1. Field
The present disclosure relates to an impulse heat sealer, and in particular, to a heater.
2. Description of the Related Art
Existing impulse heat sealers including a heater wire having, for example, a length of 20 cm and a width of 2 mm, require a low voltage and a high current such as 20 V and 10 A. Therefore, a heavy transformer is necessary to use such an impulse heat sealer with commercial electric power at 100 V. The inventors have improved an existing strip-shaped heater wire by cutting narrow slits into the wire from both sides of the wire, thereby forming a zigzag shape having a small and uniform width, which is electrically narrow and long. As a result, a high voltage and a low current such as 100 V and 2 A can be used, and an impulse heat sealer can be directly connected to the commercial electric power. Thus, a heavy transformer is not necessary, and a lightweight and energy-saving impulse heat sealer is realized. (See Japanese Patent No. 3943934.)
When an electric current is passed through the heater wire, an electric shock may occur. To prevent this, the impulse heat sealer includes a safety device that interrupts an electric current flowing through the electric wire when a press mechanism is open. However, if the zigzag-shaped portion of the heater wire is stretched or if an end of a broken heater wire protrudes, part of the heater wire may be exposed to the outside from the mouth of the press mechanism even if the press mechanism is closed. If a switch is pressed and the heater wire is energized in this state, a user's hand may contact the heater wire and receive an electric shock.
The inventors have taken measures against this problem by affixing to the heater wire a film that is coated with a sticky agent and that is made of a polyimide resin that can resist a temperature of 600° C. As a result, and in particular because the heater wire is fixed in place with the sticky agent that is moved to the heater wire, the zigzag-shaped wire is prevented from stretching and an end of a broken wire is prevented from protruding, and the heater wire is improved. (See Japanese Unexamined Patent Application Publication No. 2005-7606.) However, the film is thermally weak. Because the sealer is not usually used to seal a bag that has a maximal sealable width, parts of the film near ends of the film at which pressure is low tend to rise above the heater wire. The heater wire is frequently overheated because air, which is a thermal insulator, enters such parts and inflates from below the film. As a result, within several months or so, the film becomes burned and charred, and the film is removed from the heater wire when replacing fluoropolymer tape affixed to the film.
It is assumed from this result that the heater wire that is thermally insulated by air and the polyimide resin, which is a thermal insulator, was temporarily heated to a temperature higher than 600° C. and the heat deteriorated the polyimide resin. Then, the high-temperature is related to material degradation such as 475° C. embrittlement of an iron-chromium alloy from which the heater wire is made, so that using the film is not an effective measure. By increasing the thickness of the film, the life of the film can be increased to some extent. However, a film having a thickness of 60 micrometers, which is the smallest available thickness, considerably impedes heat transfer. Therefore, a sealer using a thick film does not have practical utility.
According to some illustrative and non-limiting embodiments, a heat sealer includes a press mechanism, a heater attached to a jaw of the press mechanism, and an electric power circuit connected to the heater, the electric power circuit receiving electric power from an external power source. In some examples, the heat sealer clamps and presses an object made of a thermoplastic resin by using the press mechanism, instantaneously heats the heater by passing a high electric current through the heater in a short time, melts the object, and cools and solidifies the object by interrupting the electric current. In some examples, the heater includes (a) a thin thermal-electrical insulator plate, (b) one or more heater wires, (c) a ceramic plate, (d) a thermal-electrical insulator, and (e) a thin release film. In some examples, the thin thermal-electrical insulator plate has an appropriate size and thickness, and is superposed on a heat dissipating base or on the jaw that also serves as the heat dissipating base, the heat dissipating base being made of a metal and disposed on the jaw of the press mechanism. In some examples, each heater wire is a thin metal resistor plate superposed on the thin thermal-electrical insulator plate, the heater wire including an electrode that is connected to the electric power circuit and a heat generating portion having a strip-like shape or a desired shape. In some examples, the ceramic plate (hereinafter referred to as a thermally conductive electrical insulator) is superposed on the heat generating portion, the thermally conductive electrical insulator having a flat surface that closely contacts the heat generating portion, the thermally conductive electrical insulator being an electrical insulator and having a thermal conductivity that is equal to or higher than that of alumina. In some examples, the thermal-electrical insulator covers exposed portions of the heater wires and the electrode, the thermal-electrical insulator surrounding a part of the exposed portions located around the thermally conductive electrical insulator so that the part is electrically and thermally insulated and surrounding a remaining part of the exposed portions so that the remaining part is at least electrically insulated. In some examples, the thin release film is superposed constantly or as necessary on the thermally conductive electrical insulator with or without a gap therebetween. In some examples, the elements of the heater described in (a) to (e) are made to closely contact each other and fixed at necessary positions by using an adhesive, a sticky agent, or a physical method.
The above and/or other aspects, features and/or advantages of various embodiments will be further appreciated in view of the following description in conjunction with the accompanying figures. Various embodiments can include and/or exclude different aspects, features and/or advantages where applicable. In addition, various embodiments can combine one or more aspect or feature of other embodiments where applicable. The descriptions of aspects, features and/or advantages of particular embodiments should not be construed as limiting other embodiments or the claims.
The above and/or other exemplary features and advantages of the preferred embodiments of the present invention will become more apparent through the detailed description of exemplary embodiments thereof with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Exemplary embodiments of the present invention will now be described more fully with reference to the accompanying drawings. The matters exemplified in this description are provided to assist in a comprehensive understanding of various embodiments of the present invention disclosed with reference to the accompanying figures. Accordingly, those of ordinary skill in the art will recognize that various changes and modifications of the embodiments described herein can be made without departing from the scope and spirit of the claimed invention. Descriptions of well-known functions and constructions are omitted for clarity and conciseness.
With respect to existing impulse sealers, only a low voltage electric current is passed through a heater wire of existing impulse sealers, and it is empirically known that heat is not transferred in a short time to any object placed on the heater wire. Therefore, only a fluoropolymer tape is disposed on the heater wire to prevent melted polyethylene or the like from sticking to the heater wire. However, in order to use a transformerless heat sealer having a zigzag-shaped wire without a danger of electric shock not only in countries where the voltage of commercial electric power is 100 V but also in countries where the voltage is in the range of 200 to 240 V, it is necessary to use a cover that does not deteriorate due to heat generated by the heater wire and through which the heat is rapidly transferred to the surface.
A thin ceramic plate that conducts heat but does not conduct electricity (hereinafter referred to as “thermally conductive electrical insulator”) is disposed on a heat generating portion of the heater wire. For example, in some embodiments, the thin ceramic plate has a thickness of 0.6 mm and is made of an aluminium nitride. In addition, in some embodiments the thermally conductive electrical insulator can be made of a plurality of parts; for example, in some embodiments, a thin ceramic plate can be made of a plurality of stacked thin ceramic plates in some embodiments. The thin ceramic plate is surrounded by a silicone rubber or a glass cloth that does not conduct heat and electricity (hereinafter referred to as “thermal-electrical insulator”), and they are made to closely contact each other and fixed to a heat dissipating base.
The possibility of electric shock is almost entirely eliminated because heat generated by the heater wire is immediately transferred to the thin ceramic plate, which is a thermally conductive electrical insulator, the temperatures of the heater wire and the thin ceramic plate do not become abnormally higher than the operating temperature (150° C.), the heater wire is completely covered, and the lives of the heater wire and the ceramic are considerably increased. Moreover, heat generated by the heater wire is rapidly transferred to the surface through the thin plate made of a thermally conductive electrical insulator, and the heater wire is cooled rapidly in a short time after the electric current is turned off and generation of heat is stopped.
A first illustrative and non-limiting embodiment will be described with reference to
Referring to
The operation and function will be described. As with existing press mechanisms, a base 12 is fixed to the other of the jaws 1 of the press mechanism and a soft silicone rubber 11 having a thickness of 2 mm and a width of 3.4 mm is affixed to the base 12. A bag 13 made of a polyethylene film having a thickness of about 0.05 mm was placed between the jaws 1, clamped, and pressed. When the heater was energized for one second, which was slightly longer than 0.8 seconds in the case where the thin aluminium nitride plate 6 was not present, the bag 13 was properly sealed. Cooling time increased slightly.
Heat generated by the heater wire 5 is rapidly transferred to the thin aluminium nitride plate 6. Therefore, when the thin aluminium nitride plate 6 is heated to a sealable temperature, the temperature of the heater wire 5 is only several degrees higher than that of the sealable temperature. The sealable temperature is in the range of 100 to 150° C. If the width of the bag 13 made of polyethylene is smaller than that of the heater, heat generated at end portions of the heater is not used. However, the heat at the end portions is rapidly transferred toward the middle of the heater. As a result, the temperature of any part of the thin aluminium nitride plate 6 does not exceed 200° C. Some commercial silicone-based adhesives for high-temperature are resistant to a temperature of 250° C. in ordinary use. Such an adhesive can be used for a substantially long time and can follow the difference in thermal expansion between components because the adhesive has a certain degree of flexibility.
As illustrated
The length of the heater wire 5, which has a zigzag shape, is electrically thinner and longer than a ribbon wire having the same size. In the example described above, the electrical resistance of the heater wire 5 is 25 Ω while the electrical resistance of a ribbon wire having the same size is 2 Ω. Therefore, an appropriate electric current is obtained by half-wave rectifying commercial electric power of 100 V. Therefore, a transformer need not be used. The slits of the heater wire may be formed in accordance with the used voltage. Even if the width of the zigzag-shaped wire is nonuniform to a certain degree, the thin aluminium nitride plate 6 immediately corrects nonuniformity in heat and enables proper sealing. Therefore, the heater according to the embodiment may be formed not only in a linear shape, but also in a quadrangular or a circular shape to meet a variety of needs. Moreover, the heater may include more than one heater wires.
It is preferable that the thin aluminium nitride plate 6 has the same shape, the same area, and the same thickness as the heat generating portion 9 of the heater wire. However, the temperature of the thin aluminium nitride plate 6 decreases if the area of the thin aluminium nitride plate 6 is made larger than that of the heat source, and the temperature of the thin aluminium nitride plate 6 increases if the thin aluminium nitride plate 6 has a trapezoidal cross section and has a front surface that is smaller than a surface through which heat is received. By taking this into consideration, the shape of the thin aluminium nitride plate 6 may be different from that of the heat generating portion of the heater wire to a certain degree. For example, a heat die having a triangular cross section may be integrally formed with the thin aluminium nitride plate 6. In this case, a surface of the thin aluminium nitride plate 6 opposite to the heater wire has a certain amount of protrusions and recesses. However, as long as a thin aluminium nitride plate has a surface that closely contacts the heater wire and has a function the same as that of the embodiment, such a thin aluminium nitride plate is included in the scope of the claims. The thicker the plate is, the stronger the plate is. However, because a thick plate is expensive and aluminium nitride has very high heat conductivity, a thickness of about 0.6 mm is appropriate.
Even if the thin aluminium nitride plate has a joint or a crack having a width in the range of about 0.1 to 0.2 mm, as described in the specification of a zigzag-shaped heater wire disclosed by the inventors, such a joint or a crack does not influence the sealing performance because heat is diffused by the piece of fluoropolymer tape or a bag itself. Therefore, an arbitrarily long heater can be manufactured by joining short members. In this case, the thin aluminium nitride plate, which has an elongated shape, may be cracked during use. However, even if the plate is cracked, there is no problem as long as fragments are not scattered and holes are not made. Therefore, the thin aluminium nitride plate, the heater wire 5, and the pieces of glass cloth tape 7 on both sides are bonded to each other with an adhesive. A groove may be formed beforehand by using a laser or the like. When a strong force is suddenly applied to the thin aluminium nitride plate, the plate may be cracked along the groove. However, generation of a large number of small fragments or sharp edges is prevented.
The ribs 3, which are elongated protrusions at the sides of the heat dissipating base, more positively protect the thin aluminium nitride plate and the insulator. The heater may be damaged if the press mechanism is closed if a hard object in a bag has been accidentally moved to the mouth of the bag to be sealed. The ribs 3 serve to prevent such an accident. For example, a handle of a scalpel in a sterilization bag may protrude from the mouth of the bag. The structure illustrated
In the range of 250° C. to 300° C., the peak of the graph for the point A corresponds to a time at which flow of electric current was stopped and heating was stopped. The graph shows a phenomenon that the temperature at the point B increased for nearly 0.5 seconds after that time. This phenomenon occurred because the sensor at the point A was in contact with the piece of Sarcon tape having a high thermal conductivity (0.9 W/m·K) at the bottom of the heater wire and, i.e., a heat-conductive electric insulator, while the sensor at the point B was in contact with the silicone rubber 11 (an ordinary silicone rubber having a low thermal conductivity of 0.16 W/m·K), i.e., a non-heat-conductive electric insulator. This means that the heater wire made of an iron-chromium alloy, which has a low thermal conductivity, decouples heat.
Examples of thermally conductive electrical insulators that function in the same way as the thin aluminium nitride plate include silicon carbide, beryllium oxide, cubic boron nitride (c-BN), and the like. Diamond may be used if cost allows. A ceramic composed of such materials, or a composite material may be used. These ceramics can be used in the same way as the thin aluminium nitride plate described above. Aluminium nitride has a heat conductivity in the range of 150 to 250 W/m·K. Alumina has a heat conductivity of 24 W/m·K, which is the lowest among those of the ceramics described above and about the same as that of an iron-chromium alloy or Nichrome that is the material of the heater wire. These materials are included in the scope of the claims. Alumina can be used, although the sealing performance is lower than that of aluminium nitride when the same amount of heat is generated and the resistance to thermal shock is lower than that of aluminium nitride. Materials having a thermal conductivity lower than that of alumina cannot be used, because such materials cannot absorb all of generated heat and the temperature of the heater wire tends to become abnormally high.
The thermal conductivity of the thermal-electrical insulator that surrounds the thermally conductive electrical insulator is also important. To cool an impulse sealer, it is necessary to rapidly dissipate heat and transfer heat to the aluminium base. However, a thermal-electrical insulator having excessively high heat conductivity cannot be used. Steatite, which is a representative of porcelain, has a thermal conductivity of 2.5 W/m·K. If a thin plate of steatite having a thickness of 0.6 mm is used, heat is transferred through the thin plate to the heat dissipating base at the bottom. As a result, when heating is performed by supplying an electric current having an ordinary strength, sufficient amount of heat is not transferred to the surface through the thin aluminium nitride plate. When a Sarcon Tape having a thermal conductivity of 0.9 W/m·K is used, heat is transferred to the surface and sealing is successfully performed. This value may be an upper limit of the thermal conductivity of the insulator, although it may depend on the amount of applied electric power.
On the other hand, there is no lower limit to the thermal conductivity of the insulator that can be used. An insulator made of a glass cloth (0.23 W/m·K) or a silicone rubber having a low thermal conductivity can be used, because heat is dissipated into the atmosphere and the temperature decreases within seconds from the sealable temperature to a non-shrinking temperature. However, when the heater is continuously used, the temperature of the heater is gradually increased due to accumulated heat. Therefore, in this case, it is necessary to control the electric current more precisely as the temperature rises. Therefore, it is necessary to select whether to use an existing sealer, which uses an insulator having relatively high heat conductivity and naturally dissipates heat to the heat dissipating base, or a new type of sealer, which uses an insulator having a low thermal conductivity and performs precise temperature control. An example of the latter is the third embodiment.
With respect to heat dissipation, whether or not to separate the insulator on the surface from the insulator at the bottom is not important. Therefore, for ease of manufacturing, an integrated insulator 16 having an angular U-shaped cross section as illustrated
To be specific, referring to
Regarding electrical insulation, which is a property of preventing flow of electric current, there are national standards or laws that specify breakdown voltage, flame retardancy, thickness, strength, and the like. It is necessary to meat such standards. A piece of glass tape and a silicone rubber having a thickness of 0.6 mm meet the standard of double insulation. A thin aluminium nitride plate having a thickness of 0.6 mm and a piece of Sarcon Tape having a thickness of 0.45 mm meet the standard for heat dissipater of electrical components. However, to be specific, the standards of the country in which the heater is used are to be met. Therefore, the expression in the claims that an insulator has an appropriate thickness may mean that the thickness satisfies not only the standards related to heat but also the standards related to electricity.
The height of the pieces of glass cloth tape 7 on the surface is also important. The pieces of glass cloth tape 7 of
As illustrated in
The heat cut heater described above is useful when used carefully. However, if pressure is applied rapidly, or if the heat die has a triangular cross section having a large height and a short base, the thin aluminium nitride plate may be cracked. A thick aluminium nitride plate is not easily cracked, and the thicker the plate is, the stronger the plate is. However, the cost of a thick plate is high. Therefore, as illustrated in
As can be seen from these three examples, metal is the material that is suitable for the following purposes: to prevent the thin aluminium nitride plate 6 from being cracked by distributing pressure applied to the thin aluminium nitride plate 6; to prevent fragments from being scattered to the outside even if the thin aluminium nitride plate 6 is cracked; and to provide heat to an object. Metal can be used because the thin aluminium nitride plate 6 serves as an electrical insulator. Invar and aluminium plate described above are interchangeable with any metal as long as the metal has an appropriate thermal expansion coefficient. Even if the thermal conductivity of the metal is lower, the thermal conductivity of the metal is hundreds of times higher than that of a polyimide resin or a fluoropolymer. Moreover, because heat generated by the heater wire is temporarily accumulated in the thin aluminium nitride plate, the temperatures of the heater wire and the thin aluminium nitride plate do not increase abnormally. That is, the metal plates in these three examples serve to reinforce the structure and the function of a heater having a thin aluminium nitride plate as a main element. Therefore, the plate or the ribbon will be referred to as a heater reinforcing member. In reality, no metal satisfies all of the requirements of low thermal expansion coefficient, high thermal conductivity, and high strength as a die. However, the first two of these can be compensated for by using an appropriate structure, the strength is important when selecting the metal. The metal may be selected in accordance with the purpose of the sealer (i.e., what is to be sealed in what manner), the operability, the continuous service time, the life, the cost, and the like. Besides metals, a carbon fiber, a carbon nanotube, and composite materials including a carbon fiber or a carbon nanotube and aluminium or epoxy resin or the like are suitable. Such materials will be collectively referred to as a carbon composite.
The heating time of the heaters illustrated in
As with impulse sealers, the sealer is repeatedly heated when energized and cooled when de-energized. The way that the sealer is cooled and the speed of sealing operation are the same as those of existing hot plate sealers. However, a component corresponding to a hot plate is covered with an insulator and only a small part is exposed to the outside, so that the risk of burn injury is small, the amount of radiant heat is small, and the sealer is highly energy efficient. That is, the heater reinforcing member is used not only to protect the thin aluminium nitride plate but also to increase the volume and thermal capacity of the heater. However, excessively high thermal capacity is not appropriate. As long as a user does not feel that the heating time from the room temperature to the set temperature, which may be two or three seconds or more, is long, the thermal capacity is appropriate. During continuous use, the heater can be used with almost no waiting time because heat generated in the previous operation remains in the heater.
In
In existing impulse sealers, the material of a heat dissipating base may be aluminium, copper, or an aluminium-copper alloy. In the heater according to the embodiment, the heater is covered with an insulator having low heat conductivity, so that heat dissipation effect is reduced. Therefore, the heat dissipating base functions only as a base or a reinforcing plate, so that the material of the heat dissipating base may be iron, which has a high strength. However, as long as heat is transferred therethrough, the term “heat dissipating base” is also used for such a member. When the heater according to the embodiment is surrounded by the heat dissipating base, the heater has optimal strength and ease of handling. As illustrated in
Because existing heater wires stretch and contract, when a piece of fluoropolymer tape is affixed to the heater wire by using a sticky agent, small creases are formed on the piece of tape during use. Therefore, a wide piece of tape that is not coated with a sticky agent is used, and the piece of tape is fixed by mechanically fixing the edges of the piece of tape. On the other hand, because the heater according to the embodiment stretches and contracts only negligibly, it is sufficient that a piece of fluoropolymer tape coated with a sticky agent be simply affixed. For the heater illustrated in
The term “fluoropolymer tape” may mean tape having a substrate made of a glass cloth or the like. Replaceability of the tape need not be considered, because the temperature of the heater according to the embodiment does not become abnormally high. Therefore, for example, a thin film may be formed and strongly baked on the surface of the thermally conductive electrical insulator or the heater reinforcing member. In this case, a silicone rubber may be used as the material of the thin film. Fluoropolymer tape, silicone rubber, and an application film made of such a material will be collectively referred to as a release film. The thermal conductivity of a release film made of a fluoropolymer or a silicone rubber is very low, i.e., conducts only a small amount of heat. Heat is conducted when the thickness of the release film is as thin as about 0.1 mm. The thinner the thickness of the release film is, the larger the amount of conducted heat is. Omitting the release film is the best. Laminate films having a surface made of nylon, paper, or nonwoven fabric do not melt and do not adhere to the heater. Therefore, if the heater is used only for sealing such films, the release film is not necessary. Therefore, a heater that does not include a release film is included in the scope of the claims.
The sealer illustrated in
A heater wire according to the embodiment may have a zigzag shape different from that illustrated in
When the heater wire is a flexible zigzag-shaped wire as illustrated in
Not only a zigzag-shaped wire but also a general ribbon wire may be covered by a thermally conductive electrical insulator, and the same advantage can be obtained. A ceramic such as aluminium nitride has a low thermal expansion efficient. Therefore, a metal having a low thermal expansion coefficient, such as Invar, is suitable as the material of the heater wire. In the case of a long sealer having a length in the range of 2 m to 3 m, a voltage applied to the heater wire is in the range of 200 V to 300 V. Such a heater wire can be used by securely insulating the heater. Alternatively, a heater having a length of 3 m may be formed by seamlessly joining three heater wires each having a length of 1 m and a voltage of 100 V may be successively applied to each of the heater wires. The heater wire can be protected when sealing a bag containing water or a corrosive liquid.
A ribbon-shaped heater wire cannot be used as it is, because the thermal expansion coefficient of such a heater wire is high. The same applies to the heater reinforcing member, which is usually made of a metal. Displacement due to thermal expansion can be neglected if the length of the sealer is small, but the displacement cannot be neglected if the length of the sealer is large. However, as described above, this problem can be solved by using a structure that allows displacement or a structure in which a gap having a width of about 0.1 mm at room temperature is formed and the gap disappears as the heater is heated and stretched. Instead of making a thermally conductive electrical insulator independently, the thermally conductive electrical insulator may be integrally formed with a material having a high thermal expansion coefficient. For example, if the thermally conductive electrical insulator is made of a diamond like carbon (DLC), a thin layer of DLC may be formed on the surface of the iron alloy heater wire, or a thin layer of DLC may be formed on the surfaces of the heater wire and the aluminium plate, which is a heater reinforcing member. Among other ceramics, an alumina film on the aluminium plate may be used. Although only a thin film can be formed at present, if an aluminium nitride layer having a sufficient thickness can be formed on the aluminium plate, aluminium nitride may be used. Therefore, the term “a thermally conductive electrical insulator” in the claims may mean a plurality of insulators of the same kind or of different kinds.
A metal resistor plate used as the heater wire may be made of any material that is usually used for a heater wire, such as an iron-chromium alloy, Nichrome, and tungsten. The silicone rubber 11 disposed on the other of the jaws of the press mechanism may be made of a fluorocarbon rubber. If the operating temperature is low, another synthetic rubber may be used. These rubbers will be collectively referred to as a heat resistant rubber.
A sealer according to the embodiment is lightweight and a user can easily use the sealer by holding sealer with his/her hand. Therefore, the sealer may include only the heater side. In this case, although the sealer does not have a heat resistant rubber, it is necessary to affix a heat resistant rubber to a base against which the sealer is pressed. Therefore, a press mechanism in which a user holds the heater and seals a bag placed on the base, i.e., a press mechanism including a human body, is included in the scope of the claims.
Electrical insulation is semipermanently secured, because the heater wire and the electrode are completely covered with an aluminium nitride plate or a glass cloth that is strong and is not easily cracked. Thus, by using a zigzag-shaped heater wire that matches a power supply voltage, a safe and transformerless impulse sealer that can be used in countries where the voltage of commercial electric power is as high as in the range of 200 to 240 V can be produced. As a result, a heavy transformer made of iron and copper is not necessary.
A device for fixing the release film is not necessary, because the thin aluminium nitride plate used as the cover stretches and contracts only negligibly. Therefore, by using the thin aluminium nitride plate in combination with the zigzag-shaped heater wire, as in the case where the zigzag-shaped wire is independently used, a mechanism for stretching the heater wire is not necessary, so that the structure of the sealer is considerably simplified.
The heater wire and the piece of fluoropolymer tape can be used for a long time because heat is rapidly transferred through the thermally conductive electrical insulator, so that a part having an abnormally high temperature is not generated and the maintenance interval is increased.
The sealer can be used for variety of purposes other than packaging, such as for sealing excrements during caregiving or bad odor by a polyethylene bag, because the sealer is simple, lightweight, maintenance-free, and durable.
Existing heater wires, which are exposed to the outside, may corrode when the heater wire is used to seal a bag containing pickles including water or acid liquid or used in an acidic atmosphere in a factory. A heater according to the embodiment has a high corrosion resistance, because the heater can be almost completely sealed without exposing to corrosive water.
By using an appropriate heater reinforcing member, the sealer according to the embodiment has a pressing force larger than that of existing sealers. Therefore, tea leaf bags and gazette bags can be easily sealed. By disposing a heat die having a triangular cross section or having a shape of a number or the like on the heater or integrally forming such a heat die with the heater, new functions such as sealing of a thick tube for blood transfusion or stamping of a date can be performed.
By using a heater reinforcing member having an appropriate size and a thermal-electrical insulator having a low heat conductivity and by allowing precise temperature control, an impulse heat sealer of a hot-plate type that can be immediately used after being energized, that has a high operability, that is energy efficient, high-speed, and safe is realized.
While the present invention has been particularly shown and described with reference to certain exemplary embodiments thereof, it will be understood by those of ordinary skill in the art that various changes in form and detail may be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention as defined by the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/JP2008/058968 | May 2008 | JP | national |
PCT/JP2008/059023 | May 2008 | JP | national |
PCT/JP2008/059089 | May 2008 | JP | national |
PCT/JP2008/067865 | Oct 2008 | JP | national |
PCT/JP2009/057388 | Apr 2009 | JP | national |
PCT/JP2009/069725 | Nov 2009 | JP | national |
PCT/JP2009/069793 | Nov 2009 | JP | national |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/JP2009/069793 | Nov 2009 | US |
Child | 13269060 | US |