WO1995008425A1 - Shredding apparatus with shearing action - Google Patents

Shredding apparatus with shearing action Download PDF

Info

Publication number
WO1995008425A1
WO1995008425A1 PCT/CA1993/000375 CA9300375W WO9508425A1 WO 1995008425 A1 WO1995008425 A1 WO 1995008425A1 CA 9300375 W CA9300375 W CA 9300375W WO 9508425 A1 WO9508425 A1 WO 9508425A1
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
tines
rotor
stator
rows
housing
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Ceased
Application number
PCT/CA1993/000375
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Maurice Deschamps
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Priority to EP19930918856 priority Critical patent/EP0720524B1/en
Priority to DE69329074T priority patent/DE69329074T2/en
Priority to AU49399/93A priority patent/AU4939993A/en
Priority to PCT/CA1993/000375 priority patent/WO1995008425A1/en
Priority to AT93918856T priority patent/ATE194793T1/en
Priority to ES93918856T priority patent/ES2151514T3/en
Publication of WO1995008425A1 publication Critical patent/WO1995008425A1/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Ceased legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B29WORKING OF PLASTICS; WORKING OF SUBSTANCES IN A PLASTIC STATE IN GENERAL
    • B29BPREPARATION OR PRETREATMENT OF THE MATERIAL TO BE SHAPED; MAKING GRANULES OR PREFORMS; RECOVERY OF PLASTICS OR OTHER CONSTITUENTS OF WASTE MATERIAL CONTAINING PLASTICS
    • B29B17/00Recovery of plastics or other constituents of waste material containing plastics
    • B29B17/04Disintegrating plastics, e.g. by milling
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B02CRUSHING, PULVERISING, OR DISINTEGRATING; PREPARATORY TREATMENT OF GRAIN FOR MILLING
    • B02CCRUSHING, PULVERISING, OR DISINTEGRATING IN GENERAL; MILLING GRAIN
    • B02C18/00Disintegrating by knives or other cutting or tearing members which chop material into fragments
    • B02C18/06Disintegrating by knives or other cutting or tearing members which chop material into fragments with rotating knives
    • B02C18/14Disintegrating by knives or other cutting or tearing members which chop material into fragments with rotating knives within horizontal containers
    • B02C18/145Disintegrating by knives or other cutting or tearing members which chop material into fragments with rotating knives within horizontal containers with knives spaced axially and circumferentially on the periphery of a cylindrical rotor unit
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B29WORKING OF PLASTICS; WORKING OF SUBSTANCES IN A PLASTIC STATE IN GENERAL
    • B29LINDEXING SCHEME ASSOCIATED WITH SUBCLASS B29C, RELATING TO PARTICULAR ARTICLES
    • B29L2030/00Pneumatic or solid tyres or parts thereof
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y02TECHNOLOGIES OR APPLICATIONS FOR MITIGATION OR ADAPTATION AGAINST CLIMATE CHANGE
    • Y02WCLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION TECHNOLOGIES RELATED TO WASTEWATER TREATMENT OR WASTE MANAGEMENT
    • Y02W30/00Technologies for solid waste management
    • Y02W30/50Reuse, recycling or recovery technologies
    • Y02W30/62Plastics recycling; Rubber recycling

Definitions

  • This invention relates to an apparatus for shredding materials, in recycling operations for example, and more particularly to a shredding apparatus in which rows of rotor tines pass through rows of stator tines to shear the materials.
  • An initial step in such recycling involves reducing such materials to a basic form in which they can be more easily handled, usually through a process such as melting or shredding.
  • Used tires, for example, are presently increasingly being recycled, and the shredding of such tires into tiny fragments is a first step in such recycling.
  • the storage of used tires in piles presents both a fire hazard and a health hazard.
  • shredding of used tires obviates the need for new expenditures on energy and long-chain hydrocarbon resources, such as natural and synthetic rubbers.
  • the extraordinary elastic properties and resistance to wear of vulcanized rubber due to the cross-linking of rubber molecules by "sulphur bridges" has caused vulcanized rubber to be used as a raw material for a vast range of products. There is consequently a large market for vulcanized rubber fragments generated by shredding of used tires.
  • Prior art shredding devices are generally designed to shred material fed between cutters by tearing the material apart. Significant expenditures of energy are required to drive such machines.
  • shredding apparatus In the prior art, many shredding devices utilize a tearing action, which expends a great deal of energy.
  • shearing is the primary shredding mechanism, which reduces the energy expenditure.
  • the subject apparatus also reduces materials to pieces of roughly uniform size, thereby simplifying and making more economical further processing of those pieces, which in turn increases their utility.
  • Another desirable attribute of the subject apparatus is its relatively light weight in comparison to other shredding devices, and hence its increased portability relative to most prior art shredding devices.
  • the fact that the apparatus is preferably fully enclosed in an external housing further facilitates transportatio .
  • the invention is a shredding apparatus comprising a rotor mounted to rotate between a pair of side walls, a housing extending in an arc on one side of the rotor between the pair of side walls, an inlet means for feeding material into an entry opening between the rotor and the housing, and a motor for rotating the rotor relative to the housing.
  • the rotor has tines projecting generally radially outwardly therefrom in a series of rows equiangularly positioned around it. Each of those rows extends generally parallel to the axis of rotation.
  • Each rotor tine has a generally flat face in the direction of rotation, those flat faces on tines in the same row extending generally in the same plane.
  • the housing has stator tines projecting generally radially inwardly therefrom in a series of rows extending generally parallel to the axis of rotation.
  • the stator tines are positioned such that one or more of the rotor tines pass between adjacent stator tines.
  • Each stator tine has a generally flat face in the direction adapted to oppose the flat face on passing rotor tines.
  • the flat faces on stator tines in the same row extend generally in the same plane.
  • Each of the rotor tines and stator tines have a length substantially equal to the radial distance between facing surfaces on the rotor and the housing.
  • Each of the rotor tines and stator tines is of substantially equal width, and the clearance between passing rotor and stator tines is quite small, such as approximately 1/8 of an inch for most applications. The clearance could be smaller in some cases, or larger in others, especially larger machines.
  • the motor rotates the rotor relative to the housing at a speed of at least 500 rotations per minute.
  • the rotor tines and stator tines are oriented such that the flat faces on one or both are angled slightly away from the radial direction such that the outer ends of the rotor tines pass the stator tines before the inner ends of the rotor tines. A small angle is thereby defined between the flat faces on the rotor tines and the flat faces on the stator tines as those tines pass.
  • the small angle is preferably in the range of 5 to 20 degrees.
  • the rotor tines and stator tines may be approximately 1 inch wide, and pass each other at a clearance of approximately 1/8 of an inch.
  • the flat faces on the rotor tines and stator tines may be replaceably mounted on the rotor and housing, respectively.
  • stator tines There may be three rows of rotor tines spaced 120 degrees apart, and three rows of stator tines.
  • the rotor tines pass the first row of stator tines before passing the second row of stator tines before passing the third row of stator tines.
  • the tines in the first and second rows of stator tines are arranged longitudinally on the housing in pairs that are spaced from each other by the spacing of a missing pair.
  • Each pair of stator tines in the first and second rows correspond in longitudinal position to a missing pair in the second and first rows respectively.
  • the third row of stator tines and the three rows of rotor tines each have tines with longitudinal positions corresponding to the tines in both the first and second rows of stator tines.
  • the housing preferably is movable relative to the rotor to increase the distance between facing surfaces on the rotor and the housing for facilitating maintenance and cleaning of the apparatus, and particularly for facilitating clearance of any jams.
  • the invention is a shredder assembly that comprises a first shredding apparatus and a second substantially-smaller shredding apparatus.
  • the inlet means of the second shredding apparatus is adapted to receive material output from the first shredding apparatus.
  • Figure 1 is a sectioned plan view of the shredding apparatus of the invention, the view being taken along the line I-I in Figure 2.
  • Figure 2 is a sectioned side view of the shredding apparatus, the view being taken along the line II-II in
  • Figure 3 is a sectioned end view of the shredding apparatus, the view being taken along the line III-III in Figure 2.
  • Figure 4 is an amplified view of a portion of Figure 3 illustrating the mounting of an end of the housing member on the side wall of the apparatus.
  • Figure 5 is a portion of the sectioned side view of Figure 2, the housing member of the shredding apparatus being in position for the shredding operation.
  • Figure 6 is a similar view to Figure 5, but illustrating the housing member in a retracted position.
  • Figure 7 is a side view of the housing member of the shredding apparatus.
  • Figure 8 is an end view of the housing member of Figure 7, the view illustrating the position of the three rows of tines on the housing member.
  • Figure 9 is a perspective view of the housing member of Figure 7.
  • Figure 10 is a perspective view of the housing member of Figure 7, and also illustrating the rotor of the apparatus in its operative position.
  • the preferred embodiment of the shredding apparatus has a front wall 20, a back wall 22, a pair of inner side walls 24, and a pair of outer side walls 26.
  • Each of the outer side walls 26 is mounted on a set of hinges 28.
  • a rotor generally designated 30 is mounted on a pair of bearings 32, each of which is supported on a respective section of square tubing 34 secured to one of the inner side walls 24.
  • Three rows of rotor tines 36 each extend across rotor 30, each of the three rows being angularly displaced 120 degrees from the other two rows.
  • Each rotor tine 36 has a flat front face in the direction of rotation of rotor 30, a flat top face, and a flat sloping back face. The spacing between adjacent rotor tines 36 is slightly greater than the width of a tine 36.
  • a housing generally designated 40 and separately illustrated in Figure 7 has an arc member 42, each end of which is connected to a side member 44.
  • a square tubing section 46 extends between the side members 44, and a plate 48 connects side members 44, tubing section 46 and arc member 42.
  • arc member 42 In its operative position, as illustrated in Figures 2 and 5, arc member 42 extends concentrically around the axis of rotation of rotor 30.
  • Three rows of stator tines 50 each extend across arc member 42, as illustrated in Figures 8 and 9.
  • Tines 50 in the first and second rows are arranged longitudinally on the inner surface of arc member 42 in pairs that are spaced from each other by the spacing of a missing pair.
  • Each pair of tines 50 in the first and second rows correspond in longitudinal position on arc member 42 with a missing pair of tines 50 in the second and first rows, respectively.
  • the tines 50 in the third row on arc member 42 are longitudinally positioned so as to correspond with the tines 50 in both the first and second rows.
  • the longitudinal position of the stator tines 50 on arc member 42 are staggered from the longitudinal position of the rotor tines 36 on rotor 30, allowing the rotor tines to pass the stator tines with a slight clearance.
  • the stator tines have a similar shape to the shape previously described for rotor tines.
  • the height of the rotor and stator tines is such that when housing 40 is in its operative position, the end of the rotor tines have a slight clearance from the inner surface of arc member 42, and the end of the stator tines have a slight clearance from the surface of rotor 30, a typical clearance in each case being about 1/8 of an inch.
  • Material entering the shredding apparatus is pressed by the rotor tines 36 against the first and second rows of stator tines 50 having the tine spacing earlier described. The material is shredded into fragments of a small size by those two rows.
  • the resulting fragments are then pressed against the third row of stator tines 50; the number of tines in that third row equals the number of tines in each row of rotor 30.
  • the material is shredded by the third row of stator tines into fragments of still smaller size.
  • each rotor tine 36 is set at a slight angle relative to the flat opposing face on each stator tine 50.
  • the outer end of each tine 36 thereby passes the opposing face on a tine 50 before the inner end of tine 36 passes that face, and a scissors-like shearing action results.
  • the width of a rotor tine 36 is approximately the same as the width of a stator tine 50, and the clearance between those sets of tines as they pass is quite small in relation to the tine width. With a tine width of 1 inch, the clearance is approximately 1/8 of an inch in the preferred embodiment, although other small clearances could obviously be used, the acceptable range depending somewhat on the materials being shredded, keeping in mind that shearing is the desired mechanism.
  • a scissors-like shearing action thereby commences as a rotor tine passes a stator tine, the action starting at the outer end of the rotor tine and progressing inwardly.
  • Housing 40 can be shifted from the operative position shown in Figures 2 and 5 to a retracted position allowing cleaning or maintenance, shown in Figure 6, and especially facilitating the clearance of jams. This is accomplished by means of a hydraulic cylinder 54 that drives a piston 56 which is pivotally connected by a collar 57 to one end of an arm 58. The other end of arm 58 is fixed to a central position on a bar 60. Each end of bar 60 is rotatably mounted on a respective one of the inner side walls 24.
  • each side member 44 of housing 40 slides in a recess defined by a lower bracket 68, a lateral guide member 69 secured to lower bracket 68, and an upper bracket 70. Movement of piston 56 out of cylinder 54 results in housing 40 moving from its operative position to the retracted position.
  • the sequence of operation on startup, or after a stoppage due to a jam is that hydraulic fluid is pumped to hydraulic cylinder 54 by an electric motor (not shown) that is activated automatically each time electric motor 76 is switched on, so that the housing 40 moves from its operative position.
  • the rotor 30 then starts to turn, which clears away any jammed material or any material left in the apparatus from a previous shutdown.
  • the housing is then returned to its operative position, at which time shredding operations may be recommenced.
  • An electrical motor 76 of approximately 150 horsepower is fastened to the base 78 of the shredding apparatus.
  • the rotor 80 of motor 76 has a four-belt pulley 82 mounted on it.
  • belts 84 extend around both that pulley and a four-belt pulley 86 on a driven shaft 88.
  • Shaft 88 is mounted in a pair of bearings 90 that are each supported on an inner side wall 24 by a bracket 92.
  • Each end of shaft 88 has a four-belt pulley 94 mounted on it, and four belts 96 extends around both that pulley and a four-belt pulley 98 mounted on the axle 100 of rotor 30.
  • the motor 76 is capable of rotating rotor 30 at typical speeds of from 500 r.p.m. to over 3,000 r.p.m.; the optimum rotational speed is a function of the material being shredded, and is best determined through routine experimentation.
  • feed channel 104 The material to be shredded is fed to the shredding apparatus through a broad feed channel generally designated 104, illustrated in profile in Figure 2.
  • a portion of feed channel 104 is an input chute, defined by opposing inclined surfaces 106 and 108 and by opposing parallel surfaces 110, and mounted in a top wall 111 of the apparatus.
  • An output chute is defined by opposing inclined surfaces 112 and 114 and by opposing parallel surfaces 116.
  • rotor 30 has a steel axle 100 of 2.5-inch diameter, three steel disks 120 of 1-inch thickness and 12-inch diameter, and a circular cylindrical steel tube 122 of 1-inch thickness and 12- inch inside diameter.
  • Each of the disks 120 is welded circumferentially to steel tube 122, one disk proximate each end and one centrally.
  • a disk 124 of 6-inch diameter is circumferentially welded to the outside of each of the end-positioned disks 120 to extend concentric with the respective disk.
  • Each end of axle 100 has a spline 125 that is 6 inches long and approximately 0.5 inches square.
  • a spline 126 of similar cross-section extends in each of the end-positioned disks 120 and 124, and a key 128 is fitted between splines 125 and 126 to prevent relative rotation between axle 100 and disks 120 and 124.
  • rotor 30 is constructed with its complement of tines 36, it is balanced. To balance rotor 30, holes of 1-inch diameter are drilled at appropriate angular locations in each disk 120, and a steel dowel 130 of 1-inch diameter is mounted in each hole. The length of each dowel 130 is selected so as to provide the required balance to the disk 120.
  • the tines 36 which are made of hardened steel, may be constructed with a replaceable flat front face portion that is fastened to the remainder of the tine to allow periodic replacement.
  • the following table illustrates, for a series of materials, the width and radial height of the tines used and the angular speed of the rotor:
  • the first and second stator rows of an apparatus for shredding the materials marked with an '*' differ from the construction earlier described in that each of the first and second stator rows have as many tines as the third row.
  • Some materials may require a multi-stage shredding process.
  • used tires require at least a two-stage assembly, with the rotor in the first stage rotating at 500 r.p.m, and at the same or faster r.p.m. in subsequent stages.
  • the rotor tines and stator tines used to shred tires have a height of 4 inches and a width of anywhere from 1 to 3 inches.
  • the tine height and width, and the angular speed of rotor 30, are best determined through trial-and-error for each application.
  • the shredding apparatus has been used to shred such diverse articles as empty beer bottles in their cardboard cases, transformers, emptied mercury light bulbs and bed boards. These objects come out of the shredding apparatus as tiny fragments of the constituent materials; those shredded materials are then readily separable from each other by further processing.
  • the shredding apparatus of the invention utilizes a shearing action to shred materials efficiently.

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Food Science & Technology (AREA)
  • Environmental & Geological Engineering (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Crushing And Pulverization Processes (AREA)
  • Shovels (AREA)

Abstract

A shredding apparatus includes a rotor having rows of tines projecting generally radially outwardly therefrom, and also a housing surrounding the rotor having rows of tines projecting generally radially inwardly therefrom. The rotor tines and stator tines have staggered positions, with one or more of the rotor tines passing between adjacent stator tines. Material inserted into an inlet at the top of the housing is caught by the rotor tines and pulled past the first row of stator tines. That first row has fewer tines than does each row of tines on the rotor, whereas the final row has the same number of tines as each row on the rotor. The opposing faces of the tines on the rotor and stator are flat, with a small clearance between passing tines, of typically about 1/8 of an inch. The passing flat faces on the tines are at a slight angle to each other, the outer ends of rotor tines passing stator tines ahead of the inner ends in a scissors-like fashion. The rotor speed is a function of the material being shredded, and has a value of at least 500 rotations per minute. A multi-stage shredding assembly may be created in which the output from one shredding apparatus feeds another shredding apparatus.

Description

SHREDDING APPARATUS WITH SHEARING ACTION
TECHNICAL FIELD
This invention relates to an apparatus for shredding materials, in recycling operations for example, and more particularly to a shredding apparatus in which rows of rotor tines pass through rows of stator tines to shear the materials.
BACKGROUND ART
There is an increasing awareness of the need to preserve the quality of the global ecosystem through recycling of discarded materials. An initial step in such recycling involves reducing such materials to a basic form in which they can be more easily handled, usually through a process such as melting or shredding. Used tires, for example, are presently increasingly being recycled, and the shredding of such tires into tiny fragments is a first step in such recycling. The storage of used tires in piles presents both a fire hazard and a health hazard. Burning of used tires releases into the atmosphere various substances mixed into the constituent rubber during its production and vulcanization, including compounds such as tars, silica, paraffin, aromatic amines or phenol derivatives, asbestos, accelerator compounds, etc., which are known or hypothesized to have mutagenic and carcinogenic properties. In some jurisdictions, laws have been enacted or proposed requiring the safe destruction of used tires to avoid such environmental and health hazards.
Besides removing their potential for creating environmental and health problems, shredding of used tires obviates the need for new expenditures on energy and long-chain hydrocarbon resources, such as natural and synthetic rubbers. The extraordinary elastic properties and resistance to wear of vulcanized rubber due to the cross-linking of rubber molecules by "sulphur bridges" has caused vulcanized rubber to be used as a raw material for a vast range of products. There is consequently a large market for vulcanized rubber fragments generated by shredding of used tires.
Research into possible new applications for shredded tires is proceeding at a rapid pace, and many new applications have been developed recently. Although the foregoing comments have related to the recycling of rubber in used tires, the shredding process of course has broad application in the effective handling of a wide range of other materials. For instance, shredding is used as a first step in the recycling of waste plastic. And the recovery of oil, metal, paper and rubber from used oil filters is on the verge of becoming a major industry. In a more general application of the shredding process, garbage volume in a landfill site may be reduced by first putting the garbage through a shredding process.
Various forms of shredding apparatus are of course well-known in the prior art. Many designs are known and in use at present, but generally they suffer from a number of drawbacks, including excessive complexity, unreliability, high price, and/or lack of transportability.
Prior art shredding devices are generally designed to shred material fed between cutters by tearing the material apart. Significant expenditures of energy are required to drive such machines.
DISCLOSURE OF INVENTION
It is an object of the invention to provide a shredding apparatus that is reliable, relatively simple in construction, and relatively lightweight. It is a further object of the invention to provide a shredding apparatus that is effective in reducing a product to pieces of roughly uniform size for any given product, using as little energy as possible. It is also desirable that the apparatus should be fully enclosed and transportable.
In the prior art, many shredding devices utilize a tearing action, which expends a great deal of energy. In the shredding apparatus of the present invention, shearing is the primary shredding mechanism, which reduces the energy expenditure. The subject apparatus also reduces materials to pieces of roughly uniform size, thereby simplifying and making more economical further processing of those pieces, which in turn increases their utility. Another desirable attribute of the subject apparatus is its relatively light weight in comparison to other shredding devices, and hence its increased portability relative to most prior art shredding devices. The fact that the apparatus is preferably fully enclosed in an external housing further facilitates transportatio .
In one form, the invention is a shredding apparatus comprising a rotor mounted to rotate between a pair of side walls, a housing extending in an arc on one side of the rotor between the pair of side walls, an inlet means for feeding material into an entry opening between the rotor and the housing, and a motor for rotating the rotor relative to the housing. The rotor has tines projecting generally radially outwardly therefrom in a series of rows equiangularly positioned around it. Each of those rows extends generally parallel to the axis of rotation. Each rotor tine has a generally flat face in the direction of rotation, those flat faces on tines in the same row extending generally in the same plane. The housing has stator tines projecting generally radially inwardly therefrom in a series of rows extending generally parallel to the axis of rotation. The stator tines are positioned such that one or more of the rotor tines pass between adjacent stator tines. Each stator tine has a generally flat face in the direction adapted to oppose the flat face on passing rotor tines. The flat faces on stator tines in the same row extend generally in the same plane. Each of the rotor tines and stator tines have a length substantially equal to the radial distance between facing surfaces on the rotor and the housing. Each of the rotor tines and stator tines is of substantially equal width, and the clearance between passing rotor and stator tines is quite small, such as approximately 1/8 of an inch for most applications. The clearance could be smaller in some cases, or larger in others, especially larger machines. The motor rotates the rotor relative to the housing at a speed of at least 500 rotations per minute. The rotor tines and stator tines are oriented such that the flat faces on one or both are angled slightly away from the radial direction such that the outer ends of the rotor tines pass the stator tines before the inner ends of the rotor tines. A small angle is thereby defined between the flat faces on the rotor tines and the flat faces on the stator tines as those tines pass.
The small angle is preferably in the range of 5 to 20 degrees. The rotor tines and stator tines may be approximately 1 inch wide, and pass each other at a clearance of approximately 1/8 of an inch. The flat faces on the rotor tines and stator tines may be replaceably mounted on the rotor and housing, respectively.
There may be three rows of rotor tines spaced 120 degrees apart, and three rows of stator tines. In this arrangement, the rotor tines pass the first row of stator tines before passing the second row of stator tines before passing the third row of stator tines. The tines in the first and second rows of stator tines are arranged longitudinally on the housing in pairs that are spaced from each other by the spacing of a missing pair. Each pair of stator tines in the first and second rows correspond in longitudinal position to a missing pair in the second and first rows respectively. The third row of stator tines and the three rows of rotor tines each have tines with longitudinal positions corresponding to the tines in both the first and second rows of stator tines.
The housing preferably is movable relative to the rotor to increase the distance between facing surfaces on the rotor and the housing for facilitating maintenance and cleaning of the apparatus, and particularly for facilitating clearance of any jams.
In a further form, the invention is a shredder assembly that comprises a first shredding apparatus and a second substantially-smaller shredding apparatus. The inlet means of the second shredding apparatus is adapted to receive material output from the first shredding apparatus.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
The invention will next be more fully described by means of a preferred embodiment, utilizing the accompanying drawings, in which:
Figure 1 is a sectioned plan view of the shredding apparatus of the invention, the view being taken along the line I-I in Figure 2. Figure 2 is a sectioned side view of the shredding apparatus, the view being taken along the line II-II in
Figure 1. Figure 3 is a sectioned end view of the shredding apparatus, the view being taken along the line III-III in Figure 2.
Figure 4 is an amplified view of a portion of Figure 3 illustrating the mounting of an end of the housing member on the side wall of the apparatus.
Figure 5 is a portion of the sectioned side view of Figure 2, the housing member of the shredding apparatus being in position for the shredding operation. Figure 6 is a similar view to Figure 5, but illustrating the housing member in a retracted position.
Figure 7 is a side view of the housing member of the shredding apparatus.
Figure 8 is an end view of the housing member of Figure 7, the view illustrating the position of the three rows of tines on the housing member.
Figure 9 is a perspective view of the housing member of Figure 7.
Figure 10 is a perspective view of the housing member of Figure 7, and also illustrating the rotor of the apparatus in its operative position.
BEST MODE FOR CARRYING OUT THE INVENTION
As shown in the plan view of Figure 1, the preferred embodiment of the shredding apparatus has a front wall 20, a back wall 22, a pair of inner side walls 24, and a pair of outer side walls 26. Each of the outer side walls 26 is mounted on a set of hinges 28.
A rotor generally designated 30 is mounted on a pair of bearings 32, each of which is supported on a respective section of square tubing 34 secured to one of the inner side walls 24. Three rows of rotor tines 36 each extend across rotor 30, each of the three rows being angularly displaced 120 degrees from the other two rows.
Each rotor tine 36 has a flat front face in the direction of rotation of rotor 30, a flat top face, and a flat sloping back face. The spacing between adjacent rotor tines 36 is slightly greater than the width of a tine 36. A housing generally designated 40 and separately illustrated in Figure 7 has an arc member 42, each end of which is connected to a side member 44. A square tubing section 46 extends between the side members 44, and a plate 48 connects side members 44, tubing section 46 and arc member 42. In its operative position, as illustrated in Figures 2 and 5, arc member 42 extends concentrically around the axis of rotation of rotor 30. Three rows of stator tines 50 each extend across arc member 42, as illustrated in Figures 8 and 9. Tines 50 in the first and second rows are arranged longitudinally on the inner surface of arc member 42 in pairs that are spaced from each other by the spacing of a missing pair. Each pair of tines 50 in the first and second rows correspond in longitudinal position on arc member 42 with a missing pair of tines 50 in the second and first rows, respectively. The tines 50 in the third row on arc member 42 are longitudinally positioned so as to correspond with the tines 50 in both the first and second rows. The longitudinal position of the stator tines 50 on arc member 42 are staggered from the longitudinal position of the rotor tines 36 on rotor 30, allowing the rotor tines to pass the stator tines with a slight clearance. The stator tines have a similar shape to the shape previously described for rotor tines. The height of the rotor and stator tines is such that when housing 40 is in its operative position, the end of the rotor tines have a slight clearance from the inner surface of arc member 42, and the end of the stator tines have a slight clearance from the surface of rotor 30, a typical clearance in each case being about 1/8 of an inch. Material entering the shredding apparatus is pressed by the rotor tines 36 against the first and second rows of stator tines 50 having the tine spacing earlier described. The material is shredded into fragments of a small size by those two rows. The resulting fragments are then pressed against the third row of stator tines 50; the number of tines in that third row equals the number of tines in each row of rotor 30. The material is shredded by the third row of stator tines into fragments of still smaller size.
As illustrated in Figure 2, the flat front face on each rotor tine 36 is set at a slight angle relative to the flat opposing face on each stator tine 50. The outer end of each tine 36 thereby passes the opposing face on a tine 50 before the inner end of tine 36 passes that face, and a scissors-like shearing action results.
The width of a rotor tine 36 is approximately the same as the width of a stator tine 50, and the clearance between those sets of tines as they pass is quite small in relation to the tine width. With a tine width of 1 inch, the clearance is approximately 1/8 of an inch in the preferred embodiment, although other small clearances could obviously be used, the acceptable range depending somewhat on the materials being shredded, keeping in mind that shearing is the desired mechanism. There is a small angle of preferably between 5 and 20 degrees formed between the flat front face of each rotor tine 36 and the flat opposing face of each stator tine 50, with the outer end of a rotor tine 36 therefore passing the leading edge of a stator tine 50 ahead of the inner end of the rotor tine 36. A scissors-like shearing action thereby commences as a rotor tine passes a stator tine, the action starting at the outer end of the rotor tine and progressing inwardly. Housing 40 can be shifted from the operative position shown in Figures 2 and 5 to a retracted position allowing cleaning or maintenance, shown in Figure 6, and especially facilitating the clearance of jams. This is accomplished by means of a hydraulic cylinder 54 that drives a piston 56 which is pivotally connected by a collar 57 to one end of an arm 58. The other end of arm 58 is fixed to a central position on a bar 60. Each end of bar 60 is rotatably mounted on a respective one of the inner side walls 24. One end of a pair of arms 62 is fixed to a respective one of the ends of bar 60. The other end of each arm 62 is slotted to receive a pin 64 that extends between a pair of brackets 66 connected to rectangular tubing section 46. As illustrated in Figure 3 and the amplified view in Figure 4, each side member 44 of housing 40 slides in a recess defined by a lower bracket 68, a lateral guide member 69 secured to lower bracket 68, and an upper bracket 70. Movement of piston 56 out of cylinder 54 results in housing 40 moving from its operative position to the retracted position.
The sequence of operation on startup, or after a stoppage due to a jam, is that hydraulic fluid is pumped to hydraulic cylinder 54 by an electric motor (not shown) that is activated automatically each time electric motor 76 is switched on, so that the housing 40 moves from its operative position. The rotor 30 then starts to turn, which clears away any jammed material or any material left in the apparatus from a previous shutdown. The housing is then returned to its operative position, at which time shredding operations may be recommenced. An electrical motor 76 of approximately 150 horsepower is fastened to the base 78 of the shredding apparatus. The rotor 80 of motor 76 has a four-belt pulley 82 mounted on it. Four belts 84 extend around both that pulley and a four-belt pulley 86 on a driven shaft 88. Shaft 88 is mounted in a pair of bearings 90 that are each supported on an inner side wall 24 by a bracket 92. Each end of shaft 88 has a four-belt pulley 94 mounted on it, and four belts 96 extends around both that pulley and a four-belt pulley 98 mounted on the axle 100 of rotor 30. These features are best illustrated in Figure 3. By choosing appropriately-sized pulleys 82 and 86, the motor 76 is capable of rotating rotor 30 at typical speeds of from 500 r.p.m. to over 3,000 r.p.m.; the optimum rotational speed is a function of the material being shredded, and is best determined through routine experimentation.
The material to be shredded is fed to the shredding apparatus through a broad feed channel generally designated 104, illustrated in profile in Figure 2. A portion of feed channel 104 is an input chute, defined by opposing inclined surfaces 106 and 108 and by opposing parallel surfaces 110, and mounted in a top wall 111 of the apparatus. An output chute is defined by opposing inclined surfaces 112 and 114 and by opposing parallel surfaces 116.
By connecting the output chute of the shredding apparatus to the input chute of another shredding apparatus, it is possible to build a two-stage or three- stage assembly. The rotors and tines in a second and/or third stage are smaller than in the first stage, and the rotors are driven at correspondingly greater angular speed. Tires are an example of a material that generally requires more than a single-stage shredding apparatus for complete reduction.
As illustrated in Figure 10, rotor 30 has a steel axle 100 of 2.5-inch diameter, three steel disks 120 of 1-inch thickness and 12-inch diameter, and a circular cylindrical steel tube 122 of 1-inch thickness and 12- inch inside diameter. Each of the disks 120 is welded circumferentially to steel tube 122, one disk proximate each end and one centrally. A disk 124 of 6-inch diameter is circumferentially welded to the outside of each of the end-positioned disks 120 to extend concentric with the respective disk. Each end of axle 100 has a spline 125 that is 6 inches long and approximately 0.5 inches square. A spline 126 of similar cross-section extends in each of the end-positioned disks 120 and 124, and a key 128 is fitted between splines 125 and 126 to prevent relative rotation between axle 100 and disks 120 and 124. After rotor 30 is constructed with its complement of tines 36, it is balanced. To balance rotor 30, holes of 1-inch diameter are drilled at appropriate angular locations in each disk 120, and a steel dowel 130 of 1-inch diameter is mounted in each hole. The length of each dowel 130 is selected so as to provide the required balance to the disk 120.
The tines 36, which are made of hardened steel, may be constructed with a replaceable flat front face portion that is fastened to the remainder of the tine to allow periodic replacement. The following table illustrates, for a series of materials, the width and radial height of the tines used and the angular speed of the rotor:
TABLE 1
Material Tine Height Tine Width Anαular Speed (inches) (inches) (r.p.m. )
Glass* 1 1 3,000
Tires 4 1-3 500
Carpet 0.5 0.5 1,800 - 2,000
Wood pallet 1.5 1 500 - 1,800
Wood stumps 4 1 500 - 1,800
Plastic* 1 1 2,800
Paint cans* 1.5 1 2,800
Batteries 1.5 1 2,800 Oil Filters 2 1 1,000 - 1,500
Gypsum 1.5 - 2 1 1,800
The first and second stator rows of an apparatus for shredding the materials marked with an '*' differ from the construction earlier described in that each of the first and second stator rows have as many tines as the third row.
Some materials may require a multi-stage shredding process. For instance, used tires require at least a two-stage assembly, with the rotor in the first stage rotating at 500 r.p.m, and at the same or faster r.p.m. in subsequent stages. The rotor tines and stator tines used to shred tires have a height of 4 inches and a width of anywhere from 1 to 3 inches. The tine height and width, and the angular speed of rotor 30, are best determined through trial-and-error for each application. Besides the above-mentioned materials, the shredding apparatus has been used to shred such diverse articles as empty beer bottles in their cardboard cases, transformers, emptied mercury light bulbs and bed boards. These objects come out of the shredding apparatus as tiny fragments of the constituent materials; those shredded materials are then readily separable from each other by further processing.
INDUSTRIAL APPLICABILITY
The shredding apparatus of the invention utilizes a shearing action to shred materials efficiently.

Claims

CLAIMS :
1. A shredding apparatus, comprising:
(a) a rotor mounted to rotate between a pair of side walls, the rotor having tines projecting generally radially outwardly therefrom, the rotor tines extending in a series of rows equiangularly-positioned around the rotor, each of the rows extending generally parallel to the axis of rotation, each rotor tine having a generally flat face in the direction of rotation, those flat faces on tines in the same row extending generally in the same plane;
(b) a housing extending in an arc on one side of the rotor between the pair of side walls, the housing having stator tines projecting generally radially inwardly therefrom in a series of rows extending generally parallel to the axis of rotation, the stator tines being positioned such that one or more of the rotor tines pass between adjacent stator tines, each stator tine having a generally flat face in the direction adapted to oppose the flat face on passing rotor tines, the flat faces on stator tines in the same row extending generally in the same plane, each of the rotor tines and stator tines having a length substantially equal to the radial distance between facing surfaces on the rotor and the housing, each of the rotor tines and stator tines being of substantially equal width, the clearance between small in relation to the width of the tines , so as to produce shearing action;
(c) an inlet means for feeding material into an upper entry opening between the rotor and the housing; and,
(d) a motor for rotating the rotor relative to the housing at a speed of at least 500 rotations per minute; wherein the rotor tines and the stator tines are oriented such that the flat faces on one or both are angled slightly away from the radial direction such that the outer ends of the rotor tines pass the stator tines before the inner ends of the rotor tines, a small angle being defined between the flat faces on the rotor tines and the flat faces on the stator tines as those tines pass.
2. A shredding apparatus as in claim 1, wherein the small angle is in the range of 5 to 20 degrees.
3. A shredding apparatus as in claim 1, wherein the rotor tines and stator tines are each approximately 1 inch wide, and pass each other at a clearance of approximately 1/8 of an inch.
4. A shredding apparatus as in claim 1, wherein the flat faces on the rotor tines and stator tines are replaceably mounted on the rotor and housing, respectively.
5. A shredding apparatus as in claim 1, wherein there are three rows of rotor tines spaced 120 degrees apart, and three rows of stator tines.
6.. A shredding apparatus as in claim 1, wherein there are three rows of rotor tines spaced 120 degrees apart, and three rows of stator tines, the rotor tines passing the first row of stator tines before passing the second row of stator tines before passing the third row of stator tines, the tines in the first and second rows of stator tines being arranged longitudinally on the housing in pairs that are spaced from each other by the spacing of a missing pair, each pair of stator tines in the first and second rows corresponding in longitudinal position to a missing pair in the second and first rows respectively, the third row of stator tines and the three rows of rotor tines each having tines with longitudinal positions corresponding to the tines in both the first and second rows of stator tines.
7. A shredding apparatus as in claim 1, wherein the housing is retractable from its operative position, to increase the distance between facing surfaces on the rotor and the housing.
8. A shredding apparatus as in claim 7, including control means by which a startup or jam clearance sequence may be initiated, said sequence comprising the steps of first retracting said housing from its operative position, then commencing or recommencing rotation of the rotor, thereby clearing away any remaining material, and then returning the housing to its operative position so that normal shredding operations may be recommenced.
9. A shredder assembly, comprising a first shredding apparatus as in claim 1 and a second substantially- smaller shredding apparatus as in claim 1, the inlet means of the second shredding apparatus being adapted to receive material output from the first shredding apparatus.
PCT/CA1993/000375 1993-09-20 1993-09-20 Shredding apparatus with shearing action Ceased WO1995008425A1 (en)

Priority Applications (6)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
EP19930918856 EP0720524B1 (en) 1993-09-20 1993-09-20 Shredding apparatus with shearing action
DE69329074T DE69329074T2 (en) 1993-09-20 1993-09-20 SHREDDING SHREDDING DEVICE
AU49399/93A AU4939993A (en) 1993-09-20 1993-09-20 Shredding apparatus with shearing action
PCT/CA1993/000375 WO1995008425A1 (en) 1993-09-20 1993-09-20 Shredding apparatus with shearing action
AT93918856T ATE194793T1 (en) 1993-09-20 1993-09-20 SHREDDING DEVICE WITH SHEARING EFFECT
ES93918856T ES2151514T3 (en) 1993-09-20 1993-09-20 CRUSHING DEVICE WITH SHEARING ACTION.

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
PCT/CA1993/000375 WO1995008425A1 (en) 1993-09-20 1993-09-20 Shredding apparatus with shearing action

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
WO1995008425A1 true WO1995008425A1 (en) 1995-03-30

Family

ID=4172983

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
PCT/CA1993/000375 Ceased WO1995008425A1 (en) 1993-09-20 1993-09-20 Shredding apparatus with shearing action

Country Status (6)

Country Link
EP (1) EP0720524B1 (en)
AT (1) ATE194793T1 (en)
AU (1) AU4939993A (en)
DE (1) DE69329074T2 (en)
ES (1) ES2151514T3 (en)
WO (1) WO1995008425A1 (en)

Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP0908238A1 (en) * 1997-10-06 1999-04-14 UNTERWURZACHER PATENTVERWERTUNGSGESELLSCHAFT mbH Material shredding apparatus
DE19601029C2 (en) * 1996-01-13 1999-11-11 Suedrohrbau Gmbh & Co Process and device for processing waste
CN105457704A (en) * 2015-12-31 2016-04-06 郑昊 Mechanical device for deeply processing pottery clay
CN109831085A (en) * 2019-02-15 2019-05-31 深圳市配天电机技术有限公司 Switched reluctance machines, electric car and electrical equipment
US12418229B2 (en) 2019-02-15 2025-09-16 Shenzhen Tatfook New Energy Co., Ltd. Switched reluctance motor with uneven distribution of stator teeth

Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2959362A (en) * 1957-02-12 1960-11-08 American Biltrite Rubber Compa Process of making resinous granules
EP0006261A1 (en) * 1978-06-20 1980-01-09 Electricite Neuchateloise S.A. Shredder for bulky and/or tough material
US4394983A (en) * 1981-03-02 1983-07-26 Kaca Corporation Tire and refuse shredder
WO1991017690A1 (en) * 1990-05-18 1991-11-28 Szombathy Janos J A machine for shredding vehicle tires and other articles

Patent Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2959362A (en) * 1957-02-12 1960-11-08 American Biltrite Rubber Compa Process of making resinous granules
EP0006261A1 (en) * 1978-06-20 1980-01-09 Electricite Neuchateloise S.A. Shredder for bulky and/or tough material
US4394983A (en) * 1981-03-02 1983-07-26 Kaca Corporation Tire and refuse shredder
WO1991017690A1 (en) * 1990-05-18 1991-11-28 Szombathy Janos J A machine for shredding vehicle tires and other articles

Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE19601029C2 (en) * 1996-01-13 1999-11-11 Suedrohrbau Gmbh & Co Process and device for processing waste
EP0908238A1 (en) * 1997-10-06 1999-04-14 UNTERWURZACHER PATENTVERWERTUNGSGESELLSCHAFT mbH Material shredding apparatus
CN105457704A (en) * 2015-12-31 2016-04-06 郑昊 Mechanical device for deeply processing pottery clay
CN109831085A (en) * 2019-02-15 2019-05-31 深圳市配天电机技术有限公司 Switched reluctance machines, electric car and electrical equipment
US12418229B2 (en) 2019-02-15 2025-09-16 Shenzhen Tatfook New Energy Co., Ltd. Switched reluctance motor with uneven distribution of stator teeth

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
EP0720524A1 (en) 1996-07-10
EP0720524B1 (en) 2000-07-19
DE69329074T2 (en) 2001-06-07
AU4939993A (en) 1995-04-10
ES2151514T3 (en) 2001-01-01
DE69329074D1 (en) 2000-08-24
ATE194793T1 (en) 2000-08-15

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US5829690A (en) Shredding apparatus with shearing action
US4142688A (en) Apparatus for handling waste including rubber tires
KR101787666B1 (en) Crushing apparatus for wastes
WO2004014559A1 (en) Two-shaft industrial shredder
KR101870585B1 (en) Apparatus for breaking wasted styrofoam into pieces
US20100102155A1 (en) Fixed Quantity Supply Apparatus for Breaking Open Waste Envelope
US20120085848A1 (en) The comminution of waste & other materials
EP0720524B1 (en) Shredding apparatus with shearing action
KR20170006471A (en) Creshing Deduster Of Municipal Waste Manufacturing System
JPH0127778B2 (en)
US3229921A (en) Shredding apparatus
US4723717A (en) Rotary shearing/cutting machine
JPS59206057A (en) Waste tire cutting apparatus and rollor blade
KR101546356B1 (en) Hit wind type sorting apparatus for waste
US5350122A (en) Waste recycling device
CA2172157A1 (en) Shredding apparatus with shearing action
KR100526953B1 (en) A apparatus for crushing of wood
KR102867939B1 (en) a regeneration apparatus of styrofoam
JP4803793B2 (en) Single screw crusher
CN205660957U (en) Portable plastic crusher
JPS5817664B2 (en) Fully automatic method and machine for crushing waste into fixed size squares
KR100287789B1 (en) Waste sorting and conveying device
KR200262498Y1 (en) Waste Tire Crusher
US3927840A (en) Refuse shredder
CN222724467U (en) Double-shaft shredding recovery device for waste treatment

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
AK Designated states

Kind code of ref document: A1

Designated state(s): AT AU BB BG BR BY CA CH CZ DE DK ES FI GB HU JP KP KR KZ LK LU MG MN MW NL NO NZ PL PT RO RU SD SE SK UA US VN

AL Designated countries for regional patents

Kind code of ref document: A1

Designated state(s): AT BE CH DE DK ES FR GB GR IE IT LU MC NL PT SE BF BJ CF CG CI CM GA GN ML MR NE SN TD TG

DFPE Request for preliminary examination filed prior to expiration of 19th month from priority date (pct application filed before 20040101)
121 Ep: the epo has been informed by wipo that ep was designated in this application
WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 1993918856

Country of ref document: EP

WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 08619497

Country of ref document: US

REG Reference to national code

Ref country code: DE

Ref legal event code: 8642

WWP Wipo information: published in national office

Ref document number: 1993918856

Country of ref document: EP

WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 2172157

Country of ref document: CA

WWW Wipo information: withdrawn in national office

Ref document number: 1993918856

Country of ref document: EP

WWG Wipo information: grant in national office

Ref document number: 1993918856

Country of ref document: EP