[0001] The present invention relates to a wood chipping machine comprising a cutter disk
arranged in a disk housing, the cutter disk comprising one or more cutter knives arranged
in a substantially radial plane of the cutter disk.
BACKGROUND
[0002] Basically, there are two different principles used in wood chipping machines, both
of which use a rotating rotor onto which a number of cutter knives are mounted. The
rotor is driven by an external force, such as the engine of a tractor or another machine,
or by an internal combustion engine or an electrical motor integrated within the wood
chipping machine assembly. In both principles, the material to be chipped is fed into
a feed inlet from where it is transported to the rotor either by gravitational forces
("drop feeding") or by means of a feeding device. After being chipped, the material
leaves the wood chipping machine through some form of outlet pipe.
[0003] The material to be chipped is most often biological material, such as whole trees,
branches or pieces of wood, but it could also be plastic, paper, ice or other materials
suitable for being chipped.
[0004] Using the first principle, the rotor is formed as a cylinder with the cutter knives
arranged with their cutting edges in a tangential plane of the rotor, substantially
in the axially direction of the rotor. The material to be chipped is fed to the rotor
in a substantially radial direction. This principle of wood chipping comprises many
fine features. However, it is primarily used in very large specialized machines due
to rather large construction costs.
[0005] In smaller machines, it is normal to use the second principle, in which the rotor
comprises a cutter disk onto which cutter knives are mounted within or in close connection
with chip slots formed through the disk. The material to be chipped is fed to the
front side of the cutter disk in a substantially axially direction. The chipped material
moves through the chip slots to the back side of the cutter disk, where a number of
ejector vanes mounted on the disk make sure that the wood chips are ejected through
the outlet pipe of the wood chipping machine.
[0006] Perfect wood chips are obtained when every piece of chipped material is smaller than
a predefined maximum size, and there are no so-called lumps or pegs within the chipped
material. Lumps and pegs are pieces of wood that are larger than the wanted maximum
size of the wood chips. Contrary to a lump, which is more like a chunk of wood, a
peg is oblong and often consists of a smaller branch.
[0007] In a wood chipping machine using a cutter disk, both lumps and pegs can pass through
the machine without being chipped, either through a chip slot in the cutter disk or
by following the front side of the cutter disk to its perimeter and passing around
the edge of the disk to the back side.
[0008] US Patent no. 5,060,873 discloses a wood chipping machine having a rotating cutter disk, which comprises
a plurality of fins attached to the back side of the cutter disk near the perimeter
for deflecting wood chips axially away from the cutter disk. The purpose of the fins
is to minimize the cross over of wood chips from the back side to the front side of
the cutter disk.
[0009] An objective of the present invention is to provide a solution to the above mentioned
problem of pieces of material passing through the wood chipping machine without being
chipped into sufficiently small pieces.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE PRESENT INVENTION
[0010] The present invention relates to a wood chipping machine for disintegrating material,
mainly biological material such as whole trees, branches and other forms of wooden
material.
[0011] The wood chipping machine comprises a disk housing having an ejection opening at
its periphery, a rotor arranged in the disk housing to be rotatable about its central
axis and drive means for driving the rotation of the rotor. The rotor comprises a
cutter disk having one or more cutter knives arranged with their cutting edges in
a substantially radial plane of the cutter disk. The cutter disk has a front side
oriented towards a feed inlet of the wood chipping machine. Furthermore, the rotor
comprises one or more ejector vanes mounted behind the cutter disk as seen from the
feed inlet, which ejector vanes extend in a substantially radial direction with respect
to the cutter disk and are arranged to rotate during operation of the wood chipping
machine, thus creating a centrifugal flow of air and forcing material behind the cutter
disk towards the ejection opening of the disk housing.
[0012] The wood chipping machine further comprises a peripheral sieving and disintegration
device including one or more fixed parts that are stationary with respect to the disk
housing, and one or more rotating parts that are arranged to rotate with the rotor
during operation of the wood chipping machine. The rotating parts and the fixed parts
are arranged to interact with each other to sieve and disintegrate material passing
towards the periphery of the disk housing on the back side of the cutter disk during
operation of the wood chipping machine.
[0013] The term "substantially radial direction" is meant not only to include straight,
radial ejector vanes but also forward curved or backward curved ejector vanes. The
different shapes are all well-known from blades of centrifugal fans, giving different
pressure and flow properties of the air flow produced by such fans.
[0014] Having a peripheral sieving and disintegration device is advantageous in that it
prevents pieces of material from passing through the wood chipping machine to the
ejection opening without being chipped into sufficiently small pieces.
[0015] Using the interaction between moving and stationary parts is a well-proven and advantageous
way to disintegrate a material into smaller pieces and bits.
[0016] In a preferred embodiment of the invention, the cutting edges of the one or more
cutter knives extend in a substantially radial direction with respect to the cutter
disk.
[0017] Letting the cutting edges extend in a substantially radial direction is advantageous
in that, when the cutter disk rotates about its central axis, the cutting edges meet
the material to be chipped, which material reaches the front side of the cutter disk
from the feed inlet, in a direction being substantially perpendicular to the cutting
edges as well as to the feeding direction of the material.
[0018] It requires more energy to chip the material in a direction perpendicular to the
feeding direction and, thereby, generally perpendicular to the grains of the wood,
than it does to chip the material at a more oblique angle. Even so, a right angle
is preferred due to the fact that chipping wooden material at oblique angles produces
more pegs, because the wooden material is more inclined to split, the more parallel
the edges of the cutter knives are to the grains of the wood.
[0019] In a further preferred embodiment of the invention, the peripheral sieving and disintegration
device comprises a sieving device and one or more cutter blades, the sieving device
having a plurality of openings, and the cutter blades being arranged to interact with
the edges of the openings of the sieving device to disintegrate pieces of material
having too large dimensions to pass through the openings of the sieving device.
[0020] Using the interaction of a sieving device and one or more cutter blades is a well-proven
and advantageous way to disintegrate a material into smaller pieces and bits.
[0021] In preferred embodiments of the invention, the width of the openings of the sieving
device is between 5 mm and 130 mm, preferably between 10 mm and 100 mm, most preferred
between 15 mm and 70 mm.
[0022] The use of opening widths within the above specified ranges ensures, that the dimensions
of the wood chips being produced by the wood chipping machine can be held within certain
predefined preferred sizes.
[0023] Also, in preferred embodiments of the invention, the total area of the openings of
the sieving device is between 0.01 m
2 and 3.5 m
2, preferably between 0.05 m
2 and 0.5 m
2, most preferred between 0.1 m
2 and 0.3 m
2.
[0024] Keeping the total area of the openings within the above specified ranges makes sure
that the disintegration capacity of the peripheral sieving and disintegration device
is high, and that at the same time, the dividing walls of the device separating the
openings can be dimensioned to be strong enough to withstand the wear that they will
inevitably be subjected to during operation of the wood chipping machine.
[0025] In an advantageous embodiment of the invention, the sieving device is arranged so
as to ensure that substantially all material passing towards the periphery of the
disk housing on the back side of the cutter disk during operation of the wood chipping
machine is bound to pass through the sieving device.
[0026] Arranging the sieving device in a way so as to ensure that substantially all material
is bound to pass through it is an advantageous and simple way of making sure that
no pieces of material larger than a certain size defined by the size of the openings
in the sieving device can pass through the wood chipping machine to the ejection opening.
[0027] In a preferred embodiment of the invention, at least a part of the sieving device
forms at least a part of a cylindrical or conical surface.
[0028] Arranging at least a part of the sieving device to form at least a part of a cylindrical
or conical surface facilitates a simple and easy interaction between the one or more
cutter blades and the sieving device due to the rotational motion of the sieving device
and the cutter blades relatively to each other.
[0029] In an embodiment of the invention, the sieving device is arranged to rotate with
the rotor, the one or more ejector vanes are mounted near the central part of the
back side of the cutter disk, and the one or more cutter blades are arranged more
peripherally on the inside of the wall of the disk housing behind the cutter disk,
the one or more cutter blades extending in a substantially radial direction with respect
to the cutter disk.
[0030] In this case, the sieving device and the ejector vanes both rotate with the rotor
during operation of the wood chipping machine, whereas the cutter blades are stationary.
Therefore, it is necessary that there is a certain gap in the radial direction between
the sieving device and the ejector vanes, leaving space for the cutter blades to pass
between the sieving device and the ejector vanes while interacting with the sieving
device as the rotor rotates.
[0031] In a preferred embodiment, the sieving device is fixed with respect to the disk housing,
and the cutter blades are arranged on the back side of the cutter disk, extending
in a substantially radial direction.
[0032] Using a stationary sieving device and letting the cutter blades rotate with the cutter
disk is advantageous in that it enables easy solutions for replacing and repairing
cutter knives, cutter blades, the sieving device, ejector vanes or other parts of
the machine that might be damaged or worn out, as will be described in the detailed
description below.
[0033] Again, the term "substantially radial direction" includes forward curved or backward
curved cutter blades. Since the cutter blades rotating with the cutter disk will also
function, at least to a certain degree, as ejector vanes forcing the material behind
the cutter disk towards the sieving device and the ejection opening of the disk housing,
the shape of the cutter blades can be designed according to the desired pressure and
flow properties of the centrifugal air flow behind the cutter disk.
[0034] In a further preferred embodiment of the invention, the rotor further comprises a
rear disk mounted behind the cutter disk as seen from the feed inlet, thus forming
an internal space within the rotor between the cutter disk, the rear disk and the
sieving device, the rear disk further being arranged to be rotatable with the same
rotational speed as the cutter disk, parallel to and concentrically with the cutter
disk.
[0035] Adding a rear disk to the rotor is advantageous in that the creation of the internal
space within the rotor facilitates the flow of chipped material towards the sieving
device.
[0036] In a preferred embodiment of the invention, the distance between the cutter disk
and the rear disk is between 20 mm and 1000 mm, preferably between 30 mm and 350 mm,
most preferred between 50 mm and 250 mm.
[0037] The distance between the cutter disk and the rear disk must be large enough to get
a sufficiently large total area of the openings of the sieving device and, thus, a
sufficient capacity of the sieving and disintegration device. For the same reason,
the distance should at least equal the width of the openings of the sieving device.
On the other hand, the distance should be kept small in order to limit the dimensions
of the rotor and, thus, of the disk housing and the wood chipping machine as a whole.
[0038] The given ranges for the distance between the cutter disk and the rear disk have
been found to represent good compromises with respect to the above-mentioned considerations
regarding the distance.
[0039] In an advantageous embodiment of the invention, at least some of the parts of the
sieving device extend in a radial direction in close proximity with the back side
of the rear disk, said parts extending within the outer perimeter of the rear disk.
[0040] Letting a part of the sieving device extend in a radial direction behind the rear
disk ensures that no material is leaving the internal space within the rotor by passing
by the rim of the rear disk without passing through the sieving device.
[0041] In yet an advantageous embodiment of the invention, the one or more ejector vanes
are mounted on the back side of the rear disk, at least a part of which ejector vanes
extends in a substantially radial direction.
[0042] Mounting the ejector vanes on the back side of the rear disk and, thus, outside the
sieving device facilitates the creation of a sufficient centrifugal air flow to force
the chipped material towards and out through the ejection opening of the disk housing.
[0043] In an even more advantageous embodiment of the invention, one or more parts of the
one or more ejector vanes further extend in a substantially axial direction being
substantially parallel to the outer surface of the sieving device.
[0044] If a part of the ejector vanes extend in an axial direction parallel to the sieving
device, a sweeping or pushing function of the ejector vanes is added to the centrifugal
air flow forcing the chipped material towards the ejection opening.
[0045] In another aspect of the invention, it relates to a method for producing wood chips
with no dimensions exceeding certain predefined maximum dimensions. This method comprises
the steps of
feeding material to the front side of a rotating cutter disk of a wood chipping machine
as described above, where the cutter knives of said cutter disk chip the material,
and the chipped material thereupon is transported to the back side of the cutter disk
through chip slots extending through the cutter disk, and
directing any material passing from the back side of the cutter disk towards the ejection
opening of the disk housing through the peripheral sieving and disintegration device,
where pieces of material too large to pass through the peripheral sieving and disintegration
device are disintegrated.
[0046] In yet another aspect of the invention, it relates to the use of a wood chipping
machine according to any of the above mentioned embodiments to produce wood chips
with no dimensions exceeding certain predefined maximum dimensions.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
[0047] A few embodiments of the invention will be described in the following with reference
to the figures in which
- fig.1
- illustrates an overview of the main parts of a wood chipping machine,
- fig. 2
- illustrates an overview of the main parts of the feeding device and the disk housing
of a wood chipping machine as known from the art,
- fig. 3a
- illustrates a cutter disk of a wood chipping machine as seen from the front side,
- fig. 3b
- illustrates a cutter disk of a wood chipping machine as seen from the back side,
- fig. 4a
- illustrates a sectional view of the feeding device and the disk housing of a wood
chipping machine as known from the art,
- fig. 4b
- illustrates an enlargement of a central part of the sectional view of the feeding
device and the disk housing of a wood chipping machine as shown in fig. 4a,
- fig. 5a
- illustrates a partial sectional view of a cutter disk with a knife mounted in recesses
on the front side,
- fig. 5b
- illustrates a partial sectional view of a cutter disk with a knife mounted in a slot
inside the disk,
- fig.6a
- illustrates an opened disk housing of a wood chipping machine according to the present
invention,
- fig. 6b
- illustrates the same opened disk housing as fig. 6a as seen from another angle,
- fig. 7
- illustrates the same opened disk housing as fig. 6a with some parts of the disk housing
and the rotor cut away,
- figs. 8a-8j
- is a series of illustrations showing an example of how the rotor can be assembled
and arranged in the disk housing,
- fig. 9
- illustrates the path of wood chips passing through the disk housing of a wood chipping
machine according to the present invention,
- fig. 9a
- is an enlargement of a part of fig. 9, illustrating the path of the wood chips through
the cutter disk, and
- fig. 9b
- is an enlargement of another part of fig. 9, illustrating the path of the wood chips
through the sieving device.
[0048] The appended figures are provided for illustrating an embodiment of the present invention
and are not intended to limit the scope of protection as defined by the claims. For
instance, the present invention is not limited to wood chipping machines comprising
only a single cutter disk.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0049] In the following is disclosed a few embodiments of the present invention of a wood
chipping machine comprising a cutter disk having one or more cutter knives arranged
with their cutting edges in a substantially radial plane of the cutter disk and a
peripheral sieving and disintegration device including fixed as well as rotating parts.
[0050] Fig. 1 illustrates a generalized overview of a wood chipping machine 1 comprising
a feed inlet 2, a feeding device 3, a disk housing 4 and an outlet pipe 5.
[0051] During operation of the wood chipping machine 1, material 10, such as whole trees,
branches or pieces of wood, which is to be disintegrated into wood chips 26, is fed
into a feed inlet 2. The feeding device 3 behind the feed inlet 2 catches the material
10 and drags it towards the disk housing 4, inside which the knives 16 on a rotating
cutter disk 15 chip the fed material 10 into wood chips 26. By means of ejector vanes
25 mounted behind the cutter disk 15, the wood chips 26 are expelled from the wood
chipping machine 1 through the outlet pipe 5.
[0052] Fig. 2 illustrates a generalized overview of the main parts of the feeding device
3 and the disk housing 4 of a wood chipping machine 1 as known from the art.
[0053] The feeding device comprises two feed-in rollers 6, 7 rotating in opposite directions
8, 9 about parallel axes of rotation. When material 10 to be disintegrated is caught
between the feed-in rollers 6, 7, the rotation 8, 9 of the rollers 6, 7 drags the
material 10 in a direction 11 towards the disk housing 4. In the shown embodiment,
the rotational axes of the feed-in rollers 6, 7 are horizontal. It should be noted,
however, that the axes can also be vertical or form any angle with the horizontal
plane as long as they are parallel.
[0054] The disk housing 4 basically comprises a front sheet 12, a back sheet 13 and a disk
casing 14, enclosing a cutter disk 15 along its front side, its back side and its
rim, respectively. The cutter disk 15 comprises a number of cutter knives 16 arranged
with their cutting edges in a substantially radial plane on the front side of the
disk 15, which is arranged with its axial direction substantially parallel to the
feed-in direction 11 of the feeding device 3. In the shown embodiment, the disk housing
4 further comprises a backstop 17 arranged to hold the material 10 in position while
it is being chipped by the cutter knives 16 during rotation 18 of the cutter disk
15.
[0055] Furthermore, the disk housing 4 comprises an ejector shielding 19, which is a kind
of extra disk casing covering the ejection opening 20 through which the wood chips
26 are ejected 21 from the disk housing 4. The ejector shielding 19 covers the ejection
opening 20 in front of the cutter disk 15 and over the rim of the disk 15 but leaves
the ejection opening 20 open behind the cutter disk 15. Thus, the ejector shielding
19 ensures that material 10 on the front side of the cutter disk 15, that has not
yet been disintegrated, cannot be ejected from the disk housing 15, whereas wood chips
26 on the back side of the cutter disk 15, that has already been disintegrated, is
ejected through the ejection opening 20.
[0056] Fig. 3a and 3b show a cutter disk 15 as seen from the front side and the back side,
respectively. In connection with each cutter knife 16, there is a chip slot 22 formed
through the disk 15, through which the wood chips 26 pass from the front side to the
back side of the disk 15 after being cut by a knife 16. The purpose of the edge blades
23 is to break the otherwise circular periphery of the cutter disk 15 and clean out
the area between the rim of the cutter disk 15 and the disk casing 14 in order to
avoid that any material 10 gets stuck in this area, where it can get very hot and
even catch fire due to the friction between the stuck material 10 and the rotating
cutter disk 15.
[0057] Normally, the diameter of cutter disks as known from the art are within a range from
around 300 mm to around 1400 mm with the most typical diameter being around 1000 mm,
but even larger cutter disks can be seen in large industrial wood chipping machines.
[0058] The cutter disk 15 is mounted on and driven by a drive shaft 24, which is again driven
by some kind of drive means for driving the rotation of the rotor. These drive means
may comprise an external force, such as the engine of a tractor or another machine,
or an internal combustion engine or an electrical motor integrated within the wood
chipping machine assembly 1. On the back side of a cutter disk 15 as known from the
art, there is a number of ejector vanes 25 which, due to the rotation of the cutter
disk 15, eject the wood chips 26 through the ejection opening 20 as the chips reach
the back side of the disk 15 through the chip slots 22.
[0059] Cutting the material requires a relatively large force and, therefore, a certain
rotational speed of the rotor. For this reason, a so-called "revolution guard" is
preferably installed within the wood chipping machine 1. The "revolution guard" is
an electronic device monitoring the number of revolutions per minute of the rotor
and disabling the function of the feeding device 3, if the number of resolutions gets
too low. This is done in order to avoid "choking" of the machine or engine driving
the rotation of the rotor, because it is very difficult to start up the wood chipping
machine 1 again, if it is filled up with material 10 to be chipped. As soon as the
number of revolutions is back to normal, the function of the feeding device 3 is enabled
again, and the machine 1 resumes working normally.
[0060] The operational principle of a wood chipping machine 1 as known from the art using
a cutter disk 15 is illustrated in figs. 4a and 4b, where fig. 4b is an enlargement
of a central part of fig. 4a. The material 10 to be disintegrated is drawn into the
wood chipping machine 1 by the feed-in rollers 6, 7 of the feeding device 3 towards
the cutter disk 15. When the material 10 has reached the cutter disk 15, the end of
the material 10 is chipped by one of the cutter knives 16 rotating with the cutter
disk 15, the material 10 being held in position by the backstop 17.
[0061] The material 10 that has been chipped off and has now become wood chips 26 is forced
through the chip slot 22 behind the knife 15 by the cutting force of the knife 15
and ends up at the back side of the cutter disk 15, from where it is ejected from
the wood chipping machine 1 by being shovelled out by the ejector vanes 25. The small
arrows in fig. 4a illustrate the flow of material 10, 26 through the machine.
[0062] Fig. 5a and fig. 5b illustrates two different principles of mounting the cutter knives
16 on the cutter disk 15. Basically, the size of the wood chips 26 is defined by the
cutting height 28, i.e. the height of the edge of the knife 16 over the surface of
the cutter disk 15. However, other factors can also affect the size of the wood chips
26. If, for instance, the material 10 to be disintegrated is drawn too slowly towards
the cutter disk 15 by the feeding device 3, so that it does not reach the front surface
of the disk 15 before it is chipped by a knife 16, the wood chips will be smaller
than the maximum size defined by the cutting height 28.
[0063] In fig. 5a, a cutter knife 16 is mounted in a recess on the front side of the cutter
disk 15 with the blade of the knife 16 arranged in a plane that is parallel to the
front plane of the disk 15. If needed, a spacer 27 can be mounted between the cutter
knife 16 and the cutter disk 15 for adjustment of the cutting height 28.
[0064] Using the other principle, as shown in fig. 5b, the cutter knife 16 is mounted within
the chip slot 22 through the cutter disk 15 along a wall of the slot 22 that is angled
with respect to the radial plane of the cutter disk 15. In this case, the cutting
height 28 is adjusted by sliding the knife 16 along the wall of the chip slot 22 onto
which the knife 16 is mounted.
[0065] During the use of wood chipping machines 1 using a cutter disk 15 as known from the
art, pieces of material 10 sometimes pass through the chip slots 22 from the front
side to the back side of the cutter disk 15 without being chipped into suitable sized
wood chips 26 by the cutter knives 16. This is particularly a problem with end pieces
of the material 10, which can be dragged through the chip slot 22 by the knife 16
instead of being cut, because they are too short to be held in position by the backstop
17 when they are met by the edge of a knife 16.
[0066] The maximum width of a piece of material 10 passing through a chip slot 22 equals
the radial width of the chip slot 22, and the maximum height of such a piece of material
10 equals the distance between the edge of the cutter knife 16 and the opposite edge
of the associated chip slot 22. The maximum length of a piece of material passing
through a chip slot 22 depends on the cutting height 28, the speed with which the
material 10 is fed towards the cutter disk 15 by the feeding device 3 and, only if
the cutter disk 15 rotates very slowly, of the rotational speed of the cutter disk
15.
[0067] In a wood chipping machine as known from the art, oversized pieces of material 10
do not only travel from the front side to the back side of the cutter disk 15 through
the chip slots 22. Also, some pieces of material 10 are seen travelling along the
front side of the cutter disk 15 to its periphery and passing by the rim of the cutter
disk 15 to its back side. Obviously, the material 10 is not supposed to move this
way around the cutter disk 15, but it is very difficult to avoid that at least a limited
amount of material 10 passes along the front side of the cutter disk 15 towards the
rim because of the gap between the cutter disk 15 and the front sheet 12 of the disk
housing 4. This gap is necessary to make room for the cutter knives 16 which extend
at least the cutting height 28 from the front side of the cutter disk 15. Also, a
certain tolerance between the cutter knives 16 and the front sheet 12 is needed.
[0068] It should be noted, that it is not a workable solution just to blank off the periphery
of the cutter disk 15, since this will simply cause the space between the front side
of the cutter disk 15 and the front sheet 12 of the disk housing 4 to be filled up
with material 10 very quickly.
[0069] A preferred embodiment of the present invention, comprising a sieving device 29 fixed
to the front sheet 12 of the disk housing 4, represents a solution to the problem
of oversized pieces of material 10 passing to the back side of the cutter disk 15,
whether the pieces of material 10 pass through chip slots 22 or by the rim of the
cutter disk 15. This embodiment, which causes all material 10 on the back side of
the cutter disk 15 to pass through the sieving device 29 before it reaches the ejection
opening 20 of the disk housing 4, is described in details with references to the following
figures.
[0070] Figs. 6a and 6b illustrate an opened disk housing 4 of a wood chipping machine 1
according to the above-mention embodiment of the invention as seen from two different
angles.
[0071] As can be seen from the figures, the disk housing 4 is divided into an upper part
30 and a bottom part 31. The same is true for the sieving device 29, which consists
of three parts, namely a sieving plate 32, a sealing plate 33 and a mounting plate
34, each of which three parts are divided into an upper and a bottom part. Dividing
the disk housing 4 and the sieving device 29 into upper and bottom parts facilitates
an easy access to the rotor for maintenance and repair as well as for replacement
of parts that have been damaged or are simply worn out. In other embodiments of the
invention, the disk housing 4 and/or the sieving device 29 can be undivided, or they
can be divided into more than two parts each for easy access to the interior of the
disk housing 4.
[0072] It should be noted, that in order to enable the disassembly of the sieving device
29 into its upper and bottom parts, the rotor should be rotated 90° as compared to
the figure to get the ejector vane 25 out of the way.
[0073] The main part of the sieving device 29 is the sieving plate 32 containing the openings
35 of the sieving device 29. The sieving plate 32 is also the part of the sieving
device 29 forming a cylindrical surface.
[0074] The sealing plate 33 is the part of the sieving device 29 that extends in a radial
direction within the outer perimeter of the rear disk 36 in close proximity with the
back side of the rear disk 36.
[0075] In stead of extending along the back side of the rear disk 36, the sealing plate
33 can also be placed in a recess along the back side edge of the rear disk 36, if
the thickness of the rear disk 36 is large enough to leave space for such a recess.
[0076] The mounting plate 34 is used for fixing the sieving device 29 to the front sheet
12 of the disk housing 4. In the embodiment shown, the mounting plate 34 is fixed
to the disk housing 4 by means of a number of bolts 37. This is advantageous because
it makes it possible to replace the sieving device 29, either because of wear or because
another size of openings 35 is wanted. If the mounting plate 34 were welded directly
to the disk housing 4, such a replacement would not be possible without also replacing
the whole front sheet 12 of the disk housing 4.
[0077] The rear disk 36 is provided with a number of air passages 38 formed through the
disk 36 near its centre. These air passages 38 constitute the main inlet for the air
being blown out through the ejection opening 20 and the outlet pipe 5 during operation
of the wood chipping machine 1. Due to the centrifugal properties of the air flow
within the rotor, which air flow forces the wood chips 26 between the cutter disk
15 and the rear disk 36 to move towards the sieving device 29, placed at the periphery
of the disks 15, 36, and due to the direction of the motion of the air being sucked
into the rotor through the air passages 38, the wood chips 26 are not inclined to
leave the rotor through the air passages 38 during operation of the machine 1. Anyhow,
the air passages 38 can be formed as a plurality of small openings, or they can be
covered by a mesh in order to ensure that no material leaves the rotor this way.
[0078] In the embodiment shown in fig. 6a, the rear disk 36 has substantially the same diameter
as the cutter disk 15, thus facilitating the use of a sieving plate 32 shaped as a
cylindrical surface as also shown in the figure. If, instead, the rear disk 36 is
chosen to have a smaller diameter than the cutter disk 15, the use of a sieving plate
32 shaped as a conical surface is facilitated. Technically, such a solution is more
complicated, but it has the advantage that the wood chips 26 passing through the sieving
device 29 are directed towards the back of the disk housing 4 and, thus, towards the
ejector vanes 25 and the ejection opening 20 of the disk housing 4.
[0079] The cutter blades 39 are mounted between the back side of the cutter disk 15 and
the front side of the rear disk 36 by means of supports 40, which serve two purposes.
Apart from supporting the cutter blades 39 and keeping them in the right positions
to interact properly with the sieving device 29, the supports 40 also contribute to
the formation of a centrifugal flow of air within the rotor forcing the wood chips
26 towards the sieving device 29.
[0080] The cutter blades 39 interact with the edges of the openings 35 of the sieving device
29 to disintegrate the wood chips 26, until the wood chips 26 have been divided into
pieces small enough to pass through the openings 35. In order to achieve a proper
disintegration between the cutter blades 39 and the sieving device 29, it is necessary
to keep a rather tight tolerance between the cutter blades 39 and the sieving device
29.
[0081] In another embodiment of the invention, the cutter blades 39 extend towards the feed
inlet 2 of the wood chipping machine 1 through recesses cut out from the rim of the
cutter disk 15. In this way, also the part of the sieving plate 32 surrounding the
rim of the cutter disk 15 can be used for disintegrating and sieving the wood chips
26.
[0082] Also, an ejector vane 25 extending in two directions perpendicular to each other
is shown in figs. 6a and 6b, mounted to the back side of the rear disk 36. The reason
for the shown ejector vane 25 to be cut of in an oblique angle is to make room for
reinforcement of the connection between the sieving plate 32 and the mounting plate
34 of the sieving device 29, should it be necessary.
[0083] The cutter knives 16 are mounted in a plane parallel to the radial plane of the cutter
disk 15, each in close proximity with a chip slot 22.
[0084] Fig. 7 illustrates the same opened disk housing as shown in fig. 6a, only with some
parts of the disk housing 4, the sieving device 29 and the rotor cut away. First and
foremost, this makes the interaction between the cutter blades 39 and the sieving
plate 32 visible, but also the mounting of the cutter blades 39 on their supports
40 and the mounting of the supports 40 between the cutter disk 15 and the rear disk
36 are more easily seen than in fig 6a.
[0085] Figs. 8a-8j is a series of illustrations showing an example of how the rotor can
be assembled and arranged in the disk housing 4.
[0086] Figs. 8a and 8b illustrate a cutter disk 15 as known from the art as seen from the
front side and from the back side, respectively. The cutter disk 15, which is mounted
on a drive shaft 24, comprises cutter knives 16, chip slots 22 and edge blades 23.
[0087] In fig. 8c, the supports 40 for the cutter blades 39 have been bolted to the back
side of the cutter disk 15, and in fig. 8d, the cutter blades 39 have been bolted
to their respective supports 40.
[0088] In fig. 8e, the rear disk 36 has been mounted to the free ends of the cutter blade
supports 40, and in fig. 8f, the ejector vanes 25 have been mounted to the back side
of the rear disk 36.
[0089] Fig. 8g illustrates the two parts of the sieving device 29, each comprising a part
of the sieving plate 32, the sealing plate 33 and the mounting plate 34.
[0090] In fig. 8h, the two parts of the sieving device 29 have been mounted to the corresponding
parts of the front sheet 12 of the disk housing 4, and the two parts 12, 29 have been
assembled around the rotor.
[0091] Finally, in fig. 8i, the upper and bottom parts of the disk casing 14 has been mounted,
leaving open the ejection opening 20 of the disk housing 4, and in fig. 8j, the two
parts of the back sheet 13 of the disk housing 4 has been mounted to close the disk
housing 4.
[0092] Fig. 9 illustrates a disk housing 4 with some parts cut away to show the path of
wood chips 26a, 26b passing through the disk housing 4 of a wood chipping machine
1 according to the present invention.
[0093] Figs. 9a and 9b are enlargements of parts of fig. 9, illustrating the path of the
wood chips 26a, 26b through the cutter disk 15 and through the sieving device 29,
respectively.
[0094] It should be noted that in figs. 9, 9a and 9b, the reference number 26, generally
referring to wood chips, has been split up into two reference numbers 26a and 26b,
referring to wood chips 26a containing oversized pieces and perfect wood chips 26b
with no oversized pieces, respectively.
[0095] In fig. 9a, it is seen how wood chips 26a pass through a chip slot 22 from the front
side to the back side of the cutter disk 15 after having been chipped by a cutter
knife 16. Furthermore, this figure clearly shows the bolts 41 with which the cutter
knives 16 are mounted to the cutter disk 15.
[0096] Figure 9b similarly illustrates how oversized pieces of wood chips 26a are disintegrated
between a cutter blade 39 and the sieving plate 32, whereupon they pass through openings
35 of the sieving device 29, now being referred to as perfect wood chips 26b. Furthermore,
this figure clearly shows the bolts 42 with which the cutter blade supports 40 are
mounted to the back side of the cutter disk 15, and the bolts 43, with which the cutter
blades 39 are mounted to the supports 40.
[0097] The small arrows in the figures illustrate the flow direction of material 10, 26a,
26b passing through the disk housing 4.
REFERENCE LIST
[0098] In the drawings, the reference numbers refer to:
- 1. Wood chipping machine
- 2. Feed inlet
- 3. Feeding device
- 4. Disk housing
- 5. Outlet pipe
- 6. Upper feed-in roller
- 7. Lower feed-in roller
- 8. Rotational direction of upper feed-in roller
- 9. Rotational direction of lower feed-in roller
- 10. Material to be disintegrated
- 11. Feed-in direction of material to be disintegrated
- 12. Front sheet of disk housing
- 13. Back sheet of disk housing
- 14. Disk casing
- 15. Cutter disk
- 16. Cutter knife
- 17. Backstop
- 18. Rotational direction of cutter disk
- 19. Ejector shielding
- 20. Ejection opening
- 21. Ejection direction for wood chips
- 22. Chip slot through cutter disk
- 23. Edge blade on cutter disk
- 24. Drive shaft for cutter disk
- 25. Ejector vane
- 26. Wood chips
26a. Wood chips containing oversized pieces
26b. Perfect wood chips with no oversized pieces
- 27. Spacer for adjustment of cutting height
- 28. Cutting height
- 29. Sieving device
- 30. Upper part of disk housing
- 31. Bottom part of disk housing
- 32. Sieving plate
- 33. Sealing plate for sieving device
- 34. Mounting plate for sieving device
- 35. Opening of sieving device
- 36. Rear disk
- 37. Bolt for fixing sieving device
- 38. Air passage through rear disk
- 39. Cutter blade
- 40. Support for cutter blade
- 41. Bolt for mounting cutter knife
- 42. Bolt for mounting support for cutter blade
- 43. Bolt for mounting cutter blade
1. A wood chipping machine (1) for disintegrating material (10), mainly biological material
such as whole trees, branches and other forms of wooden material, comprising
a disk housing (4) having an ejection opening (20) at its periphery,
a rotor, arranged in the disk housing to be rotatable about its central axis, the
rotor comprising
a cutter disk (15) having one or more cutter knives (16) arranged with their cutting
edges in a substantially radial plane of the cutter disk, the cutter disk having a
front side oriented towards a feed inlet (2) of the wood chipping machine, and
one or more ejector vanes (25) mounted behind the cutter disk as seen from the feed
inlet, which ejector vanes extend in a substantially radial direction with respect
to the cutter disk and are arranged to rotate during operation of the wood chipping
machine, thus creating a centrifugal flow of air and forcing material behind the cutter
disk towards the ejection opening of the disk housing, and
drive means for driving the rotation of the rotor,
characterized in that
the wood chipping machine further comprises a peripheral sieving and disintegration
device (29, 32-35, 39-40) including
one or more fixed parts that are stationary with respect to the disk housing, and
one or more rotating parts that are arranged to rotate with the rotor during operation
of the wood chipping machine,
the rotating parts and the fixed parts of the peripheral sieving and disintegration
device being arranged to interact with each other to sieve and disintegrate material
passing towards the periphery of the disk housing on the back side of the cutter disk
during operation of the wood chipping machine.
2. A wood chipping machine according to claim 1, wherein the cutting edges of the one
or more cutter knives extend in a substantially radial direction with respect to the
cutter disk.
3. A wood chipping machine according to claim 1 or 2, wherein the peripheral sieving
and disintegration device comprises a sieving device (29) and one or more cutter blades
(39), the sieving device having a plurality of openings (35), and the cutter blades
being arranged to interact with the edges of the openings of the sieving device to
disintegrate pieces of material (10, 26, 26a) having too large dimensions to pass
through the openings of the sieving device.
4. A wood chipping machine according to claim 3, wherein the width of the openings of
the sieving device is between 5 mm and 130 mm, preferably between 10 mm and 100 mm,
most preferred between 15 mm and 70 mm.
5. A wood chipping device according to claim 3 or 4, wherein the total area of the openings
of the sieving device is between 0.01 m2 and 3.5 m2, preferably between 0.05 m2 and 0.5 m2, most preferred between 0.1 m2 and 0.3 m2.
6. A wood chipping machine according to any of claims 3-5, wherein the sieving device
is arranged so as to ensure that substantially all material passing towards the periphery
of the disk housing on the back side of the cutter disk during operation of the wood
chipping machine is bound to pass through the sieving device.
7. A wood chipping machine according to any of claims 3-6, wherein at least a part of
the sieving device forms at least a part of a cylindrical or conical surface (32).
8. A wood chipping machine according to any of claims 3-7, wherein the sieving device
is arranged to rotate with the rotor, the one or more ejector vanes are mounted near
the central part of the back side of the cutter disk, and the one or more cutter blades
are arranged more peripherally on the inside of the wall (13) of the disk housing
behind the cutter disk, the one or more cutter blades extending in a substantially
radial direction with respect to the cutter disk.
9. A wood chipping machine according any of claims 3-7, wherein the sieving device is
fixed with respect to the disk housing, and the cutter blades are arranged on the
back side of the cutter disk, extending in a substantially radial direction.
10. A wood chipping machine according to claims 9, wherein the rotor further comprises
a rear disk (36) mounted behind the cutter disk as seen from the feed inlet, thus
forming an internal space within the rotor between the cutter disk, the rear disk
and the sieving device, the rear disk further being arranged to be rotatable with
the same rotational speed as the cutter disk, parallel to and concentrically with
the cutter disk.
11. A wood chipping device according to claim 10, wherein the distance between the cutter
disk and the rear disk is between 20 mm and 1000 mm, preferably between 30 mm and
350 mm, most preferred between 50 mm and 250 mm.
12. A wood chipping machine according to claim 10 or 11, wherein at least some of the
parts (33) of the sieving device extend in a radial direction in close proximity with
the back side of the rear disk, said parts extending within the outer perimeter of
the rear disk.
13. A wood chipping machine according to any of the claims 10-12, wherein the one or more
ejector vanes are mounted on the back side of the rear disk, at least a part of which
ejector vanes extends in a substantially radial direction.
14. A wood chipping machine according to claim 13, wherein one or more parts of the one
or more ejector vanes further extend in a substantially axial direction being substantially
parallel to the outer surface of the sieving device.
15. A method for producing wood chips with no dimensions exceeding certain predefined
maximum dimensions, the method comprising the steps of
feeding material to the front side of a rotating cutter disk of a wood chipping machine
according to any of claims 1-14, where the cutter knives of said cutter disk chip
the material, and the chipped material thereupon is transported to the back side of
the cutter disk through chip slots extending through the cutter disk, and
directing any material passing from the back side of the cutter disk towards the ejection
opening of the disk housing through the peripheral sieving and disintegration device,
where pieces of material too large to pass through the peripheral sieving and disintegration
device are disintegrated.
16. The use of a wood chipping machine according to any of claims 1-14 to produce wood
chips with no dimensions exceeding certain predefined maximum dimensions.