Claims
- 1. A method of coating a surface of a metallic substrate to form a lubricious coating thereon, comprising:
- forming a plurality of finely divided particles of lubricant, said particles having a diameter to weight ratio such that they will remain suspended in a substantially quiescent atmosphere;
- physically transporting said suspended particles from the location of particle formation to the general location of said metallic substrate;
- confining said suspended and transported particles in a non-electrically conductive housing adjacent the metallic substrate to be coated in a substantially quiescent atmosphere;
- electrically charging said particles while so confined to the degree necessary to enable them to repel one another while they are suspended; and
- electrostatically depositing said particles on the metal surface while said particles are in a repelling relationship with respect to one another by establishing an attracting electrical field between said confined charged particles and said metallic substrate whereby said particles are deposited on the substrate in a laterally displaced relationship with respect to one another.
- 2. A method as defined in claim 1, wherein the lubricant particles are spheroidal in shape and are initially formed by melting a lubricant which is a solid at room temperature, forming the molten lubricant into substantially spheroidal shaped particles, and cooling said particles prior to depositing on the metallic substrate whereby said particles retain their spheroidal shape when deposited on the metallic substrate.
- 3. A method as in claim 2, wherein the suspended spheroidal particles are confined adjacent the surface of a metallic substrate prior to being electrically charged.
- 4. A method for electrostatically dispersing tiny spheroids of lubricating material onto a moving electrically conductive substrate, said method comprising the steps of:
- providing a supply of lubricating material in a liquid phase;
- forming a mist of finely divided spheroids from said supply of liquid lubricating material, a majority of said spheroids having an average diameter less than 10 microns in size such that said mist is airborne and substantially independent of gravity forces;
- providing a housing through which said conductive substrate is passable longitudinally thereof, the housing having electrodes extending therewithin, said electrodes being spaced from said moving substrate;
- producing an electrical corona discharge within said housing by applying a voltage differential between said moving substrate and said electrodes to thereby produce a plasma therewithin of electrically charged ambient gaseous molecules electrically charged to the same polarity as the electrical polarity existing on said electrodes;
- drifting said airborne mist into said plasma to produce multiple collisions between said charged ambient gaseous molecules and said relatively larger spheroids, thereby accumulating a like electrical charge on said spheroids;
- said drifting step being carried forth so as to cause substantially all of said spheroids to attain a substantially uniform maximum charged state whereupon substantially only electrostatic forces cause substantially all of the thusly charged spheroids to move toward the oppositely charged substrate surface and to substantially uniformly disperse thereover whereby substantially all the spheroids drifted into said plasma are eventually uniformly dispersed onto the substrate surface to produce a uniform steady state percentage coverage of the substrate that is defined primarily only by the steady state quantity of spheroids drifted into the plasma and by the steady state speed of the substrate moving through said housing.
- 5. A method as in claim 4 wherein said housing through which passes said substrate is a non-electrically conductive housing.
- 6. A method as in claim 4 wherein said drifting step comprises average spheroid movements of distance per unit time towards and into said plasma which are less than the average substrate movements of distance per unit time through said housing.
- 7. A method as in claim 4 wherein said step of forming a mist comprises:
- providing a substantially closed container housing said supply of liquid lubricating material and having an air inlet orifice and an outlet port both at the upper portion thereof;
- passing a supply of compressed gas through said inlet orifice downwardly toward said supply of liquid lubricating material and generally directed away from said outlet port;
- drawing a stream of said liquid lubricating material through said orifice and downwardly out through said output port with said supply of gas thereby shearing said stream into liquid spheroids of various sizes which spheroids are thus propelled downwardly towards said supply of liquid lubricating material and away from said outlet port whereby only airborne spheroids substantially independent of gravity forces are passed out through said outlet port.
- 8. A method as in claim 4 further comprising the step of:
- heating said elongated electrodes to prevent any accumulation of said lubricating material thereon.
- 9. A method as in claim 8 wherein said heating step comprises passing AC electrical current through said electrodes.
- 10. A method for applying a lubricating material upon a metallic substrate comprising:
- forming a mist of finely divided particles of said lubricating material from a plurality of mist sources, the particles of said material having an average size of less than 10 microns diameter;
- passing the particles from said plurality of mist sources into a first containing means extending along the width of said metallic substrate and having a substantially quiescent atmosphere therein and permitting said particles from the different sources to diffuse together therein and form a substantially uniformly distributed mist of said particles along the entire width of the substrate;
- passing the particles from said first containing means into a second containing means having an electrostatic field therewithin while maintaining the particles within a closely confined space within the electrostatic field whereby said particles are charged therein; and
- conveying the metallic substrate through said second containing means while establishing an attracting electrical field between said confined charged particles and said metallic substrate so as to electrostatically deposit the lubricating material upon said substrate.
- 11. The method of claim 10 wherein forming the mist includes dispersing fluid droplets and depositing said droplets in the form of solid particles upon the surface of said substrate.
- 12. A method of dispensing small lubricating particles substantially uniformly and randomly across at least one surface of a moving conductive substrate comprising the steps of:
- forming in an atomizer a plurality of droplets of a lubricant,
- filtering said droplets to form a mist of finely divided droplets having an average size of less than about ten microns diameter,
- slowly migrating said droplets into a nonconductive precipitating chamber,
- distributing said droplets substantially uniformly about said chamber,
- moving said droplets substantially randomly within said chamber,
- moving a conductive substrate through said chamber, and
- continually charging said droplets with respect to said conductive substrate until said droplets are accelerated toward said substrate to form a substantially uniform and random distribution of said droplets on at least one surface of said substrate.
- 13. A method of forming a lubricious surface on a metallic substrate, comprising forming a plurality of finely divided particles of a lubricant taken from a group consisting of hydrocarbons and ethylenic polymers, said particles having a diameter to weight ratio such that the particles will remain substantially suspended in atmosphere, transporting said particles to a location adjacent the metallic substrate, electrically charging said particles of lubricant to the degree necessary to enable them to repel one another, and depositing said particles of lubricant on the metal surface in a repelling relationship with respect to one another whereby said particles are laterally displaced with respect to one another.
- 14. A method as set forth in claim 13, wherein the lubricant is a hydrocarbon selected from the group consisting of paraffin wax, microcrystalline wax and petrolatum and said particles are spheroidal in shape and are initially formed by liquefying said lubricant by heat, forming the liquefied lubricant into substantially spheroidal shaped particles, and cooling said particles prior to depositing on the metallic substrate whereby said particles retain their spheroidal shape when deposited on the metallic substrate.
- 15. A method as set forth in claim 14, wherein the non-liquid spheroidal particles are confined in a suspension at the location adjacent the surface of a metallic substrate.
- 16. A method of forming a lubricious surface on a metallic substrate, comprising providing a liquid supply of a normally non-fluid dielectric lubricating material, forming a plurality of finely divided spheroidal particles, a majority of which have a diameter less than 10 microns, transporting the finely divided particles to a location adjacent the metallic substrate while returning the particles to their normally non-fluid state, electrostically charging said particles of dielectric lubricating material to such a degree that they mutually repel one another and are deposited on the metalic substrate while so charged.
- 17. A method as set forth in claim 16 wherein said lubricating material is a hydrocarbon wax.
- 18. A method as set forth in claim 16 wherein said lubricating material is petrolatum.
- 19. A method as set forth in claim 16 wherein the lubricating material is a synthetic wax selected from the group consisting of polyethylene glycols, methoxypolyethylene glycols, and chlorinated naphthalenes.
- 20. A method of forming a lubricious surface on a metallic substrate, comprising forming a plurality of finely divided particles of a dielectric lubricating material, said particles having a diameter to weight ratio such that the particles will remain substantially suspended in atmosphere, providing a quiescent cloud of said particles adjacent the surface of the metallic substrate to be coated, electrostatically charging said particles so that the charged particles mutually repel one another and are deposited and distributed on said substrate surface while so charged substantially entirely by electrostatic forces.
Parent Case Info
This patent application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 570,346 filed Apr. 22, 1975, (now abandoned), which is a continuation in part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 382,980, filed July 26, 1973 (now abandoned). This application is also related to commonly assigned copending applications Ser. No. 751,690, filed Dec. 17, 1976, and Ser. No. 677,782, filed Apr. 16, 1976, of ourselves together with Robert L. Hurst. Some of the disclosure presented hereinbelow for the purpose of fully describing our presently preferred embodiment and mode of operation represents the inventive contributions of ourselves and Mr. Hurst and is accordingly claimed in said concurrently filed application.
US Referenced Citations (7)
Non-Patent Literature Citations (2)
Entry |
"New Series 700 Waxer with Airtech Exhauster for Metal and Paper Products", Oxy-Dry Sprayer Corporation. |
"The Grammer Spray", Acme Gear & Machine Co. |
Continuations (1)
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Date |
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Parent |
570346 |
Apr 1975 |
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Continuation in Parts (1)
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382980 |
Jul 1973 |
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