Rotating Suction Chamber Apparatus
20170008033 ยท 2017-01-12
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B07B4/025
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B07B11/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
Abstract
A rotating suction chamber apparatus for sorting a mixture of materials comprises a cylindrical drum with its upper end is at a higher elevation than its lower end. An upper housing connected to the upper end has a material intake for receiving the mixture of materials for introduction to the upper end. The mixture of materials includes a light fraction and a heavy fraction, and the upper housing has an outlet for the light fraction. A suction hood connected to the light fraction outlet includes a light separator shaft with a substantially vertical portion, and an air blower is adapted to create an airflow from the lower end, to the upper end, through the light fraction outlet and through the suction hood. A rotator rotates the drum about its longitudinal axis so that the heavy fraction is moved through the drum and falls out of the lower end.
Claims
1-9. (canceled)
10. A rotating suction chamber apparatus for sorting a mixture of materials, wherein the mixture of materials comprises a light fraction and a heavy fraction, the apparatus comprising: a cylindrical drum having an upper end and a lower end, wherein the upper end is at a higher elevation than the lower end; an upper housing connected to the upper end, the upper housing having a material intake for receiving the mixture of materials for introduction to the upper end, wherein the upper housing comprises an outlet for the light fraction; a suction hood connected to the light fraction outlet at an elevation higher than the upper end, the suction hood further comprising a light separator shaft with a substantially vertical portion; an air blower adapted to create an airflow from the lower end, to the upper end, through the light fraction outlet and through the suction hood; the suction hood is constructed such that the airflow lifts the light fraction away from the upper end through the substantially vertical portion; a rotator constructed to rotate the drum about its longitudinal axis, whereby the heavy fraction is moved through the drum and falls out of the lower end; a separator to separate the light fraction from the airflow, the separator having an intake and an exhaust; an air recirculation shaft connected to the lower end; and wherein the light separator shaft is connected to the separator intake and the air recirculation shaft is connected to the separator exhaust, thereby allowing the airflow to circulate in a closed loop.
11. (canceled)
12. The rotating suction chamber apparatus of claim 1, further comprising a light fraction receptacle disposed beneath the separator.
13. The rotating suction chamber apparatus of claim 12, further comprising a gate valve disposed at the light fraction receptacle.
14. The rotating suction chamber apparatus of claim 10, wherein the upper housing further comprises a gate valve.
15. The rotating suction chamber apparatus of claim 10, further comprising a gate valve disposed at the lower end of the drum.
16. The rotating suction chamber apparatus of claim 10, the drum further comprising an inner wall having a plurality of flights for separating the light fraction from the heavy fraction as the drum is rotated.
17. The rotating suction chamber apparatus of claim 16, wherein the flights are helical.
18. The rotating suction chamber apparatus of claim 10, wherein the mixture of materials further includes a medium fraction and wherein the upper housing further comprises an outlet for removing the medium fraction.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0014] Various aspects of certain example embodiments can be better understood with reference to the following figures. The components shown in the figures are not necessarily to scale, emphasis instead being placed on clearly illustrating example aspects and features. In the figures, like reference numerals designate corresponding parts throughout the different views and embodiments. Certain components and details may be omitted from the figures to improve clarity.
[0015]
[0016]
[0017]
[0018]
[0019]
[0020]
[0021]
[0022]
[0023]
[0024]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EXAMPLE EMBODIMENTS
[0025] Following is a written description illustrating various aspects of non-limiting example embodiments. These examples are provided to enable a person of ordinary skill in the art to practice the full scope of the invention, including different examples, without having to engage in an undue amount of experimentation. As will be apparent to persons skilled in the art, further modifications and adaptations can be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention, which is limited only by the claims.
[0026] In the following description, numerous specific details are set forth in order to provide a thorough understanding. Particular example embodiments may be implemented without some or all of the disclosed features or specific details. Additionally, to improve clarity of the disclosure, some components well known to persons of skill in the art are not described in detail.
[0027] The reference numerals and numbers refer to the following structures or features of the present disclosure: [0028] 102 drum [0029] 106 unsorted material intake [0030] 108 light fraction outlet [0031] 110 gate valve [0032] 112 upper end of drum [0033] 114 lower end of drum [0034] 116 wheels [0035] 118 drum supporting structure [0036] 120 motor [0037] 122 heavy fraction outlet [0038] 124 upper housing [0039] 126 lower housing [0040] 202 flights [0041] 204 drum inner wall [0042] 502 conical separator [0043] 504 air recirculation shaft [0044] 506 light fraction receptacle [0045] 508 air blower [0046] 510 conical separator intake [0047] 512 conical separator exhaust [0048] 514 light separator shaft [0049] 516 suction hood [0050] 518 material feed [0051] 606 seal ring [0052] 608 medium fraction outlet [0053] 610 air lock [0054] 612 seal plate [0055] 614 air gate [0056] 616 last chance suction gate [0057] 618 light fraction [0058] 620 heavy fraction
[0059] Referring to
[0060]
[0061] Shown in
[0062]
[0063] The suction hood 516 pulls air from the drum 102 into the upper housing 124 as the air blower 508 circulates air into the lower housing 126. A last chance suction gate 616 and a seal plate 612 on the lower end 114 and a seal ring 606 at the upper end 112 help to channel the desired air circulation and aid in separation of materials. As air flows from the lower end 114 toward the upper end 112, the motor 120 drives the wheels 116 to rotate the drum 102 about its longitudinal axis. When the drum 102 rotates, the flights 202 continually raise the unsorted material and drop it into the air stream, breaking apart composites and unlayering layered items to separate the heavy fraction 620 from the light fraction 618. The heavy fraction 620 falls down the drum 102 from the upper end 112 to the lower end 114, encouraged by flights 202 which are helical in one embodiment, and drops out of the drum 102 at the heavy fraction outlet 122. The gate valve 110 at the lower end 114 functions to prevent material from blowing out and allows for recirculation of air.
[0064] Meanwhile, the light fraction 618 is sucked in the opposite direction by the airflow to rise through the light fraction outlet 108. The light fraction 618 is pulled through the suction hood 516 into the substantially vertical portion of the light separator shaft 514 and flowed to the conical separator 502, entering via the intake 510. An air lock 610 or similar device within the separator 502 removes the light fraction 618 from the airflow. The light fraction 618 drops into the light fraction receptacle 506 where it may be removed, The gate valve 110 in the light fraction receptacle 506 functions to prevent material from blowing out and allows for recirculation of air. The airflow continues out of the separator 502 via the exhaust 512 into the air recirculation shaft 504, and returns to the air blower 508.
[0065] A medium cut may also be achieved within the rotating suction chamber apparatus. The light fraction 618 is lifted out through the suction hood 516, while the heavy fraction 620 falls out the lower end 114 of the drum 102, as previously described. By adjusting the recirculation of air, a medium or mid fraction can be made to fall out of a medium fraction outlet 608 in the upper end 112. This allows larger items, and items not normally moved by suction, to be separated within the drum 102. If the three-cut rotary suction chamber apparatus was used on typical single stream fines, shredded paper and dust would move in the light fraction, glass would be the heavy fraction, and plastic bottle caps would be the mid fraction, for example. Additionally, this technique could be used on larger-sized items, such as a mixed waste stream including concrete, bricks, and other inert material; organics; and light fiber and plastics. The organics would then be the mid fraction while the light fiber and plastic sort with the light components and the concrete and inert material with the heavy components.
[0066] Further, moving air in a closed loop, with vertical airflow separation, has several advantages. First, this allows for capture and containment of fine particulate rather than blowing it into the atmosphere. This is important because solid waste particulate can contain bio-hazard (bio-aerosols) and other hazards such as glass dust. Second, using vertical airflow separation effectively separates the light fraction 618 that is moved into ducting and then removed from the airflow by normal means, such as a rotary air valve, cyclone, or air lock 610. Third, by re-circulating the air to the lower end 11.4 of the drum 102 as well as bleeding off a certain amount via an air gate 614, the movement of air into and out of the drum 102 can be precisely controlled. This allows the apparatus to achieve a medium cut or fraction separation, as the various outflows of air from the drum 102 can be designed such that only a certain amount of air goes into the ducting system, moving only ultra-light components and particulate. Fourth, using closed-loop vertical airflow separation, at the upper end 112 of the drum, allows the light fraction 618 to move at a much greater velocity. It remains airborne rather than migrating through the drum 102 as in prior devices. The primary constraint on the throughput of such a machine is how quickly it can remove the light, high volume fraction from the separation area. Thus, moving the liberated light fraction 618 quickly once it becomes liberated increases the throughput.
[0067] The invention has been described in connection with specific embodiments that illustrate examples of the invention but do not limit its scope. Various example systems have been shown and described having various aspects and elements. Unless indicated otherwise, any feature, aspect or element of any of these systems may be removed from, added to, combined with or modified by any other feature, aspect or element of any of the systems. As will be apparent to persons skilled in the art, modifications and adaptations to the above-described systems and methods can be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention, which is defined only by the following Moreover, the applicant expressly does not intend that the following claims and the embodiments in the specification to be strictly coextensive. Phillips v. AHW Corp., 415 F.3d 1303, 1323 (Fed. Cir. 2005) (en banc).