The present invention relates to techniques for obtaining bent and possibly thermally toughened glass sheets, whether the sheets be bent to cylindrical shapes or to complex non-cylindrical shapes.
More specifically, the invention relates to those of these techniques in which the glass sheets are made to move along at least one shaping bed consisting of shaping rods, for example rotary elements arranged in a path with a profile that is curved in the direction of travel of the glass sheets.
The invention applies for example to the production of automotive glazing, for example of the side window type.
Such bending techniques are currently employed at very high production rates due, in particular, to the possibility of moving the glass sheets along with a spacing of just a few centimeters between them. They allow very good repeatability of the curvature and of the optical quality of the end glazing.
However, the shapes of these bent sheets are becoming increasingly complex.
Admittedly, it is possible to alter the shape of the shaping rods used to form the shaping bed for bending. However, that entails constructing for each new series of bent glass sheets, a new shaping bed with lengthy and precise mounting of the new shaping rods, even though the modifications to be made to a curvature are of the order of few tenths of a millimeter to a few millimeters.
In order to solve this difficulty, the present invention proposes an improvement to the current bending methods and machines, said improvement consisting in continuous and asymmetric blowing of air over the glass sheets under conditions able to influence the final concavity of the sheet by comparison with conventional bending without this asymmetric blowing.
The subject of the present invention is therefore first of all a method for producing bent glass sheets whereby glass sheets which have been raised beforehand to their softening point are moved along, progressively giving them the desired bent shape, characterized in that, between the initial bending phase in which the sheet begins to adopt its shape and the final phase of said bending, continuous blowing of air is performed, at a point along the line along which the sheets move, onto at least one face of the glass sheets, under conditions capable of asymmetrically influencing the final concavity of the bent glass sheets by comparison with the concavity that the final bending would have given without said blowing.
According to a first embodiment, the blowing of air onto just one face of the glass sheets is performed in at least one transverse region of these sheets with respect to the axis along which they move. It is thus possible to perform the blowing on just one side with respect to the axis along which they move, or alternatively, to perform the blowing across the entire transverse region of the glass sheets with respect to the axis along which they move.
According to a second embodiment, the blowing of air is performed on both faces of the glass sheets, said blowing not being performed across the entire transverse region of the glass sheets on at least one of the faces. It is thus possible to blow air on each side of the glass sheets as they move along and on just one side with respect to the axis along which they move.
According to the method of the invention, the air blown may be cold enough or hot enough with respect to the bending temperature for the blowing to have an influence on the final bending.
Air may be blown at a temperature other than the temperature at which bending is carried out so as to give greater concavity on one side of the glass sheet. If the blowing has a tendency to lower the temperature of the face of the glass sheet receiving said blowing, the concavity will be increased on the other side of the sheet, that is to say on the side that did not receive said blowing, by comparison with the concavity obtained in the absence of said blowing. If the blowing tends to increase the temperature of the face of the glass sheet receiving said blowing then the concavity will be locally increased on the side that received said blowing, by comparison with the concavity obtained in the absence of said blowing. According to the invention, air is blown at a temperature other than the temperature at which bending is carried out, the blowing producing an increase in concavity on the same side as the face receiving it if the blowing causes heating, the blowing producing a reduction in concavity on the same side of the face receiving it if the blowing produces cooling.
Since, in general, before receiving the blowing, the two faces of the sheet are at more or less the same temperature, the concavity is generally increased by blowing on the side of the face of the glass that is the hottest.
The concavity is increased in all directions on the side of the face of the glass that has its concavity increased, that is to say both in the direction of travel and in the plane perpendicular to the direction of travel. This effect can be observed at the points that received the blowing. Just part of the sheet may therefore be affected by this effect (the case of
Said blowing is advantageously performed by directing air onto the glass sheets at a pressure ranging from 4.90×103 to 9.81×103 Pa (500 to 1000 mm water column).
The method according to the invention leads in particular to bent glass sheets exhibiting variations in dimension ranging from 2/10 mm to 2 mm with respect to bending without blowing.
According to other features of the method according to the invention:
In one preferred particular embodiment, sheets of glass are moved along in a planar trajectory through a reheat furnace in order to bring them to the softening point, then in a trajectory with a curved profile tangential to the aforementioned planar trajectory over a shaping bed consisting of shaping rods, the blowing being performed at a point situated along the curved-profile trajectory after the sheets have begun to take shape.
It is also possible to give the glass sheets their shape by performing sag bending, then to continue bending in a trajectory with a curved profile over a shaping bed consisting of shaping rods, blowing being performed along said curved-profile trajectory.
It is also possible to subject the glass sheets to toughening downstream of the blowing and before the end of the bending. In particular, the toughening may be performed by directing air at a pressure ranging from 2.94×104 Pa to 3.43×104 Pa (3000 to 3500 mm water column).
The present invention also relates to bent glass sheets obtained or likely to be obtained by the method as defined hereinabove; and to bent glass sheets exhibiting asymmetry likely to be detected by polariscopy or by measuring stress by techniques employing an epibiascope (possibly also a stratorefractometer or a biasgraph). What happens is that the blowing performed continuously and asymmetrically onto the sheets as they move along may give rise to traces parallel to the direction of travel, more particularly in the cases illustrated in
The present invention relates finally to a machine for bending glass sheets comprising means for moving along glass sheets which have been raised beforehand to their softening point, giving them the desired bent shape, characterized in that this machine further comprises at least one nozzle for blowing air continuously, this nozzle being arranged at a point on the line along which the sheets move after the sheets have begun to take shape and before the final phase of said bending, the nozzle or nozzles being arranged in such a way as to blow air asymmetrically onto said sheets, and set up so that said air blowing influences the final concavity of the bent glass sheets by comparison with the concavity that the final bending would have given without said blowing.
The bending machine according to the invention advantageously comprises a shaping bed consisting of shaping rods in a path with a curved profile, the asymmetric blowing nozzle or nozzles being aimed between two adjacent shaping rods of the shaping bed.
It may also further comprise blowing plenums for toughening, downstream of the asymmetric blowing nozzle or nozzles, said blowing plenums for toughening each comprising nozzles arranged in arrays and aimed between two adjacent shaping rods of the shaping bed.
In order to better illustrate the method and machine according to the present invention, several particular embodiments thereof will now be described by way of nonlimiting indication with reference to the attached drawing in which:
Each of
According to the invention, hot or cold air is blown asymmetrically (as symbolized by the arrows F) over the sheet 1 as it moves along before final bending, for example from above the sheet 1 and on one side (
When air is blown at a temperature other than the temperature at which bending is carried out, the concavity is modified as explained above, not only as far as the concavity in the direction of travel is concerned, but also as regards the concavity in the plane perpendicular to the direction of travel.
In the case of
It should, however, be emphasized that the asymmetric blowing does not preclude the simultaneous use of other means in order to arrive at the desired final shape, such as the shape of the shaping rods as will be described later on.
The asymmetric blowing according to the invention is then seen as an additional way to set the desired final shape of the bent sheet.
In practice, preference is given to the alternative form of
In the case of the alternative forms of
The conveyor is extended in fact without breaking the route taken by the glass sheets heated to the softening point in a reheat furnace. In other words, the shaping bed is tangential to the planar trajectory with which the glass sheets arrive at this bed.
In the latter, the trajectory followed by the glass sheets is cylindrical, the generatrices of the cylinder being horizontal and perpendicular to the direction of conveying, in the flat state, of the glass. The radius of the cylinder on which the trajectory of the glass sheet is based corresponds to the radius of curvature conferred upon the glass sheet in the direction parallel to the direction of travel.
With rotary elements consisting of straight rods, a right cylinder is obtained (
According to the invention, air is blown onto one side of the sheet (cf.
The asymmetric blowing nozzles 3 and 3a are arranged upstream of a terminal bending zone in which a thermal toughening operation is performed in a known way, for which nozzles 4 for blowing cold air are arranged in four lower arrays and four upper arrays opposite, over the entire width of the bending machine.
It is possible, as the case may be, to employ just one of the two asymmetric blowing nozzles (3 or 3a). It is also possible to employ the two nozzles 3 and 3a simultaneously (as is the case in
Upper retaining means of the backing roll type 5 are arranged in the bending/toughening zone downstream of the nozzles 3. The lower nozzles 4 are aimed between two shaping rods 2, and the upper nozzles 4 are aimed between two backing rolls 5.
It is pointed out that the asymmetric nozzles 3, 3a are placed just before the first upper backing roll 5.
The glass sheets are made to move along at a high speed at least equal to 10 cm/s and preferably of the order of 15 to 18 cm/s and they then acquire the profile corresponding to the shaping bed under the combined effect of gravity and of the speed upstream of the nozzles 3a, with, in addition, the pressing of the backing rolls 5 in the bending/toughening zone.
For glass sheets 3 mm thick, the shaping rods are typically spaced 50 to 100 mm apart.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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02/12577 | Oct 2002 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/FR03/02959 | 10/8/2003 | WO | 3/14/2005 |