The invention relates generally to a scalable device for electrochemical treatment of a surface in numerous orientations.
Most electrochemical treatments such as anodizing occur in the tank filled with an electrolyte. Currently, there are a number of solutions for minimizing the mess, drippage and impact of off-gases associated with the local, selective electrochemical treatment of substrates. See U.S. Pat. No. 2,108,700 incorporated herein by this reference.
Some of these solutions attempt to flow the required electrolytes through the treatment tooling and into a collection reservoir. But these solutions may fail to meet the needs of the industry as still much pre-preparation is required to layout plastics and tapes to gather and direct the flow of electrolytes back to the reservoirs, still risking the creation of spillages and doing little to reduce potential off-gases inhaled by the operator.
Other solutions attempt to flow the electrolyte through some holes in the center of the electrode and then recycle the electrolyte through a single, peripheral opening surrounding the electrode. See U.S. Pat. Nos. 9,863,056 and 5,571,389 both incorporated herein by this reference. While this particular approach might work for small treatment areas it may not be scalable to larger treatment areas as eventually the distance between the central electrode holes and the peripheral exhaust becomes too large and such larger tools will inevitably drip.
Consequently, such tools are limited to the treatment of smaller items. Attempts to treat larger items would involve unrealistically large process times, consuming costly labor time and opening up the operator to risk of repetitive strain injuries in handling the tooling for such long periods.
For the electrochemical treatment of large articles there are many processes that employ large process tanks where the whole component for treatment is immersed. This is known as in-tank processing. However, for the manufacture of smaller articles or local repair it is desirable to have a device that can apply electrochemical treatment “out of tank”, locally on a surface of any shape and orientation without creating unwanted drips and runs of the process fluids which could damage the part or create a health hazard for the operator of the device. Furthermore, it is desirable that such a device can easily be increased in scale in order to treat larger surfaces on larger articles, “out of tank” yet maintain the advantages of no drippage and reasonable overall process times.
There are some present devices that can electrochemically treat surfaces without drippage but such devices are limited to small scales, a particular weakness in their design being that they employ only a single fluid inflow and outflow. When trying to scale up such a device, there becomes a point where the outflow is at a distance too far from the inflow, and thereby not able to apply the necessary suction to maintain the advantage of non-drip without interfering with other aspects of the process. For example, if too much suction is applied to such a device, then the porous media does not receive a uniform supply of inflow fluid and cannot uniformly apply the electrochemical treatment. If not enough suction is applied, the incoming fluids will be in excess and unwanted drippage will occur.
The disclosed device, in one example, advantageously fills these needs and addresses the aforementioned deficiencies by providing, in the same electrode, a system of multiple return flow channels in conjunction with a system of multiple supply flow channels. In this way, the distances from the individual alternating supply flow ports and the individual alternating return flow ports can be engineered and optimized to ensure non-drippage performance and uniform electrochemical treatment in a timely fashion.
Consequently, an electrode of this design can be made at much larger sizes and still maintain full functionality. Employing such an electrode design with manifolded systems of supply flows and return flows is believed unique and, although such designs can range from simple to complex, it is now possible to fabricate such designs, at relatively low cost with modern machining and fabricating techniques such as additive manufacturing for example. With such a scalable electrode design, it is now possible to plate or anodize much larger components out of tank thereby avoiding the huge capital cost of an immersion tank plating or anodizing line and associated equipment.
Featured is a tool which applies an electrochemical treatment to a surface in many orientations. Fluid supply channel systems feed fluid to fluid supply ports and fluid return channel systems draw return fluids. Single or multiple electrodes each have an embedded multitude of flow channels. Also included are a porous media and electrical connections.
Preferably, the electrode contains within it, two or more, separated systems comprising multiple channels. One system of channels connects between the fluid supply and the porous media and another system of channels connects between the fluid return and the porous media. The electrode is preferably connected to one of the terminals of a current source and the surface to be treated is connected to the other terminal of the same current source. The system can then be used to electrochemically treat the surface in any orientation. By touching the surface to be treated with the porous media, an electrical circuit is completed. The supply fluid is preferably an electrolyte which flows through the system of fluid supply channels inside the electrode and into the adjacent porous media. The return flow system of channels inside the electrode are also connected to the porous media and apply a suction that draws in excess electrolyte and surrounding ambient gases thereby avoiding oversupply of the electrolyte and avoiding unwanted drippage.
Disclosed is a scalable device for electrochemical treatment of a surface in any orientation and any size.
Also possible is more than one system of fluid supply channels. This may be beneficial if components of the electrolyte composition have to remain separate until the moment of application. Also, the supply fluids could be required for certain steps in the substrate treatment, so one fluid supply system could be a rinse water for example and another fluid supply system supplied from a separate source could be a plating solution. In this way, time would be saved by avoiding a change of tool or fluid supply reservoir.
Also possible is more than one system of return fluid channels. For example one might want to withdraw a large amount of fluid and perhaps even more ambient air/environmental gas, but be limited in the size of available pumps, so rather than one large pump on one return fluid system you could have two of more smaller pumps on two of more return fluid systems. More suction might be required for larger process fluid volumes or lower viscous fluids for example.
A perimeter/surrounding flow system is possible to suck ambient gasses, not through the porous media, but immediately adjacent to it and could be used to more effectively reduce emissions of volatiles from the coating process and lowering exposures to personnel. This additional perimeter flow system could be run as suction from another pump or even a fan for improved movement of gasses or improved drying of product coating. The perimeter flow system could be worked in reverse and supplied by warm air from the pump or fan to aid drying of the treatment coating. The perimeter flow system could be worked in reverse and supplied by certain gases to form a local, inert atmosphere.
The resulting pattern or arrangement of fluid supply ports and fluid return ports on the electrode bounding surfaces may be configured in a number of different ways. One embodiment could have alternating supply ports and return ports, which may be more amenable to scaling for larger electrodes. Another example might be groups of supply ports and groups of return ports. Serpentine arrangements of supply ports and return ports, and/or spiral and double spiral arrangements.
The shape of the individual supply ports and return ports may also be different, for example, slots, circular, elliptical, rectangular. The bounding faces of the electrode do not need to be planar. The electrode can be curved to more appropriately contour with the substrate to be treated. The electrode and the surrounding tool can be manufactured from flexible materials to accommodate to the surface of curved shapes. Castellations could be used to better secure the porous media as well as bringing in the supply fluid at different depth levels in the porous media compared to the return flow which would resist the fluids short circuiting.
Also, an additional component, conductive or non-conductive may be inserted between the electrode and porous media. This could be used to better guide flow into the porous media and reduce short circuiting, and to improve and further refine flow distribution from an electrode with larger ports.
The current supply does not need to be electrically active—for example, to use the benefits of the device to rinse in a non-drip fashion.
The device may be small and light enough to be handheld or larger for use with a robot. COBOT or other machinery where the device can be moved over the component or the component can be moved over the device.
The fluid supply may be a pump, a syringe like device, a gravity fed reservoir, and/or a fan. Fluid collection may be the suction end of a pump or fan. The porous media material may be of different porosities for different fluids and processes. The supply current may be direct, alternating, pulse or pulse reverse. The electrode may be a stainless steel for anodizing. The electrode may be titanium coated with platinum, Mixed Metal Oxide (MMO), or other coatings to enhance current transfer.
The incoming and outgoing fluids may be cooled with a chiller device or heated as appropriate with a temperature-controlled, resistive heating element or thermoelectric means.
The disclosed device is believed unique when compared with other known devices and solutions because, by incorporating a plurality of systems of fluid supply channels and systems of fluid return channels integrated within the same solid electrode, fluid supply ports and fluid return ports can be arranged and placed in close proximity to each other on the faces of the electrode to enable precise control and balance of the flows into and out of the porous media, avoiding fluid drippage.
The balance of the fluid supply flows and fluid return flows can be important to the successful operation of the non-drip system and may depend on many parameters such as the flow rate, viscosity of the fluids, porosity of the porous media and of course the precise geometry of the fluid flow channel systems within the electrode. Leveraging modern engineering software tools such as multi-phase computational fluid dynamics, it is possible to design, size and optimize the precise channel system dimensions and routing in order to calculate the pump rates required for the supply flows and return flows. These pump rates can then be set into the system with the use of a pump controller.
In particular, this unique design approach enables the electrode system to be easily scaled enabling selective plating, anodizing, electrophoretic coating, electropolishing, stripping, or other electrochemical processes to be executed in a non-drip fashion on much larger components. Consequently, this removes the previous limitation that has led to large components necessarily being treated in tanks.
The disclosed device is believed unique in that by leveraging modern manufacturing techniques, it is significantly structurally different from other known devices or solutions.
A plurality of fluid supply channel systems can be integrated within the solid of the electrode enabling a uniform supply of different fluids to the porous media. The cross-section of the channels and the exit shapes can be custom designed, optimized, and vary in shape and size to ensure uniform distribution of flow delivered to the porous media. A plurality of fluid return channel systems are preferably separate from the fluid supply channel systems and yet are still integrated within the same solid electrode structure. The cross-section of the channels and the exit shapes can be custom designed, optimized, and vary in shape and size to ensure uniform collection of flow of excess fluids and ambient gases from the porous media avoiding drippage and starving of flow in the porous media.
The design approach can be thought of as arranging multiple channels systems in the solid electrode and manifolding these channels towards several individual fluid supply reservoirs and fluid return reservoirs. Another design strategy is to consider the number of channel systems required and then arrange them to gather into individual plenums that can be arranged as chamber/pillar structures and then each can be connected to the pumps for supply flow or return flow control. The advent of modern additive manufacturing techniques makes this approach possible.
So, further unique advantages are supply fluid ports and return fluid ports in the electrode that do not have to be in the same plane allowing more options to avoid short circuiting of supply fluids and return fluids, and a peripheral arrangement of openings that can be used solely for collection of noxious off-gases or supply of inerting gases or rinsing fluids or additives.
Featured is an electrochemical treatment system comprising a housing including a treatment fluid supply manifold, a fluid return manifold, and an electrode section connected to the treatment fluid supply manifold. A plurality of treatment fluid supply ports feed fluid through or across the electrode and a plurality of fluid return ports proximate the treatment fluid supply ports are connected to the fluid return manifold. A porous pad is coupled to the electrode section for contacting a substrate to be treated and receives the treatment fluid via the plurality of treatment fluid supply ports. The plurality of fluid return ports remove spent and excess treatment fluid and gases from the substrate, the surrounding air, and the porous pad.
The treatment fluid is preferably an electrolyte. The system may further include a treatment fluid reservoir coupled to the treatment fluid supply manifold via a first pump. The system may further include a return flow reservoir coupled to the fluid return manifold via a second pump. A controller automatically operates the first pump and the second pump at rates which fully disperse the treatment fluid throughout the pad while limiting leakage of treatment fluid from the pad.
The system may further include a power supply electrically interconnected between the electrode and the substrate. The treatment fluid supply manifold may include linear channels each over an array of fluid supply ports and the return manifold may include linear channels each over an array of fluid return ports. The fluid supply manifold linear channels may alternate with the return fluid manifold linear channels. The array of fluid supply ports may be a 1 by n array where n is greater than 1 and/or the return fluid ports may be in a 1 by n array where n is greater than 1. The fluid supply manifold may further include a duct interconnecting the linear channels over the array of fluid supply ports and the return fluid manifold may further include a duct interconnecting the linear channels over the array of return fluid ports.
The electrode section may further include a peripheral fluid return and the pad may be internal to the peripheral fluid return. The electrode may further include a peripheral fluid return manifold coupled to the peripheral fluid ports.
The system housing can include an internal wall separating the housing into a treatment fluid supply chamber and a return fluid chamber. The fluid supply chamber may be located between the wall and the electrode bottom section and the fluid supply ports are in communication with the fluid supply chamber. The fluid supply manifold may include the fluid supply chamber and a conduit extends from the fluid supply chamber through the wall. The fluid return manifold may include the fluid return chamber and conduits extending through the internal wall to the fluid return ports in the bottom electrode section.
The fluid supply manifold may include a first plenum and the fluid return manifold may include a second plenum nestled with the first plenum. The pad may include non-woven fibers in a three-dimensional web.
In one system, there are first and second treatment fluid manifolds each connected to a sub plurality of treatment fluid supply ports and each connected via a pump to a different treatment fluid reservoir.
In one system, there are one or more treatment cells constructed so that each cell may be operated independently, or together with any other cell, each cell comprising an fluid supply manifold, a fluid return manifold, an electrode, and a plurality of fluid supply ports and fluid return ports. The system may be flexible, allowing the system to maintain contact with a curved surface. For example, the electrode can be made of wires, grids, meshes, fibers, conductive polymers, or other flexible materials.
Also featured is a method of electrochemically treating a substrate. The substrate contacts an electrode fitted with a porous pad, a treatment fluid is driven through supply ports in the electrode and to multiple locations of the porous pad and spent and excess treatment fluid and gases from multiple locations of the porous pad are urged through return ports in the electrode at a rate which limits treatment fluid leakage from the pad while urging the treatment fluid to fully disperse throughout the extent of the pad.
The method may include pumping the treatment fluid from a reservoir to the electrode, and pumping the spent and excess treatment fluid from the pad. The method may further include connecting a power supply between the electrode and the substrate.
Other objects, features and advantages will occur to those skilled in the art from the following description of a preferred embodiment and the accompanying drawings, in which:
Aside from the preferred embodiment or embodiments disclosed below, this invention is capable of other embodiments and of being practiced or being carried out in various ways. Thus, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited in its application to the details of construction and the arrangements of components set forth in the following description or illustrated in the drawings. If only one embodiment is described herein, the claims hereof are not to be limited to that embodiment. Moreover, the claims hereof are not to be read restrictively unless there is clear and convincing evidence manifesting a certain exclusion, restriction, or disclaimer.
The present invention is directed to scalable device for electrochemical treatment of a surface in any orientation
In one version, the device of
When in a plating or anodizing mode or employing processes requiring the supply of current, electrode 3a is electrically connected to one terminal of the activated power supply 5. Substrate 8 is electrically connected to the other terminal of the activated power supply 5.
The tool is then placed in a position, touching the surface to be treated 8 and moved relative to the surface, by hand or with help of automation, over the substrate 8, thereby completing an electrical circuit from the power supply 5 through the electrode 3a and fluid in the porous pad 4 to the substrate 8 and back to the power supply 5. Pad 4 may be structure of fibers (e.g., non-woven) in a three-dimensional web, see, for example, U.S. Pat. No. 2,958,593 incorporated herein by this reference. Sponges, scouring pads, and the like, may also serve as the pad.
Fluid is supplied from a reservoir 1 such as a bottle, via pump 6a to the plumbed fluid supply system of channels within the integrated electrode 3a. Within the electrode, a system or systems of channels distribute the supply fluid to a matrix of fluid supply ports 3b on the electrode face or faces which are adjacent and connected to a porous media pad 4. The supply fluid distributes through the porous media pad 4 and wets the substrate 8 enough for the electrochemical treatment. Excess fluid is simultaneously collected and sucked through the porous pad 4 into a separate system of fluid return channels which are in turn plumbed to return tubing connecting to a return fluid reservoir 2 or bottle via a pump 6b. The balance of fluid supply and fluid return may be controlled by the controller 6c. The integrated electrode structure 3a is connected via a power supply 5 to the substrate to be treated 8, in this way the electrical circuit can be completed and the supply fluid or electrolyte can then react and electroplate onto the substrate being treated 8 or indeed anodize the substrate to be treated 8 if the polarity of the power supply 5 is changed. This whole system can indeed be operated without the power supply 5 if for example, the system is used for a rinsing step.
Housing 50 includes internal wall 60 separating the housing into treatment fluid supply chamber 62 and fluid return chamber 64. The fluid supply manifold thus includes chamber 62 and conduit 28 through wall 60 and extending out of housing 50. Fluid in chamber 62 flows through fluid supply ports 29. The return flow manifold includes chamber 64 and conduits 27 extending through wall 60 to the electrode return ports 35,
Furthermore, it is possible to see another return flow system where the fluid can be collected from a periphery slot 31 on the electrode active face 32 and directed through a separate channel system to a further collection point 33, in this case, on the top (or back) face of the electrode 34.
In one embodiment,
A treatment fluid reservoir 84 coupled to the treatment fluid supply manifold 80 via a first pump P1. A return fluid reservoir 86 is coupled to the fluid return manifold 82 via a second pump P2. Controller 88 may be programmed to automatically operate the first pump Pt and the second pump P2 at rates which limit leakage of treatment fluid from the pad 10 while urging the treatment fluid to fully disperse throughout the pad 10.
A method of electrochemically treating a substrate features contacting the substrate with an electrode 13 fitted with a porous pad 10. A treatment fluid is driven through supply ports 16 in the electrode and to multiple locations of the porous pad. Spent and excess treatment fluid and gases are driven from multiple locations of the porous pad through return ports 17 in electrode 13 at a rate which limits electrolyte leakage from the pad 10 while urging the treatment fluid to fully disperse throughout the extent of the pad.
There may be a ratio of one supply port for several surrounding return ports, or supply and return tubes of different diameters, or pumps that feed electrolyte and exhaust electrolyte and air at different rates. The controller can be programmed to operate the pumps based on several factors such as the number and size and spacing of the supply ports and return ports, the size, material, and the porosity of the pad, and the viscosity of the treatment fluid (e.g., an electrolyte, rinsing water, ionic salts, and the like).
A typical anodizing treatment using an electrolyte may employ a pad 4″ by 4″ which can be moved over a part to be treated manually, robotically (e.g., using a robot arm), or using a CNC machine or, the pad and electrolyte can be held stationary and the part rotated or moved relative to the pad and electrolyte.
The balance of the fluid supply flows and fluid return flows can be important to the operation of the non-drip system. The balance of the fluid flows may depend on many parameters, such as the supply flow rates, the return flow rates, viscosity of the fluids, temperature, porosity of the porous media, capillarity forces, pressure drop through the flow channels, the proximate arrangement of the supply flow and return flow ports on the electrode face, and the precise geometry and routes of the fluid flow channel systems within the electrode. Testing the effect of each of the parameters mentioned above with physical prototypes would be time consuming, and there is no guarantee that an appropriate design can be achieve with such a “hit and miss”, i.e. Edisonian approach. A more effective engineering procedure is to create a virtual prototype using Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) where one can quantitatively assess the impact of each of these parameters on the final design. Therefore, one can size and optimize the precise channel system dimensions and routing in order to calculate the pump rates required for the operational balance of supply flows and return flows to eliminate drippage. Unfortunately, most of the CFD models needed for these complex phenomena do not take into consideration the full set of forces, for example the capillary force. There may be different combinations of parameters according to the process. For example, the optimum geometry and fluid flow settings for an anodizing process may differ from the optimum geometry and settings for a plating process. However, these optimum parameters can be calculated, upfront with CFD techniques. The electrode can then be manufactured and a pump controller programmed with the necessary logic for that particular process.
Although specific features of the invention are shown in some drawings and not in others, this is for convenience only as each feature may be combined with any or all of the other features in accordance with the invention. The words “including”, “comprising”, “having”, and “with” as used herein are to be interpreted broadly and comprehensively and are not limited to any physical interconnection. Moreover, any embodiments disclosed in the subject application are not to be taken as the only possible embodiments. Other embodiments will occur to those skilled in the art and are within the following claims.
In addition, any amendment presented during the prosecution of the patent application for this patent is not a disclaimer of any claim element presented in the application as filed: those skilled in the art cannot reasonably be expected to draft a claim that would literally encompass all possible equivalents, many equivalents will be unforeseeable at the time of the amendment and are beyond a fair interpretation of what is to be surrendered (if anything), the rationale underlying the amendment may bear no more than a tangential relation to many equivalents, and/or there are many other reasons the applicant cannot be expected to describe certain insubstantial substitutes for any claim element amended.
This application claims benefit of and priority to U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 63/136,868 filed Jan. 13, 2021, under 35 U.S.C. §§ 119, 120, 363, 365, and 37 C.F.R. § 1.55 and § 1.78, which is incorporated herein by this reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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63136868 | Jan 2021 | US |