This application claims priority on Finnish App. No. 20041379, Filed Oct. 26, 2004, the disclosure of which is incorporated by reference herein.
Not applicable.
The present invention concerns a beam structure for a paper, board or finishing machine. The beam structure of the invention is suited for use in all applications where a device needs to be supported in the cross direction of a paper or board machine so that the said device stays as straight as possible. The beam of the invention is preferably used to support a doctor, or a coating, measuring, or washing device. Especially preferably, the beam structure comprises a beam which is made of a composite material and which is supported at the middle.
In the following, prior art beam solutions are presented using doctor support beams as examples, because they are the most common beam solutions and because their structures have also been applied in many other uses of beams.
Earlier, when paper machines were narrower and when the deflection criteria were less strict, a solid doctor support beam made of steel or other purposeful metal was sufficient. The characteristic feature of these beams is, however, that they cannot usually reach the quality level required by modern and fast paper machines in the control of deflection and potential vibrations.
This is why it was presented in the previous decade that doctor support beams would no longer be made of solid metal beams, but that they could be, for instance, hollow and rigid box-type structures which are potentially made of a composite material. Such doctor support beams are described in publications U.S. Pat. No. 5,356,519; DE-A1-197 13 195; and FI-B105578.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,356,519 describes a doctor support beam which consists of a hollow box-type structure where the cross section of the structure is either an equilateral or inequilateral polygon or oval. According to the publication, the structural material is fiber composite material.
German publication DE-A1-197 13 195 describes a doctor support beam where the load-bearing part consists of a number of tubular elements joined together, with the elements manufactured from a suitable fiber material. All of the said elements can have the same diameter, or they can also have different diameters. The publication also states that in addition to tubes with a round cross section, triangular tubes, for instance, can also be used.
Finnish patent publication FI-B-105578 describes a beam structure where the cross section consists of a curved part and a straight part. The curved part is preferably semicircular, and the straight part encloses it to form a box beam. The doctor blade or similar component is fastened to the point of contact between the curved part and the straight part by means of suitable devices.
The beam structures presented above, however, have not attained much success on the market. The reason for this can be both the complex structure of the beams which makes the beam unreasonably expensive, and their cross-sectional shape which is disadvantageous from the point of view of the manufacture of the beam and also raises the price of the beam. Moreover, a complex structure increases the risk of manufacturing defects considerably and may also lead more easily to breakages resulting from stress during operation.
However, since the beams made of a composite material, presented above, have mostly turned out to be practicable solutions with the exception of issues such as the above-mentioned high manufacturing costs and risks, the present invention has attempted to find a beam structure which could be manufactured inexpensively for instance from composite materials without ignoring the requirements imposed on the beam.
As known, a small deflection (recommended maximum guideline value is half a millimeter irrespective of the length of the beam, in some cases a maximum deflection of up to one millimeter is permitted at the middle of the beam) is one of the most important properties of a beam in all applications of beams. Moreover, especially in the case of doctor support beams, however, the vibration properties of the beam must be taken into account in the design of beams so that when using the conventional subcritical dimensioning, the first natural frequency of the beam would be at least 20 percent above the excitation frequency of the roll. When using supercritical dimensioning, the natural frequency of the beam would therefore be at least that much below the excitation frequency of the roll. Supercritical dimensioning could also be used in conjunction with the present invention because of the damping elements at the ends and because of deflection control so that even smaller beam dimensions could be reached.
In the attempt to attain beam manufacture which is as inexpensive as possible, the present invention uses as its starting point a tubular, preferably a cylindrical beam, which can be manufactured for instance from composite materials by winding. When examining a tubular or cylindrical body, it is easy to determine both the vibration and deflection properties of a beam by means of calculations without having to use model bodies.
When calculations were used for examining the use of a cylindrical box beam made of composite materials as a doctor support beam, it was found that it was not very difficult to fulfill the natural frequency requirement at least with the cylinder structure, but it would be more difficult to fulfill the deflection requirement. Fulfilling the deflection requirement requires either the use of a beam with a larger diameter, made of standard fibers, or the use of a beam with a smaller diameter but made of special fibers. In other words, a less expensive beam made of standard fibers has too large a diameter for many applications. On the other hand, a beam made of special fibers has a smaller size, but its price is much higher, and in some cases the use of special fibers almost doubles the price.
This is why the present invention aims to solve for instance the above-mentioned problems related to the manufacturing costs of the beam, diameter of the beam, deflection of the beam and natural vibration frequency of the beam so that the end result would be a box beam which could be used as well as possible in as many different applications of support beams as possible and which would be acceptable to the market with regard to both its price and size.
In the present invention, unlike in the German publication referred to above and presented in prior art
As far as the advantages brought by the present invention are concerned, it can be stated that the double-shell beams of the invention:
The characteristic feature of the beam structure of a paper, board or finishing machine of the present invention is that the beam consists of an inner and outer shell which are situated inside each other and which are supported to each other over some of their length, and that one shell is supported stationarily by its ends to the frame structures of the said paper, board or finishing machine and that one shell deflects when the beam is loaded while the other shell remains essentially straight.
In the following, the beam structure of the present invention is described in more detail with reference to the accompanying drawings.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,356,519, presented in
German publication DE-A1-197 13 195, presented in
Finnish patent publication FI-B-105578 presented in
The beam structures presented above, however, have not turned out very usable in practice. The primary reason for this is the complicated manufacturing technology, which raises the price of the beam considerably high. The complicated manufacturing technology also partly leads to the possibility of manufacturing defects which cannot be eliminated even when good quality control is used. In other words, one of the objectives of the present invention is to develop a beam structure that employs simple manufacturing technology, which also leads to inexpensive manufacturing costs and smaller risk of manufacturing defects. This is one of the objectives of the beam structure that aims to utilize a cylindrical tube which is made of a composite material in accordance with one preferred embodiment of the invention, with the manufacturing process of the tube being very simple and the risks with regard to manufacturing defects, for instance, being minimal.
As was stated above, a mere simple straight cylindrical box beam is not an optimum solution either because its size (when using conventional fiber materials) is too large for most applications or because its price (when using special fibers) becomes unreasonably high.
In accordance with one preferred structural alternative, the devices which determine the direction of movement of the beam, presented in
As far as the said sleeves 66, in other words extensions of the outer shell 54 of the beam 50, are concerned, it is worth mentioning that they can be not only tubular but also rods or various types of profiles which essentially protrude outward from the end 64 of the outer shell in the longitudinal direction of the beam. In this way, the sleeves 66, which could better be referred to as elements 66, can be located, with respect to the rods 58 which are extensions to the inner shell 52, not only around the rods 58 but also parallel with the rods 58, essentially on that plane which runs through the center line of the beam where the force that loads the beam deflects the beam 50.
The springs presented in
In addition to dampening movements in the deflection direction, the cylinder-piston solutions described above can also be used for guiding the direction of movement of the ends of the beam, which avoids the use of separate rails, guides and/or rollers.
The rigidity of the said dampers or similar flexible elements 80 at both ends of the beam is preferably chosen to be identical to the rigidity of the inner shell 52 which supports the outer shell 54 at the middle. In this case, the flexible elements yield equally as much as what the inner shell deflects so that the outer shell does not practically deflect at all.
In conjunction with
The double-shell beam solution of the invention consists, as was presented above, of an outer shell and an inner shell, which are located at a distance from each other with the exception of the longitudinal middle section of the beam. When the beam is manufactured from a fiber material, the said distance can be arranged for instance so that when the beam is being manufactured, an expansion is wound over the middle section of the inner shell between two sleeve-like molds arranged at the end regions of the inner shell. The thickness of the sleeves corresponds to the said distance, and the spacing between the sleeves at the middle section of the beam corresponds to the length of the said expansion. When the expansion is ready, the outer shell of the beam is wound over the molds and the expansion to the desired thickness. If the shells of the beam are made of different materials, material change can be done easily in conjunction with the installation of the molds.
In a solution in accordance with one preferred embodiment of the invention, the shells of the beam are not actually fastened to each other, but an expansion is made on the inner shell, essentially on its center line, with the diameter of the expansion essentially corresponding to the inner diameter of the outer shell so that the inner shell can be pushed inside the outer shell, or vice versa, without causing any kind of expansion on the outer surface of the outer shell.
The material alternatives for the double-shell beam of the present invention are in principle free, in other words various types of metals and composites and their combinations can be used as the materials. However, the beam is preferably made of a composite material, in which case the beam can be made of carbon fibers, ordinary glass fibers or especially strong so-called pitch fibers, which are carbon fibers manufactured using a specific pitch method.
Also, even though it was described above that the manufacturing method of a composite beam is winding, the manufacturing method can just as well be pultrusion. Similarly, even though a round shape was presented above for the cross section of the beam, the cross section of the beam can also be square, rectangular, polygonal or elliptic, or in practice any cross section profile that allows the use of two shells inside each other as described above. In other words, the shells must be capable of bending at least partly irrespective of each other.
It must also be taken into account that the beam solution of the invention also covers structures where the shells of the beam are not supported to each other at the longitudinal middle section of the beam only but at some other point. In other words, the shells of the beam can be supported to each other either at the very ends of the beam or at some point between the ends and the middle section, including solutions where there is a support both at the ends and between the ends and the middle point. In this way, there can be multiple support points. It is further possible to use structural alternatives where the shells of the beam are supported to each other so that there is no support point on the longitudinal middle point of the beam, but there are even several support points at equal spacing when moving towards the ends of the beam. These solutions are possible because the forces loading the beam are known, which is why the supports can be dimensioned so that the inner shell retains its necessary curvature and the outer shell remains straight. Naturally, a similar result can be achieved by constructing one or both of the shells so that their rigidity changes in the longitudinal direction of the beam.
As can be seen in what has been presented above, a completely new type of double-shell beam structure has been developed, capable of reducing or even completely eliminating many problems and shortcomings characteristic of prior art beams of a paper, board or finishing machine. The above exemplifications of the alternative support structures give an opportunity to control and guide the deflection and the deflection direction of the double-shell beams as is necessary in each case. It is also to be noted that while conventional beams are only supported at their ends to the frame structures of the machine, the beam (or more exactly, the outer shell of the beam) of the present invention is supported at least between its ends. If the outer shell is also supported at several points, the support in question stiffens the beam structure considerably so that even relatively small beams can fulfill the deflection and vibration criteria set for the beam. The above description of the invention, however, only describes the invention through some exemplified and schematic embodiments. This is why it is clear that the invention may differ considerably from what has been presented above, still falling within the limits of the appended claims.
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20041379 | Oct 2004 | FI | national |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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