3.1. Test and Analysis of Specification Cutting Machine before Improvement
Experiments on carrots and potatoes with respect to slicing, strip cutting, and dicing were conducted. The results are shown in
Figure 11. The statistical results of the test data are shown in the table below. During the slicing test, the gap between the edge-cutting tool of the roller and the wall of the feeding barrel was set to 11 mm, and the maximum slicing thickness was 11 mm. The speed of the drive motor was 680 r/min, so the speed of the propeller was 194 r/min. Under these conditions, the statistical output results of carrots and potatoes are shown in the table below.
It can be seen from
Table 1 that the overall error of carrot slicing is about 19.3% smaller, and that that of potato slicing is about 18.8% smaller.
In the combined test implementing slicing and strip cutting, the gap between the edge-cutting tool of the roller and the wall of the feeding barrel was set to 11 mm, the maximum slice thickness was 11 mm, and the disc cutter was set to 10 mm. The speed of the drive motor was 680 r/min, so the speed of the propeller and the disc tool was 194 r/min and 777 r/min, respectively. In this case, the statistical output results are shown in the table below.
It can be seen from
Table 2 that the comprehensive error of carrot slicing is 14.9% smaller and that the error of strip cutting is 1.7% smaller. The comprehensive error of potato slicing is 18.5% smaller, and the comprehensive error of strip cutting is 4% smaller. Due to the limitation of the tool gap and the size of the conveying cavity, the size of the material after being sliced and cut into strips is smaller, which is in line with reality.
In the test combining slicing, strip cutting, and dicing, the gap between the edge-cutting tool of the roller and the wall of the feeding barrel was set to 11 mm, the maximum slice thickness was set to 11 mm, the disc cutting tool was set to 10 mm, and the preset size of the cross-cutting tool was 10 mm. The speed of the drive motor was 680 r/min, so the speed of the propeller, disc tool, and cross-cutting tool was 194 r/min, 777 r/min, and 806 r/min, respectively. Under these conditions, the statistics of the carrot and potato output results are shown in the table below.
It can be seen from
Table 3 that the carrot slicing thickness is 16.1% smaller, the strip-cutting thickness is 2.6% smaller, and the dicing thickness is 13.4% larger; the potato slicing thickness is 21.1% smaller, the strip-cutting thickness is 3% smaller, and the dicing thickness is 19.3 % larger.
The test analysis is shown below.
The slicing analysis will be discussed first. It can be seen from
Figure 4 that there is a certain gap between the slicing tool and the other side of the guide plate, which is adjustable. The gap is the set slicing thickness. Under the dual action of the propeller and the inner wall of the roller, relative movements can be observed in the fruits and vegetables as well as in the slices, causing fruits or vegetables separated from the slices and to be discharged along the gap. The inner wall of the cylinder is arc-shaped, while ideal slices are straight lines. The contact position of the propeller and the roller is inconsistent, resulting in the sliced material not being completely parallel on both sides, meaning that the curve may change. On the other hand, the discharge gap is set, and the thickness of the sliced fruits or vegetables is less than or equal to the gap thickness. There is no better solution for the error caused by the above structure, but in order to optimize the work quality, it is necessary to control the rotation speed of the roller, increasing the centrifugal force on fruits or vegetables to avoid loosening and resulting in greater errors. As shown in
Table 1,
Table 2 and
Table 3, the combined errors of the carrot and potato slices are −19.3%, −14.9%, and −16.1% and −18.8%, −18.5, and −21.1%, respectively. This relative error rate will gradually decrease as the slice thickness increases, but it cannot be eliminated.
The strip-cutting analysis will be considered next. It can be seen from
Figure 4 that the sliced material slides down along the inclined plane through the discharge channel, where the material is subjected to gravity, reverse friction, and the downward friction force of disc cutting tool. During strip cutting, the size comes from the gap distribution of the blades in the disc tool. Therefore, by adjusting the blade gap, the strip-cutting size can be controlled. By analyzing structure and motion law, the systematic error of strip cutting is very small and can be ignored. Therefore, the strip-cutting size is theoretically very close to the disc blade gap. While the size of the both ends of sliced fruits or vegetables is not controllable, affected by the shape of fruits or vegetables, which is an uncontrollable error from fruits or vegetables. The combined error of carrot and potato cutting is −1.7%, −2.6%; −4%, −3%, respectively.
Finally, we will discuss the details of the dicing analysis. According to the analysis of the dicing mechanism of fruits and vegetables in the first section above, the shape of the dicing section is affected by various parameters, such as the feed speed of the fruits vegetables, the speed of the cross-cutting tool, and the shape of the cutting tool. By establishing the curve equation of the dicing section, the curve of the dicing section is symmetrical, and the rotation speed of the cross-cutting tool is determined by combining the rotational speed of the cylinder and the disc cutting tool.
However, through the experiments, it was found that the actual error of the dicing size is relatively large. According to the cross-sectional equation, it was found that the feed speed of the material is equal to the output speed of the sliced material when the actual material is moving at a variable speed, which is caused by the uncontrollable friction coefficient, as the friction coefficient is related to water content and the proportion of the internal components of the material. The test results in
Table 3 show that the combined error of carrot and potato dicing is 13.4% and 19.3%, respectively.
In summary, the dicing tool can be individually closed-loop controlled, and related experiments are carried out below.
3.2. Test and Analysis of Improved-Specification Cutting Machine
Using the improved prototype shown in
Figure 10, on 3 June 2021, a dicing test was carried out at Jiangsu LiGong Fruit and Vegetable Machinery Co., Ltd.(Wuxi, China) The drive motor 1 was set to drive the slicing and strip-cutting mechanism, and the speed was determined to be 935 r/min. Drive motor 2 was set to drive the cross-cutting tool, and the speed was determined to be 1390 r/min. This test mainly aimed to achieve the 10 mm dicing requirement in the early stage of the experiment. Through the detection of the material-dicing conveyor speed and by displaying the decision value of the drive speed of the cross-cutting tool, the frequency of drive motor 2 was manually adjusted in order to compare the change in the dicing error before and after the prototype was improved. In addition, for 12 mm dicing, the dicing results were compared to those for the above-mentioned 10 mm dicing.
For the dicing test with the cross-cutting tool size preset to 10 mm, based on the test results and preset parameters before the improvement of the prototype, according to the output speed of drive motor 1, 680 r/min, the frequency of motor 1 was set to 36.36 Hz, and according to the output speed of the cross-cutting tool, 806 r/min, the frequency of motor 2 was set to 28.99 Hz. The carrot’s movement speed, 0.07 m/s, and the potato’s movement speed, 0.0696 m/s, were obtained from the sensor detection results. The frequency of the drive motor was adjusted from 2 to 30 Hz and 31 Hz for carrot and potato, respectively. The detection interface is shown in
Figure 12.
It can be seen from
Table 4 and
Table 5 that the error of carrots ranges from −3% to 12%, and the average error is 3.3%; the error of potatoes ranges from 5% to 13%, and the average error is 9%. After fine-tuning motor 2, the average error rate is controlled within 10%.
As for the dicing test, where the cross-cutting tool had a preset size of 12 mm, the speed of each tool was set according to the previous theoretical calculations, and the setting principles were consistent with the preset parameters before the improvement of the prototype. The frequency ratio and the rated full scale of drive motor 1 were set to 35.05 Hz and 50 Hz, respectively, so the output speed of motor 1 was 655 r/min, the propeller was set to 187 r/min, and the disc tool was set to 749 r/min; the frequency ratio and the rated full scale of drive motor 2 were set to 25.09 Hz and 50 Hz, respectively, so the actual output speed of drive motor 2 was 697.5 r/min. The size of the toothed-belt output wheel of motor 2 was the same as that of the toothed-belt wheel driven by the power shaft of the cross-cutting tool, so the speed of cross-cutting tool was 697.5 r/min. Under these conditions, the diced thickness statistics for carrot and potato are shown in
Table 6 and
Table 7.
According to the analysis of sensor detection data, the average output speed of carrot dicing is 0.0661 m/s, and the average output speed of potato dicing is 0.0672 m/s. The system automatically fine tunes the speed of drive motor 2 during carrot dicing, as the frequency ratio is adjusted to 25.19 r/min, and the actual output speed is 700 r/min. In addition, the system fine tunes the frequency ratio of drive motor 2 during potato dicing to adjust the frequency ratio to 25.29 r/min; the actual output speed of the drive motor 2 is 703 r/min, and the cross-cutting tool is 703 r/min. Under these conditions, the statistics demonstrating the thickness of diced carrot and potato are shown in
Table 8 and
Table 9.
For
Table 6 and
Table 7 and for
Table 8 and
Table 9, three groups of average slip value filtering methods were used to obtain the variation trends in the average thickness error of the dicing process. After average filtering, the error data were reduced from 10 groups to 8 groups, as shown in
Table 10.
From
Table 10, the error range of carrots changes from 1.1% to 7.5% before adjustment to −3.1% to 2.9% after adjustment; the error range of potato dicing changes from 2.2% to 7.5% before adjustment to 0.3~5% after adjustment. The experiment found that due to the different damping coefficients of the two contexts, the damping of carrot is smaller than that of potato, and the overall movement is decelerated. Therefore, the increase in the frequency of carrot dicing is slightly lower than that of potato, which effectively improves the accuracy and stability of dicing. Compared to the dicing error of dicing with the preset size of 10 mm, the dicing error of dicing with the preset size of 12 mm is relatively decreased due to the increase in the base number. However, based on the speed measurements obtained from the system, the dicing size error of both vegetables can be controlled within 10% after fine-tuning the speed of the cross-cutting tool. The comparative error results before and after adjustment can be seen in
Table 11.