[0001] The invention relates to a method for mixing two or more materials in granular form,
in powder form or liquid, with a viscosity which is or which is not high, in a continuous
process in a mixing housing, so that a mixture with a homogenous distribution arises,
whereby those materials are introduced into the mixing housing, are mixed therein
with the aid of a rudder rotating around an axis, and the mixture is finally expelled
from the mixing housing.
[0002] Such homogenous mixtures serve, for example, as basic materials for extruding and
injection moulding of plastics. The homogeneity of such materials is especially important
in cases in which one of the composite materials is a colouring material and a homogenous
coloration of the mixture must be achieved.
[0003] There are various methods and appertaining devices known in order to achieve the
said homogenous mixtures as well as possible. Those methods have in common that those
materials are mixed with the aid of a rotating mechanism in a mixing vessel which
is filled with the materials concerned, in which they are moved around in the mixing
housing in principally a single direction. With these methods it is usually not possible
to achieve the desired completely homogenous mixture. For example, mixtures of granulates
of a plastic and a colouring material will always show the colour in stripes. This
is not improved by continuing the mixing process for a longer period of time; on the
contrary: in that case a certain separation will even occur in due course as a result
of the differences in the densities of the various materials.
[0004] The aim of the invention is to nevertheless achieve the desired homogenous mixing,
and to do so in a reasonably short time.
[0005] The invention is based on the insight, that if it is possible to make a mixture of
materials, with which a mixing housing is filled, move quickly successively in different
directions, as a result of which a sort of zig-zag movement is achieved, instead of
having it rotate in one direction, the intended results are obtained. The method according
to the invention is characterized to that end in that the mixing process takes place
by moving the material several times in the mixing housing in relation to the rotational
axis of the mixing rotor, alternately towards and from the rotor axis, during one
rotation of the mixing rotor. This prevents the entire contents of the mixing housing
as a whole, or at least a large part thereof, from simply rotating along together
with the mixing rotor.
[0006] It appears, that especially if the change of direction of movement takes place with
a frequency of 25 or more per rotation of the mixing rotor, the desired effect is
achieved for a large assortment of materials of various grain sizes and viscosities.
[0007] As already stated: the advantages of the method become especially obvious if the
aim is to mix a colouring material - in the form of granulates, powders or of a very
viscous liquid - a paste - with a plastic in powder form or as a granulate.
[0008] When mixing certain components, especially if those components are powders, but also
when one or more powders must be mixed with one or more granulates, or granulates
must be mixed with one another, it is advantageous if the mixing process according
to the invention takes place successively in two mixing chambers situated behind one
another in the direction of the axis of the rotor, whereby the material is introduced
in the first mixing chamber, there undergoes a preliminary mixing, and flows from
there to the second mixing chamber where it is mixed further and from which it then
flows out of mixing housing.
[0009] The mixing process thus is this carried out in two 'steps'; the components are forced
to undergo both steps, in chambers which are more or less separated from each other,
as a result of which it is not possible that part of the material 'falls' through
the mixing housing unmixed or virtually unmixed by the mixing mechanism. As a result
of the fact that the inlet opening and the outlet opening are not located in one chamber,
the way between the two is blocked for the components.
[0010] The invention also includes a device for implementing the method according to the
invention in a principally circular-cylindrically shaped mixing housing with the inlet
and the outlet opening of the chamber in the cylinder wall and approximately diametrically
opposite one another, and with a mixing rotor in the mixing housing, which can rotate
around an axis which coincides with the cylinder axis.
[0011] Characteristic for that device is that for the material, present in the housing and
which is made to move by the rotor, fixed obstacles are present in the housing, that
the mixing rotor is equipped with mixing arms which extend principally in the direction
of the rotor axis and that those obstacles and the mixing arms are placed in such
a manner in respect of one another, that during rotation the material is moved several
times during one rotation in a principally radial direction, alternating towards and
from the rotor axis.
[0012] The material in the mixing housing is moved, as a result of the fact that it 'bumps'
against the obstacles, the mixing arms and the walls of the housing, in directions
which are more or less at right-angles to the 'route' between the inlet and the outlet
opening. A particular flow field for the material arises, whereby it is led alternatively
towards the rotor axis and from it; a more or less zig-zag movement.
[0013] The mixing rotor is preferably designed as a flat, disk-shaped part, mounted in a
detachable manner approximately in the middle of the mixing housing on a rotor axis,
which extends through a lid of the mixing housing into the chamber, is fixed therein
with bearings, is specially sealed and runs through to approximately half-way in the
mixing housing, whereby the disk-shaped part is equipped with one or more rings of
mixing arms, which extend on each side of the disk in directions, which are principally
perpendicular to the flat disk-shaped part and which have the shape of longitudinal
beams, and that the fixed obstacles are one or more rings of beam-shaped parts, which
are mounted by their end-surfaces against the insides of the one lid and the other
lid, respectively, of the mixing housing, arranged principally symmetrically around
the cylinder axis and extending in a direction, which is principally parallel to the
cylinder axis, up to a certain distance from the rotor disk - the inner stators -,
whereby the radius (radii) of the ring(s) varies (vary) from that (those) of the ring(s)
of the mixing arms, while those obstacles may possibly include beam-shaped parts -
the so-called outer stators - positioned in their longitudinal direction against the
inner wall of the cylinder wall, running principally parallel to the cylinder axis.
[0014] It is noted, that especially with a view to the material - and therefore also the
weight - saving, both the stators and the mixing arms are preferably designed as hollow
profiles.
[0015] The inner stators therefore reach from the lids of the housing to just in front of
the lower or upper surface, respectively, of the rotor disk; any outer stators which
are present run across the entire length of the housing. The mixing arms rotate when
in use freely from the obstacles, and between them; the rotor disk therefore turns,
seen in a radial direction, between the ring(s) of the inner stators. The outer stators
are a kind of thickenings on the inner side of the cylinder wall running in an axial
direction, against which they are fixed. It must be avoided that during rotation material
gets stuck in the corners between the outer stators and the cylinder wall. To that
end the connection between the outer stators and the cylinder wall must be smooth,
for example rounded-off, or in a preferred embodiment according to the invention:
they must form an obtuse angle, whereby in that case a beam is chosen as an outer
stator with a cross-section, perpendicular to the cylinder axis, which is preferably
an equilateral, right-angled triangle, of which the slanting side, with which it lies
against the cylinder wall, is curved outwards and follows the curve of the cylinder
wall.
[0016] The mixing arms on the rotor disk are, for example, mounted along the outer edge
of the disk, divided regularly across the circumference and possibly further also
in a circle situated more inwards on the rotor disk. The mixing arms are preferably
beams, with a perpendicular cross-section which is a rectangle or a square, and they
are preferably positioned on the disk in such a manner, that one of the diagonals
runs in the direction of the radius of the disk; one of the ribs is therefore, seen
in a radial direction, turned outwards.
[0017] Surprisingly good results are achieved with a device according to the invention,
of which the mixing arms which extend on either side of the rotor disk -or at least
several of them: those which belong to an inner ring - are located in a manner oblique
to the rotor axis, such that the longitudinal symmetrical axes of such mixing arms
on the one side of the rotor form an obtuse angle with those on the other side. Often
the mixing arms on either side of the rotor disk will belong to one another in pairs:
two arms running in each other's extensions. Seen in a radial direction they therefore
each form a side of a 'V' in the oblique position referred to here. The material is
pressed even more outwards, as it were, by the oblique position of the mixing arms.
[0018] A set-up of the mixing arms, whereby their longitudinal axes form an angle of approximately
120°, turns out in practise to produce very good results.
[0019] The inner stators are also preferably beams with a rectangular or square perpendicular
cross-section, located in such a manner on the front and back lid of the mixing housing
that one diagonal of the rectangle or the square is aimed according to the radius
of the cylinder.
[0020] A well-functioning representative embodiment of the device according to the invention
and in which both inner and outer stators are applied has a ring of four inner stators
located equally divided across a circle circumference and six mixing arms divided
equally across the circumference of the rotor disk on each side of the rotor disk.
It also has four outer stators which, seen from the inlet opening of the mixing housing,
are positioned along the inner wall of the cylinder wall, at places corresponding
with angles of 45°, 135°, 225° and 315° in respect of that inlet opening. The positions
of the outer stators in respect of those of the inner stators are always staggered
across an angle of 45° in respect of one another.
[0021] As has already been explained above in the explanation of the method according to
the invention, it is advantageous for mixing certain components if the mixing process
takes place in two steps, successively in two 'chambers'. In order to thus carry out
the mixing process the mixing device which is to be used to that end is characterized
in that the flat, disk-shaped part has a diameter which is only a little smaller than
the diameter of the mixing housing, so that it divides the housing into two housings,
of which the first contains the inlet opening and the second the outlet opening, and
in that the part is equipped with openings through which the material which is to
be mixed can flow into the second chamber from the first chamber.
[0022] In order to prevent the material from nevertheless 'falling' during the mixing process,
unmixed or hardly mixed by the mixing arms and/or the stators, from the inlet opening,
through the openings in the rotor disk and through the outlet opening again, the openings
in the rotor disk are preferably located around the heart of the rotor disk.
[0023] During the rotation the rotor disk therefore rotates within the housing only just
free from the housing wall, with only a slight chamber between them, so that it forms
a good dividing wall between the spaces. Naturally, the presence of inner stators
positioned against the inner wall of the housing is not suitable when the said rotor
disk with a large diameter is applied; if the disk rotates 'just' freely within the
housing then there will be no space or hardly any space available for those stators.
[0024] The invention is explained further on the basis of the drawing, in which
- fig. 1
- shows a cross-section of a device according to the invention, through the middle of
the mixing housing, perpendicular to the cylinder and rotor axes and with a rotor
disk with a diameter which is significantly smaller than that of the mixing housing.
- fig. 2
- shows a top view of such a device, opened-up in accordance with a cross-section through
the cylinder and rotor axes, perpendicular to the cross-section according to fig.
1;
- fig. 3
- shows a cross-section like that in fig. 1, but now with a rotor disk which acts as
a dividing wall between two mixing chambers and
- fig. 4
- shows a top view like that in fig. 2, but now of the device according to fig. 3.
[0025] The materials which are to be mixed are introduced through the inlet opening 1 into
the cylinder-shaped mixing housing 2, which is formed by a cylinder wall 3 and a front
and rear lid 4 and 5 (see fig. 2).
[0026] In the mixing housing 2 the rotor disk 6 is located, which is mounted on rotor axis
7, which protrudes through the rear lid 5 and which is driven by the motor 8.
[0027] The mixing arms 9, 12, 13 etc. are mounted on this rotor disk 6. These mixing arms
9, 12, 13 are generally hollow beam-shaped parts. On either side of the rotor disk
6 mixing arms extend up to a certain distance of the lids 4 and 5 of the housing 2.
In fig. 2 the mixing arms are applied in either side of the rotor 6 in such a manner,
that the two belong to one another: they run in each others' extensions and are formed
by one beam which runs through the rotor disk. As explained above this is a special
embodiment; they can also be mounted on either side staggered in respect of one another.
The mixing arms which are shown have an approximately square cross-section and are
positioned on the rotor disk 6 in such a manner, that one diagonal 10 of the cross-section
extends approximately in a radial direction. That means that, seen in a radial direction,
they have one rib 11 on the outside. In the example drawn in the figures 1 and 2 the
diameter of the rotor disk is smaller to some degree than that of the mixing housing
11 and the mixing arms have been positioned along the outer wall of the rotor.
[0028] Fig. 2 shows how, in a preferred embodiment, the mixing arms are located slanting
on the rotor disk. During rotation of the rotor disk those mixing arms 9, 12 and 13
force the material outwards, as shown with the arrows 14, 14A and 15, 15A. If, however,
sticky colouring materials and/or additives are used it is then advantageous to have
the rotor turn alternatively left and right in order to prevent the material becoming
stuck to the stators and the mixing arms. The mixing arms are then preferably placed
perpendicular to the rotor disk in order to avoid 'dead corners'.
[0029] In the mixing housing 2 four outer stators 16 and four inner stators 17 are drawn.
The outer stators 16 are mounted in the direction of the rotor axis 7 against the
cylindrical inner wall 3 of the housing 2. They form obtuse angles 18 with the wall
3 in order to thus avoid the fact that the material gets stuck in a corner during
the rotation of the material. They are attached regularly distributed across wall
3 and seen from the inlet opening 1 at places which correspond with arcs of the cylinder
circumference of 45°, 135°, 225° and 315°. As a result of the fact that there is sufficient
space between the rotor disk and the cylinder wall outer stators can be applied as
drawn.
[0030] The inner stators 17 (see fig.1; not drawn in fig.2) are attached to the front and
rear lids 4, 5 in rings along circles 19 with a radius, which is smaller than that
of the rotor disk 6, so that when the rotor disk 6 with the mixing arms 9, 12, 13
thereon rotates, the mixing arms and the inner stators do not touch each other and
operate at the desired distance from one another. Like the mixing arms, the inner
stators 17 have a square perpendicular cross-section and are mounted on the lids 4,
5 in such a manner, that one diagonal 20 is directed in a radial direction; those
inner stators are therefore also set-up with one longitudinal rib turned outwards.
[0031] Furthermore, they are positioned regularly across the circumference of the circle
19 such, that seen from the inlet opening 1, they are located at places corresponding
with 90°, 180°, 270° and 370° along the circle. That means that they are located 'between'
the outer stators 16.
[0032] In fig. 1, arrows 21, 21A etc. show how the material streams run when the rotor is
turning. It can be seen clearly that the movement is a zig-zag movement, alternating
towards the rotor axis 7 and then away from it.
[0033] In the figures 3 and 4 a device according to the invention is drawn which differs
from that according to the figures 1 and 2, as a result of the fact that is has two
mixing chambers 21 and 22.
[0034] The rotor disk 6 has a diameter which is only a little smaller than the inner diameter
of the mixing housing. At 23 and 24 it runs just freely during rotation from the housing
inner wall 3 and thus forms a dividing wall between the two chambers 21 and 22. In
the same manner as shown in the figures 1 and 2 the mixing arms 9, 12, 13 etc. are
located on either side of the rotor disk 6 and the inner stators 26, 27 etc. are located
on the lids 4 and 5. Besides the 'ring' of mixing arms 9, 12, 13 - and on the other
side of the rotor disk 6 the corresponding ring of mixing arms 26, 27 etc. - another
ring of mixing arms 28 and 29 - and on the other side of the rotor disk 6 the corresponding
ring of mixing arms 30 and 31 - is drawn on the rotor disk drawn in fig. 3 and fig
4. The latter rings are located, seen in a radial direction, within the ring of inner
stators 17.
[0035] In fig. 3, 25 shows the openings - three in number - in the rotor disk 6, through
which material can flow from chamber 21 to chamber 22 in order to undergo the mixing
process there once again.
[0036] Fig. 4 shows that, with the use of a device with two chambers and with connecting
openings 25 in the rotor disk 6, arranged around the heart of that rotor disk, it
is not possible for a component which is introduced into the chamber 21 through the
inlet opening 1 to leave the mixing housing again via the outlet opening 32 without
participating in the mixing process; there is no longer any 'direct connection' between
the two openings.
Example of a device according to the invention
[0037] Work was done with a mixing device according to the invention with four outer stators,
two groups of four inner stators and a rotor disk with a diameter which is significantly
smaller than that of the mixing housing and equipped with six mixing arms, which were
located at an angle of 30° on the rotor disk. The stators and the mixing arms had
square perpendicular cross-sections and were positioned mutually as shown in the figures
1 and 2.
[0038] The contents of the mixing housing amounted to 8 litres; the mixing housing had a
diameter of approximately 300 mm and a height (thickness) of approximately 120 mm,
measured internally.
[0039] The diameter of the rotor was approximately 200 mm and the thickness thereof was
5 mm; the length of the mixing arms amounted to approximately 50 mm.
[0040] The rotational speed amounted to 90 revolutions per minute. (Due to an undesired
large heat development in the mixture this speed will have to be lower for some mixtures.)
The change of direction of movement amounted in this device to: 48 times per rotation.
[0041] The materials which were to be mixed were: plastic granulates with a part diameter
of 3 to 7 mm, powders and pastes.
[0042] With the aid of a mixing process, usual until now, which means: via rotation in a
housing, it was not possible to achieve a homogenous mixture. With the aid of the
method according to the invention a fully homogenous mixture was acquired. With the
mixture which was acquired a good product was even obtained when using out-of-date
plastic injection machines and extruders, i.e. those which do not or which hardly
mix additionally.
[0043] A second example of a device according to the invention is a mixing device in which,
as shown in figures 3 and 4, with two rings of mixing arms on either side of the rotor
disk: an outer ring with six arms and an inner ring with three arms and with four
(inner) stators. When mixing PVC powder with a colouring material, also in powder
form, and when mixing granulates of both PVC and colouring material, very homogenous
mixtures are acquired.
1. Method for mixing two or more materials in a continuous process in a mixing housing,
in granular form, powder form or liquid, with a high viscosity or not, so that a mixture
with a homogenous distribution arises, whereby those materials are introduced into
the mixing housing, are mixed therein with the aid of a rudder which rotates around
an axis, and the mixture is finally expelled from the mixing housing, characterized in that the mixing process takes place by moving the material in the mixing housing several
times during one rotation of the mixing rotor in an approximately radial direction
in respect of the rotation axis, alternately towards and from the rotor axis,
2. Method according to claim 1,
characterized in that the change of direction of movement of the parts of the material occurs at least
approximately 25 times per rotation of the rudder.
3. Method according to claims 1 or 2, characterized in that at least one of the materials is a plastic, or a
mixture of plastics, which are mixed with a colouring material.
4. Method according to claims 1, 2 or 3, characterized in that the mixing process in the mixing housing takes
place successively in two chambers which are located behind one another in the axial
direction of the rotor, whereby the material is introduced into the first mixing housing,
undergoes a preliminary mixing therein, and flows from there into the second mixing
housing, where it is mixed further and from which it flows out of the mixing housing
again.
5. Device for implementing the method according to claims 1, 2, 3 or 4, with a principally
circular-cylindrically shaped mixing housing, with the inlet and the outlet opening
of the housing in the cylinder wall and approximately diametrically opposite one another,
and with a mixing rotor in the mixing housing which can be rotated around an axis
which coincides with the cylinder axis,
characterized in that for the material, present in the housing and is made to move by the rotor, fixed
obstacles are present in the housing, that the mixing rotor is equipped with mixing
arms which extend principally in the direction of the rotor axis, and that those obstacles
and the mixing arms are positioned in respect of one another in such a manner, that
during the rotation the material is moved in a principally radial direction several
times during one rotation, alternately towards and from the rotor axis.
6. Device according to claim 5,
characterized in that the mixing rotor consists of a flat, disk-shaped part, mounted in a detachable manner
approximately in the middle on a rotor axis, which extends through a lid of the mixing
housing into the mixing housing, is fixed therein with bearings and runs through to
approximately half-way in the mixing housing, whereby the disk-shaped part is equipped
with one or more rings of mixing arms, which extend on each side of the disk in a
direction, which is principally perpendicular to the flat, disk-shaped part, and which
have the shape of longitudinal beams, and that the fixed obstacles are one or more
rings of beam-shaped parts, which are mounted by their end-surfaces against the insides
of the one lid and the other lid, respectively, of the mixing housing, arranged principally
symmetrically around the cylinder axis and extending in a direction, which is principally
parallel to the cylinder axis, up to a certain distance from the rotor disk - the
so-called inner stators -, whereby the radius (radii) of that/those ring(s) differ(s)
from that of the ring(s) of the mixing arms, while beam-shaped parts positioned in
their longitudinal direction against the inner wall of the cylinder wall, running
principally parallel to the cylinder axis - the so-called outer stators - may also
belong to those obstacles
7. Device according to one of the preceding claims,
characterized in that it contains outer stators which have such a shape, and are attached against the cylinder
wall in such a manner, that they make an obtuse angle with the cylinder wall along
their entire length.
8. Device according to claim 7,
characterized in that the cross-section through an outer stator, perpendicular to the cylinder axis, is
an equilateral, right-angled triangle, of which the slanting side, with which it lies
against the cylinder wall, is curved outwards and follows the curve of the cylinder
wall.
9. Device according to claim 5, 6, 7 or 8,
characterized in that the perpendicular cross sections through the beams which form the mixing arms are
rectangles or squares and that one diagonal of each of them runs in the direction
of the radius of the rotor disk at that place.
10. Device according to one of the claims 5 - 9
characterized in that at least some of the mixing arms which extend on either side of the rotor disk are
located in a manner oblique to the rotor disk, in such a manner that with their longitudinal
symmetrical axes perpendicular to the radius of the disk at that place, in such a
manner that the longitudinal symmetrical axes of such mixing arms on the one side
of the rotor form an obtuse angle with those on the other side.
11. Device according to claim 10,
characterized in that the obtuse angle is approximately 120°.
12. Device according to one of the claims 5 - 11,
characterized in that the perpendicular cross-sections through the inner stators are rectangles or squares
and that one diagonal of each of those rectangles or squares runs in the direction
of the radius of the cylinder.
13. Device according to one of the claims 5 - 12,
characterized in that it contains a ring of four inner stators located equally distributed across a circle
circumference on each side of the rotor disk and six mixing arms located equally distributed
across the circumference of the rotor disk on either side of the rotor disk, and that
it contains four outer stators which, seen from the inlet opening of the mixing housing,
are situated along the inner wall of the cylinder wall at places corresponding with
angles of 45°, 135°, 225°, and 315° in respect of that inlet opening.
14. Device according to claim 13,
characterized in that the positions of the outer stators in respect of those of the inner stators are always
staggered by an angle of 45° in respect of each other.
15. Device according to one of the claims 5 - 14,
characterized in that the flat, disk-shaped part has a diameter which is only slightly smaller than the
diameter of the mixing housing, so that the housing is divided into two chambers,
of which the first contains the inlet opening and the second the outlet opening, and
that the part is equipped with openings through which material can flow into the second
chamber from the first chamber during mixing.
16. Device according to claim 15,
characterized in that the openings in the flat disk-shaped part are arranged around the heart of that part.