The present invention relates to adhesive dispensing and, in particular, to compact heated air manifolds for use in adhesive application systems.
Dispensing systems are used in numerous manufacturing production lines for dispensing heated liquids onto a substrate at specified application temperatures. Often, the dispensing system must discharge the heated liquid within a precise, elevated temperature range, such as in the dispensing of hot melt adhesives. Certain hot melt adhesive dispensing systems include a bank of individual dispensing modules or applicators that have a nozzle and an internal valve assembly for regulating liquid flow through the nozzle. Often, the valve assembly includes a valve seat engageable by a movable valve stem for flow control purposes.
The dispensing modules are typically heated to a desired adhesive application temperature such as by being directly connected to a heated manifold. In addition, a flow of heated process air is provided to the vicinity of the adhesive discharge outlet or nozzle. The heated process air is used for modifying a characteristic of the dispensed hot melt adhesive. For example, hot air streams can be angularly directed onto the extruded stream of hot melt adhesive to create one of various different patterns on the substrate, such as an irregular back-and-forth pattern, a spiral, a stitch pattern, or one of a myriad of other patterns. To form the pattern, the hot air stream imparts a motion to the discharged stream, which deposits continuously as a patterned bead on a substrate moving relative to the stream. As another example, the heated process air may be used to attenuate the diameter of the molten adhesive stream.
The heated process air also maintains the temperature of the nozzle at the required adhesive application temperature so that the hot melt adhesive will perform satisfactorily. If the nozzle is too cool, the hot melt adhesive may cool down too much just prior to discharge. The cooling may adversely affect the liquid cut-off at the nozzle when the valve stem is closed so that accumulated hot melt adhesive in the nozzle can drip or drool from the dispensing module. Often, this dispenses hot melt adhesive in unwanted locations such as, for example, in undesirable locations on the substrate or on the surrounding equipment and reduces edge control for the adhesive bead desired for intermittent dispensing applications. Furthermore, if hot melt adhesive exits the nozzle at a reduced temperature, the reduction in temperature can compromise the quality of the adhesive bond.
Conventional hot air manifolds employed in adhesive dispensing systems consist of a metal block having an interconnected network of internal air passageways and one or more heating elements. Process air is introduced into an inlet of the network and is distributed by the various air passageways to a set of outlets. Each outlet provides heated process air to an individual dispensing module. The heating elements heat the metal block by conductive heat transfer, and the surfaces of the internal air passageways, in turn, transfer heat energy to the process air circulating in the network. The heat energy heats the process air to a desired process temperature.
Conventional hot air manifolds are machined for a specific dispensing application. To place the outlets at desired locations, bores creating the air passageways must be machined as cross-drilled passages having precise inclination angles between two sides of the distribution manifold. The pattern of bores is challenging to design and complex to create. In addition, the pattern of outlets cannot be altered for accommodating differing numbers of dispensing modules or for adjusting the spacing between adjacent ones of the dispensing modules. In addition, because a single hot air manifold serves all of the modules, it is difficult if not impossible to individually adjust a property of the heated air, such as flow rate, provided to individual ones of the dispensing modules.
The introduction of modular adhesive manifolds for hot melt adhesive dispensing systems has provided a heretofore unsatisfied need for a modular hot air manifold. Conventional hot air manifolds that distribute heated process air to multiple outlets are not well suited for modular adhesive dispensing systems. In fact, conventional hot air manifolds actually reduce the key advantage of such systems since the hot air manifold cannot accommodate differing numbers of module adhesive manifolds (for changing the number of dispensing modules).
Thus, a hot air manifold is needed that has reduced dimensions and that can be dedicated to individual dispensing modules among those modules in a bank of dispensing modules. In particular, a hot air manifold is required for use with modular adhesive dispensing systems.
The present invention is directed to a dispensing system that includes a hot air manifold device of reduced dimensions and compliant with modular heated liquid dispensing applications. The present invention also provides a dispensing system for use in non-modular adhesive dispensing applications that permits individual air adjustment for each dispensing module. In one embodiment, the dispensing system includes a liquid manifold capable of supplying heated liquid and a dispensing module coupled in fluid communication with the liquid manifold. The dispensing module is capable of dispensing heated liquid received from the liquid manifold onto the substrate. The dispensing system further includes a hot air manifold with an air plenum and a flat heater positioned within the air plenum. An air inlet of the air plenum is capable of receiving process air and an air outlet of the air plenum is coupled in fluid communication with the dispensing module. The flat heater is operative for transferring heat to process air flowing from the air inlet to the air outlet. In certain embodiments, the flat heater may include a thick film resistive heating element.
In another embodiment, a dispensing system includes a liquid manifold capable of supplying heated liquid and a dispensing module coupled in fluid communication with the liquid manifold. The dispensing module is capable of receiving heated liquid from the liquid manifold and dispensing heated liquid from the nozzle onto the substrate. The dispensing system further includes a hot air manifold including a body with an air plenum and a heating element within the body. The air plenum has an air inlet capable of receiving process air and an air outlet coupled in fluid communication with the nozzle. The heating element is operative for heating process air flowing from the air inlet to the air outlet. The air plenum is dimensioned to produce a pressure drop of the process air between the air inlet and the air outlet of less than about 10% of the initial pressure at the air inlet.
In yet another embodiment, a modular dispensing system is provided for dispensing a heated liquid from a plurality of nozzles onto a substrate. The modular dispensing system comprises a plurality of manifold segments and a plurality of dispensing modules. Each of the manifold segments has a supply passage and a distribution passage and is configured to supply a flow of heated liquid from the supply passage to the distribution passage. The manifold segments are interconnected in side-by-side relationship so that the supply passages are in fluid communication. Each of the dispensing modules has a liquid passageway coupled in fluid communication with the distribution passage of a corresponding one of the adhesive manifolds for receiving the flow of the heated liquid. Each dispensing module is operative for dispensing heated liquid from one of the nozzles onto the substrate. The modular dispensing system further includes a plurality of hot air manifolds each respectively coupled to a corresponding one of the dispensing modules. Each hot air manifold includes an air plenum having an air inlet capable of receiving process air and an air outlet and a heating element operative for heating process air flowing from the air inlet to the air outlet. The air outlet of each hot air module is coupled in fluid communication with a corresponding one of the nozzles.
In another embodiment of the invention, a hot air manifold is provided for a modular dispensing system having a plurality of modular manifold segments, a plurality of dispensing modules, and a plurality of nozzles. Each dispensing module is coupled in fluid communication with a corresponding one of the modular manifold segments so as to receive heated liquid received and coupled in fluid communication with a corresponding one of the nozzles for dispensing heated liquid therefrom. The hot air manifold includes a body with a heating element, an air inlet capable of receiving process air, an air outlet adapted to be coupled in fluid communication with a corresponding one of the nozzles, and an air plenum extending from the air inlet to the air outlet. The heating element is operative for heating process air flowing from the air inlet to the air outlet. The air plenum is dimensioned to create a pressure drop of the process air between the air inlet and the air outlet of less than about 10% of the initial pressure at the air inlet.
In another embodiment of the invention, a hot air manifold is provided for a modular dispensing system having a plurality of adhesive manifold segments and a plurality of dispensing modules in which each dispensing module is operatively attached to and coupled in fluid communication with a corresponding one of the adhesive manifold segments. The hot air manifold comprises a hot air manifold body having an air inlet adapted to be coupled in fluid communication with a process air supply, an air outlet adapted to be coupled in fluid communication with only one of the dispensing modules, and an air passage extending from the air inlet to the air outlet. The manifold further includes a flat heater positioned within the air passage and operative for heating process air flowing from the air inlet to the air outlet.
In another embodiment of the invention, a hot air manifold is provided for a modular dispensing system having a plurality of modular manifold segments, a plurality of dispensing modules, and a plurality of nozzles. Each dispensing module is coupled in fluid communication with a corresponding one of the modular manifold segments so as to receive heated liquid received and coupled in fluid communication with a corresponding one of the nozzles for dispensing heated liquid therefrom. The hot air manifold comprises a body including an air inlet adapted to be coupled in fluid communication with a process air supply, an air outlet adapted to be coupled in fluid communication with only one of the dispensing modules, an air plenum extending from the air inlet to the air outlet, and a heating element in thermal contact with the body. The heating element is operative for heating process air flowing in the air plenum from the air inlet to the air outlet.
The present invention dramatically reduces the exterior dimensions of hot air manifolds used in the dispensing of heated adhesives. The hot air modules of the present invention increase the efficiency of the heat transfer from the heating elements to the process air and do so in a body of reduced dimensions without introducing a significant pressure drop in the air passageways of the module. The hot air modules of the present invention also improve the control over the temperature of the exhausted process air, especially for relatively high air flow rates, and are highly responsive to changes in the temperature of the associated heating elements. The hot air modules of the present invention are readily adaptable to modular adhesive dispensing applications, as an individual hot air manifold can be provided for each adhesive manifold module and dispensing module in a bank of dispensing manifolds and modules.
The hot air modules of the present invention are also useful in non-modular systems having conventional adhesive manifolds because each can provide heated process air to an individual dispensing module attached to the conventional adhesive manifold. In particular, the hot air modules of the present invention allow the air pressure, flow rate, and/or perhaps air temperature to be individually adjusted among the dispensing modules in multi-stream dispensing systems having either modular or conventional adhesive manifolds. Furthermore, because each hot air module is dedicated to one dispensing module, a high degree of control over the characteristics of the heated process provided to each dispensing module is simply provided. For example, a flow control device, such as a needle valve, can be installed on the air inlet to each hot air manifold so that the pressure and flow rate are easily and individually adjustable for each dispensing module, whether served by a unique process air source or by a common hot air manifold.
Various advantages, objectives, and features of the invention will become more readily apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art upon review of the following detailed description of the preferred embodiments, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
Although the invention will be described next in connection with certain embodiments, the invention is not limited to practice in any one specific type of adhesive dispensing system. Exemplary adhesive dispensing systems in which the principles of the invention can be used are commercially available, for example, from Nordson Corporation (Westlake, Ohio) and such commercially available adhesive dispensing systems may be adapted for monitoring the application process in accordance with the principles of the invention. The description of the invention is intended to cover all alternatives, modifications, and equivalent arrangements as may be included within the spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims. In particular, those skilled in the art will recognize that the components of the invention described herein could be arranged in multiple different ways.
With reference to
With reference to
The flat heater 12 may be any flat, two-dimensional heater having the desired air heating ability and sized to be positioned within the housing halves 14, 16. Typically, the flat heater 12 must have the ability to heat the process air discharged from air outlet 22 to a process temperature between about 250° F. and about 450° F. To that end, the flat heater 12 must have an area and a power density adequate to heat the process air to the desired process temperature. The flat heater 12 is illustrated in
The heating element 26 includes a pair of stud terminations 27, 28 that are connected by conventional power transmission cables 29, 30 to a temperature controller 32. The power transmission cables 29, 30 are sealingly captured within a pair of openings provided by semicircular notches 31 in the upper housing half 14 that are registered with corresponding ones of semicircular notches 33 in the lower housing half 16 when the housing halves 14, 16 are mated. The temperature controller 32 is operative for providing electrical energy that is resistively dissipated by the heating element 26 to produce thermal energy used for heating the process air flowing from air inlet 18 to air outlet 22. The flat heater 12 or one of the housing halves 14, 16 may be provided with a conventional temperature sensor (not shown), such as a resistance temperature detector (RTD), a thermistor or a thermocouple, for sensing the temperature of heater 12 and for providing a feedback signal for use by the temperature controller 32 in regulating the temperature of the flat heater 12.
In use and as best shown in
Each of the air plenums 17, 19 is generally shaped as a parallelepiped open space having a rectangular cross-section when viewed normal to any face of the parallelepiped and having rectangular dimensions consisting of a length L and a width (into and out of the plane of the page of
With reference to
A flow control device 46, such as a needle valve, may be provided in conduit 42 for controlling the flow rate and/or pressure of process air provided to air inlet 44. The flow control device 46 individualizes the control over the flow rate and/or air pressure of the process air applied to the dispensing module 50. As a result and as shown in
Although not shown in
With continued reference to
Each of the air passageways 38a-c is generally shaped as a parallelepiped open space having a rectangular cross-section when viewed normal to any face of the parallelepiped and having rectangular dimensions consisting of a length L, and a width extending into and out of the plane of the page of
In use and with reference to
With reference to
Modular manifold segment 67 incorporates various internal distribution channels that provide respective flows of hot melt adhesive, heated process air, and actuation air to dispensing module 63, which is pneumatically actuated although the invention is not so limited. In particular, a gear pump (not shown), which is attached to an unfilled corner of modular manifold segment 67, pumps hot melt adhesive from a central supply passage 65 to a distribution passage 69 coupled in fluid communication with the dispensing module 63. Modular manifold segments 67 suitable for use in the present invention are described, for example, in commonly-assigned U.S. Pat. No. 6,296,463, entitled “Segmented Metering Die for Hot Melt Adhesives or Other Polymer Melts,” and U.S. Pat. No. 6,422,428 having the same title. It is appreciated that, as an attribute of the modular system design, an adhesive dispensing system may generally include multiple dispensing modules 63, as necessitated by the parameters of the dispensing application. Specifically, a plurality of modular manifold segments 67, each having a supply passage 65 and a distribution passage 69, may be interconnected in a side-by-side relationship in which the supply passages 65 are in fluid communication with each other and with a source of heated liquid, and each of the distribution passages 69 are in fluid communication with a corresponding dispensing module 63. Each of the modular manifold segments 67 and dispensing modules 63 may be associated with a corresponding hot air manifold 60 for providing an individual supply of heated process air relating to the heated liquid dispensed by each dispensing module 63. In such a configuration, each of the hot air manifolds 60 may individually tailor a characteristic of the heated process air, such as air temperature, air pressure or air flow rate, relating to the heated liquid dispensed to a corresponding dispensing module 63. In addition, the compact dimensions of hot air manifold 60 cooperate with the compact dimensions of the modular manifold segments 67 to provide a compact, modular dispensing system.
With continued reference to
Hot air manifold 60 also includes an adhesive passageway 76 capable of transferring heated hot melt adhesive dispensed from dispensing module 63 to nozzle 73a. Adhesive passageway 76 receives hot melt adhesive through a slotted adhesive inlet 77 formed in a generally-planar upper surface 78 of the hot air manifold 60 and routes the hot melt adhesive to an adhesive outlet 80. The nozzle 73a includes an adhesive passageway 79 coupled in fluid communication with adhesive passageway 76 and terminating in an outlet 79a for discharging the hot melt adhesive.
With continued reference to
With reference to
Air inlet 84 is connected by an air passageway 100 with a source of process air (not shown). Air outlet 86 includes two air openings 102, 104 near opposite ends of a slot or recess 82 recessed beneath the floor surface 90 that helps to channel the heated process air into the air openings 102, 104. The air openings 102, 104 provide the heated process air to a corresponding pair of process air passageways 106, of which one is shown, that direct the heated process air to a process air passageway 105 in nozzle 73a. The heated process air heats the dispensing nozzle to ensure proper dispensing and may be emitted from an outlet 105a of process air passageway 105 for, possibly, manipulating a property of the discharged hot melt adhesive.
An elongate, open-ended chamber 108 is provided in hot air manifold 60 for receiving a cartridge heating element 66a of cartridge heater assembly 66. Heat is transferred from the cartridge heating element 66a to the metal forming the hot air manifold 60 and, subsequently, is transferred by the surfaces defining recess 82 to process air flowing in shallow recess 82 from air inlet 84 to air outlet 86.
With continued reference to
Recess 82 is generally shaped as a parallelepiped open space having a rectangular cross-section, when viewed normal to any face of the parallelepiped, and having rectangular dimensions consisting of a length L1, a width W1, and a depth, D. The rectangular dimensions of recess 82 are selected to provide efficient heat transfer with an acceptable pressure drop between the air inlet 84 and the air outlet 86. If a value of, for example, the width of the recess 82 is selected, a depth and a length satisfying these requirements may be calculated numerically as indicated below or may be determined empirically or experimentally. Typically, a pressure drop of less than about 10% of the pressure at the air inlet 84 is desired in the flow path between the air inlet 84 and air outlet 86. To achieve such performance with a length of less than about 5 inches and a width of less than about 1 inch, the depth of the recess 82 should generally be in the range of about 5 mils to about 20 mils, and may be as large as about 30 mils. Generally, the heat transfer rate from the inwardly-facing surfaces of recess 82 to the process air flowing in the recess 82 increases with decreasing depth, and the pressure drop through the recess 82 also increases with decreasing depth. The increased pressure drop may be offset by increasing the length and width of the recess 82.
According to the principles of the invention, the flow path for process air in the air passageway or air plenum of a hot air manifold, such as one of the hot air manifolds 10, 34 and 60, may be modeled to predict a set of optimized dimensions that promotes efficient heat transfer from the manifold to the circulating process air and that minimizes the pressure drop in the air plenum or air passageway between the air inlet and the air outlet. In particular, the physical behavior of the hot air manifold may be approximated by solving appropriate heat transfer and pressure drop equations mathematically to simulate the performance of the hot air manifold. Input parameters may be varied to study the approximated physical behavior.
The heat transfer and pressure drop equations are solved numerically by suitable software applications, such as MATHCAD® (Mathsoft, Inc., Cambridge, Mass.), implemented on a suitable electronic computer or microprocessor, which is operated so as to perform the physical performance approximation. The software application MATHCAD® internally converts all units to a common or consistent set of units, such as SI metric units or English units, as understood by a person of ordinary skill in the art. A set of initial conditions is defined by assigning initial values to the variables and assigning numeric values to the constants. The equations are then solved numerically to provide a set of optimized dimensions for the flow path of process air in the hot air manifold. Specifically, required length of the flow path and pressure drop are determined for a given flow path width and depth to achieve a desired temperature for the output process air. The pressure drop increases slightly when the flow path is folded or convoluted to provide a multi-segment path consisting of a plurality, n, of segments. It is contemplated that the model of the flow path for process air in the air passageway or air plenum of the hot air manifold and the numerical solution for optimized dimensions may account for obstructions or occlusions in the flow path. For example, the model may be modified to include piecewise continuous flow paths having differing dimensions.
The system of equations and a sample set of input parameters are provided by the following description.
In the preceding description, the average pressure, Pavg, represents the average of the pressure at the air inlet and the pressure at the air outlet. The pressure drop equations in the preceding description originate from a journal article entitled “Friction-factor Equation Spans All Fluid Flow Regimes” authored by Stuart W. Churchill and published in Chemical Engineering, Nov. 7, 1977, pp. 91-92. All heat transfer equations in the preceding description are derived from Perry's Chemical Engineers' Handbook, McGraw-Hill 5th Edition (1973) and Chemical Engineering Reference Manual, Professional Publications, Inc., 5th Edition (1996).
With reference to
Typically, a pressure drop of less than about 10% is desired in the flow path between the air inlet and air outlet. Generally, to achieve such performance for a length of less than about 5 inches and a width of less than about 1 inch, the recess depth should be in the range of about 5 mils to about 20 mils. However, the present invention is not so limited and the recess depth will depend upon length and width, among other variables.
As is apparent from
According to the principles of the invention, the dimensions of the hot air manifold are minimized for space savings and, to that end, the length of the flow path may be selected from the calculation that provides an acceptable pressure drop and that will concomitantly minimize the dimensions of the hot air manifold. For example and with reference to
As is apparent from
It is appreciated by a person of ordinary skill that the optimized dimensions for the recess determined from the numerical solution of the model may be used as a basis for subsequent empirical measurements based on experiment or observation that adjust the optimized dimensions for physical behavior of the hot air manifold only approximated by the model. It is also appreciated by a person of ordinary skill in the art that a set of optimized dimensions may be determined empirically based on observation or experience rather than by numerical solution of a model approximating the physical behavior of the hot air manifold.
While the present invention has been illustrated by a description of various preferred embodiments and while these embodiments have been described in considerable detail in order to describe the best mode of practicing the invention, it is not the intention of the applicants to restrict or in any way limit the scope of the appended claims to such detail. Additional advantages and modifications within the spirit and scope of the invention will readily appear to those skilled in the art. The invention itself should only be defined by the appended claims, wherein we claim:
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application Serial No. 60/352,397, filed Jan. 28, 2002, the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
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