The invention relates to a device for aligning magnetisable particles in a paste-like material, having an aligning body with a wall comprising a front surface section and a rear surface section, the paste-like material and the aligning body with its front surface section foremost being movable relative to each other, the aligning body furthermore having a magnet unit which is arranged inside the aligning body on the inside of the front surface section and which generates a periodically varying magnetic field acting on the paste-like material in order to align the magnetisable particles. The invention also relates to a method for aligning magnetisable particles in a paste-like material.
The use of steel fibres in concrete in order to reinforce it has been known for about 20 years. In this case, the steel fibres are distributed uniformly in the concrete over its volume with a random alignment. In a concrete slab loaded in flexion, for example, it is desirable for the fibres to be distributed in a plane perpendicular to the bending force which acts, so that they can reinforce the concrete body maximally according to its load. Those fibres which are arranged obliquely or even parallel to the force acting contribute only less or not at all to this reinforcing effect. In a concrete body having steel fibres aligned in the desired way, compared with concrete bodies having irregularly distributed steel fibres, their dosing can therefore be reduced without significantly impairing the specific load response of the concrete body.
Besides the advantage of selective structural reinforcement of the respective concrete component by aligning the fibres which it contains, for example in industrial flooring, further applications of such concrete components are also conceivable. By aligning the steel fibres in a plane, for example, it is possible to generate an electrically conductive layer in a concrete wall, so that this can be heated or electromagnetic screening can be produced.
The prior art of laid-open US patent application US 2002/0182395 A1 and published international application WO/9967072 discloses a method and a device for aligning magnetisable fibres in a viscous body, particularly steel fibres in unset concrete. The device consists of an aligning body designed as a hollow profile, which itself consists of a nonmagnetisable material. The aligning body has a front surface section in the shape of a circle arc in cross section, which converges sharply in a straight line via two flank sections in the direction of a rear surface section. Arranged in the aligning body, concentrically with the front surface section in the shape of a circle arc, there is a rotatably mounted roller which has one or more permanent magnets on its outer circumferential surface, in particular three arranged with a mutual separation of 120° each. The gap between the inside of the front surface section and the circumferential surface of the roller is minimised since the radius of the roller is only slightly less than the radius of curvature of the front surface section. By rotating the magnetic roller, a rotating magnetic field is generated which penetrates through the nonmagnetic wall of the aligning body and acts on the material around the aligning body.
According to the method indicated for aligning the fibres in the unset concrete, the device i.e. the aligning body with a rotating roller is moved transversely to its longitudinal axis through the concrete body, or the paste-like concrete containing the fibres to be aligned is moved relative to the stationary aligning body, so that the concrete flows around the aligning body along its curved front surface section. Owing to the magnetic field generated by the permanent magnets arranged on the rotating roller, the fibres encountering the front surface section are moved around the aligning body according to the rotation direction of the roller. At the transition from the circularly curved front surface section into the straight flank section, the magnetic field of the rotating magnets becomes much weaker on the wall of the aligning body since they are further away from the wall. The fibres consequently remain in the aligned position. Owing to the continuous relative motion between the concrete and the aligning body, a layer of aligned fibres is therefore formed along the path travelled by the aligning body relative to the concrete.
According to a special embodiment of the known device, a substantially smaller second magnetic roller is arranged inside the magnetic roller in addition to it, in the region of the transition from the front surface section into the flank section. The arrangement of the magnet present on the second roller and the ratio of the diameters of the two rollers to each other is selected so that the magnetic field of the first roller guiding the fibres around the front surface section is screened outwards, i.e. in the direction of the fibres, to some degree in the region of the second roller so that the release of the aligned fibres at the intended position is improved.
A disadvantage with the described device, and with the method carried out using this device, is that only fibres in the immediate vicinity of the device can be aligned, so that fibres lying further away keep their irregular alignment. Furthermore, the alignment of the fibres is not optimal owing to the comparatively high residual field strength at the release position. Although simply increasing the magnetic field strength by using stronger magnets would increase the range of the magnetic field to a limited extent, this would nevertheless significantly reduce the quality of the layer structure owing to inferior release of the aligned particles.
It is therefore an object of the invention to refine the prior art device so that more selective alignment of a substantially larger number of particles contained in a paste-like material is possible. It is also an object for the device to be produced without great technical outlay and cost. Further objects of the invention can be found in the following description of the invention and the exemplary embodiments.
The aforementioned object is achieved by a device of the type mentioned in the introduction, in that the magnetic field is divided into at least two zones having sub-fields of different field strength and/or field line profile, the sub-field of the first zone exerting a long-range attracting and aligning force on the particles and the sub-field of the second zone releasing the particles in the aligned position.
The effect achieved by dividing the magnetic field generated by the magnet unit according to the invention into at least two zones having sub-fields of different field strength and/or field line profile, on the one hand, is that even the particles which are at a comparatively large distance from the aligning body are aligned. On the other hand, the effect achieved by the sub-field of the second zone is that the particles are released precisely at the position intended for this on the wall of the aligning body so that, for example, a layer to be formed by aligned particles in the paste-like material is provided with the desired properties, in particular a high fibre density in the layer plane together with a minimal layer thickness.
The aligning body provided according to the invention may consist of any material. Nonmagnetic materials are particularly suitable since they do not hinder the release of the aligned particles on the wall of the aligning body at the position intended for this owing to their own magnetic field.
With respect to the attracting force generated by the sub-field of the first zone, which acts on the particles to be aligned, its range can be adjusted by appropriate selection of the field strength and the field line profile of the sub-field in this zone. The proportion of the particles in the paste-like material which are intended to be co-aligned by the device according to the invention, or the proportion of the particles which are still intended to remain with an irregular alignment in the material, can thus be adjusted exactly. The material properties of the paste-like material, for example its viscosity or the size and shape of other fillers which it contains, will likewise be taken into account in this case.
The field line profile in the magnet unit can be adjusted in various ways. One advantageous adjustment consists in the field lines of the magnetic field of the magnet unit extending only in a plane perpendicular to the relative motion between the aligning body and the paste-like material. Alignment of the particles therefore takes place only in this plane. Consequently, the particles can be released very easily at the position intended for this on the wall of the aligning body, since this does not involve the formation of a network of magnetised particles along the direction of the relative motion, which would cause strong coalescence between the magnetised particles and therefore make them difficult to release.
Another way of adjusting the field line profile consists in the field lines extending in a plane parallel to the relative motion between the aligning body and the paste-like material. In fact, the aforementioned network formation does then take place. Nevertheless, this can be effectively countered by a particularly variably configurable field line profile. In this case, for example, it is possible to divide the magnetic field of the magnet unit into three zones having sub-fields of different field strength and/or different field line profile, the sub-field of the first zone exerting a long-range attracting force on the particles, that of the second zone exerting a holding force on the particles by which they are aligned, and that of the third zone releasing the particles in the aligned position. On the one hand, dividing the magnetic field into three zones still ensures the alignment of particles lying relatively far away from the aligning body, and on the other hand they will be aligned particularly precisely by the moderate holding force generated by the sub-field of the second zone, and finally released by the sub-field of the third zone after reaching the desired position in the paste-like material. This division of the magnetic field consequently means that the quality of the particle alignment, and their controlled release at the position intended for this, are not impaired despite the strong long-range attracting force of the sub-field of the first zone.
In a particularly preferred embodiment of the device, the field line profile of the magnetic field of the magnet unit is composed of a combination of components which extend in a plane perpendicular to the relative motion between the aligning body and the paste-like material, and components which extend parallel to the relative motion. This type of combined field line profile makes it possible, in particular, for the aligned particles to be distributed particularly uniformly in the target volume, and for them no longer to have any tendency towards clumped accumulation along those field lines which extend only parallel or perpendicularly to the relative motion between the aligning body and the paste-like material. Furthermore, consistency of the aligning process as a function of position and time can be achieved even if the relative speed between the aligning body and the paste-like material and the frequency of the periodically varying magnetic field are not optimally matched to each other.
In particular, two solutions have been found to be particularly advantageous for dividing the magnetic field generated by the magnet unit, whose field lines extend in a plane parallel to the relative motion between the aligning body and the paste-like material, into the different zones. On the one hand, the first and second zones may each cover approximately a 90° region and the third zone may cover an approximately 180° region of the cross section of the magnet unit. Nevertheless, approximately 120° coverage of the cross section of the magnet unit by each of the three zones is also expedient.
In particular, the device may be produced without excessive technical outlay and costs if the magnet unit generating the periodically varying magnetic field is designed as a rotating body with a static field distribution. As already found in the prior art, the aligning body is advantageously designed as a hollow profile, extending transversely to the direction of the relative motion between the aligning body and the paste-like material, the cross section of which converges as a support surface cross section from the essentially semicircularly curved front surface section, tapering via two flank surfaces to the rear surface section. This shape favours, on the one hand, the alignment of the particles as they are transported along the curved surface and, on the other hand, their controlled release at the transition between one end of the front surface section and a flank surface.
Designing the magnet unit as a rotating cylindrical roller whose rotation axis coincides with the mid-axis of the semicircularly curved front surface section, minimises the gap between the inside of the front surface section of the aligning body and the magnetic roller, so that its magnetic field can act with low losses on the paste-like material around the aligning body. The magnetic roller in this case expediently extends over the entire length of the aligning body. Correspondingly, the field lines lying in a plane parallel to the relative motion between the aligning body and the paste-like material extend in the axial direction of the magnetic roller, whereas the field lines lying in a plane parallel to the relative motion extend in the circumferential direction of the magnetic roller.
High variability in the shaping of the magnetic field formed by the three sub-fields is obtained if it is generated by permanent magnets. Particularly high field strengths can be generated by permanent magnets made of an NdFeB alloy. To this end, it is expedient for at least one of the permanent magnets to consist of this alloy.
In the case of a magnetic field divided into three zones, the function of the third zone of the magnetic field is to release the particles in the aligned position. This can be achieved particularly effectively if the sub-field of the third zone is generated by a soft magnetic material, particularly a low-carbon steel. This leads to a return flux of the magnetic field lines which is spatially restricted to the soft magnetic material, so that the field strength of the magnetic field almost vanishes radially outside this zone and the particles no longer experience virtually any attracting force in this region.
It is also an object of the invention to provide an improved method for aligning magnetisable particles in a paste-like material.
The object is achieved by a method using the device described above. The advantages of this device apply equally to the method according to the invention. In particular, it has a wide range of application when unset concrete is used as the paste-like material and the particles are designed as steel fibres.
Alternatively, the particles may also be designed as steel rings. Their use is found to be particularly advantageous when, for example, a thin layer is intended to be generated in a concrete slab loaded in flexion. Using steel rings then achieves a particularly high degree of overlap of the individual particles in the layer plane, so that the effectiveness of the structural reinforcement is increased. Compared with the use of conventional one-dimensionally shaped steel shavings or fibres, this makes it possible inter alia to reduce the consumption of material without noticeably impairing the load response of the reinforced component.
The invention will be explained in more detail below with reference to a drawing which represents merely exemplary embodiments, in which:
a,b show a device for aligning magnetisable particles in a paste-like material by a schematic representation in cross section and perspective,
a,b show the magnet unit of the device in
a and 1b represent a device for aligning magnetic particles in a paste-like material. The device has an aligning body 1 in the form of a hollow profile, which consists of a nonmagnetic material. According to the cross-sectional view of
An alternative embodiment of the magnet unit, according to which it is arranged fixed in the aligning body and the periodically varying magnetic field is produced by arranging individually driveable electromagnets inside the aligning body, is not represented.
The functional principle of the device is schematically represented in
The sub-field of the first zone I exerts a long-range attracting force on the steel fibres 4, so that the fibres 4 in an elongate region 7 before the front surface section 1a of the aligning body 1 move towards the latter. The sub-field of the second zone II exerts a holding force on the attracted particles 4, by which they are transported down along the front surface section la according to the rotation direction of the magnetic roller 2 while being aligned. The sub-field of the third zone III, the field strength of which almost vanishes radially outside the aligning body 1 owing to the closed magnetic field lines inside this zone, releases the particles 4 in the aligned position approximately at the point 1e of the transition from the circularly curved front-surface section 1a into the lower flank section 1c.
The rotation of the overall magnetic field of the magnetic roller 2, composed of the three sub-fields, means that the sub-field of the first zone I also acts regularly at the point where the particles 4 are released. The detachment of the particles from the wall of the aligning body 1 is therefore regularly impeded temporarily, which would lead to an undesired corrugated structure of the particle layer 6 to be formed. This can be effectively countered, however, if the rotation frequency of the magnetic roller is selected to be very high relative to the motion of the aligning body 1 in the concrete layer, so that any corrugated structure of the layer 6 is smoothed out.
According to
The magnetic field generated by this magnet arrangement is divided into two zones I, II and is graphically represented by its field lines. The first zone I is formed by the permanent magnet 8 and the pole piece 9. The pole piece 9 is in this case magnetised by the strong permanent magnet 8, so that a magnetic south pole is formed on each of its end sections 9b. Accordingly, the field lines extend from the north pole of the permanent magnet 8 through the space around the magnetic roller, or the aligning body which encloses it, to the end sections 9b of the pole piece 9, the consequence of which is that the region 10 of the magnetic roller lying towards the rear with respect to the magnet arrangement, which forms the second zone II and may for example be filled with aluminium or steel, is permeated by a field of only low field strength. The field generated by the north pole of the permanent magnet 8 exerts an attracting force, in particular on magnetisable material which lies in a region in extension of its longitudinal axis. The magnet arrangement according to
The magnet arrangement according to
On the other side of the rotation axis of the magnetic roller 2, at an equal angular spacing from the two magnets 11, 12, there is a region 13 consisting of a soft magnetic material, preferably a soft unalloyed steel, which extends over 180° and therefore over half the cross-sectional area of the magnetic roller 2.
The magnetic field generated by this magnet arrangement is again divided into two zones I, II and is visualised by its field line profile. The sub-field of the first zone is generated by the angularly arranged magnets 11, 12. Their opposite alignment generates a magnetic field which extends deep into space and therefore exerts a far-reaching attracting force. The region 13 arranged towards the rear, consisting of the soft magnetic material, represents the second zone II in which the field lines are fed back almost completely. The residual field strength in the region externally around the second zone is therefore vanishingly small, which is a prerequisite for the possibility of releasing the attracted and aligned particles in the desired position.
The asymmetric magnet arrangement of the magnetic roller 2 represented in
The magnetic roller 2 is itself subdivided into two 180° sectors 14, 15 with a central interface D. The sector 14 is in turn subdivided into two 90° sectors 14a, 14b. Arranged in the sector 14a, there is a strong permanent magnet 16 which extends at a right angle from the interface D in the direction of the opposite circumferential surface of the magnetic roller 2, so that its north pole lies in the region of the circumferential surface of the magnetic roller 2. In the sector 14b placed next to it, a weaker second permanent magnet 17 is arranged parallel to the first magnet 16 but oppositely oriented. The two magnets 16, 17 preferably consist of an NdFeB alloy and are matched in respect of their outer end faces to the curvature of the circumferential surface of the magnetic roller 2. The intermediate spaces lying between the magnets 16, 17 are filled with a nonmagnetic material, for example aluminium. The second 180° sector 15 consists entirely of a soft magnetic material, preferably a soft unalloyed steel.
The effect of this magnet arrangement in respect of the field line profile is represented in
The particular advantage of this asymmetric magnet arrangement is the long range of the attracting force with a comparatively simple structure which is cost-effective to produce.
In the Bucking pole arrangement represented in
The arrangement of
The arrangement with a Bucking pole or Halbach array can likewise be implemented in the dipole arrangement with a radial magnet alignment, for example according to
A further embodiment of the invention is represented in
The magnets 22a-22e are fastened on a roller block 23 with a semicircular cross section. The roller block 23 preferably consists of a magnetic steel with high permeability.
The particular advantage of this axial arrangement of the magnets, which may likewise be arranged in the form of a Bucking pole, is now that owing to the axial profile of the magnetic field lines (see
Lastly,
The particular advantage of such a magnet arrangement is that the aligned particles are distributed particularly uniformly in the target volume, and no longer have any tendency towards clumped accumulation along field lines which extend only parallel or perpendicularly to the relative motion between the aligning body and the paste-like material.
The invention is not restricted to the exemplary embodiments which have been described; rather the person skilled in the art may find many possibilities for derivation or modification in the scope of the invention. In particular, the protective scope of the invention is established by the claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
03011664.4 | May 2003 | EP | regional |
03014707.8 | Jun 2003 | EP | regional |
03029732.9 | Dec 2003 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP04/05114 | 5/13/2004 | WO | 5/12/2006 |