This disclosure is related to extrusion systems and methods, and in particular to such systems and methods used to extrude ceramic precursor batch material, wherein the extrusion process utilizes temperature control.
The process of forming a ceramic honeycomb and other ceramic-based articles involves extruding a ceramic precursor batch material (also referred to herein as “ceramic batch”, “batch material”, or “ceramic batch material”) through a barrel and then through an extrusion die to form an extrudate. The extrudate is then processed (e.g., cut up, dried and fired) to form the final articles of manufacture.
The ceramic precursor batch material has temperature-dependent flow properties. Depending on the temperature, the batch material can either flow faster or slower through the extrusion die. Consequently, temperature differences in the batch material can cause flow non-uniformities that can adversely affect the shape of the extrudate and thus the shape of the final articles.
Aspects of the disclosure include system and methods for locally controlling the temperature of ceramic batch material just prior to the material being extruded through an extrusion die to achieve a desired extrusion effect, such as a uniformly shaped extrudate. This temperature control is accomplished in one example by disposing heating elements relative to the extruder such that they surround the periphery of the ceramic batch material. The number of heating elements used defines the degree of temperature control of the ceramic batch material that can be achieved. A cooling system can also be used to locally adjust the temperature of the ceramic batch material. Thus, in an example, the local adjustment of the temperature of the ceramic batch material employs both heating and cooling to achieve a desired extrusion effect on the extrudate.
A first set of temperature sensors is operably positioned to measure the temperatures of multiple locations along the outer surface of the extrudate as it exits the extrusion die. An optional second set of temperature sensors is operably arranged to measure the temperatures of the heating elements, or the regions adjacent the heating elements, so that the amount of power provided to the heating elements can be controlled. This allows for the local temperature of the ceramic batch material to be adjusted in a controlled manner.
A temperature controller receives the measured temperatures of the outer surface of the extrudate and controls the amount of power that is sent to each heating element. The systems and methods may include a cooling system that cools the transition section between the extruder and the die. This transition section is referred to herein as the extruder front end. The cooling temperature set point can be set independently within a reasonable range, e.g., from about −30 ° C. to about 30° C. or from about −5° C. to about 30° C.
The cooling system can be operated independently of the temperature controller or can be operated in a control loop that includes the temperature controller. In an example, active cooling and heating coupled with the characteristic of a temperature-sensitive ceramic batch composition enables the systems and methods to control the extrudate's flow velocity, which translates into controlling the extrudate's shape.
An aspect of the disclosure is a method of controlling a shape of an extrudate made of a ceramic batch material extruded from an extrusion die of an extruder. The method includes flowing the ceramic batch material through an extruder cavity immediately adjacent the extrusion die, wherein the cavity has a central axis and defines a perimeter of the ceramic batch material. The method also includes locally adjusting the temperature of the ceramic batch material. The method further includes extruding the temperature-adjusted ceramic batch material through the extrusion die to form the extrudate, with the extrudate having an outer surface. The method additionally includes measuring temperatures of the extrudate at multiple outer surface locations having different azimuthal positions. The method also includes controlling the local temperature adjustment of the ceramic batch material based on the measured outer surface temperatures to control the shape of the extrudate.
Another aspect of the disclosure is an extrusion system for controlling the extrusion of a ceramic batch material to form an extrudate having an outer surface and a desired shape. The system includes an extruder having a long axis and a cavity configured to contain the ceramic batch material and containing at least one extrusion screw operable to cause a flow of the ceramic batch material. The system also includes an extrusion die operably arranged at an output end of the extruder. A front section of the extruder resides immediately adjacent the extrusion die. A plurality of heating elements is azimuthally arranged about at least a portion of the cavity periphery at the front section and is configured to provide, in response to power signals, localized heating of the ceramic batch material as it flows through the front section. A plurality of first temperature sensors is azimuthally arranged relative to the long axis at the extruder front end and is configured to make non-contact measurements of surface temperatures along the extrudate outer surface and generate first temperature signals that are representative of the measured surface temperatures. A temperature controller is operably connected to the plurality of heating elements and the plurality of first temperature sensors and is configured to receive the first temperature signals and control, via the power signals, the amounts of heat generated by each of the heating elements in response to the measured surface temperatures.
Another aspect of the disclosure is an extruder system for controlling the extrusion of a ceramic batch material to form an extrudate having an outer surface and a desired shape. The extruder system has an extrusion die having a first cavity and an output aperture and has a first extruder section arranged immediately adjacent the extrusion die and having a second cavity that is open to the first cavity. The system also has a second extruder section arranged immediately adjacent the first extruder section and configured to cause the ceramic batch material to flow through the second cavity to the first cavity and out of the extrusion die output end to form the extrudate. The system further includes a plurality of first temperature sensors azimuthally disposed about the extrusion die output aperture and operable to measure temperatures along the extrudate outer surface and in response thereto generate first temperature signals. The system has a plurality of first heating elements azimuthally disposed about the second cavity and operable to locally heat the ceramic batch material flowing through the second cavity in response to power signals. The system further includes a temperature control unit operably connected to the first temperature sensors and the heating elements. The temperature control unit is configured to receive the first temperature signals and control the power signals in a first control loop in order to control the amounts of heat generated by each of the heating elements in response to the measured surface temperatures.
It is to be understood that both the foregoing general description and the following Detailed Description represent embodiments of the disclosure and are intended to provide an overview or framework for understanding the nature and character of the disclosure as it is claimed. The accompanying drawings are included to provide a further understanding of the disclosure and are incorporated into and constitute a part of this specification. The drawings illustrate various embodiments of the disclosure and together with the description serve to explain the principles and operations of the disclosure.
Additional features and advantages of the disclosure are set forth in the Detailed Description that follows, and in part will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art from that description or recognized by practicing the disclosure as described herein, including the Detailed Description that follows, the claims, and the appended drawings.
The claims as set forth below are incorporated into and constitute a part of the Detailed Description set forth below.
Additional features and advantages of the disclosure are set forth in the Detailed Description that follows and will be apparent to those skilled in the art from the description or recognized by practicing the disclosure as described herein, together with the claims and appended drawings.
Cartesian coordinates are shown in certain of the Figures for the sake of reference and are not intended as limiting with respect to direction or orientation.
The system 10 also includes an extruder 30. The extruder 30 includes a barrel 31 with a long axis A1 and can be considered as having three main sections: an input section 32, a front section 52, and an output section 72. The output section 72 has an output end 74 and includes an extrusion die 80 having a die cavity 82 with a central opening 84 that is open at output end 74. Thus, front section 52 is immediately adjacent output section 72 and extrusion die 80 therein, and is not necessarily in the middle of or otherwise centrally located in extruder 30. Also, the nomenclature used herein that divides extruder 30 into different sections is somewhat arbitrary and is for ease of description, and is not intended as limiting the extruder to having such specific sections.
The input section 32 includes an input funnel 34 configured to receive ceramic batch material 22 from batch supply unit 20. In an example extruder 30, barrel 31 operably supports two extrusion screws 36 in a cavity 26 that runs along long axis A1. The cavity 26 is defined by an inner surface 35 of a barrel wall 33, with the inner surface defining the cavity periphery (i.e., the inner surface is also the cavity periphery). The rotation of extrusion screws 36 pushes ceramic batch material 22 forward through cavity 26 of barrel 31 from input section 32 through front section 52 and from cavity 26 therein into cavity 82 of extrusion die 80.
The ceramic batch material 22 is then extruded from central opening 84 of extrusion die 80 and out of output end 74 of output section 72. With reference also to
The front section 52 includes a temperature control system 40 configured to control the temperature of ceramic batch material 22 as it passes through cavity 26 at the front section. This is a simplified version that assumes for the sake of illustration that cavity 26 extends into front section 52. In other examples, there can be different cavities 26 in front section 52 and input section 32. The temperature control system 40 is described in greater detail below. The temperature control is localized, i.e., some portions of ceramic batch material 22 can be heated more than others so that different portions of the ceramic batch material can have different temperatures and thus different flow velocities. The temperature control system 40 can be used to selectively heat ceramic batch material 22 and can also be used to cool the ceramic batch material, as described below. Thus, ceramic batch material 22 has a temperature (which can include a temperature distribution) when residing in cavity 26, and the temperature is locally adjusted, either via heating or via a combination of heating and cooling, to form a temperature-adjusted ceramic batch material. The temperature-adjusted ceramic batch material is then extruded to form extrudate 90.
The system 10 includes a temperature-sensing unit 100 arranged adjacent output section 72 at output end 74. The temperature-sensing unit 100 is configured to make a non-contact measurement of the temperature of outer surface 92 of extrudate 90 as it exits extrusion die 80. The temperature-sensing unit 100 includes a plurality (i.e., a set) of temperature sensors 102 arranged adjacent outer surface 92 of extrudate 90. The temperature sensing unit 100 is operably connected to temperature control system 40.
A plurality of longitudinal heating-element bores 58 that run generally parallel to barrel long axis A1 are formed in barrel wall 33. Each bore 58 is sized to accommodate one or more heating elements 150. In an example, each bore 58 is also sized to accommodate at least one temperature sensor 152. Twelve bores 58 are shown by way of example in
The heating elements 150 are electrically connected to temperature controller 110, as shown in
The heating elements 150 generate heat 101 in proportion to the amount of electrical power they receive. The amount of heat 101 generated by each heating element 150 can be controlled by virtue of temperature controller 110 regulating the amount of electrical power it provides to each heating element via respective power signals SP. This power regulation gives rise to localized heating of ceramic batch material 22, which provides the ceramic batch material with a desired thermal profile when it exits front section 52 and enters extrusion die 80. In
The flow of coolant 204 through cooling jacket 200 serves to remove heat 101′ from ceramic batch material 22 (see
Thus, in an example embodiment, in place of a cooling jacket 200, coolant 204 is flowed through cooling bores 203 formed directly in input section 32 of barrel 31. The cooling bores 203 are fluidly connected to coolant return 224 and coolant supply 230. Moreover, cooling system 300 can be configured such that the flow of coolant 204 is controlled though sets of cooling bores 203 to provide localized cooling of ceramic batch material 22. This can be accomplished using multiple input and output ports 212 and 214 and multiple actuator valves 240 and flow controllers 260 so that the amount of coolant flow can be varied with azimuthal angle φ.
In an example shown in
In the example embodiment of system 10 as illustrated in
If power is then applied to heating elements 150 in a select manner using power signals SP from temperature controller 110, then ceramic batch material 22 will be heated in a corresponding manner. Since variations in temperature are common within ceramic batch material 22 during the extrusion process, it is anticipated that non-uniform heating via heating elements 150 will need to be applied in order for the ceramic batch material to have a substantially uniform temperature and generate an extrudate 90 with a substantially uniform temperature. Also, the non-uniform heating may be used to provide a select temperature non-uniformity to ceramic batch material 22 to achieve a desired effect on extrudate 90, such as the limitation of bowing or other deviations from an ideal extrudate shape.
In an example, the flow of coolant 204 in cooling system 300 is substantially constant and has a fixed set-point temperature TSET. In this case, flow controller 260 need not be connected to temperature controller 110 so that cooling system 300 can operate in a stand-alone mode, such as illustrated in system 10 of
In another example embodiment, cooling system 300 varies its flow of coolant 204 in response to the temperature measurements of extrudate 90. In this case, flow controller 260 is connected to and controlled by temperature controller 110 via control signals S1, as illustrated in the example systems 10 of
As discussed above, apparatus 10 includes temperature sensing unit 100, which has temperature sensors 102 arranged adjacent outer surface 92 of extrudate 90 and operably (e.g., electrically) connected to temperature controller 110. The temperature sensors 102 generate temperature signals ST representative of the measured temperature and send the temperature signals to temperature controller 110.
In an example, temperature sensors 102 are substantially azimuthally aligned with heating elements 150, such as are illustrated in the front-on view of
The temperature signals ST are sent to temperature controller 110, which uses the measured temperatures to generate power signals SP that regulate the amount of power provided to heating elements 150 (150-1, 150-2, . . . 150-8) to adjust the amount of heat 101 (see
In an example where temperature sensors 152 are employed, these temperature sensors also provide temperature signals ST′ (ST′1, ST′2, . . . ST′n) to temperature controller 110 so that the amount of power provided to heating elements 150 can be carefully regulated to provide a select temperature distribution for ceramic batch material 22. More generally, the feedback from temperature sensors 152 can provide several different functions, from regulating the heater temperature (through power manipulation), to limiting the heater output, to detecting whether the heater is malfunctioning (e.g., over-heating or under-heating).
Thus, aspects of the disclosure include a method of extruding ceramic batch material 22 using system 10. The method includes measuring temperatures of different portions of outer surface 92 of extrudate 90 using temperature sensors 102 and generating corresponding temperature signals ST that are representative of the measured temperatures. The method also includes temperature controller 110 using the temperature signals ST to regulate the amount of heat 101 generated by heating elements 150 to substantially uniformize the measured temperatures of extrudate 90.
In an example, the temperature associated with heating elements 150 is measured by corresponding temperature sensors 152 that generate temperature signals ST′ that are representative of the measured temperatures. The temperature signals ST′ are sent to temperature controller 110 to provide temperature feedback control for heating elements 150 so that the temperature controller can control the amount of power it provides to the heating elements via power signals SP.
Variations in the temperature of outer surface 92 of extrudate 90 can lead to flow instabilities and malformed ceramic articles made from the extrudate. The amount of heat 101 that heating elements 150 need to apply depends on the composition of ceramic batch material 22 and its sensitivity to temperature changes. The localized control of the temperature of ceramic batch material 22 allows for adjusting the skin (outer surface) flow velocity of the ceramic batch material at discrete locations about outer surface 92 of extrudate 90. It also provides the ability to control peripheral versus center flow (flow front), the ability to control bow, and the ability to reduce variations in the temperature of ceramic batch material 22 as it flows through extrusion die 80.
In the configurations of system 10 shown in
In the configuration of system 10 as shown in
The temperature controller 110 also adjusts the cooling control loop(s) in a manner that seeks to prevent one or more heating elements 150 from reaching saturation, i.e., 0% or 100% output, while still achieving the primary objective of controlling the temperature distribution of extrudate outer surface 92. In this example, the cooling loop would add cooling flow and/or decrease the temperature of coolant 204 if one or more heating elements 150 reached 0% output while exceeding set temperature TSET for the associated azimuthal positions on outer surface 92 of extrudate 90. Alternatively, the cooling loop would decrease flow and/or increase the temperature of coolant 204 if one or more heating elements 150 reached 100% output while falling short of set temperature TSET for the associated azimuthal positions on outer surface 92 of extrudate 90.
There are a number of ways the temperature control (and thus the shape control) of extrudate outer surface 92 can be accomplished using the different embodiments of system 10. In one example, temperature control is accomplished using feedback control, e.g., fuzzy logic, PID or the like. Coolant-flow set point(s) FSET can be adjusted to maintain one or more heating elements 150 within a controllable output range, e.g., 0% to 100% or 10% to 90% of their output range.
In another example, a feed-forward controller is employed, such as one that performs model-based control, that adjusts the output of the cooling loop(s) based on the desired extrudate temperature(s), the expected heating-element output(s), and the modeled interaction of the coolant loop with the heater loops to maintain the heater outputs within the desired controllable range while achieving the desired temperature goals for extrudate 90. The inner coolant control can be based on PID loop(s) that acquire(s) coolant-flow set point(s) FSET from temperature controller 110 and adjusts one or more actuator valves 240 against the coolant-flow feedback signals SF from corresponding one or more flow meters 250 to achieve the desired flow rate(s) of coolant 204.
In an example, system 10 is used to raise or lower the temperature of outer surface 92 of extrudate 90 to maintain a desired temperature differential between the outer surface and extrudate core 94. This enables flow front control of extrudate 90, which affects shape, center and peripheral swollen webs, and skin quality.
In another example, system 10 is operated to stabilize the temperature of extrudate outer surface 92 to reduce or eliminate temperature variation as a source of skin flow instability.
In another example, system 10 is operated to locally control the flow of ceramic batch material 22 without the need for hardware adjustments. For example, system 10 can be employed to control log bow by providing a temperature offset for extrudate outer surface 92 at opposite sides.
In an example, temperature controller 110 receives temperature feedback signals ST and adjusts the power output to heating elements 150 directly. The adjustment of the amount of power delivered to heating elements 150 can be achieved using the PID loops by way of example. In practice, other known control schemes can be employed for the same purpose. In this example, system 10 can operate with or without temperature sensors 152 and with or without cooling system 300.
In a configuration where system 10 also includes temperature sensors 152, these temperature sensors can provide additional functionality to the system. For example, temperature sensors 152 can be used as limit-sensing devices to indicate if a given heating element 150 is overheating or has failed. Alternatively, temperature sensors 152 can be used to provide separate feedback signals for a temperature control loop for heating elements 150 in conjunction with temperature sensors 102, which are used in feedback loops for temperature control of extrudate 90. In this case, the temperatures of heating elements 150 can be the inner loop of a cascaded control loop, for example, a PID loop, where the heating-element temperature signals ST′ are fed back to the temperature controller 110. The temperature controller 110 can then modify the amount of power provided to a given heating element 150 to achieve the desired heating-element temperature. In this example, the outer control loop includes the extrudate surface temperature sensors 152.
The temperature signal ST reads the temperature of the extrudate outer surface 92 and outputs a set temperature TSET to the inner heater control loop. The inner heater control loop then acts to control the heating-element temperature by reading the heating-element temperature signal ST′ from temperature sensors 152 and adjusting the heater power, as previously described. In this example, the inner control loop can be implemented by any of a number of control schemes, including a PID control loop.
Also in this example, the extrudate temperature control loop can employ any of a number of control schemes. The selection of a particular control scheme depends on the dynamics of the control system, such as process gain, time constant and dead time as well as the desired response dynamics. In many cases, a simple PID control loop can suffice, but long dead times or variable process gains might require the selection of a different control scheme. Typically, the process dynamics are tested to determine whether a simple cascade PID loop would suffice to achieve the desired process performance.
In a configuration that uses cooling jacket 200, multiple scenarios can exist. The simplest is illustrated in
The cooling jacket 200 can also be operated in a closed-loop control mode, as illustrated in
Saturation of the output of a given heating element 150 can be defined as temperature controller 110 running the heating element at 0% output (meaning the measured extrudate temperature is above the desired temperature) or 100% output (meaning the extrudate temperature is below the desired temperature), and as the desired extrudate temperature not being achieved within an allowable time frame. The allowable time frame can be related to the response time and dead time of the process.
If heating elements 150 are saturated at 0%, temperature controller 110 can respond by requesting more cooling from flow controller 260 via control signal S1. The flow controller 260 responds by increasing the cooling of front section 52, forcing the overall temperatures to decrease and the saturated heating element(s) 150 to begin operating in a controllable range once again.
Conversely, if one or more heating elements 150 are saturated at 100% output, then temperature controller 110 can respond by requesting less cooling from flow controller 260 via control signal S1. The flow controller 260 responds by decreasing cooling of front section 52, forcing the overall temperature to rise and the saturated heating element(s) 150 to begin operating in a controllable range.
In the case where some heating elements 150 are saturated at 0% and some are saturated at 100%, a control scheme can be implemented that decides whether to increase cooling, decrease cooling, or take no action based on the process objectives. The cooling control loop would typically be implemented with a PID loop, but, depending on the process dynamics, a more sophisticated control strategy may be needed, e.g., to deal with non-linear behavior or long dead-times.
Each of these individual control loops can be implemented in essentially the same manner as the single control loop as described above. In this case, the coolant temperature set point can be adjusted up or down, depending on the average output of heating elements 150. This provides either a lower coolant temperature if heating elements 150 are tending to saturate at or approach 0%, or a higher coolant temperature if the heating elements are tending to saturate at or approach 100%. In the case where heating elements 150 are not used, the coolant temperature can be based on the whether the average temperature of outer surface 92 of extrudate 90 was being achieved. The coolant temperature can be increased or decreased if the extrudate temperatures were exceeding or falling short of the desired temperatures.
In the case where heating elements 150 are used, the individual coolant loop flows can be managed based on whether associated individual heating zones were at or approaching saturation in the manner described above, i.e., can provide more cooling if heating-element outputs are at or approaching 0% and vice versa. In the case where heating elements 150 are not used, individual coolant flows are dictated by the extrudate surface temperature directly, i.e., by adding cooling to decrease localized azimuthal temperatures and vice versa.
In certain situations, there can be some interaction between adjacent heated or cooled sections around the periphery of front section 52 of extruder 30 of system 10. In these situations, alternative strategies beyond the use of PID control may need to be employed. As will be appreciated by those skilled in the art, the specific control strategy implemented will depend on the physical implementation of system 10, the operating region of the process and the performance criteria required of the system. The flow of ceramic batch material 22 depends on its particular composition, since different compositions have temperature dependencies. Some compositions of ceramic batch material 22 exhibit thinning or lower-pressure behavior while being heated to a certain temperature, wherein an inflection occurs and the composition exhibits stiffening and higher pressure as the temperature increases.
In examples, the systems and methods disclosed herein operate within a select temperature span ranging from the lowest operating pressure to an appreciably stiff or high operating pressure area at higher temperatures. In examples, increasing the temperature of ceramic batch material 22 acts to slow the flow velocity, whereas cooling acts to increase the flow velocity. The temperature span depends on the pressure-versus-temperature response of various compositions of ceramic batch material 22. In an example, the temperature span can have decreasing pressure with increased temperature for a period of time, and then may inflect and start to increase pressure with further increased temperatures. Generally speaking, different compositions of ceramic batch material 22 need to be controlled differently, e.g., over different temperature ranges.
Although the embodiments herein have been described with reference to particular aspects and features, it is to be understood that these embodiments are merely illustrative of desired principles and applications. It is therefore to be understood that numerous modifications may be made to the illustrative embodiments and that other arrangements may be devised without departing from the spirit and scope of the appended claims.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3335459 | Tyrner | Aug 1967 | A |
3341388 | Bunyea | Sep 1967 | A |
3521325 | Schippers | Jul 1970 | A |
3675451 | Aisenberg et al. | Jul 1972 | A |
3919384 | Cantaloupe et al. | Nov 1975 | A |
4137028 | Reitemeyer | Jan 1979 | A |
4332543 | Fulton et al. | Jun 1982 | A |
4364881 | Mizuno et al. | Dec 1982 | A |
4480981 | Togawa | Nov 1984 | A |
4720251 | Mallay et al. | Jan 1988 | A |
5177340 | Zaffiro | Jan 1993 | A |
5192543 | Irvin et al. | Mar 1993 | A |
6457550 | Barry et al. | Oct 2002 | B1 |
6620354 | Bessemer et al. | Sep 2003 | B1 |
6637250 | Plata et al. | Oct 2003 | B2 |
6854969 | Shibagaki et al. | Feb 2005 | B2 |
6960746 | Chen | Nov 2005 | B2 |
7276194 | Shalkey | Oct 2007 | B2 |
7361226 | Wyatt et al. | Apr 2008 | B2 |
8747729 | Inoguchi | Jun 2014 | B2 |
20020014710 | Tsuruta et al. | Feb 2002 | A1 |
20020167102 | Yamaguchi et al. | Nov 2002 | A1 |
20070034092 | Lawrence et al. | Feb 2007 | A1 |
20070117061 | Schwartz | May 2007 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
1191853 | Sep 1998 | CN |
201736430 | Feb 2011 | CN |
2008137186 | Jun 2008 | JP |
1011140 | Jul 2000 | NL |
WO-2010051430 | May 2010 | WO |
Entry |
---|
Patent Cooperation Treaty International Notification of Transmittal of the International Search Report and the Written Opinion of the International Searching Authority, international application No. PCT/US2013/071772; dated Feb. 5, 2014, 13 pages. |
English Translation of CN201380071934.8 First Office Action dated Aug. 3, 2016, China Patent Office, 11 Pgs. |
English Translation of JP2015545159 Office Action dated Mar. 28, 2017, Japan Patent Office, 4 Pgs. |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20140151915 A1 | Jun 2014 | US |