The invention relates to a method for drying objects, in particular painted vehicle bodies, in which the objects are moved through a drying zone in which they are cured in an inert gas atmosphere,
and to
a device for drying objects, in particular painted vehicle bodies, comprising:
Very recently, paints which must be cured in an inert gas atmosphere, for example, in UV light, in order to prevent undesired reactions with components of the normal atmosphere, in particular oxygen, have gained increasing importance. These novel paints are distinguished by very high surface hardness and short polymerisation times. In painting installations operated with continuous throughput, the last-mentioned advantage is directly reflected in shorter installation lengths, which, of course, leads to considerably lower investment costs.
Whereas, in conventional driers and drying methods operating with normal air as the atmosphere, the quantity of air which is introduced into the drier and removed therefrom is of lesser importance for cost reasons, in the case of inert gas atmospheres care must be taken to achieve the lowest possible consumption.
It is the object of the present invention so to configure a method and a device of the type mentioned in the introduction that it is possible to operate for as long as possible with the same inert gas.
This object is achieved, with regard to the method, in that inert gas is withdrawn continuously or intermittently from the drying zone, which inert gas is conducted along at least one surface which is cooled to a temperature below the temperature of impurities contained in the inert gas in such a way that the impurities condense out on the cooled surface.
It is recognised with the present invention that the “service life” of the inert gas during drying depends very heavily on the degree to which impurities emanating from the objects to be dried or entrained therewith are concentrated in the inert gas. If the concentration of the impurities in the inert gas increases too much, the surface quality of the objects dried is impaired. According to the invention, therefore, inert gas is withdrawn continuously or repeatedly from the drying zone. The impurities contained in the withdrawn inert gas are condensed out on a cold surface, that is, they are removed from the inert gas, which can then be returned to the drying zone in a purified state. In this way the inert gas can be continuously circulated, only the unavoidable losses, which escape via leaks or via the inlet or outlet of the drying zone, needing to be replaced. This economical utilisation of inert gas keeps the costs of the inventive method low.
The method in which the cooled surface is cooled by means of Peltier elements is especially advantageous. Peltier elements are commercially available at low cost and require minimum complexity and cost in terms of apparatus in order to achieve the cooling effect.
The use of Peltier elements is also especially advantageous in the following context: the temperature of the inert gas falls as it flows past the cooled surface. This may be desired in a particular case, namely if (for reasons not of interest here) zones are present in the total installation in which a cooled inert gas atmosphere prevails. In that case the cold inert gas freed of impurities can be conducted to these zones. If that is not the case, however, the cooled, purified inert gases must be reheated to the operating temperature prevailing in the drier. If Peltier elements are used for cooling, the heat emitted by said Peltier elements can be utilised for reheating the inert gas after it has flowed past the cooled surface.
Another advantageous possibility of cooling the plates is that of using inert gas drawn from a pressure accumulator, which inert gas has cooled through decompression, as the cooling medium. In particular, the inert gas which is fed back to the installation to replace lost inert gas may be used for this purpose.
Low-viscosity condensed impurities may be allowed simply to drain from the appropriately oriented cooled surface. They can then be disposed of in an appropriate manner without necessitating interruption of operation for this purpose.
By contrast, condensed impurities which are solid or have high viscosity should be removed from the cooled surface mechanically and/or by solvents at the given time intervals.
The above-mentioned object is achieved, with regard to the device, in that:
The advantages of the device according to the invention are analogous to the above-mentioned advantages of the method according to the invention. The advantageous embodiments of the device according to the invention specified in claims 8 to 13 also predominantly have an analogue in one of the above-mentioned variants of the method, and corresponding advantages. Reference may be made thereto.
Embodiments of the invention are explained in more detail below with reference to the drawings, in which:
a to 3e show different positions of a vehicle body in a lock of the installation of
Reference will first be made to
From the spray cabin 3 the vehicle bodies 2 first reach a pre-drier 4, the detailed construction of which is likewise not of interest and is known to the person skilled in the art. In the pre-drier 4 a first expulsion of the solvents takes place at a temperature from 40° C. to 150° C. For this purpose the air contained in the pre-drier 4 is circulated, for example, via a heating unit 5.
The pre-drying may also be carried out by relatively long residence times in an unheated, ventilated zone instead of a pre-drier, solvents being evaporated and degassed, depending on the type of paint used.
From the pre-drier 4 the vehicle bodies 2 are moved into the main drier 6, which is made up of an inlet lock 7, a drying tunnel 8 and an outlet lock 9.
An inert gas atmosphere is present in the drying tunnel 8; it is therefore filled, for example, with CO2, nitrogen or in some cases with helium. A temperature from 40° C. to 150° C. prevails in the drying tunnel 8, and is obtained in the embodiment illustrated by circulating the inert gas via a heating unit 10. In the locks 7 and 9 the vehicle bodies 2 are moved into and out of the inert gas atmosphere of the drying tunnel 8, as will be explained below with reference to
From the outlet lock 9 of the drier 6 the vehicle bodies 2 are moved into a cooling zone 11 which again contains normal atmospheric air which is maintained at the desired temperature by means of a cooling unit 12.
As is shown in
Reference will now be made to
The lock 7 includes a housing 13 having an inlet chamber 14 and an outlet chamber 15. The inlet chamber 14 is located at the same height as the tunnel of the pre-drier 4; its inlet opening 16 can be closed with a roll-up door 17. The outlet chamber 15 is located at the same height, is aligned with the drying tunnel 8 and communicates with the interior thereof via an outlet opening 18. The outlet opening 18 may also be provided with a roll-up door.
Below the inlet chamber 14 and the outlet chamber 15 the housing 13 of the lock 7 forms a kind of “immersion bath” 19, this designation being explained below. The immersion bath 19 communicates via comparatively large-area openings 20, 21 with both the inlet chamber 14 and the outlet chamber 15.
Direct atmospheric communication between the inlet chamber 14 and the outlet chamber 15 is prevented by a vertically disposed partition 22, which extends downwardly to somewhat below the level of the floor 23 of the inlet chamber 14 and the floor 24 of the outlet chamber 15.
A swivelling arm 25 is pivoted to the lower edge of the partition 22, which swivelling arm 25 can be swivelled in a motor-driven manner from the position shown in
A mounting frame 26 which includes a platform 27 carrying the vehicle body 2 is pivoted to the free end of the swivelling arm 25. The platform 27 is provided with a conveying system which is compatible with the conveying system present in the remaining part of the installation. The mounting frame 26 can be rotated through at least 360° and back by means of a motor (not shown).
The outlet chamber 15 of the lock 7 contains the same inert gas atmosphere as the drying tunnel 8 at approximately the same temperature. The immersion bath 19 is also filled with inert gas; however, this gas has a higher density than the inert gas in the outlet chamber 15 and the normal atmosphere in the inlet chamber 14, so that it forms substantially a “substratum” to both the atmosphere in the inlet chamber 14 and the inert gas atmosphere in the outlet chamber 15. Mixing of the different atmospheres via the openings 20, 21 is kept as low as possible.
Different densities of the inert gas atmospheres in the outlet chamber 15 and the immersion bath 19 can be achieved in different ways: firstly, it is possible to use different gases as inert gases. For this purpose the immersion bath 19 may be filled, for example, with CO2 and the outlet chamber 15 with nitrogen. Because CO2 is heavier than nitrogen and is also heavier than the atmosphere contained in the inlet chamber 15, about which more will be said below, the separation of the atmospheres in the desired manner is maintained.
However, it is preferred if the same inert gas, for example, only nitrogen, is used in the outlet chamber 15 and in the immersion bath 19. In this case the higher density of the inert gas in the immersion bath 19 is brought about by a lower temperature. For example, the temperature of the inert gas atmosphere in the immersion bath 19 may be approximately 20° C., while the above-mentioned drying temperature from 40° C. to 150° C. prevails in the outlet chamber 15.
a to 3e show how the vehicle bodies 2 coming from the pre-drier 4 are conducted through the lock 7.
The vehicle body 2 can then remain for a certain time in the position shown in
Next, the support plate 27 together with the vehicle body 2 is swivelled clockwise through approximately 90° until support platform 27 and vehicle body 2 are approximately vertical. This is represented in
In this way the position shown in
The anticlockwise swivelling movement of the swivelling arm 25 is continued, optionally again with a superposed swivelling movement of the mounting frame 26, about the pivot axis 28. In this way the position represented in
There now follows another clockwise swivelling movement of the mounting frame 26 about the pivot axis 28, through approximately 90°, so that the support platform 27 and the vehicle body 2 are finally again horizontal (cf.
The above description of the operations taking place in the lock 7 makes it clear that the introduction of the vehicle bodies 2 into the inert gas atmosphere of the drying tunnel 8 takes place “in steps”. The expression “in steps” is understood to mean the conducting of the vehicle bodies 2 through different atmospheres in which the densities of the inert gas are different: the inlet chamber 14 contains only as much inert gas as enters said chamber through the “steaming” of inert gas from the immersion bath 19 via the opening 20 and, if applicable, via flushing nozzles which flush the body 2. The lowest density of the inert gas is therefore to be found in the inlet chamber 14. The highest density of the inert gas is present in the immersion bath 19, so that especially intensive flushing of the vehicle bodies 2 takes place in the latter.
The quantity of normal atmosphere, in particular oxygen, which is entrained into the immersion bath 19 via the vehicle body 2 is already sharply reduced because of the pre-flushing taking place in the inlet chamber 14. When the vehicle bodies 2 emerge from the immersion bath 19 into the outlet chamber 15 they are practically completely free of foreign gases, in particular oxygen.
As mentioned above, comparable operations take place in the outlet lock 9, although the transition here is from the inert gas atmosphere of the drying tunnel 8 to the normal atmosphere of the cooling zone 11. The primary purpose of the outlet lock 9 is to allow the least possible inert gas to cross into the cooling zone 11, which inert gas would be lost for the inert gas circulating in the drier 6.
To the extent that this precipitate comprises low-viscosity liquids, these can simply drain from the plates and be discharged in a suitable manner. However, in many cases high-viscosity precipitates are produced which must be removed mechanically and/or using solvents. For this purpose it is advantageous if the plates inside the condensate separator 30 are either easily accessible or easily removable.
In the process described, the inert gas which has been purified in the condensate separator 30 is cooled to a temperature which approximately matches the temperature of the cool inert gas in the immersion bath 19 of the lock 7. It is therefore returned via a conduit 31, in which a fan 32 is located, directly to the immersion bath 19 of the lock 7. Cooled inert gas may also be introduced into the immersion bath of the lock 9 in a corresponding manner.
The portion of a painting installation 101 illustrated in
However, unlike that of the embodiment of
The lock 107 again comprises a housing 113 with an inlet chamber 114 and outlet chamber 115. The two chambers 114 and 115 communicate via a large-area opening 121 in the top of the inlet chamber and the bottom of the outlet chamber 115. A swivelling arm 125 is pivoted at one end to the housing 113 and can be swivelled back and forth in a motor-driven manner through an angle of approximately 90°. On its free end it again carries via a pivot axis 128 a mounting frame 126 with a support platform 127 which can receive the body 102 and is again provided with a conveying system which is compatible with the conveying systems in the pre-drier 104 and in the drying tunnel 108. The mounting frame 126 can be swivelled through at least 90° about the pivot axis 128 by means of a motor.
The inlet chamber 114 again has an inlet opening 116 which is closable by a roll-up door 117.
The outlet chamber 115 is filled with hot inert gas the density of which is lower than that of the normal atmosphere which is present in the inlet chamber 114. This means that the atmospheres in the inlet chamber 114 and the outlet chamber 115 remain largely separate from one another without a mechanical barrier. The inert gas atmosphere in the outlet chamber 115 may be substantially the same as the inert gas atmosphere in the drying tunnel 108.
The transfer of the vehicle bodies 102 through the lock 107 into the drying tunnel 108 is effected in the embodiment of
First, the swivelling arm 125 adopts the approximately horizontal position shown in
Next, the swivelling arm 125 is swivelled clockwise through approximately 90°, optionally accompanied by a swivelling movement of the mounting frame 126 about the pivot axis 128. In the course of this swivelling movement of the swivelling arm 125 the vehicle body 102 is guided upwardly in an arc into the outlet chamber 115 of the lock 107 until a position is finally reached in which the swivelling arm 125 is approximately vertical and the vehicle body 102 is approximately horizontal. The vehicle body 102 can then be taken over by the conveying system in the drying tunnel 108.
The operations in the outlet lock 109 follow the reverse sequence.
As in the embodiment of
The flushing processes in the embodiment of
For cooling the plates contained in the condensate separator 30, 130, use may be made of the phenomenon that the inert gas stored in a pressure accumulator is decompressed and cooled as it is released. The inert gas removed continuously or intermittently from the pressure accumulator to replace lost inert gas therefore needs only to be supplied to the installation past the plates to be cooled.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2004 025 528.8 | May 2004 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP05/05131 | 5/12/2005 | WO | 00 | 8/16/2007 |