Separating screen conveyor
11253891 · 2022-02-22
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B07B1/155
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B07B1/15
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
Abstract
A separating screen conveyor for sorting a material into fractions having different distributions of a property of the particles or items. The conveyor screen has a row of shafts mutually spaced in a conveying direction, each shaft carrying a row of axially spaced discs for intermittently urging material on the sorting conveyor upward and in the conveying direction. The discs are releasably clamped to the shafts which have strips oriented in longitudinal direction of the shafts on circumferential surfaces of the shafts. The strips have toothed surfaces. Openings of the discs each have a recess closely fitting to the strips and teeth in engagement with the teeth of the toothed surfaces of the strips. The pitch of the teeth of the strips is smaller than the maximum widths of the discs in the longitudinal direction of the shaft.
Claims
1. A separating screen conveyor for sorting a material composed of large numbers of loose items or particles, into a first fraction having a first distribution of a property of the particles or items and a second fraction having a second distribution of said property of the particles or items, said first distribution being different from said second distribution; the conveyor screen comprising a row of shafts mutually spaced in a conveying direction, each of said shafts being rotatable about an axial center line thereof, extending transversely to said conveying direction, and carrying a row of radially projecting discs for intermittently urging material on the sorting conveyor upward and in the conveying direction, the discs of each of said rows being mutually spaced in longitudinal direction of the respective shaft; wherein the discs of at least one of said rows are releasably clamped to the respective one of said shafts extending through openings in said discs, for allowing readjustment of the mutual spacing of said discs in said longitudinal direction of said shaft when in released condition, said discs each having a maximum width in said longitudinal direction of said shaft; wherein the at least one shaft to which the discs of said at least one row are clamped has at least one strip oriented in said longitudinal direction of said shaft, projecting radially from a circumferential surface of the shaft and having a toothed surface, teeth of said toothed surface projecting transversely to the axial direction of the shaft and being arranged in a row with a pitch in said longitudinal direction of said shaft; said openings of the discs each have at least one recess closely fitting to the at least one strip, respectively, and having at least one surface having at least one tooth in engagement with the teeth of said toothed surface of said strip; and said pitch of said teeth of said strip is smaller than said maximum width of each of said discs in said longitudinal direction of said shaft.
2. A separating screen conveyor according to claim 1, wherein said teeth of said strip are located on a surface facing away from said shaft, said teeth each having a top further away from the axial center line of the shaft than a base of the respective tooth.
3. A separating screen conveyor according to claim 1, wherein said at least one shaft is rotatable in a transport sense of rotation with upwardly facing surface sections of said shaft moving in the conveying direction and said teeth of said strip are located on a surface facing in a direction opposite to said sense of rotation.
4. A separating screen conveyor according to claim 1, wherein said at least one shaft is rotatable in a transport sense of rotation with upwardly facing surface sections of said shaft moving in the conveying direction and wherein at least a transition between a side of said strip leading in said transport sense of rotation and a side of said strip facing away from said shaft is beveled or rounded.
5. A separating screen conveyor according to claim 4, wherein said side of said strip leading in said transport sense of rotation is beveled or rounded over at least an outer 50% of its radial size.
6. A separating screen conveyor according to claim 1, wherein said discs comprise disc parts that are urged towards each other by clamping members, said clamping members operating in directions parallel to the direction in which said teeth of said strip project.
7. A separating screen conveyor according to claim 1, wherein at least said teeth of said strip or said at least one tooth of each of said discs has flanks converging towards a furthest projecting top end of the tooth.
8. A separating screen conveyor according to claim 1, wherein each of said discs has a plurality of said tooth with a pitch in said longitudinal direction of said shaft equal to or a whole multiple of said pitch in said longitudinal direction of said shaft of said row of teeth of said strip.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(9) In
(10) The conveyor screens 1, 2 are each provided with a row of rotatable, driven shaft assemblies 7 (see also
(11) In this example, the conveyors 1, 2 are further each provided with a motor-transmission unit 12 (
(12) In operation, material to be separated is fed along the feeding conveyor 3. From there, the material is deposited onto the upstream separating conveyor 1. The upstream separating conveyor 1 transports the material in conveying direction 8 through rotation of the discs 9 in conveying direction 8. Since the discs include radially projecting portions 11, the material on the conveyor 1 is simultaneously intermittently urged upwards and thereby agitated, which increases the likelihood that items sufficiently small and/or flexible to pass through open spaces in the conveyor 1 will eventually drop through the conveyor 1. Material that has not dropped through the conveyor 1 and reaches the downstream end of the conveyor 1 is dropped onto the downstream separating conveyor 2, where the same separating treatment is repeated, optionally at a different separation setting, so that a further fraction of the material, with different properties than the fraction that is first separated, is separated.
(13) Material that has dropped through the conveyors 1, 2 is carried off along discharge conveyors 4, 5. Material that has also passed the downstream conveyor 2 without dropping through is dropped onto a third discharge conveyor 6 and carried off to another location. The mutual spacing of the discs 9 of each shaft assembly 7 in the longitudinal direction of that shaft assembly 7 is adjustable.
(14) In this example, each of the separating conveyors 1, 2 is constituted by an upstream section 29 and a downstream section 30. The mutual spacings between the shafts 17 in the upstream sections 29 and between the shafts 17 in the downstream sections 30 are independently adjustable. The upstream and downstream sections 29, 30 of each of the separating conveyors 1, 2 are driven by separate chains 14, so the circumferential velocities of the shaft assemblies 7 in the upstream and downstream sections are controllable independently of each other.
(15) In
(16) The discs 9; 59; 109; 159 of the separating conveyors shown can be manufactured particularly efficiently, because the disc body is formed by two mutually identical parts 25; 75; 125; 175. The parts 25; 75; 125; 175 are releasably clamped around the one of the shafts 17 carrying that disc 9; 59; 109; 159 by bolts 26 engaging nuts 27 in the opposite parts. The disc body can also be advantageously formed by more than two identical parts clamped around the shaft.
(17) The discs 9; 59; 109; 159 have radial projections 11; 61; 111; 161 projecting further outward than radially recessed portions 28; 78; 128; 178 between the projections 11; 61; 111; 161. However, depending on the requirements and properties of the materials to be separated, other shapes may be more advantageous. The discs 9; 109; 159 are preferably made of elastomeric and/or polymeric material. However, as is illustrated in the example shown in
(18) Further details are first described with reference to the first example shown in
(19) Because the teeth 40 of the toothed surface 39 of the strip 36 and the teeth 41 of the disc 9 are in engagement and the pitch p of the teeth 40 of the strip 36 is smaller than the maximum width w of the individual discs 9 in the longitudinal direction of the shaft 17, a fine adjustment of the axial position of the discs 9 is allowed, but also distinct predetermined mounting positions are provided, which facilitates mounting the discs 9 accurately with mutually identical axial spacings between all neighboring discs 9 on the shaft 17. The toothed surface 39 provided on a strip 36 projecting radially from the shaft 17 can be manufactured in an efficient way, because no shaping process has to be performed on the shaft 17 as a whole.
(20) For a particularly fine adjustability, the pitch p of the teeth 40 of the strip 36 can be at least two times and more preferably at least five or at least eight times smaller than the maximum width w of each of the discs 9 in the longitudinal direction of the shaft 17. However, for allowing positioning neighboring discs 9 at mutually identical distances quickly and easily, it is preferred that the pitch p of the teeth 40 of the strip 36 is not more than 20 times and more preferably not more than 12 times smaller than the maximum width w of each of the discs 9 in the longitudinal direction of the shaft 17.
(21) In particular if, as in the present example, two (or more) strips 36 are provided in positions evenly distributed around the circumference of the shaft 17, the predetermined positions defined by the interengaging teeth 40, 41 are also helpful for quickly mounting the discs 9 in orientations exactly perpendicularly to the shaft 17. It is however also possible to provide a shaft of which the positions of the strips with a toothed surface are not evenly distributed about the circumference or to provide a shaft with just one strip with a toothed surface.
(22) The teeth 40 of the strips 36 are located on a surface facing away from the shaft 17 and the teeth 40 each have a top further away from the axial center line of the shaft 17 than a base of the respective tooth 40. Thus, a clamping force clamping the discs 9 to the shaft 17 also clamps the teeth 40 of the strip 36 and the tooth or teeth 41 of the discs 9, which are then mounted on a surface facing the shaft 17, against each other. Moreover, such strips 36 can be manufactured at low costs and mounted easily.
(23) For particularly tight engagement of the teeth 40 of the strip 36 and the teeth 41 of the discs 9, the disc parts 25 are preferably urged towards each other by the clamping members 26, 27 in directions parallel to the direction in which the teeth 40 of the strip 36 project.
(24) For accurate positioning of the discs 9 it is further advantageous if at least the teeth 40 of the strip or the teeth 41 of the discs 9 have flanks converging towards a furthest projecting top end of the respective tooth. The teeth then each center between two opposite teeth.
(25) The discs may each have one tooth only, but for durability it is preferred that each of the discs 9 has a plurality of the teeth with a pitch p′ in the longitudinal direction of the shaft 17 equal to or a whole multiple of the pitch p in the longitudinal direction of the shaft 17 of the row of teeth 40 of the strip 36.
(26) In the example shown in
(27) For effectively counteracting winding-up of materials, the side of the strip 136 leading in the transport sense of rotation 42 is preferably rounded over at least an outer 50%, and more preferably at least an outer 70%, of its radial size.
(28) As is illustrated by
(29) In this example, the teeth 191 of the strip 186 are located on a surface facing in a direction opposite to the sense of rotation 42 and the teeth 190 of the disc 159 are located on a surface facing in the direction of the sense of rotation 42. Thus, clinging of materials to the teeth 190 of the strip 186 is avoided and the risk of damaging the teeth 191 by hitting materials being sorted is reduced. Such an arrangement is particularly useful when the material being sorted includes particularly hard and/or abrasive particles.
(30) Several features have been described as part of the same or separate embodiments. However, it will be appreciated that the scope of the invention also includes embodiments having combinations of all or some of these features other than the specific combinations of features embodied in the examples.