The present invention relates to an automatic device for filling insulating glazing units composed of at least two glass panes and at least one spacer frame with a gas other than air and to a method therefor.
Currently it is known to deposit a spacer frame or a spacer profile on a glass pane and then mate the assembly thus formed to a second glass pane and seal it along the entire outer peripheral region so as to constitute the so-called insulating glazing unit or double glazing unit. The operation can also be a multiple one in order to obtain the insulating glazing unit constituted by three glass panes and two spacer frames or profiles, as well as n (4 or more) glass panes and n−1 spacer frames or profiles. The operation can also relate to glass panes that have different dimensions despite belonging to the same insulating glazing unit, so as to obtain an offset between their edges, which is necessary for mating with a particular type of door or window, i.e., the one that constitutes the so-called continuous glazing or so-called structural glazing. Frequently, the spacer frame or, more correctly, the profile that constitutes it, has a hollow rectangular transverse cross-section and is coated, on its sides that adhere to the glass panes, with a butyl sealant, and is also bevelled toward the outside of the double-glazing unit in order to accommodate a larger quantity of sealant. The spacer frame can also be constituted by a continuous profile made of expanded synthetic material which is coated, on its sides, with an acrylic adhesive and optionally with a butyl sealant.
Currently it is increasingly frequent to replace the air contained in the volume formed by the glass panes and by the spacer frame, a volume known as “chamber”, with a gas having more effective thermal insulation characteristics than air. This is increasingly topical in view of the requirements of technical laws related to energy saving, and the present invention therefore arises specifically to solve some method- and device-related aspects that are inadequate according to the background art available up to now.
In order to better understand the configuration of the insulating glazing unit in the combination of its components, such as the glass panes and the spacer frame or spacer profile, some concepts related to the intermediate components themselves, i.e., the glass pane 2 and the spacer profile or frame 3, and the final product, i.e., the insulating glazing unit 1, are described in greater detail hereafter, with the assumption that the subsequent use of the insulating glazing unit, i.e., as a component of the door or window or of continuous glazing or structural glazing, is known.
In order to provide a more clear description, the final product will be described and then its forming components, with reference to
The insulating glazing unit 1 is constituted by the composition of two or more glass panes 2, which are separated by one or more spacer frames 3, which are generally hollow and finely perforated on the face that is directed inward; the spacer frames contain hygroscopic material 4 in their hollow part and are provided on the lateral faces with a butyl sealant 5 (which constitutes the so-called first seal) and the chamber (or chambers) delimited by the glass panes 2 and by the spacer frame (spacer frames) 3 are able to contain air or gas or mixtures of gases that give the double-glazing unit particular properties, for example thermally insulating and/or soundproofing properties. Recently, use has become widespread also of a spacer profile 3 that has a substantially rectangular cross-section and is made of expanded synthetic material (by way of non-limiting example: silicone and EPDM), which incorporates the hygroscopic material in its mass.
The joint between the glass panes 2 and the spacer frame (frames) 3 is achieved by means of two levels of sealing: the first one 5 is intended to provide tightness and initial bonding between such components and affects, i.e. is applied on, the lateral surfaces of the frame and the portions of the adjacent glazing units, already mentioned earlier; the second one 6 is intended to provide final cohesion among the components and mechanical strength of the joint among them and affects, i.e. is applied at, the compartment constituted by the outer surface of the spacer frame 3 and by the faces of the glass panes 2 up to their edge. In the case of a spacer profile 3 made of expanded synthetic material, the first level of sealing is replaced with, or integrated by, an adhesive material, for example an acrylic one, which is already spread onto the lateral faces of such spacer profile 3 and is covered by a removable protective film.
The glass panes 2 used in the composition of the insulating glazing unit 1 can have different configurations depending on the use of such unit: for example, the outer pane (outer with respect to the building) can be normal or reflective (to limit the heat input during summer months) or laminated/armored (for intrusion prevention/vandalism prevention functions) or laminated/tempered (for safety functions) or combined (for example reflective and laminated, to obtain a combination of properties); the inner pane (inner with respect to the building) can be normal or of the low-emissivity type (in order to limit the dispersion of heat during winter months) or laminated/tempered (for safety functions) or combined (for example of the low-emissivity type and laminated to obtain a combination of properties). In particular, the outer glass pane 2M can be larger than the inner one (ones) 2m along the entire extension of the perimeter or only on one side or only on some sides.
Among the types of glass pane referenced above, the so-called laminated, reinforced and tempered ones have the characteristic, or rather the problem, of not being sufficiently planar, and this makes filling with gas difficult, at least according to known methods.
The simple summary presented above makes it already evident that a manufacturing line for obtaining the insulating glazing unit product 1 requires many processes in sequence and in particular comprises filling with a gas other than air, to which the present application relates in detail, particularly to solve the drawback of the non-planarity of the glass panes that constitute the insulating glazing unit 1.
The processes for producing the insulating glazing unit 1, each requiring a corresponding and particular machine to be arranged in series with respect to the other complementary ones, are, by way of non-limiting example and at the same time not all necessary, the following:
One of the most widespread solutions for replacing the air of a glazing unit with a gas that has superior thermal insulation properties, with reference to
The process described above can be performed by the respective machine automatically or semiautomatically.
The prior art regarding the field and describing machines and methods for filling an insulating glazing unit 1 with a gas other than air, does not appear to lead to a fully satisfactory solution for correct filling with gas in the case of glass panes 2 that are not sufficiently planar.
This aspect of the non-planarity of the glass panes 2 therefore constitutes one of the greatest current problems in the fabrication of glazing units with commercially available machines, since it compromises their results as regards the concentration of contained gas and the gas consumption. While inexpensive argon gas was used predominantly in the past, currently, in order to achieve far more efficient thermal insulations, more expensive gases, such as krypton and xenon, are used, and therefore the waste of gas during the filling step is no longer affordable (if the cost of argon is 1, krypton and xenon respectively cost 100 and 400).
Prior documents belonging to the background art pertinent to the invention comprise:
The background art available does not solve the problem related to the non-planarity of glass panes. It is also not helpful with reference to the possibility to fill the insulating glazing units 3, whose glass panes 2M and 2m that compose them are not aligned along the base 1d.
The aim of the present invention is to provide a device and a method for filling insulating glazing units composed of at least two glass panes and at least one spacer frame with a gas other than air that require no manual intervention or adjustments made by an operator.
Within this aim, an object of the present invention is to provide a method and a device that allow to fill the insulating glazing unit with a gas other than air in a fully mechanized and efficient manner even if one or more of the glass panes 2 lacks a sufficiently precise planarity, and also in the case of an insulating glazing unit 1 that is composed of glass panes 2M and 2m that are not aligned at the lower edge 1d, without problems.
Another object of the present invention is to provide a device that is obtainable with means easily available on the market and at competitive costs.
This aim and these and other objects, which will become better apparent hereinafter, are achieved by a device having the features set forth in claim 1 and by a method with the steps set forth in claim 7.
In an advantageous aspect thereof, the invention provides the lower part of the fixed bed 21 with a series of retractable suckers, which by interacting adequately with the lower flap 1d of the glass pane 2 before, during and after the step for injecting gas, optimize the flow of such gas, avoiding situations of asymmetry, occlusion and most of all of triggering of partial vacuum fields which would entail the suction of air as well as turbulent conditions that would prevent the expulsion of air from the chamber constituted by the glass panes 2, by the spacer frame 3 and by the corresponding upper slot. Further, a belt transfer device arranged at the fixed bed 21 is provided with adjustability along the vertical plane and likewise a gas distribution device located at the movable bed 22 is provided with adjustability along the vertical plane in order to allow the provision of insulating glazing units 1 in which the corresponding panes 2M and 2m are not aligned along the base 1d.
Further characteristics and advantages of the invention will become better apparent from the following detailed description of a preferred but not exclusive embodiment thereof, illustrated by way of non-limiting example in the accompanying drawings, wherein:
The inner/outer orientation is identified visually with icons that represent the sun (outer side) and the radiator (inner side). The
With reference to the figures, the criterion used in the numbering has been the following: the products, an insulating glazing unit 1, a glass pane 2, a spacer frame 3 are designated by single-digit numerals. In particular, in order to distinguish the various possible shapes of the insulating glazing unit 1, the reference numeral 1 designates the rectangular shape, the reference numeral 1′ designates the polygonal shape, the reference numeral 1″ designates the curvilinear shape, and the reference numeral 1′″ designates the mixed shape (see
The known components of an automatic coupling/pressing/gas filling machine 10 are designated by numbering with two digits and are not all consecutive being distributed in ranges of tens.
Main components of the invention are generally indicated in the series 100 and 200 and have therefore three-digit numbering.
For the purposes of the present description and definition of the invention it will be noted that when reference has and will be made to “substantially vertical”, this was and shall be understood to mean “slightly inclined with respect to the vertical”; the conveyance of the insulating glazing unit 1 in fact occurs on conveyors whose resting surface is inclined by approximately 6° with respect to the vertical plane, and likewise the rollers or other lower supporting/transport elements have their axis inclined by approximately 6° with respect to the horizontal plane; likewise, when reference has and will be made to “substantially horizontal”, this was and shall be understood to mean “slightly inclined with respect to the horizontal”.
Thus “slightly inclined” will be understood as meaning inclined by no more than approximately 6° with respect to the vertical/horizontal plane.
The terms “lower”, “upper”, “bottom” and “side” refer to the position of the various parts herein disclosed as they are shown in the figures.
First, the known part of the automatic coupling/pressing/gas filling machine 10 (summarized hereinafter by the term “press” alone), i.e., the part that leads to coupling, filling with gas and pressing of the components of the insulating glazing unit 1, is described.
The first one of the two glass panes 2 that arrives from preceding processes performed in the vertical production line of the insulating glazing unit 1 and described in summary earlier, conveyed by conveyors 15 with a substantially vertical arrangement, enters the press body, where it is supported and conveyed by support and conveyance means constituted, in an embodiment by a belt conveyor 24, and rested against a first, substantially vertical fixed bed (actually inclined by 6°) 21, which is generally and diffusely provided with a series of holes that feed air, so as to produce gliding against the bed 21, assisted by an air cushion. Known slowing and stopping sensors act on the motor that actuates the advancement and position the glass pane 2 in a specific point of the bed 21, as shown in
At the end of this operation, a second, movable bed 22 (see
At this point, the second subsequent glass pane 2, provided with the spacer frame 3, which in turn arrives from the previous processes performed in the vertical line for production of the insulating glazing unit 1, conveyed by the conveyors 15 with a substantially vertical arrangement, enters the press body, where it is supported and conveyed by the belt conveyor 24 and rested against the vertical fixed bed 21 with an air cushion. The slowing and stopping sensors act on the motor that actuates the advancement and position the second glass pane 2 also in the same point where the preceding one had stopped.
Then the movable bed 22 and the previously captured glass pane 2 with it, again by actuation of the motor 25, approaches the fixed bed 21 and moves the glass pane 2 retained by the movable bed 22 to a distance of a few millimeters from the spacer frame 3; gas 7, fed by a manifold provided with a plurality of holes and arranged below the fixed 21 and movable 22 beds, enters through such slot. Sealing systems of a known type close a lower edge or base 1d, leaving it connected only to the manifold, and lateral edges 1a and 1c of the components of the insulating glazing unit 1. During the inflow of the gas 7, a horizontal upper side 1b remains open to vent the air.
Once introduction of the gas 7 has ended, the movable bed 22, again by way of the actuation of the motor 25, causes the glass pane 2 retained by it to move toward the spacer frame 3, coupling them and pressing them with such a pressure value as to ensure spreading of a butyl sealant 5 between the frame 3 and the glass panes 2, so as to obtain the sealing of the chamber of the insulating glazing unit 1.
The process can be repeated by adding another glass pane 2 provided with a spacer frame 3, in order to obtain the insulating glazing unit 1 with two chambers, and so forth.
We now come to the detailed description of a way of carrying out the inventive part of the present invention, i.e., the one that, combined with the traditional part described above, is capable of filling the insulating glazing unit 1 in an innovative manner with respect to the background art.
A preferred but not exclusive embodiment of the invention is the one described hereafter. For easy comprehension, reference will be made to the figures, particularly
The description of the known parts of the machine 10 and of the operation method was given earlier. The inventive parts are shown superimposed on such known parts and mainly, but not exclusively, regard:
The method steps relating to the operation of such devices are also disclosed.
A detailed description is now given with reference to the above devices and the Figures.
a) Once the second or subsequent glass pane 2 provided with the spacer frame 3 has stopped and is supported on the fixed bed 21, a plurality of suckers 101a-g provided arranged on a lower band 110 of the fixed bed 21, are actuated by low-thrust pneumatic cylinders 106a-g and the corresponding mechanisms already mentioned and described in the presentation of the figures, so as to arrange themselves against the glass pane 2 at its lower face. Subsequently, ejectors 107a-g are activated and therefore the suckers 101a-g are joined to and capture the subsequent glass pane 2. Then, the pneumatic cylinders 106a-g, this time with a high traction ratio, are actuated and the lower flap of the subsequent glass pane 2 provided with the spacer frame 3 is straightened by virtue of the retraction motion of the suckers 101a-g with respect to the movable bed 22, thus arranging the lower edge of the subsequent glass pane 2 perfectly aligned with the fixed bed 21. A consequence of this is that in the subsequent step for approach of the movable bed 22, the slot that remains free for the inflow of gas 7 can be uniformly calibrated around a value of 2 mm, which calibration was previously impossible with the devices known in the art. Moreover, by virtue of the uniformity of the slot, it allows achieving a correct flow of gas and therefore limiting turbulence, thus optimizing the concentration of gas in the chamber and the consumption of the gas. The reduction and the uniformity of the extent of such slot with respect to the ones obtainable in the background art leads to the systematic reduction of gas consumption, since a big and variable extent of such slot corresponds to an amount of gas that is wasted in any case. The residual volume when the insulating glazing unit 1 is finished is, actually, the one that corresponds to the area of the glass pane 2 multiplied by the thickness of the spacer frame 3 and not by the thickness of the spacer frame plus 2 mm (or plus at least 5 millimeters as it is usually in the background art that is needed to compensate for the non-planarity of the glass panes).
b) The front seal constituted by an inflatable tubular gasket 203 applied in a receptacle of a perforated manifold 204 (
c) Starting from the configuration of item b), it will be understood that the manifold 204 and the belt conveyor 24 are provided respectively with a movement with respect to the vertical axes V1 and V2. These movements are also performed by known mechanisms, such as supporting sliders, sliding blocks and ball bearing guides, ballscrews and gearmotors, that when they are combined with the transverse movement mechanisms, respectively on axes z4 and z3, and with the inflatable tubular gasket 203 constituting the front seal, they constitute a device that allows to fill with gas even those insulating glazing units 1 of configurations as shown in
In the case of an insulating glazing unit 1 that has a contoured shape, i.e., a non-rectangular one (as shown in
All the movements linked to the operation steps of the fabrication cycle are advantageously, mutually interlocked with the aid of a logic system that is parallel but always active, in order to prevent, during the process, conditions of mutual interference between the actuators and the material being processed.
The present invention is susceptible of numerous constructive variations, with respect to what was described and can be deduced from the drawings, whose details are evident and eloquent for the person skilled in the art. All such variations are within the scope of the appended claims.
Thus, for example, the mechanical devices for movement and the adjustments along the axes V1, V2, z3, z4, the electronic/mechanical devices for assisting them, et cetera, the actuation means, which can be electrical, electrical-electronic, pneumatic, hydraulic and/or combined, et cetera, the control means, which can be electronic or fluidic and/or combined, et cetera, all are replaceable by other, known equivalent means.
All the details can be replaced with other technically equivalent ones. The materials and the dimensions may be any according to requirements arising in particular from the dimensions (the base and the height) and/or from shape of the insulating glazing unit.
The description and the figures referenced above refer to a fully automatic coupling/pressing/gas filling machine 10, which includes the devices according to the invention, arranged according to a left-to-right process flow as shown in the Figures. It is therefore easy to imagine a description and corresponding figures in the case of mirror-symmetrical or otherwise different arrangements, for example including variations of the direction of the work line.
In practice it has been found that the invention achieves the intended aim and objects.
Machines for automatically filling the insulating glazing unit 1 with a gas other than air have been developed according to a solution that differs from the injection of the gas during the coupling step. They act after the coupling, in order to be independent of the need for planarity of the glass panes 2. This method and the corresponding machines, albeit with excellent qualitative results in terms of concentration of gas and consumption of gas, did not turn out to be competitive in terms of cost, since they were machines working as additional devices to the coupling machine/press.
The demand for machines for filling an insulating glazing unit with a gas other than air is fastly growing by virtue of the laws imposing energy saving.
Insertion of the machine that according to the present invention in the production line of the double glazing unit as shown in
The disclosures in Italian Patent Application No. TV2008A000031 from which this application claims priority are incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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TV2008A0031 | Feb 2008 | IT | national |
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0 674 085 | May 1998 | EP |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20090205743 A1 | Aug 2009 | US |