outward from a top end of the dispensing cartridge to a bottom end of the dispensing cartridge with the bottom end of the dispensing cartridge having a peripheral fluid inlet port and a fluid outlet port; and placing the dispensing cartridge with the peripheral fluid inlet port and fluid outlet port into an inline dispenser having an inlet port and an outlet port; bringing the fluid inlet port and fluid outlet port in the dispensing cartridge into fluid communication with the inlet port and the outlet port of the inline dispenser so that the fluid flows into and out of the bottom of the dispensing cartridge to remove the dispensable material from a bottom portion of the dispensable material in the dispensing cartridge while releasing any bridged dispensable material suspended over a bottom end of the dispensing cartridge through a gravitational force on the bridged dispensable material; and maintaining the fluid flowing through the bottom of the dispensing cartridge as the smooth internal sidewall of the dispensing cartridge directs the bridged dispensable material into the fluid flowing through the bottom of the dispensing cartridge.
19. The method of claim 18 including the step of directing a water flow into the inline dispenser while retaining the dispensing cartridge in a fixed position within the inline dispenser.
20. The method of claim 18 wherein the step of placing the dispensing cartridge into the inline dispenser comprises the step of inserting the dispensing cartridge having a frusto conical shape into the inline dispenser with a larger end of the dispensing cartridge located below a smaller end of the dispensing cartridge so that the dispensable material therein can fall downward into the fluid flowing through the bottom of the dispensable canister even though the dispensable material adheres to itself and forms a bridge over the fluid inlet and the outlet port of the dispensing cartridge.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
(5)
(6)
(7) In the dispensing phase the fluid, for example water, is directed into inlet fitting 13 and through the ports 16 and 21 and into the chamber 20a in canister 20 where a solid dispersant 30 is located therein (
(8)
(9)
(10)
(11) As described herein caking may occur when the dispensable material is placed in a dispenser cartridge or the caking may occur for various reasons, for example, such as contact with the water in the dispensing cartridge. Since the caking may effect the dispensing rate one approach is to prevent caking by changing the content of the dispensable materials, however, it may not always be feasible to change the content of the dispensing material in order to avoid dispensing problems associated with caking. Another problem with caked material, which is shown in
(12) In the example shown in
(13) In the example shown in
(14) Thus, the feature of the removal of physical impediments such as wall protrusions and the use of a converging sidewall within the dispensing cartridge minimize or eliminates physical barriers to the caked dispersant becoming hung up within the dispensing cartridge. In addition another feature of the invention is the use of a dispensing interior cartridge with a smooth sidewall that reduces the frictional forces or other types of adhesion forces between the exterior surface of the caked dispersant and the sidewall to a level such that the gravitational forces on the caked disperant, which are due to the mass of the caked dispersant, are sufficient to overcome any of the frictional or other types of adhesion forces that may normally cause the caked disperant to adhere to the wall. Thus with some dispersants a downward diverging sidewall without physical impediments to obstruct caked dispersal movement may be sufficient to prevent disruption in the dispersal rate and other one may want to ensure that any forces between a sidewall of the caked disperant is insufficient to hold the caked disperant in place as a bottom portion of the caked disperant that supports the caked disperant is removed to water flow through the bottom of the dispensing cartridge.