FIELD OF INVENTION
The present invention relates generally to electric induction heating of an electrically conductive strip or slab material moving between a pair of transverse flux inductors and in particular to such heating processes where the pair of transverse flux inductors are adjustable.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
FIG. 1 illustrates a typical pair of transverse flux inductors 102a and 102b with fixed transverse lengths between which an electrically conductive strip or slab material 90 (shown as a partial strip) moves in an industrial process, for example, annealing of the material or evaporating a solvent in a coating deposited on the material by electric induction heating of the material. Electrical connectors such as bus bars 102a′ and 102a″ (with 102a″ hidden behind electrical insulator 104a in the figure) are connected to opposing adjacent ends of inductor 102a and bus bars 102b′ and 102b″ (102b″ hidden behind electrical insulator 104b) are connected to opposing adjacent ends of inductor 102b. The bus bars in this example provide the means for electrical interconnection of transverse flux inductors 102a and 102b to one or more alternating current (AC) power supplies 106 that supply AC power to the inductors which generates a magnetic flux field around the inductors as represented by typical flux lines 108 with conical arrows 108a illustrating an instantaneous direction of the generated flux vectors when the inductors 102a and 102b are connected in a series electrical circuit with power supply 106 and arrow 109 illustrates corresponding instantaneous direction of AC current flow through inductor 102a. Arrow 91 indicates the corresponding instantaneous direction of typical induced heating current loops 91a′ and 91a″ in material 90. For orientation purposes herein the X-direction (and arrow) is referred to as the longitudinal, or longitudinal direction, of the material as it passes between the inductors and the material's edge-to-edge (93a to 93b) distance is referred to herein as the transverse, or transverse width, of the material and the pair of transverse flux inductors with reference to the indicated Cartesian coordinate system in the figures for a three-dimensional space (X being the longitudinal direction of travel of the material between the pair of transverse flux inductors; Y being the direction of the transverse, or transverse width, of the material and the pair of transverse flux inductors; and Z being the direction of vertical separation between the pair of transverse flux inductors).
When fixed-width transverse inductors are used, different fixed-width transverse inductors must be used to inductively heat materials having different transverse widths. For example fixed-width transverse flux inductor 202a shown transversely over material 92 with material width MW1 in FIG. 2(a) has a suitable transverse length IW1 to heat material 92 between transverse material edges 92′ and 92″ as it passes below inductor 202a when inductor 202a is paired with another transverse flux inductor (not shown in the figure) under material 92 and fixed-width transverse flux inductor 302a shown over material 94 with smaller material width MW1 in FIG. 2(b) has a suitable smaller transverse length IW2 to heat material 94 between transverse material edges 94′ and 94″ as it passes below inductor 302a with inductor 302a is paired with another transverse flux inductor (not shown in the figure) under material 94. In industrial applications a preferred transverse flux induction heating line has a single pair of adjustable-length transverse inductors to accommodate various widths of strip or slab materials. Typically this is accomplished by making at least a section of the physical non-flexible inductors variable in length, for example, one inductor physical segment retracting into or out of another inductor segment. For example, in U.S. Pat. No. 4,751,360 each of the pair of transverse flux inductors have a pair of straight sections with portions extending transversely to the material passing between them and curved sections that can be adjusted in position adjacent to the edges of the material to inductively heat materials of variable transverse widths.
It is one object of the present invention to provide an adjustable pairs of transverse flux inductors that can be adjusted for inductively heating materials of different widths without sectionalized variable physical lengths of inductor sections.
It is another object of the present invention to provide an adjustable pairs of transverse flux inductors where the transverse flux inductor is formed from a pair of flexible cables and at least one of the pair of flexible cables is adjustable in position to change the transverse width of the inductor and optionally the pole pitch of the inductor.
It is another example of the present invention to provide pairs of transverse flux inductors for independently tracking either one or both of the opposing edges of a material passing between the adjustable pair of transverse flux inductors where at least one of the pair of flexible cables is adjustable in position.
BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
In one aspect the present invention is an apparatus for, and method of, forming a transverse flux electric induction heating apparatus with adjustable transverse flux inductor pairs where each one of the inductors in the pair is formed from flexible cables positioned within movable roll channels in roll assemblies that can adjust the transverse length of the inductor pair across the edge-to-edge transverse of a strip or slab moving between the inductor pair and/or the pole pitch between inductor transverse lengths of each inductor in the pair.
In another aspect the present invention is an apparatus for, and method of, independently tracking either one or both of the opposing edges of a material passing between the adjustable pair of transverse flux inductors of the present invention in an electric induction heating process of the material.
The above and other aspects of the invention are set forth in this specification and the appended claims.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
The foregoing brief summary, as well as the following detailed description of the invention, is better understood when read in conjunction with the appended drawings. For the purpose of illustrating the invention, there is shown in the drawings exemplary forms of the invention that are presently preferred; however, the invention is not limited to the specific arrangements and instrumentalities disclosed in the following appended drawings.
FIG. 1 illustrates a pair of fixed transverse flux inductors connected to an alternating current power supply for generating a magnetic flux field that can inductively heat an electrically conductive material moving between the inductors as illustrated by a section of an electrically conductive strip or plate.
FIG. 2(a) illustrates a first pair of fixed transverse flux inductors having a suitable first transverse length for inductivity heating the entire transverse width of a first material with a first transverse distance between the material's opposing edges shown in the figure.
FIG. 2(b) illustrates a second pair of fixed transverse flux inductors having a suitable transverse length for inductively heating the entire transverse width of a second material with a second transverse distance between the material's opposing edges shown in the figure where the second transverse distance is less than the first transverse distance between the material's opposing edges shown in FIG. 2(a).
FIG. 3(a) and FIG. 3(b) illustrate one embodiment of the present invention where the adjustable pair of transverse flux inductors is in an extended transverse length position to inductively heat the entire transverse width of the first material shown in FIG. 2(a) passing between the pair of inductors.
FIG. 4(a) and FIG. 4(b) illustrate the adjustable pair of transverse flux inductors shown in FIG. 3(a) and FIG. 3(b) in a retracted transverse length position to inductively heat the entire transverse width of the second material shown in FIG. 2(b) passing between the pair of inductors where the second material has a smaller edge-to-edge transverse length than the edge-to-edge transverse length of the first material.
FIG. 5(a) through FIG. 5(d) illustrate another embodiment of the present invention where the adjustable pair of transverse flux inductors are adjustable in transverse length and pole pitch between adjacent transverse cable sections in each one of the pair of transverse flux inductors.
FIG. 6(a) and FIG. 6(b) illustrate another embodiment of the present invention with flexible cable joiner and separator assemblies that can be more robust than in other embodiments of the invention.
FIG. 7(a) is a detail view of a two-layer combination flexible cable joiner and spreader assembly used in some embodiments of the present invention where multiple cables form each one of the pair of flexible cables in a transverse flux inductor assembly of the present invention.
FIG. 7(b) is a partial detail view of an alternative two-layer combination flexible cable joiner and spreader assembly shown in FIG. 7(a) where rolls are provided multiple cables in a multiple cable group in FIG. 7(a).
FIG. 8(a) and FIG. 8(b) illustrate another embodiment of the present invention where a combination of flexible cable joiner assemblies and electrically conductive tubes form a transverse flux inductor assembly of the present invention.
FIG. 9(a) and FIG. 9(b) illustrate another embodiment of the present invention where a tunnel structure is provided around the material being inductively heated by a transverse flux induction heating apparatus of the present invention and between a pair of transverse flux inductor assemblies of the present invention.
FIG. 10 illustrates another embodiment of the present invention where multiple transverse flux induction heating apparatus are arranged sequentially along the longitudinal length of an induction heating line.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
FIG. 3(a) through FIG. 4(b) illustrate one embodiment of a transverse flux inductor heating apparatus 10 of the present invention for inductively heating a strip or slab material (also referred to as workpiece) illustrated as wider material 92 or narrower material 94 moving between a pair of transverse flux inductor assemblies 12a and 12b. Each one of the pair of identical inductor assemblies is located on opposing sides of the material and is disposed mirror image to each other in this embodiment.
In this embodiment of the invention each cable assembly 12a or 12b in the pair comprise a pair of continuous flexible cables, for example, cable 12a1 and 12a2 for cable assembly 12a. Each cable is a continuous run of flexible cable between opposing ends 12a1′ and 12a1″ for flexible cable 12a1 and 12a2′ and 12a2″ for flexible cable 12a. Each cable assembly in this embodiment includes a separate moveable flexible cable joiner assembly 14 near to each opposing end of the flexible cables and a separate moveable flexible cable separator assembly 24 located transversely inward of the joiner assemblies as shown in the drawings relative to the material being inductively heated.
Selection of suitable flexible cables for use in the present invention is dependent upon the following characteristics. The inner conductor insulation materials and outer jacket materials should possess sufficient flexibility so that they tend not to maintain a set deformation when stressed. Overall cable construction should be loose and internally slippery, whereby the conductors can freely move within the bundle without generating enough heat and abrasion to cause failure. The inner conductor, for example a copper composition, should be an alloy that can withstand flexing without cold hardening. The flexible cables may be composed of typical electrical conducting materials such as a copper composition or superconductors. The flexible cables can comprise solid or stranded conductors in an arrangement, including for example, a litz wire cable arrangement that satisfies the radii of curvatures for the flexible cable joiner and separator assemblies in a particular application. In one embodiment of the invention a flexible cable comprises copper wire rope consisting of several flexible strands of copper rope where the strands are electrically insulated from each other, for example, in the form of litz wire as known in the art. The resulting flexible wire rope can be alternatively wound around a non-electrically conductive cable support tube, an elastic spring core composition or other support structure to minimize any cooling requirements due to Joule heating and mechanical wear.
If forced-flow cooling is required due to the magnitude of Joule heating in the flexible cables, the flexible cables are preferably, forced-flow cooled internally by flow of a liquid or gas cooling medium through an interior cooling passage in the flexible cables, for example, via suitable fluid couplings FC at the opposing ends of the flexible cables.
A flexible cable joiner assembly 14 is formed from an array of rolls 13 (also referred to as rollers) arranged to form a roll array channel in which the roll array channel narrows to a roll array throat region 14′ at the end of the roll array channel nearest to each end (12a1′, 12a1″, 12a2′ or 12a2″ in FIG. 3(a)) of the flexible cables. In this embodiment of the invention the roll array channel is formed by making at least some of the rolls 13 in the shape of a flanged spool. Each of the rolls 13 of a flexible cable joiner assembly can be rotatably mounted on joiner base 16 or other structural mounting in this embodiment by roll vertical shaft 17 fixedly mounted to the joiner base. A central opening in each joiner roll 13 is inserted into a joiner roll vertical shaft 17 and the rolls rotate about the roll vertical shaft as the flexible cables move through a joiner assembly. In other embodiments of the invention at least some of the rolls may be fixedly mounted to the joiner base or other joiner mounting structure.
In the embodiment shown in FIG. 3(a) through FIG. 4(b) the roll array throat region 14′ has an opening width equal to the sum of the diameters of the two flexible cables (cables 12a1 and 12a2 in this example) seated in the roll array channel with a width tolerance, if required, to allow the two flexible cables to pass through the roll array throat width with suitable friction force against the rotating rolls during cable pull, joiner assembly movement and/or powered roller movement.
At the end of a flexible cable joiner assembly opposite the roll array throat region 14′ is a roll array mouth region 14″ as shown in FIG. 3(a) that has a width wider than the sum of the diameters of the two flexible cables to limit spreading apart of the two flexible cables by a flexible cable spreader assembly located transversely inward of the flexible cable joiner assembly.
A flexible cable spreader assembly 24 is disposed transversely inward of each of the flexible cable joiner assemblies 14. Each flexible cable spreader assembly is formed from a first and second roll array of spreader rolls arranged to form separate first and second roll array spreader channels for each one of the two flexible cables to spread apart the pair of flexible cables in the longitudinal (X-direction) of the material passing through the roll arrays. In this embodiment of the invention each roll array spreader channel is formed by making at least some of the rolls 15 in the shape of a flanged spool. In this embodiment each of the first and second array spreader channels has a width equal to the diameter of one of the pair of flexible cables seated in an array spreader channel with a width tolerance, if required, to allow the single flexible cable to pass through the roll array spreader channel with suitable friction force against the rotating rolls.
Each of the spreader rolls 15 of a flexible cable spreader assembly 24 are rotatably mounted on roll vertical shafts 17 that are fixedly mounted to spreader base 26 in this embodiment. A central opening in each spreader roll 15 is inserted into a spreader roll vertical shaft 19 and the rolls rotate about the roll vertical shaft as the flexible cables move through the spreader assembly. In other embodiments of the invention at least some of the rolls may be fixedly mounted to the spreader base or other spreader assembly mounting structure.
Induction system actuators or drivers for the flexible cables, joiner assemblies, separator assemblies and rollers as known in the art, in combination or individually, are used in a particular application and may be manual, mechanical or electromechanical, or combinations thereof. Separate or combination of induction heating system actuators or drivers may be used with coordinated control of movement being performed by a computer processor interfacing with the system actuators or drivers.
In FIG. 3(a) and FIG. 3(b) the joiner assemblies 14 and spreader assemblies 24 are positioned by cable pull actuators or drivers, joiner and spreader assembly movement actuators or drivers and/or powered roller movement actuators or drivers to establish a transverse coil pair with transverse width of IW1 to inductively heat wide material 92 with transverse width of MW1. In FIG. 4(a) and FIG. 4(b) the joiner assemblies 14 and spreader assemblies 24 are positioned by cable pull actuators or drivers, joiner and spreader assembly movement actuators or drivers and/or powered roller movement actuators or drivers to establish a transverse coil pair with transverse width of IW2 to inductively heat narrow material 94 with transverse width of MW2. In this particular example of the invention, component relative positioning for the transverse inductor coil pair is as follows. For heating of material 92 in FIG. 3(a) and FIG. 3(b): Y1′ is the transverse separation of adjacent joiner and separator assemblies; Y2′ is the transverse separation between opposing separator assemblies and Y3′ is the transverse separation between adjacent cable ends and joiner assemblies. For heating of material 94 in FIG. 4(a) and FIG. 4(b): Y1 is the transverse separation of adjacent joiner and separator assemblies; Y2 is the transverse separation between opposing separator assemblies and Y3 is the transverse separation between adjacent cable ends and joiner assemblies.
In some embodiments of the invention one or more induction heating actuators are configured to change the separation distance between the pair of flexible electric cable in a transverse workpiece direction and a longitudinal workpiece direction. In one embodiment of the invention the one or more induction heating actuators can be selected from one or more of the group of: a separator assembly actuator for transverse movement of the pair of separate moveable cable joiner assemblies; a separator assembly actuator for longitudinal movement of the pair of separate moveable cable joiner assemblies; and a joiner assembly actuator for transverse movement of the pair of separate moveable cable joiner assemblies.
Curvature limitations for a particular composition of flexible cable can be accommodated by restricting the spacing apart distances between adjacent joiner and spreader assemblies and/or restricting relative placement of rolls on adjacent joiner and spreader assemblies. In some embodiments of the invention the joiner and/or spreader rolls may be mounted with dynamically adjustable tension mechanisms to allow a range of curvature depending upon the force exerted on the flexible cable on the adjustable tension roll.
In some embodiments of the invention, the joiner and spreader rolls and mounting structures for the rolls, including the bases and vertical roll shafts can be formed from an electrically conductive material such as copper or aluminum. In other embodiments of the invention, the joiner and spreader rolls and mounting structures for the rolls can be formed from an electromagnetically transparent material such as glass fiber reinforced plastic. In other embodiments of the invention, the joiner base or the spreader base may be formed at least partially from a flux concentrator material or a flux compensator material to alter the flux field produced by current flow through the flexible cables.
FIG. 5(a) through FIG. 5(d) illustrate another embodiment of a transverse flux inductor heating apparatus 11 of the present invention that is similar to the embodiment shown in FIG. 3(a) through FIG. 4(b) with the added technical feature being each flexible cable forming each transverse flux inductor has its own flexible cable spreader cable assembly with individual X (longitudinal) and Y (transverse) direction induction heating system actuators or drivers that enables inductor transverse length control via movement of the spreader assemblies in the Y-direction in inductor transverse width control and inductor pole pitch control via movement of the spreader assemblies in the (longitudinal) X-direction.
In FIG. 5(a) and FIG. 5(b) the joiner assemblies 14 and spreader assemblies 24b and 24d for cable 12a1, and spreader assemblies 24a and 24c for cable 12a2 are positioned by cable pull actuators or drivers, joiner and spreader assembly movement actuators or drivers and/or powered roller movement actuators or drivers to establish a transverse coil pair with transverse width of IW2 and pole pitch of τ1 to inductively heat narrow width material 94 with transverse width of MW2. In FIG. 5(c) and FIG. 5(d) the joiner assemblies 14 and spreader assemblies 24b and 24d for cable 12a1 and spreader assemblies 24a and 24c are positioned by cable pull actuators or drivers, joiner and spreader assembly movement actuators or drivers and/or powered roller movement actuators or drivers to establish a transverse coil pair with transverse width of IW1 and pole pitch of τ2, which is greater than τ1, to inductively heat wide material 92 with transverse width of MW2. In this particular example of the invention, component relative positioning for the transverse inductor coil pair is as follows. For heating of material 94 as illustrated in plan view FIG. 5(b): Y1 is the transverse separation of adjacent joiner and pair of separator assemblies; Y2 is the transverse separation between opposing pair of separator assemblies; Y3 is the transverse separation between adjacent cable ends and joiner assemblies; and X1 is the longitudinal separation between adjacent separator assemblies. For heating of material 92 as illustrated in plan view FIG. 5(c): Y1′ is the transverse separation of adjacent joiner and pair of separator assemblies; Y2′ is the transverse separation between opposing pair of separator assemblies; Y3′ is the transverse separation between adjacent cable ends and joiner assemblies; and X1′ is the longitudinal separation between adjacent separator assemblies.
FIG. 6(a) and FIG. 6(b) illustrate another embodiment of a transverse flux inductor heating apparatus 10′ of the present invention that is similar to the embodiment shown in FIG. 3(a) through FIG. 4(b) with the added technical feature being each of the flexible cable joiner assemblies 34 further comprises a joiner closing plate 35 opposing joiner base 16 to further contain and hold in place joiner rolls 13 and the flexible cables passing through the joiner assembly. The ends of joiner roll vertical shafts 17 opposite the ends fixed to joiner base 16 can be fixedly attached to the joiner closing plate 35. Similarly in FIG. 6(a) and FIG. 6(b) each of the flexible cable separator assemblies 36 further comprises a separator closing plate 37 opposing separator base 26 to further contain and hold in place separator rolls 15 and the flexible cables passing through the separator assembly. The ends of separator roll vertical shafts 19 opposite the ends fixed to separator base 26 can be fixedly attached to the separator closing plate 37.
The addition of closing plates for the flexible cables joiner assemblies and separator assemblies also apply to the transverse flux inductor heating apparatus 11 of FIG. 5(a) through FIG. 5(d) and other examples of the present invention.
Where a large magnitude of induced electric power input is required from a transverse inductor heating apparatus of the present invention a pair of large diameter single flexible cables 12a1 and 12a2 may be required, for example, for the transverse flux inductor heating apparatus in FIG. 3(a) through FIG. 4(b). Alternatively in other examples of the invention, a plurality of small diameter flexible cables are used to form a multiple cable group for each of the pair of flexible cables comprising the pair of transverse flexible cables for each transverse flux inductor heating apparatus. One example is shown in detail in FIG. 7(a) where a combined two-level (in the Z-direction) joiner and spreader assembly 114 comprises combination upper joiner rolls 113a and lower joiner rolls 113b and joiner roll vertical shafts 117 connected to a joiner and spreader base not shown in the figure. First multiple cable group 42 is formed by small diameter cables 42a1, 42a2 and 42a3 terminating at T1a, T1b and T1c, respectively and moves through the upper joiner rolls 113a and then first flexible cable group spreader assembly 116a formed from spreader rolls 116 and first spreader roll vertical shafts 119. Second multiple cable group 52 is formed by small diameter cables 52a1, 52a2 and 52a3 terminating at T3a, T3b and T3c (not visible in FIG. 7(a)), respectively and moves through the lower joiner rolls 113b and then second flexible cable group spreader assembly 116b formed from spreader rolls 116a′ and first spreader roll vertical shafts 119. In other embodiments of the invention other number of multi-level joiner or combination of joiner and spreader assemblies are used as required to accommodate multiple cable groups in a particular application.
FIG. 7(b) is a partial detail view of an alternative two-layer combination flexible cable joiner and spreader assembly shown in FIG. 7(a) where rollers can be provided between multiple cables used in a cable group shown in FIG. 7(a). In the embodiment shown in FIG. 7(b) rolls 214 are provided between cables 42a1 and 42a2 in flexible cable group 42′ to prevent friction between adjacent cables in curved regions of the pair of flexible cables when, for example, the transverse width of the pair of transverse inductors is changed. Rolls 116′ in FIG. 7(b) serve a similar function as rolls 113a and 116 in FIG. 7(a).
In other embodiments of the invention the flexible cables in one of the flexible cable groups may be connected in series or mixed series and parallel combinations for multi-turn flexible cable arrangements.
Another embodiment of a transverse flux inductor heating apparatus 10″ of the present invention is shown in FIGS. 8(a) and 8(b) where magnetic flux distortion at opposing edges of the material 92 or 94 being inductively heated is reduced by moving flexible cables spreader and joiner assemblies 54 further back from the edges of the material and providing material facing vertical flaps 54a′ on the assemblies' mounting structure 54′ with holes in the vertical flaps for passage of the flexible cables 52a and 52b. Electrically conductive tubes 50, such as copper tubes, are soldered to the flap 54a′ to perform the function of the flexible cable spreader assemblies and to maintain cables 52a and 52b in parallel configuration at a defined distance “d”. Conductive tubes 50 increase the magnetic coupling between flexible cables 52a and 52b on one side and the flexible cables spreader/joiner assemblies 54 on the other side. Toroidal magnetic cores 56 are optionally provided around transverse tube 50 as shown in the figures to impose the same magnitude of current in the loop that the conductive tubes 50 form with the flexible cables spreader/joiner assemblies 54 as in the main flexible cables 52a and 52b. Optional features of other transverse flux inductor heating apparatus disclosed herein also apply to the embodiment illustrated in FIG. 8(a) and FIG. 8(b).
In other embodiments of the present invention, as shown in FIG. 9(a) and FIG. 9(b) a tunnel structure 60 is provided around the material 92 or 94 that is being inductively heated and between any of the adjustable pair of transverse flux inductors of the present invention, for example the transverse flux inductor heating apparatus 10 in FIG. 3(a) through FIG. 4(b).
In some embodiments of the invention the tunnel structure is sealed gas-tight from ambient conditions and thermally insulated for heating material under a protective atmosphere contained within the tunnel structure in order to avoid negatively affecting material properties, such as oxidation of steels, improving the material properties, such as decarburization of steels or perform any other process requiring isolation from ambient conditions.
In other embodiments of the invention the tunnel structure may be reinforced to seal a tunnel environment operating at a vacuum or positive or negative pressure relative to ambient pressure external to the tunnel.
In some embodiments of the transverse flux induction heating apparatus as disclosed herein the one or more induction heating actuators are provided for selectively moving in the transverse Y-direction one or more of the separator assemblies and or joiner assemblies so that the transverse width of the transverse inductors formed from the pair of flexible cables tracks the instantaneous positions of the opposing edges of the workpiece that is being inductively heated as the instantaneous positions of the opposing edges may waver from nominal positions as the moving workpiece travels between the pair of transverse inductors. For example edge sensing sensors, such as laser beam sensors that sense the instantaneous positions of the transverse edges of the workpiece, can output signals to a computer processing circuit that signals one or more actuators to move selected separator assemblies and/or joiner assembles.
Each embodiment of the transverse flux inductor heating apparatus of the present invention may optionally include support structure to keep the flexible cables or other associated components in place to counteract electrical and/or mechanical forces acting on them, for example, electromagnetic forces resulting from current flow in adjacent flexible conductors. The support structure should be non-electrically conductive as required to avoid induced heating in the support structure.
In some embodiments of the present invention flexible cables having a transposed arrangement of electrical conductors may be used with any of the adjustable transverse flux inductors disclosed herein particularly if Joule heating and reactive impedance balancing are of concern in a specific application.
In some embodiments of the present invention one or more longitudinally (X-direction) or transversally (Y-direction) oriented magnetic shunts can optionally be used in combination with any of the adjustable transverse flux inductors disclosed herein to increase magnetic flux intensity for increased inductive heating of the strip or slab material. Optionally these magnetic shunts could be independently adjustable in X-direction, Y-direction or Z-direction relative to the pair of transverse flux inductors and the workpiece to achieve a desired effect in the transverse (edge-to-edge) material temperature profile of the workpiece being inductively heated.
In other embodiments of a transverse flux induction heating apparatus of the present invention, two or more of any combination of transverse flux induction heating apparatus disclosed herein may be longitudinally disposed adjacent to each other in an electric induction heating line and electrically interconnected in series, parallel or combination series and parallel to achieve a particular magnitude of induced electric power in the strip or slab material. By way of example, and not limitation, FIG. 10 is a simplified diagram of two transverse flux induction heating apparatus 10 as shown in FIG. 3(a) through FIG. 4(b) longitudinally disposed adjacent to each other where the two transverse flux induction heating apparatus 10 are connected to one or more alternating current power supplies so that instantaneous current in each flexible cable flows in the directions indicated by the arrows.
The term “transversely inward” refers to facing an interior (center) transverse region of the workpiece being inductively heated in the transverse Y-direction and the term “transversely outward” refers to facing towards a transverse edge of the workpiece being inductively heated.
While the above embodiments of the invention disclose a pair of transverse flux inductors disposed above and below the workpiece material passing between the pair of transverse flux inductors, in other embodiments a single transverse flux inductor as disclosed herein may be used to inductively heat only one upper or lower side surface of the workpiece material.
In the description above, for the purposes of explanation, numerous specific requirements and several specific details have been set forth in order to provide a thorough understanding of the example and embodiments. It will be apparent however, to one skilled in the art, that one or more other examples or embodiments may be practiced without some of these specific details. The particular embodiments described are not provided to limit the invention but to illustrate it.
Reference throughout this specification to “one example or embodiment,” “an example or embodiment,” “one or more examples or embodiments,” or “different example or embodiments,” for example, means that a particular feature may be included in the practice of the invention. In the description various features are sometimes grouped together in a single example, embodiment, figure, or description thereof for the purpose of streamlining the disclosure and aiding in the understanding of various inventive aspects.
The present invention has been described in terms of preferred examples and embodiments. Equivalents, alternatives and modifications, aside from those expressly stated, are possible and within the scope of the invention.