The current invention describes an apparatus and method for use in solid-state microcellular thermoplastic processing. A gas-impregnated thermoplastic web is fed into a processing apparatus comprising a plurality of thermal rollers and nip rollers arranged in various configurations. As the web advances through the apparatus, it is exposed to the series of thermal rollers and nip pressure, thereby allowing the web to expand at a controlled rate. Each thermal roller is coupled with a nip roller to form a nip that keeps the thermoplastic web under tension as it expands. By constraining the thermoplastic web and controlling its rate of expansion, a microcellular thermoplastic web with a flat surface and uniform thickness may be produced.
Solid-state microcellular expansion involves saturating a solid thermoplastic material with a high-pressure non-reacting gas (usually CO2 or N2) inside a pressure vessel. Over time the gas diffuses into the thermoplastic material to achieve a uniform gas concentration throughout. When the gas-saturated thermoplastic material is removed from the pressure vessel and brought to atmospheric pressure, a “supersaturated” specimen that is thermodynamically unstable due to the drop in solubility is produced. The thermoplastic material is then heated at a temperature just above the glass-transition temperature of the gas-soaked thermoplastic material, and the billions of microbubbles thus generated inside the thermoplastic material causes the material to expand in volume. The resultant microcellular thermoplastic material is then cut to size or thermoformed into the desired article of manufacture.
In order to obtain flat microcellular thermoplastic samples, various heating methods have been employed. For instance, the gas-saturated thermoplastic material may be expanded in an IR (infrared) oven. The thermoplastic material is loaded onto a bi-axial stretching frame used to keep the material flat as it expands during heating. The bi-axial stretching frame is located between the top and bottom heating panels of the IR oven and expands under controlled processing times and temperatures. In another instance, the gas-saturated thermoplastic material is expanded in a hot press consisting of a pair of upper and lower heating platens. The thermoplastic sheet is inserted in between the heating platens whereupon the platens vertically close on the sheet applying a determined amount of pressure and temperature to achieve a certain thickness while keeping the surfaces of the thermoplastic sheet flat as it expands.
Yet other methods of expansion are to feed a gas-saturated thermoplastic sheet or web through an air flotation or impingement oven for expansion. Nip rollers are oftentimes used to maintain tension in the web in order to minimize corrugation and to control for thickness as the web expands.
The current challenge to solid-state microcellular thermoplastic processing is the ability to consistently produce flat microcellular thermoplastic web or sheet. With existing methods using an air flotation or air impingement oven, the web or sheet tends to form an uneven, corrugated surface. In addition, the use of an air flotation or air impingement oven to blast the gas-saturated thermoplastic material with hot air causes the material to expand without the ability to control the expansion in a precise manner.
In an attempt to produce flat microcellular thermoplastic web or sheet for thermoforming purposes, the present invention provides for an apparatus and method that employ temperature controls and nip pressure to regulate the expansion of the thermoplastic material. Unlike the rapid expansion of the web or sheet observed in air ovens, the apparatus of this current invention subjects the thermoplastic web to a series of thermal rollers and nip pressure in order to expand the web under tension and at a controlled rate. It is believed that slowing down the rate of expansion and applying the right amount of tension to the thermoplastic material will help to address the problem of uneven surface deformation.
In one aspect embodiments of the invention relate to a method of forming a continuous flat sheet from a gas-saturated thermoplastic web, the method comprising sequentially passing the thermoplastic web through multiple sets of heat and nip rollers having at least one of a) increasingly higher heating temperatures for the heat rollers, b) intermittently higher and lower temperatures for the heat rollers, or c) alternately higher and lower temperatures for the heat rollers, while applying a nip pressure to keep the web flat.
In another aspect embodiments of the invention relate to a method of forming a continuous flat sheet from a gas-saturated thermoplastic web, the method comprising sequentially altering the temperature of the web in stages while maintaining a tension on the web sufficient to constrain the expansion of the web in each stage to maintain a flat sheet.
In another aspect embodiments of the invention relate to an apparatus for producing a continuous flat sheet of thermoplastic material comprising multiple sets of sequentially arranged heat and nip rollers, with each set altering the tension of the web and applying a sufficient nip pressure to sequentially constrain the expansion of the web to form a flat sheet of uniform thickness.
A major challenge in commercial scale, solid-state microcellular thermoplastic processing is being able to consistently produce a flat sheet or web of microcellular thermoplastic material. It is not uncommon during expansion of a gas-impregnated thermoplastic material for the material to form an uneven surface marred by undesirable corrugations. The present invention corrects this and includes an apparatus for regulating expansion conditions, namely heating temperature and nip pressure, in order to allow the thermoplastic material to expand evenly to obtain a uniformly thick expanded material with a flat surface.
The apparatus comprises a system of pairs of thermal and nip rollers that are arranged in a horizontal or vertical orientation or some other arrangement intended to accomplish the purpose. Each pair of thermal and nip roller comprises a working pair that jointly defines a nip, a plurality of which a gas-saturated thermoplastic web is passed through. In addition, each pair of nip-forming thermal rollers is arranged in sets, (labeled “set” in the figures) each set comprising two proximate and identical thermal rollers of the same diameter and temperature in order that both sides of the thermoplastic web make contact with a thermal roller for the same length of time and at the same temperature.
Each thermal roller can be individually adjusted to have a certain rotational speed and temperature. The thermal roller is mounted on an axle and rotatable about its own axis. Its temperature is also regulated by its own heating and cooling mechanism. Referring to
To accommodate the growing dimensions of the thermoplastic material during expansion, each successive set of thermal rollers may be larger in diameter and/or have faster rotational speeds. The rotation of the thermal roller functions to advance the thermoplastic web at speeds calibrated to the web's projected expansion in the length direction. As the thermoplastic web is fed through the series of thermal and nip roller pairs, the temperature of each set of thermal rollers could be higher than the earlier sets in the series, thereby causing the web to expand at faster rates as it passes through the apparatus. The thermal rollers along the series are thus adjusted to rotate at faster speeds in order to accommodate the growing volume while avoiding potential bottlenecks in the system. Hence, the rotation speed of each set of thermal rollers can be expressed as: R∞ . . . R3>R2>R1. Consequently, to offset the reduction in heating time with the faster rotating thermal rollers, each set of thermal rollers in the series may be larger in diameter to allow for more surface contact with the thermoplastic web, which can be expressed as: D∞ . . . D3>D2>D1.
Each nip roller in every set of the apparatus is mounted on an axle and is directionally adjustable in order to achieve the amount of nip pressure required to keeping the thermoplastic web under tension. The nip roller can be moved up, down, (see arrow labeled 50) or sideways (see arrow labeled 52) depending on the orientation of the nip contact, in order to increase or decrease the amount of distance between the thermal and nip roller relative to the thermoplastic web sandwiched in between them, thereby defining the amount of nip pressure that is applied on the thermoplastic web. The desired nip pressure is determined by the amount of tension necessary to keeping the thermoplastic material flat and to achieving the desired uniform thickness. The amount of nip pressure must also take into account the growing thickness of the thermoplastic web as it is conveyed through the apparatus to avoid applying excessive compressive pressure, which could lead to unwanted surface markings or even densification of the thermoplastic material.
The series of nips formed by the several pairs of thermal and nip rollers serve to exert a certain amount of nip pressure necessary to keep the thermoplastic web as flat as possible as it expands. Each thermal and nip roller pair thus work in tandem to advance the web at a certain rotational speed and nip pressure to accommodate the expanding web while achieving the desired uniform thickness and even surface.
In other embodiments of the apparatus, the thermal roller may provide tension in the thermoplastic web that can replace the pressure provided by the nip rollers to keep the thermoplastic web as flat as possible while the web expands. For example, the apparatus shown in
In an embodiment of the apparatus,
In another embodiment of the apparatus,
In yet another embodiment of the apparatus,
An apparatus and method that produces a continuous flat sheet of microcellular thermoplastic material in the solid-state.
The apparatus is designed to control certain processing conditions, namely temperature and nip pressure, to allow a gas-saturated thermoplastic web to expand in stages and under tension by exposing it to (1) increasingly higher heating temperatures or (2) intermittently higher and lower temperatures, or (3) other combinations of higher heating or lower cooling temperatures thereof while applying sufficient amount of nip pressure to keep the web flat and to achieve a certain uniform thickness. In order to maintain the right temperature conditions, the apparatus could be housed in a temperature-control enclosure.
The apparatus comprises a plurality of thermal and nip roller pairs assembled in a horizontal or vertical series or some other suitably oriented series.
Each thermal and nip roller pair forms a nip, is characterized by a certain amount of nip pressure applied on the thermoplastic web as it passes, and functions to constrain the web during expansion in order to keep the web flat and uniformly thick.
Each set of thermal rollers in the series of thermal-nip roller pairs is characterized by a certain temperature that could be higher or lower than the one before it in order to regulate expansion of the thermoplastic web at a controlled rate.
Each set of thermal rollers in the series of thermal-nip roller pairs is set at a certain rotation speed that tends to be faster than the one before it in order to accommodate the web's expansion by adjusting its running speed.
Each set of thermal rollers in the series of thermal-nip roller pairs is of a certain size diameter that tends to be larger than the one before it to ensure that even though the thermal rollers in the later series may be running at faster speeds, the web is experiencing the same amount of surface contact because the thermal rollers are larger in diameter.
The present invention provides a method for expanding a gas-saturated thermoplastic web in an apparatus that exposes the web to target temperatures as it advances through a series of thermal-nip roller pairs, whereby each thermal-nip roller pair subjects the thermoplastic web to a certain temperature, nip pressure, thermal contact and rotation speed to expand the thermoplastic web in stages and in a constrained manner.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 62/093,726, filed Dec. 18, 2014, which is herein incorporated by reference in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62093726 | Dec 2014 | US |