PNEUMATIC PULSATION LIQUID COLOR PUMPING
20190024653 ยท 2019-01-24
Inventors
Cpc classification
F04B49/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04B51/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04B43/028
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04B49/22
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F04B43/073
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04B51/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04B49/22
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04B43/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A liquid color pump and method for operation thereof includes a diaphragm displaceable into a chamber to displace liquid color therefrom; a pair of solenoid valves, each having an inlet port, an exhaust port, and first and second output ports; a potentiometer sensing displacement position of the diaphragm and a processor actuating the solenoid valves responsively to a diaphragm position sensed by the potentiometer.
Claims
1. A liquid color pump comprising: a) a diaphragm displaceable into a chamber to displace liquid color therefrom; b) a pair of solenoid valves, each having an inlet port, an exhaust port, a first output port connecting to the inlet port when the valve is energized, and a second output port connecting to the inlet port when the valve is not energized; i) a first one of the valves having its inlet port connected to a compressed air supply, its first output port connected to the diaphragm, its second output port blocked, and its exhaust port connected to the inlet port of the second valve; ii) the second valve having its first output port connected to atmosphere; c) a potentiometer sensing displacement position of the diaphragm; and d) a processor actuating the solenoid valves responsively to diaphragm position sensed by the potentiometer.
2. A liquid color pump comprising: a) a diaphragm displaceable into a chamber for displacing liquid color therefrom; b) a pair of solenoid valves, each valve having an inlet port, an exhaust port, and an output port connected to the inlet port when the valve is energized, and connected to the exhaust port when the valve is not energized; i) a first one of the valves having its inlet port connected to a compressed air supply, its output port connected to the diaphragm, and its exhaust port connected to the inlet port of the second valve; and ii) the second valve having its output port connected to atmosphere c) a potentiometer sensing displacement position of the diaphragm; d) a processor actuating the solenoid valves responsively to diaphragm position sensed by the potentiometer.
3. A liquid color pump comprising: a) a diaphragm displaceable into a chamber to displace liquid color therefrom; b) a solenoid valve for releasing repeated burst of air to displace the diaphragm into the chamber; c) a potentiometer for sensing displacement position of the diaphragm; and d) a processor for repeatedly actuating the solenoid valve to provide the repeated bursts of air responsively to diaphragm position sensed by the potentiometer.
4. The liquid color pump of claim 3 wherein the solenoid valve has an inlet port connected to a supply of compressed air and an outlet port that upon valve energization is connected to the diaphragm for flow of air therethrough from the supply to the diaphragm.
5. The liquid color pump of claim 4 wherein upon de-energization of the solenoid valve the outlet port connecting to the diaphragm is connected to an exhaust port.
6. A liquid color pump comprising: a) a diaphragm displaceable into a chamber to displace liquid color therefrom; b) a first solenoid valve when energized supplying compressed air from a supply to the diaphragm and when de-energized, connecting the diaphragm to an exhaust port; c) a second solenoid valve when energized connecting the exhaust port of the first solenoid valve to atmosphere; d) a potentiometer for sensing displacement position of the diaphragm; and e) a processor for actuating the solenoid valve responsively to diaphragm position sensed by the potentiometer.
7. A method for pumping liquid color comprising: a) positioning a diaphragm in a pump housing to displace liquid color out of the pump upon displacement of the diaphragm; and b) applying compressed air in a series of pulses to the diaphragm by: i) opening a valve in a pressurized air supply line leading to the diaphragm thereby permitting air from a pressurized supply to contact the diaphragm; ii) closing an exhaust line valve leading from the diaphragm thereby maintain the air applied to the diaphragm to remain in contact therewith; iii) repeatedly opening the supply line valve thereby applying additional air to the diaphragm until displacement of liquid color is complete; iv) opening the exhaust line valve to allow pressurized air to escape from contact with the diaphragm.
8. The method of claim 7 further comprising: a) sensing position of the diaphragm; b) regulating the opening of the supply line valve in response to sensed position of the diaphragm.
9. The method of claim 8 wherein the sensing is performed continuously.
10. The method of claim 8 wherein the sensing is performed by contacting the diaphragm with a riding member and detecting movement of the member.
11. The method of claim 8 wherein sensing is performed by a potentiometer.
12. The method of claim 10 wherein the member connects to the potentiometer.
13. The method of claim 7 wherein regulating opening of the supply line valve comprises regulating the valve open time.
14. The method of claim 7 wherein regulating opening of the supply line valve comprises regulating the valve closed time.
15. The method of claim 7 wherein regulating opening of the supply line valve comprises regulating the time between valve openings.
16. A method for pumping liquid color, comprising: a) providing first and second valves, each having inlet and exhaust ports and each a supply port, the supply port being connected to the inlet port when the valve is energized and being connected to the exhaust port when the valve is not energized; b) connecting the inlet port of one valve to a supply of pumping fluid; c) connecting the first supply port of the first valve to a pumping diaphragm; d) connecting the exhaust port of the first valve to the inlet port of a second valve; e) applying pressurized fluid in a series of pulses to the diaphragm by energizing the one valve thereby permitting the pressurized fluid to contact the diaphragm while de-energizing the second valve thereby forcing the pressurized fluid applied to the diaphragm to remain in contact therewith.
17. The method of claim 16 further comprising sensing positional displacement of the diaphragm and adjusting the duration of the fluid pulses in response thereto.
18. The method of claim 17 further comprising sensing positional displacement of the diaphragm with a potentiometer.
19. The method of claim 16 further comprising sensing positional displacement of the diaphragm and using a microprocessor to adjust the duration of the pulses in response thereto.
20. The method of claim 19 further comprising adjusting interval timing of the pulses.
21. The method of claim 19 further comprising adjusting on time of the pulses.
22. The method of claim 19 further comprising adjusting off time of the pulses.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0054]
[0055]
[0056]
[0057]
[0058] In
[0059] In
Description of the Preferred Embodiments and Best Mode Known for Practice of the Invention
[0060] Referring to the drawings, in the pump of the invention air (or another pumping fluid) under pressure is applied to an upper side 24U of a diaphragm 24, to press diaphragm 24 downwards. This downward movement of diaphragm 24 defines the pumping stoke. In the pump, a spring 106 on bottom side 24L of the diaphragm acts to urge diaphragm 24 up. Upward movement of diaphragm 24 in response to the force of spring 106 defines the suction stroke.
[0061] Moving the diaphragm downward through part of all of the full range of motion is preferably accomplished by operation of solenoid actuated air valves 700, 702 and applying air pressure, as described in more detail below, to move the diaphragm optionally all the way to the bottom of its range of motion, which may be to the bottom of the pumping cavity 98 or to move the diaphragm through less than its full range of motion.
[0062] Referring to
[0063] Solenoid valves 700, 702 are mounted on the rear of liquid color pump inlet section 22 as illustrated in
[0064] Compressed air is supplied to first solenoid valve 700 by a house air line 602 as illustrated in
[0065] When liquid color is used to color plastic parts during fabrication, careful metering of liquid color consumption is required as the liquid color is added while the plastic resin is melted and processed by a process machine. The rate the liquid color is dispensed by the pump must exactly match the rate at which the liquid color is consumed by the process machine. Hence, rate or speed of the liquid color pumping process must be precisely controlled. In some applications only require partial pump strokes are required. The rate at which liquid color is supplied by the pump is controlled by carefully pulsing only very small bursts of air into the pump, into the space above the diaphragm. Regulating the duration of each air pulse and regulating the time between pulses results in metering the liquid color to the process machine at exactly the desired flow rate so that the process machine receives precisely the amount of liquid color the process requires, at exactly the right rate of supply of liquid color.
[0066] Critical to the success of this process for supplying liquid color is having continuous feedback of the exact position of the diaphragm at all times as compressed air released by solenoid valve 700 pushes the diaphragm downward. Knowing the exact position of the diaphragm at all times allows accurate continuous monitoring and correction of the liquid color flow rate by regulation of the solenoid valves 700, 702 by the potentiometer 36 and microprocessor 68, and also allows accurate metering of partial stokes of diaphragm 24.
[0067] The invention accomplishes this by providing a pin 42 that lightly rides the upper surface 24U of diaphragm 24, following the diaphragm as the diaphragm moves down and up. The invention further involves positioning potentiometer 36, most desirably a linear slide potentiometer, so that potentiometer 36 is actuated by movement of pin 42.
[0068] In one preferred embodiment, total diaphragm movement may be about 0.25 inch. The potentiometer T-bar arm 40 and pin 42 may move about 0.75 inch or more, but in the preferred embodiment, the invention typically uses only 0.25 inch of that stroke.
[0069] Initially, microprocessor 68 preferably records the upper and lower extreme positions of the linear potentiometer slider arm 40, corresponding to the upper and lower limits of diaphragm travel. The microprocessor 68 then uses the readings of potentiometer 36 that are between the corresponding upper and lower limits of diaphragm travel to determine the exact location of diaphragm 24 as diaphragm 24 moves up and down and pumps liquid color. A 0.25 inch maximum travel stroke of diaphragm 24 translates into about 300 different position readings of the pin 42 and potentiometer 36, which may be stored and used by microprocessor 68, assuring precise readout of diaphragm location at any time.
[0070] Referring to
[0071] Referring still to
[0072] As illustrated in
[0073] One piece lower body portion 20 is a single molded piece of plastic of integral construction. There is no assembly or fabrication activity involved as respecting finishing one piece lower body portion 20 and making it ready for incorporation into pump 14 once one piece lower body portion 20 is ejected from the mold of an injection molding machine. The only finishing that may occasionally be necessary is removal of any flash resulting from the molding process.
[0074] A liquid color inlet conduit 26 extends downwardly from molded one piece lower body portion 20 and communicates with pumping chamber 98 of molded one piece lower body portion 20 via a liquid color inlet aperture 100 formed in molded one piece lower body portion 20. A liquid color inlet check valve, located at liquid color inlet aperture 100 to molded lower body portion 20, is designated generally 28 in
[0075] Liquid color inlet check valve ball 30 resides within and is movable freely with respect to a diaphragm return spring designated 32 in
[0076] As illustrated in
[0077] A pumped color liquid outlet from pump outlet section 23 is designated 46. The bottom interior surface of liquid container lid 16 is designated 48 and the top exterior surface of liquid container lid 16 is designated 50. O-rings 52 are provided to seal the quick disconnect inlet section 22 and the quick disconnect liquid color outlet assembly 23 relative to an uppermost plate 65 of quick disconnect sandwich 63 consisting of plates 65, 66, 67, which are bolted to drum lid 16 by nut-bolt combinations 88 as described.
[0078] The pump assembly further includes a liquid color outlet shutoff valve designated generally 54, a liquid color outlet shutoff valve ball designated 56, and a liquid color outlet shutoff valve spring designated 58. The sandwich-like quick disconnect plate assembly provided as 63 includes quick disconnect retainer plate 65, quick disconnect spacer plate 66, and quick disconnect base plate 67. An optional gasket 600 may be interposed between upper surface 50 of drum lid 16 and a lower, unnumbered surface of quick disconnect base plate 67, which faces drum lid 16.
[0079] Microprocessor 68 actuates and operates solenoid valves 700, 702, which supply air as needed to the upper side of diaphragm 24 from a house air line 602, as illustrated in
[0080] A recess 84 formed in the upper surface of pump molded one-piece lower body portion 20 defines a channel designated by arrow 86, which shows the direction of flow of liquid color from a pumping section of the pump, defined generally by the structure underlying quick disconnect inlet section 22, to an outlet section of the pump defined generally quarter turn quick disconnect liquid color outlet assembly 23.
[0081] When pump outlet section 23, defined generally by the quarter turn adapter outlet fitting, is not present (as having been removed by rotating it a quarter turn so that the unnumbered feet of that fitting do not engage channels in spacer plate 66), ball 56 of liquid color shut off valve 54 pops up due to the force applied to it by liquid color shut off valve spring 58, which is immediately below ball 56 and in contact therewith. As ball 56 rises, ball 56 encounters a hole in plate 16, or optionally a hole in gasket 24 underlying plate 16 (if gasket 24 is configured to extend that far to the left in
[0082] When pump outlet section 23 is put into position with a quarter turn so that the unnumbered feet thereof engage the unnumbered channels defined by retainer plate 65 and spacer plate 66 and are retained in place thereby, the unnumbered lower extremity of a downwardly extending annular channel in pump outlet section 23 contacts ball 56 and pushes ball 56 down against the force of liquid color shut off valve spring 58, thereby allowing liquid color pumped by action of diaphragm 24 to flow to the left in
[0083] Referring to the schematic drawings presented as
[0084] As shown in
[0085] As soon as the required pulse has been applied for the required duration, as controlled by microprocessor 68 monitoring displacement of diaphragm 24 as sensed by slide potentiometer 36, valve 700 is de-energized. However, upon de-energization of valve 700 the compressed air applied to the diaphragm upper surface 24U remains present and cannot escape, since the inlet port 7001N of first solenoid valve 700 is connected to exhaust port 700EX, and exhaust port 700EX is in turn connected to the inlet port 7021N of solenoid valve 702. Since solenoid valve 702 is not energized, air entering inlet port 7021N of solenoid valve 702 attempts to go to valve non-energized supply port 702S-NE.
[0086] However, in the implementation of the invention illustrated in
[0087] As first solenoid valve 700 continues to cycle on and off and continues thereby to force additional air pressure against upper side 24U of diaphragm 24, diaphragm 24 continues to deflect downwardly considering
[0088] Once the slide potentiometer 36 indicates that the diaphragm 24 has reached its maximum displacement and has pumped the maximum, or a desired, amount of liquid color at a desired rate, first solenoid valve 700 is de-energized and second solenoid valve 702 is energized. This opens a passageway for escape of the air that had been pressing against upper surface 24U of diaphragm 24 with that air flowing out of de-energized first solenoid valve 700 by passing through port 700S-E and then port 700EX and on to now energized second solenoid valve 702 entering valve 702 through inlet port 7021N and then venting to atmosphere through solenoid valve 702 by exiting that valve via energized supply port 702S-E.
[0089] While operation and the structure of the invention as disclosed has shown first and second solenoid valves 700, 702 as four-port valves, three-port valves could equally well be used, whereupon energization of such a three-port valve, the inlet port is connected to a single supply port, and upon de-energization of the valve, the single supply port is connected to the valve exhaust port.
[0090] Three-port and four-port solenoid valves suitable for use in practice of the invention are available from MAC Valves located at 30569 Beck Road, Wixom, Mich.
[0091] Use of the four-port solenoid valve in the preferred embodiment of the invention facilitates the delivery of air in extremely small amounts to provide fine, very precise control of movement of diaphragm 24. First solenoid valve 700 is turned on and off for very short on times, such as ten milliseconds, namely 1/100.sup.th of a second. This provides a very short pulse of air against the upper side of the diaphragm 24. When first solenoid valve 700 is turned off, the air just delivered against the upper side 24U of diaphragm 24 would normally escape by flowing back through the solenoid valve and exiting exhaust port 700EX. However, this is not the way the invention in its preferable mode works, as the invention does not want this air to be exhausted until diaphragm 24 has completed its full pumping displacement as controlled by the microprocessor for the particular liquid color being supplied and the particular process machine being serviced thereby. Accordingly, a second solenoid valve, solenoid valve 702, is connected to the exhaust port of first solenoid valve 700 and is used to keep exhaust port 700EX closed until venting is required.
[0092] When it is time to relieve the pressure on diaphragm 24 to allow diaphragm 24 to return to its neutral position and to allow liquid color to flow upwardly into pumping chamber 98 that has been pumped free of liquid color, air must be exhausted from the upper side 24U of the diaphragm, so second solenoid valve 702 is energized and the air is vented to atmosphere as indicted by arrow 606 in
[0093] Note that in the four port solenoid valve implementation of the invention ports 700S-NE and 702S-NE preferably are permanently sealed.
[0094] Although schematic implementations of present invention and at least some of its advantages are described in detail hereinabove, it should be understood that various changes, substitutions and alterations may be made to the apparatus and methods disclosed herein without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims. Moreover, the scope of this patent application is not intended to be limited to the particular implementations of apparatus and methods described in the specification, nor to any methods that may be described or inferentially understood by those skilled in the art to be present as described in this specification.
[0095] As one of skill in the art will readily appreciate from the disclosure of the invention as set forth hereinabove, apparatus, methods, and steps presently existing or later developed, which perform substantially the same function or achieve substantially the same result as the corresponding embodiments described and disclosed hereinabove, may be utilized according to the description of the invention and the claims appended hereto. Accordingly, the appended claims are intended to include within their scope such apparatus, methods, and processes that provide the same result or which are, as a matter of law, embraced by the doctrine of the equivalents respecting the claims of this application.
[0096] As respecting the claims appended hereto, the term comprising means including but not limited to, whereas the term consisting of means having only and no more, and the term consisting essentially of means having only and no more except for minor additions which would be known to one of skill in the art as possibly needed for operation of the invention.