N/A
For the thermal processing of products and materials, there is often a need for rapid and uniformly heating of the product or the material without causing thermal stress which can damage the product or material being processed. Products such as touch screens used for computer tablets, silicon wafers employed in fabricating solar cells and sintered ceramics are especially prone to thermal stress if heated in a manner which is not properly managed.
A furnace system and method for thermal processing of products and materials is disclosed. The system and method are particularly useful for example in processing touch screens for computer tablets, silicon wafers employed in fabricating solar cells, glass coatings, sintered ceramics and carbon fiber structures. Another exemplary use is in diffusing phosphorous or boron into semiconductor wafers as part of a solar cell or panel fabrication process. The invention is not limited to such uses but is more broadly applicable to the thermal processing of workpieces and materials where rapid and uniform heating in a controlled manner is desirable.
The system employs a hybrid of microwave and radiant heating of workpieces to provide controlled heating of the workpieces. In one embodiment, the system includes an insulated furnace housing having an inlet end and an outlet end and having a furnace chamber within the housing which may be divided into one or more zones. A conveyor assembly is provided for transporting workpieces through the furnace chamber from the inlet end to the outlet end. A plurality of susceptors are disposed in the chamber in at least one zone thereof, the susceptors being positioned above the conveyor to define a chamber through which the workpieces are transported. A plurality of microwave sources are arranged to provide microwave radiation in the chamber to uniformly heat the workpieces transported through the chamber by the conveyor and to provide uniform heating of the plurality of susceptors. At temperatures greater than about 600°, the susceptors are effective upon microwave heating by the plurality of microwave sources to provide uniform radiant heating of the workpieces being transported through the chamber.
The susceptors in a preferred embodiment comprise a plurality of rods each composed of high temperature high purity composite ceramic material, the rods being disposed in spaced relation across the width of the chamber in at least one zone of the chamber and positioned to receive microwave radiation from the plurality of microwave sources and to provide radiant energy to the workpieces being transported through the chamber. The susceptor rods can be varied in number and in spacing in order to adjust the power levels and heat profiles suitable for the particular workpieces being processed in the furnace.
The power per unit volume of the susceptors is determined to provide an intended amount of microwave absorption by the susceptors in order to absorb sufficient microwave energy for heating of the susceptors and emission of radiant energy onto the workpieces or product.
For lower operating temperatures, typically less than about 600°, the susceptors do not produce much radiant heating of the workpieces but serve to provide more uniform microwave heating of the workpieces by control of the microwave field.
Each of the microwave sources is composed of a relatively low power and low cost magnetron coupled to a horn mounted about an aperture in a chamber wall and operative to introduce microwave energy into the chamber. A plurality of such sources are disposed in an array operative to introduce microwave energy through respective apertures in the wall into the chamber. The magnetrons are powered by respective power supplies or, alternatively, by one or more shared power supplies to provide requisite electrical power to the magnetrons. The power to the magnetrons is controllable by associated power controllers for varying the power provided by the respective sources and for switching the respective sources on and off. The number and spacing of sources within the microwave array can be selectively determined, as can the power provided to each of the sources of the array in order to produce an intended power level and/or profile of microwave energy introduced into the furnace chamber.
One or more mode stirrers, which per se are known in the art, are provided in the furnace chamber and are operative to mix the microwave modes to provide more uniform electric field within the chamber. In one preferred embodiment two mode stirrers are employed on respective sidewalls of the chamber.
A microwave choke is provided at the inlet end and outlet end of the furnace to prevent leakage of microwave energy from the furnace to the external environment. Isolators can be employed around any shafts protruding through the furnace wall, such as the shafts of the mode stirrers to prevent leakage of microwave energy.
The system includes a control system for independent control of each of the microwave sources and closed loop control of the temperatures in the furnace chamber. Thermocouples or other temperature sensors are provided in the furnace chamber for monitoring chamber temperature, and an infrared pyrometer or other sensor is employed to measure the temperature of the workpieces being transported through the chamber. Signals from these sensors are provided to the control system and employed to control temperature to maintain an intended workpiece and processing temperature. Different temperatures can be provided in respective zones of a multi-zone furnace to provide an intended thermal profile as the workpieces are conveyed through the zones.
The dielectric characteristics of the workpieces must be taken into account in order to achieve an intended processing profile and degree of control.
The conveyor is made of belt material and construction appropriate for use in a microwave field. For example, the conveyor can employ quartz rollers which are transparent to microwaves. The conveyor belt can also be made of metal and can be electrically grounded since heated metal is less microwave reflective and can be used in the microwave chamber. Other conveyors can be employed such as roller or pusher mechanisms depending upon the nature and weight of the product.
The invention can also be implemented in a batch furnace in which case the conveyor belt and chokes will ordinarily not be necessary. In a batch system a furnace chamber is provided within a suitable housing and a sealed door can be provided for access to the chamber for loading and removal of a product to be processed in the chamber. The door is thermally sealed to minimize heat loss and is also microwave sealed to minimize leakage of microwave energy.
The invention will be more fully understood from the following detailed description in conjunction with the drawings, in which:
This application claims the benefit under 35 U.S.C. §119(3) of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/712,444, entitled “Furnace System Having Hybrid Microwave and Radiant Heating” filed Oct. 11, 2012 which is herein incorporated by reference in its entirety for all purposes.
Overall System
An embodiment of a continuous furnace system in accordance with the invention is illustrated diagrammatically in
An array 114 of magnetrons are disposed on the top of the furnace housing and are operative to introduce microwave energy from each of the magnetrons of the array into the furnace chamber for microwave heating of the workpieces passing through the chamber on the conveyor belt. The microwave energy from the magnetron array is also operative to heat the susceptors disposed in box 101 in the furnace chamber and which, upon microwave heating, produce radiant energy directed to the workpieces. The susceptors will be described hereinbelow in further detail. In accordance with the invention, the workpieces conveyed through the furnace are heated by a controlled combination of radiant energy from the susceptors and microwave energy from the magnetron array.
The furnace according to the invention is typically operated in a temperature range between about 600° and 1050° C. but the invention can be implemented in furnace constructions operative at higher and lower temperatures.
Magnetron Array
A plurality of microwave sources are arranged to provide uniform microwave radiation in the chamber to uniformly heat the workpieces transported through the chamber by the conveyor and to provide uniform heating of the plurality of susceptor rods. Each low cost magnetron coupled via a tunable waveguide to a horn mounted about an aperture in a furnace wall and operative to introduce microwave energy into the chamber. A plurality of such sources are disposed in an array operative to introduce microwave energy through respective apertures in the furnace wall. In the illustrated embodiment an array of nine microwave sources is provided arranged in a rectangular 3×3 array. The number and placement of magnetrons and associated waveguides and horns is determined to produce a uniform microwave field in the chamber and uniform heating of the susceptors. As an alternative, the relative power of the magnetrons and their spacing and position within an array of magnetrons can be adjusted to produce a desired non-uniform distribution or profile of microwave energy in the chamber.
One of the microwave sources is illustrated in
The respective pistons for stubs 22 and 24 are slidable along the respective waveguide inner surfaces and each of the pistons includes a groove around the periphery thereof in which a metal or other conductive mesh gasket, is provided as illustrated in
The horn 18 is configured to provide high gain, low VSWR and relatively wide bandwidth and to serve as an impedance matcher between the waveguide and the free space of the chamber. The forward field is maximized by the matched termination provided by the horn and reflected waves are minimized. In one embodiment using a WR 430 waveguide, the magnetrons operate at 2.45 GHz, and the horns have a beam width of 20 degrees, and a gain of at least 15 dB and a return loss of <−10 dB. The radiation pattern of each horn overlaps the radiation pattern of the other horns of the microwave array as illustrated in
The microwave radiation is multi-mode in the chamber and one or more mode stirrers are employed to provide changing mode patterns to maintain uniformity of the electric field in the chamber. A mode stirrer 103 in shown in
The magnetrons in the illustrated embodiment each have an output power of 1.1 kilowatts and are driven by a power supply which can be individually controlled. The maximum power of the array of nine sources is about 10.8 kilowatts in this embodiment. The array of magnetrons is air cooled by directing air at high velocity onto the cooling vanes of the magnetrons to maintain the magnetrons below 60° C. at 100% power. Cooling air can also be directed to the power supplies to maintain a safe operating temperature. The cooling air is exhausted through one or more vents provided in the furnace housing.
The magnetron array is not limited to nine magnetrons. The number and power output of the magnetrons can vary to achieve an intended power distribution with a high degree of uniformity and power level for the workpieces being processed.
The control system for the magnetron array is illustrated in
The power output of each magnetron in the magnetron array can be monitored and/or recorded by the apparatus shown in
Thermal Box and Susceptors
The thermal box and susceptor rod arrangement is illustrated in
A plurality of susceptor rods 51 are disposed along the length of the thermal box between the first and second ends. The rods are spaced from each other and quartz rods 53 are disposed between adjacent susceptor rods to maintain the spacing of the susceptor rods along the length of the chamber defined by channel 46. The susceptor rods and quartz rods are supported on shelf areas 52 provided along the respective sides of the chamber. The quartz rods are transparent to microwave energy. The susceptor rods are absorptive of microwave energy and are heated by the microwave energy and radiate heat to the workpieces transported through the chamber. In general, the microwave power is of a level to provide a penetration depth in the susceptor rods of about 50%.
The susceptor rods and spacer elements can be of any shape and size to produce the desired absorption and transmission of microwaves. The rods collectively provide an intended thermal mass to be heated by the microwaves and to radiate in the chamber to heat workpieces in the chamber. The susceptor rod sizes and the spacing between adjacent rods are determined to produce the intended temperature uniformity in the furnace chamber and to achieve acceptable heating efficiency. The efficiency is defined as the amount of heating accomplished for the least amount of power consumed by the magnetron array.
Quartz disks 54 shown in
The susceptor rods are of a size and spacing to achieve uniformity of heating and balance between the microwave and the radiative heating of the workpieces.
The susceptors are composed of high purity high temperature composite ceramic material having high microwave absorption, high mechanical strength and thermal shock resistance, low oxidation and low chemical degradation at high operating temperatures. Suitable materials are a ceramic material of the group consisting of SiC, SiO2, Fe2O3 Si3N4, and Al2O3.
Lower Temperature Operation
For lower operating temperatures typically less than about 600° C., the susceptors are operative mainly to control or modulate the microwave field to produce more uniform microwave heating of workpieces in the furnace chamber. At these lower temperatures, the susceptors do not contribute much radiant heating of the workpieces.
The susceptors at these lower temperatures contribute heat to the volume of air in the furnace chamber which is stirred or moved by convective currents caused by conveyor belt movement, and the heated convective air provides some heating of the workpieces.
Two Stage Chokes
The two stage microwave chokes 106 and 108 (
The reflective section 60 is operative to attenuate the microwave field by destructive interference. Channels 72 are provided orthogonal to channel 65 and which are configured and dimensioned to reflect microwave energy from channel 64 back into that channel 180° out-of-phase with the incident energy to thereby cancel or substantially attenuate the microwave field in channel 64. In the illustrated embodiment, the reflective channels 72 are formed by the spaces between pot shaped elements 74, but the reflective channels can be provided by many other constructions.
The absorptive section 62 is operative to further attenuate the microwave field and includes in the illustrated embodiment, rectangular rods or bars 76 extending across the width of channel 64 and disposed at the top and bottom of the channel. The bars 76 are composed of a microwave absorptive material which may the same material used in the susceptor rods or other composite or pure material having the requisite characteristics. Spacers 78 are provided between the bottom absorptive bars 76 and serve as spacers or fillers to provide a substantially continuous floor in section 62 of the choke. The spacers 78 are typically made of quartz. The substantially continuous floor provides a smooth support for the conveyor belt being driven through channel 64 of the choke. The mounting flange 68 includes a groove 80 in which a metal or other conductive gasket is disposed to prevent microwave leakage through the mounting flange attached to a furnace wall, as per se known in the microwave art. The dimensions in relation to wavelength for a typical embodiment are as shown in
Radiation is reduced at the end of the reflective stage by about 90%. Microwave energy is further attenuated in the absorptive stage resulting in EMI leakage from end 70 of the choke of about 5 mw/cm2 which is very low leakage and well below applicable standards for leakage from microwave sources.
The length of the choke stages and the number of reflective channels in the reflective stage and absorbing elements in the absorptive stage is determined to result in the desired attenuation of EMI leakage from the exit end of the choke.
Conveyor Belt
The conveyor belt in the illustrated embodiment is a woven metal belt which itself can be of known construction. The metallic wires of the belt provide a sufficiently small surface area in the microwave chamber to not adversely interfere with microwave performance. Presence of the metallic belt is taken into account in tuning of the microwave array to minimize unwanted reflections which could interfere with intended heating performance and which could interfere with or be damaging to the magnetron sources. In alternative embodiments, a non-metallic conveyor belt can be employed for transport of workpieces through the furnace. Non-metallic conveyor belts are shown for example in co-pending US application BTU-197XX. Other conveyor systems can be utilized such as roller or pusher types to suit different product configurations and produce weights.
The invention is not to be limited to what has been particularly shown and described but is intended to encompass the spirit and true scope of the appended claims.
This application claims the benefit under 35 U.S.C. §119(3) of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/712,444, entitled “Furnace System Having Hybrid Microwave and Radiant Heating” filed Oct. 11, 2012 which is herein incorporated by reference in its entirety for all purposes.
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Translation of JP2007037467A, Kuriyama et al., Stbilizer for oil and fat crystal,Feb. 15, 2007, http://worldwide.espacenet.com/publicationDetails. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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61712444 | Oct 2012 | US |