The application is directed toward insulated glass and, more particularly, toward a machine for the automatic sealing of the peripheral cavity of the insulating glass having irregular geometry.
Currently it is known to deposit the rigid spacer frame 3 or the flexible spacer profile 4, pre-spread with butyl primary sealant and/or acrylic adhesive on a glass pane 2 and then couple the assembly to a second glass pane 2′ and seal it by means of secondary sealant 5 along the entire cavity of the external peripheral region so as to constitute the so-called insulating glass 1. The operation can also be multiple in order to obtain the insulating glass 1 constituted by three glass panes 2, 2′, 2″ and two spacer frames 3, 3′ or spacer profiles 4, 4′, as well as n glass panes 2, 2, 2″, 2″′, etc., and n−1 spacer frames 3, 3′, 3″, etc., or spacer profiles 4, 4′, 4″, etc.
These glass panes 2, 2′ etc. are often not aligned at the perimeter on one or more sides, since the insulating glass is designed for architectures in which typically the glass pane that is external (with respect to the building) is larger than the one that is internal (with respect to the building), in particular so that the external face of the building is constituted only by glass, while the internal glass pane or panes must leave space for the supporting structures and are therefore smaller. Furthermore, these glass panes 2, 2″, 2″′, etc., since they derive from upstream manufacturing processes, which despite being accurate are however not free from imperfections, may have irregular geometries as regards the dimensions and, as regards shape, especially in terms of planarity.
Sealing the perimetric cavity in situations in which the glass panes are aligned in some perimetric positions and are not aligned in other perimetric positions and moreover with a nonplanar geometry is a currently unsolved problem in the background art. The sealing nozzles either remain, albeit slightly, spaced from the face of the larger glass pane, with consequent leakage of sealant toward the face of the larger glass pane, contaminating it from the aesthetic and functional standpoint, or are pushed with an uncontrolled force against the larger glass pane and the latter can consequently be damaged, in particular if the face of said pane in contact with the nozzles is screen printed or painted.
The nonplanar geometry of glass panes, moreover, is regulated by standards that define the values thereof that are deemed allowable, which are presented as a function of the dimensions (base, height and thickness) and the type; said standards are for example the US standards ASTM C 1036-11 for flat glass panes, ASTM C 1048-12 for tempered glass panes, ASTM C 1172-14 for panes of laminated glass (also known as multilayer glass).
Accordingly, the nozzles must adapt to these nonplanarities, and this is already considered in a patent of the background art referenced hereinafter, which however does not perform it in a “soft” manner.
The present disclosure indeed deals with control of the force of approach of the nozzles against the face of the larger glass pane during sealing of the perimetric cavity and does so in the multiple conditions that can be present and generally are present even in combination within the same insulating glass 1, i.e., in situations that are variable along the perimeter, such as:
aligned glass pane edges; 1voffset glass pane edges, with offset extents of even just a few millimeters;
nonplanarity of the glass panes;
cantilever face of the larger glass pane provided with surface treatment such as screen printing or painting;
and in situations with which the machine must interface easily, at the most by means of simple adjustment of some parameters, and specifically:
insulating glass units of large size and therefore statistically composed of rather rigid panes;
insulating glass units of small size and therefore statistically composed of rather flexible panes;
glass panes composing the insulating glass in the most disparate types and conditions.
The most pertinent prior art for representing the state of the art is:
PCT/EP2018/072908 in the name of the same Applicant FOREL SPA, currently in the confidential phase, but partially disclosed herein, having a priority dated 11 Sep. 2017;
EP 1 655 443 B1 in the name of the same Applicant FOREL SPA having a priority dated 4 Nov. 2004.
In particular, these two documents are relevant because the present application constitutes an important improvement of the combination of these two prior art documents.
Other prior art documents generically deal with the sealing of the perimetric cavity of insulating glass panels and can represent well the field of application according to the present application; since this field is rather crowded with Industrial Property titles, one of them is cited by way of example and is the following:
U.S. Pat. No. 6,197,231 B1 in the name of Peter Lisec, with priority dated 15 Oct. 1997.
The content of these disclosures can be summarized respectively as follows (the reference numerals of the details of the drawings are the ones used in each respective patent document).
PCT/EP 2018/072908
This patent application teaches to follow the nonplanarity of the glass panes by providing two solutions, either by mapping performed upstream of the sealing machine or by scanning performed by a sensor located in the sealing head during sealing and by feedback on the actuation system that actuates the Z axis that moves the nozzle closer to or further away transversely from the glass panes, and although it also shows among the configurations of the edge of the insulating glass panel the ones, in particular in
EP 1 655 443 B1
This patent discloses in its
U.S. Pat. No. 6,197,231 B1
This document, and many others not listed herein, does not even mention the real situations in which the glass panes are not sufficiently planar and the case in which the edges of the glass panes are mutually offset.
The summary description of the drawings and the detailed description of a way of carrying out the disclosure will clarify how the disclosure according to the present application is constituted and how it can be embodied.
In order to describe one way of carrying out the disclosure, which comprises all the equivalent ones, reference is made to
The products: insulating glass 1, glass pane 2, 2′, 2″, 2″′ etc., spacer frame 3, 3′, 3″ etc., 4, 4′, 4″, etc., and additional components thereof are identified by single-digit numbering, optionally provided with indices or letters. In particular, in order to distinguish the various possible shapes of the insulating glass, the reference numeral 1 designates the most frequent (rectangular) situation, the reference numerals 1′ and 1′ designates the situations that can be processed in any case with the devices according to the present disclosure (polygonal and mixed), the reference numeral 1″ designates the (completely curvilinear) shape which is rarely requested and can be processed with the integration of devices, which are not innovative and therefore not described, by the present disclosure. In particular, both for an insulating glass production line that operates with a left-to-right direction and for an insulating glass production line that operates with a right-to-left direction, the reference numeral 1a designates the vertical side that is sealed first, the reference numeral 1b designates the upper horizontal side, the reference numeral 1c designates the vertical side that is opposite the preceding vertical one, the reference numeral 1d designates the lower horizontal side, which is the one that rests on the conveyors and is entrained by them. The various figures consider and provide a miscellany of both cases, since they are not significant.
The components that are separate but interfaced with the automatic sealing machine are designated by two-digit numbering.
The main components of the inventive device according to the present application, identified in the assembly 500 and of the known correlated devices identified in the assemblies 100, 200, 300, 400, are identified by three-digit numbering, optionally provided with indices or letters, wherein the ones that contain two zeroes relate to assemblies or units while the others refer to the respective component details.
The machines that belong to the production line of the insulating glass 1 are identified by four-digit numberings, in the order according to
It should be stressed that the device and the method according to the present disclosure deal with the implementation of important improvements in the so-called SECOND SEALING or SECONDARY SEALING which provides the structural and functional coupling of the set of components: panes 2, 2′, 2′, 2″′ etc., spacer frame 3, 3′, 3″ etc., 4, 4′ 4″ etc., at the perimeter, by means of polymeric sealants such as silicone, polysulfide, polyurethane, hot-melt, etc., fluids which are typically non-Newtonian and therefore have a complex rheology. The disclosure according to the present application relates in particular to new and innovative components to allow the operation of the machine that performs said sealing in the condition in which the insulating glass 1 as assembled, in the machine 6000, before sealing is not sufficiently planar and this by importing part of the solution of the prior art PCT/EP2018/072908 in the name of the same Applicant and especially in the condition, not solved in the background art, in which the sealing nozzle must provide a seal both against the perimetric edge of the smaller glass pane and against the face of the larger glass pane in the peripheral portions in which it is offset with respect to the smaller glass pane (cases shown in
Leaving aside the steps of the process before the sealing operation that leads to the forming of the insulating glass panel to be sealed, since they are known and irrelevant with respect to the innovations introduced with the present disclosure, the description refers to the concepts of sealing to introduce the innovative modifications that commingle in the background art, in particular the nearest one according to PCT/EP2018/072908.
What is shown partially in
A few details related to the background art are instead referenced as regards the path of the sealant 5, 5′, 5″, etc., since it is correlated with the function of filling the perimetric joint in the various configurations. This is to point out that the final operation of the filling of the cavity one 1, 1′, 1″, 1″′ with high-quality aesthetic results constitutes a process that is complex from the point of view of the automatic adjustment principles, toward which the nonplanarity of the insulating glass and the offset between the glass panes only increase the complexity of the requirements of the functions required by the various devices. The sealants that are typically used are: silicone, particular for structural glazing; polysulfide; polyurethane; predominantly in the bi-component versions, i.e. the ones constituted by a base product plus a catalyst product, to be dosed and mixed and, in the final step, to be spread, filling the joint so as to constitute a geometry that is perfectly aligned with the borders of the glass panes and, as mentioned earlier, the rheology of sealants being complex.
The dosing assembly 400 is constituted by the dosing unit of the base product B and by the dosing unit of the catalyst product C which, being each in synchronous tie, can dispense the flow of the base product and the flow of the catalyst product in the stoichiometric ratio required by the manufacturer of the secondary sealant 5, 5′, 5″ etc. (typically 10:1 by volume, but any ratio is adjustable by means of simple inputs in the control panel 12). Obviously, in the case of mono-component sealant, the dosing unit is only one, since the catalyst product is not present.
The dosing unit of the base product comprises the following essential components: plunger or syringe 401B; cylinder or chamber 402B; seal 403B; recirculating ballscrew 404B; ballscrew nut 405B; mechanical transmission 406B, for example of the sprocket/chain type; mechanical reduction unit 407B; synchronous electric motor 408B. It is evident that these components are coupled partly to an upper plate and partly to a lower plate, said plates being connected by tension members, structural elements which are shared and used by the dosing unit B of the base product and by the dosing unit C of the catalyst product, as visible in
The dosing unit of the base product comprises the following auxiliary components, all of which also belong to the background art: valves, pressure transducers, pressure gauges, protections against overpressures, etc.
The dosing unit of the catalyst product comprises the following components: plunger or syringe 401C; cylinder or chamber 402C; seal 403C; recirculating ballscrew 404C; ballscrew nut 405C; mechanical transmission 406C, for example of the sprocket/chain type; mechanical reduction unit 407C; synchronous and electric motor 408C, coupled as mentioned earlier.
The dosing unit of the catalyst product also comprises the auxiliary components as mentioned earlier.
In the case of mono-component sealant, the layout remains usable, but a single dosing unit is involved.
The operating logic of all of these components is shown schematically in
In detail, as regards the logic and power controls used to perform the dispensing of the sealant product at the nozzle 301, they are managed by the PLC 306, and the following are the main INPUTS and OUTPUTS:
INPUTS:
w=width of the spacer frame
d=distance of its extrados from the margin of the glass panes
v=relative speed of the peripheral region of the side of the insulating glass 1, 1′, 1″, 1″′/extrusion nozzle 301
signals from the pressure transducers
feedbacks from the synchronous motors 408B and 408C
OUTPUTS:
signals towards the actuation systems (not shown in the figure) of the synchronous motors, such as to embody the equation v×S=c1×S1+c2×S2.
Other parameters reside in the PLC, such as for example the sections 51 and S2 of the syringes, since they are constant data.
This description refers to the more complete case of the bi-component sealant. Obviously, it is applicable also to the case of the mono-component sealant, simply by eliminating the parts that describe the catalyst fluid.
For the sake of simplicity,
The innovative and therefore inventive part of the present application arises from the aim to eliminate the problems of the background art, which are fundamentally exemplified in
In order to follow the nonplanarity of the insulating glass by means of the mechanisms of the first assembly, the principles of patent PCT/EP2018/072908 are used to, improving them, using for example a sensor 308 (
The second group of mechanisms intervenes between the ballscrew nut 503 and the carriage 507, i.e., the group that performs, synergistically with the first group, control of the thrust of the portion of nozzle 301 against the protruding part of the face of the larger glass pane. The first group in fact performs a geometric positioning, the precision of which derives: from the resolution of the signal of the sensor 308, from the control of the actuation systems, from the accuracy of the machining, from the plays, from the temperature, etc., and ends up having a resolution that is not better than ±0.5 mm, and this entails, in case of separation of the nozzle from the face of the glass pane, an outflow of the sealant toward said face with corresponding contamination, and in case of interference between the nozzle and the face of the glass pane, damage of the latter. The second group of mechanisms is constituted by the following components: body 504; pneumatic cylinder/compensator 505; stem 506; and, shared with the mechanisms of the first group, the carriage 507. The way of operating of the second group of mechanisms is as follows.
The body 504, in which the ballscrew nut 503 is coupled, is not rigidly integral with the carriage 507 but is interfaced with it by means of an elastic connection constituted by the “compensator” pneumatic cylinder 505, the stem 506 of which is screwed and locked on a part of the carriage 507. It is evident, therefore, that as a function of the pressures that can be established in the pneumatic cylinder 505 the sealing head 300, and with it the portion of the sealing nozzle 301 that is moving closer against the protruding part of the face of the larger glass pane, can apply a “soft” thrust against the face of the protruding part of the larger glass pane. It is even sufficient to work with the adjustment of the pneumatic pressure only in the chamber of the pneumatic cylinder on the stem side (the chamber of the so-called negative stroke). In fact, as shown in the diagram of
The component 510 shown in
In addition to the “soft damping” performed by the second group of mechanisms cited above, the coupling between the extrusion nozzle 301 and the extrusion head 300 is provided in a slightly articulated manner in order to follow any geometric irregularities of the edges of the glass panes and the nonplanar geometry of the insulating glass, and this is done to prevent the sealant 5 from escaping from the borders which must instead be hermetic between the involved parts of the nozzle and of the glass panes. This joint is of the spherical type in order to be able to perform oscillations both along an axis that is parallel to the face of the insulating glass and along an axis that is perpendicular to the face of the insulating glass.
In view of the wide range of the configurations of the cavities of the perimetric edge of the insulating glass to be filled with the sealant, obviously the nozzles 301 for the most frequent joint situations are provided with the machine, whereas they are designed accordingly for particular situations.
In all cases, the shapes of the nozzle 301 may be multiple, since they have to interface with at least the following situations of the perimetric joint of the insulating glass, as shown by way of partial example in
edges aligned along the entire perimeter;
edges not aligned along the entire perimeter with equal offset;
edges not aligned along the entire perimeter with differentiated offsets;
edges aligned in some perimeter portions and not aligned in others;
combinations of the situations cited above with rectangular or nonrectangular shapes of the insulating glass;
combinations of the situations cited above with a depth of the cavity of the joint that is constant or different in the various perimeter portions and optionally is recessed in its external extrados with respect to the margin of the smaller glass pane.
Since the most frequent situation is the one for which the nozzle 301 must work within the same insulating glass both in conditions with edges aligned in some portions of the perimeter and edges not aligned in some other portions of the perimeter, it is necessary to adopt for the same nozzle a shape that is adapted both to be superimposed simultaneously and at least partially on two edges and to be superimposed at least partially on one edge and be arranged opposite one face, as shown in
The possibility is also mentioned and claimed to arrange the mechanisms in double feedback, instead of as described in the preferred embodiment of the disclosure between the body 201 of the vertical carriage 200 which moves along the vertical axis V and the carriage 507 which moves along the transverse axis Z, rather proximate to the terminal part of the extrusion head 300 directly upstream of the nozzle 301 in order to obtain theoretically movements that are freer since they involve smaller masses and run on carriages which are miniaturized and therefore have a reduced friction. However, this solution is influenced by the noise introduced by the sealant feed tube, which despite being flexible entails loads which are additional and furthermore variable as a function of the type (as viscosity changes) and of the flow rate of the sealant 5 toward the nozzle 301 and therefore toward the protruding face of the larger glass pane.
Obviously, the industrial application is assuredly successful, since machines for the automatic execution of the second sealing of the insulating glass 1, 1′, 1″, 1″′ have undergone particular development over the last decade, so much that the owner of the present application has already marketed over four hundred units, but since these automatic sealing machines have the severe limitations described in the background art section they are not suitable to deal with the continuous architectural evolutions of buildings, which require adaptations of all the elements that compose the buildings, in particular of insulating glass units and more particularly of structural insulating glass units.
Currently, the demand for types of insulating glass that are innovative both in terms of shape and in terms of structural and functional performance has undergone a surprising increase; it is sufficient to consider structural glazing, which extends over heights of more than one story of the building, or commercial insulating glazing, which reaches lengths of over 15 meters, and the consequence that the large extensions of the surface entail the use of equally important glass pane thicknesses and the use of glass pane configurations which range from tempered to laminated and accordingly their displacement from planar geometry, which is already per se present due to the large dimensions, is therefore even more significant due to the type. But most of all the configuration of the insulating glass units in which the peripheral edges are not aligned has undergone unexpected developments both in quantitative terms and in terms of types such as: the wide range of the offset values between the panes, which today is extended up to even 500 mm; the variety and combination of situations of aligned edge/offset edge situations within the same insulating glass; the quantity of panes within the same insulating glass, which is no longer limited to two as in the past; the variability of the surface treatments of the protruding parts of the larger glass pane. Moreover, the supporting structures of glazing units also have undergone evolutions in the shapes of the cross-sections and in the materials, such as steel and aluminum originally and now also including composites. And as already mentioned, the automatic sealing machine range according to the background art has turned out to be unsuitable for this parallel development of the insulating glass final product, or able to solve the problem only by means of predominantly manual palliatives.
The insertion of the present disclosure in the production line of the insulating glass is shown in
Moreover, the machine according to the present disclosure can be implemented easily in existing lines, since as it performs the last work of the manufacturing process of the insulating glass it is a matter of replacing the obsolete machine with said innovative machine without altering the placement of all the upstream machines, intervening only on the terminal part of the line, therefore reducing sometimes to a single day the interruption of production in order to perform replacement or updates.
The disclosures in Italian Patent Application No. 102018000009336 from which this application claims priority are incorporated herein by reference.
Where technical features mentioned in any claim are followed by reference signs, those reference signs have been included for the sole purpose of increasing the intelligibility of the claims and accordingly, such reference signs do not have any limiting effect on the interpretation of each element identified by way of example by such reference signs.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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102018000009336 | Oct 2018 | IT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2019/076284 | 9/27/2019 | WO | 00 |