This application claims priority from provisional patent application 2904/MUM/2010 titled “Method of Manufacturing of Objects with Varying Concentration of Particles” filed in Mumbai, India on 19 Oct. 2010.
The present invention relates to materials. More particularly, it relates to manufacturing of objects of materials with varying concentrations of particles of a second material.
Objects, particularly rods or sheets of a first material with particles of a second material embedded within them are used for various purposes in the art. Such particles may cause a change in some property of the object such as strength, brittleness, heat resistance, etc. which are beneficial for various purposes. Rods and sheets with particles are also used for optical purposes. For example, a transparent rod or sheet may have particles of a different refractive index embedded in it. The transparent rod or sheet acts as a light guide, and the embedded particles disperse the guided light. This apparatus can be used as a light source. The particles may be dyes added to impart color to the sheet.
An apparatus and method for manufacturing an object with a varying concentration of particles, with a defined concentration profile are disclosed. In an embodiment, the object with varying concentration of particles is manufactured by mixing liquids comprising different particle concentrations, the proportion in which such liquids are mixed being varied over time. The resultant liquid is cast or extruded into the required shape to form the object with a varying concentration of particles.
The above and other preferred features, including various details of implementation and combination of elements are more particularly described with reference to the accompanying drawings and pointed out in the claims. It will be understood that the particular methods and systems described herein are shown by way of illustrations only and not as limitations. As will be understood by those skilled in the art, the principles and features described herein may be employed in various and numerous embodiments without departing from the scope of the invention.
The accompanying drawings, which are included as part of the present specification, illustrate the presently preferred embodiment and together with the general description given above and the detailed description of the preferred embodiment given below service to explain and teach the principles of the present invention.
An apparatus and method for manufacturing an object with a varying concentration of particles, with a defined concentration profile are disclosed. In an embodiment, the object with varying concentration of particles is manufactured by mixing liquids comprising different particle concentrations, the proportion in which such liquids are mixed being varied over time. The resultant liquid is cast or extruded into the required shape to form the object with a varying concentration of particles.
In an embodiment, the mixed material is extruded or molded using a process such as extrusion or injection molding to produce a final solid product.
Either one or both of 203 and 205 could be a zero concentration (i.e. one with no particles inside it). The rate of extrusion of material of particle concentration 203 could be made variable with time by varying the speed of rotation of the screw 209. The rate of extrusion of material of particle concentration 205 could also be made variable with time by varying the speed of rotation of the screw 211. The screw speeds of extruder 202 and extruder 204 could be same or different. The outputs of extruder 202 and extruder 204 are given as inputs to extruder 206. Extruder 206 mixes the materials with particle concentration 203 and 205 to produce material with output particle concentration 207. The output particle concentration 207 could be fixed or varying with time.
The speed of rotation of screw 213 of extruder 207 decides the output flow rate. According to an embodiment, the output flow rate of extruder 206 is set to the sum of the output flow rates of extruders 202 and 204. Alternatively, the output flow rates of extruders 202 and 204 are set such that their sum is the output flow rate of extruder 206. The speed of rotation of screws 209 and 211 set the output flow rates of extruders 202 and 204 respectively. The output flow rate is also decided by other factors such as size and design of the screw, size and design of the extruder, etc. The output flow rates of extruders 202 and 204 are varied over time. The ratio of output flow rates of extruders 202 and 204 at a given instant produces material of a particular concentration at the input of extruder 206. As the ratio of the output flow rates is varied over time, the concentration at the input of extruder 206 varies. This creates a varying concentration at the output of extruder 206.
The two input extruders 202 and 204 are made to output material of different particle concentrations. This is done by feeding each input extruder, material having different particle concentrations. In an embodiment, pure base material and particulate material is fed in accurate amounts to the feeder (hopper) that feeds the screw of the input extruder. In another embodiment, pure base material has particulate material embedded in it, at a predefined concentration level. This may be done, for example, by master-batching, or creating the composite material using a different extrusion or mixing process where the two materials are mixed. In a third embodiment, pellets of pure base material and base material with particulate material embedded in it are both fed to the feeder in accurate amounts. In all the above methods, choosing the appropriate amounts of the two species being fed will create an appropriate particle concentration in the input extruder. The extruder screw will thoroughly mix the two fed species to evenly distribute the particulate material in the base material. In an embodiment the material fed to the input extruders is in solid form. The material is heated and/or pressurized and churned by the action of the screws to produce a liquid at the output of the input extruders.
According to an embodiment, the output flow rate of material of particle concentration 303 is the sum of the rate of extrusion of material due to the extruder 302 (itself a function of the speed of rotation of screw 309) and an additive rate due to the piston 315. The additive rate due to the piston 315 is proportional to the velocity of the piston. In an embodiment, the additive rate is the product of the velocity of the piston, the surface area of the piston and density of the material being extruded. This additive rate due to the piston is positive if the piston is moving in towards the material channel and negative if the piston is moving away from the channel. By controlling the velocity of the piston 315, the additive rate and hence the rate of output of material of particle concentration 303 can be controlled. Similarly by controlling the velocity of piston 317, the rate of output of material of particle concentration 305 can be controlled.
To get a repetitive (periodic) concentration profile (concentration pattern), the velocity of the pistons is changed in a periodic manner. The pistons cycle through both positive and negative velocities in such a way that at the end of the pattern, they are in the same position as in the beginning.
The output flow rate of material of particle concentration 403 is dependent on the speed of rotation of screw 409, as well as the velocity at which it is moving forward or backward in the extruder cylinder. One or both of these may be varied to vary the rate of output of material. Similarly output flow rate of material of particle concentration 405 is varied.
In an embodiment, the reciprocating motion and the rotary motion of the screws are alternated. The rotary motion creates a heated liquid at the end of the screw, and a forward motion of the screw sends the material forward to the material mixing. The velocity of such forward motion is different at different times, so that material from the two screw extruders mixes in different proportions at different times.
In an embodiment, there may also be attached a cylinder with a reciprocating piston to the channel between the extruders 402 and 404, and the mixing extruder 406. The velocity of the piston affects the output flow rate, as recited previously.
In an embodiment, the variation in material injection rate in the duration of the shot is achieved by changing the speed at which the injection takes place. Thus, for screw type injection molding machines, the two screws of the two injection molding machines are moving forward at rates which are different for the two machines and different at different points of time. In another embodiment, the pressure applied for the injection during the shot is varied per injection molding machine. In yet another embodiment, a variable sized reservoir such as a cylinder with a reciprocating piston is attached to the channel between the injection molding machine and the mixing manifold 603. This piston/pistons moves during the shot, thus creating different rates of material injection.
In another embodiment, the machines 601 and 602 are not injection molding machines, but extrusion machines which can extrude material at rates which vary over time. This variation of rates can be achieved by varying the speed of screws, by using reciprocating screws, by using cylinders with reciprocating screws at the output, or by using more than one of these strategies. The manifold 603 mixes the liquid from the two injection molding machines into a single liquid stream having a varying concentration of particles. This stream enters the object 604. 604 may be a mold of the shape of the final product (as used in injection molding), or it may be an extrusion die, i.e. an orifice having the shape of the cross section of the final product. The final product may be a rod or a sheet. In the case of a sheet, a system of channels will convert the single stream of liquid into the shape of the sheet, while ensuring that liquid that enters the channel at a given time exits different points on the sheet at the same time. This ensures the concentration variation remains in the extruded direction of the sheet, and there is no (or very less) concentration variation in the cross direction (across a cross sectional plane).
In an embodiment, the inlets are of a tubular type, but the outlet is of a sheet type. The cross section of the channels have a shape which is tube like at one end and sheet like at the other end. In an embodiment, this change of shape from tube to a sheet is achieved before the point of merging 703, so that the liquids are in sheet form at the point at which they merge.
In an embodiment, a continuous sheet or rod with a varying concentration of particles is continuously produced using a continuous extrusion process. The rod or sheet has a repeating pattern of concentrations. The continuous rod or sheet is then cut into discrete rods or sheets, each having one tile or instance of the repeating pattern, to produce a rod or sheet having a specified variation in particle concentrations.
In an embodiment, more than one species of particles are present in the base material, in the final object being created. If all of these particles vary according to the same concentration profile, or in concentration profiles which are related to each other by an affine function, then the species may be mixed in the two devices producing the two liquids at different concentrations, to get the final concentration profile. On the other hand, in certain applications, the concentration profiles of the different particles may be completely different. In this case, more than two devices producing liquid of different particle concentrations may be used. Liquid from these (more than two) devices (e.g. two extruders or injection molding machines) may be merged in a mixing device which may be an extruder, a mixing manifold or a channel or system of channels that mixes material.
In an embodiment, objects having a varying material composition are being created. Multiple devices producing liquids of different material composition feed these liquids to a mixing device. The proportion in which the different liquids are mixed is varied with time, to produce a liquid with varying material composition. This liquid is cast in a mold or extruded to give an object of varying material composition. All embodiments relating to liquids of different particle concentrations can be adapted to liquids of different material composition. The liquids produced by the different devices may be miscible or partly miscible, or may form a suspension in each other. The vigorous churning in the manifold or in an output extruder screw will help to mix the materials. In an embodiment, the different materials have the same or closely matched densities.
A rod or sheet having a graded (varying) concentration of particles of a different refractive index, or pigment, dye or photoluminescent material may be used as a light source by shining light on one or both ends of the rod or sheet. The gradation in concentration helps achieve uniformity of extracted light, or any required pattern of light. Photoluminescent material or dye may be used to color the light, or to change the wavelength of light to a suitable wavelength. Photoluminescent material and light scattering material (usually particles of a different refractive index, or metallic particles or pigment) may be added together to impart required uniformity and color characteristics. The concentration profiles for photoluminescent material and light scattering material may be different. Furthermore, more than one kind of photoluminescent material or light scattering material may be used, each having different concentration profiles.
A continuous sheet having different properties in different parts may be created by creating a sheet having a varying material composition, or varying concentration of additives. For example a sheet may be flexible in one part and rigid in another part. This could be used to make components, such as electronic components. PCBs (printed circuit boards) which are flexible in some places and rigid in other can be used to flexibly bend to form couplings, etc. Such sheets may be used to produce displays which are partly flexible and partly rigid. In this case, the materials being mixed in varying proportions may be synthetic rubber and a compatible plastic.
As another example, a sheet may have different thermal properties in different parts. For example, it may be a good conductor of heat in some parts and a bad conductor of heat in another part. This may be used to create specialized heat exchangers.
Similarly sheets may have a continuous gradation of mechanical properties, for example elasticity, flexibility, modulus of elasticity, strength, density. In an automobile, a single sheet may be strong where required, and light in another place—this will improve safety and reduce weight at the same time. Similarly, in an airplane, a wing needs to be strong near the airplane hull, and light near the tips. This is done by structural design. Using the present invention, these designs may be improved by using sheets having mechanical properties which change along the surface.
Similarly, rods having different properties in different parts, such as flexibility, thermal properties, modulus of elasticity, strength, density, etc. may also be created and used to improve design of various objects.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2904/MUM/2010 | Oct 2010 | IN | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB11/54676 | 10/19/2011 | WO | 00 | 4/18/2013 |