This application claims the benefit of priority under 35 U.S.C. §119 of German Utility Model 20 2010 011 404.7 filed Aug. 13, 2010, the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
The present invention pertains to an electric heating device, especially for an injection molding tool, with a material tube, through which passes a duct for a flowable material, with a heater for heating the flowable material when this is present in the duct, wherein the heater is pushed over the material tube or is placed around the material tube, so that the material tube is mounted in an opening passing through the heater along the direction in which the material tube extends, and wherein the heater is arranged detachably at the material tube, and with a thermocouple and to a process for manufacturing same.
Such electric heating devices are used, for example, in injection molding dies. They have a material tube with a duct for the flowable material and a heater, which surrounds the outer wall of the material tube and can be removed from the material tube.
Furthermore, accurate temperature monitoring is important, which is achieved in practice by providing a thermocouple, whose sensor tip is brought into contact with the material tube and is fixed there. This means that the thermocouple must pass through the heater, i.e., in a hole, which is prepared in the heater for this purpose and into which the thermocouple must be inserted. An example of such an electric heating device is known, for example, from DE 10 2008 055 640 A1.
It was found in practice that the service lives of thermocouples and heaters, which are used in electric heating devices, are different from each other in practice. However, it is complicated, if at all possible, in the prior-art embodiments to replace a defective thermocouple of a still functioning heater or to use a functioning thermocouple of a defective heater in conjunction with a new heater that is able to function.
An object is therefore to provide an electric heater that makes it possible to replace the thermocouple in a simple manner and rapidly and a process for manufacturing same.
The electric heating device according to the present invention comprises a material tube, through which passes a duct for a flowable material and a heater for heating the flowable material when this is present in the duct. The suitable heaters are especially heaters in which the heating element is formed by a heating layer applied to the outer or inner jacket surface according to a plasma process, by printing or in another manner, thick-layer heaters, heaters with a heating element that is inserted into a groove prepared in the inner or outer jacket surface of the heater, and also heaters in which the heating element is embedded in a powder or granular material between the jacket surfaces.
The heater is arranged detachably at the material tube and is especially pushed detachably over the material tube or is placed detachably around the material tube, so that the material tube is received in an opening passing through along the direction in which the material tube extends. This does not expressly require that the material tube must be surrounded by the heater in all directions. Embodiments in which the heater has a recess passing through it in parallel to the longitudinal axis thereof are included as well.
Furthermore, the electric heating device comprises at least one thermocouple.
The thermocouple is arranged according to the present invention at least in some sections between a surface of the material tube facing away from the duct and the surface of the heater facing the duct, so that the thermocouple and heater form separate assembly units when the heater is detached from the material tube.
The present invention is based on the discovery that the defined positioning and fixing of the thermocouple, which is absolutely necessary for obtaining reliable and reproducible measured temperature values, can be achieved when arranging the thermocouple between the heater and the material tube by an interaction with these components. This entails that when one of these components is removed, the fixing of the thermocouple is automatically no longer guaranteed, either, so that it can be detached easily or by itself from the other assembly units of the electric heating device.
It is especially advantageous if, when separating the heater from the material tube, the thermocouple and heater form separate assembly units, which can fall apart and thus they are not, as in a less preferred embodiment of the connection compared to this, connected to one another in an easily detachable manner by holding means, which do not bring about a positioning and fixing of the thermocouple. In the preferred embodiment with separate assembly units, which can fall apart, it is, on the contrary, sufficient for this to pull off the heater from the material tube to replace the thermocouple and, if necessary, to tilt it, unless the thermocouple had already fallen off in the process.
In an especially compact embodiment of the electric heating device, the thermocouple is guided, at least in some sections, in a groove in the material tube or in a groove of the heater. It is especially advantageous if the groove passes completely through the material tube or heater in the direction in which the material tube extends, i.e., in the direction of flow of the material to be injected.
In an advantageous variant of the present invention, the groove is prepared in the heater by deforming the heater. It was found that, for example, compaction of the heater on a calibrating mandrel, which has a burr in the form of the groove to be prepared, leads to suitable grooves, which permits, moreover, cost-effective manufacture, because, contrary to the situation seen especially in case of the use of grooves prepared by machining, no additional process step has to be performed any more.
A preferred process for manufacturing an electric heating device according to the present invention correspondingly has the steps of manufacturing a heater, inserting the thermocouple into a groove of the heater or of the material tube and pushing the heater with the thermocouple inserted into the groove over the material tube, wherein the thermocouple inserted into the groove is jammed during or after the pushing over of the heater. Provisions are made in an especially advantageous embodiment for the groove to be arranged in the heater and to be impressed into the heater during the compaction performed in connection with the manufacture of the heater. This can be achieved especially by the compaction being performed on a calibrating mandrel, which has a burr in the form of the desired groove.
An especially simple manner of positioning and fixing the thermocouple is obtained if the thermocouple is fixed by being clamped a least in some sections, especially in the area of its sensor tip, between the heater and material tube. Clamping in the area of the sensor tip also ensures, moreover, intimate thermal contact between the temperature-sensitive area of the thermocouple and the material tube, which makes possible especially reliable measurements.
There are a number of possibilities of bringing about this clamping action, each of which has different advantages.
Provisions are made in a first embodiment, which is advantageous because of the simple and cost-effective possibility of manufacture associated with it, for a reduction of the cross section of the opening passing through the heater to be present in the area in which the sensor tip is located, so that the clamping action is produced.
Provisions are made in an alternative advantageous embodiment for an end section of the thermocouple to be guided in a groove in the material tube or in a groove in the heater, whose depth decreases in the direction of the sensor tip of the thermocouple to a value that is lower than the diameter of the sensor tip, so that the clamping action is produced. This embodiment makes possible an especially compact and space-saving design.
Provisions are made in yet another embodiment for the heater to have a recess, into which a wedge can be inserted, wherein in the state in which it is inserted into the recess, said wedge clamps the sensor tip of the thermocouple between heater and material tube. The special advantage of this embodiment is that even removal of the wedge is sufficient to make it possible to replace the thermocouple. The advantage of a compact design can be additionally embodied in a variant of this embodiment if the wedge has a guide for receiving a section, especially of the sensor tip, of the thermocouple. In addition, the wedge may be shaped in this variant such that it surrounds the sensor tip of the thermocouple on all surfaces that are not in contact with the material tube, so that there is no direct contact any more between the heater and sensor tip of the thermocouple. If the material from which the wedge is made is selected properly, thermal uncoupling from the heater can be achieved as a result, which contributes to coming close to the ideal situation, in which the temperature values determined depend exclusively on the temperature of the material to be injected.
Provisions are made in another embodiment for the heater to comprise a spring element, which presses the thermocouple onto the material tube, so that the clamping action is produced. This approach has the advantage that the risk of pinching of the thermocouple, which would lead to damage thereto, is minimized because an effective limitation of the forces acting on the thermocouple can be achieved by selecting the stress of the spring element.
Moreover, especially reliable measured values can be determined with the thermocouple if the sensor tip of the thermocouple is clamped indirectly between the heater and material tube via a heat-conductive piece of material, which is thermally uncoupled from the heater and has a groove or hole, in which the sensor tip of the thermocouple is mounted.
In another advantageous variant of the present invention, the thermocouple has a positioning section, in which the cross section of the thermocouple is larger in at least one direction of the cross-sectional area than in sections of the thermocouple located adjacent to this section, and the heater has means for locking this section against being displaced in and/or opposite the direction in which the thermocouple extends. It is ensured in this embodiment that no displacement of the thermocouple takes place when the heater is pushed over the material tube, so that the correct positioning of the sensor tip at the desired site continues to be guaranteed.
An especially simple possibility of embodying the positioning section is to attach a sleeve to the thermocouple, e.g., by pressing, soldering or welding. However, it is also possible to deform the thermocouple in a defined area, e.g., to press the thermocouple flat in the direction of the jacket tube, as a result of which the thermocouple would expand, i.e., widen in the direction at right angles thereto, which is located in the cross-sectional surface.
The positioning sections are then advantageously fixed by a recess in the projection or in a projection on the surface of the heater, which faces the jacket tube.
The present invention will be explained in more detail below on the basis of drawings. The various features of novelty which characterize the invention are pointed out with particularity in the claims annexed to and forming a part of this disclosure. For a better understanding of the invention, its operating advantages and specific objects attained by its uses, reference is made to the accompanying drawings and descriptive matter in which preferred embodiments of the invention are illustrated.
In the drawings:
a is a three-dimensional view of the general design of an electric heating device according to the present invention;
b is the heater pulled off from the electric heating device in
c is a top view of the electric heating device from
d is a section along line A-A in
e is an enlarged section along line B-B in
f is an enlarged section along line B-B in
g is an enlarged section along line B-B in
a is an enlarged section along line C-C from
b is an enlarged view of detail D from the view in
a is an enlarged section along line C-C in
b is an enlarged view of detail D from the view in
a is an enlarged section along line C-C from
b is an enlarged view of detail D from the view in
a is an enlarged section along line C-C in
b is an enlarged view of detail D from the view in
a is an enlarged section along line C-C in
b is an enlarged view of detail D from the view in
a is an enlarged section along line C-C in
b is an enlarged sectional view of detail D from the view in
a is an enlarged section along line C-C from
b is an enlarged view of detail D from the view in
a is an enlarged section along line C-C from
b is an enlarged view of detail D from the view in
a is an enlarged section along line C-C from
b is an enlarged view of detail D from the view in
a is an enlarged section along line C-C from
b is an enlarged view of detail D from the view in
a is an enlarged section along line C-C from
b is an enlarged view of detail D from the view in
a is an enlarged section along line C-C from
b is an enlarged view of detail D from the view in
a is an enlarged section along line C-C from
b is an enlarged view of detail D from the view in
a is an enlarged view of detail Y from the view in
b is an enlarged view of detail Y from the view in
Referring to the drawings in particular, identical reference numbers are used for identical components of the same exemplary embodiments in all figures.
a shows a three-dimensional view of the general design of an electric heating device 100 according to the present invention with material tube 101, heater 102 and thermocouple 103. The material tube has an injection nozzle 104 at the end at which the flowable material is discharged during the operation. The heating element 105 of heater 102, which can be supplied with supply voltage via the connector plug 106, protrudes from the heater 102 on the side facing the machine, not shown, at which the electric heating device 100 is arranged. The thermocouple 103 is connected via a connector plug 107.
b shows the heater 102 pulled off from the electric heating device from
It shall be pointed out, in particular, in connection with
Another essential point, which is linked with this, is that the heater 102 is a separate assembly unit not connected to the thermocouple 103. Even though the thermocouple 103 may possibly remain in groove 108, depending on the orientation of the heater 102 when the heater 102 is pulled off from the material tube 101, thermocouple 103 and heater 102 fall apart as two separate assembly units at least after a suitable motion of heater 102.
A section line A-A is defined in
Another essential feature, which can be recognized in
Furthermore, two section lines B-B are shown in
e through 15b discussed below show enlarged views of various possibilities of designing the general structure of the electric heating device 100, as it is described in
e shows a first possibility of arranging the thermocouple 103 of a heater 102 with a ring-shaped cross section 102, which completely surrounds a material tube 101 with ring-shaped cross-section, through which a concentric duct 109 passes. Thermocouple 103, whose diameter is designated by d, is arranged in a groove 108, whose extension is greater than the diameter, so that thermocouple 103 and heater 102 fall apart when the heater 102 is pulled off from the material tube 101.
f shows an enlarged section along line B-B in
g shows an enlarged detail along line B-B in
a through 14b show different manners in which the general design of an electric heating device according to
a shows an enlarged sectional view along line C-C in
a shows an enlarged section along line C-C in
a and
a and
a and
a and
a and b show a variant of the embodiment according to
a shows an enlarged section along line C-C in
a and 10b show a clamping mechanism that differs from that shown in
a and 11b show a variant of the embodiment according to
The embodiment according to
The embodiment according to
a shows an enlarged section along line C-C in
a and 15b show as examples two different embodiments of the present invention, in which the position of the sensor tip of the thermocouple 103 arranged between the material tube 101 and heater 102 is better defined by providing a positioning section, so that it is ensured that when the heater 102 with thermocouple 103 is pushed over the material tube 101, no displacement of the thermocouple 103 will take place. A sleeve 180, which is pushed over the thermocouple 103 and is fixed there, e.g., by welding, soldering or pressing, is used as a positioning section in the embodiments shown. By providing the sleeve 180 at the thermocouple 103, the cross section of the thermocouple is enlarged in the positioning section.
A projection 181, which meshes with the positioning section and which thus blocks a displacement of the thermocouple 103 in the direction in which the heater 102 is attached, is arranged in
In addition to the projection 181 shown in
While specific embodiments of the invention have been shown and described in detail to illustrate the application of the principles of the invention, it will be understood that the invention may be embodied otherwise without departing from such principles.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20 2010 011 404.7 | Aug 2010 | DE | national |