1. Field of the Invention
An arc generator produces a high impedance path to ground to eliminate electrostatic charges in dispensers.
2. Description of the Related Art
Conventional dispensers for absorbent sheet products include a store with an absorbent web which is to be dispensed. The web is conveyed with at least one conveying element for feeding the absorbent web to a position where it is cut so as to form separate absorbent sheet products for a user.
In dispensers for absorbent material, like tissue material, a build-up of electrostatic charge can be observed. When two bodies of different material are in contact which each other, there is migration of electrons between the two surfaces. The number of electrons that migrate is dependent on the difference in the so called work function of the two materials. The term “work function” stands for the energy required to remove an electron from the surface of a specific material to infinite. A material with a lower work function acts as a donor. From such donor material, the electrons migrate to the acceptor material with the higher work function. If the two bodies suddenly are separated from each other, the electrons try to return to their parent material. In the cases were the material is conductive, this is possible and the electrons migrate back to their parent material. However, if one or both of the two bodies are insulating materials, this will not happen. As a result, electrons get trapped in the surface of the material to which they have migrated.
Static electricity generates high voltages with low currents. Commonly accepted Standard IEC 61000-4-2 limits the allowable maximum voltage level to an amount smaller than ±8000 V. If the electrostatic charge exceeds this maximum voltage, it might affect other electrical components. Further, it is even possible that a user might be exposed to unpleasant discharges.
Various factors influence the build-up of electrostatic charges. The first factor is the type of material. In order to create an electrostatic build-up two bodies have to be in contact with each other, where at least one of them should be a bad conductor. When there are two bodies of dissimilar material it could cause the material to charge even more than when two similar materials are in contact with each other. This is the effect of the dielectric constant, or the work function. A material with high relative permittivity (the electric constant) becomes positively charged when it is separated from a material with low permittivity. A second factor is the contact area between dissimilar materials. The larger the contact area is, the more electrons migrate between the materials. As a result of this, a large contact area promotes a high electrostatic charge build-up. A third factor is the separation speed. The higher the speed of separation of the two materials is, the less is the possibility for the electrons to move back to the parent material. A higher separation speed results in a higher charge build-up.
A further influencing factor is a possible motion between the materials. Firstly, the local heat generated by the friction between materials increases the energy level of the atoms making the escape of electrons easier. Secondly, a movement causes better surface contact by bringing the microscopic irregularities on both surfaces in contact with each other thus increasing the possibility of the electrons to migrate from one material to the other. The same applies for a higher temperature which results in easier release of electrons due to the higher energy level. Finally, atmospheric conditions can also influence the build-up of electrostatic charge. The more moisture there is in the atmosphere, the better is the ability of discharge. However, this is not true for all materials. For dispensers of the kind as stated above, however, the observation has been made that the electrostatic build-up tends to be higher in winter where the relative humidity of the ambient air is usually smaller.
Measurements show that the parts in a conventional dispenser which generate electrostatic charges are the conveying rolls and the knife or tear bar for severing the web into individual sheets. The paper leaves a dispenser positively charged so that the dispenser apparatus itself experiences a build-up of negative electrostatic charges.
Conventional art solutions (such as in U.S. Pat. No. 6,871,815 and U.S. Pat. No. 7,017,856) include systems in which a low impedance, high conductivity pathway, like a wire, is used to connect internal components of the dispenser that are subject to static charge build-up to a mechanical contact on the back of the dispenser housing. This contact, in turn, makes contact with the supporting wall upon which the dispenser is mounted, with the premise being that any static charge will be dissipated by the wall.
Another conventional approach described in WO2008/053393 would be to provide an electronic dispenser incorporating a passive, self-discharging static charge dissipating material incorporated with at least an internal component within the internal volume of the housing that stores static charge generated by operation of the dispenser. The web material is directed over the static charge dissipating material as it is conveyed through the dispenser in order to reduce the electrostatic load of the web material leaving the dispenser.
However, there is still a need to find more efficient technologies to dissipate electrostatic electricity generated in dispensers.
Electrostatic charges in dispensers or other devices are eliminated by an arc generator that produces a high impedance path to ground.
The dispenser or other device can include a charge collector and an arc gap connected to a grounded conductor, where the arc gap may be between the charge collector and the grounded conductor. The arc gap may be adjustable and from about 0.1 to about 0.01 inches, from about 0.05 to about 0.075 inches or from about 0.07 to about 0.075 inches. The charge collector can be at least one conductive brush formed from graphite, copper wire, aluminum wire or steel wire, or a slip ring. The brushes can form at least one row. The charge collector, the arc gap and the ground can be by conductive bands or wire located either inside or outside a housing of the dispenser.
Removal of the electrostatic charge is effected by collecting charge from at least one charge generating site with at least one charge collector, and sending the charge to ground through an arc gap, the arc gap being between the at least one charge collector and the ground.
In the following, the invention will be briefly discussed, by way of example only, by reference to the accompanying drawings.
Static electricity in a dispenser can be eliminated by providing a high impedance path to ground from a generator of static charge, e.g., a pinch roll or a tear bar. The high impedance can be provided by an arc gap, which can also be referred to as a spark gap. The arc gap is defined by the facing conductive elements separated from one another by a predetermined distance, the gap itself being the air between those elements.
The dispenser generally denoted by reference numeral 10 has a housing which includes at least two parts. The back shell 12 as shown in
Inside the dispenser, there may be a feed roll 14 on which an absorbent web 16 is wound. This is just an example and, as outlined above, other types of dispensers can also be used to realize the invention, like dispensers in which the absorbent web is stored as a folded stack. In the exemplary dispenser as shown in
The main parts of the conveying unit 18 as shown in
It has been found that, during operation, most static load builds-up at the three components as shown in
The dispensing apparatus shown in
The store within the apparatus may be a roll on which an absorbent web is wound. It might as well be a store in which the web material is folded to a stack.
The term “brush” does not necessarily mean that it must have fibers, bristles or hairs. A brush should be considered in the electrical sense to mean a device which conducts current between stationary wires and moving parts. For example a brush can be formed from solid carbon or graphite. A solid carbon brush is illustrated in
The brush 32 can be formed from copper, aluminum or steel wire. High resistance brushes may be made from graphite (sometimes with added copper). Graphite/carbon powder can be used to form the brush 32. If the brush 32 is solid, binders may be mixed in so the powder holds its shape when compacted. (Mostly phenol, other resins or pitch). Other additives include metal powders, and solid lubricants like MoS2 or WS2.
An alternative to the brush is a slip ring. A slip ring (in electrical engineering terms) is an electrical connection through a rotating assembly. Slip rings, also called rotary electrical interfaces, rotating electrical connectors, collectors, swivels, or electrical rotary joints, are commonly found in electrical generators for AC systems and alternators and in packaging machinery, cable reels, and wind turbines. One of the two rings is connected to one end of the field winding and other one to the other end of the field winding.
A slip ring may be formed from of a conductive circle or band mounted on a shaft and insulated from it. Electrical connections from the rotating part of the system, such as the rotor of a generator, are made to the ring. Fixed contacts or brushes run in contact with the ring, transferring electrical power or signals to the exterior, static part of the system.
The arc elements 38a, 38b may be manually shifted to achieve the desired gap. Alternatively, the posts can be mounted in a goniometer or a jig (not shown) and the gap adjustment can be performed mechanically. The arc gap may be between about 0.1 and 0.01 inches. In a preferred embodiment, the arc gap may be between about 0.05 and 0.075 inches, more preferably 0.07 and 0.075 inches.
The arc gap could be bridged by a high resistance or high impedance element. For example, a resistor or other impedance element whose resistance is greater than the impedance provided by the air gap would result in a closed circuit that nevertheless operates on the same principle as the depicted embodiments, because the accumulated static electricity at one post would still discharge through the air to the other post before it would pass through the bridging resistor.
The screw sizes may range from #000 to #14. Starting at #0 size which is about 0.060 inch at the thread's major diameter, all sizes above this (1-14) are larger by increments of about 0.013 inch. A “four forty” screw is a #4 screw with about 40 threads per inch. A “six thirty-two” is a #6 screw with about 32 threads per inch. An “eight thirty-two” is a #8 screw with about 32 threads per inch. A “ten thirty-two” screw is a #10 screw with about 32 threads per inch.
The term “ground” as used herein embraces not only a true electrical ground but also surfaces and bodies that are relatively more electrically grounded that the dispenser embodying the invention, e.g., the wall on which the dispenser is mounted, even if the wall is not itself formed of a conductive material.
Although one arc gap is used in the examples, more than one arc gap can be used. Different arc gaps can be used for different charge generating sites. There can also be different arc gap to different ground configurations for different charge generating sites.
The ground 60 can be formed from any suitable conductive material such as copper, steel, tin, zinc, etc. For example, the ground can be an about 2 inches by about 3 inches copper foil plate. Other sizes can be used, such as inches by about 5 inches, about 4 inches by about 4 inches, etc.
The rear panel 54 can be formed from any suitable non-conductive material such as wood, plastic, resin composite, painted metal, etc.
The conductive elements used in the present invention (which include the brushes, wire or bands, arc gap elements, ground, etc.) need not be restricted to the more common materials such as copper or aluminum. They can be formed from copper, aluminum, carbon, graphite, zinc, tin, indium, gold, silver or combinations or alloys thereof. Also solders containing tin, indium, lead, etc. can be used. Conductive oxides such as ITO (indium tin oxide) or IZO (indium zinc oxide) coated on a substrate can alternative be used. Conductive polymer technology can also be utilized for the conductive parts of the dispenser. Appropriate conductive polymers may include polyacetylene, polyphenylenevinylene, polypyrrole (X═NH), and polythiophene (X═S), polyaniline (X═N, NH) and polyphenylene sulfide (X═S) and mixtures thereof, which are illustrated below.
Also, a single row of brushes can be used, as is shown in
In use, the device collects static electricity from rolls, bars, cutters, etc. of the dispenser that are prone to generate static charges. These charges are then sent to ground via the arc gap, which provides high impedance.
The voltage to current relationship shown in
Tests were performed using two different models of commercially-available dispensers, each of which utilizes a capacitive proximity sensor for sensing the presence of a user's hand, and initiates dispensing of a sheet of material based upon such detection. The paper used in these dispensers was oven dried paper (<1% moisture content) in an operating environment of 30% RH. The arc gap was set to within about 0.070 inches to 0.075 inches for all tests.
Tests were performed without the arc gap structure according to the invention and with the arc gap structure according to the invention. That is, in the comparative dispensers without an arc gap, neither the arc elements nor the associated conductors were provided in the dispensers. The dispensers including an arc gap according to embodiments of the invention are referred to in the results set forth below as a Static Arc Projector (SAP), also known as a Static Arc Gap (SAG).
The results are shown in Table 1.
Test were also performed in these dispensers by providing a conductive path for removing static electricity, i.e., a continuous wire without provision of an arc gap according to the invention (see, e.g., U.S. Pat. No. 6,871,815). In those tests it was found that that the capacitive sensor operation was intermittent or not performing as intended, in that the dispenser either dispensed paper when a user's hand was not near, and thus the sensor was oversensitive; or, the sensor was non-responsive and paper was not dispensed even when a user's hand was within range of the sensor.
Without wishing to be held to any particular theory, it is believed that the provision of an arc gap according to the present invention not only removes accumulated static electricity but also effects an ionization of the atmosphere and dispenser surfaces in the vicinity of the arc gap. That ionization in turn better protects the dispenser electronics and forestalls the re-accumulation of static charge upon resumed operation of the dispenser.
Additional advantages arise from having the arc located away from the electronics, so as to reduce the likelihood of electronic malfunction arising from static charges. This is effected by the accumulation of point charges at the arc gap, which effectively functions as a capacitor when not in arcing mode. The result is a better dissipation of the static electricity that accumulates on the insulating parts of the dispenser.
While the present invention has been described in connection with various preferred embodiments thereof, it is to be understood that those embodiments are provided merely to illustrate the invention, and should not be used as a pretext to limit the scope of protection conferred by the true scope and spirit of the appended claims.
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