The invention relates to apparatus for applying radiant energy to coating materials, and in particular to applying ultraviolet (UV) energy to coatings on floors.
Beams of high intensity UV light are useful for curing polymers in certain coatings, such as paints, inks adhesives and the like. Such coatings are often used to treat large surface areas, such as floors and so there is a need to cure coatings on such surface areas with UV light. U.S. Pat. No. 6,761,127 describes apparatus for curing floor coatings using two UV lamps at different wavelengths with energy applied in a linear stripe pattern. This apparatus is said to be limited to no more than 75 watts per inch.
More power density is useful for faster curing. In prior patent application Ser. No. 12/209,080 filed Sep. 11, 2008, G. Wakalopulos described how a known reliable source of UV light at good power is a mercury vapor street light. Typical power is 175 watts per inch available a few minutes after starting. At start-up a small pool of mercury is vaporized and heated. The lamp is a negative resistance device requiring ballast to prevent increasing current from damaging the lamp. The negative resistance is offset by a positive impedance that tends to limit current. As the lamp heats up during operation, internal gas pressure rises and a higher voltage is required to maintain the discharge. The resistive drop across the ballast supplies the required voltage until the required voltage cannot be supplied to maintain the discharge. At that point, the discharge is extinguished, the lamp cools, the gas pressure is reduced and the ballast is again effective once the lamp is started. An auxiliary high voltage electrode is used to restart the arc discharge. Such power in a UV lamp would be desirable for curing floor coatings if heat and electrical stability problems could be solved with appropriate ballast in a convenient radiant energy delivery system adapted for surfaces such as floors. If heat and electrical stability problems are not solved, the lamp fails.
The present invention deploys ultraviolet lamps of the kind found in street lamps on radially extending arms about an axial support shaft. There are two problems. A first problem is to focus the light onto the floor in an efficient high intensity beam. A second problem is to provide thermal and electrical ballast to the lamp to prevent lamp failure.
The first problem is solved in an embodiment using a U-shaped channel housing that is a shell supporting shiny spars that form a reflector for an elongated lamp tube placed between the spars at a focal location. The lamp tube axis is parallel to the arm. A gap between the spars allows air flow between spars to cool the lamp.
The second problem is more difficult and is solved in an embodiment using a Nichrome wire of the type found in a common hair dryer, providing resistive ballast. Air is blown across the heated wire in a path that takes hot air past the lamp. The reflector is vented so that air can enter a plenum defined by the reflector wherein the lamp is mounted. When the lamp is cold, heated air passing over the resistive wire heats the lamp toward a desired operating temperature. When the lamp temperature exceeds the temperature of the heated wire the air cools the lamp tending to stabilize thermal performance.
Circulation of hot air is established by air jets coming from fans in tubes that resemble hair dryer barrels. The barrels are aligned transverse to the arms like jets engines on aircraft wings to provide circumferential reactive momentum to arms on which they are mounted, similar to other arms mounting the lamps, all rotating about the same axis. Thus the barrels provide jet momentum that rotates the arms about the axis as well as air that regulates the lamps also being rotated by the jet momentum. As lamp temperature increases, voltage across the lamp increases, causing increased fan speed increasing jet momentum thereby cooling the lamp, lowering voltage, and lowering jet momentum. In this manner, the lamp achieves ballast while jet momentum alternates between two values.
In summary, elongated UV lamps of the type commonly used as street lamps, mounted on freely rotating arms, trace an annular pattern on a floor. As a spindle or shaft, carrying the arms, is advanced, a wide swath of a floor is treated. Hot air from a blower is used for thermal stabilization of the lamps. It may also be used to rotate the arms by reactive momentum transfer.
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Perpendicular, or at least transverse, to arms 16 and 18 are arms 17 and 19. Arm 17 carries a pair of blowers 35 and 36. Similarly, arm 19 carries a pair of blowers 37 and 38. The blowers are similar in size, appearance, and performance to the barrels of hand held hair dryers. Each blower has a Nichrome heating wire inside of the barrel across which air is blown by a motor driven fan or cage. Hot air emerges from the barrel. Other electronics associated with the Nichrome wire are also in the barrel. When the UV lamps are at relatively low temperature compared to their ideal operating temperature, air heated by being blown across the Nichrome wire heats the lamps by convection associated with rotation of the arms. When the temperature of the lamps exceeds the ideal operating temperature, air blown across the wire, at the same temperature as described above, now cools the lamps because the lamps are hotter than the hot air. In this manner the lamp operating temperature is stabilized. It is seen that the preferred operating temperature for air heated by the Nichrome wire is equal to the ideal operating temperature of the lamps. Since the Nichrome wire operates by resistive heating, similar to a toaster, the amount of resistance of the wire is adjusted to achieve the desired air heating. This can either be established at the time of manufacture by calibration or an electronic feedback system having a temperature sensor and variable resistance controller can be used. Without temperature stabilization, many lamps would fail.
Each of the blowers has a exit port for heated air. The exit ports 45, 46 are associated with respective blowers 35, 36. The air exit ports for blowers 37, 38 cannot be seen because they face in an opposite direction but have the effect of complementing the reactive momentum of the other blowers. The blowers are mounted below respective support arms, like jet engines mounted below an aircraft wing. Just like jet engines, the blowers establish reactive momentum that propels the arms causing the collar 27 to rotate about axial shaft 25. In
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This application claims priority from provisional application Ser. No. 61/098,602 filed Sep. 19, 2008 for Rotating UV Source for Wide Area Curing and is a continuation-in-part of application Ser. No. 12/209,080 filed Sep. 11, 2008 , now U.S. Pat. No. 7,731,379, and application Ser. No. 12/112,753 filed Apr. 30, 2008, now U.S. Pat. No. 7,775,690, all by George Wakalopulos.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Child | 12478970 | US | |
Parent | 12112753 | Apr 2008 | US |
Child | 12209080 | US |