The present invention relates to a nozzle for a hot air device used in the electronic assembly industry to melt solder or heat shrink-wrap insulators. The nozzle provides a uniform temperature environment and suppresses the occurrence of local excess heating.
In the electronics fabrication and re-working field, a hot air device is often used to melt solder when a user is required to dismount or remove and replace an electrical component. Hot air may also be used to heat shrink-wrap insulation materials. However, when hot air is blown on a targeted electronic device directly, the thermal energy may be undesirably transmitted to other electronic elements adjoining the targeted device. This inadvertent heat transfer occurs with contemporary nozzles because the nozzles are held above or floated over a substrate and the targeted device, and the hot air must exhaust via the space between the nozzle and the substrate. When the user wants to prevent thermal energy from transferring heat undesirably to adjacent components from a space between the nozzle and the substrate, the conventional nozzles have complicated structures. For example, some conventional nozzles have air flow exhaust passages in the nozzle. Conventional nozzles with complicated structures tend to be unsuitable for high density mounted PCB components due to their size. Reducing the size of conventional nozzles with complicated structures is expensive.
The present invention details a nozzle design and production method for the nozzle to provide a simple structure for a hot air nozzle having an exhaust path that protects against heat transfer to surrounding electrical components. The nozzle is configured to be mounted on the distal end of a heating device, such as a hand held hot air device connected to a work station. The hot air nozzle provides a uniform temperature environment while suppressing the occurrence of local excess heating. A heated electrical component or object can receive thermal energy by hot air effectively and efficiently, and most of the hot air is exhausted through exhaust holes in the nozzle. There is no complicated structure in the nozzle.
As it may be seen from the cross section of
The connection cylinder 36 is formed by inserting the inner cylinder 62 into the outer cylinder 60. The inner cylinder 62 and the outer cylinder 60 may be integrated by welding or press fitting. Alternatively, the inner cylinder 62 and the outer cylinder 60 may be made detachable, so that convection boxes 32 having various sizes and shapes may be used with a common insertion cylinder 40 and baffle plate 38. Preferably, the hot air nozzle 30 is made in three pieces, the convection box 32 including the outer cylinder 60, the baffle plate 38 including the inner cylinder 62, and the insertion cylinder 40. It should be noted that while the convection box 32 depicted and described herein is formed in the shape of an open-ended cube, the convection box 32 may be formed to define other shapes, including cylinders and elongated rectangles configured to fit over the various shapes of electrical circuit components.
To illustrate the fabrication process,
The spacing between the opposing faces of the end wall 50 of the convection box 32 and the baffle plate 38 created by the length of the connection cylinder 36 allows the heated air to exhaust from the convection box 32 through the exhaust ports 56 and the exhausting hot air flow impinges on the baffle plate 38 and is thereby deflected radially outward so as to avoid injuring the user's hand holding the handle section 12 at the insulated grip 16. Preferably, the baffle plate 38 is slightly larger than the end wall 50. Due to the height of the side walls 52, the hot air is exhausted sufficiently above the work surface and the electrical components mounted thereupon to avoid damaging the surrounding circuitry.
In operation, the convection box 32 defines a convection space. The convection box 32 is placed over the surface of the substrate to be heated with the distal edges of the side walls abutting the surface of the substrate, for example a printed circuit board (PCB), and the peripheral side walls 52 prevent the hot air from flowing onto surrounding electric components. The shape of the end wall 50 is preferably the same as the shape defined by the distal edges of the side walls. Hot air enters the convection box 32 via the holes 64 and 66. The hot air is convected in the convection space exhausting through the exhaust ports 56. Therefore, electronic components adjoining the targeted component are not exposed to thermal energy of the hot air. Hot air from the hole is convected in the convention space and the thermal energy is transmitted to the targeted element properly.
The convection space in the convection box 32 extends from the holes 64 and 66 to the peripheral side walls 52 and the surface of the workpiece. As a result, hot air provides thermal energy to the targeted electronic component uniformly without causing excessive low temperature or high temperature locally. The user can dismount electrical components with high reliability.
To transmit thermal energy to a heated object such as a solder connection, an electronic element or a substrate, it is preferable to circulate hot air uniformly inside a nozzle's convection box. The present invention provides a convection box having a simple structure which can convect hot air in a confined space bounding the object to be heated. Those skilled in the art will readily appreciate that the disclosure herein is meant to be exemplary and actual parameters, shapes and materials depend upon the specific application for which the present invention is intended. The foregoing embodiments are presented by way of example while the scope of the invention is defined by the appended claims and equivalents thereto.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20170336098 A1 | Nov 2017 | US |