This application is the US national phase of PCT application PCT/EP2007/009338, filed 27 Oct. 2007, published 19 Jun. 2008 as WO2008/071259, and claiming the priority of German patent application 102006058627.1 itself filed 13 Dec. 2006.
The invention relates to a system for applying glue to fibers for making fiberboard, especially MDF board or similar wood-containing board, having a fiber supply having at least one fiber feed conduit using air for fiber transport and opening into a fiber-discharge conduit, for example via an arcuate fiber deflection element, having a chute downstream of the fiber-discharge conduit, having a glue applicator having spray nozzles for spraying the fibers that emerge from the fiber-discharge conduit and enter the chute with droplets of glue, between the fiber-discharge conduit and the chute, for example, and having a collection device downstream of the chute with an air-permeable conveyor belt for catching and, if necessary, conveying away the fibers, and a suction device below the conveyor belt for drawing air from the chute through the conveyor belt, the suction device having one or more suction boxes to which one or more suction lines are connected.
An MDF board is a medium-density fiberboard. In such a system, the fibers to which glue is to be applied are blown in through a vertical fiber-supply conduit, for example, and a 180° fiber diverter, into a fiber-discharge conduit that is also vertical. Thence the fibers enter into a glue-application zone situated between fiber-discharge conduit and the chute. The glue-coated fibers then drop into the chute, and from there onto the conveyor below the chute. Preferably, an air-jacket supply is furthermore provided, having a line for generating an air jacket that surrounds the fiber stream in the chute, the air jacket and the transport air being drawn off by the suction device, specifically through the foraminous transport belt.
Such a system for applying glue to fibers is known from DE 102 47 412 [WO 2004/035279], DE 102 47 413 [WO 2004/035278], DE 102 47 414 [WO 2004/052603], and DE 10 2004 001 527 [WO 2005/065905]. In the case of the system known from DE 102 47 412, the suction device has a plurality of suction elements, one behind the other in the belt travel direction, i.e. transport direction, in the form of suction registers or suction funnels. The fibers fall through the chute onto the screen belt where they form a fiber mat. Any glue droplets that did not get used also fall through the chute, onto this fiber mat, so that essentially, subsequent glue application occurs. Along the conveyor, a feed mechanism can be provided upstream of the chute that applies fresh fibers to the screen belt, before it passes below the chute. As a result, a preliminary nonwoven fabric essentially forms on the screen belt, so the glue-coated fibers do not land directly on the screen belt, but rather onto the preliminarily formed nonwoven layer. In this manner, contamination of the screen belt with fibers carrying still sticky glue is in theory avoided or reduced. The measures known in this regard have fundamentally proven themselves, but they could be developed further.
The object of the invention is to create a system having the structure described above, with which it is possible to apply glue to fibers for making fiberboard, particularly MDF board, without problems, in an efficient and economical manner. In particular, contamination of the system is to be avoided, or easy and cost-advantageously remedied.
To accomplish this task, the invention teaches, in the case of a system of the type stated and described initially, that the suction boxes are configured as cleaning boxes having at least one cleaner for removing fibers (to which glue has been applied and/or to which glue has not been applied) that enter the suction boxes through the conveyor belt. Such a cleaner preferably has at least one cleanout port that can be closed by a cover flap or similar closure. According to a preferred further development, the cleaner has a conveyor, for example an auger that can transport fibers away, out of the cleaning box, through the cleanout port.
The invention proceeds from the recognition that, first of all, it is practical to collect the glue-coated fibers in a chute glue applicator in the known manner below the chute on an air-permeable conveyor belt, e.g. a mesh or filter belt, and if suction registers are underneath the conveyor belt to this end. Taking into consideration the power of the suction, i.e. suction volume required in practice, through the conveyor belt, it is impossible to avoid drawing fibers and, in particular, glue-coated fibers, as well as possibly also droplets of glue into the suction boxes through the conveyor belt to a certain degree. The invention has now recognized that perfect and long-lasting operation can be guaranteed if the suction boxes, as cleaning boxes, are provided with a cleaner, for example a transport auger, as well as with a cleanout port. In this way, the cleaning boxes can be cleaned at predetermined intervals, or also continuous or quasi continuously, and consequently be freed of fibers and/or glue-coated fibers, and caked-on residues that are deposited in the cleaning boxes. In this connection, it can be sufficient to work with only two, relatively large suction boxes, and the suction power of these two suction boxes can be different or also the same. Preferably, the cleaning augers work in a direction orthogonal to the transport direction of the conveyor belt, while the suction lines are preferably connected with the suction boxes in a direction that runs parallel to the transport direction of the conveyor belt.
According to a further proposal of the invention, the suction boxes are underneath the chute in only a limited region configured as a suction region, with a suction-free region upstream of this suction region forming a fiber-deposition zone. The lower outlet end of the chute is consequently not fully juxtaposed with suction registers or boxes, but rather, a suction-free region is upstream of the suction region as a fiber-deposition zone. This means that the conveyor belt that enters into the chute region is at first covered with fibers without any suctioning from underneath, before this part of the screen belt then gets into the region of the suction boxes. Surprisingly, the contamination of the suction boxes and also of the belt can be significantly reduced by these measures, even though deposition of the fibers takes place with glue-coated fibers. The length of the suction-free fiber-deposition zone (in the transport direction) amounts to approximately 10 to 70%, preferably 20 to 50% of the length of the suction region (in the transport direction).
Furthermore, the invention proposes that the suction device can be controlled as a function of the contamination of the conveyor belt. Consequently, the suction power can be increased with increasing contamination of the conveyor belt and resulting decreasing air perviousness of the conveyor belt, so that the volume of the air stream suctioned out of the chute can be kept constant by a suitable control, or can be adjusted in desired manner.
The conveyor belt, in known manner, can be guided over deflectors as an endless circulating conveyor belt, with a belt cleaner being provided in the region of the conveyor belt return run. Such a belt cleaner can consist, on the one hand, of a brush, and, on the other hand, of a wet scrubber. In this connection, the invention proposes that this belt cleaner is connected with a controller that controls the cleaning process as a function of the degree of contamination of the screen belt.
According to a further proposal of the invention, which has independent significance, in the case of a system in which the transport air is blown into the chute through the fiber-supply conduit and an air jacket is blown into the chute through an air-jacket line, and both are suctioned out of the chute by the suction device, that an open housing region is provided above the chute, for example in the region of the glue applicator, through which ambient (or room) air is drawn into the chute by the suction device. In this connection, the invention proceeds from the recognition that the flow conditions can be influenced to a positive degree by suctioning in “makeup air” in targeted manner. This is because surprisingly, suctioning in makeup air, i.e. ambient air, leads to support of the fiber stream that exits from the fiber-discharge conduit, so that in total, particularly homogeneous glue application can take place, without any caked-on deposits being observed in the chute near the glue applicator.
To control the air amounts or the volume streams, it is practical to preselect and adjust the volume of the stream of transport air and the volume of the stream of the air jacket in fixed manner, and then to adjust the (variable) volume of the stream of ambient air and consequently makeup air by way of the suction volume of the stream of suction device. In this connection, the invention proposes that the volume of the stream of ambient air forms a ratio to the volume of the stream of transport air of 1:1 to 1:5, preferably 1:2 to 1:3. The volume of the stream of ambient air can form a ratio to the volume of the stream of the air jacket of 1:1 to 1:3, preferably 1:1 to 1:2. Furthermore, it is practical if the volume of the stream of the air jacket to the volume of the stream of transport air forms a ratio of 1:1 to 1:3, preferably 1:1 to 1:2. This results in an advantageous proportion of the volume of the stream of ambient air, as part of the total stream (ambient air+air jacket+transport air), of 10 to 40%, for example 10 to 30%, preferably 15 to 25%.
In the following, the invention will be explained in greater detail with reference to a drawing that shows an embodiment merely as an example. In the drawing:
a is a detail of the structure of
b is a detail of the structure of
The figures show a system for applying glue to fibers 1 for making fiberboard, particularly MDF board. The system is set up for continuous operation and has a fiber supply 2 having at least one fiber-supply conduit 3 to which transport air F is supplied for fiber transport. This vertical fiber-supply conduit 3 connects to a fiber-discharge conduit 5, which is also oriented vertically, through an arcuate 180° fiber-deflection conduit 4. A chute 6 is downstream of this fiber-discharge conduit 5; it is also vertical and has a cross section that flares downward, i.e. in the drop direction. A glue applicator 7 having spray nozzles 8 for spraying glue droplets onto the fibers 1 that exit from the fiber-discharge conduit 5 and enter into the chute 6 is between the fiber-discharge conduit 5 and the chute 6. To this end, an array of for example 10 to 20 spray nozzles on a nozzle ring surrounds the fiber stream that exits from the fiber-discharge conduit 5. An air-jacket supply 12 having one or more air-jacket lines 13 is provided underneath the glue applicator 7 and above the chute 6, to form an air jacket M that surrounds the fiber stream in the chute. The spray nozzles 8 are configured as mixing nozzles, and are connected to at least one glue supply line and one compressed air line. The chute has a collection device 9 having an air-permeable conveyor belt 10 for catching and carrying away the fibers, as well as a suction device 11 for suctioning air out of the chute and through the conveyor belt 10 underneath it. The air-permeable conveyor belt 10 is configured as a mesh or filter belt. The suction device 11 has two suction boxes 14, to each of which a suction line 15 is connected. Furthermore, the collection device 9 has a downstream drying zone 16 through which the fibers that are on the conveyor belt 10 and have had glue applied to them pass. A fiber-discharge device in the form of a fiber-discharge conduit 19 is connected with the collection device 9 via a milling roller 17 and a rotary valve 18.
According to the invention, the suction boxes 14 according to
Furthermore, it can particularly be seen in
Furthermore, a controller, not shown, is provided, with which the suction device 11 can be controlled as a function of the contamination of the conveyor belt 10.
The conveyor belt 10 is guided over deflectors 24 as an endlessly revolving conveyor belt, with a belt cleaner 25 in the region of the belt return run. This belt cleaner 25 has a mechanical cleaner, namely a brush 25a, on the one hand, and, on the other hand, a wet scrubber 25b. These cleaners 25, 25a, 25b are operated and consequently controlled as a function of the degree of contamination.
The air technology of a system according to the invention will be explained using
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2006 058 627 | Dec 2006 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2007/009338 | 10/27/2007 | WO | 00 | 4/27/2009 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2008/071259 | 6/19/2008 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
20030066168 | Schneider | Apr 2003 | A1 |
20050139340 | Thordahl | Jun 2005 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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2004035279 | Apr 2004 | WO |
WO-2004035278 | Apr 2004 | WO |
WO-2004035279 | Apr 2004 | WO |
WO-2004052603 | Jun 2004 | WO |
WO-2005065905 | Jul 2005 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20120138233 A1 | Jun 2012 | US |