The present invention relates to an assembly for ultrasound sealing continuous tubular strips.
As is known, for example, from U.S. Pat. No. 6,574,944, on FFS (Form, Fill and Seal) machines, a continuous tubular strip of thermoplastic material, housing an orderly succession of products, is fed along a feed path extending through a rotary sealing assembly located at a sealing station to close the tubular strip along a succession of transverse seal lines, each located along a respective portion of the tubular strip between two adjacent products.
The above known rotary sealing assembly comprises a first and second rotor, which are located on opposite sides of the feed path, have respective pitch surfaces tangent to each other and to the feed path, and rotate in opposite directions about a first and second axis, respectively, parallel to each other and defining a plane through the sealing station and perpendicular to the feed path.
The first rotor has at least one sealing device having an active sealing surface movable along the respective pitch surface; and the second rotor has at least one anvil, an end contrast surface of which is movable along the relative pitch surface and reaches the sealing station in time with the active sealing surface. The anvil is normally connected to the relative rotor by a device for adjusting the radial position of the contrast surface, which has a central slot engaged by a blade, the cutting edge of which engages and cuts the continuous tubular strip at the sealing station.
Once set to a given position, the anvil of known sealing assemblies of the above type is fixed and connected rigidly to the relative rotor.
Machines of the above type employing electrically heated, as opposed to ultrasound, sealing bodies comprise elastic means interposed between the two rotors to allow roughly one millimetre travel of the sealing body from its set position towards the axis of the relative rotor, to reduce vibration and improve grip between the sealing body on one side and the anvil and blade on the other.
Though effective on sealing assemblies with electrically heated active sealing surfaces, the elastic means cannot be used on ultrasound sealing assemblies comprising vibratory sonotrodes, on account of vibration being transmitted, in use, by the sonotrode to the relative anvil, and being retransmitted by the anvil. Consequently, an ultrasound sealing assembly must normally be equipped with fixed, i.e. non-cushioned anvils.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a rotary ultrasound sealing assembly designed to eliminate the aforementioned drawbacks.
According to the present invention, there is provided a rotary sealing assembly as claimed in claim 1 or, preferably, in any one of the following Claims depending directly or indirectly on claim 1.
A number of non-limiting embodiments of the present invention will be described by way of example with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Number 1 in
Rotary assembly 5 comprises two rotors 8 and 9, which are located on opposite sides of feed path P, rotate in opposite directions about respective parallel axes 10 and 11 defining a plane perpendicular to feed path P at sealing station 4, and have respective cylindrical pitch surfaces 12 and 13 substantially tangent to each other and to feed path P at the sealing station.
The rotary sealing assembly 5 shown in
Each sealing device 20 comprises an activating device 21—which may be a converter, a booster, or a pack of ceramic piezoelectric plates—and a sonotrode 22 arranged in series along a respective axis 23 which is radial with respect to sleeve 15. Sonotrode 22 comprises a tapering horn 24 having a free end surface defining an active surface 25 of relative sealing device 20; and a counterweight 26, which is coaxial with horn 24 along respective axis 23, and has, along a respective end surface 27 facing respective activating device 21, a cavity 28 coaxial with axis 10 and bounded by a bottom surface 29. Activating device 21 is connected to sonotrode 22 by a threaded appendix 30, which projects, coaxially with axis 10, from an end surface 31 of activating device 21, and engages a threaded hole 32 formed through bottom surface 29; and activating device 21 is partly inserted inside cavity 28, so that free surface 31 contacts bottom surface 29.
Sealing device 20 is connected to ring 19 by a flange 33 integral with sonotrode 22 and extending outwards from sonotrode 22, close to the relative nodal surface (not shown).
As shown in
Rotor 9 also comprises a sleeve 38 fitted to drive shaft 34, facing sleeve 15, and having an axial rib 39, in turn having a longitudinal slot 40, which defines, on rib 39, a longitudinal fork 41 engaged by an inner portion of a blade 42, which extends longitudinally along axial rib 39 by a length equal to at least twice the longitudinal dimension of a sonotrode 22, and has an outer portion projecting radially from fork 41 and having a cutting edge 43 parallel to axis 11. As shown in
Rotor 9 also comprises one anvil 47 cooperating with both sonotrodes 22, and of a length, measured parallel to axes 10 and 11, at least equal to the total length of both sonotrodes 22. Anvil 47 is substantially cup-shaped with its concavity facing axis 11, and comprises a top wall 48 parallel to axis 11, bounded externally by a grooved contrast surface 49, and having a longitudinal slot 50 engaged in radially sliding manner by blade 42; and two lateral walls 51 defining between them a groove 52 communicating with slot 50 and engaged in radially sliding manner by axial rib 39.
As shown in
As shown in
Operation of rotary sealing assembly 5 is easily deducible from the foregoing description, with no further explanation required.
It should be pointed out, however, that, outside sealing station 4, by virtue of the adjustment by adjusting and fastening device 44 and the thrust exerted by springs 56, the slack between eccentric portion 60 of bolts 58 and holes 61 in longitudinal fork 41 is located entirely on the opposite side of eccentric portion 60 to that facing axis 11; whereas, at sealing station 4, the slack between eccentric portion 60 of bolts 58 and holes 61 in longitudinal fork 41 is shifted—in opposition to springs 56 and by virtue of contrast surface 49 contacting active surfaces 25 of sonotrodes 22, with tubular strip 2 in between—to the side of eccentric portion 60 facing axis 11, thus “elastically” coupling sonotrodes 22 and anvil 47.
In a second embodiment shown in
In connection with the above, it should be pointed out that, as sonotrodes 22 and anvil 47 travel through sealing station 4, the heat transmitted by sonotrodes 22 to anvil 47 in no way damages, and in no way affects, other than marginally, the elastic response of, springs 56.
Also, since the thickness of the material interposed between sonotrodes 22 and anvil 47 is reduced by plasticization of the material, thus resulting in radial movement of anvil 47 towards sonotrodes 22, the pressure exchanged between sonotrodes 22 and anvil 47 at sealing station 4 by virtue of springs 56 is also reduced gradually and automatically as plasticization proceeds, thus preventing excessive compression and weakening of the end portions of sealed wrappings 7.
In a variation not shown, and more suitable for narrower tubular strips, sleeve 15 of rotor 8 supports a single sealing device 20, the sonotrode 22 of which has an active surface 25 of a length, measured parallel to axes 10 and 11, substantially equal to the length of contrast surface 49 of relative anvil 47, and slightly greater than the width of tubular strip 2.
In the
In the
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
BO2005A 000511 | Jul 2005 | BO | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/IB2005/003890 | 12/28/2005 | WO | 00 | 6/24/2009 |