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US3497912A - Apparatus for continuous mixing of solid and liquid material and extrusion of the mixture - Google Patents

Apparatus for continuous mixing of solid and liquid material and extrusion of the mixture Download PDF

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US3497912A
US3497912A US509803A US3497912DA US3497912A US 3497912 A US3497912 A US 3497912A US 509803 A US509803 A US 509803A US 3497912D A US3497912D A US 3497912DA US 3497912 A US3497912 A US 3497912A
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Prior art keywords
paddles
shafts
paddle
housing
bar
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US509803A
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Charles Frederick Fischer
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Colgate Palmolive Co
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Colgate Palmolive Co
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    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C11ANIMAL OR VEGETABLE OILS, FATS, FATTY SUBSTANCES OR WAXES; FATTY ACIDS THEREFROM; DETERGENTS; CANDLES
    • C11DDETERGENT COMPOSITIONS; USE OF SINGLE SUBSTANCES AS DETERGENTS; SOAP OR SOAP-MAKING; RESIN SOAPS; RECOVERY OF GLYCEROL
    • C11D11/00Special methods for preparing compositions containing mixtures of detergents
    • C11D11/04Special methods for preparing compositions containing mixtures of detergents by chemical means, e.g. by sulfonating in the presence of other compounding ingredients followed by neutralising
    • 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
    • B29B7/00Mixing; Kneading
    • B29B7/30Mixing; Kneading continuous, with mechanical mixing or kneading devices
    • B29B7/34Mixing; Kneading continuous, with mechanical mixing or kneading devices with movable mixing or kneading devices
    • B29B7/38Mixing; Kneading continuous, with mechanical mixing or kneading devices with movable mixing or kneading devices rotary
    • B29B7/46Mixing; Kneading continuous, with mechanical mixing or kneading devices with movable mixing or kneading devices rotary with more than one shaft
    • B29B7/48Mixing; Kneading continuous, with mechanical mixing or kneading devices with movable mixing or kneading devices rotary with more than one shaft with intermeshing devices, e.g. screws
    • B29B7/482Mixing; Kneading continuous, with mechanical mixing or kneading devices with movable mixing or kneading devices rotary with more than one shaft with intermeshing devices, e.g. screws provided with screw parts in addition to other mixing parts, e.g. paddles, gears, discs
    • B29B7/483Mixing; Kneading continuous, with mechanical mixing or kneading devices with movable mixing or kneading devices rotary with more than one shaft with intermeshing devices, e.g. screws provided with screw parts in addition to other mixing parts, e.g. paddles, gears, discs the other mixing parts being discs perpendicular to the screw axis
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B29WORKING OF PLASTICS; WORKING OF SUBSTANCES IN A PLASTIC STATE IN GENERAL
    • B29CSHAPING OR JOINING OF PLASTICS; SHAPING OF MATERIAL IN A PLASTIC STATE, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; AFTER-TREATMENT OF THE SHAPED PRODUCTS, e.g. REPAIRING
    • B29C48/00Extrusion moulding, i.e. expressing the moulding material through a die or nozzle which imparts the desired form; Apparatus therefor
    • B29C48/25Component parts, details or accessories; Auxiliary operations
    • B29C48/36Means for plasticising or homogenising the moulding material or forcing it through the nozzle or die
    • B29C48/375Plasticisers, homogenisers or feeders comprising two or more stages
    • B29C48/39Plasticisers, homogenisers or feeders comprising two or more stages a first extruder feeding the melt into an intermediate location of a second extruder
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B29WORKING OF PLASTICS; WORKING OF SUBSTANCES IN A PLASTIC STATE IN GENERAL
    • B29CSHAPING OR JOINING OF PLASTICS; SHAPING OF MATERIAL IN A PLASTIC STATE, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; AFTER-TREATMENT OF THE SHAPED PRODUCTS, e.g. REPAIRING
    • B29C48/00Extrusion moulding, i.e. expressing the moulding material through a die or nozzle which imparts the desired form; Apparatus therefor
    • B29C48/25Component parts, details or accessories; Auxiliary operations
    • B29C48/36Means for plasticising or homogenising the moulding material or forcing it through the nozzle or die
    • B29C48/395Means for plasticising or homogenising the moulding material or forcing it through the nozzle or die using screws surrounded by a cooperating barrel, e.g. single screw extruders
    • B29C48/40Means for plasticising or homogenising the moulding material or forcing it through the nozzle or die using screws surrounded by a cooperating barrel, e.g. single screw extruders using two or more parallel screws or at least two parallel non-intermeshing screws, e.g. twin screw extruders
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B29WORKING OF PLASTICS; WORKING OF SUBSTANCES IN A PLASTIC STATE IN GENERAL
    • B29CSHAPING OR JOINING OF PLASTICS; SHAPING OF MATERIAL IN A PLASTIC STATE, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; AFTER-TREATMENT OF THE SHAPED PRODUCTS, e.g. REPAIRING
    • B29C48/00Extrusion moulding, i.e. expressing the moulding material through a die or nozzle which imparts the desired form; Apparatus therefor
    • B29C48/25Component parts, details or accessories; Auxiliary operations
    • B29C48/36Means for plasticising or homogenising the moulding material or forcing it through the nozzle or die
    • B29C48/395Means for plasticising or homogenising the moulding material or forcing it through the nozzle or die using screws surrounded by a cooperating barrel, e.g. single screw extruders
    • B29C48/40Means for plasticising or homogenising the moulding material or forcing it through the nozzle or die using screws surrounded by a cooperating barrel, e.g. single screw extruders using two or more parallel screws or at least two parallel non-intermeshing screws, e.g. twin screw extruders
    • B29C48/405Intermeshing co-rotating screws
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B29WORKING OF PLASTICS; WORKING OF SUBSTANCES IN A PLASTIC STATE IN GENERAL
    • B29CSHAPING OR JOINING OF PLASTICS; SHAPING OF MATERIAL IN A PLASTIC STATE, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; AFTER-TREATMENT OF THE SHAPED PRODUCTS, e.g. REPAIRING
    • B29C48/00Extrusion moulding, i.e. expressing the moulding material through a die or nozzle which imparts the desired form; Apparatus therefor
    • B29C48/25Component parts, details or accessories; Auxiliary operations
    • B29C48/36Means for plasticising or homogenising the moulding material or forcing it through the nozzle or die
    • B29C48/50Details of extruders
    • B29C48/505Screws
    • B29C48/57Screws provided with kneading disc-like elements, e.g. with oval-shaped elements
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C11ANIMAL OR VEGETABLE OILS, FATS, FATTY SUBSTANCES OR WAXES; FATTY ACIDS THEREFROM; DETERGENTS; CANDLES
    • C11DDETERGENT COMPOSITIONS; USE OF SINGLE SUBSTANCES AS DETERGENTS; SOAP OR SOAP-MAKING; RESIN SOAPS; RECOVERY OF GLYCEROL
    • C11D1/00Detergent compositions based essentially on surface-active compounds; Use of these compounds as a detergent
    • C11D1/02Anionic compounds
    • C11D1/12Sulfonic acids or sulfuric acid esters; Salts thereof
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C11ANIMAL OR VEGETABLE OILS, FATS, FATTY SUBSTANCES OR WAXES; FATTY ACIDS THEREFROM; DETERGENTS; CANDLES
    • C11DDETERGENT COMPOSITIONS; USE OF SINGLE SUBSTANCES AS DETERGENTS; SOAP OR SOAP-MAKING; RESIN SOAPS; RECOVERY OF GLYCEROL
    • C11D17/00Detergent materials or soaps characterised by their shape or physical properties
    • C11D17/0047Detergents in the form of bars or tablets
    • C11D17/0065Solid detergents containing builders
    • C11D17/0069Laundry bars

Definitions

  • This invention relates to a process for the production of synthetic detergent laundry bars and to machinery particularly suitable for producing such bars.
  • One aspect of this invention relates to a modification of a twin-shaft paddle type mixing apparatus to enable the apparatus to be used not only as a mixing and intensive shearing apparatus, but also for a continuous mixing, shearing and extrusion operation in the manufacture of synthetic detergent laundry bars containing high proportions of builder salts. It has been found, in accordance with this aspect of the invention, that by providing a bar-discharge passageway which is offset with respect to the central plane between the twin shafts, it is possible to produce extrudates of smoother cross-section and closer grain and more uniform grain structure across the width of the extruded bar, and to make good products at high rates of production.
  • the material is extruded from the apparatus in a direction transverse to the central plane between the shafts.
  • the material is extruded in a direction parallel to the central plane, preferably through an opening which is adjacent to that side of the apparatus where the motion of the tips of the mixing and shearing paddles has a generally upward, rather than downward, component. It has been found, surprisingly, that the best extruded bars are obtained when the discharge opening is located at that side.
  • FIGURE 1 is an overall side view of the apparatus
  • FIGURE 2 is a top view, in crosssection, with portions broken away, showing the arrangement of shafts, feed screw elements and paddles, and the position of a side discharge opening;
  • FIGURES 3 to 7 constitute a sequence of end views, partly in cross-section, showing successive positions of the paddles during the rotation of the shaft;
  • FIGURE 8 is an end view of an advancing paddle
  • FIGURE 9 is a top view showing the tip edge of an advancing paddle
  • FIGURE 10 is a top view showing the tip edge of a non-advancing paddle
  • FIGURE 11 is an end view, partly in cross-section, illustrating the positions of adjacent paddles on their shafts
  • FIGURE 12 is a view, in elevation, of an end plate, showing its eccentric discharge passageway
  • FIGURE 13 is a side view, partly in section, showing ice the end plate of FIG. 12 in position on the end of the housing of the apparatus;
  • FIGURE 14 is a top view, in cross-section, showing an arrangement in which screw flights are employed at the discharge end of the apparatus;
  • FIGURE 15 is a schematic end view showing the mixing and extrusion apparatus coupled with a conveying, cutting and pressing apparatus.
  • reference numeral 11 designates a jacketed housing within which there are mounted a pair of parallel rotatable shafts 12 (FIG. 2) each extending horizontally the full length of the housing and each having mounted thereon, for rotation therewith, feed screw elements 13 and agitator elements or paddles 14.
  • the longitudinal cavity within the housing is made up of two intersecting circular cylindrical zones (as can be seen from the end view in FIG. 3) each such cylindrical zone being coaxial with the rotatable shaft situated in said zone; there being a small radial clearance between the inner walls of the cavity and the outer peripheries of the paddles and feed screw elements.
  • these solid materials are finely divided builder salts together with finely divided synthetic anionic detergent; the water to be blended with the solid ingredients to form a pasty mass is introduced under pressure through an opening 17.
  • the latter is made in two sections, namely, a stationary lower half 18 and a removable upper half 19 which is firmly but detachably secured to the lower half in any suitable manner, as by means of bolts 21 passing through matching flanges 22 of these two halves of the housing.
  • the upper half 19 has a downwardly depending ridge 22 (FIG. 3) conforming to the circular portions above their intersection, and the lower half has a similar upwardly projecting ridge 23.
  • the two shafts are adapted to be driven in the same direction by a drive motor and gear arrangement 24 situated at one end of the housing.
  • the feed screw elements on the shafts are of conventional helical type, suitably intermeshing in well-known fashion as the shafts rotate to advance the material, supplied through the hopper .16, in an axial direction towards the paddles.
  • the paddles 14 are arranged in matching pairs, the design being such that a tip 26 (FIG. 3) of one paddle of each pair is always moving in wiping relationship to an edge 27 of the other paddle of the pair during the continuous co-rotation of the shafts.
  • the paddles of any pair are identical with each other and mounted with their long axes LA (FIG. 4) at right angles, the edges 27 of each paddle being defined by equiradial symmetrical arcs whose centers 0 and O' are symmetrically situated on the prolongations of the short axis SA of the paddle. These arcs are of greater radius than the radii of the cylindrical zones of the cavity in the housing. As will be seen from the sequence shown in FIGS.
  • FIG. 4 is a view after a 45 rotation from the position shown in FIG. 3, and FIG. 5 shows the relationship after an additional 67 /2 of rotation. After a total rotation of from. the osition shown in FIG. 4, the tip of the right hand paddle is adjacent to the other tip of the left paddle, as
  • FIG. 6 Thereafter, that tip of the left hand paddle moves in an identical fashion along an edge or flank of the right hand paddle;
  • FIG. 7 shows the relationship after an additional 45 rotation.
  • each edge of each paddle will be wiped once by a tip of its matching paddle.
  • the internal Walls of the housing will be wiped twice by the tips of the paddles.
  • Certain paddles 14 are designed to advance the material longitudinal- 1y of the shafts. T this end, the profile of the rear face 31 (FIG. 8) of the advancing paddle is offset by a slight angle a (about the axis of rotation) from the profile of its front face 32.
  • a about the axis of rotation
  • the two faces may be offset by an angle of 12 /2
  • the other paddle of the same pair has the profiles of its faces similarly offset by the identical angle, the design being such that the edge of each paddle will be wiped by the tip of its paired paddle, as previously described.
  • the profile at the rear face of the paddle (that is the face nearest the hopper end) is preferably offset (from the profile at its front face) in the same direction as the direction of rotation of the paddles illustrated by the arrows in FIG. 8.
  • the tips are shown as being relatively sharp in the drawings, they may be relatively blunt, for example having arcuate tips as indicated by the broken lines 26a on FIG. 8, the dimensions being adjusted so that the tips, though blunt, still are in close wiping relationship with the inner walls of the housing and with the edges of the matching paddle.
  • the long axes of each successive pair of paddles may be offset, by an arcuate angle, from the long axes of the pair previously engaged by the material being treated.
  • FIG. 11 illustrates various positions of the front faces of successive paddles, the paddle designated as I being nearer to the discharge end of the machine than the other paddles; the paddle II being next, then the paddle III and then the paddle IV which is furthest from the discharge end, there being a 45 angle between the long axes of successive paddles.
  • This offsetting of the long axes of adjacent paddles also aids in the mixing action of the apparatus.
  • FIG. 11 when the paddles are in the position designated as II, for example, their further movement acts to compress the material between the edges of flanks of the paddles and the walls of the housing, forcing the material into the paths of the movement of adjacent pairs of paddles.
  • the front and rear faces 32, 31 (FIGS. 9 and 10) of the paddles are advantageously flat and, when the paddles are mounted on the shafts, are situated in planes perpendicular to said shafts; the faces of adjacent paddles are preferably close to each other; thus the clearance between the front face of one paddle and the rear face of the next paddle may be on the order of about 0.03 inch.
  • the clearances between the tips of the paddles and the inner walls of the housing may be, for example, about 0.03-0.04 inch; the clearances between the tip of the paddles and the edges of the paired paddles which they wipe may be about the same, e.g. about 0.0 3 inch.
  • This discharge tube is advantageously located at that side of the housing which corresponds to the side where the motion of the paddle tip has a generally upward, rather than downward, component; alternatively, but less desirably, it may be located at the opposite side, as indicated by the broken lines, at 36 (FIG. 11). While good results have been obtained with a discharge tube having a substantially uniform cross-section along its length, the discharge tube may be tapered, narrowing toward its exit.
  • the last pairs of paddles are not oifset 45 in the manner just described but are, instead, offset from each other (e.g. in the last five pairs of paddles, each pair may be offset 90 from its preceding and succeeding pair); this arrangement has been found to give a highly aerated low density product, the air being injected under pressure into the device upstream of the discharge end and through the lower half of the housing (eg at inlet 33, FIG. 2).
  • FIGS. 12 and 13 there is no side discharge tube. Instead, the processed detergent mixture is discharged from the end of the device, e.g. through a discharge passageway 38 in a plate 39 having circular holes 41 for receiving the parallel shafts 12.
  • the plate 39 is about one inch thick and the discharge passageway is horizontal and rectangular, being about 2 inches wide and about 1 inch high, the plate being spaced, for example, about 1 to 6 inches from the ends 42, 43 of the upper and lower ridges 22, 23, the shape of the cavity in the housing adjacent the plate 39 being a symmetrical oval formed by two spaced opposed vertical semi circles (of the same diameter and aligned with the corresponding inner walls of the main cavity in the housing) joined by tangent horizontal lines.
  • the upper part of the discharge passageway 38 is about at the same level as the top of the lower ridge 33 and the center of the discharge passageway is offset about 10-15 from the center of the cavity in the housing.
  • the discharge opening is at the right side of the apparatus, which (in contrast to the left side) is the side where the motion of the tips of the paddles has a generally upward component when the paddles are rotated on the direction shown by the arrows in FIG. 12.
  • FIG. 14 there are a series of screw elements 46, identical with feed screw elements 13 at the inlet end of the machine, mounted on the shafts 12. Discharge may take place from a side discharge tube 47 shown in broken lines, but more preferably from a discharge passageway 48 like that shown in FIG. 13 (or both).
  • the provision of the feed screw elements at the discharge end makes it possible to obtain a much higher discharge pressure (e.g. on the order of p.s.i.g.) which is particularly advantageous when the machine is used for making high-density detergent laundry bars at high rates of production.
  • the extruded bar 51 continuously leaving the discharge tube 36 is taken up on moving endless belt 52, cooled and aged to harden it, passed through a conventional cutting device 53 and then pressed in a conventional soap bar press 54.
  • the extrusion opening may have an area of at least about two square inches and a height (equivalent to the thickness of the individual bars) in the range of about to 3 inches, and a width of about 2 inches or more.
  • the width of the extrusion opening may be equal to the width of a single bar, or may be a multiple of that Width (e.g. two or three times that width), in which case the extrudate may be cut lengthwise before or after it is fully cooled and hardened (e.g. by pulling or pushing it past one or more cutting elements, such as thin verticle wires, which may be heated to facilitate the cutting).
  • the water-soluble anionic organic synthetic detergents which may be present in the compositions contain a sulfo acid solubilizing group joined (directly or indirectly through an intermediate linkage) to a hydrophobic organic group.
  • a sulfo acid solubilizing group joined (directly or indirectly through an intermediate linkage) to a hydrophobic organic group.
  • such detergents include both organic sulfonates, e.g. R-SO compounds and organic sulfates, e.g. R-OSO compounds, having sufficient water solubility to form detersive aqueous solutions with foaming properties in concentrations which are suitable for use in laundering operations.
  • R is a radical having an aliphatic chain of at least six carbons, the radical preferably having about 8-30 carbons.
  • the detergents may be used in individually or in any desired combination.
  • the higher alkyl aryl sulfonate detergents having about 8 to carbon atoms in the alkyl group are particularly effective. It is preferred to use the higher alkyl benzene sulfonate detergents for optimum effects, though other detergents containing a mononuclear aryl group, such as xylene, toluene, or phenol, may be used also.
  • the higher alkyl substituent on the aromatic nucleus may be branched or straight-chained in structure. Examples of straight chain alkyl groups are ndecyl, n-dodecyl and n-tetradecyl groups derived from natural fatty acids and petroleum.
  • branched chain alkyl derivatives are propylene and butylene polymers such as propylene trimer, tetramer and pentamer.
  • suitable water soluble anionic sulfonated detergents which may be satisfactorily used in the compositions of this invention are the alkane sulfonates containing about 8 to carbon atoms in the alkyl group and the alkyl sulfonates wherein the alkyl group of about 8 to 20 carbon atoms is linked to the sulfonic acid group through a --COOR group, e.g. oleic acid isothionate, -CONHR group, e.g. lauric acid taurate, or a OR group, e.g. dodecyl glyceryl ether sulfonate, wherein the R is a lower alkyl or a substituted lower alkyl group containing 2-3 carbon atoms.
  • alkyl sulfates e.g. sodium lauryl or coconut fatty alcohol sulfate
  • alkyl ethyleneoxy ether sulfates e.g. sodium lauryl tri-ethyleneoxy sulfate
  • alkyl groups having about 8 to 20 carbon atoms and the ethyleneoxy sulfates containing about 1 to 15, preferably 2 to 10 moles of ethylene oxide.
  • the alkyl groups may be derived from naturally occurring glycerides or synthetically from petroleum, e.g. cracked waxes or ethylene polymerization.
  • Suitable organic sulfate detergents include sulfuric acid esters of polyhydric alcohols, incompletely esterified with higher fatty acids, e.g. coconut oil monoglyceride monosulfate, and sulfated higher alkyl phenolethylene oxide condensates having an average of about 2 to 18 moles of ethylene oxide per phenol group and about 6 to 18 carbons in the alkyl group.
  • the sulfated higher alkyl phenol-ethylene oxide condensates which it is preferred to employ have about 4 to 6 moles of ethylene oxide per phenol group and about 8 to 12 carbon atoms in the alkyl group.
  • these sulfate and sulfonate detergents advantageously are supplied to the shearing zone in acid liquid state and are present in the final product in the form of their alkali metal and alkaline earth metal salts.
  • the preferred alkali metals are sodium and potassium and the preferred alkaline earth metals are calcium and magnesium. Optimum effects are obtained with the sodium salts in general.
  • the proportion of anionic organic detergent should be suitably selected so as to yield a product having the desired performance and physical characteristics.
  • the detergent active functions as a foaming and cleansing agent as Well as a plasticizer in the compositions of the invention.
  • the proportion of said detergent will be minor compared to the inorganic salts, usually in the range of about 10 to 40% by weight, and preferably about 15 to 30% by weight, of the finished bar.
  • the water soluble inorganic builder salts are known in the art generally and may be any suitable alkali metal, alkaline earth metal, or heavy metal salt or combinations thereof. Ammonium or an ethanolammonium salt in a suitable amount may be added also, but generally, the sodium and potassium salts or similar salts effective to add hardness or strength to the bar are preferred. Examples are the water soluble sodium and potassium phosphates, silicates, carbonates, bicarbonates, borates, sulfates and chlorides.
  • the builder salts contribute detersive efficiency when used in combination with sulfonic acid and/ or sulfuric ester organic synthetic detergents. Particularly preferred builder salts are the alkaline builder salts such as polyphosphates, silicates, borates, etc.
  • inorganic builder salts are used in variable, predominating proportions, e.g. about 4585% by weight of the finished bar, preferably in proportion of about 5065% by weight.
  • the water soluble inorganic builder salt mixtures used in the detergent laundry bar compositions it is preferred to have present a mixture of sodium tripolyphosphate and sodium or potassium bicarbonate.
  • the combination or mixture of salts wherein the bicarbonate to tripolyphosphate ratio is selected from the range of about 1:1 to about 3:1, and which when admixed with the particular organic detergent and water in proportions such that this mixture of inorganic salts is at least about 40% of the total weight of the manufactured bar, results in desired processing effects and produce bars having superior physical characteristics.
  • the proportions of this particular inorganic salt mixture is within the range of about 45 to about 65% by weight of the manufactured bar.
  • Phase I and Phase II sodium tripolyphosphate and mixtures thereof may be successfully used in the cornpositions.
  • the usual commercial tripolyphosphate consists mainly of the Phase II material.
  • the commercial tripolyphosphate material is usually essentially tripolyphosphate, e.g. 87-95%, with small amounts, e.g. 443% of other phosphates, e.g. pyrophosphate and orthophosphate.
  • Sodium tripolyphosphate in its hydrated form may be used also. While trisodium orthophosphate may be used in the amounts indicated, its presence often results in a bar which tends to sweat in hot, humid climates and whose surface tends to slough off more readily in such climates.
  • the sodium or potassium bicarbonate is an effective pH buffer and is preferred because the particular tripolyphosphate bicarbonate mixture results in plastic detergent compositions which yield superior extruded bars. This material is also desirable in that it is relatively inexpensive,
  • the sodium bicarbonate may be incorporated directly as anhydrous bicarbonate or in the form of sesquicarbonate, a hydrate containing both bicarbonate and carbonate.
  • Suitable builder salts which may be incorporated in the built synthetic detergent bar compositions include the water soluble sodium and potassium silicates, carbonates, borates, e.g. sodium tetraborate, chlorides and sulfates, e.g. magnesium sulfate. Generally, the total proportion of these additional builder salts will be within the range of from 0.5 to 24% by weight of the manufactured bar.
  • the sodium and potassium silicates having a Na O:SiO ratio within the range of 1:1 to about 3.5 :1 are particularly effective as corrosion inhibitors in proportions of about 1 to 8% by weight of the finished bar.
  • the sodium sulfate content is advantageously kept low, e.g. below A, the weight of the phosphate (on an anhydrous basis); preferably, to avoid frosting, the sodium sulfate content is below about of the weight of the bar.
  • the final essential ingredient in the built synthetic detergent bar composition is water or similar material.
  • This component is generally present in a proportion within the range of about 2 to 30% by weight of the bar.
  • This material serves as a plasticizer; also, when the anionic detergent is formed in situ in the intensive shearing zone by reaction of injected liquid detergent acid (e.g. alkyl benzene sulfonic acid), the water helps promote the neutralization reaction.
  • liquid detergent acid e.g. alkyl benzene sulfonic acid
  • the total amount of water is the sum of the amount added with the other ingredients in the feed (e.g. in the sulfonic acid, or with the salts, or separately) and the amount formed during the neutralization reaction. It is preferred that the water is from about 4% to 25% by weight.
  • a fatty acid alkylolamide may be included in the composition.
  • Such materials are generally condensation products of higher fatty acids having about to 14 carbon atoms in the acyl group with alkylolamides selected from the group consisting of mono-ethanolamine, diethanolamine and isopropanolamine. Examples are lauric, capric, myristic and coconut monoethanolamide, diethanolamide and isopropanolamide.
  • the alkylolamide suds builders may be present in proportions within the range of about 0 to 5%, preferably about 2%.
  • compositions may beneficially include specific chelating agents capable of complexing iron such as the water soluble salts of ethylene diamine tetraacetic acid and the like.
  • Other conventional auxiliary material which may be incorporated in the compositions are soil-suspending agents such as sodium carboxymethylcellulose, tarnish inhibitors such as melamine, fluorescent brightening agents, perfumes, coloring agents, germicides or bacteriostats, skin-conditioning agents such as glycerine or lanolin, and the like. These materials may be admixed with the compositions in any suitable manner which does not substantially adversely affect the plasticity of the compositions.
  • starches such as tapioca flour, cornstarch, yucca starch or potato starch
  • starch aids in the processing of the mixture, improves its workability and appears to promote its flow over the inner walls of the bar-forming die of the machine.
  • Other agents which have related effects, and which may be added together with or in place of the starch are clays such as bentonite and kaolin, which like starch tend to absorb moisture and swell to form gels in hot aqueous media, and finely divided cellulose (Solka-Floc).
  • Solka-Floc finely divided cellulose
  • Another processing aid is a wax such as paraffin, which may be added as fine flakes mixed with the builder salts or dissolved or dispersed in heated detergent sulfonic acid.
  • a wax such as paraffin
  • Related waxy materials such as petrolatum may also be used.
  • the wax also helps to increase the life of the bar in ordinary use and to prevent sweating of the bar in certain climates, when used in small amounts (e.g. to 1 /z%); smaller and larger amounts may be used as desired.
  • the anionic detergent may be produced in situ in the shearing zone.
  • a stream of the liquid acidic form of the detergent and a stream of neutralizing agent such as aqueous NaOH
  • the liquid neutralizing agent may be omitted and sufiicient solid neutralizing agent (e.g. finely divided alkali metal carbonate and/or bicarbonate) may be included with the other solid ingredients.
  • the apparatus used was that of FIG. 14 having an internal cavity about 3 feet long, the internal diameter of each of the intersecting circles being about 5 inches, the feed screw flights (two turns) extending about 4 inches in each shaft, the discharge screw flights (two turns) also extending about 4 inches on each shaft, the long axes of the paddle faces being almost 5 inches long, and the short axes being 2 inches long, the paddles being about one inch thick, the offset between long axes of successive paddles being 45, the pattern of paddles being: eight pairs of advancing paddles at the feed end, followed by two pairs of non-advancing paddles, two pairs of advancing paddles, this and two-and-two arrangement being repeated three times more, then one pair of nonadvancing paddles and the 4 inches of discharge screw flights.
  • the discharge was effected through the off-center rectangular discharge passageway previously described, spaced about 5 inches from the nearest pair of paddles.
  • the speed of rotation of the co-rotating shafts was about 150 rpm.
  • the rates of feed were 605 pounds per hour of the dry mixture and 75 pounds per hour of water, which was injected continuously in the lower portion of the cavity at about 9 inches downstream of the feed screw section.
  • a smooth bar was extruded continuously.
  • the extruded material which, as extruded, had a temperature of about F., was permitted to cool, in a quiescent state, to room temperature and was then cut into individual bars and pressed at a pressure of about 200 p.s.i.
  • the specific gravity of the bars was 1.5l.6.
  • the dry mixture used in this example was a finely divided blend of 41% sodium tridecyl benzenesulfonate (branched chain type, from sulfonation of a mixture of reaction products of benzene); 12% of tapioca flour, 24% sodium bicarbonate, 22% pentasodium tripolyphosphate (commercial grade anhydrous) plus perfume and minor impurities, which had been screened through a standard 40 mesh screen to remove lumps.
  • Apparatus for the continuous mixing of solid and liquid material to form a pasty mass and for the continuous extrusion of said mass in the form of a bar of predetermined cross section comprising a generally horizontal elongated housing, a pair of parallel substantially horizontal shafts symmetrically positioned with respect to an imaginary central plane, means for driving said shafts to rotate both shafts in the same direction, said shafts having thereon a series of paired mixing and shearing projections arranged lengthwise of said shafts and within said housing, said paired projections be ing constructed and arranged so that, during the.
  • said projections wipe each others surfaces and the inside of said housing, said housing having adjacent one of its ends a feed opening for the introduction of material to be mixed therein and having adjacent its opposite end a discharge passageway for the extrusion of the mixed mass in the form of a bar of predetermined cross section, said discharge passageway being offset with respect to said central plane, said projections including pairs of paddles, each pair comprising a paddle mounted on one of said shafts and a cooperating and aligned paddle mounted on the other of said shafts, each paddle being elongated and having an arcuate edge profile and tips at opposite ends, the inner walls of said housing conforming to the shape of concentric intersecting circular cylinders centered on the axes of said shafts and of slightly greater radius than the radial distance between the axis of the corresponding shaft and the tip of the paddle thereon, said paddles being constructed and arranged so that, during rotation of said shafts and of the paddles carried thereby, the tip of each paired paddle wipes successively against the arcuate edge
  • Apparatus for the continuous mixing of solid and liquid material to form a pasty mass and for the continuous extrusion of said mass in the form of a bar of predetermined cross section comprising a generally horizontal elongated housing, a pair of parallel substantially horizontal shafts symmetrically positioned with respect to an imaginary central plane, means for driving said shafts to rotate both shafts in the same direction, said shafts having thereon a series of paired mixing and shearing projections arranged lengthwise of said shafts and within said housing, said paired projections being constructed and arranged so that, during the rotation of said shafts, said projections wipe each others surfaces and the inside of said housing, said housing having adjacent one of its ends a feed opening for the introduction of material to be mixed therein and having adjacent its opposite end a discharge passageway for the extrusion of the mixed mass in the form of a bar of predetermined cross section, said discharge passageway being offset with respect to said central plane, said projections including pairs of
  • said paddles being constructed and arranged so that, during the rotation of said shafts and of the paddles carried thereby, the tip of each paired paddle wipes successively against the arcuate edge of the other paired paddle and the inner wall of the housing, said discharge passage-way being a tube leading from an inner wall of said housing along a path transverse to said plane.
  • Apparatus for the continuous mixing of solid and liquid material to form a pasty mass and for the continuous extrusion of said mass in the form of a bar of predetermined cross section comprising a gen erally horizontal elongated housing, a pair of parallel substantially horizontal shafts symmetrically positioned with respect to an imaginary central plane, means for driving said shafts to rotate both shafts in the same direction, said shafts having thereon a series of paired mixing and shearing paddles arranged lengthwise of said shafts and within said housing, each pair comprising a paddle mounted on one of said shafts and a cooperating and aligned paddle mounted on the other of said shafts, each paddle being elongated and having an arcuate.
  • the inner walls of said housing conforming to the shape of concentric intersecting circular cylinders centered on the axes of said shafts and of slightly greater radius than the radial distance between the axis of the corresponding shaft and the tip of the paddle thereon, said paddles being constructed and arranged so that, during the rotation of said shafts and of the paddles carried thereby, the tip of each paired paddle wipes successively against the arcuate edge of the other paired paddle and the.
  • said housing having adjacent one of its ends a feed opening for the introduction of material to be mixed therein and having adjacent its opposite end a discharge passageway for the extrusion of the mixed mass in the form of a bar of predetermined cross section, said shafts having mounted thereon pairs of intermeshed helical screws mounted adjacent said opposite end to force the mixed mass through said discharge passageway.
  • Apparatus for the continuous mixing of solid and liquid material to form a pasty mass and for the continuous extrusion of said mass in the form of a bar of predetermined cross section comprising a generally horizontal elongated housing, a pair of parallel substantially horizontal shafts symmetrically positioned with respect to an imaginary central plane, means for driving said shafts to rotate both shafts in the same direction, said shafts having thereon a series of paired mixing and shearing projections arranged lengthwise of said shafts and within said housing, said paired projections being constructed and arranged so that, during the rotation of said shafts, said projections wipe each others surfaces and the inside of said housing, said housing having adjacent one of its ends a feed opening for the.
  • each paddle comprising a paddle mounted on one of said shafts and a cooperating and aligned paddle mounted on the other of said shafts, each paddle being elongted and having an arcuate edge profile and tips at opposite ends, the inner walls of said housing conforming to the shape of concentric intersecting circular cylinders centered on the axes of said shafts and of slightly greater radius than the radial distance between the axis of the corresponding shaft and the tip of the paddle thereon, said paddles being constructed and arranged so that, during the rotation of said shafts and of the paddles carried thereby, the tip of each paired paddle wipes successively against the arcuate edge of the other paired paddle and the inner wall of the housing, the two paddles of each pair being of substantially the same size and shape, each paddle
  • front face and rear face of others of said paddles being offset by an acute angle about the respective shafts on which the paddles are mounted, the construction and arrangement of said offset-faced paddles being such as to advance the material being processed in said housing in a direction toward the discharge. end of said housing.
  • Apparatus for the continuous mixing of solid and liquid material to form a pasty mass and for the continous extrusion of said mass in the form of a bar of predetermined cross section comprising a generally horizontal elongated housing, a pair of parallel substantially horizontal shafts, means for driving said shafts to rotate both shafts in the same direction, said shafts having thereon a series of paired mixing and shearing projections arranged lengthwise of said shafts and Within said housing, said projections including pairs of paddles, each pair comprising a paddle mounted on one of said shafts and a cooperating and aligned paddle.
  • each paddle being elongated and having an arcuate edge profile and tips at opposite ends, the inner Walls of said housing conforming to the shape of concentric intersecting circular cylinders centered on the axes of said shafts and of slightly greater radius than the radial distance between the axis of the corresponding shaft and the tip of the paddle thereon, said paddles being constructed and arranged so that, during the rotation of said shafts and of the paddles carried thereby, the tip of each paired paddle wipes successively against the arcuate edge of the other paired paddle and the inner wall of the housing, said housing having adjacent one of its ends a feed opening for the introduction of material to be mixed therein and having adjacent its opposite end a discharge passageway for the extrusion of the mixed mass in the form of a bar of predetermined cross section, said discharge passageway leading from an inner wall of the housing along a path transverse to said shafts.

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Description

March 3, 1970 c. F. FISCHER 3,497,912
APPARATUS FOR OONTINOUS MIXING OF SOLID AND LIQUID MATERIAL AND EXTRUSION OF THE MIXTURE Filed Nov. 26, 1965 2 Sheets-Sheet 1 INVENTOR. Charles F Fischer awhw C. E FISCHER March 3, 1970 APPARATUS FOR CONTINOUS MIXING OF SOLID AND LIQUID MATERIAL AND EXTRUSION OF THE MIXTURE 2 Sheets-Sheet 2 Filed Nov. 26, 1965 INVENTOR. Charles F F/ h r 1 flri'aA/e FIG. /5
United States Patent 3,497,912 APPARATUS FOR CONTHNUOUS MIXING F SOLID AND LIQUID MATERIAL AND EX- TRUSIQN OF THE MIXTURE Charles Frederick Fischer, Jersey City, N.J., assignor to Colgate-Palmolive Company, New York, N.Y., a corporation of Delaware Filed Nov. 26, 1965, Ser. No. 509,803 Int. Cl. B29f 3/02 U.S. (ll. 18-2 7 Claims ABSTRAET OF THE DISCLOSURE Continuous formation of extruded *built synthetic laundry detergent bar by mixing and shearing the ingredients in a zone having a series of successive counter-rotating paired paddles, mounted on two parallel horizontal shafts; and extruding the mixture from said zone. The apparatus may have an extrusion passageway offset from the central plane of the device.
This invention relates to a process for the production of synthetic detergent laundry bars and to machinery particularly suitable for producing such bars.
One aspect of this invention relates to a modification of a twin-shaft paddle type mixing apparatus to enable the apparatus to be used not only as a mixing and intensive shearing apparatus, but also for a continuous mixing, shearing and extrusion operation in the manufacture of synthetic detergent laundry bars containing high proportions of builder salts. It has been found, in accordance with this aspect of the invention, that by providing a bar-discharge passageway which is offset with respect to the central plane between the twin shafts, it is possible to produce extrudates of smoother cross-section and closer grain and more uniform grain structure across the width of the extruded bar, and to make good products at high rates of production.
In one preferred embodiment of the invention the material is extruded from the apparatus in a direction transverse to the central plane between the shafts. In another preferred embodiment, the material is extruded in a direction parallel to the central plane, preferably through an opening which is adjacent to that side of the apparatus where the motion of the tips of the mixing and shearing paddles has a generally upward, rather than downward, component. It has been found, surprisingly, that the best extruded bars are obtained when the discharge opening is located at that side.
Certain preferred embodiments of the invention are illustrated in the accompanying drawing in which:
FIGURE 1 is an overall side view of the apparatus;
FIGURE 2 is a top view, in crosssection, with portions broken away, showing the arrangement of shafts, feed screw elements and paddles, and the position of a side discharge opening;
FIGURES 3 to 7 constitute a sequence of end views, partly in cross-section, showing successive positions of the paddles during the rotation of the shaft;
FIGURE 8 is an end view of an advancing paddle;
FIGURE 9 is a top view showing the tip edge of an advancing paddle;
FIGURE 10 is a top view showing the tip edge of a non-advancing paddle;
FIGURE 11 is an end view, partly in cross-section, illustrating the positions of adjacent paddles on their shafts;
FIGURE 12 is a view, in elevation, of an end plate, showing its eccentric discharge passageway;
FIGURE 13 is a side view, partly in section, showing ice the end plate of FIG. 12 in position on the end of the housing of the apparatus; and
FIGURE 14 is a top view, in cross-section, showing an arrangement in which screw flights are employed at the discharge end of the apparatus;
FIGURE 15 is a schematic end view showing the mixing and extrusion apparatus coupled with a conveying, cutting and pressing apparatus.
Referring now to FIG. 1 of the drawing, reference numeral 11 designates a jacketed housing within which there are mounted a pair of parallel rotatable shafts 12 (FIG. 2) each extending horizontally the full length of the housing and each having mounted thereon, for rotation therewith, feed screw elements 13 and agitator elements or paddles 14. The longitudinal cavity within the housing is made up of two intersecting circular cylindrical zones (as can be seen from the end view in FIG. 3) each such cylindrical zone being coaxial with the rotatable shaft situated in said zone; there being a small radial clearance between the inner walls of the cavity and the outer peripheries of the paddles and feed screw elements. There is an opening or hopper 16 at one end of the housing, above the feed screw elements, for introducing, into the cavity of the housing, the solid materials to be processed. In one embodiment of the invention, these solid materials are finely divided builder salts together with finely divided synthetic anionic detergent; the water to be blended with the solid ingredients to form a pasty mass is introduced under pressure through an opening 17.
To provide access to the interior of the housing, the latter is made in two sections, namely, a stationary lower half 18 and a removable upper half 19 which is firmly but detachably secured to the lower half in any suitable manner, as by means of bolts 21 passing through matching flanges 22 of these two halves of the housing. The upper half 19 has a downwardly depending ridge 22 (FIG. 3) conforming to the circular portions above their intersection, and the lower half has a similar upwardly projecting ridge 23.
The two shafts are adapted to be driven in the same direction by a drive motor and gear arrangement 24 situated at one end of the housing. The feed screw elements on the shafts are of conventional helical type, suitably intermeshing in well-known fashion as the shafts rotate to advance the material, supplied through the hopper .16, in an axial direction towards the paddles.
The paddles 14 are arranged in matching pairs, the design being such that a tip 26 (FIG. 3) of one paddle of each pair is always moving in wiping relationship to an edge 27 of the other paddle of the pair during the continuous co-rotation of the shafts. In one particularly advantageous construction, the paddles of any pair are identical with each other and mounted with their long axes LA (FIG. 4) at right angles, the edges 27 of each paddle being defined by equiradial symmetrical arcs whose centers 0 and O' are symmetrically situated on the prolongations of the short axis SA of the paddle. These arcs are of greater radius than the radii of the cylindrical zones of the cavity in the housing. As will be seen from the sequence shown in FIGS. 3 to 7, during the corotation of the shafts about the rotational axes RA, one tip 26 of the left hand paddle follows along the edge of flank 27 of the right hand paddle, and then a tip of the right hand paddle moves in identical fashion along the edge of the left hand paddle. Thus, FIG. 4 is a view after a 45 rotation from the position shown in FIG. 3, and FIG. 5 shows the relationship after an additional 67 /2 of rotation. After a total rotation of from. the osition shown in FIG. 4, the tip of the right hand paddle is adjacent to the other tip of the left paddle, as
shown in FIG. 6. Thereafter, that tip of the left hand paddle moves in an identical fashion along an edge or flank of the right hand paddle; FIG. 7 shows the relationship after an additional 45 rotation. Thus, in a full 360 rotation, each edge of each paddle will be wiped once by a tip of its matching paddle. During this full 360 rotation, the internal Walls of the housing will be wiped twice by the tips of the paddles.
Certain paddles 14 (hereinafter called advancing paddles) are designed to advance the material longitudinal- 1y of the shafts. T this end, the profile of the rear face 31 (FIG. 8) of the advancing paddle is offset by a slight angle a (about the axis of rotation) from the profile of its front face 32. For example, for a paddle having its long axis 4% inches long and its short axis 2 inches long, and having a thickness of 1 inch, the two faces may be offset by an angle of 12 /2 The other paddle of the same pair has the profiles of its faces similarly offset by the identical angle, the design being such that the edge of each paddle will be wiped by the tip of its paired paddle, as previously described. Thus, in any cross section through the pair of paddles, at right angles to the axis of rotation, the relationship of the cross-sectional profiles will be the same as that shown in FIGS. 3 to 7. To advance the material from the hopper end of the housing toward its opposite end, the profile at the rear face of the paddle (that is the face nearest the hopper end) is preferably offset (from the profile at its front face) in the same direction as the direction of rotation of the paddles illustrated by the arrows in FIG. 8. It will be appreciated that while the tips are shown as being relatively sharp in the drawings, they may be relatively blunt, for example having arcuate tips as indicated by the broken lines 26a on FIG. 8, the dimensions being adjusted so that the tips, though blunt, still are in close wiping relationship with the inner walls of the housing and with the edges of the matching paddle.
To continue the longitudinal advance of the material, in a more or less helical path, the long axes of each successive pair of paddles may be offset, by an arcuate angle, from the long axes of the pair previously engaged by the material being treated. FIG. 11 (in which the arrows indicate the direction of rotation of the shafts) illustrates various positions of the front faces of successive paddles, the paddle designated as I being nearer to the discharge end of the machine than the other paddles; the paddle II being next, then the paddle III and then the paddle IV which is furthest from the discharge end, there being a 45 angle between the long axes of successive paddles. This offsetting of the long axes of adjacent paddles also aids in the mixing action of the apparatus. As will be seen from FIG. 11, when the paddles are in the position designated as II, for example, their further movement acts to compress the material between the edges of flanks of the paddles and the walls of the housing, forcing the material into the paths of the movement of adjacent pairs of paddles.
The front and rear faces 32, 31 (FIGS. 9 and 10) of the paddles are advantageously flat and, when the paddles are mounted on the shafts, are situated in planes perpendicular to said shafts; the faces of adjacent paddles are preferably close to each other; thus the clearance between the front face of one paddle and the rear face of the next paddle may be on the order of about 0.03 inch. The clearances between the tips of the paddles and the inner walls of the housing may be, for example, about 0.03-0.04 inch; the clearances between the tip of the paddles and the edges of the paired paddles which they wipe may be about the same, e.g. about 0.0 3 inch.
It has been found advantageous to utilize, simultaneously, both the advancing paddles (i.e. paddles whose front and rear faces are offset, as described previously) and the nonadvancing paddles (i.e. paddles whose front and rear profiles are aligned, not offset).
In one typical arrangement, illustrated schematically in FIG. 2, after a series of four full helices (on each shaft) of the feed screw elements 13, there are a sequence of five pairs of advancing paddles (of the dimensions previously described) followed by one pair of otherwise identical non-advancing paddles, then three pairs of advancing paddles, this one-and-three arrangement being repeated three times more, followed by one pair of nonadvancing paddles and five pairs of advancing paddles. In this arrangement, the long axis of the front face of each paddle is oflfset 45 (in the direction of rotation of the shaft) from the long axis of the front face of the next, downstream, paddle. Slightly rearward of the end wall 34 of the housing is a rectangular horizontal discharge tube 36 (see also FIG. 11), having an internal width of about 2 inches, an internal height of about 1 inch and a length of about 6 inches. This discharge tube is advantageously located at that side of the housing which corresponds to the side where the motion of the paddle tip has a generally upward, rather than downward, component; alternatively, but less desirably, it may be located at the opposite side, as indicated by the broken lines, at 36 (FIG. 11). While good results have been obtained with a discharge tube having a substantially uniform cross-section along its length, the discharge tube may be tapered, narrowing toward its exit. In another discharge arrangement, found particularly suitable for the manufacture of lower density aerated detergent laundry bars, the last pairs of paddles (adjacent the discharge end) are not oifset 45 in the manner just described but are, instead, offset from each other (e.g. in the last five pairs of paddles, each pair may be offset 90 from its preceding and succeeding pair); this arrangement has been found to give a highly aerated low density product, the air being injected under pressure into the device upstream of the discharge end and through the lower half of the housing (eg at inlet 33, FIG. 2).
In another discharge arrangement, illustrated in FIGS. 12 and 13, there is no side discharge tube. Instead, the processed detergent mixture is discharged from the end of the device, e.g. through a discharge passageway 38 in a plate 39 having circular holes 41 for receiving the parallel shafts 12. In one form which has been used with the paddle arrangement described in the preceding paragraph, the plate 39 is about one inch thick and the discharge passageway is horizontal and rectangular, being about 2 inches wide and about 1 inch high, the plate being spaced, for example, about 1 to 6 inches from the ends 42, 43 of the upper and lower ridges 22, 23, the shape of the cavity in the housing adjacent the plate 39 being a symmetrical oval formed by two spaced opposed vertical semi circles (of the same diameter and aligned with the corresponding inner walls of the main cavity in the housing) joined by tangent horizontal lines. In the illustrated embodiment, the upper part of the discharge passageway 38 is about at the same level as the top of the lower ridge 33 and the center of the discharge passageway is offset about 10-15 from the center of the cavity in the housing. It will be noted that the discharge opening is at the right side of the apparatus, which (in contrast to the left side) is the side where the motion of the tips of the paddles has a generally upward component when the paddles are rotated on the direction shown by the arrows in FIG. 12.
In another discharge arrangement illustrated in FIG. 14, there are a series of screw elements 46, identical with feed screw elements 13 at the inlet end of the machine, mounted on the shafts 12. Discharge may take place from a side discharge tube 47 shown in broken lines, but more preferably from a discharge passageway 48 like that shown in FIG. 13 (or both). The provision of the feed screw elements at the discharge end makes it possible to obtain a much higher discharge pressure (e.g. on the order of p.s.i.g.) which is particularly advantageous when the machine is used for making high-density detergent laundry bars at high rates of production.
In the overall arrangement shown schematically in FIG.
15, the extruded bar 51 continuously leaving the discharge tube 36 is taken up on moving endless belt 52, cooled and aged to harden it, passed through a conventional cutting device 53 and then pressed in a conventional soap bar press 54.
Typically, the extrusion opening may have an area of at least about two square inches and a height (equivalent to the thickness of the individual bars) in the range of about to 3 inches, and a width of about 2 inches or more. The width of the extrusion opening may be equal to the width of a single bar, or may be a multiple of that Width (e.g. two or three times that width), in which case the extrudate may be cut lengthwise before or after it is fully cooled and hardened (e.g. by pulling or pushing it past one or more cutting elements, such as thin verticle wires, which may be heated to facilitate the cutting).
In the manufacture of the detergent laundry bar, there are employed a synthetic anionic detergent and a substantial proportion of a watersoluble solid builder salt, generally in excess of the amount of said detergent.
The water-soluble anionic organic synthetic detergents which may be present in the compositions contain a sulfo acid solubilizing group joined (directly or indirectly through an intermediate linkage) to a hydrophobic organic group. Thus, such detergents include both organic sulfonates, e.g. R-SO compounds and organic sulfates, e.g. R-OSO compounds, having sufficient water solubility to form detersive aqueous solutions with foaming properties in concentrations which are suitable for use in laundering operations. In the formula, R is a radical having an aliphatic chain of at least six carbons, the radical preferably having about 8-30 carbons. The detergents may be used in individually or in any desired combination.
Among the suitable water soluble anionic sulfonated detergents, the higher alkyl aryl sulfonate detergents having about 8 to carbon atoms in the alkyl group are particularly effective. It is preferred to use the higher alkyl benzene sulfonate detergents for optimum effects, though other detergents containing a mononuclear aryl group, such as xylene, toluene, or phenol, may be used also. The higher alkyl substituent on the aromatic nucleus may be branched or straight-chained in structure. Examples of straight chain alkyl groups are ndecyl, n-dodecyl and n-tetradecyl groups derived from natural fatty acids and petroleum.
Examples of branched chain alkyl derivatives are propylene and butylene polymers such as propylene trimer, tetramer and pentamer. Examples of other suitable water soluble anionic sulfonated detergents which may be satisfactorily used in the compositions of this invention are the alkane sulfonates containing about 8 to carbon atoms in the alkyl group and the alkyl sulfonates wherein the alkyl group of about 8 to 20 carbon atoms is linked to the sulfonic acid group through a --COOR group, e.g. oleic acid isothionate, -CONHR group, e.g. lauric acid taurate, or a OR group, e.g. dodecyl glyceryl ether sulfonate, wherein the R is a lower alkyl or a substituted lower alkyl group containing 2-3 carbon atoms.
Among the suitable water soluble organic sulfated detergents which it is preferred to use in compositions of the invention are alkyl sulfates, e.g. sodium lauryl or coconut fatty alcohol sulfate, and the alkyl ethyleneoxy ether sulfates, e.g. sodium lauryl tri-ethyleneoxy sulfate, said alkyl groups having about 8 to 20 carbon atoms and the ethyleneoxy sulfates containing about 1 to 15, preferably 2 to 10 moles of ethylene oxide. The alkyl groups may be derived from naturally occurring glycerides or synthetically from petroleum, e.g. cracked waxes or ethylene polymerization.
Other suitable organic sulfate detergents include sulfuric acid esters of polyhydric alcohols, incompletely esterified with higher fatty acids, e.g. coconut oil monoglyceride monosulfate, and sulfated higher alkyl phenolethylene oxide condensates having an average of about 2 to 18 moles of ethylene oxide per phenol group and about 6 to 18 carbons in the alkyl group. The sulfated higher alkyl phenol-ethylene oxide condensates which it is preferred to employ have about 4 to 6 moles of ethylene oxide per phenol group and about 8 to 12 carbon atoms in the alkyl group.
As previously indicated, these sulfate and sulfonate detergents advantageously are supplied to the shearing zone in acid liquid state and are present in the final product in the form of their alkali metal and alkaline earth metal salts. The preferred alkali metals are sodium and potassium and the preferred alkaline earth metals are calcium and magnesium. Optimum effects are obtained with the sodium salts in general.
The proportion of anionic organic detergent should be suitably selected so as to yield a product having the desired performance and physical characteristics. The detergent active functions as a foaming and cleansing agent as Well as a plasticizer in the compositions of the invention. The proportion of said detergent will be minor compared to the inorganic salts, usually in the range of about 10 to 40% by weight, and preferably about 15 to 30% by weight, of the finished bar.
The water soluble inorganic builder salts are known in the art generally and may be any suitable alkali metal, alkaline earth metal, or heavy metal salt or combinations thereof. Ammonium or an ethanolammonium salt in a suitable amount may be added also, but generally, the sodium and potassium salts or similar salts effective to add hardness or strength to the bar are preferred. Examples are the water soluble sodium and potassium phosphates, silicates, carbonates, bicarbonates, borates, sulfates and chlorides. The builder salts contribute detersive efficiency when used in combination with sulfonic acid and/ or sulfuric ester organic synthetic detergents. Particularly preferred builder salts are the alkaline builder salts such as polyphosphates, silicates, borates, etc. Inasmuch as the builder effects and processing characteristics of the individual salts vary to some extent, generally mixtures of inorganic builder salts are used in variable, predominating proportions, e.g. about 4585% by weight of the finished bar, preferably in proportion of about 5065% by weight.
In the water soluble inorganic builder salt mixtures used in the detergent laundry bar compositions, it is preferred to have present a mixture of sodium tripolyphosphate and sodium or potassium bicarbonate. The combination or mixture of salts wherein the bicarbonate to tripolyphosphate ratio is selected from the range of about 1:1 to about 3:1, and which when admixed with the particular organic detergent and water in proportions such that this mixture of inorganic salts is at least about 40% of the total weight of the manufactured bar, results in desired processing effects and produce bars having superior physical characteristics. Preferably, the proportions of this particular inorganic salt mixture is within the range of about 45 to about 65% by weight of the manufactured bar.
Both Phase I and Phase II sodium tripolyphosphate and mixtures thereof may be successfully used in the cornpositions. The usual commercial tripolyphosphate consists mainly of the Phase II material. The commercial tripolyphosphate material is usually essentially tripolyphosphate, e.g. 87-95%, with small amounts, e.g. 443% of other phosphates, e.g. pyrophosphate and orthophosphate. Sodium tripolyphosphate in its hydrated form may be used also. While trisodium orthophosphate may be used in the amounts indicated, its presence often results in a bar which tends to sweat in hot, humid climates and whose surface tends to slough off more readily in such climates.
The sodium or potassium bicarbonate is an effective pH buffer and is preferred because the particular tripolyphosphate bicarbonate mixture results in plastic detergent compositions which yield superior extruded bars. This material is also desirable in that it is relatively inexpensive,
has suitable solubility and does not cause frosting on the surface of the bar. The sodium bicarbonate may be incorporated directly as anhydrous bicarbonate or in the form of sesquicarbonate, a hydrate containing both bicarbonate and carbonate.
Other suitable builder salts which may be incorporated in the built synthetic detergent bar compositions include the water soluble sodium and potassium silicates, carbonates, borates, e.g. sodium tetraborate, chlorides and sulfates, e.g. magnesium sulfate. Generally, the total proportion of these additional builder salts will be within the range of from 0.5 to 24% by weight of the manufactured bar. The sodium and potassium silicates having a Na O:SiO ratio within the range of 1:1 to about 3.5 :1 are particularly effective as corrosion inhibitors in proportions of about 1 to 8% by weight of the finished bar. The sodium sulfate content is advantageously kept low, e.g. below A, the weight of the phosphate (on an anhydrous basis); preferably, to avoid frosting, the sodium sulfate content is below about of the weight of the bar.
The final essential ingredient in the built synthetic detergent bar composition is water or similar material. This component is generally present in a proportion within the range of about 2 to 30% by weight of the bar. This material serves as a plasticizer; also, when the anionic detergent is formed in situ in the intensive shearing zone by reaction of injected liquid detergent acid (e.g. alkyl benzene sulfonic acid), the water helps promote the neutralization reaction. It will 'be appreciated that the total amount of water is the sum of the amount added with the other ingredients in the feed (e.g. in the sulfonic acid, or with the salts, or separately) and the amount formed during the neutralization reaction. It is preferred that the water is from about 4% to 25% by weight.
Optionally, a fatty acid alkylolamide may be included in the composition. Such materials are generally condensation products of higher fatty acids having about to 14 carbon atoms in the acyl group with alkylolamides selected from the group consisting of mono-ethanolamine, diethanolamine and isopropanolamine. Examples are lauric, capric, myristic and coconut monoethanolamide, diethanolamide and isopropanolamide. The alkylolamide suds builders may be present in proportions within the range of about 0 to 5%, preferably about 2%.
Various other ingredients may be included if desired. The compositions may beneficially include specific chelating agents capable of complexing iron such as the water soluble salts of ethylene diamine tetraacetic acid and the like. Other conventional auxiliary material which may be incorporated in the compositions are soil-suspending agents such as sodium carboxymethylcellulose, tarnish inhibitors such as melamine, fluorescent brightening agents, perfumes, coloring agents, germicides or bacteriostats, skin-conditioning agents such as glycerine or lanolin, and the like. These materials may be admixed with the compositions in any suitable manner which does not substantially adversely affect the plasticity of the compositions.
Other ingredients which may be employed are starches (such as tapioca flour, cornstarch, yucca starch or potato starch); the presence of the starch aids in the processing of the mixture, improves its workability and appears to promote its flow over the inner walls of the bar-forming die of the machine. Other agents which have related effects, and which may be added together with or in place of the starch, are clays such as bentonite and kaolin, which like starch tend to absorb moisture and swell to form gels in hot aqueous media, and finely divided cellulose (Solka-Floc). These additives may be included in amounts up to about their eifects are marked above about 5% (e.g. 7%); a preferred proportion'is about 10-12% of starch. Starch also helps to give the bar a brighter color.
Another processing aid is a wax such as paraffin, which may be added as fine flakes mixed with the builder salts or dissolved or dispersed in heated detergent sulfonic acid. Related waxy materials such as petrolatum may also be used. The wax also helps to increase the life of the bar in ordinary use and to prevent sweating of the bar in certain climates, when used in small amounts (e.g. to 1 /z%); smaller and larger amounts may be used as desired.
As previously indicated, the anionic detergent may be produced in situ in the shearing zone. In this case, a stream of the liquid acidic form of the detergent and a stream of neutralizing agent (such as aqueous NaOH) may be injected continuously into the shearing zone; alternatively, the liquid neutralizing agent may be omitted and sufiicient solid neutralizing agent (e.g. finely divided alkali metal carbonate and/or bicarbonate) may be included with the other solid ingredients.
Further details relating to the composition and process for making detergent bars are found in the application of Austin and Lee, Ser. No. 469,144, filed July 2, 1965, whose disclosure is incorporated herein by reference. The apparatus of this invention may also be used for making other types of detergent products.
The following example is given to illustrate the invention further.
EXAMPLE In this example, the apparatus used was that of FIG. 14 having an internal cavity about 3 feet long, the internal diameter of each of the intersecting circles being about 5 inches, the feed screw flights (two turns) extending about 4 inches in each shaft, the discharge screw flights (two turns) also extending about 4 inches on each shaft, the long axes of the paddle faces being almost 5 inches long, and the short axes being 2 inches long, the paddles being about one inch thick, the offset between long axes of successive paddles being 45, the pattern of paddles being: eight pairs of advancing paddles at the feed end, followed by two pairs of non-advancing paddles, two pairs of advancing paddles, this and two-and-two arrangement being repeated three times more, then one pair of nonadvancing paddles and the 4 inches of discharge screw flights.
The discharge was effected through the off-center rectangular discharge passageway previously described, spaced about 5 inches from the nearest pair of paddles. The speed of rotation of the co-rotating shafts was about 150 rpm. The rates of feed were 605 pounds per hour of the dry mixture and 75 pounds per hour of water, which was injected continuously in the lower portion of the cavity at about 9 inches downstream of the feed screw section. After a normalization period of about 15 minutes, a smooth bar was extruded continuously. The extruded material which, as extruded, had a temperature of about F., was permitted to cool, in a quiescent state, to room temperature and was then cut into individual bars and pressed at a pressure of about 200 p.s.i. The specific gravity of the bars was 1.5l.6. The dry mixture used in this example was a finely divided blend of 41% sodium tridecyl benzenesulfonate (branched chain type, from sulfonation of a mixture of reaction products of benzene); 12% of tapioca flour, 24% sodium bicarbonate, 22% pentasodium tripolyphosphate (commercial grade anhydrous) plus perfume and minor impurities, which had been screened through a standard 40 mesh screen to remove lumps.
Numerous modifications and variations of the embodimerits of this invention can be made without departing from the spirit and scope thereof. Accordingly, it is to be understood that this invention is not to be limited except as defined in the appended claims.
What is claimed is:
1. Apparatus for the continuous mixing of solid and liquid material to form a pasty mass and for the continuous extrusion of said mass in the form of a bar of predetermined cross section, said apparatus comprising a generally horizontal elongated housing, a pair of parallel substantially horizontal shafts symmetrically positioned with respect to an imaginary central plane, means for driving said shafts to rotate both shafts in the same direction, said shafts having thereon a series of paired mixing and shearing projections arranged lengthwise of said shafts and within said housing, said paired projections be ing constructed and arranged so that, during the. rotation of said shafts, said projections wipe each others surfaces and the inside of said housing, said housing having adjacent one of its ends a feed opening for the introduction of material to be mixed therein and having adjacent its opposite end a discharge passageway for the extrusion of the mixed mass in the form of a bar of predetermined cross section, said discharge passageway being offset with respect to said central plane, said projections including pairs of paddles, each pair comprising a paddle mounted on one of said shafts and a cooperating and aligned paddle mounted on the other of said shafts, each paddle being elongated and having an arcuate edge profile and tips at opposite ends, the inner walls of said housing conforming to the shape of concentric intersecting circular cylinders centered on the axes of said shafts and of slightly greater radius than the radial distance between the axis of the corresponding shaft and the tip of the paddle thereon, said paddles being constructed and arranged so that, during rotation of said shafts and of the paddles carried thereby, the tip of each paired paddle wipes successively against the arcuate edge of the other paired paddle and the inner wall of the housing, said plane being vertical, said housing having an end wall, said discharge passageway being a generally rectangular opening in said end Wall and being principally situated within the imaginary circle constitutin a horizontal projection of that one of said cylinders which houses those paddles whose tips move upward along the inner wall of the housing. ous extrusion of said mass in the form of a bar of prede 2. Apparatus for the continuous mixing of solid and liquid material to form a pasty mass and for the continuous extrusion of said mass in the form of a bar of predetermined cross section, said apparatus comprising a generally horizontal elongated housing, a pair of parallel substantially horizontal shafts symmetrically positioned with respect to an imaginary central plane, means for driving said shafts to rotate both shafts in the same direction, said shafts having thereon a series of paired mixing and shearing projections arranged lengthwise of said shafts and within said housing, said paired projections being constructed and arranged so that, during the rotation of said shafts, said projections wipe each others surfaces and the inside of said housing, said housing having adjacent one of its ends a feed opening for the introduction of material to be mixed therein and having adjacent its opposite end a discharge passageway for the extrusion of the mixed mass in the form of a bar of predetermined cross section, said discharge passageway being offset with respect to said central plane, said projections including pairs of paddles, each pair comprising a paddle mounted on one of said shafts and a cooperating and aligned paddle mounted on the other of said shafts, each paddle being elongated and having an arcuate edge profile and tips at opposite ends, the inner walls of said housing conforming to the shape of concentric intersecting circular cylinders centered on the axes of said shafts and of slightly greater radius than the radial distance. between the axis of the corresponding shaft and the tip of the paddle thereon, said paddles being constructed and arranged so that, during the rotation of said shafts and of the paddles carried thereby, the tip of each paired paddle wipes successively against the arcuate edge of the other paired paddle and the inner wall of the housing, said discharge passage-way being a tube leading from an inner wall of said housing along a path transverse to said plane.
3. Apparatus as set forth in claim 2, said discharge passageway leading from an inner wall of that one of said cylinders which houses those paddles whose tips move upward along the inner wall of the housing.
4. Apparatus for the continuous mixing of solid and liquid material to form a pasty mass and for the continuous extrusion of said mass in the form of a bar of predetermined cross section, said apparatus comprising a gen erally horizontal elongated housing, a pair of parallel substantially horizontal shafts symmetrically positioned with respect to an imaginary central plane, means for driving said shafts to rotate both shafts in the same direction, said shafts having thereon a series of paired mixing and shearing paddles arranged lengthwise of said shafts and within said housing, each pair comprising a paddle mounted on one of said shafts and a cooperating and aligned paddle mounted on the other of said shafts, each paddle being elongated and having an arcuate. edge profile and tips at opposite ends, the inner walls of said housing conforming to the shape of concentric intersecting circular cylinders centered on the axes of said shafts and of slightly greater radius than the radial distance between the axis of the corresponding shaft and the tip of the paddle thereon, said paddles being constructed and arranged so that, during the rotation of said shafts and of the paddles carried thereby, the tip of each paired paddle wipes successively against the arcuate edge of the other paired paddle and the. inner wall of the housing, said housing having adjacent one of its ends a feed opening for the introduction of material to be mixed therein and having adjacent its opposite end a discharge passageway for the extrusion of the mixed mass in the form of a bar of predetermined cross section, said shafts having mounted thereon pairs of intermeshed helical screws mounted adjacent said opposite end to force the mixed mass through said discharge passageway.
5. Apparatus as set forth in claim 4, said plane being vertical, said housing having an end wall, said discharge passageway being a generally rectangular opening in said end wall and being principally situated within the imaginary circle constituting a horizontal projection of that one of said cylinders which houses those paddles whose tips move upward along the inner wall of the housing, said apparatus including conveyor means for supporting the extruded bar as it leaves said opening and cutter means for subdividing said bar into individual laundry bars.
6. Apparatus for the continuous mixing of solid and liquid material to form a pasty mass and for the continuous extrusion of said mass in the form of a bar of predetermined cross section, said apparatus comprising a generally horizontal elongated housing, a pair of parallel substantially horizontal shafts symmetrically positioned with respect to an imaginary central plane, means for driving said shafts to rotate both shafts in the same direction, said shafts having thereon a series of paired mixing and shearing projections arranged lengthwise of said shafts and within said housing, said paired projections being constructed and arranged so that, during the rotation of said shafts, said projections wipe each others surfaces and the inside of said housing, said housing having adjacent one of its ends a feed opening for the. introduction of material to be mixed therein and having adjacent its opposite end a discharge passageway for the extrusion of the. mixed mass in the form of a bar of predetermined cross section, said discharge passageway being offset with respect to said central plane, said projections including pairs of paddles, each pair comprising a paddle mounted on one of said shafts and a cooperating and aligned paddle mounted on the other of said shafts, each paddle being elongted and having an arcuate edge profile and tips at opposite ends, the inner walls of said housing conforming to the shape of concentric intersecting circular cylinders centered on the axes of said shafts and of slightly greater radius than the radial distance between the axis of the corresponding shaft and the tip of the paddle thereon, said paddles being constructed and arranged so that, during the rotation of said shafts and of the paddles carried thereby, the tip of each paired paddle wipes successively against the arcuate edge of the other paired paddle and the inner wall of the housing, the two paddles of each pair being of substantially the same size and shape, each paddle having two diametrically opposed tips joined by tWo convex arcs intersecting equiradial circles, the long axis joining the tips of each paired paddle being at right angles to the corresponding long axis of the other paddle of each pair, each paddle having a front face and a rear face, both said faces being in planes transverse to said central plane, the front face and rear face of some of said paddles being aligned in a direction parallel to the shafts and the. front face and rear face of others of said paddles being offset by an acute angle about the respective shafts on which the paddles are mounted, the construction and arrangement of said offset-faced paddles being such as to advance the material being processed in said housing in a direction toward the discharge. end of said housing.
7. Apparatus for the continuous mixing of solid and liquid material to form a pasty mass and for the continous extrusion of said mass in the form of a bar of predetermined cross section, said apparatus comprising a generally horizontal elongated housing, a pair of parallel substantially horizontal shafts, means for driving said shafts to rotate both shafts in the same direction, said shafts having thereon a series of paired mixing and shearing projections arranged lengthwise of said shafts and Within said housing, said projections including pairs of paddles, each pair comprising a paddle mounted on one of said shafts and a cooperating and aligned paddle. mounted on the other of said shafts, each paddle being elongated and having an arcuate edge profile and tips at opposite ends, the inner Walls of said housing conforming to the shape of concentric intersecting circular cylinders centered on the axes of said shafts and of slightly greater radius than the radial distance between the axis of the corresponding shaft and the tip of the paddle thereon, said paddles being constructed and arranged so that, during the rotation of said shafts and of the paddles carried thereby, the tip of each paired paddle wipes successively against the arcuate edge of the other paired paddle and the inner wall of the housing, said housing having adjacent one of its ends a feed opening for the introduction of material to be mixed therein and having adjacent its opposite end a discharge passageway for the extrusion of the mixed mass in the form of a bar of predetermined cross section, said discharge passageway leading from an inner wall of the housing along a path transverse to said shafts.
References Cited UNITED STATES PATENTS 2,584,225 2/1952 Plunguian et a1. 2,689,962 1/1955 Swalloin. 3,146,493 9/1964 Steinle et a1.
FOREIGN PATENTS 966,424 8/1967 Great Britain.
WILLIAM J. STEPHENSON, Primary Examiner US. Cl. X.R. 18l2
US509803A 1965-07-02 1965-11-26 Apparatus for continuous mixing of solid and liquid material and extrusion of the mixture Expired - Lifetime US3497912A (en)

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US4634564A (en) * 1983-10-14 1987-01-06 Lever Brothers Company Manufacture of multi-colored detergent bars
US5156794A (en) * 1990-06-27 1992-10-20 Kao Corporation Pulverizing/kneading apparatus and method for manufacturing soap using the pulverizing/kneading apparatus
US5302106A (en) * 1991-07-11 1994-04-12 Friedrich Theysohn Gmbh Double-worm extruder with polygonal-disk kneader
US5534212A (en) * 1994-02-15 1996-07-09 Lever Brothers Company, Division Of Conopco,Inc. Process for the manufacture of soap bars and apparatus for use in same process
DE19718292A1 (en) * 1997-04-30 1998-11-05 Krupp Werner & Pfleiderer Gmbh Multi-shaft screw machine, in particular two-shaft extruder
US20070211560A1 (en) * 2006-03-10 2007-09-13 The Japan Steel Works, Ltd. Kneading extruder
US20080145274A1 (en) * 2006-12-14 2008-06-19 Sasan Habibi-Naini Porous Metering Device

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US4515707A (en) * 1983-06-27 1985-05-07 The Chemithon Corporation Intermediate product for use in producing a detergent bar and method for producing same
US4543204A (en) * 1983-08-17 1985-09-24 Colgate-Palmolive Company Sodium higher fatty alkyl sulfate detergent laundry bars and process for manufacture thereof
US4844928A (en) * 1985-03-27 1989-07-04 Lever Brothers Company Process for the preparation of an edible fat-containing product
US4840810A (en) * 1985-03-27 1989-06-20 Lever Brothers Company Process for the preparation of an edible fat-containing product
GB8800763D0 (en) * 1988-01-14 1988-02-17 Unilever Plc Detergent compositions
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GB2257649A (en) * 1991-07-18 1993-01-20 Apv Corp Ltd Converting fine particlulate material to block form,by extrusion
US5759982A (en) * 1994-06-17 1998-06-02 The Procter & Gamble Company Laundry bars with polyethylene glycol as a processing aid
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US4634564A (en) * 1983-10-14 1987-01-06 Lever Brothers Company Manufacture of multi-colored detergent bars
US5156794A (en) * 1990-06-27 1992-10-20 Kao Corporation Pulverizing/kneading apparatus and method for manufacturing soap using the pulverizing/kneading apparatus
US5302106A (en) * 1991-07-11 1994-04-12 Friedrich Theysohn Gmbh Double-worm extruder with polygonal-disk kneader
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US20070211560A1 (en) * 2006-03-10 2007-09-13 The Japan Steel Works, Ltd. Kneading extruder
US8042987B2 (en) * 2006-03-10 2011-10-25 The Japan Steel Works, Ltd. Kneading extruder
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AT289273B (en) 1971-04-13

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