The invention relates to a vacuum conveyor belt, a regulating valve for regulating the vacuum and a method for conveying a planar object with the vacuum conveyor belt.
Various vacuum conveyor belts, as well as valves, are known and common from the prior art. In addition, for the processing or working of planar objects, use is made of multi-axis robots, which have the drawback, however, that an empty return run generally has an adverse effect upon efficiency and cost structure in respect of reception, conveyance and depositing. Added to this is the fact that, though the robot arms can perform the required four to six thousand handling motions per hour, the planar objects to be conveyed, specifically in the case of solar wafers or solar cells, which are by now made very thin, and a corresponding acceleration of the robot arm, can lead to damage. In addition, the drawback is evident that the multi-axis robots can only receive, convey and deposit just one planar object each. This is likewise disadvantageous for the efficiency of such a machine.
The object of the invention is to define a vacuum conveyor belt, as well as a valve for regulating the vacuum of the vacuum conveyor belt, with which the drawbacks of the prior art are remedied or at least alleviated. More particularly, the object of the invention is to provide a vacuum conveyor belt which not only treats planar objects gently, but also works efficiently and cost-effectively.
The object is achieved with a vacuum conveyor belt and a valve for controlling the vacuum and a method for transporting planar objects as described below.
The vacuum conveyor belt according to the invention is suitable for receiving, conveying and depositing planar objects. Reception preferably means in this context that a supplied planar object is drawn up to the vacuum conveyor belt by the vacuum generation. In the same way, it is also conceivable, however, that, if the planar object is led up from below, a spring is arranged in such a way that the planar object is placed directly against the vacuum conveyor belt and the vacuum conveyor belt merely implements the holding of the planar object. This fact too can be referred to as reception. In a preferred illustrative embodiment, the conveyance of the planar object includes the transport by means of a revolving vacuum conveyor belt around a U-profile according to the invention. The direction and speed of the conveyance is governed by the shape of the U-profile and the speed at which the vacuum conveyor belt is driven. In a preferred illustrative embodiment, the focus is on the depositing of the planar object. By depositing shall here be meant that either the vacuum conveyor belt no longer has negative pressure and hence the planar object falls, or it is lifted off the vacuum conveyor belt. Similarly, it can be part of the depositing if the planar object is released from the conveyor belt by a scraper. Advantages with respect to the use of a vacuum conveyor belt are cost efficiency and the prevention of empty runs in the course of the process.
The vacuum of an inventive illustrative embodiment of the vacuum conveyor belt has a circulating drive. This consists of a toothed belt wheel driven by an electric motor. The cogwheel is operatively connected to a toothed belt profile configured on the bottom side of the vacuum conveyor belt. The bottom side means that side which is facing toward the planar object to be conveyed. The fact that the circulating drive requires less energy and is durable is here advantageous. In addition, it is advantageous that such electric drives nowadays have a very long life and require little space.
An illustrative embodiment according to the invention also has a U-profile, the U-profile comprising a conveying passage and a return passage. Traditionally in vacuum conveyor belts, the top side of the vacuum conveyor belt is regarded as the conveying passage. The return passage is in this case realized on the bottom side of the U-profile, which usually is not suitable for the conveyance. The shape and size of the U-profile is governed by the requirements of the planar objects to be conveyed. For this, hollow profiles in modular construction, which have the advantage of offering greatest possible flexibility for adapting to all customer requirements, are generally used.
In a preferred illustrative embodiment, solar wafers, solar cells, solar strings, compact disks (CDs), DVDs, paper, cardboard packagings or planar components from the electrical or metal industry are regarded as planar objects.
In a preferred illustrative embodiment, the vacuum conveyor belt is driven from the interaction of the toothed belt profile with the circulating drive. It is here in turn advantageous that an energy-efficient conversion of the drive to a circulatory motion of the vacuum conveyor belt is enabled.
A preferred illustrative embodiment has a chamber in the U-profile. This chamber is connected by a valve to a vacuum source. The chamber serves as a buffer for supplying the vacuum conveyor belt with negative pressure. This has the advantage that no complex tube construction up to the vacuum conveyor belt has to be provided.
Another preferred illustrative embodiment of a vacuum conveyor belt according to the invention is designed in such a way that the holder element comprises at least one supply line and a vacuum basin. In this case, also a plurality of supply lines can open out into a vacuum basin. The supply line here forms the bridge between the vacuum basin of the holder element and the vacuum buffer. The fact that a fine adjustment is able to be made by adjusting the diameter of the supply line and the depth or length or diameter of the vacuum basin in order appropriately to conform to the planar objects to be transported, and the weight and properties thereof, is here in turn advantageous.
Preferably, the U-profile is made up of a plurality of portions. These portions preferably have a total length of 50 mm to 300 mm, preferably 100 mm to 250 mm, still more preferably 160 mm to 220 mm. The advantage with this is the fact that the division of the portions of the U-profile enables an accurate as possible pressure adjustment to be made in relation to the planar object to be conveyed and its properties, such as weight and shape.
Preferably, the vacuum basins formed in the holder element are also made up of mutually separated portions. These portions likewise have a total length of 50 mm to 300 mm, preferably 100 mm to 250 mm, still more preferably 160 mm to 220 mm. Generally, the total length of the portion of the vacuum basin is matched to the total length of the portion of the U-profile. A negative pressure profile which is made as uniform as possible and exhibits an equal negative pressure throughout the length of the portion is here advantageous.
By virtue of the holder element according to the invention, it is possible to design a here-described vacuum conveyor belt in such a way that it can be used to transport planar objects on the conveying passage side and/or on the return passage side. This arises from the fact that the holder element prevents sagging of the vacuum conveyor belt on the return passage side. As a result of this sagging, the negative pressure would otherwise be gilded sideways such that planar objects can no longer be held. In this context, a very high flexibility in the use of vacuum conveyor belts according to the invention is advantageous.
Another preferred illustrative embodiment is designed in such a way that a vacuum conveyor belt according to the invention initially conveys a planar object on the return passage side and then transfers it onto the conveying side of another vacuum conveyor belt for onward transport. The further vacuum conveyor belt can here be equipped without a holder element, as is customary in the prior art. This operation can optionally be continued and allows very high flexibility of use.
In a preferred illustrative embodiment, a valve for the vacuum regulating system or vacuum circuit of the vacuum conveyor belt according to the invention is provided. The vacuum circuit serves to generate the ejector pulse whereby the planar object to be conveyed is delivered. This valve has an inlet. This inlet is designed in such a way that a negative pressure is generated by a vacuum source via lines, which negative pressure is led up to the housing of the valve via the inlet. The shape and form of the housing can be ignored, since they are generally adjusted to given basic conditions and cannot therefore be uniform. The inlet merely produces an airtight transfer of the connections from the vacuum source to the valve. The advantage with this is the fact that the least possible negative pressure is lost. The valve housing according to the invention also has an inner chamber. This inner chamber advantageously serves to regulate the valve. Moreover, in a preferred illustrative embodiment of a valve according to the invention, at least one outlet is provided. This outlet appears as a tubular configuration of the housing. The outlet serves to establish a connection of the valve to the vacuum conveyor belt. A connection of the valve to the vacuum conveyor belt which is as secure, simple and cost-effective as possible is here advantageous.
An illustrative embodiment according to the invention also has an additional compressed air supply. This compressed air supply is designed in such a way that it is connected by a line to the inner chamber of the housing and supplies via lines through a compressed air source.
The compressed air supply is preferably designed such that, by the injection of compressed air into the inner chamber, the diversion element is shifted from a rest position into a working position. This happens specifically by virtue of the fact that the diversion element, which can be displaceably mounted, for instance, in a rail or guide system, is displaced from a rest position into a working position by the introduction of compressed air. This happens specifically by virtue of the fact that as a result of the displacement of the diversion element to the inlet, which inlet is initially in the rest position closed off, a bypass is formed between inlet and outlet, which in turn means that the diversion element is subsequently in the working position. In the preferred illustrative embodiment, the inlet is fitted on the side facing away from the planar object which is later to be held. The outlet is fitted at roughly a 90° angle on a side wall of the housing. The diversion element is tubular and forms an approximately 90°-bent borehole or piston. The fact that the actuation of the valve is wholly without electrical drive or other control mechanisms, but is enabled only by the introduction of compressed air into the inner chamber, is here advantageous. In another illustrative embodiment, it is conceivable that the valve is actuated by an electric circuit or an electrically operated valve. The advantage would here be that a rapid switchover is enabled. The displaceability of the diversion element is delimited by two stops. Depending on from which end face of the housing the compressed air is blown in, the diversion element is displaced either to that stop or to the other stop.
Another preferred illustrative embodiment of a valve according to the invention also has a sensor, suitable for detecting the position of the diversion element. The sensor can here be of different configuration. Depending on the field of application or the difference in user, an ultrasonic sensor, an optoelectronic sensor, but also resistive sensors, inductive sensors, differential transformers, inductive displacement transducers, eddy current sensors, inductive proximity sensors, magnetoelastic sensors, piezoelectronic sensors or temperature sensors enter into consideration as sensors. The fact that the sensor enables the precise position of the by-pass line to be portrayed at any point of the working or rest position is here in turn advantageous.
In a preferred illustrative embodiment, the valve and the vacuum conveyor belt is controlled by a central processing unit and mutually coordinated. This advantageously enables a smooth running of the entire process.
A method according to the invention for receiving, conveying and depositing a planar object has as the first step the supply of a planar object to the return passage of the vacuum conveyor belt. This supply can be realized either automatically, by an appropriate feeder device, or by the particular configuration of obliquely placed feeder surfaces formed in the shape of a slide. As the return passage of the vacuum conveyor belt is here meant the bottom side of the vacuum conveyor belt, which in traditional vacuum conveyor belts from the prior art cannot be utilized.
After this, compressed air is blown into the inner chamber of the valve, so that the by-pass line is displaced up to the stop in accordance with the predefined guides. The valve is thereby shifted from the rest position into the working position. The negative pressure which was present in the inlet is now extended by the diversion element into the chamber of the vacuum conveyor belt. From the chamber of the vacuum conveyor belt, the negative pressure extends onward via the supply line of the holder element into the vacuum basin. There, on the basis of the working position, a negative pressure is formed, which negative pressure, by virtue of the openings in the vacuum conveyor belt, causes a planar object to be received. The fact that the entire process can proceed in an energy-efficient, quick and smooth manner is here advantageous. In a preferred method, the object is drawn up onto the side of the return passage of the vacuum conveyor belt, and held there, by the negative pressure generated on the return passage. Next, the vacuum conveyor belt is moved by the circulating drive, which in turn results in the planar object, likewise on the side which is upside down, being moved to the return passage side of the vacuum conveyor belt. This has the advantage that the previously intricately designed superstructures, which were necessitated by the previously sole possibility of use of a vacuum conveyor belt by conveyance on the top side of the vacuum conveyor belt, can now be dispensed with.
The bottom side of the U-profile is referred to as the return passage. The conveying side is the top side of the U-profile. In this context, the bottom side in turn means the side which points to the floor of a production site.
The circulating drive, in interaction with the vacuum conveyor belt, now effects the evacuation of the planar object from the reception region to the depositing region. If the valve is intended to be shifted back out of the working position into the rest position, on the other end face of the valve housing compressed air is in turn blown into the inner chamber of the valve, so that the diversion element is displaced to the other stop. The inlet is thereby closed off and the connection between inlet and outlet broken. In turn, the vacuum conveyor belt is hence no longer supplied with negative pressure, which results in the planar object falling from the vacuum conveyor belt, down into a predefined location, due to its gravitational force. The fact that it is possible to determine precisely at which moment or place the planar object is to fall from the vacuum conveyor belt is here in turn advantageous.
In a preferred illustrative embodiment of a method according to the invention, the place of use of the rest position of the vacuum conveyor belt according to the invention can also be designed in such a way that another vacuum conveyor belt is positioned with the conveying passage, i.e. the top side, such that the planar object can be drawn, taken or let from the return passage side of one vacuum conveyor belt onto the conveying passage side of the further vacuum conveyor belt. The fact that a gentle transfer of the planar object from the vacuum conveyor belt to the further vacuum conveyor belt can be executed without possible damage to the planar object is here advantageous. A smooth and rapid transfer of the planar object between the two vacuum conveyor belts is also advantageous.
In a preferred illustrative embodiment, the planar object can now be evacuated on the conveying passage of the further conveyor belt by the use of a further circulating drive. The fact that this transfer and the evacuation can be modularly constructed, and therefore an adaptation to the needs and requirements of each planar object or customer or user can be provided, is here in turn advantageous.
Another preferred illustrative embodiment of a method according to the invention is designed in such a way that more than two valves according to the invention can be interconnected with at least one vacuum conveyor belt. This in turn has the advantage that a higher efficiency increase can be achieved, since a plurality of planar objects can be received, evacuated and deposited at once with one and the same vacuum conveyor belt.
Further advantages and features of preferred embodiments of the invention are explained below with reference to the appended drawing, wherein:
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Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2010 037 593.4 | Sep 2010 | DE | national |
20 2010 008 561.6 | Sep 2010 | DE | national |
20 2011 000 458.9 | Mar 2011 | DE | national |