Spraying water on ginned cotton
10280536 ยท 2019-05-07
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
International classification
Abstract
In a cotton gin, water is sprayed into a duct transporting pneumatically conveyed cotton fibers from a gin stand toward a battery condenser to improve the operation of a bale press where the ginned fibers are compacted into a bale. In some embodiments, a taggant is incorporated into the water to mark cotton fibers so threads or fabrics made from the cotton can be identified for quality control purposes. Spray nozzles may deliver water droplets of roughly the same size as the diameter of the cotton fibers. The nozzles may be located on a duct in a location adjacent dead air in the duct to promote coverage of the spray onto the cotton stream. Air may be delivered around the nozzles into the duct to prevent buildup of cotton and debris around the nozzles.
Claims
1. A cotton gin comprising at least one gin stand, a battery condenser receiving cotton lint from the at least one gin stand and including a device to separate cotton lint from propulsion air, a duct and equipment configured to pneumatically transport cotton lint from the at least one gin stand to the battery condenser, a bale press, a lint slide delivering a cotton batt from the battery condenser to the bale press, a source of water and at least one spray nozzle configured to receive water from the source and emit droplets, the nozzle being configured to direct the droplets onto the pneumatically transported cotton lint, downstream of the at least one gin stand and upstream of the device in the battery condenser.
2. The cotton gin of claim 1 wherein the cotton lint comprises fibers of a diameter in the range of 7-22 microns and wherein the spray nozzle being configured to deliver water droplets having a diameter in the range of 5-25 microns.
3. The cotton gin of claim 2 wherein the spray nozzle is configured to deliver water droplets of 8-12 microns in diameter.
4. The cotton gin of claim 1 further comprising a taggant delivery system including the source of water and taqqant in the source of water, the nozzle being configured to emit taqqant-water droplets directed toward the pneumatically conveyed cotton lint.
5. The cotton gin of claim 4 wherein the taggant is DNA.
6. The cotton gin of claim 1 wherein the spray nozzle is configured to deliver spray into the duct between the at least one gin stand and the battery condenser.
7. The cotton gin of claim 1 wherein the cotton gin includes a lint cleaner, upstream of the battery condenser, receiving cotton lint from the gin stand and wherein the spray nozzle is configured to emit liquid water droplets directed into the duct between the lint cleaner and the battery condenser.
8. The cotton gin of claim 6 wherein the duct being configured to create a zone where cotton lint flow has disengaged from a duct wall, the spray nozzle being configured to emit water droplets directed into the zone.
9. The cotton gin of claim 8 wherein the duct includes an elbow having an inlet, a hatch access and an outlet at an angle to the inlet other than 180 , the zone being located adjacent the hatch access.
10. The cotton gin of claim 8 wherein the duct includes a section having an inlet, a section of increased cross-sectional area and an outlet, the zone being located adjacent a junction of the inlet and section of increased cross-sectional area.
11. The cotton gin of claim 8 wherein the duct includes a compartment opening into the duct at an angle inclined to the direction of flow, the zone being located adjacent an intersection of the compartment and the duct.
12. The cotton gin of claim 8 wherein the duct is configured to produce pressure in the zone less than atmospheric pressure exterior to the duct and the duct includes an opening allowing the movement of air in a flow path from the exterior of the duct into the interior, the nozzle being mounted outboard of an interior of the duct in the air flow path to reduce material collecting on the nozzle.
13. The cotton gin of claim 8 wherein the duct includes a conduit opening into the duct, a nozzle in the conduit, a fan in the conduit and configured to deliver air into the duct and create the zone.
14. A method of marking cotton lint in a cotton gin with a taggant comprising pneumatically conveying cotton lint, in a duct, away from gin stands toward a battery condenser having a device to separate cotton lint from propulsion air and creating a spray of droplets of a liquid solution of the taggant from a nozzle and directing the droplets into the duct onto the cotton lint at a location between the gin stands and the battery condenser device while the cotton lint is being pneumatically conveyed toward the battery condenser.
15. The method of claim 14 wherein directing the droplets into the duct is conducted between a lint cleaner, downstream of the gin stands, and the battery condenser.
16. The method of claim 14 wherein the conveying step comprises pneumatically conveying cotton fibers having a width in the range of 7-22 microns and the step of directing droplets into the duct comprises spraying water in a range of 5-25 microns onto the cotton lint.
17. The method of claim 14 wherein the solution is a water solution.
18. The method of claim 14 further comprising the step of creating a dead air space open to an interior of the duct and the step of directing droplets into the duct comprises spraying the solution droplets into the dead air space.
19. The method of claim 14 further comprising the step of creating a zone internally of the duct where cotton flow through the duct separates from a duct wall and the step of directing droplets into the duct comprises spraying the solution droplets into the zone.
20. A method of spraying water on cotton lint in a cotton gin comprising pneumatically conveying cotton lint, in a duct, away from gin stands toward a battery condenser having a device to separate cotton lint from propulsion air and spraying water droplets from a nozzle into the duct onto the cotton lint at a location between the gin stands and the battery condenser device while the cotton lint is being pneumatically conveyed toward the battery condenser.
21. A cotton gin comprising at least one gin stand, a battery condenser receiving cotton lint from the at least one gin stand and including a device to separate cotton lint from propulsion air, a duct and equipment configured to pneumatically transport cotton lint through the duct from the at least one gin stand to the battery condenser, a bale press and a lint slide delivering a cotton batt from the battery condenser to the bale press and at least one spray nozzle configured to emit water droplets and direct the water droplets into the duct onto the pneumatically transported cotton lint at a location between the at least one gin stand and the battery condenser.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
(11) Referring to
(12) Conveying air introduced in a conventional manner downstream of the gin stands 24 delivers cotton fibers through the cleaner 26 and through a duct 28 leading to a battery condenser 32. The duct 28 may be a wide rectangular duct which necks down through a transition 30 to a round duct 34. Inside the battery condenser 32 is a screen 36 or other suitable means for separating conveying air flow cotton lint and producing a cotton batt 38. The cotton batt 38 slides by gravity along a lint slide 40 into to a bale press 42 where the ginned cotton is compressed into a gin bale.
(13) Conveying air from the battery condenser 32 passes through a conduit 44 to one or more cyclones 46 for removing dust from the conveying air before exhausting it to the atmosphere. Those skilled in the art will recognize the gin 10 as heretofore described as being typical of modern commercial gins. The disclosures of U.S. Pat. Nos. 8,046,877 and 8,356,389 are incorporated herein by reference for a more complete description of a cotton gin.
(14) As will be explained more fully hereinafter, a series of nozzle assemblies 48 delivers a water spray into the duct 28 at one or more locations downstream of the gin stands 24, such as between the gin stands 24 and the lint cleaner 26 or between the lint cleaner 26 and the battery condenser 32. Downstream of the lint cleaner 26 may be preferred because many lint cleaners are more efficient with drier cotton lint. The water spray may preferably be into the duct 28 upstream of the battery condenser 32 or into the battery condenser 32 upstream of the screen 36 or other device to separate propulsion air from ginned cotton fibers. It may be preferred to have the nozzle assemblies 48 spraying water into the wide rectangular duct 28 because the cotton fibers are traveling at a lower speed than in the smaller round duct 34 where velocities are higher thereby promoting more consistent dispersion of water droplets onto the cotton lint.
(15) Another advantage of spraying into the wide rectangular duct 28 is there is considerably more room for a large number of nozzle assemblies 48 as compared to the smaller round duct 34 as may be visualized in
(16) Referring to
(17) The nozzle 54 is connected to a water supply line 62 and an air supply line 64. An oddity of the nozzle 54 is that it is capable of delivering very small droplets in the range of 5-25 micron diameter microns which is about the same size as the width or diameter of many cotton fibers. Preferably, the water droplets may be in the range of 5-25 microns and which may preferably be about 8-12 microns in diameter and which may practically be about 10 microns in diameter. Cotton fibers may vary somewhat in diameter but this variation will likely be in the range of 7-22 microns. As pointed out more fully hereinafter, it is believed the size of the water droplets being about the same diameter as the width of the cotton fibers promotes the efficiency of contacting fibers with water droplets.
(18) The nozzle assemblies 48 can be purchased commercially from such companies as Spray.com of Wheaton, Ill. By controlling the water pressure to the assembly 48 with a regulator 66 and controlling the air pressure at the assembly 48 with a regulator 68, the size of droplets emitting from the nozzle 54 and the rate of water delivery can be controlled in a conventional manner, i.e. a table may be provided by the manufacturer so that if water pressure is selected and air pressure is selected, the droplet size and water quantity can be dictated.
(19) To test how consistent water is applied to cotton fibers with the device of
(20) Such a taggant may be of any suitable type but, in the test, artificial DNA was used. The DNA taggant was from Applied DNA Science of Stony Brook, N.Y. Thirty two milliliters of DNA in a total of one liter of DNA/water solution was injected per minute into the water conduit 62 and sprayed into the duct 28 in a gin delivering 20 bales/hour of Pima cotton. Thus, 1920 milliliters/hour of the DNA solution was sprayed onto 20 bales/hour or approximately 10,000 pounds/hour of Pima cotton. The DNA solution was diluted by a substantial amount of water, as explained more fully hereinafter, meaning that the concentration of DNA in the DNA solution is susceptible of wide variation because it will be diluted significantly in the spraying operation.
(21) At a rate of about 350 bales/day, a total of about 10,000 bales of cotton were sprayed with the DNA solution. A total of twelve fiber samples per day were delivered to a laboratory to determine whether the DNA taggant was present on the fiber or a total of about 350 fiber samples. 100% of the fiber samples submitted to the laboratory tested positive for the DNA taggant, Meaning that every tooted fiber had contacted a water droplet. This is difficult for knowledgeable cotton gin people to believe because the number of individual fibers in 10,000 bales of cotton is immense, almost beyond imagination. This is not proof that every fiber in the 10,000 bales had been contacted with water but sophisticated statistical calculations will show, to a very high degree of confidence, that a very large proportion of fibers were contacted with DNA laced water. The exact mechanism that distributes taggant so efficiently is not known and the invention is not bound by any theory. One may surmise that some of the fibers were contacted directly by sprayed taggant but it is not known that all of the tested fibers were contacted directly by sprayed taggant. It is possible that taggant was transferred indirectly to some fibers by a tagged fiber rubbing against an untagged fiber. Given the turmoil of fibers jostling along in a propulsion air stream, this seems possible and perhaps likely.
(22) It is apparent this technique is a viable approach to mark fibers, including cotton fibers, in a quality control effort. Tagging a select type of cotton fibers with DNA taggants can readily assure that the select type of fibers is present in processed threads or textiles. In addition, it is clearly feasible to spray water onto ginned cotton upstream of a battery condenser with a penetrant, other than a taggant or marker, that has beneficial effects on cotton fibers. The penetrant may be of any suitable type such as a surfactant, wetting agent or the like.
(23) Another advantage of this invention is that it is much, much cheaper than conventional rehumidifying equipment. The only cost are some commercially available nozzles, a water source, a source of low pressure air, conventional low pressure regulators, valves, a computer controller and the labor to install the equipment. The required water pressure in most applications is well below the pressure of conventional city water systems, meaning that no additional water pumping equipment is necessary.
(24) Referring to
(25) A series of nozzle assemblies 106 delivers a water spray into the duct 100 at one or more locations downstream of the cleaners 82, 88. It may be preferred to have the nozzle assemblies 108 spraying water into the wide rectangular duct 100 rather than into the round duct 104 for the same reasons it may be desirable to spray water into the rectangular duct 28 rather than the round duct 32.
(26) Referring to
(27) It may be advantageous to spray water into the dead air space 132 for a variety of reasons. Pressure in the dead air space 132 is lower than atmospheric pressure because of the change of direction of lint flow. This allows outside air to flow, without a fan or pump, past the nozzle assemblies 130 to dislodge cotton or water collecting, or tending to collect, on the nozzle assemblies 130 as will be pointed out more fully hereinafter. Another aspect of the dead air space 132 is that lint flow detaches from the wall 122 along a line or zone 134 leaving the space 132 mostly free of cotton. This allows spray from the nozzle assemblies 130 to spread out before contacting any cotton thereby increasing the ability of the spray to reach most or all of the cotton fibers. Another advantage of the dead air space 132 is to allow ambient air to enter the duct 110 and thereby flow past the nozzle assemblies 130 in order to dislodge or prevent the accumulation of debris on the assemblies 130.
(28) Referring to
(29) It will be apparent that many different approaches may be devised to create a dead air space in a duct of a pneumatic conveyor, as by the provision of a compartment 152 opening into a duct 154 as shown in
(30) Some of the effects of a dead air space can be created by forcibly blowing air into a duct 168 as shown in
(31) Referring to
(32) It may be desirable to employ filters to remove particles in the same range or larger than the water droplets emitting from the spray nozzles. To this end, referring to
(33) It may be desirable to employ a heater in the water supply to minimize the effects of operating in abnormally cold climates or during an abnormally cold time of the year. To this end, a heater 206 may be incorporated in the water supply line 62.
(34) Although this invention has been disclosed and described in its preferred forms with a certain degree of particularity, it is understood that the present disclosure of the preferred forms is only by way of example and that numerous changes in the details of operation and in the combination and arrangement of parts may be resorted to without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as hereafter claimed.