The present invention relates to improvements made to fiberizing booths intended for the fabrication of glass filaments. It will be recalled that a fiberizing booth is, in a way known per se, made up of at least one bushing pierced with a plurality of holes through which molten glass flows to form a web of glass filaments.
More specifically, the present invention is aimed at a heat exchanger device designed to be positioned underneath the bottom of the bushing, the latter being itself situated within the fiberizing booth.
Now, operating a fiberizing booth is actually a particularly complex process in the course of which numerous physico-chemical parameters are constantly monitored. In this respect, it is pointed out in particular that the temperature at the bottom of the bushing is one of the most important parameters in obtaining an optimum filament as it is actually this that governs the viscosity of the glass.
To this end, it is therefore necessary to cool the underside of the bushing so as to set the temperature of the cones of glass fibers.
Furthermore, other phenomena influence the temperature of the cone of filaments and require the incorporation of heat exchanger devices underneath the bottom of the bushing.
Thus, in a fiberizing booth, the movement of the filaments carries along the air trapped in the web toward the outside of the booth, and this causes air to be sucked from the outside toward the inside of the web underneath the bottom of the bushing. It is necessary to supply fresh air to compensate for this lack of air underneath the bottom of the bushing so as to ensure uniform heat exchange with the glass cones and the bottom of the bushing, thus making it possible to improve the uniformity of the filament thickness.
A first family of known heat exchanger devices which are able to influence the temperature at the bottom of the bushing but do not perform the air supply function consists of an array of fins forming combs. Each of the fins is made of a bar made of a material with excellent heat exchange coefficients (particularly in terms of conduction), one of the free ends of each bar being connected to a manifold secured to the fiberizing booth at the underside of the bushing and provided with a heat transfer circuit thus allowing the heat energy extracted by conduction to be taken away, the glass filaments passing between the gaps of the comb.
Although it meets the current requirements in terms of the cooling of the underside of the bushing, this first family of devices cannot be read across to bushings with a high throughput. Problems associated with the geometry of the fiberizing booths (the dimensions of the area of the booth intended to accommodate the bushing are set by construction) make it difficult to envisage mounting these devices on bushings comprising a great many (several thousand) orifices, this problem being all the more exacerbated when, in addition, additional air needs to be supplied, something that is essential in high-throughput bushings.
Also known is a second family of heat exchanger devices which perform both the function of cooling the cone of glass and the function of supplying air. These are blowing fins. The latter are also configured as a comb and situated underneath the bottom of the bushing, the glass filaments passing through the gaps between the rows of fins.
Cooling fins are known from patents U.S. Pat. No. 3,150,946 and U.S. Pat. No. 3,345,147. Now, according to those documents, the fins are made from a metal gauze which is folded into a tube to form the fin. However, folding deforms some of the holes in the mesh. These are then no longer the same size and the flow generated by blowing is no longer uniform.
Patent U.S. Pat. No. 5,693,118 discloses a suction fin device that increases the convected heat exchange underneath the bottom of the bushing. The sucking of air through the fins generates uniform flow under the bushing and improves the stability of the fiberizing. By contrast, the sucking-in of air through the fins encourages the deposition of airborne substances (dust) on the surface of the fins and the ingress of dust and water droplets into the web, and these are factors known to contribute to the instability of the web.
Patents U.S. Pat. No. 4,214,884 and U.S. Pat. No. 4,310,602 relate to fins made from a thin sheet of solid nickel. The holes, with identical and precise dimensions, are obtained using a photochemical or electrolytic process.
In spite of the care taken in manufacturing these holes, their density is not enough to guarantee the optimum air flow conditions (uniformity) that will guarantee the stability of the web of glass filaments.
The present invention therefore aims to alleviate these disadvantages by proposing a heat exchanger device intended to be positioned underneath the bottom of a bushing, particularly a high-throughput bushing, this heat exchanger device being designed to guarantee optimum fiberizing conditions for the web of filaments passing through said bushing.
To this end, the heat exchanger device that is the subject of the invention, comprising at least one fin provided with means for blowing a fluid, is characterized in that the blowing means are uniform and consist of at least one of the walls of said fin, said wall having open porosity.
By virtue of these arrangements it is possible to obtain optimum cooling of the cone of glass leaving the bottom of the bushing using a convection movement resulting from the blowing of the fluid.
In preferred embodiments of the invention recourse may also possibly be had to one and/or other of the following measures:
the open porosity of the wall is between 5 and 30% and preferably between 10 and 25% and more preferably still between 15 and 20%,
the fin is of parallelepipedal overall shape and tubular cross section and has a permeability measured with air at a pressure of 0.5 bar and at 0° C. lying in the range from 300 to 1500 Sm3/h/m2, particularly lying in the range from 300 to 800 Sm3/h/m2, and preferably lying in the range between 500 and 600 Sm3/h/m2,
the blowing fluid velocity field is symmetric across the open porosity wall,
at least one of the walls of the heat exchanger device is obtained by sintering a metal powder,
the metal powder is based on a mixture of powdered stainless steel, brass and nickel, with a particle size smaller than 100 μm and preferably with a particle size lying within the range from 10 to 80 μm,
the porosity of the fin based on metal powder is of the order of 17%,
at least one of the walls of the heat exchanger device is obtained by laminating a metal gauze,
the lamination comprises 3 to 18, particularly 3 to 6, layers of metal gauze,
the fluid is air at a pressure of between 0.1 and 6 bar, preferably between 0.2 and 4 bar,
the blowing fluid results from the vaporization within the fin of a fluid that was initially in the liquid state,
the heat exchanger device is provided with an auxiliary cooling circuit.
Other features and advantages of the invention will become apparent in the course of the following description of one of its embodiments, given by way of non-limiting example with reference to the attached drawings. In the drawings:
This heat exchanger device is intended to be positioned underneath and near the bottom of a bushing in a fiberizing booth. The spacing between the fins corresponds roughly to the separation of the fiberizing nozzles situated at the bottom of the bushing so that the filaments of molten glass pass more or less in a plane positioned such that it is coplanar with and equidistant between two juxtaposed fins.
Each fin is of roughly parallelepipedal shape with a tubular cross section and has short and long walls 4, 5 parallel to one another in pairs, the long walls 4, 5, however, being intended to face the filaments. In the example depicted in
According to a first embodiment of the invention, the fin is obtained by sintering a metal powder, particularly a mixture of powdered stainless steel, brass and nickel, the particle size of which is smaller than 100 μm and preferably lies in the range from 10 to 80 μm.
The open porosity sought with this type of powder is in the range between 5 and 30% and preferably between 10 and 25% and more preferably still between 15 and 20% and more or less around 17%.
The thickness of the tubular walls of the fin is more or less around 1 mm.
Using these fins it has been possible to measure, across each to the long faces of the fin, a permeability to air measured at 0.5 bar and 0° C. in the range from 300 to 1500 Sm3/h/m2, particularly in the range from 300 to 800 Sm3/h/m2 and preferably in the range from 500 to 600 Sm3/h/m2, which represents flow speeds of between 0.08 and 0.2 m/s in the case of the first range of permeability values. The operating pressure of the fin and therefore of the comb which incorporates at least one of these fins is between 0.1 and 6 bar, preferably between 0.2 and 4 bar.
According to a second embodiment, the fin is obtained by laminating a metal gauze, between at least 3 and 18 layers, particularly between at least 3 and 6 layers of gauze assembled by compression or by sintering. The mesh size of the gauze lies more or less in the range from 1 to 30 μm.
The open porosity sought with this lamination of metal gauze lies in the range from 5 to 30% and preferably between 10 and 25% and more preferably still between 15 and 20%.
Likewise, using these fins, it has been possible to measure on each of the long faces of the fin a permeability to air at 0.5 bar and at 0° C. in the range from 300 to 1500 Sm3/h/m2, particularly in the range from 300 to 800 Sm3/h/m2, preferably in the range from 500 to 600 Sm3/h/m2, which represents flow speeds of between 0.08 and 0.2 m/s (in the case of the first range of permeability values). The operating pressure of the fin and therefore of the comb incorporating at least one of these fins is between 0.1 and 6 bar, preferably between 0.2 and 4 bar.
Using this method of fabrication it has been possible to determine a certain number of characteristics regarding the flow of the blowing fluid through each side of the long walls of the fin.
Hence,
The throughput of the bushing increases progressively as the bushing set point temperature increases. At the maximum temperature (1475° C.) that the bushing can withstand, by adjusting the blowing flow rate a maximum bushing throughput of 47.2 kg/day is observed. This is 21% higher than the maximum throughput that can be achieved with conventional fins (39.1 kg/day). The gain in throughput using the blowing fins is therefore very great. It should be pointed out that this maximum throughput is limited rather by the maximum set point temperature of the bushing (1475° C.) at which temperature the alloy of which the bushing is made melts.
The increase in the throughput of the bushing is not only dependent on the temperature of the blowing fluid, which provides cooling of the fins by convection. When the blowing fluid passes through the porous walls of the fins, the fresh blown fluid (entering the fins at 20° C.) efficiently cools the fins and is able to keep the fin temperature relatively low dependent on the blowing flow rate. This low temperature of the blowing fins allows at the same time an increase in the radiation heat exchange between the cones and the blowing fins. In order to give an idea of the cooling capability of the blowing fins,
Although increasing the throughput of a bushing is one of the users' main objectives it is nevertheless important not to lose sight of the fact that this increase must not be had at the expense of the stability of the bushing, and mainly the stability of the cones formed underneath the bottom of the bushing. Now, cone stability is dependent on the cone temperature, this temperature itself being dependent on the flow rate of the blowing fluid and on its homogeneity.
As can be seen in
Of course, other embodiments not depicted in the figures may be conceived of, particularly in terms of the shapes, cross sections and outlines of the fins. Likewise, in terms of the heat exchanger device and according to an alternative form, also not depicted in the figures, provision is made for a cooling circuit to be incorporated in the manifold in order to remove additional heat energy by circulating a heat transfer fluid (such as water for example).
The invention described above offers numerous advantages:
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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03/00380 | Jan 2003 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/FR04/00052 | 1/14/2004 | WO | 3/28/2006 |