The description relates to the treatment of sheet wrapping materials.
One or more embodiments may be applied to the treatment of sheet wrapping material including, for example, a layer of aluminium foil.
In the context of the present description, the term “treatment” is intended to include under a single term operations of processing of sheet wrapping material such as cutting, pre-cutting (i.e., a score made in the material or a partial removal of material, for example aluminium, designed to favour opening in a given area of the wrapping), perforation, etc.
For the treatment (e.g., cutting) of wrapping materials—in particular, sheet wrapping materials in the foodstuffs and confectionery sector—there is widespread use of mechanical means in various implementations.
The above implementations may require the use of even rather complex equipment, in particular when processing is carried out at very high rates (for example, of the order of thousands of units per minute) and/or on moving materials, for example on wrapping material that is being rolled off a reel for supplying a packaging and/or wrapping machine.
Moreover, the processing techniques prove intrinsically far from flexible: just to provide an example, when it is desired, for any reason, to modify the cutting path, to take into account a change of format or a change of shape of the wrapping, the mechanical processes entail in a practically inevitable way replacement of the corresponding tools.
To these considerations there may then be added considerations linked, for example, to the wear of the aforesaid tools, a phenomenon that can present even in quite short times in the case of packaging lines operating at high rates.
In numerous technical sectors, there have been asserted for some time now, as an alternative to implementations of a mechanical type, implementations that envisage the use of a laser beam.
Examples of such techniques are provided in documents such as U.S. Pat. No. 5,250,784 A (regarding cutting of thin films for electrochemical generators), U.S. Pat. No. 4,691,078 A (which describes a method for dividing and interrupting via laser cutting the conductive paths of an electrical aluminium circuit), or EP 1 736 272 A1 (which regards cutting of sanitary articles, for example sanitary towels, pads, and the like).
The latter document makes reference to the prior document EP 1 447 068 A1 as example of the possibility, offered by laser cutting, of modifying in a relatively simple and flexible way the cutting paths, even in the case where it is necessary to operate on moving products.
The question of cutting aluminium thin films is also treated in scientific papers such as “Laser Cutting of Aluminum Thin Film With No Damage to Under Layers”, Annals of the CIRP, Vol. 28/1, 1979.
Documents such as CN 102233482 A, CN 201669510 U, or CN 202622186U describe the possibility of using laser-cutting techniques on laminar aluminium materials, also with reference to the foodstuffs industry.
On the other hand, the latter documents cited make explicit reference to the need to subject the aluminium sheet, during cutting, to an operation of local cooling, implemented, for example, with a cooling-air source. The same documents likewise refer to the need to prevent melting of the metal material, which may give rise to cutting irregularities (burrs), that might even assume a conformation approximately resembling a sawtooth conformation, together with the drawbacks that can derive therefrom.
The object of one or more embodiments is to overcome the drawbacks outlined above.
According to one or more embodiments, this object may be achieved thanks to a method having the characteristics recalled in the ensuing claims.
One or more embodiments may also regard a corresponding apparatus.
The claims form an integral part of the technical teachings provided herein in relation to the embodiments.
One or more embodiments will now be described, purely by way of non-limiting example, with reference to the annexed drawings, wherein:
It will be appreciated that, for clarity and simplicity of illustration, the various figures may not be represented at the same scale.
In the ensuing description, various specific details are illustrated aimed at enabling an in-depth understanding of various examples of embodiments according to the description. The embodiments may be provided without one or more of the specific details, or with other methods, components, materials, etc. In other cases, known structures, materials, or operations are not illustrated or described in detail so that the various aspects of the embodiments will not be obscured.
Reference to “an embodiment” or “one embodiment” in the framework of the present description is intended to indicate that a particular configuration, structure, or characteristic described in relation to the embodiment is included in at least one embodiment. Hence, phrases such as “in an embodiment” or “in one embodiment”, and the like, that may be present in various points of the present description do not necessarily refer exactly to one and the same embodiment. Moreover, particular conformations, structures, or characteristics may be combined in any adequate way in one or more embodiments.
The references used herein are provided merely for convenience and hence do not define the sphere of protection or the scope of the embodiments.
In the figures, the references L1 and L2 designate laser sources that can generate respective beams of laser radiation LB1, LB2, which may be used for carrying out operations of treatment on sheet wrapping material, for example for use in the foodstuffs or confectionery industry.
In the sequel of the present description, for reasons of simplicity reference will be made chiefly to the cutting operation, it remaining, however, understood that, as has already been said previously, one or more embodiments may be applied to operations of treatment of a different type such as cutting, pre-cutting, perforation, etc. of sheet wrapping material.
The possibility of using laser sources for treatment operations, such as cutting, is to be deemed in general known, for example from the various documents cited in the introductory part of the present description.
This applies in particular to the modalities that can be used for:
Likewise known is the possibility of associating, for these purposes, auxiliary devices, such as lenses, deflectors, collimators, etc. to the laser sources.
What has been said above renders superfluous any detailed description herein of the parts or elements represented in a deliberately simplified way in the annexed figures.
In one or more embodiments, the material 10 may include a layer of metal material such as aluminium.
In one or more embodiments, the layer 10 may have a thickness between 1 and 500 micron, possibly between 3 and 300 micron, and optionally between 5 and 50 micron (1 micron=10−6 m).
The choice of the material of the layer 10 is not, on the other hand, limited to aluminium.
Other possible choices of metal material may include, for example, steel (e.g., stainless steel) or brass.
In one or more embodiments, the laser L1 may be a fibre laser or a YAG laser.
In one or more embodiments, the laser L1 may have an emission wavelength in the range between 900 nm and 1500 nm (900-1500.10−9 m).
In various experiments, conducted by the present applicant, good results were obtained both with pulsed lasers, and with continuous emission (CW) lasers.
In one or more embodiments, the substrate 12 may include a material, such as polytetrafluoroethylene (Teflon). In particular, the fact that the metal layer 10 may rest on or adhere to the substrate 12 does not entail the need for permanent coupling.
For instance,
In one or more embodiments, it is also conceivable that the substrate 12 is constituted by a transmission element, such as a roller, or ductor or drop roller, 12 capable of supporting the layer 10 at least locally so as to keep it stretched out, or in any case at a correct focal distance, within a given tolerance, where it is exposed to the action of the laser beam LB1, either independently or using an additional device.
In this regard, it is useful to consider the possibility of keeping the material 10 in position locally using a system such as a vacuum-positioning system, as represented schematically in
In one or more embodiments, the local positioning of the material 10 can be achieved with an electrostatic-attraction system.
In
It has been noted that a laser beam like the beam LB1 having characteristics of the type exemplified previously enables an action of treatment (e.g., cutting/perforation) of the layer of metal material 10, without having any appreciable effect on the material of the substrate 12.
In one or more embodiments, instead of being brought into contact with a substrate 12, the material 10 may be kept free in air, withheld stretched, e.g. at the sides.
In one or more embodiments, the substrate 12 (if present) may present in any of the forms mentioned previously with reference to
In this connection, it is once again recalled that, in one or more embodiments, instead of being brought into contact with a substrate 12, the material 10 (here with the material 50) can be kept free in air, withheld stretched (e.g. at the sides).
For instance, in one or more embodiments, the layer of material 50 represented in
In one or more embodiments, the set of layers 10 and 50 (plus other possible layers, not illustrated in the figures) may correspond to a wrapping material of the type currently referred to as “multilayer”, in English terminology.
In one or more embodiments, the set of layers 10 and 50 (plus other possible layers, not illustrated in the figures) may correspond to using a metallised plastic material (e.g. polypropylene PP), with a metallization which may lie between 10 and 500 {acute over (Å)}ngstrom (1 {acute over (Å)}ngstrom=10−10 m).
Whatever the solution adopted for providing such a set or assembly of layers, the material 50 may include a material chosen, even in possible combinations, from polypropylene (PP), polyethylene (PE), polyester, polyamide (nylon), polystyrene or other polymer materials, such as e.g. polymers from biomasses (e.g. based on corn, rice, and so on) and/or bio-degradable materials such as so-called “compostable” materials, which may be coupled with metal materials (such as e.g. aluminium) and may be suited for being metallised.
It has been noted that a laser beam, such as the beam LB1 having characteristics of the type exemplified previously, enables an action of treatment (e.g., cutting/perforation) of the layer of metal material 10, without having any appreciable effect either on the material of the substrate 12 or on the material 50.
Without on the other hand wishing to be tied down to any specific theory in this regard, there is reason to think that the solutions exemplified in the figures enable control of the dissipation of the heat developed at a local level by the laser beam, causing, for example, cutting/perforation of the layer 10 to take place mainly following upon a phenomenon of sublimation, with direct passage from the solid state to the aeriform state, without having any appreciable passage to the liquid state. In this way, a cut or perforation with clean edges, i.e., substantially without any burrs, is facilitated.
In this way, it is possible to create a treated web, where formed in the metal layer 10 are cutting paths 100 having, for example, an oval or elliptical shape, this of course being a choice purely provided by way of example in so far as the path may be any, precisely thanks to the extreme flexibility afforded by laser cutting.
Added to this is also the possibility of “peeling” (as exemplified on the left in
The illustration (which is deliberately schematic) of
Of course, in one or more embodiments it is possible to use the material 102 and discard the remaining material.
It will likewise be appreciated that, as exemplified in
In one or more embodiments, for example when recourse is had to the solution exemplified in
In one or more embodiments, such a result can be achieved by resorting to the solution exemplified in
The foregoing, in one or more embodiments, may be obtained as follows:
In one or more embodiments, it is possible to obtain the layer 10 so that it is practically transparent to the radiation of the source L2, with the layer 50 practically transparent to the radiation of the source L1.
In one or more embodiments, the two laser sources L1, L2 (operating according to criteria in themselves known) may be configured in such a way that the respective beams LB1, LB2 act simultaneously, practically simultaneously or in an alternated manner on the two layers, i.e., with the beam LB1 that acts on the layer 10 while the beam LB2 is acting on the layer 50.
For instance, in one or more embodiments (in the case where it is not desired to resort to multiple laser sources, which can emit at different wavelengths, or to deflector mirrors) it is possible to arrange the two laser sources L1, L2 in such a way the respective beams LB1, LB2 hit at corresponding or at least substantially corresponding locations with:
In one or more embodiments, the laser source L2 may be a CO2 laser source.
In one or more embodiments, the laser L2 may have an emission wavelength in the range between 9 and 11 micron (9-11.10−6 m), for example, at around 9.6 micron or 10.6 micron (9.6 or 10.6.10−6 m).
In this connection, it may be noted that a CO2 laser having characteristics as exemplified previously is indicated for polymeric materials, whereas a fibre laser is suited also for metal materials as well as for some polymeric materials.
It is once again recalled that the representation of the sources L1 and L2 provided in the annexed figures is deliberately simplified.
In particular, not visible in
In particular, by operating with the two sources L1, L2 it is possible to form, in the multilayer material 10, 50 cutting paths 200 that involve both of the layers 10 and 50.
In this way, the formations 202 deriving from the cutting operation (once again here reference is made, purely by way of non-limiting example, to formations of an elliptical or oval shape) may be separated in the form of elements of multilayer material, which can then be sent on to subsequent handling operations (for example, wrapping of foodstuffs and/or confectionery products).
Holes 204 remain in the multilayer material 10, 50 once it has been treated and once the formations 202 have been removed.
Of course, in one or more embodiments it is possible to use the material 202 and discard the remaining material.
As in the case of the representation of
In that respect,
Without prejudice to the underlying principles, the details of construction and the embodiments may vary, even significantly, with respect to what has been illustrated herein purely by way of non-limiting example, without thereby departing from the extent of protection.
The extent of protection is defined by the annexed claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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93 248 | Oct 2016 | LU | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/IB2017/055267 | 9/1/2017 | WO | 00 |