The present invention relates to apparatus defined in the preamble of the main claim, in particular to apparatus replacing the atmospheric oxygen by an inert gas such as nitrogen of substrates which move in their direction of advance on at least on one side of the laminar air boundary surface, said substrates illustratively being lines of material, said apparatus comprising a first chamber which is open only toward the substrate and otherwise is enclosed by the surrounding outside space, said first chamber comprising a sealingl edge which is situated forward as seen in the direction of advance and preferably running perpendicularly to said direction and to which is mounted a front corona electrode fed by a high DC voltage with a front mate electrode situated on the other side of the substrate, said first chamber also comprising behind the first corona electrode, and on the same side of the substrate as said first coronary electrode, a further corona electrode mounted on the rear sealing edge which also is transverse to the direction of advance, said further corona electrode being fed with high DC voltage and being associated with a further mate electrode on the other substrate side, and the present invention furthermore relates to a device feeding inert gases and to an application.
Such apparatus is known in sheet-offset printing machines (German patent document 100 50 217 A1) wherein however the first chamber is equipped with the inert-gas feeding device.
It is generally known about the drying (curing) of UV inks/lacquers that the atmospheric oxygen situated directly at the ink/lacquer surface together with the photoinitiators will form so-called free radicals hampering the original photo-initiator function, this phenomenon being called O2 inhibition. Accordingly the presence of atmospheric oxygen entails higher quantities of expensive photoinitiators, making printing more expensive.
UV driers or plasma driers for the same reason are frequently designed as chambers which are flushed out with inert gases such as nitrogen. In such cases the intake and outlet gaps should be minimized in order to keep nitrogen losses within acceptable bounds. Such chambers are known per se (German patent documents 198 57 984 A1 and 297 07 190 U1).
The known apparatus within this species (DE 100 50 517 A1) as defined in the preamble of the present claim 1 is equipped with such a chamber that will be flushed with nitrogen. In this design, the chamber in the sheet offset printing machine is sealed by the corona electrode(s) mounted to the front resp. the rear sealing edges, said electrodes being connected to high DC voltages. Herein position-qualifying terms such as “front, rear, behind . . . ” if not otherwise specified are understood to refer to the direction of advance. As regards the known apparatus of this species, the principle used therein converts the gaseous laminar air boundary layer entrained by a moving substrate by means of a corona electrode connected to a positive or negative high-voltage, and in cooperation with an associated mate electrode, into turbulent flow on the other substrate side (DE 195 25 453 A1).
The known apparatus of this species has not lived up to expectations. On one hand the nitrogen consumption is still high, thereby significantly raising the operating costs of the known apparatus. On the other hand, on account of the simultaneously low efficiency, much energy is needed for the dryer in the form of a UV radiator. Furthermore there remains the still large quantity of expensive photoinitiators.
The objective of the present invention is to further develop an apparatus of the above species defined in the preamble of the independent claim and to propose a pertinent application whereby the quantities of required inert gas and hence the operating costs may be substantially reduced.
This problem is solved with respect to apparatus of said species defined in the preamble of the independent claim by said claim's features, namely in that the inert-gas feeding device issues into the zone of partial vacuum being formed directly behind the flow of electrons/ions of the further coronary electrode.
The apparatus of the present invention may be used in printing machinery for gravure printing, flexographic printing, roller offset printing or sheet offset printing and as regards various coating procedures, for instance in the paper or textile industries which increasingly are using UV curing inks or lacquer printing means—generally termed UV curing systems. Said systems contain a given proportion of so-called photoinitiators. The curing/drying of such inks or lacquers is carried out in a UV drier. Depending on the UV inks/lacquers, the radiators will be narrow band, namely so-called UV excimer radiators, or broad band UV radiators. The photoinitiators absorb some of the applied UV radiation energy and trigger the polymerization/curing of the UV inks/lacquers. These processes also are called radiatiative-chemically curing systems. So-called plasma driers also are used in this respect, for which the energy of curing is generated by a high frequency corona discharge, while curing by electron beams also falls within the scope of the present invention.
In the present invention, the laminar air boundary layer entrained by the moving substrate arrives in the zone of the front corona electrode. The flow of electrons or ions, herein shortly termed the electron/ion flow, present at said electrode, generates conversion from a laminar into a turbulent state at the surface of that side of the moving substrate where the front corona electrode is also mounted. The flow of mostly turbulent entrained air dragged along by the laminar air boundary surface is deflected upward before the front corona electrode and away from the moving substrate. The turbulent air boundary layer forming behind the front corona electrode is deflected—behind and at a distance from the further corona electrode which is preferably configured parallel to the front corona electrode—except for a laminar residual boundary layer entrained farther by the substrate—upward and perpendicularly to the surface of the moving substrate within the first chamber and upward, as the main air flow, opposite the direction of advance—and back into the region of the first corona electrode. Because of the gaps between the individual electron/ion flows of the individual and adjacent tips of the front corona electrode, this main air flow returns—oppositely the direction of advance—outside the first chamber in the outer space surrounding latter and into the ambient and jointly with the air entraining flow rises before the front corona electrode perpendicularly to the substrate.
Because the turbulent air boundary layer is “scraped off” by the further corona electrode at the rear edge of the first sealed off chamber, a partial vacuum zone is produced behind the further corona electrode mounted there. The inert gas feed device issuing into the this partial vacuum zone to some extent sucks this inert gas into said zone and as result a new laminar layer, this time however a laminar inert gas boundary layer of low turbulence, builds up above the moving substrate. If the quantity of inert gas required to adequately render inert the laminar inert gas mixture is adjusted as a function of the speed of the moving substrate in such manner that a slight leakage flow of inert gas moves opposite the direction of advance and jointly with the deflected main air flow in the first chamber shall finally escape from it into the ambience, then the original partial vacuum zone behind the further corona electrode will entirely fill with inert gas, as a result of which a slight excess pressure is produced which precludes that a flow of air shall be sucked out of the outside space enclosing the first chamber.
By using the apparatus of the present invention, the inert gas consumption to render inert the inert gas boundary layer near the substrate path to the rear of the further corona electrode may be reduced up to 80% relative to the state of the art, this saving in operational costs being significant. Because of the low residual oxygen content in the boundary layer near the substrate path, the quantity of expensive photoinitiators may also be reduced further. At the same these savings are simultaneous with a drop in the bothersome odors emanating from the photoinitiators. Consequently products may be manufactured in the future for which heretofore such odors could not be tolerated on hygienic grounds.
Another significant improvement offered by the apparatus of the present invention relating to its advantageous nature is attained by configuring a further chamber, preferably identical with the first one, between the further corona electrode and the Inert-gas feed device. Said second chamber most of the time will allow eliminating the laminar residual boundary layer: this feature is foremost significant at higher speeds of the moving substrate.
Advantageously a drier in the form of a UV radiator shall be configured directly to the rear of the inert-gas feed device. Because of the low oxygen content in the inert gas layer near the substrate path, and simultaneously with very low oxygen consumption, the UV radiation power required for adequately curing the UV inks and/or UV lacquers can be reduced by about 40% relative to the state of the art. Besides saving electrical energy, the infrared portion of broadband UV radiators will be reduced also, this feature being advantageous when processing heat-sensitive substrates such as PE foils.
If, in an appropriate configuration of the present invention, a sealing corona electrode together with the pertinent mate electrode is mounted on the other substrate side and behind the UV radiator, and if this sub-assembly is encapsulated in the manner of a chamber, then the mostly turbulent, entrained flow substantially consisting of inert gas and situated above the inert gas boundary layer can be fed back into said encapsulated chamber in a direction opposite that of advance, whereby a portion of this inert gas is made available again to the laminar inert gas boundary layer. The reason for such feedback is the low impedance of the electron/ion flow generated by the sealing corona electrode. On account of the related slight rise in pressure in the encapsulated chamber, further reduction of inert gas consumption maybe attained.
Further appropriate embodiment modes and developments of the present invention are featured in the dependent claims.
One illustrative embodiment of the present invention is elucidated below in relation to the appended drawing.
In this design, the first chamber 41 consists of the front corona electrode 5 and the further corona electrode 6 and of a single, upper electrode cover 19 covering both said electrodes and of two lateral electrode covers 20 laterally covering the two corona electrodes 5 and 6. The device feeding inert gas, preferably nitrogen, is in the form of an inert gas nozzle 15 and is mounted to the rear of the further corona electrode 6 and parallel to it, said nozzle 15 being I n the vicinity of the substrate 1 and pointing at it.
The inert gas feed comprises an inert gas dispenser 14 connected to the inert gas nozzle 15.
The inert gas dispenser 14 fitted with a rear stop 16 running across the full substrate width and with lateral stops 21 running parallel to the direction of advance 2 and close to the surface of one of the sides of the substrate 1, where the stop 16 perpendicular to the substrate 1 preferably shall be flush with rear end of the inert gas dispenser 14.
The front corona electrode 5 as well as the further electrode 6 each comprise single tip electrodes each located in one plane and mutually distant by a grid pitch as shown in
In the present invention the laminar air boundary surface 3 entrained by the substrate 1 moving in the direction of advance 2 arrives in the zone of the front coronary electrode 5. The electron/ion flow 9 present at the latter electrode generates the conversion from a laminar into a turbulent state in the form of the turbulent air boundary surface 10 at the surface of the moving substrate 1 at one of this substrate's sides, namely, in the drawing, the upper one, where the front coronary electrode 5 also is configured. The entrained and mostly turbulent air entraining flow 4 is deflected before the front corona electrode 5 upward and away from the moving substrate 1. The turbulent air boundary surface 10 forming to the rear of the front corona electrode 5 is deflected to the rear of and away from the further corona electrode 6 which preferably shall be parallel to the front corona electrode 5—as far as a laminar residual boundary layer 23 entrained farther from the substrate 1 in FIG. 3—perpendicularly to the surface of the moving substrate 1 within the first closed chamber 41 upward as the main flow 11 and oppositely the direction of advance 2 back into the region of the first corona electrode 5. On account of the gaps 28 present between the individual electrode/ion flows 9 of the individual and adjacent tips of the front corona electrode 5, this main air flow 11 arrives—opposite the direction of advance 2—again outside the first chamber 41 into the ambience in the outside space 40 enclosing the first chamber 41 and together with the air entraining flow 4 it will rise before the front corona electrode 5 perpendicularly to the substrate 1.
On account of the so-called scrape-off action by the further corona electrode 6 on the turbulent air boundary layer 10 which takes place at the rear edge of the first and sealed chamber 41, a zone 12 of partial vacuum is produced at the further corona electrode 6 mounted there. The inert gas feed nozzle 15 issuing into this partial vacuum zone in a way aspirates this gas into the partial vacuum zone 12, as a result of which a new laminar layer, this time however in the form of an inert gas and a laminar inert gas boundary layer 17 of low turbulence, builds up above the moving substrate 1. When the quantity of inert gas required to adequately render inert the laminar inert gas boundary layer 17 is adjusted as a function of the speed of the moving substrate in such manner that a slight inert gas leakage flow 18 moves against the direction of advance 2 and will together with the deflected main air flow 11 arrive in the first chamber 41 and finally will reach with it the ambience 40, then the initial partial vacuum zone 12 to the rear of the further coronary electrode 6 will completely fill with inert gas, as a result of which slight excess pressure will arise there and preclude aspirating an air flow from the outside space 40 enclosing the first chamber 41.
The second embodiment mode of
An inert gas leakage flow 18 is present from the partial vacuum zone 12 toward the rear coronary electrode 22 and together with the upwardly deflected residual air flow 25 moves opposite the direction of advance 2 into the region of the further coronary electrode 6 and from there to the deflected main air flow 11 into the first chamber 41 and from there, as described in relation to
In this embodiment mode and as shown in
The third embodiment mode of
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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103 02 367 | Jan 2003 | DE | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4329212 | Obenshain | May 1982 | A |
4946568 | Kalwar et al. | Aug 1990 | A |
6285032 | Hahne et al. | Sep 2001 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
195 25 453 | Jan 1997 | DE |
297 07 190 | Nov 1997 | DE |
198 57 984 | Jun 2000 | DE |
100 50 517 | May 2002 | DE |
100 50 217 | Apr 2004 | DE |
1199165 | Sep 2001 | EP |
58-225133 | Dec 1983 | JP |
1763024 | Sep 1992 | SU |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20040184973 A1 | Sep 2004 | US |