Title of Invention

FEEDER UNIT FOR FEEDING INFUSION MATERIAL TO A PACKAGING MACHINE PRODUCING FILTER PACKS

Abstract Described is a unit (1) for feeding powdered infusion material to a machine (M) producing packs (3) made from filter material (5). The machine (M) comprises a production line (2) for making such packs (3) and consists of a conveyor (4) with mobile recesses (7) moving in a feed direction (L) designed to be covered with filter material (5) and to form impressions (8) in the filter material (5); rotary feeders (10) fitted to the unit (1) designed to feed an amount or dose (C) of the powdered infusion material into the impressions(8), and rotary precompactors (14) mounted on the rotary feeders (10) acting together with rotary feeders (10) to distribute the doses (C) uniformly inside the impressions (8).
Full Text Feeder Unit for feeding infusion material to a packaging machine
producing filter packs
Technical Field
This invention relates to a feeder unit for feeding infusion
material to a packaging machine producing packs made from filter
material.
In particular, the present invention can be advantageously
employed to feed powdered, ground coffee to an automatic packing
machine designed to produce coffee "pods" made from filter paper.
The description below makes explicit reference to this embodiment
without restricting the scope of the invention.
Background Art
At the present time, feeding powdered coffee to machines
which make and fill filter-paper coffee pods is performed by a
unit fitted to the machine itself where the unit consists of
feeder devices designed to drop an amount of coffee into a dosing
chamber.
The dosing chamber is horizontal and inside has a sliding,
reciprocating piston designed to push the dose of coffee dropped
down by the feeders into a vertical feed tube from where the
coffee drops down into a series of circular filter paper
impressions ; the impressions are formed by embossing a strip of
filter paper on a corresponding series of circular recesses on an
intermittent conveyor which forms the pod shaping and conveying
line of the packing machine.
Vertical, reciprocating pressers are mounted at the feed
tube and compress the coffee in the circular impressions before
the impressions are covered on the top with a strip of filter
paper in order to close and complete the pod.
A serious drawback to the feeding-dosing unit described
above is that the powdered coffee is not distributed uniformly
inside the circular pod impressions.
The principal cause of this drawback is the fact that the
coffee, pushed by the piston element in the feed tube, drops down
into the impressions in an uncontrolled and uneven manner and not
even the action of the pressers is able to distribute the coffee
uniformly in the impressions.
The result using the type of feeder-doser described above is
a coffee pod which does not meet quality specifications.
This considerable drawback worsens as the operating speed of
the pod maker-filler machine increases.
The aim of the present invention is to produce a feeder unit
which overcomes the drawbacks cited above.
In particular, the aim of the present invention is to
produce a coffee feeder unit for a packing machine that produces
filter paper coffee pods of the specified quality and which
operates at high production speeds.
Disclosure of the invention
The present invention provides a feeder unit for feeding
infusion material to a packaging machine for producing packs made
from filter material, wherein the machine comprises a production
line for said packs consisting of a conveyor with mobile recesses
moving in a specified feed direction and designed to be covered
with filter material to form impressions in the filter material ;
characterised in that said unit comprises rotary feeders designed
to feed an amount or dose of infusion material into the
impressions, and rotary precompactors mounted on the rotary
feeders and acting together with the rotary feeders to distribute
the doses uniformly inside the impressions.
Brief description of the accompanying drawings
The technical characteristics of the invention, with
reference to the above aims, are clearly described in the claims
below and its advantages are apparent from the detailed
description which follows, and from the accompanying drawings
which illustrate a preferred embodiment of the invention provided
merely by way of example without limiting the scope of the
inventive step, and in which:
- Figure 1 is a front view, with some parts cut away and
others in cross section to better illustrate certain details, of
an embodiment of the feeder unit in a first operating position;
- Figures 2a and 2b are enlarged views of the unit in Figure
1 as seen from the front and from above respectively;
- Figure 3 . is a front view, with some parts cut away and
others in cross section to better illustrate certain details, of
the feeder unit in Figure 1 in a second operating position;
- Figure 4 is front view of an infusion material pack filled
by the feeder unit described in this invention.
Detailed description of the preferred embodiments of the invention
With reference to Figure 1, the numeral 1 indicates a feeder
unit for feeding powdered, ground coffee to the production line 2
of a packing machine M producing coffee pods.3 (Figure 4) made
from filter paper, the feeder unit 1 being an integral part of
this machine.
The production line 2 comprises a intermittent-motion
conveyor 4 moving in a horizontal feed direction L carrying a
filter-paper strip 5, and having a series of modular elements 6.
Each modular element 6 has at least one, mobile circular
recess 7 moving in the direction L and designed to make a
corresponding circular impression 8 in the filter paper (dashed
line in Figure 1). The impression' is formed, using a known
embossing method not illustrated here, by pressing the 'strip 5
into the recess 7 in order to form the lower portion or half-shell
9 (Figure 4) of the pod 3 being formed by the machine.
Figures 1, 2a and 3 show a feeder unit 1 consisting of
rotary feeders 10 in the form of a feed screw 11 rotating about a
vertical axis 12 inside a hollow, tubular, cylindrical container
13 and designed to feed a specified amount or dose C of powdered
coffee into the impressions 8 of the conveyor 4 of the line 2.
The cylindrical container 13 is mounted at a distance D from
the conveyor 4 (Figure 1) and supports, on its outer surface, a
sliding precompactor 14.
Figures 1 and 3 show the precompactor 14 which consists of a
hollow, ring-shaped cap 15 fixed to a hollow, cylindrical, tubular
element 16.
One end 17 of the tubular element 16 is designed to engage
with the gear wheel (not shown here) of a motor unit (also not
shown' here) which rotates the tubular element around the cylinder
13 on special bearings and around the axis 12; the tubular element
also slides vertically (arrow F in Figures 1 and 3) on the
cylinder 13 between a rest position A, where the cap 15 is
positioned at a distance from the conveyor 4 substantially the
same as the distance D (Figure 1) , and an operating position B
where the cap 15 is designed to act on the upper portion of the
powdered coffee dose C fed into the pod impression 8 by the feed
screw 11 in order to aid the uniform distribution of the dose C
(Figure 3) by levelling it out uniformly inside the impression 8.
Figures 2a and 2b show the end of the feed screw 11 where
there is a separator 18 consisting of blades 19 extending radially
at one end of a rotary cylinder 20 which rotates around the
cylinder 13 which in turn rotates, independent of the feed screw
11 action, together with the tubular element 16 to which it is
connected. The rotary blades 19 are designed to act on' the coffee
dose C in the impression 8 already distributed uniformly by -the
action of the rotary cap 15 and thereby produce a dynamic
separation between the dose C and the lower end of the screw feed
11.
The blades 19 are rotated together with the precompactor 14
by the tubular element 16 to which they are both connected and
rotate together with the feed screw 11 to aid the flow of coffee
downwards towards the impressions 8 when the feed screw 11 itself
is rotating; when the feed screw 11 stops rotating, the blades 19
continue to rotate thus producing a dynamic separation.
In practice, when the filter paper impression 8 on the
module 6 of the conveyor 4 is under the feed screw 11 during an
operating cycle, the tubular element 16 slides downwards from
position A to position B and, at the same time, rotates around the
cylinder 13. This has the effect of rotating the feed screw 11 of
the unit 1 so that a coffee dose C drops down into the impression
3.
In position B, the rotary cap 15 presses down and rotates on
the upper part of the dose C currently being formed thus
effectively and uniformly precompacting the dose C being formed so
that it is uniformly distributed inside the impression 8; a paper
presser 21 mounted on the element 14 holds and stabilises the
filter paper strip 5 while the dose C is being compacted.
When the screw feed 11 stops rotating this stops the flow of
coffee powder, the blades 19 of the separator-leveller 18 continue
to rotate thus separating the dose C from the feed screw 11.
At the end of the cycle, the tubular element 16 travels
upwards carrying the cap 15 of the precompactor 14 back to the
home position A. The impression 8, now filled with the
precompacted dose C, moves forward towards another presser element
(of a known type and not shown here) which completes compaction of
the dose C after the conveyor 4 feeds forward by one step in the
direction L. The next impression 8 is now in position under the
feed screw 11 ready to be filled with a new dose from the feeder
unit 1.
The invention described here may be subject to. modifications'
and variations without thereby departing from the scope of the
inventive concept; all the details of the invention may be
substituted by technically equivalent elements.
WE CLAIM :
1. A feeder unit (1) for feeding infusion material to a
packaging machine (M) for producing packs (3) made from filter
material (5), wherein the machine (M) comprises a production line
(2) for said packs (3) consisting of a conveyor (4) with mobile
recesses (7) moving in a specified feed direction (L) and
designed to be covered with filter material (5) to form
impressions (8) in the filter material (5) ; characterised in
that said unit comprises rotary feeders (10) designed to feed an
amount or dose (C) of infusion material into the impressions (8),
and rotary precompactors (14) mounted on the rotary feeders (10)
and acting together with the rotary feeders (10) to distribute
the doses (C) uniformly inside the impressions (8).
2. A feeder unit as claimed in claim 1, wherein the rotary
feeders (10) consist of a feed screw (11) rotating inside a
hollow, tubular container (13) positioned transversely across the
feed direction (L) at a fixed distance (D) from the conveyor of
the production line (2); the precompactors (14) being mounted so
as to rotate around the tubular container (13) and to slide on
the container (13) towards and away from the operating position
(B) where the precompactors (14) are in contact with atleast one
of the doses (C) already inside one of the impressions (8).
3. A feeder unit as claimed in claim 2, wherein the
precompactors (14) consist of a hollow, ring-shaped cap (15)
fixed to a hollow, cylindrical, tubular element (16) which is
designed to rotate around and slide up the cylindrical container
(13) of the feed screw (11).
4. A feeder unit as claimed in any of the claims 1 to 3,
wherein the rotary feeders (10) support separator-leveller
devices (18) fitted with rotary blades (19) designed to act on
the doses (C).
5. A feeder unit as claimed in claim 4, wherein the rotary
blades (19) are designed to produce a dynamic separation between
the doses (C) and the feeders (10).
Described is a unit (1) for feeding powdered
infusion material to a machine (M) producing packs
(3) made from filter material (5). The machine (M) comprises
a production line (2) for making such packs (3) and
consists of a conveyor (4) with mobile recesses (7) moving
in a feed direction (L) designed to be covered with
filter material (5) and to form impressions (8) in the filter
material (5); rotary feeders (10) fitted to the unit (1)
designed to feed an amount or dose (C) of the powdered
infusion material into the impressions(8), and rotary precompactors
(14) mounted on the rotary feeders (10) acting
together with rotary feeders (10) to distribute the doses (C)
uniformly inside the impressions (8).

Documents:

397-KOLNP-2006-CORRESPONDENCE-1.1.pdf

397-KOLNP-2006-FORM 16.pdf

397-KOLNP-2006-FORM 27.pdf

397-KOLNP-2006-FORM-27.pdf

397-kolnp-2006-granted-abstract.pdf

397-kolnp-2006-granted-assignment.pdf

397-kolnp-2006-granted-claims.pdf

397-kolnp-2006-granted-correspondence.pdf

397-kolnp-2006-granted-description (complete).pdf

397-kolnp-2006-granted-drawings.pdf

397-kolnp-2006-granted-examination report.pdf

397-kolnp-2006-granted-form 1.pdf

397-kolnp-2006-granted-form 18.pdf

397-kolnp-2006-granted-form 3.pdf

397-kolnp-2006-granted-form 5.pdf

397-kolnp-2006-granted-gpa.pdf

397-kolnp-2006-granted-reply to examination report.pdf

397-kolnp-2006-granted-specification.pdf

397-kolnp-2006-granted-translated copy of priority document.pdf


Patent Number 233779
Indian Patent Application Number 397/KOLNP/2006
PG Journal Number 15/2099
Publication Date 10-Apr-2009
Grant Date 08-Apr-2009
Date of Filing 22-Feb-2006
Name of Patentee I. M. A. INDUSTRIA MACCHINE AUTOMATICHE S. P. A.
Applicant Address VIA EMILIA LEVANTE, 428.442, I-40064 OZZANO EMILIA
Inventors:
# Inventor's Name Inventor's Address
1 CONTI, ROBERTO VIA CONDOTTO, 13A, I-40026 IMOLA
2 FISCHER, BRIGLTTE LANGE HECKE 38 D-53639 KONIGSWINTER
PCT International Classification Number B65B 29/02
PCT International Application Number PCT/IB2005/002005
PCT International Filing date 2005-06-30
PCT Conventions:
# PCT Application Number Date of Convention Priority Country
1 BO2004A000442 2004-07-16 Italy