[0001] Centrifugal cleaners have been employed for many years in the paper industry for
removing small particles of higher specific gravity than paper fibers from slurries
of paper making fiber, especially waste paper stocks.
[0002] In centrifugal cleaners used for that purpose, in what is hereinafter referred to
as "conventional centrifugal cleaning technique," the discharge outlet at the apex
(tip) of the cylindrical-conical vessel is relatively small in comparison with the
inlet and accepts outlets, e.g. 1/8 inch in diameter as compared with 5/8 inch diameters
for the other two ports in a conventional cleaner 3 inches in diameter. In such conventional
cleaning operations, therefore, the reject discharge through the apex outlet is correspondingly
small in comparison with the accepts flow, e.g. 3% and 97% by volume respectively.
[0003] In comparatively recent years, there has been an increasing use of centrifugal cleaners
to separate good paper fibers from contaminants of closely similar or lower specific
gravity such that they cannot be readily separated by conventional centrifugal cleaning
technique.
[0004] In general, cleaners for such "reverse" centrifugal cleaning have been made by modifying
the construction and/or operation of a conventional cleaner to provide operating conditions
which cause the good fiber to be discharged through the apex outlet as the accepts
flow while the lights are discharged as reject through the base (top) outlet which
is the accepts outlet in conventional centrifugal cleaning. For an extended discussion
of prior and up dated reverse centrifugal cleaning developments, reference is made
to Seifert et al. U.S. Patent No. 4,155,839 wherein the present inventor was a joint
patentee.
[0005] A primary object of this invention is to provide an improved centrifugal cleaner
particularly adapted for reverse centrifugal cleaning wherein both of the discharge
ports, for the two fractions into which the cleaner separates the feed flow, are located
adjacent the apex end of the cleaner, so that there is no reversal of flow within
the cleaner as in past practice for both conventional and reverse cleaning.
[0006] More specifically, in a reverse centrifugal cleaner in accordance with the invention,
the apex outlet, which heretofore has been used as the outlet for the "heavy" fraction,
whether it be reject in conventional cleaning or accepts in reverse cleaning, becomes
the outlet for the light fraction which constitutes rejects in reverse centrifugal
cleaning. The cleaner of the invention is provided with a second discharge outlet
in its side wall, and preferably at the downstream end of the conical portion of the
interior of the cleaner, which is then the discharge outlet for the heavy fraction
constituting the accepts flow in reverse centrifugal cleaning.
[0007] Thus in the practice of the invention, there is a through flow of the feed stock
from the base end to the apex end of the cleaner, with no reverse flow through the
central part of the cleaner as in both conventional and reverse cleaning as heretofore
practiced. This feature is of particular value in the application of the invention
to cyclone assemblies or "canister" cleaners wherein multiple individual centrifugal
cleaners are assembled in parallel relation within a common canister whose interior
is divided into feed, accepts and reject chambers which connect respectively with
the inlet and discharge ports of all of the individual cleaners.
[0008] A special feature of the invention resides in the construction and assembly of the
outlet for the light fraction, which comprises a tube releasably locked into position
within the cleaner in such manner that in the event of blockage of the outlet for
the heavy fraction from the cleaner body, this tube can be temporarily retracted to
effect relief of the blockage.
[0009]
Fig. 1 is a view in axial section of a reverse cleaning unit in accordance with the
invention;
Fig. 2 is a fragmentary view similar to Fig. 1 and showing a modified inlet port arrangement;
Fig. 3 is a fragmentary view illustrating the application of the invention to a canister-type
cyclone assembly;
Fig. 4 is a view similar to Fig. 1 showing a reverse cleaning unit incorporating a
modified discharge tube arrangement for the light fraction; and
Fig. 5 is a fragmentary exploded isometric view illustrative details of the mechanism
for releasably locking discharge tube of the cleaner in Fig. 4 in operative position.
[0010] A typical reverse centrifugal cleaner indicated generally at 10 is shown in Fig.
1 as housed in a casing 11 which has its interior divided by partitions 12 and 13
into a supply or feed chamber 15 at one end of the casing 11, a reject chamber 16
at the other end of the casing, and an accepts chamber 17 located intermediate the
chambers 15 and 16, each of these chambers being provided with its own port 20, 21
and 22, respectively.
[0011] The cleaner 10 comprises a main tubular vessel 25 the interior of which is cylindrical
over a portion of its length and frusto-conical throughout its remaining portion.
A housing 26 is threaded on the smaller end of the vessel 25, and a tubular tip piece
27 is secured within the housing 26 by a retainer nut 28 as shown. The cylindrical
bore 29 within the tip piece 27 forms a continuation of the interior of housing 25
which leads to the discharge port 30.
[0012] The housing 26 has one or more radially or tangentially arranged ports 31 therethrough
which provide a total flow area larger than that of the port 30 leading into the interior
of the reject chamber 16. The lower end of the housing 26 is closed by a threaded
cap 33 which extends through an opening in the end wall 34 of the casing 11 and clamps
the casing wall against the end of housing 26 to the casing wall. The base end of
the vessel 25 is provided with a closure plug 35 which is threaded into the end of
the vessel 25 and also clamps the partition 13 between itself and the vessel 25.
[0013] A helical groove 40 on the outer surface of the plug 35 forms the inlet port to the
interior of the cleaner vessel 25, the spiral configuration of this groove assuring
that stock to be cleaned will be delivered from the interior of the feed chamber 15
to the interior of the vessel 25 with a substantial circumferential flow component.
The plug 35 is otherwise solid, but it includes a cylindrical extension 41 on its
inner end which acts in part as a vortex finder but more particularly as a stabilizer
for the air core which forms during operation of the cleaner. The groove 40 may be
duplicated around the periphery of plug 35 to increase the effective inlet port size
as needed.
[0014] In addition to the outlet port 30 at its apex, the cleaner.10 is provided with one
or more outlet ports 44 at the lower end of the frusto-conical portion of vessel 25.
The outlet ports 44 are preferably arranged tangentially of the vessel 25, in the
same direction as the circulatory movement of stock within the vessel, and these ports
lead into the chamber 17 within the casing 11. Preferably, the tip piece 27 includes
a cylindrical extension 45 which projects upstream therefrom into the interior of
the vessel 25 sufficiently far so that it at least radially overlies the outlet port
or ports 44 and thus serves as a baffle preventing direct flow therefrom to the interior
of tip piece 27 and the outlet port 30, and the upstream end of the extension 45 thus
effectively is the apex outlet port of the vessel 25.
[0015] The inlet construction shown in Fig. 1 has special advantages in that it assures
that all stock entering the cleaner will continue to flow with a substantial component
lengthwise of the cleaner, rather than having some heavy particles tend to orbit the
inlet end of the cleaner and thereby wear away its inner wall surface. The invention
can be practiced, however, with the alternative inlet construction shown in Fig. 2,
which is essentially the same as in the above noted patent No. 4,155,839.
[0016] It includes a plug 35' which differs from plug 35 only in having no groove 40 in
its outer surface. Instead, an inlet port 40' of rectangular shape leads tangentially
through the wall of vessel 25 as shown in patent No. 4,155,839. The position of the
partition 12 with relation to the vessel 25' therefore has to be shifted so that the
port 40' will be open to the feed chamber 15, and the partition 13 is therefore clamped
between a shoulder 46 on the vessel 25' and a nut 47 threaded on the vessel 25' in
opposed relation with the shoulder 46.
[0017] In the use of a cleaner of the construction described in connection with Figs. 1
and 2, the slurry to be cleaned is delivered to the supply chamber 15 at the appropriate
pressure to cause it to enter the inlet port 40 or 40' at the desired flow rate and
velocity as described in patent No. 4,155,839, to develop within the vessel 25 centrifugal
force conditions causing vortical separation of the slurry into an outer fraction
containing the large majority of the paper fibers, an inner fraction containing the
large majority of light contaminant particles, and commonly also an innermost air
core.
[0018] The outer fraction will travel down the frusto-conical portion of the interior of
vessel 25 until it reaches the discharge port or ports 44, and it will exit through
those ports to the accepts discharge chamber 17 and its outlet port 22. The inner
fraction will enter the upstream end of the extension 45 and travel therethrough and
through the interior of the tip piece 27 and the outlet port 30 to the reject discharge
chamber 16 and its port 21.
[0019] Separation of the heavy and light fractions which form within the cleaner as they
discharge therefrom is readily controlled by regulating the respective discharge flows
from the chambers 16 and 17, by means such as valves 50 and 51 on the lines 52 and
53 leading from the ports 21 and 22. Determination of the proper flow splits from
the two discharge chambers will usually involve some experimentation, depending upon
the nature of the feed stock, the feed flow rate and the feed pressure, and satisfactory
results have been obtained under test conditions with this split varied from approximately
equal flows from both discharge chambers to approximately 90% from the accepts chamber
17 and 10% from the reject chamber 16.
[0020] As a more specific example of the practice of the invention, test runs were made
with a cleaner constructed as shown in Fig. 2 wherein the inlet port 44' had a flow
area of 0.625 sq. in., the minimum flow area of the apex outlet port was 0.785 sq.
in., and there were two outlet ports 40 each of a flow area of approximately 0.25
sq. in. In a test run wherein the feed flow rate was 50 gallons/minute at 30 p.s.i.g.,
satisfactory results were obtained with flows from the discharge chambers 16 and 17
of approximately 26 and 24 gallons/minute. Better results were obtained with a feed
flow rate of 68 g.p.m. at a feed pressure of 40 p.s.i.g., and with the flows from
the discharge chamber 16 and 17 at the rate of 54.5 and 13.5 g.p.m. respectively.
[0021] The invention has also been tested with a cleaner constructed as shown in Fig. 1
wherein the inlet port flow area was 0.625 sq. in., the minimum flow area of the apex
port was 0.306 sq. in., and the accepts port 40 was rectangular, similarly to the
inlet port 40' in Fig. 2, with dimensions of 1.5 inches x 3/8 in. and a flow area
of 0.47 sq. in. Highly satisfactory results were obtained with a feed flow at 80 gallons/minute
and a pressure of 45 p.s.i.g. with the flow from the chambers 16 and 17 at the rates
of 8.5 and 71.9 gallons/minute.
[0022] As pointed out hereinabove, the invention is especially applicable to cleaner assemblies
of the canister type, as illustrated in Fig. 3, wherein the canister 60 has internal
walls 61 and 62 dividing its interior into a central chamber 63 and opposite end chambers
64 and 65. Multiple cleaners 10 of the construction described in connection with Fig.
1 are shown as mounted within the canister 60, with the interior walls 61 and 62 and
end wall 66 providing the same mounting and partitioning functions as the partitions
12 and 13 and end wall 34 in Fig. 1.
[0023] The operation of a canister cleaner assembly of the invention as shown in Fig. 3
is the same as already described in connection with Fig. 1. The chamber 64 serves
as the feed chamber and is provided with an appropriately located port for receiving
the inlet flow of feed stock, and the chambers 63 and 65 become the reject and accept
chambers as described in connection with the chambers 16 and 17 in Fig. 1. It should
also be noted that the canister cleaner of Fig. 3 can in effect can be made double-ended
by doubling the length of the canister, installing a second set of partition walls
and cleaners opposite the set shown in Fig. 3, and then using chamber 64 as the feed
chamber for both sets of cleaners.
[0024] The modified cleaner 100 in accordance with the invention shown in Fig. 4 is mounted
in a canister casing 110 provided with an end head 111 and having its interior divided
by a partition 113 into a supply or feed chamber 115 and an accepts (heavies) chamber
117. Each of these chambers is provided with its own port 120 and 121 respectively,
but each cleaner 100 has its own outlet port for reject (lights) from the casing 110
provided by a tube 123 as described in more detail hereinafter.
[0025] The cleaner 100 comprises a main tubular vessel 125 of essentially the same construction
as the vessel 25 except that it is extended somewhat longer at its apex end, and it
has no outlet port in its side wall. The tip housing 126 is threaded on the smaller
end of the vessel 125 in clamping relation with the partition 113, and it also serves
as a mounting for the tube 123, the bore 130 of which forms the discharge port for
lights from the cleaner. A guide member 131 within the housing 126 has an axial bore
132 sized to receive the tube 123 freely therein. The outer portion of the tube 123
passes through a center bore in the threaded cap 133 which clamps the end of the housing
126 to the end head 111 of the casing 110.
[0026] The bore 132 of the part 131 is provided with a circumferential groove for receiving
an O-ring 135 sized to form a seal between the bore 132 and the tube 123. In addition,
releasable locking means are provided between the tube 123 and the part 131, namely
bayonet locking means comprising radial projections 136 on the tube 123 which are
sized to cooperate in locking relation with the slotted and grooved portions at the
outer end of the part 131. As shown, when the tube 123 is inserted in the part 131
with its projections 136 aligned with the slots 137 in the end of part 131, the projections
136 will seat on the bottoms of those slots, and then a quarter-turn of the tube will
effect locking engagement of the projections 136 in the grooves 138.
[0027] The feed inlet port to the interior of the vessel 125 is provided by one or more
tangential slots 140 of rectangular shape in the wall of the vessel adjacent its base
end, which is closed by a threaded plug 142. An extension 141 on the plug 142 acts
both as a vortex finder and as a stabilizer for the air core which forms during operation
of the cleaner, and it may be solid as shown or of the hollow cylindrical form shown
in Figs. 1 and 3.
[0028] The locking projections 136 on the tube 123 are in predetermined spaced relation
with the inner end of the tube so that when they are locked in the grooves 138, the
inner end of the tube is located at or within the apex end of the vessel 125 so that
it defines an annular discharge port 144 from the interior of the vessel 125 into
the annular chamber 145 surrounding the tube 123 on the upstream side of the part
131. A plurality of ports 146 in the wall of the housing 126 lead from this chamber
145 into the accepts chamber 117 and then to the port 121.
[0029] The operation of the cleaner assembly shown in Fig. 4 is essentially the same as
described in connection with Fig. 1, with the centrifugal force conditions developed
within the vessel 125 causing vortical separation of the feed slurry into an outer
fraction which is discharged through the annular port 144 and an inner fraction which
is discharged through the tube 123. The major advantage provided by this cleaner is
that in the event of plugging of the annular port 44 by solid material, virtually
immediate relief of the blocking can be effected by manually retracting the tube 123
from outside the casing 110 for a long enough interval for the flow to clear the apex
end of the vessel 125, and then returning the tube 123 to its operating position established
by the locked relation of the parts 136-138.
[0030] In order to take advantage of this feature of the invention, when multiple cleaners
100 are incorporated in a single canister casing 110, all of the tubes 123 project
to the outside of the canister, and each is provided with its own flexible tubing
150 for conducting the reject flow therefrom to a common collection receiver. In order
to facilitate the use of the tubes 123 for relieving blockage, each tube has its tubing
150 secured thereto by a clamp 151 which also acts as a handle by which the associated
tube 123 can be twisted to unlocked position, temporarily retracted, and then returned
and locked in its operative position.
[0031] In a typical example of the cleaner shown in Figs. 4-5 wherein the inner diameter
of the cylindrical portion of the vessel 125 is three inches, the inner diameter of
the apex end of the vessel is 1.14 inches, there are four ports 146 one inch in diameter,
the tube 123 has an outer diameter of 0.625 inch and an inner diameter of 0.500 inch,
and it is preferably beveled at its upstream end to minimize turbulence in the flow
therepast. In addition, the space between the inner end of the cap 133 and the downstream
end of the member 131 provides for at least one inch of axial movement of the tube
123 to assure complete opening of the apex end of the vessel 125 when the tube is
retracted.
[0032] While the process and forms of apparatus herein described constitute preferred embodiments
of this invention, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited to this
precise process and these forms of apparatus, and that changes may be made therein
without departing from the scope of the invention.
1. A system for separating paper making fibers from light contaminants of similar
and lower specific gravities, characterised by:
(a) means for forming a pumpable aqueous slurry wherein the solid constituents consist
essentially of paper fibers and one or more light contaminants such as wax and plastic
fragments similar in size to and not sufficiently greater in specific gravity than
wet paper fibers for separation by conventional centrifugal cleaning technique,
(b) an internally conical vessel (125) having an inlet port (140) adjacent the base
end thereof and the apex end thereof being open,
(c) housing means (126, 131) defining a chamber (145) surrounding said open apex end
of said vessel,
(d) a first outlet port (146) from said chamber (145) through the wall of said housing
means (126, 131),
(e) an outlet tube (123) supported in said housing means (126, 131) with the inner
end thereof positioned in said open end of said vessel (125) and defining therewith
an annular second outlet port leading from the interior of said vessel (125) to said
chamber (145),
(f) means for supplying said slurry to said vessel (125) through said inlet port (140)
at a sufficiently high flow rate circumferentially of said vessel and under sufficient
pressure to develop in said vessel centrifugal force conditions causing vortical separation
of said slurry within said vessel into an outer fraction containing the large majority
of the paper fibers and an inner fraction containing the large majority of said light
contaminant materials, and
(g) means (50, 51) for controlling the discharge flows from both of said outlet ports
to cause said outer fraction to discharge through said annular second outlet port
into said chamber (145) and said second fraction to discharge through said tube (123).
2. The system defined in claim 1, further comprising means (136, 137, 138) releasably
securing said tube (123) to said housing means (126, 131) to provide for release and
temporary retraction of said tube for the relief of a blockage of said annular second
outlet port.
3. The system defined in claim 2, wherein said releasable securing means (136, 137,
138) maintain the inner end of said tube (123) in substantially the same radial plane
with the apex end of said vessel (125).
4. A centrifugal cleaner particularly adapted for separating paper making fibers from
light contaminants of similar and lower specific gravities, characterised by:
(a) an internally conical vessel (125) having an inlet port (140) adjacent the base
end thereof and the apex end thereof being open,
(b) housing means (126, 131) defining a chamber (145) surrounding said open apex end
of said vessel,
(c) a first outlet port (146) in the wall of said housing means (126, 131) from said
chamber (145), and
(d) an outlet tube (123) supported in said housing means (126, 131) with the inner
end thereof positioned in said open end of said vessel (125) and defining therewith
an annular second outlet port leading from the interior of said vessel (125) to said
chamber (145).
5. A centrifugal cleaner as defined in claim 4, further comprising means (136, 137,
138) releasably securing said tube (123) to said housing means (126, 131) to provide
for release and temporary retraction of said tube for the relief of a blockage of
said annular second outlet port.
6. A multiple centrifugal cleaner assembly for separating paper making fibers from
light contaminants, characterised by:
(a) an enclosed container (60),
(b) wall means (61, 62) within said container dividing the interior thereof into a
pair of opposite end chambers (64, 65),
(c) a plurality of centrifugal cleaners (110) located within said container,
(d) each of said cleaners including a cylindrical-conical vessel (125) having an inlet
port (140) adjacent the base thereof and the apex end thereof being open,
(e) means supporting said cleaners (110) within said container (60) with said inlet
ports (140) thereof in one of said chambers (64) and the apex ends thereof in the
other of said chambers (65),
(f) said one chamber (64) having an inlet port for receiving an aqueous slurry of
paper fibers and light contaminants for delivery to said inlet ports (140) of said
cleaners,
(g) said other chamber (65) having a discharge port,
(h) housing means (126, 131) within said other chamber (65) associated with each said
vessel and defining a chamber (145) surrounding said open apex end of said vessel
(125),
(i) a first outlet port (146) in the wall of each said housing means (126, 131) leading
from said chamber (145) thereinto said other chamber (65) in said container (60),
(j) an outlet tube (123) supported in each said housing means (126, 131) with the
inner end thereof positioned in said open end of the associated said vessel and defining
therewith an annular second outlet port leading from the interior of said vessel (125)
to said chamber (145) within said housing means, and
(k) the other end of said tube (123) extending to the outside of said container (60).
7. A cleaner assembly as defined in claim 6, wherein each of said cleaners (110) includes
means (136, 137, 138) releasably securing each of said tubes (123) to the related
said housing means (126, 131) to provide for release and temporary retraction of said
tube for the relief of a blockage of the related said annular second outlet port,
and further comprising handle means (151) on each of said tubes outside said container
(60) for effecting such release and retraction of each said tube.