Title of Invention

AN APPARATUS FOR WEIGHING SMALL ARTICLES SUCH AS GELATIN CAPSULES

Abstract The capsules or other products (1) are fed by suitable means (4, 5, 10, 11, 12, 112, 13) in single file and taken up one at a time by a tangential wheel (16) which is fitted with reference teeth (18), with each tooth supporting one product, and has suction holes (19) so as to retain the said products. When the products reach or are about to reach a position above suitably shaped associated weighing heads (24), the suction that holds them against the wheel is cut off and the said Products fall, positioning themselves correctly on the Said heads, aided in part by the halting action exerted by the teeth in front. The products deposited on the heads are weighed and are then discharged by the pushing action of the wheel (16) teeth (18) which place the next product on 'the said heads. A chute (25) collects the products ejected from the heads and a deflection plate (26), controlled by the central processing and control system (32), separates products of the correct weight from those to be rejected. Several apparatus of this type are placed next to each other so as to obtain high production rates.
Full Text Apparatus for weighing small articles such as gelatin capsules"
DESCRIPTION
The invention relates to an apparatus for auto¬matically weighing small products in a continuous cycle, in particular filled gelatin capsules or tablets. In the following description reference will, for the sake of convenience, be made solely to gelatin capsules. It should be, understood, however, that the apparatus accord¬ing to the invention shall also be protected with respect to checking the weight of tablets or of any other product that involves similar requirements. The apparatus in question may, for example, be applied industrially to select capsules from those batches which have been rejected on account of defects detected by statistical weight checking systems associated with the machine that fills and closes the said capsules. Apparatus of known type essentially operate with an intermittent and reci¬procating motion that is relatively slow and inaccurate on account of the considerable vibrations generated by the reciprocating components.
The invention aims to overcome these drawbacks with a continuously operating device whereby the capsules are fed in single file and taken up one at a time by a wheel which is fitted with reference teeth, with each tooth supporting one capsule, and has suction holes so as to retain the said capsules. When the capsules reach or are about to reach a position above suitably shaped associated weighing heads, the suction that holds them against the wheel is turned off and the said capsules Eall, positioning themselves correctly on the said heads.

aided in part by the halting action exerted by the teeth in front. The capsules deposited on the heads are weighed and are then discharged by the pushing action of the wheel teeth which place the next capsule on the said heads. A chute collects the capsules ejected from the weighing heads and a deflection plate, controlled by the central processing and control system, separates capsules of the correct weight from those to be rejected. Several apparatus of this type are placed next to each other so as to obtain high production rates.
Accordingly, the present invention provides an apparatus for weighing small articles such as gelatin capsules loaded in bulk in a feeding hopper characterized by the fact that it comprises: means for taking up the articles one at the time from the hopper and aligning them in a single file in at least one column along which they descend by gravity; means to control the descent of articles along the column and allow singularly the bottom article to fall from the column; rotary conveyor means provided with stop means for stopping the bottom article falling free from the column and with suction means which are active along an arc of circumference for retaining the said bottom article until it reaches a substantially horizontal position, at which the suction is cut off; weighing means located underneath the said conveyor means to receive the article dropped by the said conveyor means as a consequence of the said suction cut off; means for checking the weight of the article with respect to predetermined limits and means for discharging the weighed articles by sorting the articles having a correct weight from those to be rejected.

Additional characteristics of the invention and the advantages derived therefrom will become apparent from the following description of a preferred embodiment of the invention, illustrated purely by way of non-limiting example in the figures of the two appended plates of drawings, in which:
- Fig. 1 is a diagrammatic side view, with some parts in section, of the apparatus;
- Fig. 2 is a diagrammatic front view, with some parts in section, of the same apparatus.
From the figures it may be seen that the capsules 1 to be weighed are fed in bulk into a hopper 2 that projects from a supporting structure 100 (Fig. 2) and has a straight horizontal aperture 3 at the bottom through which passes a parallelepipedal plunger 4, of known type, with a double-bevel led top and a plurality of evenly spaced vertical holes 5 having a diameter such that the capsules can travel through them when the latter are arranged in single file and their longitudinal axis is iligned with the longitudinal direction of the said loles. The plunger 4 is associated with vertical guide leans 6 fixed to the said structure 100, and is connected

to known drive means 7 which impart a straight recipro¬cating motion that is relatively slow and of an amplitude such as to facilitate insertion of the capsules into the said holes 5. So as to ensure that the capsules are clean when they reach the holes 5 in which they are lined up one behind the other, at least part of the sloping wall of the hopper on to which the said capsules are fed is perforated in the manner indicated by the reference numeral 8, so that dust and small impurities, such as for example pieces of broken or open capsules, can be dis¬charged and collected in a vessel 9 that can be removed for periodical cleaning or connected to a suction means, which is not shown.
The lower ends of the holes 5 abut coaxially against associated cylindrical helical springs 10 which are made of steel or other suitable material, have an internal diameter essentially equal to that of the said holes 5 and are fixed, via their upper ends, to the plunger 4 and, via their lower ends, to a corresponding parallelepipedal body 11 which is fixed to the said structure 100 and has a plurality of vertical half-channels 12, each of which is aligned with a spring 10 and, in cross-section, has the shape of a sector of a circle. As the capsules leave the springs 10, they are partly guided by a parallelepipedal body 13 located in front of the abovementioned body 11 and having vertical half-channels 112 in the shape of a sector of a circle. These half-channels 112, together with the half-channels 12, form vertical channels through which the capsules to be weighed slide longitudinally, without excessive clearance. The following description will show how it is possible, by adjusting the distance between the body 13

and the fixed body 11, to adjust the internal diameter of the guide channels 12, 112 in order to adapt them to the size of the capsules.
Located on an intermediate section of the fixed body 11 are vertical slots (not shown) which run down the middle of the half-channels 12 and in which operate the tips of associated horizontal combs 14, 15 articulated to the said body 11 at 214, 215 and connected by means of levers to associated actuators that impart a straight reciproca,ting motion, for example actuators of electro¬magnetic type or of a. type driven by fluid pressure, indicated diagrammatically by the arrows 114, 115 and anchored to the structure 100. The combs 14, 15 are positioned one above the other with a distance between them such that they form a release device of known type which, at the appropriate moment, allows only the bottom capsule in each column to pass into each channel 12, 112, while holding back the capsules above it. When the comb 15 is in the position shown by the dashed lines, the comb 14 is retracted so that the entire column of capsules present in each channel 12, 112 is supported on the teeth of the lower comb 15. Before a capsule is to be fed, the comb 14 is activated and its tips project into the channels 12 so as to exert sufficient pressure on the second capsule in each column so that, when the comb 15 is retracted, as indicated in Figure 1 by solid lines, only the bottom capsule falls, all the other capsules being held back by the teeth of the comb 14.
The bottom of the body 13 terminates in a tapered part 113 that extends an appropriate distance beneath the comb 15 and has longitudinal slits (not shown) which run along the middle of the half-channels 112. To the side of

cavicies T24 are essentially "Y"-shaped, with the upper part wide enough to accommodate and centre the capsules of various size, while the teeth 18 travel through the lower part.
Before the next capsule is positioned on a head
24, there is sufficient time to ensure that the capsule
which has been deposited on the same head during the
preceding cycle can be weighed and then discharged
therefrom by the pushing action of the tooth 18 bringing
the next capsule.
During the time it takes to place a capsule on a head 24 and for each tooth 18 to return in engagement with the channels 12, 112, the holes 19 are isolated from the source of suction. It is possible, during a fraction of this period of time, for the said holes 19 to undergo a cleaning phase, for example through the combined action of compressed air, which is blown through them via the rotary distributor 21, and/or by means of the suction exerted by an external mouth adjacent to the wheel 16, such a set-up being conceivable to and easily implemented by experts in the field, even if it is not illustrated in the drawings.
The capsules that are ejected from the weighing heads 24 fall into the various channels of a fixed chute
25. On the bottom of each channel there is a plate 26
which is controlled by an actuator 27 and usually closes
a trap-door 28 beneath which are located means for
collecting the capsules, with other collection means
being provided in the terminal part of each channel in
the chute. If the capsule weight measured by the head 24
falls within the pre-established tolerances, the plate 26
remains at rest, as indicated by the solid lines, and the

capsule is collected at the exit to the chute 25. If, on the other hand, the capsule is not of the correct weight, the plate 26 opens the trap-door 28 and the reject capsule falls through it.
It may be seen from Figures 1 and 2 that the weighing unit 29 with the abovementioned heads 24 is fitted with means, indicated diagrammatically by the arrows 30, which enable it to be oriented and fixed in the correct position with respect to the structure 100, and therefore to the wheel 16, but in such a way that dangerous vibrations which could falsify results are not transmitted to the said unit. To this end, the weighing unit 29 is supported by a suitable damped structure (not illustrated) which is essentially independent of the structure 100, and carries, in a central position, an optional mass 31 in place of a head 24, the transducer 131 of which measures the variations in the weight reading and to what extent these are caused by the vibrations. The transducer 131 is connected to the main electronic processor 32 which connects up with the transducers of the various weighing heads 24 and which, by means of a suitable algorithm, processes the signal supplied by the individual heads and subtracts from it the spurious signal resulting from the vibrations, delivering a signal that corresponds to the actual weight of the individual capsule being checked. The actuators 27 that sort the weighed capsules are activated by the processor 32 into which control and reference parameters are fed, as and when necessary, via the keyboard/screen unit 33.
Mounted via a positive drive or directly on the

shaft of rotation of the wheel 16 is a tachometric encoder/dynamo unit 34, or unit of other suitable type, that transmits the signals corresponding to the speed and angular position of a reference point on the said wheel to the processor 32. The processor 32 uses these signals to activate, via suitable interfaces 35, the means 7 that raise and lower the plunger 4 and in particular to activate the release combs 14, 15 at the appropriate moment. The said interfaces 35 are also responsible for activatirig the electric motor 3 6 with brake which, via the belt and sprocket drive 37, activates the shaft of the wheel 16. Mounted on the drive side of the drive 37 is a tensioning device 3 8 supported by an oscillating lever 39 which is spring-loaded 40. If the wheel 16 is prevented from rotating by an obstacle of some sort, for example by a deformed capsule on a weighing head 24 or in a channel 12, 112, the drive side of the drive 37 shortens and the lever of the tensioning device oscil¬lates, changing its position with respect to a sensor 41 tfhich then causes the apparatus in question to stop auto-natically.
The support plate 100 has an opening 42 through
/hich the wheel 16 passes, the latter being mounted,
:ogether with the rotary distributor 21, on a slide 43
■.hat runs along parallel guides 44 fixed to the rear side
)f the said plate and inclined at approximately 4 5°, or
.t some other suitable acute angle, with respect to the
deal plane on which the vertical capsule-guiding means
, 10, 11, 13 lie. The body 13 with the half-channels 112
s fixed on the said slide 43 by means of the support
ndicated diagrammatically by the reference 45. The slide
3 is firmly attached to the guides by means of a screw-

and-nut adjustment means 46, by acting on which it is possible to adjust the distance the wheel 16 and the body 13 are set away from the fixed body 11 and, at the same time, to adjust the distance between the said wheel 16 and the weighing heads 24, so as to adapt these distances to the size of the capsules which are to be checked at any given time. The plunger 4 and the springs 10 are replaced as the size of the capsules changes.
The apparatus in question is completed by means, for example a deionizing bar indicated diagrammatically by the reference 47, for eliminating static electricity from the wheel 16 which is in turn made from or covered with a material designed to facilitate the elimination of this drawback. The apparatus is also preferably located in a casing 4 8 that isolates it from the external envi¬ronment and in which, via suitable means 4 9 of known type, the temperature and relative humidity parameters relating to the internal environment are kept as constant aS possible, so as to ensure that the weight of the capsules is checked accurately and independently of the characteristics of the external environment.


WE CLAIM;
1. An apparatus for weighing small articles (1) such as gelatin capsules loaded in bulk in a feeding hopper (2) characterized by the fact that it comprises: means (4, 5, 10, 11, 12, 112, 13) for taking up the articles (1) one at the time from the hopper (2) and aligning them in a single file in at least one column along which they descend by gravity; means (14, 15) to control the descent of articles (1) along the column and allow singularly the bottom article to fall from the column; rotary conveyor means (16) provided with stop means (18) for stopping the bottom article (1) falling free from the column and with suction means (19) which are active along an arc of circumference for retaining the said bottom article until it reaches a substantially horizontal position, at which the suction is cut off; weighing means (24, 29) located underneath the said conveyor means to receive the article (1) dropped by the said conveyor means as a consequence of the said suction cut off; means (32, 33) for checking the weight of the article with respect to predetermined limits and means (25, 26, 27, 28) for discharging the weighed articles by sorting the articles having a correct weight from those to be rejected.
2. The apparatus as claimed in claim 1, in which the hopper (2) presents inclined sidewalls and at least one portion of said sidewalls is provided with small apertures (8) to permit the discharge of dust or small particles into a cavity (9) surrounding the said portion of sidewall, for removal.
3. The apparatus as claimed in claim 1, in which the stop means (18) are constructed as protruding teeth angularly equispaced on the rotary conveyor means

(18) and the weighing means comprise a fixed head (24) presenting a top groove (124) through which each tooth (18) can pass so as to displace the article (1) previously deposited thereon to effect its discharge.
4. The apparatus as claimed in claim 1, in which the conveyor, means (16) consists of a cylindrical wheel having a round cross-section and an annular recess (17) from the bottom of which emerge the said radial teeth (18) and in the bottom of which part of the capsule which has been allowed to fall from the said feed means (4, 5, 10, 11, 12, 112, 13) is accommodated, one or more holes (19) being provided in the bottom of the said recess, behind each tooth, and connecting up with ducts (20) that run parallel with the axis of the said wheel and engage with a rotary distributor (21) which is mounted on the Same structure that supports the end of the said wheel and is connected to the fixed suction source.
5. The apparatus as claimed in claim 1, wherein it comprises a plurality of means (4, 5, 10, 11, 12, 112, 13) for feeding the capsules on to several parallel columns, with associated control means (14, 15) that allow the bottom capsule to fall cyclically from each column, and in that it comprises several adjacent conveyor wheels (16) together with associated teeth (18) and suction holes (19), associated weighing heads (24) with associated means (25, 26, 27,28) for collecting and sorting the weighed capsules being provided underneath each wheel.
6. The apparatus as claimed in claim 5, in which the conveyor means having adjacent wheels (16), with teeth (18) and suction holes (19), is made from a single cylindrical body.

7. The apparatus as claimed in claim 1, wherein the means for aligning the capsules taken up from the loading hopper (2) on to several columns, comprise a plunger (4) inserted in an aperture (3) in the bottom of the said hopper, which plunger is attached to vertical guide means (6) and connected to raising and lowering means (7), the said plunger having a plurality of evenly spaced vertical holes (5) into which the capsules are inserted and aligned, with the lower ends of these holes abutting coaxially against associated cylindrical helical springs (10) whose lower end is connected to a fixed vertical body (11, 13) having vertical channels (12, 112) which receive the capsules from the said springs and guide them downwards with a minimum amount of clearance, the said guide body being bevelled (113) on the side facing the conveyor wheel (16) and having terminal longitudinal slits in order to allow the teeth (18) on the said conveyor wheel to pass, while the other side of the said guide body has longitudinal slots through which pass the tips of two parallel combs (14, 15), positioned one an appropriate distance above the other and connected to associated actuators (114, 115), the said combs being synchronized with the rotation of the said wheel (16) and, when the lower comb is activated, they stop the columns of capsules above the orbit of rotation of the wheel teeth (18), then, when the upper comb is activated and the lower comb subsequently deactivated, they retain the second capsule and allow the bottom capsule to fall once the said wheel teeth are positioned below it, after which, once the capsule has been carried away, the lower comb is reactivated and the upper comb retracted so that the cycle can be repeated.
8. The apparatus as claimed in claim 7, in which the final body to guide the columns of capsules is formed by two adjacent bodies (11, 13) containing associated vertical half-channels (12,112) which together form the capsule guiding channels, the

body (11) opposite the conveyor wheel (16) being fixed while the opposing body (13) is adjustable in terms of its distance from the body (11) and is associated with adjustment means for adapting the width of the channels (12, 112) to the size of the capsules to be weighed, with the springs (10)/plunger assembly being replaced, as the capsules size varies.
9. The apparatus as claimed in claim 7, in which the conveyor wheel (16) is associated with means for adjusting its distance from the subjacent weighing heads (24), as the size of the capsules to be weighed varies.
10. The apparatus as claimed in claim 1, in which the conveyor wheel (16) is mounted on a slide (43) running on fixed guides (44) that form an acute angle of appropriate amplitude, for example of approximately 45°, with respect to the composite body (11, 13) containing the final capsule guiding chaimels (12, 112), the adjustable part (11) of the said composite body also being fixed to the said slide and the said sUde being associated with screw-and-nut adjustment means (46) via which it is possible to carry out simultaneously the various adjustments needed in the event of the capsule size changing.
11. The apparatus as claimed in claim 10, in which the slide (43), which supports the projecting shaft of rotation of the conveyor wheel (16) together with the rotary disfributor (21) connected to the suction source, also supports the elecfric motor with brake (36) which drives the said wheel in rotation, this kinematic chain having a tachometric encoder/dynamo unit (34) and/or unit of other type, which transmits the necessary speed and phase signals to an electronic processor (32) which, through

suitable interfaces (35), controls the operation of the actuators of the release combs (14, 15) and the means (7) for driving the plunger (4), the said processor being set up such that, through a keyboard/screen unit (33), it receives data relating to the weight of the capsules to be checked so that these data can be compared with the data supphed by the various weighing heads (24) and so that, through an interface, it is possible to control the actuators (27) of the deflection plates (26) that separate capsules of the correct weight from those to be rejected.
12. The apparatus as claimed in claim 1, in which the conveyor wheel (16) is connected to its actuating motor (36) by means of a belt and sprocket drive (37), on the drive side of which there is a tensioning roller (38) mounted on a spring-loaded take-up arm (39, 40) whose usual position is detected by a sensor (41), the whole apparatus being designed such that, in the event that the said wheel (16) is prevented from rotating, the said sensor detects the movement of the take-up arm at the appropriate time and causes the apparatus to stop.
13. The apparatus as claimed in claim 5, in which the unit (29) with the plurality of weighing heads (24) presents a central head (31) which does not receive any capsules and is connected to means for detecting the spurious signal corresponding to the vibrations reaching the said unit, the said signal being delivered to the central processor (32) which receives the signals from the various weighing heads and which, for each head, supplies a signal from which the said spurious signal has been eliminated, this signal corresponding to the true weight of the checked capsules.

14. An apparatus for weighing small articles such as gelatin capsules, substantially as herein described with reference to the accompanying drawings.

Documents:

0310-mas-97 abstract-duplicate.pdf

0310-mas-97 abstract.pdf

0310-mas-97 claims-duplicate.pdf

0310-mas-97 claims.pdf

0310-mas-97 correspondence-others.pdf

0310-mas-97 correspondence-po.pdf

0310-mas-97 description (complete)-duplicate.pdf

0310-mas-97 description (complete).pdf

0310-mas-97 drawings.pdf

0310-mas-97 form-2.pdf

0310-mas-97 form-26.pdf

0310-mas-97 form-4.pdf

0310-mas-97 form-6.pdf

0310-mas-97 others.pdf

0310-mas-97 petition.pdf


Patent Number 196453
Indian Patent Application Number 310/MAS/1997
PG Journal Number 08/2007
Publication Date 23-Feb-2007
Grant Date 13-Feb-2006
Date of Filing 17-Feb-1997
Name of Patentee M/S. I. M. A INDUSTRIA MACCHINE AUTOMATICHE S.P.A
Applicant Address VIA EMILIA 428-442, I-40064 OZZANO EMILIA
Inventors:
# Inventor's Name Inventor's Address
1 CANE ARISTIDE VIA CONTI 20/A, I-40068 SAN LAZZARO DI SAVENA
2 AMAROLI SERGIO VIA GALASSI 45, I-40026 IMOLA
3 CONSOLI SALVATORE FABRIZIO VIA TIARINI 21, I-40129 BOLOGNA
PCT International Classification Number G01G 17/00
PCT International Application Number N/A
PCT International Filing date
PCT Conventions:
# PCT Application Number Date of Convention Priority Country
1 B096 A 000077 1996-02-21 Italy