Information
-
Patent Grant
-
6169848
-
Patent Number
6,169,848
-
Date Filed
Thursday, January 6, 200024 years ago
-
Date Issued
Tuesday, January 2, 200123 years ago
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Inventors
-
Original Assignees
-
Examiners
- Ferensic; Denise L.
- Joyce; Andrea M.
Agents
- Wright; Jerry G.
- Flehr Hohbach Test Albritton & Herbert LLP
-
CPC
-
US Classifications
Field of Search
US
- 034 273
- 034 274
- 034 426
- 034 427
- 034 68
- 034 62
- 034 543
- 034 545
- 034 553
- 034 90
- 034 618
- 034 624
- 219 388
- 392 307
- 392 417
-
International Classifications
-
Abstract
A cross-direction dryer for typically drying a continuous web of paper or paper to which coating has just been applied provides both for baseline drying and a linear moisture profile by the use of respectively gas and electric heating portions of the heater units. Profile control is normally provided by control of the voltage to electric heating lamps. Such heating lamps are suspended over a large area gas burner to provide a combined increased infrared heat output. Encapsulation of the heating lamps with quartz provides for reradiation of the medium wavelength radiation produced by the gas burner. Thyristor switching for the quartz halogen heat lamps may be located adjacent to each heater unit and cooled by the combustion air for the gas burners.
Description
INTRODUCTION
The present invention is directed to a cross-direction dryer for a machine producing sheet material moving in a machine direction having both gas powered and electric heating portions and more specifically, to a heater for drying moving sheet material such as paper either where uniform moisture content is desired or a recently applied coating to the paper must be dried.
BACKGROUND
Description of Prior Art
Radiant heaters having quartz infrared lamps with tungsten filaments located in the cross-direction of a moving web of paper and which may be individually controlled to provide an even moisture profile are disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 4,908,956. Here the specific technique of power control of the heat lamps is shown.
For drying paper in general for what is termed called baseline drying gas fired infrared burners have been used. In general, such gas infrared drying systems have not been capable of profile control (that is of providing differential heat from one zone or slice of the paper being produced to another).
Thus it is desired to increase the total infrared density or drying capacity of systems such as above while still maintaining the ability to do all of the foregoing in a compact and efficient manner.
OBJECT AND SUMMARY OF INVENTION
It is therefore a general object of the present invention to provide an improved cross-direction dryer for a machine producing sheet material moving in a machine direction having both gas powered and electric heating portions.
In accordance with the above object there is provide a cross-direction dryer for a machine producing sheet material moving in a machine direction perpendicular to the cross-direction, the sheet material having a moisture content and/or a recently applied coating comprising a plurality of heater units arranged side-by-side supported on a common frame spanning the width of the sheet in the cross-direction, each heater unit having both electric and gas powered heating portions.
The gas powered portions each include a large area burner.
The electric portions each include a plurality of high impedance wires suspended over the burner,
Power supply means supply controllable voltages to the wires to provide different heat outputs for each heater unit.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1
is a simplified cross-sectional view of a frame carrying the present invention which spans the width of a paper web in the cross direction.
FIG. 2
is a simplified cross-sectional view substantially taken along the line
2
—
2
of FIG.
1
.
FIG. 3
is an enlarged, detailed cross-sectional view of a portion of FIG.
2
.
FIG. 4
is end view of
FIG. 3
, taken substantially along the lines
4
—
4
.
FIG. 5
is a partial electrical diagram showing an electric portion of the invention.
FIG. 6
is a simplified plan view of the an alternative embodiment of a burner portion of the invention.
DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
FIG. 1
illustrates a moving web of sheet material
25
, such as paper which is being manufactured by a standard paper making machine after being formed through appropriate pressure rollers. It is dried by a plurality of side-by-side combined electric/gas heater units
10
indicated by the dashed lines which are carried by a frame
26
. Heater frame
36
spans the width of the sheet
25
in its cross-direction
27
. The moving sheet of course has a machine direction
28
. Each heater unit
10
, may correspond to a zone of for example six inches, also known as a slice, of the paper being manufactured.
For profile drying purposes the heater unit itself may be divided into smaller, controllable portions. To supply the heater units
10
, frame
26
has a gas input
29
, a combustion air input
31
including an air blower
32
, a 3-phase AC-input
15
, which may be for example 430 volts AC, and finally computer control inputs
22
. The control inputs
22
each individually control thyristor switching units
12
, a pair of which are associated with each heater unit
10
.
An individual heater unit
10
, as shown in greater detail in
FIG. 2
, includes quartz heat lamps
11
, having a tungsten filament which are suspended over the gas burners
33
. Metal grids
34
cover the lamps
11
and burner
33
to protect the moving paper
25
. The grid may be nichrome wire arranged in a screen-type mesh (or quartz glass). Carried by the frame
26
is an air manifold
36
which, also referring to
FIG. 1
, receives air from air blower
32
and the air input
31
. Frame
26
also carries gas pipes
37
and
38
. Both gas and combustion air are intermixed in the common supply pipes
41
and
42
to supply the burners
33
.
Thyristor switches
12
have their heat sinks arranged at the surface of the air manifold
36
so that the combustion air provides cooling for these switches. Finally, the control inputs
22
, drive the thyristor switches
12
as shown.
From an operational point of view the quartz lamps
11
juxtaposed over or suspended over the burners
13
increase the infrared density output of the drying unit. This will be explained below. The lamps
11
are voltage controllable for profile control. The burners
33
provide for baseline drying (that is they dry the entire width of the web). Such drying controls the moisture content of the paper itself, or a coating which has been applied, to a suitable baseline.
The lamps
11
may merely be high impedance wire. But in this embodiment they are quartz lamps (that is a quartz glass tube encapsulating a tungsten filament). The quartz is inherently capable of absorbing the medium wavelength radiation produced by the gas burners
33
. The burners operate at a 1,500 to 2,000° F. to produce such medium wavelength radiation. In contrast, the halogen lamps
11
of tungsten and quartz operate at a higher temperature and thus have a shorter wavelength infrared radiation. From a drying standpoint the medium wavelength radiation provides for a shallow drying effect and the shorter wavelengths provide for deeper drying. Thus the combination in one efficient structure of gas and electric portions provides for increased infrared drying density and capability.
Both
FIGS. 3 and 4
illustrate a typical burner
33
and heat lamps
11
. Burner
33
includes a metal fiber mesh mat
43
which the air and gas supplied by pipe
41
passes through and is ignited to produce flames indicated at
44
. Then a quartz halogen lamp
11
is suspended by a pair of clips
46
(only one is shown). The 3-phase electrical power is indicated at
15
.
FIG. 4
is an end view of an entire heater unit
10
which shows a plurality of side-by-side lamps
11
which may be arranged either parallel to each other in the machine direction or in a cross-direction or in the form of an electrical heating grid, if desired. The protective grid
34
can be a wire mesh type screen or quartz plates.
FIG. 5
illustrates the controller for the quartz halogen lamps
11
. For a typical zone having a single heater unit
10
it includes the thyristor switch
12
located in proximity to the heat lamps and cooled by the combustion air, along with a protection circuit
13
which is driven by the 3-phase line input
15
. This 3-phase line extends to other zones which may number as many as 150.
In a central control location for all of the zones, information as to 3-phase input
15
is tapped off via the instrumentation transformer
16
, and the 3-phrase input is fed into a line sync circuit
17
. This circuit provides an interrupt output
18
at every zero-crossing of the 3-phrase waveforms as discussed in the '956 patent. Phase and information is transferred via line
19
to actuator computer
21
. This computer by means of its control lines
22
drives the thyristor switches in each zone and provides the different power levels for differential drying. Feedback control from a moisture and/or coat weight sensor
20
is provided. These sensors are commercially available.
As thus far described, profile or zone-type drying is possible only with the quartz halogen lamps
11
. However, referring to
FIG. 6
a heater unit
10
may be modified so that the gas burners are separated into, for example, four different zones and the computer actuator
21
may by appropriate valves determine which portion of the gas heater is on or off to provide a differential heat output from zone to zone.
Thus an improved cross direction dryer for a machine producing material has been provided.
Claims
- 1. A cross-direction dryer for a machine producing sheet material moving in a machine direction perpendicular to the cross-direction, the sheet material having a moisture content and/or a recently applied coating comprising:a plurality of heater units arranged side-by-side supported on a common frame spanning the width of said sheet in said cross-direction, each heater unit having both electric and gas powered heating portions, said gas powered portions each including a large area burner, said electric portions each including a plurality of high impedance wires suspended over said burner, and power supply means for supplying controllable voltages to said wires to provide different heat outputs for each said heater unit.
- 2. A cross-direction dryer as in claim 1 where said electric heating portions include quartz tubes encapsulating said wires said quartz having the capability of absorbing medium wavelength radiation produced by said gas powered portions burning at approximately 1500 to 2000° F. and reradiating even while no voltage is applied to said wires.
- 3. A cross-direction dryer as in claim 1 where said gas heating portions include a cross-direction manifold carried by said frame for supplying combustion air to all of said heater units, and said electric heating portions each including a solid state switching module for driving each unit physically located at each unit, said modules being located in proximity to said air manifold to take advantage of the cooling effect of said combustion air.
- 4. A cross-direction dryer as in claim 1 where said large area burner is a mat of metal fiber mesh.
- 5. A cross-direction dryer as in claim 1 where said gas powered portions burn at approximately 1500 to 2000° F. to produce a medium wave length radiation which provides shallow drying and said electric portions operate in a temperature range to provide short wavelength radiation which provides deeper drying.
US Referenced Citations (20)