System and method of irradiating products being conveyed...

Radiant energy – Supported for nonsignalling objects of irradiation

Reexamination Certificate

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Details

C250S454110, C250S455110

Reexamination Certificate

active

06686596

ABSTRACT:

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates in general to conveyor systems, and in particular to conveyor systems used to transport products past an electron beam (e-beam) delivery device. The invention also relates to methods of irradiating products as they are conveyed past an electron beam delivery device.
According to the invention:
(a) products to be irradiated are caused to travel along a path that passes through at least two different beam delivery positions; and
(b) the electron beam is switched between the two delivery positions in synchronism with passage of products past the respective beam delivery positions such that when a product at the first position has been irradiated, the beam switches to the second position and begins irradiating a second product, thereby eliminating radiation of space between the products without the necessity of turning the beam on and off.
2. Description of Related Art
In industrial applications where a large set of products is to be irradiated, it is conventional to place the products to be irradiated into boxes or trays. The boxes or trays are then placed on a conveyor that carries them through the shielding of the delivery system and into the irradiation area.
The problem with such systems is that they are inefficient because much of the radiation from the e-beam delivery device passes between the trays and, if the trays are not completely filled, into empty spaces in the boxes. To compensate for this inefficiency, e-beam manufacturers have simply designed bigger and bigger systems with very high beam power. The cost of accelerating electrons for use in irradiating products is not insignificant, and thus considerable savings could be obtained if the electrons were utilized more efficiently.
The most inefficient e-beam delivery systems are those having a fixed scan width. In that case, the entire area between the sides of the products and the sides of the electron beam are wasted, as illustrated in FIG.
1
.
A partial solution to the efficiency problem is to adjust the beam width. However, while use of adjustable beams permits waste to be reduced in a direction transverse to the travel direction, conventional adjustable beam devices do not compensate for radiation lost to the spaces between products in the direction of travel, as illustrated in FIG.
2
. Even if successive trays touch each other, the amount of space between the products could still be as much as 49% of the length of the trays since if a product occupies 51% or more of the container length, it is impossible to place two of those products in the container in order to fill-up the remaining space. If the trays do not touch, then the amount of wasted space will be even greater. As a result, control of the beam width alone cannot solve the problem of radiation lost to spaces around the product.
Additional reductions in radiation losses can also be obtained by reducing the spaces between products. However, the amount by which the spaces can be reduced in current conveyance or product handling systems is limited, at least in the product handling systems currently available, which are basically of two types. The first type of conventional conveyance system simply takes no account of partially filled product containers or spacing between product containers.
FIG. 4
represents a simple conveyor which is commonly used, and in which the product containers are joined by a chain. The spacing in between the containers is needed to allow corners to be managed when the series of trays is winding its way through the irradiation protection surrounding the beam area. As is apparent in
FIG. 4
, much of the beam is lost in between the product containers, which is a significant disadvantage since it lowers the overall efficiency of the machine.
Advanced types of conventional conveyor, on the other hand, overcome the problem of spacing in between product containers with advanced mechanics.
FIG. 5
shows an advanced conveyor type currently available in the market, in which complex mechanics is used to stack the product containers close to each other and thus get higher effective use of the available beam. After the products have been irradiated, the containers are separated to enable them to manage the corners in the irradiation protection. However, even the advanced conveyor type cannot solve the problem of lost beam due to incompletely filled product containers. There is no known conveyor available in the market which compensates for this.
Aside from adjusting the beam width and providing conveyance arrangements that minimize spacing between products, another potential solution to the efficiency problem would be to switch an adjustable scan-width beam on and off so that the beam is turned on when the product is within the beam coverage area, and off when the product is outside the beam coverage area. While such a system could in theory result in the coverage illustrated in
FIG. 3
, the system would have the inherent disadvantage that the electron beam delivery device would have to wait for the each product to arrive at the beam delivery position before being turned on, resulting in low production capacity.
In addition to the above-described limitations, the design of any conveyor system intended to be used in a high radiation environment such as an electron beam delivery device, and in particular systems that are relatively complex, must take into account a variety of additional limitations. Among other difficulties, the high radiation precludes the use of magnetic materials and organic materials such as plastics and lubricants, which are found in many electronic and mechanical components of conveyor systems used in other contexts, and furthermore prevents placement of electronics such as sensors and integrated circuits in the beam delivery area, without substantial shielding. In addition, the need to provide shielding to protect persons and electronics situated outside the beam delivery device further limits the size and number of components that can be included, since the larger the beam delivery device, the more shielding that is required. In addition, radiation creates ozone gas, which presents a hazard to operators, increasing the desirability of the making the system as maintenance free as possible. Finally, it is critical in any conveyor system that a consistent speed of products past the beam delivery device be maintained, and that no shadows are present, to ensure uniform irradiation of each product.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It is accordingly a first objective of the present invention to provide a system for conveying products past an electron beam delivery device, in which the electron beam delivery device irradiates only the products, and not the space around the products, in a simple and robust manner.
It is a second objective of the invention to provide a beam delivery and product conveyor system that provides the optimal coverage of a system in which the beam is turned on and off as products go past, and yet in which production capacity is increased by eliminating the need to wait for each product to reach the beam delivery device before turning on the beam.
It is a third objective of the invention to provide an electron beam delivery system in which the electron beam delivery is synchronized to the presence of products in the coverage area of the beam, and yet that does not require complex control electronics.
It is a fourth objective of the invention to provide a simple and robust conveyor system for conveying products past an electron beam delivery device that optimizes beam coverage for a variety of different product configurations while minimizing wasted radiation and maximizing processing speed.
It is a fifth an objective of the invention to provide a simple and robust conveyor device which reduces lost radiation due to spacing in between product containers and that, in one embodiment, is also capable of taking into account incompletely filled containers.
It is a sixth objective of the invention to provide a system for minimizing lost

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