The present invention relates to a system for the radiation treatment of substrates with electromagnetic radiation such as infrared radiation (IR radiation) for drying substrates and/or ultraviolet radiation (UV radiation) for curing UV-hardened paints.
Such systems are used, for example, as a component of paint systems. In such paint systems, the substrate surface is typically cleaned in a first step. This can be done, for example, with air pressure and/or with means for ionizing the surface or by blasting the surface with a liquid medium such as water or an aqueous, alcohol-based, or solvent-containing solution or with a solid such as blasting material or CO2, or by immersing the substrate in an aqueous, alcohol-based, or solvent-containing solution, possibly with the action of waves such as ultrasound waves or microwaves.
In the case of cleaning with liquid media, IR heat waves can even be used for the subsequent drying.
In a second step, the actual paint layer can then be applied according to the invention by spraying on a paint dispersion. This is followed by a step in which the already painted substrate is baked. This can be carried out by means of heating in the ambient air and/or by applying infrared radiation (IR) for example at 50-80° C. This causes the solvent that is usually present in the paint dispersion to evaporate. In the UV-hardened paints that are widely used today, i.e. paints that are cured by means of UV light, this hardening takes place in a step following the volatilization of the solvent. Depending on the application. IR- and/or UV lamps are used in these process steps. In the present description, the process of drying by means of IR radiation and/or the process of curing by means of UV radiation are uniformly referred to as radiation treatment.
In order to prevent solvents from volatilizing freely into the environment and into the work environment, according to the prior art, such processes are carried out in treatment chambers.
This is intended to ensure that a continuous gas exchange takes place in order, for example, to minimize the solvent concentration in the vicinity of the substrate and thus to also accelerate the drying and/or curing process. According to the prior art, as schematically depicted in
According to the prior art, the chamber ceiling is provided with an inflow region 7 through which gas, e.g. air, that is fed from an inlet 3 flows into the chamber. According to the prior art, the gas flows past the radiation sources 9, 9′, 9″ and then past the substrates 11, 11′ and into the lower region of the chamber where it is aspirated from the chamber 1 via the outlet 5. Because of this placement according to the prior art, flow and gravity work together so that impurities such as dust and solvent are effectively aspirated away. The gas flow and its direction are schematically depicted by means of arrows in
The arrangement according to the prior art, however, is disadvantageous in that the gas flow that flows past the substrates must first pass the radiation sources. These are generally hot during operation, which leads to an uncontrolled heating of the gas flow. This means that the substrate holders 11, 11′ are acted on by a gas flow that has an indefinite temperature and temperature gradients can even occur across the width of the substrate holders. The process of the drying, and/or curing, however, is strongly influenced by the prevailing temperature. Indefinite temperature conditions therefore very quickly result in an uncontrolled process. Irregularities occur particularly if there are temperature gradients. The problem becomes even more pronounced due to the fact that the radiation sources themselves are generally not temperature-stabilized. In the starting phase, the radiation sources are rather cool, but the heat up considerably after long operation. This problem could in fact be reduced by means of explicit cooling steps carried out at the radiation sources. Such steps, however, involve significant technical complexity and are therefore costly.
According to the foregoing, it would be desirable to have radiation treatment equipment available that could be used to reduce and preferably completely overcome the above-mentioned problems of the prior art.
The object of the invention, therefore, is to create such a system.
According to the invention, the problems are in principle solved by building up a gas flow in the chamber that flows past the substrates immediately after entering the chamber. Since the gas flow does not previously flow past the radiation sources that may be radiating heat, the temperature of the gas flow is well-defined and can also be easily adjusted to a desired stable value.
The invention and its advantageous embodiments will now be described in detail by way of example in conjunction with the drawings.
A second advantageous embodiment of the present invention is shown in
The present application has disclosed a system for the radiation treatment of substrates, which includes at least one radiation source above the substrate holders in a chamber, which holders are to be equipped with substrates that are to be treated, and the chamber has means for maintaining a gas flow in the chamber, having at least one gas inlet and at least one gas outlet, characterized in that the at least one gas inlet is situated in the vicinity of the substrate holders so that gas flowing in by means of the at least one gas inlet first flows around the substrate holders before either exiting the chamber directly via the gas outlet or exiting after flowing around the at least one radiation source.
In the system, the gas outlet can be provided in the vicinity of the at least one radiation source so that the gas, after flowing, around the substrate holders, flows around the at least one radiation source before it exits the chamber via the gas outlet.
The gas outlet can be provided at a height between the substrate holders and at least one radiation source.
In the vicinity of the at least one radiation source, a second gas inlet can be provided so that gas flowing in via the second gas inlet first flows around the at least one radiation source before it meets the gas flowing against the substrate holders and flows together with it out of the chamber through the gas outlet.
At the lower edge of the chamber, recesses can be provided so that the flow is reduced in the vicinity of the recesses and the recesses thus function as dust collectors.
Removable receptacles can be provided in the recesses.
A third particularly preferred embodiment of the present invention is shown in
According to a preferred embodiment of the third variant, the individual gas flow devices have lugs in the upper part, which make it possible to hold two respective gas flow devices together, for example by means of a clamp rail or by means of caps 30, 30′, making it possible, for example, to maintain the laminar flow in this region as well.
In particular, the present invention discloses a system for the radiation treatment 401 of substrates, which has at least one radiation source 9, 9′,9″ in a chamber that is situated above the substrate, holders 11, 11′ that are to be equipped with substrates that are to be treated and the chamber has means for maintaining a gas flow in the chamber, with a gas flow device having at least one gas inlet 421, 421′ and at least one gas outlet 423, 405, where the gas flow device is situated in the region below the substrate holder (11, 11′) and is embodied so that the gas inlet 421, 421′ and gas outlet 423, 405 include elements that have flow conduits that become narrower in the flow direction and then widen out again toward the downstream end, as a result of which during operation of the system, a laminar flow essentially prevails at least in the gas flow device and therefore deposits due to turbulence phenomena do not occur.
Preferably, the elements of the system for radiation treatment 401 that constitute the flow conduits are formed out of deformable plates that are preferably composed of sheet metal.
Preferably, at least two of the elements constituting the flow conduits are held together in the upper region by means of rails, clamps, and/or caps 30, 30′, which enables a simple assembly or disassembly.
Preferably, the elements constituting the flow conduits are at least double-walled and the at least two walls are spaced apart from each other, thus forming a thermally insulating gap S.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2013 015 580 | Sep 2013 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2014/002406 | 9/5/2014 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2015/039732 | 3/26/2015 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20160214138 A1 | Jul 2016 | US |