The present invention relates to a method for finishing a manufactured article by powder painting.
Finishing by powder painting is currently widely used in decorating, so as to imitate the grain of a type of wood, metallic profiled elements to be used in particular for door and window parts.
The metallic profiled elements, after being adequately prepared for painting, are subjected to a treatment cycle which provides for the following operating steps: first of all, a first layer of powder paint or primer is deposited on the profiled element; then partial polymerization of the first layer of paint is provided; then a second layer of powder paint, having a different color or shade than the underlying layer, is applied according to a preset graphic configuration; and, final baking is performed to fully polymerize the first and second layers of paint.
The above described painting process, however, has drawbacks which drastically limit the industrial applicability thereof, both in terms of mass-production and of final cost of the finished product. The most critical step of such a treatment cycle is the application of the second layer of paint, i.e., the decorative layer, and this task is often entrusted to the experience and skill of qualified personnel capable of reproducing a particular graphic configuration, such for example an imitation grain, on any metallic or non-metallic substrate, by working manually with the aid of traditional tools such as for example brushes and paintbrushes.
From the above description it is easy to understand that it is not possible to provide an industrial process that includes an operation entirely performed by hand, since this operation constitutes an inevitable and economically unsustainable bottleneck which results in severely slowing the entire production cycle.
Through attempts to convert the process for finishing manufactured articles from a strictly manual to an automated treatment resulted in improvement the speed of the production cycle, they have not been qualitatively successful in terms of resemblance to the original, thus requiring continuous manual intervention by specialized personnel downstream of the treatment cycle.
Examples of powder painting devices are available from the Patent Abstracts of Japan, vol. 008 no. 104 and JP-A-016771 and from U.S. Pat. No. 3,295,440.
The aim of the present invention is to provide a method for finishing manufactured articles by powder painting which is capable of eliminating or substantially reducing the above mentioned drawbacks related to conventional painting methods.
An object of the present invention is to provide a method which allows to reproduce automatically any desired image on the surface of a manufactured article with high definition and repeatability.
Another object of the present invention is to provide a method which is able to ensure a speed of execution and a qualitative result which allow to introduce it in a fully automated treatment cycle, requiring no manual intervention by specialized personnel.
Another object of the present invention is to provide a method which allows to finish, for example by wood-imitation painting, manufactured articles at a cost which is highly competitive due both to the increase in productivity of the entire system and to the reduction in the costs of specialized labor.
Another object of the present invention is to provide an apparatus which is capable of reproducing automatically any chosen image on the surface of a manufactured article with high definition and repeatability.
Another object of the present invention is to provide an apparatus which allows to reproduce images with great graphic definition and fidelity even on irregular surfaces, i.e., on surfaces having rounded or differently inclined portions.
According to a first aspect of the present invention, a method is provided for finishing a manufactured article by powder painting. The method generally provides for the application, on a surface to be decorated of said manufactured article, of a decorative layer obtained by transfer through controlled migration of powder particles which originate from a graphic matrix arranged in front of the surface to be decorated and designed to adhere thereto, said transfer and said adhesion being provided by way of a first electrostatic field comprising lines of force which are incident at right angles to said surface to be decorated, said manufactured article acting fully or partly as reference electrode for said first electrostatic field, so as to produce a condition of solid contact between said electrode and said surface to be decorated.
Advantageously, the method according to the invention entails arranging the graphic matrix at a preset distance from the surface to be decorated, so as to delimit therewith a gap in which the electrostatic forces of said first electric field are predominant.
A second aspect of the present invention relates to an apparatus comprising at least one graphic matrix. The graphic matrix is provided with a graphic configuration which is equivalent to an image to be transferred onto the face to decorate, and at least one source of an electrostatic field is provided which is suitable to generate, between said graphic matrix and said face to be decorated, an electrostatic force field having lines of force which are incident at right angles to said face to be decorated and are of such intensity as to cause the controlled migration of said particles of powder from said graphic matrix to said face to be decorated in order to obtain on said face to be decorated an image equivalent to said graphic configuration determined by said graphic matrix.
Advantageously, said graphic matrix is arranged, in use, at a preset distance from said surface to be decorated, so as to delimit therewith a gap within which the electrostatic forces of said first electric field are predominant.
Further characteristics and advantages of the present invention will become better apparent from the following detailed description of some currently preferred embodiments thereof, given merely by way of non-limitative example with reference to the accompanying drawings, wherein:
In the drawings, identical or similar parts or components have been designated by the same reference numerals.
As shown schematically in
For the practical realization of the above method, the concurrent existence of some fundamental conditions is preferably required; i.e., the manufactured article 1 must be fully or partially made of electrically conducting material and must be charged electrically during use, so as to act as a reference electrode for the electrostatic field E, and there must be solid contact between said reference electrode, constituted by the manufactured article 1, and the surface to be decorated 4.
In fact, when the manufactured article 1 is entirely made of a conducting material as well as when the conducting material is coated with a surface layer, as long as said layer is permeable to the electrostatic field E, the condition of solid continuity between the surface to be decorated 4 and the reference electrode of the electrostatic field E, which acts at the same time as a target in the painting process, is maintained.
The source 3 which can be constituted by a gun provided with a nozzle 5 designed to be arranged in front of the manufactured article 1, is suitable to dispense, during use, a uniform mixture 6 composed of air and particles of powder 2 toward the manufactured article 1. Advantageously, the gun 3 is charged electrically, so as to generate, in the space in front of it, a second electrostatic field E′, which adds up to the electrostatic field E, forming a plurality of lines of force L′ which, by virtue of the well-known electrostatic principles, tend to close within the manufactured article 1, at right angles thereto. In practice, the electrostatic fields E and E′ can coincide with a single electrostatic field which is designated hereinafter by the reference letter E.
The powder particles 2 expelled by the gun 3 are therefore subjected both to fluid-dynamic and to electrostatic forces in a different ratio as they travel from the gun 3 to the surface to be decorated 4.
On the basis of the above noted remarks, an apparatus 11 is provided which is adapted to perform the finishing of a manufactured article 1 by utilizing the influence of an electrostatic field E and the condition of solid contact between the reference electrode of the electrostatic field, constituted by the manufactured article 1 itself, and the surface to be decorated 4.
As shown in
The graphic matrix 7 interposed between the gun 3 and the surface to be decorated 4 therefore acts as a stencil with respect to the air-powder mixture 6 sprayed by the gun 3, allowing said mixture to pass in a controlled amount and in a localized manner toward the region B. The powder particles 2 that pass through the graphic matrix 7 thus find themselves under the influence of the electrostatic field E, which transfers them onto the surface to be decorated 4, forcing each powder particle 2 to follow a path which coincides with a respective line of force L.
By utilizing the electrostatic field E as a means for conveying the powder particles 2, even if the manufactured article 1 has an irregular surface to be decorated 4, such as for example the surface shown in
As shown in
A second embodiment 20 of the above described apparatus 11 is shown in
The finishing process to be performed by the apparatus 20 uses a graphic matrix 7 which has the same characteristics as the one shown in
Initially, in fact, a gun 3 is arranged in front of a graphic matrix 7 provided with the intended graphic configuration, said gun being adapted to spray an air-powder mixture 6 against it and to generate, in the space in front of said matrix, a third electrostatic field E″ as in the previously described situation. Moreover, at the graphic matrix 7 and on the opposite side with respect to the gun 3, there is a base element 24 made of conducting material which is designed, during use, to be connected to the ground so as to allow the lines of force L″ of the electrostatic field E″ to cross the graphic matrix 7 substantially at right angles. In this case also, the coexistence of fluid-dynamics forces applied by the gun 3 and of electrostatic forces obtained by electrically charging the gun 3 allows to obtain a controlled transfer of the powder particles 2 sprayed by the gun 3 onto the graphic matrix 7. Most of the powder particles 2 in fact migrate through the fluid medium, i.e., the air, until they preferably arrange themselves at the incisions 10, where they are blocked and forced to adhere substantially loosely to the graphic matrix 7.
As shown in
Advantageously, the daubing device 21 further comprises a suction hood 25, which is arranged downstream of the base element 24, on the opposite side with respect to the gun 3, and is connected to a fan 26 by means of a pipe 27 so as to ensure, during use, the recovery of the very fine powder particles 2 that are able to pass through the graphic matrix 7.
Once the operation for daubing the graphic matrix 7 has ended, the graphic matrix is removed from the device 21 and applied, by appropriately provided spacers 29, to the manufactured article 1 with its daubed side facing the face to be decorated 4. At this point the transfer unit 23 is used which comprises a gun 30 adapted to spray a controlled stream of air 31 directed toward the graphic matrix 7 and to generate an electrostatic field E whose lines of force L end in the manufactured article 1 at right angles thereto, said manufactured article being connected to the ground as shown in
The air stream 31 generated, in use, by the gun 30 is thus designed to pass through the graphic matrix 7, passing through the incisions 10 so as to separate the powder particles 2 from the graphic matrix 7 and introduce them in the region B, within which the influence of the electrostatic field E is predominant. As shown in particular in
In another configuration 34 of the transfer unit 23, a second graphic matrix 35, whose graphic configuration is equivalent to the one formed on the graphic matrix 7, but with wider incisions 36 than the incisions 10, is superimposed on the daubed graphic matrix 7.
Advantageously, the air stream 31 generated by the gun 30 is thus adapted to penetrate, during use, in the incisions 10 of the graphic matrix 7 and to push against the powder particles 2 that block its exit. When the force applied by the stream 31 overcomes the electrical forces that keep the powder particles 2 stuck to the graphic matrix 7, the powder particles are introduced in the region B by said stream 31 and are directed toward a predefined direction by the incisions 36 of the graphic matrix 35.
Moreover, if it is possible to charge electrically the graphic matrices 7 and 35 with the same sign as the powder particles 2, said particles receive, in addition to the mechanical thrust of the stream 31, also an electrostatic thrust which allows to transfer them onto the surface to be decorated 4 more rapidly and precisely.
In this case, after placing the daubed graphic matrix 7, coupled to the graphic matrix 35, in front of and at a preset distance from the manufactured article 1, an electrode 38 is placed proximate to the graphic matrix 7 on the opposite side with respect to the manufactured article 1, said electrode having an opposite charge with respect to the powder particles 2 so as to produce an electrostatic field F which is suitable to produce electrostatic forces which act along lines of force H. Since the lines of force H tend to concentrate at the incisions 10 of the graphic matrix 7, in said incisions the electrostatic forces have such an intensity that they remove the powder particles 2 from the graphic matrix 7, making them migrate across the region B until they reach the surface to be decorated 4.
In order to reduce the loss into the environment of the powder particles 2 that are not involved in the painting process, downstream of the manufactured article 1 and on the opposite side with respect to a gun 3 for dispensing an air-powder mixture 6, a device 40 is advantageously provided for collecting and recovering the powder particles 2. As shown in
The supporting and handling frame 42 preferably comprises two pulleys 45a and 45b, one of which is a driving pulley, around which the or each filter 41 is wound in order to be turned with a predefined speed.
The suction means 43 are advantageously arranged upstream of the lower pulley 45b, so as to clean the or each filter 41 before it makes contact with said pulley. The or each filter 41 thus always affects the stream of powder particles 2 that arrive from the painting apparatuses with clean meshes and is thus able to capture and retain a large amount of powder particles 2.
The powder painting method and the apparatus for performing it as described above are susceptible of numerous modifications and variations, all of which are within the protective scope defined by the content of the appended claims.
Thus, for example, the same results in terms of image resolution and image reproduction on irregular surfaces obtained by means of the above described painting method can also be achieved by placing the graphic matrix 7 in contact with the surface to be decorated 4.
Moreover, by superimposing the graphic matrix 7 on the manufactured article 1 and proceeding as described above, the transfer of the powder particles 2 from the graphic matrix 7 to the surface to be decorated 4 again occurs under the effect of an electrostatic field. In this case, however, instead of causing a physical migration of the powder particles 2 across a gap B, the electrostatic field causes said particles to adhere to the surface to be decorated 4 and to separate from the graphic matrix 7 when said matrix is removed.
For example, before applying the decorative layer, it is also possible to induce on the base layer, a positive ionization performed with any suitable means and/or multiple electrically conducting substances, such as steam, optionally in a controlled atmosphere, in order to increase the electrostatic field between the manufactured article to be decorated and the graphic matrix, said electrostatic field being partially weakened by the presence of the base layer made of insulating material.
In practice, the materials and the dimensions may be various according to requirements.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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VR2000A0078 | Aug 2000 | IT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP01/08946 | 8/2/2001 | WO | 00 | 2/3/2003 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO02/11893 | 2/14/2002 | WO | A |
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A-0 297 520 | Jan 1989 | EP |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20030175417 A1 | Sep 2003 | US |