GB2324702A - Apparatus for untangling tobacco. - Google Patents

Apparatus for untangling tobacco. Download PDF

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Publication number
GB2324702A
GB2324702A GB9809189A GB9809189A GB2324702A GB 2324702 A GB2324702 A GB 2324702A GB 9809189 A GB9809189 A GB 9809189A GB 9809189 A GB9809189 A GB 9809189A GB 2324702 A GB2324702 A GB 2324702A
Authority
GB
United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
rolls
tobacco
pair
roll
tangled
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.)
Withdrawn
Application number
GB9809189A
Other versions
GB9809189D0 (en
Inventor
Richard John Forsyth
Victor Albert Montgomery White
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.)
GBE International PLC
Original Assignee
GBE International PLC
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 GBE International PLC filed Critical GBE International PLC
Publication of GB9809189D0 publication Critical patent/GB9809189D0/en
Publication of GB2324702A publication Critical patent/GB2324702A/en
Withdrawn legal-status Critical Current

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Classifications

    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A24TOBACCO; CIGARS; CIGARETTES; SIMULATED SMOKING DEVICES; SMOKERS' REQUISITES
    • A24CMACHINES FOR MAKING CIGARS OR CIGARETTES
    • A24C5/00Making cigarettes; Making tipping materials for, or attaching filters or mouthpieces to, cigars or cigarettes
    • A24C5/39Tobacco feeding devices

Abstract

Apparatus for opening tangled tobacco comprising one pair of rotating rolls positioned across a flow path for tobacco, means to drive a one roll of the pair to convey the tobacco at a greater rate than the other roll, and the speed of the rolls being variable so as to regulate flow of the tobacco through the apparatus, a further pair of rotating rolls, means to drive a one roll of the further pair to convey the tobacco at a greater rate than the other roll to thereby open the tangled tobacco, the arrangement being such that, in use, said tobacco passes from one pair of rolls to the other pair of rolls.

Description

2324702 GBE.ROD REGULATORY OPENING DEVICE Tobacco leaf comprises a mid-rib
or stem and thinner section of leaf known as lamina.
From the mid-rib, smaller stem and veins run through the lamina section. in 1 processing the tobacco leaf, a threshing process is used to remove as much as is practicable of the stem and vein. However some stem and vein will remain with threshed lamina, and hence exist with that threshed lamina as residual stem.
Typically stem residual in threshed tobacco lamina ranges from about 1 to 4 % with the target level being set by the user of the threshed tdt)acco lamina. The lower the target figure of residual stem, the more aggressively the leaf must be threshed. This aggressive threshing results in a product in which there is an unacceptably high percentage of threshed lamina which is of small particle size which reduces the yield of the usable product. Hence there is more waste and the tobacco is of lower final filling power.
After threshing, the tobacco is cut. The residual stem remaining in me threshed iamina will be cut with the lamina and become entangled within the cut lamina. Some of these larger particles can be removed by a winnower. However the smaller pieces remain as needles or slithers, which, as well as reducing the filling power of the lamina, are CI objectionable to the smoker, and can cause holes or tears in the cigarette paper thus reducing cigarette making efficiency.
Before being passed to the cigarette maker, the cut lamina is combined with cut tobacco in a number of different processes. When combining the tobaccos, further residual objectionable tobaccos may become entangled in the strands of cut lamina.
1 l he higher ine permitted levels of residual stem, the more gentle can De the threshin 9 process. Whilst this results in a higher level of potentially oi)jectionat)ie resicties, the gentler threshing process produces larger pieces and fewer smaller pieces of detached lamina. This results is less wastage and more economic use of the lamina.
to is 2 5 in some parts of the world it is customary not to thresh the tobacco leaf and not to detach the lamina from the stem. Consequently, the whole leaf is cut. Cut whole leaf will contain an increased level of objectionable tobacco panicles because the stem has been cut with the lamina. Moreover, the cut lamina strands will be longer and more entangled than those produced from threshed lamina. ' it is therefore desirable to remove "objectionaDies" (ie residual stem) from cut lamina and cut whole leaf more effectively, and the potential benefits are:
a. a relaxation of the threshing stem residual criteria, giving more c d.
economic use of threshing systems and of detached lamina.
b. an improvement in finished cigarette quality.
an improvement in cigaretie manufacturing ernciency and costs. c potential recovery of objectionable tobaccos that can be reprocessed into a non-objectionabie form and re-used in a manner which contributes rather than detracts from final cigarette quality and manufacturing costs. Reducing the severity of the threshing process and then attempting to pneumatically 0 separate the objectionable tobaccos from the entangled cut lamina has been tried but has generally not been successful. l-nis is because the entangled strands of good cut lamina are in pneumatic terms similar to winnows and that a large proportion of the "o"bjectiona"oles" are trapped in the tangled strands of cut lamina. Consequently most 0 of the objectionatAe produce is accepted and some acceptable product is rejected.
Pneumatic separation would be more effective it these prolblems can be overcome.
2 Pneumatic separation such as that in EP-A-91902269.9 and 88910091.3 and GB-A2157411, is achieved by lifting and removing good product and permitting dojectionable product to drop out to a reject location. For illustrative purposes, it is assumed that a pneumatic separator consists of a chamber in which there is an air is 2 0 stream directed vertically upwards and that product to be separated is introduced into a chamber in a substantially horizontal direction part way up the vertical chamber. When a mixture of good and objectionable product is presented into a moving air stream, those particles having a terminal velocity greater than the velocity of me air stream will not be supported by the air stream and will drop downwards. 7-nose particles having a terminal velocity less than the air stream will pass upwards with the air stream.
The terminal velocity of a particle is dependent on its mass, shape, size and orientation to the air stream. 7-he greater the difference in terminal velocity between the product to be accepted (good product) and to be rejected (objectionable) the easier it is to pneumatically separate the particles.
Tobacco is normally transported in compressed bales and hence the tobacco is tangled. in order to create the situation where objectionable stem can be separated we must first untangle/open the tobacco. Bly opening, each particle and strand or tobacco exists as a separate item. in this form the air stream in the separator has access to, and can act upon each individual particle. However the untanorling/opening must De achieved without damage to the good rdbacco. The untangfing is preferaColy achieved by conveying a mass of tangled product in such a way that the leading portion of the mass portion. in this way the distance between is advanced at a higner rate man tne trainn., the leading and trailing portions is increased in the desired direction. As a result ofthe stretching, the tangled strands forming the bunches become straighter and more 0 3 separated. A combination of the rate of extension and the distance between the two surfaces stretching the mass of tobacco will cause excessively long strands to be severed to a length below a predetermined length.
0 An apparatus for stretching the mass of tolbacco in this way may consist of sequentially adjacent surfaces spaced in the direction of travel. Each surface has a piurality or teeth for engaging the tangled strands of cut lamina. -Ine downstream surface conveys the 0 zn cut lamina at a greater rate than the upstream surface, the distance between the surfaces being such that the downstream surface engages me product before it leaves the 1 U upstream surface.
- I. - As already stated the surfaces have a pluranty of teem, these teem mesh in me gap between the surfaces, whereby in use, a leading portion of me mass of tobacco in contact with a set of teeth on the first surface is moved into the gap between the surfaces and comes into contact with a set of teeth on the second surface. The relative speeds of the sequentially adjacent surfaces stretch and loosen the mass of strands until a trailing portion of the tangled mass is advanced our of engagement wim me teeth on C r) C its first surface.
T-hese surfaces advantageousiy comprise me circumterentiai surfaces of a sequence of rolls, with the speed of rotation progressiveiy nigher in the direction of travel.
As a result of the stretching, the tangled strands forming the bunches become straighter 0 J= and more separated. in a preferred embodiment, the stretching of the tangled bunch is sufficient to sever excessively long strands of cut lamina so that only strands having C> C 1 1.
a length below a predetermined upper limit are fed to the subsequent device.
4 An apparatus of this type is described in our PCT Patent Application No: PCTiGB9610085 1. This discloses a muiti-rolis opening device designed for specific use with a pneumatic separator, receiving its tobacco from a horizontal or near horizontal conveyor. There is however with the above device no method of regulating the flow through the rolls which thus relies on the preceding equipment in the line to provide uniformity of flow.
71he present application provides apparatus whereby both flow regulation and opening occur simultaneously.
is Accordingly, the present invention provides apparatus for opening tangled tobacco comprising one pair of rotating roils positioned across a flow pain for tobacco, means to drive a downstream roll of the pair to convey the tobacco at a greater rate than the upstream roll, and the speed of the rolls being variable so as to regulate flow of the tobacco through the apparatus, a further pair of rotating roils, means to drive a downstream roll of the further pair to convey the tobacco at a greater rate than the upstream ron to thereby open me tangled tobacco, the arrangement being such that, in use, said tobacco passes from one pair of rolls to the other pair of rolls.
2, 0 in a preferred arrangement, said one pair of roils is disposed upstream of said further 0 pair of rolls. and said one pair of rolls, in addition to regulating flow, at least partially opens the tangled tobacco.
Two preferred embodiments of the invention will now be described, by way of exampie oniy, and with reference to the drawings in which; Figure I is a diagrammatic vertical section of a tobacco opener according to a first embodiment of the invention, Figure 2 is a diagrammatic vertical section of a tobacco opener according to a second ernlbodiment of the invention, 1 C) Figure 3 is a diagrammatic vertical section of a tdt)acco opener according to a third embodiment of the invention, and, Figure 4 is a diagrammatic vertical section of a tobacco opener according to a Tourth embodiment of the invention.
The tobacco opener of the present invention controls the flow and provides a directional discharge of the tobacco.
1 Referring to Figure 1 and 3, an opening apparatus in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the invention comprises a rectangular rube 10 which is mounted in a vertical or near vertical direction, the top 11 of which is open for the receipt of a tangled mass of tobacco fed from a transporter device such as a conveyor (not shown). Situated in the tube 10 are two sets of opposed, rolls (12, 13 and 14, 15) positioned across a flom. path for the t6bacco. in figure 1, rolls i2, 13, 14, 15 all rotate in a clockwise direction, whereas in Figure 3, rolls 12 and 13 are counter rotating, roil 12 rotating clockwise and roll 13 anticlockwise, and similarly rolls 14, 15 are also counter rotating with roll 14 rotating clockwise and roll 15 rotating anticlockwise. I he upper 0 r> roll set (12, 13) is for regulation of the flow of material through the apparatus whilst performing moderate opening. 7-ne second lower set of rolls (14, 15) fully open the tobacco whilst imparting a desired directional path to the product leaving the apparatus.
C5 All of the rolls are driven in the directions indicated by arrows in the Figure, 6 downstream roll 13 at higher speed than upstream roll 12 and downstream roll 14 at a higher speed than upstream roll 15.
15) II ine regulatory rolls (12, 13) are located a distance below the top of the tube (10) thus allowing guidance of the t6t)acco by a curved guide 16 onto the leading roll (12). 'Fne circumferential surface of all rolls (12, 13, 14, 15) are covered in a plurality of pins (not shown). 7-nese pins can be normal to the surface though more preferably can be inclined, ideally forwards relative to the direction of the rotation. 7Ine exact arrangement or pins depends on me product to De processed.
-I I he leading roll (12) advances the tangled product towards the second roll (13) in the pair. The second roll has a plurality of pins arranged on its surface, although the density and pattern will differ from roll (12).
The arrangement of the rolls (12, 13) is such that the distance between the rolls is adjustable, depending on the material and the extent of aggressive processing required. At the closest adjustment, the pins of the adjacent rollers will mesh.
The action of the two rolls (12, 13) and their respective sets of pins at the interface open the tangled t6bacco. Ine motor means (not shown) which rotates the rolls(!-, 13) is a variable speed motor means and control of me speed of the roils (in which a drive means such as suitable gears arranges that the second roll 13 or. at least, its relevant peripheral surface, always rotates faster than the leading roll 12), will regulate the flow of tobacco through these roils (12, 13), whilst maintaining their dojective to 2 5 partially open the product.
1 - 1 ' 1 1 1 1 I he partially opened tobacco passes down from rolls (12, 1-35) to me region between the 7 1 - 1:) two roll sets. At the base of this region is a guide 17 and the second pair of rolls (14, 15). Situated in this region are two limit detectors (not shown). These are located in the tube 10 at a position providing the uppermost desired level of tobacco. The detectors act to maintain a near constant level of tobacco above rolls (14, 15) by adjustment of the speed of rolls (12, 13) and the conveyor to the top of the tube. llnerefore it can e seen that the speed of rolls (14, 15) are required to be a function of the speed of the rolls (12, 13) above. 71he motor means (not shown) which drives the rolls (14, 15) include a drive means such as gears which arranges that the second roil (15), or, at least, its relevant peripheral surface, always rotates faster than the roll (14). Ilnese second rolls (14, 15) have the effect of fully opening the tobacco whilst feeding the tobacco vertically down to a subsequent apparatus.
The arrangement of Figures 2 and 4 are similar. 7-he arrangement of the upper rolls 12, 13 and guide 16 in Figures 2 and 4 are similar to Figures 1 and 33 respectively (although oppositely disposed in the drawings) but the lower rolls 14, 15 and guide 17 0 are arranged to discharge the material to one side rather than vertically downwards. 71hus the roll 15 is disposed above the roll 14 rather than to one side as in -Figures 1 and 3.
in Figure 2 the lower rolls both rotate in the same direction, ie clockwise, whereas in Figure 4 they counter rotate, roll 15 anticlockwise and roll 14 clockwise. in other arrangementsthe location of rolls 14, 15 in the tube (10) will vary i.e. the line perpendicular and common to the two rolls of a pair can be horizontal, angled or vertical to suit the discharge required by the subsequent device, such as a pneumatic separator. 7Inere are however several differences between the regulating (12, 13) and opening (14, 15) rolls. These differences allow the opening rolls (14, 15) to perform their task of fully opening the parTiany mnaled product. ineditterencescanbetound 1= 8 1 11 in the density and arrangement of the pins on the rolls surfaces and me speed of the rolls. T-ne opening roll set (14, 15) have a higher overall speed.
1 11 Thus the arrangement of the rolls (14, 15), can be clearly seen to be designed Tor me primary function of opening the tobacco, indicated by means of the relative motion at 0 their junction coupled with the lack of obstruction at their discharge. Control of the C1 speed of the rolls will then have the additional effect of metering the tobacco without incurring additional degradation.
The speed control of the rolls in either case can be by-electronic control or by fixed mechanical means (i.e. belt and pulley), with the lanerlbeing generally preferred when the product is of predictable quality and characteristics. Ine spacing betweenmerolls is monitored at either end of the rolls such that the parallel alignment of the rolls can be maintained.
is The guides 16, 17 (such as those illustrated but not fixed by the figures used')j in the tobacco stream to ensure the tobacco is fed into the rolls without undue residence or degradation in the apparatus.
So-called "cleaning" combs or rolls may be provided to prevent the return of product into the apparatus via the discharge rolls. Also, in the arrangement of Figure 2 and 4, air may be passed up the tube 10.
9

Claims (1)

  1. CLAIMS:
    i. Apparatus for opening tangled t6bacco comprising one pair (12, 13) of rotating rolls positioned across a flow path for tobacco, means to drive a one roll of me pair to convey the tdt)acco at a greater rate than the other roil, and the speed of the rolisbeing 1.
    variable so as to regulate flow of the tobacco through me apparatus, a further pair (14, 15) of rotating rolls, means to drive a one roll of the further pair to convey the tobacco at a greater rate than me other roll to thereby open the tangled tobacco, the arrangement being such that, in use, said tdt)acco passes from one pair of rolls to the other pair of rolls.
    Apparatus as claimed in claim 1 wherein said one pair of rolls is disposed C upstream ol said further pair of rolls, and said one pair of rolls, in addition to regulating flow, at least partially opens the tangled tobacco.
    is Apparatus as claimed in claim 1 or claim 2 wherein said one pair of rotating roils is disposed above said further pair of rotating rolis and detector means are provided to detect the upper level of tobacco above said further pair of rotating rolls and to vary the speed of rotation of said one pair of rolls to maintain said level near constant.
    4. Apparatus as claimed in any of claims 1 to 3 wherein the circumierential surfaces of said rolls are each covered in a plurality of pins.
GB9809189A 1997-04-29 1998-04-29 Apparatus for untangling tobacco. Withdrawn GB2324702A (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GBGB9708717.5A GB9708717D0 (en) 1997-04-29 1997-04-29 Regulatory opening device

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
GB9809189D0 GB9809189D0 (en) 1998-07-01
GB2324702A true GB2324702A (en) 1998-11-04

Family

ID=10811560

Family Applications (2)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
GBGB9708717.5A Pending GB9708717D0 (en) 1997-04-29 1997-04-29 Regulatory opening device
GB9809189A Withdrawn GB2324702A (en) 1997-04-29 1998-04-29 Apparatus for untangling tobacco.

Family Applications Before (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
GBGB9708717.5A Pending GB9708717D0 (en) 1997-04-29 1997-04-29 Regulatory opening device

Country Status (2)

Country Link
EP (1) EP0875159A1 (en)
GB (2) GB9708717D0 (en)

Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB784594A (en) * 1900-01-01
GB1047982A (en) * 1962-02-22 1966-11-09 Molins Organisation Ltd Apparatus for feeding cut tobacco to form a continuous tobacco filler

Family Cites Families (10)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1755081A (en) * 1926-01-29 1930-04-15 Messrs Neuerburg Sche Verwaltu Means for loosening and spreading cut tobacco
NL6909756A (en) * 1968-08-23 1970-02-25
US4121596A (en) * 1975-08-26 1978-10-24 Molins Limited Cigarette making machines
GB2087706B (en) * 1980-10-23 1985-02-13 Rothmans Of Pall Mall Tobacco feed device
GB2157411B (en) 1984-04-14 1988-04-27 Hambro Machinery Ltd Elutriator
AU591595B2 (en) * 1987-05-22 1989-12-07 Souza Cruz S/A Process for metering and opening tobacco particles in a stream of tobacco fed to a machine for tobacco packaging for sale
EP0353261A1 (en) 1987-11-26 1990-02-07 Hambro Machinery Limited Conveying apparatus and separation apparatus
GB2246502A (en) * 1988-02-10 1992-02-05 Molins Plc Separating particles of stranded material
GB9001234D0 (en) 1990-01-19 1990-03-21 Morris Christopher P Improvements relating to conveying and separation apparatus
GB9507074D0 (en) 1995-04-05 1995-05-31 Gbe International Plc Tobacco processing apparatus

Patent Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB784594A (en) * 1900-01-01
GB1047982A (en) * 1962-02-22 1966-11-09 Molins Organisation Ltd Apparatus for feeding cut tobacco to form a continuous tobacco filler

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
EP0875159A1 (en) 1998-11-04
GB9708717D0 (en) 1997-06-18
GB9809189D0 (en) 1998-07-01

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WAP Application withdrawn, taken to be withdrawn or refused ** after publication under section 16(1)