The invention is directed to a method and a device for welding parts having spot contact or short line contact in the joining region, which are referred to hereafter as wire-shaped parts, for example, in order to manufacture products having a wire grating structure, such as wire baskets, fencing panels, reinforcing lattices and the like, and in order to weld wire-shaped parts to these intersecting basic structures, the cross section of which is not circular, such as support struts in protective screens for axial fans and the like.
Latticed structures, in which the wire-shaped parts forming the lattice only have spot contact or short line contact at the point of contact or intersection, are manufactured primarily by resistance welding or capacitor discharge welding. A method is known for welding intersecting wires at the crossing point thereof, in which the preformed wires are placed on top of one another and are pressed together specifically at the crossing point. High surge current energy is fed to the particular crossing point by way of electrodes placed thereon, by discharging a capacitor by way of a pulse transformer (capacitor discharge welding). Due to the surface pressure, the thickness of the wires disposed one above the other is reduced when the material fuses, thereby producing an internal flat connection between the wires. The device for carrying out the capacitor discharge welding process comprises a lower electrode on which the part to be welded rests, an upper electrode opposite thereto, and a lifting device for moving the two electrodes toward one another (DE 100 03 428 A1).
The disadvantage of said method relates to the high costs associated with the particular welding devices, which must be produced in a type-specific manner. In particular, the two electrodes must be matched to the particular geometry of the product. The great diversity of types and variants with respect to the number of units, which is often relatively low, therefore results in substantial fixed costs, which often cannot be supported by the products themselves in light of high pricing pressure.
The method according to the invention having the characterizing features of claim 1 has the advantage, by contrast, that the use of laser technology makes it possible to weld the parts, which are wire-shaped at least in the joining region, to form nearly any type of geometry with markedly less expenditure compared to resistance welding or capacitor discharge welding. A suitable device is required for laser welding, as is the case with the aforementioned prior art, of course. It merely needs to hold and fix the parts to be welded, and to apply the slight surface pressure required. Changes need not be made to the laser welding device itself to accommodate different geometries of products.
Laser welding technology has been known for a long time and is used successfully in highly diverse fields of application, even without the use of filler material. However, it has not yet been possible to produce adequate-quality connections between intersecting wire-shaped parts, that is, parts having only spot contact or at the most short line contact at the crossing point and, therefore, at the joint point thereof. It is known that, when welding parts using a laser beam source without filler material, the two parts must lie tightly on top of one another, that is, a significant air gap must not be present between the parts, in order for the laser beam to fuse the materials in the junction region. This is not the case with wire-shaped parts to be welded to one another, however. In this case, only one spot contact point is present, with air to the right and left thereof. Short line contact, for instance when connecting wire rings to a support strut having a rectangular cross section, is likewise inadequate for laser welding.
In order to utilize laser welding, which is advantageous, to nevertheless weld wire-shaped parts, in the method according to the invention, the laser welding device is positioned above the crossing point. The laser beam passes through the upper part to the crossing point and fuses the material in the focal point, which is focused above the joint point but still within the upper part thereof. By passing the laser beam through the upper part, the energy thereof is not diminished by a gap that may be present. Instead, it precisely strikes the crossing point from the inside. To prevent the material from running out of the upper part, which has been “fused open”, the part is fused only in the center region of the cross section thereof, while no fusing takes place at either side, so that the liquid material is enclosed in a type of micro-melt in the cross section, while, in the contact zone, heat is already being introduced into the lower part, the material of which fuses at this point at least in the region adjoining the joint point.
In this phase of the fusing of the material of the upper part and the lower part, it is therefore particularly important for the wire-shaped parts to still be pressed together slightly during the laser welding process, even though this is applied outside of the crossing point, which is to say, the joint point. To this end, the parts are placed under a slight preload by way of sinking forces acting at the sides of the joint point, which move the parts slightly toward one another. As a result, the fused zone and, therefore, the contact surface of the two parts increases substantially. When the materials are paired accordingly, a pronounced welding bead forms, which is the sign of a high-quality welded joint point. The sinking forces to be applied in this case are markedly lower than the pressure forces required for capacitor discharge welding because the only objective in this case is to establish contact between the two parts and to “sink” the upper part into the fused material of the lower part. The sinking forces must be maintained until the material in the joint point hardens.
According to an additional advantageous embodiment of the invention, the laser beam is aimed orthogonally at the parts to be joined. This ensures that precisely that region of the upper part located centrally above the contact point is fused.
According to an additional advantageous embodiment of the invention, the sinking forces to be applied to the parts to be welded together is applied by a spring force. In the compressed state, they provide the required preloading of the parts, and therefore the parts move toward one another due to the formation of the fusion zone, with the spring force being maintained until the fused material hardens.
According to another advantageous embodiment of the invention, after the molten metal at the joint point has hardened, the fillet regions of the joint point are also welded, on one side or several sides. To produce such a side weld, the laser beam is used, starting at the interior of the wire, to fuse a portion of the cross section of the upper wire-shaped part, which is still intact, but without moving the parts closer together. To produce a plurality of side welds, this process is repeated after the laser beam is displaced radially. Side welds enlarge the connection cross section of the parts in the fusion zone and therefore increase the strength of the welded joint point.
According to another advantageous embodiment of the invention, the laser beam is controlled by a scanner that registers the coordinates of the joint points. As a result, the production time for products comprising several joint points, such as wire grating, is substantially reduced.
According to a particularly advantageous embodiment of the invention, the parts to be interconnected are first positioned merely approximately relative to one another. The fine positioning carried out in conjunction with fixation then takes place immediately before the laser welding process, while the parts are being pressed together. This has the advantage that the manual placement of the parts into the device, which is in itself complicated, is substantially simplified and, therefore, accelerated.
The device according to the invention for producing the welded joint point, which has the features of claim 7, has the advantage that the parts are held, positioned, fixed and pressed together in a separate device that is used independently of the actual welding apparatus. During compression, force is introduced into the upper part laterally with respect to the joint point and, therefore, outside of the entry point of the laser. As a result, it is only necessary to match the separate device to the shape of the final product, thereby markedly reducing the costs of the entire device compared to capacitor discharge welding devices.
According to an advantageous embodiment of the device, the laser is combined with a scanner, which very quickly determines the positions of the joint points, with which the laser beam is then aligned, thereby substantially shortening the welding time required to connect all joint points of the finished product.
According to an embodiment of the invention that is advantageous in this regard, the scanner is mounted on a robot. For products that are larger than the scanner field, the scanner is displaced by the robot, which can likewise be carried out rapidly and with great accuracy in a computer-aided manner.
According to an additional advantageous embodiment of the invention, the means for pressing the parts together comprise resilient, springy elements that act outside of the joint points on the upper part or parts, thereby applying a preload onto the parts and moving the two parts toward one another.
Instead of the springy elements, it is also possible, however, to use an elastic material that is applied on a carrier extending across all of the joint points or only some of the joint points. This embodiment is simpler and, therefore, less expensive than the use of springy elements. In addition, exact positioning, which is still required by the compression springs, is eliminated because an elastic band always touches the wire-shaped parts to be pressed together. The elastic material can also be used to compensate for tolerances in a simple manner. Moreover, the elastic material has the advantage that it protects the upper parts against damage.
According to another advantageous embodiment of the invention, the means for pressing the parts together are fastened to a hold-down device, which is moved toward the upper wire-shaped parts to the extent that the compression means rests against the upper parts with the required preload. It is advantageous for the hold-down device to be designed, at least in subregions, in the shape of the surface of the product to be produced. In this region, the means for holding down the upper wire-shaped parts can then have the same length, which is advantageous particularly when an elastic band is used to apply the preload,
According to a particularly advantageous embodiment of the invention, the means for pressing the parts together are disposed on a device for the fine positioning and fixation of said parts in the welding position. The parts are placed merely approximately in a base device. Said device performs the fine positioning and fixation and has an appropriate shape therefor.
According to an embodiment of the invention that is advantageous in this regard, such a shape is a comb strip, the tines of which are beveled at the free end. The tooth spaces lying therebetween narrow to the thickness of the parts to be positioned, wherein the narrow distance then also corresponds to the desired position of the part sliding into the tooth space when the comb strip is pressed downward. Advantageously, the tooth gullet of the tooth space is provided with an elastic material for applying the sinking force.
According to another advantageous embodiment of the device, the means for pressing the upper parts and the lower parts together are designed to apply the sinking force only at a single joint point. Although such a device is relatively simple, the laser beam must always be moved from joint point to joint point and positioned.
It is more advantageous to allow the hold-down device to act on a plurality of joint points simultaneously, although, as mentioned above, this must be matched to the shape of the area in which the joint points are located. The production times for the products can be shortened as a result.
It is particularly advantageous to design the hold-down device as a complete tool that can be used to act upon all joint points of a product simultaneously using the required sinking force. In this embodiment of the invention, the hold-down device therefore has the shape of the surface of the product. It is also particularly advantageous to allow the hold-down device to also perform the function of fine-positioning the upper parts.
Further advantages and advantageous embodiments of the invention will become apparent from the description of an example presented in the following, and from the drawings and the claims.
An exemplary embodiment of the invention is depicted in the drawings with reference to the production of a protective screen for axial fans, and is described in greater detail in the following. Shown are:
The strength of the welding point can be increased further by creating fillet welds in the edge regions of the screen ring 2, as shown in phase Ill in
As shown in
The invention is described hereafter by reference to an additional example, according to which the protective screen for an axial fan is produced in entirety by laser welding, which is to say, including all struts and an inner flange ring 4 and an outer flange ring 5, in a single joining device that operates using a method according to the invention.
Insertion devices 39 for the round struts 6 (see also
A yoke 40, which bridges the entire diameter of the base plate 32, is disposed above the base plate 32, centrosymmetrically with respect to the rotational axis thereof. It comprises two parallel profiled elements 41 connected to each other at the outer ends thereof by way of a guide element 42. Each guide element 42 is supported in a gliding manner on a guide shaft 43 mounted in the console 31 equidistantly from the rotational axis, thereby allowing the yoke 40 to move vertically in the direction of the rotational axis of the base plate 32 and thereby simultaneously bridge two opposing receiving devices 34 or insertion devices 39 at a time.
All of the hold-down devices required to apply the sinking forces during welding of the screen rings 2 to the flat profiles 3 and the round struts 6 are disposed in a height-adjustable manner in the intermediate space between the two profiled elements 41 on both sides of the rotational axis of the base plate 32. To illustrate the design of the hold-down devices, they are also shown in the disassembled state in
The sinking force applied to press the screen rings 2 onto the support struts 1 and the round struts 2 during the welding process is transmitted by the yoke 40 to the screen rings 2 by way of the hold-down devices 44 and 46. All the hold-down device plates 45, 47 press onto the screen rings 2 with the same force, thereby ensuring that the screen rings 2 will not tilt.
The fine positioning of the screen rings 2 using the hold-down device plates 45, 47, as shown and described in
The joining device described is therefore a universal welding device for producing protective screens for axial fans. After all the parts to be interconnected have been placed in the corresponding receiving and insertion devices 34, 39 and the associated hold-down devices 44, 46 have been fastened in the yoke 40, the base plate 32 is rotated so that the yoke 40 is located directly over two diametrically opposed receiving or insertion devices 34, 39. The yoke 40 then moves downward until the hold-down device plates 45, 47 rest on the screen rings 2 and apply the necessary preload thereto. A laser welding device, which is positioned above the yoke 40 but is not depicted in
The laser beam welds the lower region of the screen ring 2, as shown and described in
In the present example, the base plate is rotated by a spacing of 30°. Since the support struts 1 comprise two flat profiles 3, the laser beam acts on the line of the joint points twice, offset in parallel, before the base plate 32 is rotated into the next welding position, in order to connect a row of support struts 1 to the screen rings 2. After one row of support struts 1 has been welded, two rows of round struts 2 are welded before the next row of support struts 1 is welded, which is to say, after five spacings of the base plate 32 have been passed through, all the screen rings 2 have been connected to the support struts 1 and the round struts 6. A different welding processes order can, of course, be selected, such as first connecting all the flat profiles 3 to the screen rings 2.
An additional particular advantage of the joining device is that it can be designed as a modular system for producing protective screens of different sizes and shapes. To this end, any type of spacing is incorporated into the base plate in order to produce protective screens having a different number and spacing of support struts 1 and round struts 6. The diameter of the protective screens can be varied by utilizing receiving and insertion devices 34, 39 having different lengths. Finally, the variable design of the inner seat and the outer seat 36, 37, respectively, and the holding elements 38 for the support struts 1 and round struts 6 makes it possible to integrate into the joining device highly diverse parts that determine the shape of the protective screen. Thus, the design of the hold-down devices 44 and 46 can, of course, also be varied, while these can always be easily inserted into the yoke 40, which is unchanged.
The description of the joining device presented above only describes the welding of those parts of the protective screen that have spot contact or short line contact in the joining region, namely the screen rings 2 comprising the support struts 1 and the round struts 6. At the beginning of the descriptions of
This applies for the connection of the inner ends and the outer ends of the flat profiles 3 to the inner flange ring 4 and the outer flange ring 5, respectively. These can be welded without changing the position of the laser welding device above the yoke 40 because they are always located in or near the radial axis of the support struts 1 and, therefore, always underneath the intermediate space formed by the profiled elements 41 of the yoke 40 when the support struts 1 are being positioned in the welding position. When the base plate 32 is being adjusted to a welding position for the support strut 1, these connections are accessible to the laser beam when the outer hold-down device and the inner hold-down device 44, 46, respectively, have been removed from the yoke. In order to weld the outer flange ring 5, it is also possible, however, to move the laser welding device to a position outside the yoke 40. This variant is possible for welding the inner flange ring 4, only if the joint point thereof is located outside the yoke 40, which is to say, when the diameter thereof is greater than the width of the yoke 40.
All the features presented in the description, the following claims and the drawings can be essential to the invention individually and in any combination.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2009 040 083.4 | Sep 2009 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/DE2010/001041 | 9/3/2010 | WO | 00 | 5/1/2012 |