US1989873A - Apparatus for automatically forming refrigerant blocks - Google Patents

Apparatus for automatically forming refrigerant blocks Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US1989873A
US1989873A US364738A US36473829A US1989873A US 1989873 A US1989873 A US 1989873A US 364738 A US364738 A US 364738A US 36473829 A US36473829 A US 36473829A US 1989873 A US1989873 A US 1989873A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
ram
casing
expansion chamber
carbon dioxide
snow
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.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US364738A
Inventor
David A Marcus
Jr Walter W Ogier
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.)
NU ICE Co
NU-ICE Co
Original Assignee
NU ICE Co
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 NU ICE Co filed Critical NU ICE Co
Priority to US364738A priority Critical patent/US1989873A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US1989873A publication Critical patent/US1989873A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C01INORGANIC CHEMISTRY
    • C01BNON-METALLIC ELEMENTS; COMPOUNDS THEREOF; METALLOIDS OR COMPOUNDS THEREOF NOT COVERED BY SUBCLASS C01C
    • C01B32/00Carbon; Compounds thereof
    • C01B32/50Carbon dioxide
    • C01B32/55Solidifying

Definitions

  • This invention relates to the art of making refrigerant blocks from liqueiiable and solidifiable gases, and relates particularly to the makingv of such refrigerant blocks from carbon dioxide snow.
  • An object of the invention is to provide an expansion chamber having means operating therein for forming and ejecting blocks of solid or frozen products resulting from the expansion of a suitable gas within the expansion chamber.
  • a further object of the invention is to provide an expansion chamber having means therein for forming and ejecting refrigerant blocks of this character, such means being so designed as to prevent escape of gas from the expansion chamber during the ejection of the refrigerant material in block form.
  • a further object of the invention is to include in such a device as set forth in the preceding paragraph a-movable wall member by which a portion of the expansion chamber may be isolated, having in cooperationtherewith means for compressing the frozen expansion products into blocks and subsequently ejecting such blocks, all
  • Fig. 1 is a longitudinal sectional view of a simple device embodying the principles of our invention.
  • Fig. 2 is a cross section on a plane represented by the line 22 of Fig. 1.
  • Fig. 3 is a cross section as indicated by the line 3-3 of Fig. 1. 5
  • Fig. 4 is a fragmentary sectionshowing the plunger or compression ram of the device illustrated in Fig. 1 in advanced or block-ejecting position.
  • Fig. 5 is a fragmentary view showing a device of the character illustrated in Fig. 1, in which device gas outlets are provided in the head of the ram member.
  • Fig. 6 is a fragmentary view showing the wall or sleeve member incorporated with the ram, this sleeve member having the function of isolating a portion of the interior of the expansion chamber previous to advance of the ram.
  • our invention provides a wall structure 10 enclosing an expansion chamber 11, the upper portion of which is closed by a cap 12. Projecting from the expan-' sion chamber 11 in upwardly sloped direction is an initial expansion recess or chamber 13 having a valve member 14 at the end thereof for inlet control of liquefied gas through a pipe 15 extending from a source of such gas under pressure sufficient to keep it in liquid form. Insulation is provided for all parts of the device requiring insulation against external heat, but for purpose of the lower portion of the expansion chamber 11,
  • a plunger or ram 22 is adapted to be moved across the lower portion of the expansion chamber 11 from the position in which it is shown in Fig. 1 to the position in which it is shown in Fig. 4.
  • the ram 22 When in the position shown in Fig. 1, the ram 22 is received in a rightwardly extending casing 23 having an end plate 24 equipped with a packing box 25 through which extends a shaft 26 for operation of the ram 22.
  • Extending leftwardly from the lower portion of the expansion chamber 11 is a casing 2'7 which is so aligned with the casing 23 that the forward end 28 of the ram 22 will project thereinto in the manner shown in Fig. 4, the interior of this casing 27 communicating with or forming part of the expansion chamber 11.
  • a cover or closure means is provided for the outer open end 29 of the casing 27 for preventing escape of gas or snow from the interior of the expansion chamber, this closure means being shown in the form of a cylinder 30 having a flat or gasketed end portion 31, as may be desired, and being connected to a piston 32 which is operated within a cylinder 33 by introduction of fluid under pressure through either aninlet pipe 34 or an inlet pipe 35, the flow of fluid in the pipes 34 and 35 being controlled bya four-way valve 36 having an inlet pipe 360. and an exhaust pipe 37a.
  • the cylinder 33 is provided with a head 38 at its outer end and a packing device 39 at its inner end, through which packing device the member 30 is moved by the piston 32.
  • a four-way valve 40 is manipulated to introduce fluid under pressure through a pipe 41 into the space 43 at the outer end of a cylinder 42, behind a piston 44 which is slidable in the cylinder 42 and is so connected to the shaft 26 that it will move the ram 22 across the lower portion of the expansion chamber 11 into the position shown in full lines in Fig. 4.
  • the ram 22 forces carbon dioxide snow into the casing 2'7 and compresses such snow into the form of a block having a cross section corresponding to the interior shape of the casing 27, or in other words, corresponding to the cross section of the ram 22, it being recognized that the blocks may be made square, as shown, or round or polygonal, as desired.
  • the density of the block of carbon dioxide snow formed in this manner is determined by the pressure with which the ram is moved in forward direction by the piston 44; therefore it is possible to control the density through control of the fluid pressure created within the outer portion of the cylinder 42 for moving the piston 44 in leftward direction.
  • the casing 2'7 is equipped with vent holes 45, as shown in Figs. 1, 3, and 4, through which carbon dioxide gas may escape from the interior of the casing 27'and from the body of carbon dioxide snow being compressed therein, into an inner peripheral space 46 formed by a jacket 4'7.
  • the gas passes through the outlets 45 into the space 46 and thence through a pipe 48 which connects into the pipe 20 leading to the gasometer.
  • valve 36 may be manipulated to release the pressure behind the piston 32 and to introduce fluid under pressure through the pipe 35 so as to move the piston 32 and the member 30 back into the positions indicated by the dotted lines 49 and 50, and the piston 44 may then be advanced to substantially the position indicated by the dotted lines 51, resulting in the movement of the ram 22 into its extreme leftward position with the end 28 thereof substantially at the end 29 of the casing 2'7, the ram 22 by this movement ejecting the block of refrigerant which has been previously formed in the casing 27.
  • the ram 22 is preferably of such length that when in leftward or ejecting position it will extend, as shown in Fig. 4, from the end 29 of the casing 2'7 to a point beyond the rightward extremity 53' of the expansion chamber 11; and, being made of cross section to substantially fill the lower portion of the expansion chamber 11, this ram 22 also forms a closure means for preventing escape oi carbon dioxide from the expansion chamber 11 during the ejection ofa refrigerant block from the casing 2'7. Also, the ram termine the length of block compressed 'within' the casing 27.
  • FIG. 5 we show an alternate method of releasing gas from the casing 27 and the snow being compressed therein during the formation of a refrigerant block, by the use of openings 58 through the head 59 of the ram 22 so that the gas may pass out through such openings 58 through the interior of the ram 22 and thence into outlet piping 60 which connects into piping 61 extending from the upper end of the expansion chamber 11 to a gasometer, not shown.
  • Valve flaps 63 may be provided at the inner ends of the openings 58.
  • Our invention also includes, as shown in Fig. 6, a wall member 64 adapted to segregate the lower portion of the expansion chamber 11' in such a manner as to segregate in such lower portion'of the chamber a mass of carbon dioxide snow and to hold this snow positively in the path of movement of a ram 65.
  • the wall member 64 is made preferably in the form of a sleeve which encloses a piston or ram 65 and is adapted to be retracted from the extended position in which it is shown in full lines in Fig. 6 into a position within a casing 66, as indicated by dotted lines 67, the movement thereof being accomplished by a rod 68 extending through a packing device 69 carried by an end plate '70 of the cylinder 66.
  • 'ram 65 is "operated by a rod '71 which extends through the end 72 of the sleeve64 and through the packing device 69.
  • the gas outlets will be closed by the ram 65 so as to prevent escape of carbon dioxide gas] inwardly through the openings 45.
  • the lowerportion of the expansion chamber 11 will also be closed against escape of gas by the sleeve 64.
  • a device of the character described including: walls forming an expansion chamber; means for accumulating solidified gas within said expansion chamber; a ram movable across a portion of said expansion chamber, there being walls providing a recess into which said ram is retracted; a casing projecting from said expansion chamber in alignment with the movement of said ram, said casing having an end opening;
  • a device of the character described including: walls forming an expansion chamber; means for accumulating solidified gas within said expansion chamber; a ram movable across a portion of said expansion chamber, there being walls providing a recess into which said ram is retracted; a casing projecting from said expansion chamber in alignment with the movement of said ram, said casing having an end opening; a jacket around said casing forming a chamber, there being small openings through the wall of said casing from the interior of said casing to said chamber formed by said jacket; means for removing gas from said chamber formed by said jacket; a closure member cooperative with the end opening of said casing; fluid operated means.
  • a block forming device of. the character described including: a ram member; walls forming a casing into which said ram member is movable, said walls having a plurality of small openings therein for the escape of gases from the interior of said casing; a-jacket with said casing for collecting gases which have escaped through saidopenings from material being compressed in said casing by said ram; and means for conducting such gases to a recovery receptacle.

Landscapes

  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Organic Chemistry (AREA)
  • Chemical Kinetics & Catalysis (AREA)
  • Inorganic Chemistry (AREA)
  • Separation By Low-Temperature Treatments (AREA)
  • Carbon And Carbon Compounds (AREA)

Description

Feb. 5, 1935.
D. MARCUS Er AL V APPARATUS AUTOMATICALLY FORMING REFBIGERANT BLOCKS Filed May 21 1929 2 Sheets-Sheet 1 /l// I l/ I l/MM Patented I Feb. 1935 v UNITED" STATE APPARATUS FOR AUTOMATICAILY FORM- ING BEFBIGERANT BLOCKS David A. Marcus and Walter W. Ogler, In, Pasadena, O
aliL, assignors to Nu-Ice Company, Los
Angeles, Calif., a corporation of Nevada Application my 21, 1929, Serial No. 364,738 3 Claims. (01. 62-121) This invention relates to the art of making refrigerant blocks from liqueiiable and solidifiable gases, and relates particularly to the makingv of such refrigerant blocks from carbon dioxide snow.
It is found when certain gases are placed under pressure or liquefied thatby expanding these gases in an insulated chamber the absorption of heat by such expansion will cause the freezing of a portion of the fluid gas introduced into the expansion chamber into the form of a snow. At the present time a commercial refrigerant block is formed byconverting liquid carbon .dioxide into snow form and then pressing this snow into marketable blocks which are adapted to the same use as ice for refrigeration purposes. It is known. that the refrigerant blocks may be made from various other gases, among which oxygen is included, but for the purpose of simplicity the description of the present invention will be confined to its use in the making of refrigerant blocks from an expansion product obtained by expanding carbon dioxide liquid in an insulated expansion chamber.
In the extensively used methods of making carbon dioxide refrigerant blocks, a large loss of gas results from the necessity for handling the carbon dioxide snow in -the open atmosphere," as occurs where the liquid carbon dioxide is,ex-
panded in a chamber until a quantity of snow has been accumulated therein and the chamber then opened so that the accumulated carbon dioxide snow can be taken therefrom and pressed into commercial blocks. It is known that in at least one of the plants now making refrigerant blocks of this character the losses are so great that the operating efficiency compared to the actual amount of carbon dioxide gas converted into liquid form is reduced to 40%.
It is an object of our invention to provide a device for making refrigerant blocks of this character, in which the carbon dioxide gas makes no contact with the external atmosphere until its discharge from the device in the form of refrigerant blocks. It is an object of the invention to provide a device for making carbon dioxide refrigerant blocks, the use of which device accomplishes a large saving of labor as compared to the present labor required in the manufacture of such blocks, and in the use of which device a maximum gas recovery is attained.
An object of the invention is to provide an expansion chamber having means operating therein for forming and ejecting blocks of solid or frozen products resulting from the expansion of a suitable gas within the expansion chamber. A further object of the invention is to provide an expansion chamber having means therein for forming and ejecting refrigerant blocks of this character, such means being so designed as to prevent escape of gas from the expansion chamber during the ejection of the refrigerant material in block form.
- A further object of the invention is to include in such a device as set forth in the preceding paragraph a-movable wall member by which a portion of the expansion chamber may be isolated, having in cooperationtherewith means for compressing the frozen expansion products into blocks and subsequently ejecting such blocks, all
of which operations are performed without sub-r...
stantial loss of gas from the expansion chamber.
Further objects and advantages of the invention will appear throughoutthe following part of the specification.
Referring to the drawings which are for illustrative purposes only.
Fig. 1 is a longitudinal sectional view of a simple device embodying the principles of our invention. I
Fig. 2 is a cross section on a plane represented by the line 22 of Fig. 1.
Fig. 3 is a cross section as indicated by the line 3-3 of Fig. 1. 5
Fig. 4 is a fragmentary sectionshowing the plunger or compression ram of the device illustrated in Fig. 1 in advanced or block-ejecting position.
Fig. 5 is a fragmentary view showing a device of the character illustrated in Fig. 1, in which device gas outlets are provided in the head of the ram member.
Fig. 6 is a fragmentary view showing the wall or sleeve member incorporated with the ram, this sleeve member having the function of isolating a portion of the interior of the expansion chamber previous to advance of the ram.
With reference to Figs. 1, 2, 3, and 4, our invention provides a wall structure 10 enclosing an expansion chamber 11, the upper portion of which is closed by a cap 12. Projecting from the expan-' sion chamber 11 in upwardly sloped direction is an initial expansion recess or chamber 13 having a valve member 14 at the end thereof for inlet control of liquefied gas through a pipe 15 extending from a source of such gas under pressure sufficient to keep it in liquid form. Insulation is provided for all parts of the device requiring insulation against external heat, but for purpose of the lower portion of the expansion chamber 11,
or in other words, snow builds up in a loose mass or body on the bottom wall 1'7 of the expansion chamber. That portion of the carbon dioxide introduced into'the expansion chamber 11 which does not freeze into snow passes upwardly through a fine mesh screen 18, which may be held between flanges 19 of the wall'mexnber 10 and the cap 12, and thence out through piping 20' which leads to a gas accumulator or gasometer, not shown. 1
, A plunger or ram 22 is adapted to be moved across the lower portion of the expansion chamber 11 from the position in which it is shown in Fig. 1 to the position in which it is shown in Fig. 4. When in the position shown in Fig. 1, the ram 22 is received in a rightwardly extending casing 23 having an end plate 24 equipped with a packing box 25 through which extends a shaft 26 for operation of the ram 22. Extending leftwardly from the lower portion of the expansion chamber 11 is a casing 2'7 which is so aligned with the casing 23 that the forward end 28 of the ram 22 will project thereinto in the manner shown in Fig. 4, the interior of this casing 27 communicating with or forming part of the expansion chamber 11.
A cover or closure means is provided for the outer open end 29 of the casing 27 for preventing escape of gas or snow from the interior of the expansion chamber, this closure means being shown in the form of a cylinder 30 having a flat or gasketed end portion 31, as may be desired, and being connected to a piston 32 which is operated within a cylinder 33 by introduction of fluid under pressure through either aninlet pipe 34 or an inlet pipe 35, the flow of fluid in the pipes 34 and 35 being controlled bya four-way valve 36 having an inlet pipe 360. and an exhaust pipe 37a. The cylinder 33 is provided with a head 38 at its outer end and a packing device 39 at its inner end, through which packing device the member 30 is moved by the piston 32.
With the closure member 30 in a position tight against the end 29 of the casing 27 and with the ram 22 retracted into the casing 23, let it be assumed that the valve 15 is open so as to introduce liquid carbon dioxide into the expansion chamber 11. As previously described, a body of carbon dioxide snow will be built up in the lower portion of the expansion chamber 11, this body of snow resting on the lower wall 17 of the chamber 11 so as to be in the path of movement of the ram 22.
Without interruption of the introduction of liquid carbon dioxide into the expansion chamber 11, a four-way valve 40 is manipulated to introduce fluid under pressure through a pipe 41 into the space 43 at the outer end of a cylinder 42, behind a piston 44 which is slidable in the cylinder 42 and is so connected to the shaft 26 that it will move the ram 22 across the lower portion of the expansion chamber 11 into the position shown in full lines in Fig. 4.
During its forward movement, the ram 22 forces carbon dioxide snow into the casing 2'7 and compresses such snow into the form of a block having a cross section corresponding to the interior shape of the casing 27, or in other words, corresponding to the cross section of the ram 22, it being recognized that the blocks may be made square, as shown, or round or polygonal, as desired.
The density of the block of carbon dioxide snow formed in this manner is determined by the pressure with which the ram is moved in forward direction by the piston 44; therefore it is possible to control the density through control of the fluid pressure created within the outer portion of the cylinder 42 for moving the piston 44 in leftward direction.
The casing 2'7 is equipped with vent holes 45, as shown in Figs. 1, 3, and 4, through which carbon dioxide gas may escape from the interior of the casing 27'and from the body of carbon dioxide snow being compressed therein, into an inner peripheral space 46 formed by a jacket 4'7. The gas passes through the outlets 45 into the space 46 and thence through a pipe 48 which connects into the pipe 20 leading to the gasometer. This method of compressing the carbon dioxide snow into a casing or cylinder having a plurality of small vent holes therein eliminates the formation of noticeable cracks which are found in carbon dioxide refrigerant blocks formed in accordance with the old methods of manufacture.
After compression of carbon dioxide snow into the form of a block within the casing 27, the valve 36 may be manipulated to release the pressure behind the piston 32 and to introduce fluid under pressure through the pipe 35 so as to move the piston 32 and the member 30 back into the positions indicated by the dotted lines 49 and 50, and the piston 44 may then be advanced to substantially the position indicated by the dotted lines 51, resulting in the movement of the ram 22 into its extreme leftward position with the end 28 thereof substantially at the end 29 of the casing 2'7, the ram 22 by this movement ejecting the block of refrigerant which has been previously formed in the casing 27.
During the formation and ejection of the refrigerant block the accumlation of carbon dioxide snow has been continued within the expansion chamber 11 so that when, by manipulation of the four-way valve 40, fluid is again introduced under pressure through piping 52 to the forward end of the cylinder 42 and the piston 44 is returned to its position at the rightward end of the cylinder 42 whereby to return the ram 22 to its original position, a mass of carbon dioxide snow will drop down into the path of the ram 22. Whether or not the amount of carbon dioxide snow accumulated during the forming of a refrigerant block and ejection thereof will be sufficient for the immediate forming of another block is dependent, of course, entirely upon the rapidity with which the carbon dioxide snow is accumulated in the expansion chamber 11.
It will be recognized that by the equipment previously described the formation of carbon dioxide snow and the conversion thereof into refrigerant blocks may be made substantially continuous.
The ram 22 is preferably of such length that when in leftward or ejecting position it will extend, as shown in Fig. 4, from the end 29 of the casing 2'7 to a point beyond the rightward extremity 53' of the expansion chamber 11; and, being made of cross section to substantially fill the lower portion of the expansion chamber 11, this ram 22 also forms a closure means for preventing escape oi carbon dioxide from the expansion chamber 11 during the ejection ofa refrigerant block from the casing 2'7. Also, the ram termine the length of block compressed 'within' the casing 27. Should the block formed in the casing 2'7 by an initial movement of the ram 22 be of insufllcient length, one or more additional reciprocations of the ram may be made without opening of the closure member 30 until a refrigerant block of desired length is built up in the casing 2'7. 7
In Fig. 5 we show an alternate method of releasing gas from the casing 27 and the snow being compressed therein during the formation of a refrigerant block, by the use of openings 58 through the head 59 of the ram 22 so that the gas may pass out through such openings 58 through the interior of the ram 22 and thence into outlet piping 60 which connects into piping 61 extending from the upper end of the expansion chamber 11 to a gasometer, not shown. Valve flaps 63 may be provided at the inner ends of the openings 58.
Our invention also includes, as shown in Fig. 6, a wall member 64 adapted to segregate the lower portion of the expansion chamber 11' in such a manner as to segregate in such lower portion'of the chamber a mass of carbon dioxide snow and to hold this snow positively in the path of movement of a ram 65. The wall member 64 is made preferably in the form of a sleeve which encloses a piston or ram 65 and is adapted to be retracted from the extended position in which it is shown in full lines in Fig. 6 into a position within a casing 66, as indicated by dotted lines 67, the movement thereof being accomplished by a rod 68 extending through a packing device 69 carried by an end plate '70 of the cylinder 66. The
'ram 65 is "operated by a rod '71 which extends through the end 72 of the sleeve64 and through the packing device 69.
In the operation of the device carbon dioxide snow is allowed to accumulate in the lower portion of the expansion chamber 11. By external manipulation of the rod 68 the sleeve 64 is moved from position within the cylinder 66 to the position in which it is shown in full lines. In this position, the sleeve 64 has segregated a portion of the accumulated carbon dioxide snow, or in other words, has surrounded a portion of the snow by a wall member through which the blocking ram travels. In the customary manner the ram 65 may be moved leitwardly from theposition in which it is indicated in Fig. 6, thus compressing the carbon dioxide snow trapped in the sleeve 64 into the form of a block. When the closure member 30- is removed from its opera tive position, shown in Fig. 6, and the ram 65 further advanced to eject the refrigerant block,'.
the gas outlets will be closed by the ram 65 so as to prevent escape of carbon dioxide gas] inwardly through the openings 45. The lowerportion of the expansion chamber 11 will also be closed against escape of gas by the sleeve 64.
Herein we have described our invention in operative and practical form, but it is recognized that certain parts 'or elements thereof are representative of other parts,v mechanisms, or elements which may be employed to accomplish substantially the same results in substantially the same manner; therefore it is intended that the.
invention shall not be limited to the details herein disclosed but shall have the scope of the following claims.
I We claim as our invention:
1. A device of the character described, including: walls forming an expansion chamber; means for accumulating solidified gas within said expansion chamber; a ram movable across a portion of said expansion chamber, there being walls providing a recess into which said ram is retracted; a casing projecting from said expansion chamber in alignment with the movement of said ram, said casing having an end opening;
means for removing gas from said casing during the compression of solidified gas theremby said ram; a closure member cooperative with the end opening of said casing; fluid operated means for moving said closure member relative tosaid opening of said casing; and iluid actuated means for moving said ram toward said casing.
2. A device of the character described, including: walls forming an expansion chamber; means for accumulating solidified gas within said expansion chamber; a ram movable across a portion of said expansion chamber, there being walls providing a recess into which said ram is retracted; a casing projecting from said expansion chamber in alignment with the movement of said ram, said casing having an end opening; a jacket around said casing forming a chamber, there being small openings through the wall of said casing from the interior of said casing to said chamber formed by said jacket; means for removing gas from said chamber formed by said jacket; a closure member cooperative with the end opening of said casing; fluid operated means.
for moving said closure member relative to said opening of said casing; and fluid actuated means,
for moving said ram toward said casing.
3. A block forming device of. the character described, including: a ram member; walls forming a casing into which said ram member is movable, said walls having a plurality of small openings therein for the escape of gases from the interior of said casing; a-jacket with said casing for collecting gases which have escaped through saidopenings from material being compressed in said casing by said ram; and means for conducting such gases to a recovery receptacle.
DAVID A. MARCUS. WALTER W. OGIER, JR.
US364738A 1929-05-21 1929-05-21 Apparatus for automatically forming refrigerant blocks Expired - Lifetime US1989873A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US364738A US1989873A (en) 1929-05-21 1929-05-21 Apparatus for automatically forming refrigerant blocks

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US364738A US1989873A (en) 1929-05-21 1929-05-21 Apparatus for automatically forming refrigerant blocks

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US1989873A true US1989873A (en) 1935-02-05

Family

ID=23435855

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US364738A Expired - Lifetime US1989873A (en) 1929-05-21 1929-05-21 Apparatus for automatically forming refrigerant blocks

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US1989873A (en)

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3070967A (en) * 1959-09-03 1963-01-01 Tesla L Uren Dry ice manufacture
US3835657A (en) * 1971-10-26 1974-09-17 Chemetron Corp Carbon dioxide extruded pellets
US20050092017A1 (en) * 2003-11-03 2005-05-05 Becker James R. Dry ice block extruder

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3070967A (en) * 1959-09-03 1963-01-01 Tesla L Uren Dry ice manufacture
US3835657A (en) * 1971-10-26 1974-09-17 Chemetron Corp Carbon dioxide extruded pellets
US20050092017A1 (en) * 2003-11-03 2005-05-05 Becker James R. Dry ice block extruder
US7021081B2 (en) * 2003-11-03 2006-04-04 Airgas Dry Ice Dry ice block extruder

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US3521553A (en) Apparatus for compressing garbage
US2067401A (en) Method and apparatus for the pressing of plastic and dry compositions
US1989873A (en) Apparatus for automatically forming refrigerant blocks
US3133492A (en) Press
US2310748A (en) Process and apparatus for removing coke from stills
US3070967A (en) Dry ice manufacture
US1818816A (en) Process and apparatus for obtaining dense carbon dioxide snow directly from liquid carbon dioxide
US2145096A (en) Apparatus for solidifying and pressing carbon dioxide and the like
JPH05305496A (en) Press for treating heterogeneous waste product
US2220798A (en) Power control system for hydraulic presses
US2787973A (en) Machine for shaping containers
US1870691A (en) Method of and apparatus for making and shaping solid carbon dioxide
US1949179A (en) Production of solid carbon dioxide
US2253880A (en) Apparatus for producing carbon dioxide snow blocks
US1989874A (en) Apparatus for forming refrigerant blocks
US1631037A (en) Hydraulic press
US2085695A (en) Hydraulic press
US2718048A (en) Method and means for deforming hollow members
US1894892A (en) Carbon-dioxide ice machine
US6984117B1 (en) Apparatus and method for manufacturing gaskets
US2153629A (en) Method and apparatus for making dry ice
US2062971A (en) Apparatus for solidifying carbon dioxide
US2107846A (en) Metal extrusion press and method of operation
US1969169A (en) Method of and apparatus for solidifying carbon dioxide
US1973622A (en) Apparatus for shaping receptacles