DOSING METHOD AND DOSING DEVICE FOR PARTICLES OF BULK MATERIAL

20170029218 ยท 2017-02-02

    Inventors

    Cpc classification

    International classification

    Abstract

    A method for dosing bulk material particles by using a dosing device and a dosing device is provided. A dosing member of the dosing device performs a conveying movement by rotation, in order to dose bulk material particles and proceeding from a bulk material supply of the dosing device convey the same to a bulk material discharge of the dosing device. The dosing member is at least temporarily put into a shaking and/or vibratory movement in operation of the dosing device, in order to reduce an adherence of bulk material particles among each other and achieve a more uniform mass output from the dosing member.

    Claims

    1. A method for dosing bulk material particles by using a dosing device, wherein a dosing member of the dosing device performs a conveying movement by rotation, in order to dose bulk material particles and proceeding from a bulk material supply of the dosing device convey the same to a bulk material discharge of the dosing device, wherein in operation of the dosing device the dosing member at least temporarily is selectively put into a shaking and/or vibratory movement.

    2. The method according to claim 1, wherein during a conveying movement the dosing member is put into a shaking and/or vibratory movement.

    3. The method according to claim 2, wherein the dosing member is put into a shaking and/or vibratory movement for the entire duration of the conveying movement.

    4. The method according to claim 1, wherein before the beginning and/or after the end of a conveying movement the dosing member is put into a shaking and/or vibratory movement.

    5. A method for dosing bulk material particles by using a dosing device, wherein a dosing member of the dosing device performs a conveying movement by rotation, in order to dose bulk material particles and proceeding from a bulk material supply of the dosing device convey the same to a bulk material discharge of the dosing device, wherein for conveying bulk material particles to the bulk material discharge the dosing member is rotated in a first direction of rotation with a first rotational speed and before the beginning and/or after the end of a conveying movement the dosing member performs a backward movement by a rotation in an opposite second direction of rotation with a second rotational speed different from the first rotational speed.

    6. The method according to claim 5, wherein the first rotational speed is smaller than the second rotational speed, in particular smaller by at least 25%.

    7. The method according to claim 5, wherein turning back is effected with the second rotational speed by a second angle of rotation which is at least as large as a first angle of rotation by which the dosing member previously has been rotated with the first rotational speed for conveying bulk material particles.

    8. The method according to claim 1, wherein for conveying bulk material particles to the bulk material discharge the dosing member is rotated in a first direction of rotation and before the beginning and/or after the end of a conveying movement the dosing member performs a backward movement by a rotation in an opposite second direction of rotation.

    9. The method according to claim 8, wherein after the end of the backward movement the dosing member is put into a shaking and/or vibratory movement.

    10. The method according to claim 8, wherein the dosing member is put into a shaking and/or vibratory movement at least temporarily during the backward movement or for the entire duration of the backward movement.

    11. The method according to claim 9, wherein at the end of a dosing cycle, during which bulk material particles are conveyed to the bulk material discharge by the conveying movement of the dosing member, the dosing member performs a backward movement in the second direction of rotation and thereby takes a starting position for a new dosing cycle.

    12. The method according to claim 9, wherein at the end of a dosing cycle, during which bulk material particles are conveyed to the bulk material discharge by the conveying movement of the dosing member, the dosing member performs a backward movement in the second direction of rotation and subsequently again is shifted in the first direction of rotation, in order to take a starting position for a new dosing cycle.

    13. The method according to claim 1, wherein in operation of the dosing device the dosing member is put into shaking and/or vibratory movements of different strength.

    14. The method according to claim 13, wherein during a conveying movement the dosing member is put into shaking and/or vibratory movements of different strength.

    15. The method according to claim 8, wherein in operation of the dosing device the dosing member is put into shaking and/or vibratory movements of different strength, wherein during a conveying movement the dosing member is put into a shaking and/or vibratory movement of a first strength and during a backward movement and/or after the end of a backward movement the dosing member is put into at least one shaking and/or vibratory movement of a second strength different from the first strength.

    16. The method according to claim 1, wherein a shaking and/or vibratory movement is generated by an oscillating rotary movement of the dosing member.

    17. A dosing device for bulk material particles with a dosing member dosing the bulk material particles, which performs a conveying movement by rotation, in order to dose bulk material particles and proceeding from a bulk material supply of the dosing device convey the same to a bulk material discharge of the dosing device, wherein the dosing device includes at least one power-operated actuating drive by means of which at least one of the dosing member at least temporarily is selectively put into a shaking and/or vibratory movement in operation of the dosing device, the dosing member for conveying bulk material particles to the bulk material discharge is rotated in a first direction of rotation with a first rotational speed and the dosing member is rotated before the beginning and/or after the end of a conveying movement in an opposite second direction of rotation with a second rotational speed different from the first rotational speed.

    18. The dosing device according to claim 17, wherein the dosing member is rotatable by means of the actuating drive for carrying out the conveying movement and the actuating drive in addition is formed and provided to superimpose the conveying movement with a shaking and/or vibratory movement due to an oscillation rotary movement of the dosing member.

    Description

    BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

    [0039] Further advantages and features of the present invention will become apparent from the succeeding description of exemplary embodiments with reference to the Figures.

    [0040] FIG. 1A shows a first exemplary embodiment of a dosing device according to the invention in a top view along the axis of rotation of a dosing member formed as dosing roller.

    [0041] FIG. 1B shows a side view of the dosing roller.

    [0042] FIG. 1C shows the dosing device of FIG. 1A with bulk material particles to be dosed.

    [0043] FIG. 2 shows a path-time diagram for illustrating the course of dosing cycles known from the prior art under a uniform rotary movement of a dosing member.

    [0044] FIG. 3 shows a path-time diagram for illustrating a first design variant of a method according to the invention, in which an oscillation of the speed is modulated onto a rotary movement of the dosing member for dosing bulk material particles, in order to put the dosing member into a shaking and/or vibratory movement.

    [0045] FIG. 4 shows a path-time diagram for a further design variant in which during a conveying movement the dosing member is put into shaking and/or vibratory movements of different strength.

    [0046] FIG. 5A shows a path-time diagram of a further design variant in which at the beginning of a dosing cycle the dosing member performs a backward movement and in the process is put into a shaking and/or vibratory movement.

    [0047] FIG. 5B shows a path-time diagram for a development on the basis of FIG. 5A, in which at the beginning of a dosing cycle the dosing member is put into a stronger shaking and/or vibratory movement than during the succeeding conveying movement.

    [0048] FIG. 6 shows a path-time diagram for a further design variant in which after the end of a dosing cycle the dosing member performs a backward movement and subsequently is put into a shaking and/or vibratory movement.

    [0049] FIG. 7A shows a further exemplary embodiment of a dosing device according to the invention in a top view along the axis of rotation of a dosing member formed as dosing roller with a drain channel formed therein in a dosing position.

    [0050] FIG. 7B shows the dosing device of FIG. 7A with the dosing roller in a drain position.

    DETAILED DESCRIPTION

    [0051] FIG. 1A shows a dosing device 1 in a top view along the rotational axis of the axis of rotation D+ of the dosing roller 11. The dosing roller 11 is arranged and rotatably mounted in a cutout provided for this purpose in the housing 10. It is designed such that between the shell surface 110 of the dosing roller 11 and the inner surface 100 of the housing 10 a uniform gap exists. Since the dosing roller 11 is mounted with a gap, bulk material particles 2 of different size can be conveyed and dosed uniformly and carefully, without the bulk material particles 2 being jammed in the dosing device 1. The width of the gap is chosen such that bulk material particles 2 cannot get into the same. In a substantially cylindrically shaped dosing roller lithe rotational axis of the axis of rotation D of the dosing roller 11 preferably is identical with the cylinder axis of the dosing roller 11.

    [0052] As can be seen in FIG. 1A, the dosing roller 11 is cylindrical in shape and inserted into a cylindrical recess (bore) of the housing 10. As no scrapers engage into the bulk material channel 111, the dosing roller 11 is easy to remove and to insert again.

    [0053] The bulk material to be dosed is supplied to the dosing roller 11 via the bulk material supply 101. The bulk material supply 101 can be connected e.g. to a bulk material reservoir or to another supply device. In FIG. 1A, the bulk material supply 101 is shown as a funnel-shaped recess in the housing 10. The bulk material supply 101 is defined by a rear and a front inner surface 102, 103 as seen in direction of rotation D+. The rear inner surface 102 prevents that bulk material particles 2 fall or are pushed through the dosing device 1 against the direction of rotation. Between the inner surfaces 102, 103 an opening extends, through which the bulk material particles 2 impinge on the dosing roller 11. The transport of the bulk material particles 2 through the bulk material supply 101 is effected by means of gravity.

    [0054] In the embodiment of the dosing device 1, the front inner surface 103 of the bulk material supply 101 as seen in direction of rotation D+ has an edge 104 which substantially vertically meets with the shell surface 110 of the dosing roller 11. By an edge 104 of such shape dosing of the bulk material particles 2 can be effected uniformly; jamming of bulk material particles 2 between the dosing roller 11 and the inner surface 100 of the housing 10 is reduced.

    [0055] As will be explained in detail with reference to the following FIG. 1B, a bulk material channel 111 for receiving bulk material particles 2 is integrally molded in the shell surface 110 of the dosing roller 11, into which channel the bulk material particles 2 are supplied at the bulk material supply 101. By the rotary movement of the dosing roller 11 in direction of rotation D, the bulk material particles 2 are conveyed in direction of rotation D+. From the bulk material supply 101 down to the lower dead center 109 loosening of the bulk material particles 2 occurs by action of gravity. From the lower dead center 109 to the bulk material discharge 105 the bulk material particles 2 are conveyed against gravity due to the rotation of the dosing roller 11.

    [0056] In FIG. 1A, the bulk material discharge 105 similar to the bulk material supply 101 is shown as a recess in the housing 10 of the dosing device 1. The housing 10 can consist of a single part or be composed of a plurality of parts. The rear and front inner surfaces 106, 107 of the bulk material discharge 105 as seen in direction of rotation D+ are formed substantially parallel to each other and substantially parallel to the vertical axis Y. The discharge of the bulk material particles 2 is effected through an opening extending between the inner surfaces 106, 107 of the bulk material discharge 105. Through this opening, bulk material particles 2 can exit from the bulk material discharge 105 and from the dosing device 1, for example due to gravity.

    [0057] In one embodiment of the dosing device 1 the supply of the bulk material particles 2 (through the opening of the bulk material supply 101) is effected after the upper dead center 108 in direction of rotation D+ of the dosing roller 11, while the discharge of the bulk material particles 2 (through the opening of the bulk material discharge 105) is effected after the lower dead center 109 in direction of rotation D+ of the dosing roller 11. The openings shown in FIG. 1A are located at corresponding positions. However, the exact arrangement of the openings is arbitrary, as long as it satisfies the aforementioned requirements. The openings also can be designed broader or narrower than shown in FIG. 1A or be provided at a smaller or greater distance (in direction of rotation D+) to the corresponding dead centers 108, 109.

    [0058] The inner surfaces of the bulk material supply 101 and the bulk material discharge 105what is meant here are the surfaces 102, 102, 106 107 shown in FIG. 1A and the surfaces spaced along the rotational axis of the direction of rotation D, which are not shown in FIG. 1Afor example can be formed as planar surfaces and thus form a shaft which has a rectangular cross-section (in the horizontal plane). Likewise, however, said surfaces also can be bent, so that for example a circular or oval cross-section of the bulk material supply 101 and the bulk material discharge 105 is obtained in the horizontal plane. The inner surfaces of the bulk material supply 101 and the bulk material discharge 105 spaced along the rotational axis of the direction of rotation D, which are not shown in FIG. 1A, in particular can be designed such that the bulk material particles 2 are guided only to that part of the shell surface 110 of the dosing roller 11 at which the bulk material channel 111 is integrally molded.

    [0059] The bulk material channel 111 of the dosing roller 11 is shown in an exemplary embodiment in FIG. 1B. FIG. 1B shows the dosing roller 11 in a first, cylindrical embodiment in a lateral view, i.e. in a viewing direction vertical to the cylinder axis of the dosing roller 11. The illustrated dosing roller 11 includes a bulk material channel 111 extending around the shell surface 110, in which bulk material pockets 112 are integrally molded at regular distances. The bulk material pockets 112 serve for receiving and transporting bulk material particles 2. The size of the bulk material pockets 112 can be adapted to the maximum or average size of the bulk material particles 2 to be transported. It furthermore is possible that the bulk material pockets 112 are provided in various sizes.

    [0060] The bulk material pockets 112 shown in FIG. 1B are designed trough-shaped, but any modifications of this shape are conceivable, as long as the bulk material pockets 112 are suitable for receiving and/or for transporting the bulk material particles 2. It is not absolutely necessary either that the bulk material pockets 112 are provided in the bulk material channel 111 at regular distances. It is also possible that the distances between bulk material pockets 112 vary. Furthermore, it is conceivable that bulk material pockets 112 are not provided at the entire bulk material channel 111, i.e. over the entire circumference of the shell surface 110 of the dosing roller 11. Depending on the type of bulk material and in case the friction between the bulk material and the bulk material channel 111 is large enough, so that the bulk material particles 2 are entrained in direction of rotation D of the dosing roller 11, bulk material pockets 112 also can be omitted completely, or merely one bulk material pocket 112 can be provided in the bulk material channel 111. Instead of bulk material pockets 112, nubs possibly can also be provided at the bulk material channel 111. Correspondingly, transverse ribs can also be provided at the bulk material channel 111.

    [0061] The bulk material channel 111 and/or the bulk material pockets 112 can be incorporated into the dosing roller 11, e.g. by milling, or be molded together with the dosing roller, e.g. by injection molding.

    [0062] Depending on the type of the bulk material to be transported, the bulk material channel 111 can be narrower or broader than the bulk material channel 111 in FIGS. 1B and 1n particular comprise several circumferential rows of bulk material pockets 112.

    [0063] FIG. 1C shows the dosing device 1 of FIG. 1A with bulk material particles 2 to be transported. In the bulk material supply 101 a reservoir of bulk material particles 2 is located, which are supplied to the dosing device 1 via a bulk material inlet A. A bulk material inlet A can be effected manually or by any suitable device. The bulk material particles 2 get through the opening 108 into the bulk material channel 111 and into the bulk material pockets 112. By the rotation of the dosing roller 11 in direction of rotation D, the bulk material particles 2 are entrained and transported in direction of the bulk material discharge 105. To prevent jamming of bulk material particles 2 in the dosing device 1, the front inner surface 103 as seen in direction of rotation D is provided with an edge 104 which substantially vertically meets with the dosing roller 11.

    [0064] On their way from the lower dead center 109 to the bulk material discharge 105 the bulk material particles 2 are conveyed against gravity due to the rotation of the dosing roller 11 in the direction of rotation D+. A uniform distribution of bulk material particles 2 already is achieved thereby without any further measures.

    [0065] As soon as the bulk material particles 2 reach the bulk material discharge 105, they fall through its opening out of the bulk material discharge 105 of the dosing device 1 due to gravity and are supplied to a bulk material outlet B, via which the bulk material particles 2 can be moved on and/or be processed. By previously loosening the bulk material particles 2 and pushing them together a particularly uniform conveying rate of bulk material particles 2 is achieved by the dosing device 1.

    [0066] It should be noted that instead of gravity and depending on the type of the bulk material particles 2, a positive pressure for example can also be applied to the bulk material supply 101 or a negative pressure can be applied to the bulk material discharge 105, in order to achieve the transport of the bulk material particles 2. Furthermore, a positive or negative pressure at the bulk material supply 101 and/or at the bulk material discharge 105 can be used to remove bulk material particles 2 electrostatically adhering to the dosing device 1. There can be used in particular pulsed compressed air.

    [0067] With reference to a path-time diagram FIG. 2 illustrates a commonly used actuation of a rotating dosing member, such as for example of the dosing roller 11 of FIGS. 1A to 1C. On the ordinate an angle (of rotation) or the number of steps s of a step motor controlling the rotation of the dosing member is plotted. On the abscissa the time t is plotted.

    [0068] Corresponding to the diagram of FIG. 2 the dosing member, for example the dosing roller 11 of FIGS. 1A to 1C, initially is at rest for a time interval T.sub.W in which no bulk material particles 2 are to be dosed in. Thereafterfor example upon request of a downstream injection molding machinea conveying movement is triggered. This conveying movement lasts for a defined time interval T.sub.S, until the dosing member has been rotated by a specified desired angle or a specified desired number of steps S1. Thereafter, the dosing member stops again for the period T.sub.W, before in a succeeding dosing cycle for the time period T.sub.S bulk material particles 2 again are conveyed to the bulk material discharge 105 and are dosed in correspondingly (up to the desired angle or the desired number of steps S2).

    [0069] Although with the illustrated dosing device 1 a comparatively very uniform addition of bulk material particles 2 already is possible when the dosing member in the form of the rotatable dosing roller 11 is rotated in the direction of rotation D+, it was found that especially with slow rotary movements of the dosing roller 11but also with differently designed dosing membersthe influence of the static friction between the bulk material particles 2 is greatly increasing. This can lead to a non-uniform dumping of granules. Instead of individual bulk material particles 2, coherent formations of bulk material particles 2 perhaps are dumped, possibly even like an avalanche. This of course involves fluctuations in the concentration of the dosed additive.

    [0070] In a dosing method according to the invention, the dosing member now at least temporarily is selectively put into a shaking and/or vibratory movement in operation of the dosing device. In the design variants illustrated below with reference to path-time diagrams a uniform rotary movement of the dosing member selectively is superimposed with changes in direction and/or speed, in order to apply a shaking and/or vibratory movement. For example, an oscillating and/or vibratory movement is modulated onto the rotary movement of the dosing roller or dosing screw as dosing member.

    [0071] Corresponding to the path-time diagram shown in FIG. 3, the rotary movement for example is superimposed with a shaking and/or vibratory movement for the entire duration T.sub.S of a conveying movement of the dosing member. At an amplitude of 1 to 5 and/or a frequency of less than 5 Hz reference for example would be made to a shaking movement and at an amplitude of 0.1 to 2 and a frequency of greater than 5 Hz reference would be made to a vibratory movement. At a shaking movement, bulk material particles 2 at least temporarily are released from the transporting surface of the dosing roller 11. The bulk material briefly behaves like a fluid. Entanglements are released and the bulk material is newly compacted. By a shaking movement, bridges and entanglements between the bulk particles 2 hence can be eliminated. This was found to be advantageous in particular in the case of greatly differing particle shapes and particle sizes, in order to improve the dosing operation. At a vibratory movement, bulk material particles 2 do not completely separate from each other or from the transporting surface of the dosing roller 11, but rather slip and slide along the same due to a decrease in static friction. In particular cavities between the bulk material particles 2 can be closed herewith effectively, whereby a homogenization of the packing density in the bulk channel 111 can be achieved.

    [0072] Corresponding to the representation in FIG. 3, an oscillating movement with a constant amplitude a and a constant oscillation width s is modulated on during the conveying movement of the dosing member. A distinctly more uniform mass output from the dosing member can be achieved thereby, as for example effects of static friction (so-called slip-stick effects) between the bulk material particles 2 are minimized.

    [0073] For example, acting upon a dosing roller 11 corresponding to FIGS. 1A to 1C along the direction of rotation D+ has different effects. In this connection reference will again be made to FIG. 1A, in which four different quadrants I to IV are illustrated by the space axes X and Y vertical to each other and crossing each other in the point of rotation of the dosing roller 11. In the sectional view of FIG. 1A the four quadrants I to IV divide the dosing roller 11 into four segments of equal size. The quadrant I comprises the region of the dosing roller 11 at which bulk material particles 2 are filled into the bulk material channel 111 via the bulk material supply 101. In the quadrant II adjoining thereto in direction of rotation D+ and hence in anti-clockwise direction, the bulk material particles 2 are transported by the dosing roller 11 in direction of the bulk material discharge 105, which lies in quadrant III.

    [0074] When applying a shaking and/or vibratory movement onto the dosing roller 11 corresponding to the path-time diagram of FIG. 3, different effects now are achieved in the individual quadrants I to IV, which altogether lead to an improved continuous dumping of particles at the bulk material discharge 105. In quadrant I, the bulk material channel 111 is filled more uniformly when filling bulk material particles 2 into the bulk material channel 111. In quadrant II, the bulk material is compacted more uniformly due to the rotary oscillation or vibration. The individual bulk material particles 2 are aligned more strongly in direction of rotation D+ and thus reduce the fraction of cavities. The bulk/packing density in the bulk material channel 111 is increased and rendered more uniform. In quadrant III, the static friction and mechanical entanglement of the bulk material particles 2 among each other likewise is strongly reduced by the additionally applied shaking and/or vibratory movement, so that the bulk material particles 2 are dumped individually to an increased extent and less strongly entrain other bulk material particles 2.

    [0075] FIG. 4 illustrates a modification of the design variant on the basis of FIG. 3. The linear rotary movement of a dosing member is not superimposed with a uniform and constant oscillation. The intensity of the shaking and/or vibratory movement during the conveyance of bulk material particles 2 rather is varied in its strength. For this purpose, a superposition with an oscillation of variable amplitude a1, a2 is effected. At the beginning of a conveying movement, a rotation of the dosing member is superimposed with a shaking and/or vibratory movement of a first strength, characterized by an amplitude a1 and an oscillation width s1. At the end of a conveying movement and hence at the end of a dosing cycle, a shaking and/or vibratory movement of smaller strength is applied, characterized by a smaller oscillation amplitude a2<a1 and smaller oscillation width s2<s1. For example, the oscillation amplitudes differ by a factor of at least 2, for example by a factor greater than 5. For example, by a strong vibration at the beginning of a conveying movement the static friction between the bulk material particles 2 can be reduced selectively. A weaker vibration at the end of the dosing cycle on the other hand prevents uncontrolled dumping of bulk material particles 2 at the bulk material discharge 105.

    [0076] To avoid uncontrolled dumping of bulk material particles 2 at the beginning of a conveying movement as a result of the generated shaking and/or vibratory movement, it is additionally provided in the exemplary embodiment of FIG. 4 that the dosing member initially performs a backward movement in an opposite direction of rotation D. At the beginning of a new dosing cycle the dosing member, for example the dosing roller 11 of FIGS. 1A to 1C, correspondingly is turned back by a specified angle of rotation or a desired number of steps S3, so that bulk material particles 2 initially are removed from the dumping edge of the bulk material discharge 105. The risk that the same already get into the bulk material discharge 105 due to the subsequent shaking and/or vibratory movement at the beginning of the dosing cycle hence is minimized.

    [0077] With the path-time diagrams of FIGS. 5A and 5B further design variants of a dosing method according to the invention are illustrated, in which the respective dosing member is put into a shaking and/or vibratory movement not only during a conveying movement, but also in a phase of rest at the beginning of a dosing cycle. It each is provided that over a time interval T.sub.L before the beginning of a conveying movement and hence a rotation of the dosing member for conveying bulk material in direction of the bulk material discharge 105 the dosing member is driven to perform an oscillating rotation. The actual conveying movement thus is preceded by a vibration phase at the beginning of the dosing cycle, in order to release the static friction between the bulk material particles 2 and compact the bulk material in the respective bulk material channel of the dosing member.

    [0078] In a variant according to FIG. 5A at the beginning of a dosing cycle the dosing member initially is turned back by a specified desired angle of rotation or a desired number of steps S3 opposite to the future direction of rotation D+ (in direction of rotation D) and subsequently is put into a shaking and/or vibratory movement. Subsequently a rotation into the starting position is effected and the conveying movement is started each in the direction of rotation D+. In principle, a uniform rotary movement can be provided subsequent to the shaking and/or vibration phase at the beginning of the dosing cycle. In a design variant corresponding to FIG. 5A, however, it is provided that also during the subsequent conveying movement the dosing member performs an oscillating rotary movement, in order to also be shaken or vibrated during the further dosing cycle.

    [0079] In the variant according to the diagram of FIG. 5B no backward movement of the respective dosing member is effected at the beginning of a dosing cycle in the initial time interval T.sub.L, but the dosing member is oscillated about the position taken last and hence about the starting position of the new dosing cycle. The initial shaking and/or vibratory movement with an oscillation width s is greater than an oscillation width s3 during the succeeding conveying movement. A reversal of this ratio of the oscillation widths in the time intervals T.sub.L and (T.sub.ST.sub.L) and of the associated oscillation amplitudes of course also is possible.

    [0080] With the path-time diagram of FIG. 6 a further variant of a dosing method according to the invention is illustrated. It here is provided that a dosing member, for example the dosing roller 11 of the dosing device 1 of FIGS. 1A to 1C performs a backward movement at the end of a dosing cycle and on completion of a conveying movement on which a shaking and/or vibratory movement was superimposed.

    [0081] In the diagram of FIG. 6 this is illustrated by the fact that at the end of a conveying movement lasting over the time interval T.sub.S a backward movement is provided at the beginning of a succeeding time interval T.sub.R. In the resulting position of the dosing member the same is again driven to perform an oscillating rotary movement during the time interval T.sub.R and then remains at rest for the rest of the time interval (T.sub.WT.sub.R) between two dosing cycles. Due to the shaking and/or vibratory movement in the period T.sub.R after the end of a dosing cycle, the bulk material present at or in the dosing member initially is moved away from the dumping edge and subsequently shaken, in order to in particular achieve an increase of the bulk material or packing density. At the start of a succeeding dosing cycle, the previously covered angle of rotation initially is bridged by the dosing member. This can be accomplished by a uniform rotary movement or by a rotary movement which already is superimposed with a shaking and/or vibratory movement.

    [0082] As is shown with reference to the attached Figures, it is in particular possible in a method according to the invention to apply a shaking and/or vibratory movement onto a rotating dosing member, such as for example a dosing roller 11, dosing screw or dosing disk, for dosing bulk material particles 2 by targeted changes in direction and/or speed, in order to achieve a more uniform mass output. It can also be provided here to have the dosing member perform a backward movement, in order to move bulk material particles into a region without dumping risk as a result of the shaking and/or vibratory movement, when the actual dosing cycle has already been terminated or has not started yet. In addition, a series connection of various shaking and dosing movements (uniform and/or oscillating) also is possible.

    [0083] According to a second aspect of the invention the dosing roller 11 also can be operated alternatively or in addition to the above-described shaking and/or vibratory movements such that for conveying bulk material particles 2 to the bulk material discharge 105 in a first direction of rotation D+ rotating is effected with a first rotational speed and before the beginning and/or after the end of a conveying movement the dosing roller 11 performs a backward movement by rotating in the opposite second direction of rotation D with a second rotational speed larger than the first rotational speed.

    [0084] In that the dosing roller 11 is turned back with relatively high speed by an angle of rotation .sub.2, the dosing roller 11 so to speak slips through below the bulk particles 2 provided at the bulk material supply 101. When the dosing roller 11 subsequently again is turned forwards, i.e. in direction of rotation D+ and in direction of the bulk material discharge 105, with a slower rotational speed by the same or a smaller angle of rotation .sub.1, bulk material particles 102 again are transported via the dosing roller 11. The material quantity to be dosed can be controlled via the number of strokes per time unit, the rotational speeds of the dosing roller 11 and the angle of rotation .sub.1.

    [0085] In one variant only a fraction, e.g. about , of the dosing roller 11 is utilized for the transport of the bulk material particles 2. The part not utilized for the transport for example can be provided with a drain channel through which bulk material can be drained in a simple and also automated way.

    [0086] In FIGS. 7A and 7B an exemplary embodiment with such drain channel 113 is illustrated. The dosing roller 11 here includes a drain channel 113 extending radially to the axis of rotation. During a normal dosing operation no bulk material gets into the drain channel 113, as its opening at the dosing roller 11 is bordered by two radially protruding edge portions 114a, 114b of the dosing roller 11, by which the gap between the shell surface of the dosing roller 11 and the inner surface 100 of the housing 10 is reduced to such an extent that no bulk particle 2 can get into the same. Via a protruding edge portion 114b located in direction of rotation D, the inflow of bulk particles 2 from the bulk material supply 101 in direction of the bulk material discharge 105 is controlled during a dosing operation. The bulk material discharge 105 thereby can be closed and selectively be cleared steplessly or gradually, so that the desired quantity of bulk material particles 2 flows along the shell surface of the dosing roller 11 into the bulk discharge 105. In the position of the dosing roller 11 as shown in FIG. 7A the edge portion 114b completely clears the bulk material discharge 105. At the same time, the edge portion 114a opposed in circumferential direction still is spaced from the bulk material supply 101, so that a maximum possible quantity of bulk particles 2 is dosed in.

    [0087] When the dosing roller 11 is in a drain position corresponding to FIG. 7B, the opening of the drain channel 113 is brought to congruence with the bulk supply 101. Bulk particles 2 thus can flow from the bulk material supply 101 into the drain channel 113 within the dosing roller 11. The bulk material particles 2 thus received within the dosing roller 11 only can be conveyed from the drain channel 113 to the bulk discharge 105 by rotation of the dosing roller 11 in the direction of rotation D+(anti-clockwise direction). The radially protruding edge portions 114a, 114b here prevent that additional bulk material particles 2 get from the bulk material supply 101 into the bulk material discharge 105.

    [0088] A dosing method according to the invention and a dosing device according to the invention in particular can be used in a micro injection molding method. There are usually employed very short plasticizing screws which have a substantially worse mixing effect than conventional plasticizing units. One particle (granule) more or less per dosing cycle possibly has large consequences here for the product quality, so that the distinctly more uniform mass output achievable by the present invention and the resulting reduction of fluctuations in concentration are particularly advantageous.

    LIST OF REFERENCE NUMERALS

    [0089] 1 dosing device [0090] 10 housing [0091] 100 inner surface of the housing [0092] 101 bulk material supply [0093] 102 rear inner surface of the bulk material supply [0094] 103 front inner surface of the bulk material supply [0095] 104 vertical edge [0096] 105 bulk material discharge [0097] 106 rear inner surface of the bulk material discharge [0098] 107 front inner surface of the bulk material discharge [0099] 108 upper dead center [0100] 109 lower dead center [0101] 11 dosing roller [0102] 110 shell surface of the dosing roller [0103] 111 bulk material channel [0104] 112 bulk material pockets [0105] 113 drain channel [0106] 114A, 114b edge portion [0107] 2 bulk material particles [0108] X horizontal axis [0109] Y vertical axis [0110] A bulk material inlet [0111] a, a1, a2 amplitude [0112] B bulk material outlet [0113] D direction of rotation of the dosing roller [0114] s distance/steps [0115] S1, S2, S3 desired angle/desired number of steps [0116] t time [0117] T.sub.L, T.sub.R, [0118] T.sub.S, T.sub.W time interval [0119] angle [0120] s, s1, [0121] s2, s3,