The present invention relates to a method for re-establishing symmetry of the distribution of temperatures between the right-hand and left-hand sides of the cross section of a flow of molten glass that has been routed in a feeder and the flow of which has been rendered asymmetrical by passing through a bend area, which has induced thermal asymmetry.
Molten glass transfer devices, known as feeders, are designed to route the molten glass from the glass production area (melting furnace) to a forming area (forming or molding machine). A feeder comprises a refractory material lower part forming a channel for the flow of glass, thermally insulated by various insulative materials, and an upper part also thermally insulated and forming a vault capping the channel.
A feeder may consist in a simple line directly connecting the melting furnace to the forming machine.
However, a feeder may also include at least one bend area that enables its shape to be adapted to the spatial constraints of the line.
The present invention concerns feeders including at least one bend area.
The mean temperature and the thermal homogeneity of the glass at the exit from the feeder are crucial for forming, in particular for the formation of parisons with the thermal characteristics required by the fabrication method. The two thermal criteria at the feeder exit are:
Compliance with these set points assists with the formation of the left-hand and right-hand parisons of a double-parison machine, with similar thermal characteristics and weak and axially symmetrical temperature gradients between the core and the skin of the parison.
A bend area in a feeder is a source of thermal asymmetry because the flow of the glass in this area is characterized by an asymmetric speed field, with differential head losses and thermal losses between the inside and the outside of the bend.
Consequently, if the glass has at the entry of the bend a symmetrical temperature profile with a hot central vein, that hot vein of glass is no longer centered in the middle of the cross section of the channel at the exit from the bend and the cold areas near the base plate and the vertical walls of the feeder are generally at lower temperatures on the outside of the bend than on the inside. Although, for lighter colored glasses, the lack of thermal homogeneity created in this way has time to be absorbed and to disappear between the area of the bend and the exit area of the feeder, for glasses of darker color, characterized by a thermal set-up length of the order of several meters, this is no longer the case.
Lack of temperature homogeneity in the circumference of the parison (glass droplet) may lead to thickness heterogeneities in the circumference of the articles formed (bottles, pots, etc.).
The present invention aims to remedy these drawbacks that stem from the fact that the hot vein of a flow of glass in a feeder is diverted at the exit from the bend, such diversion accentuating the temperature heterogeneity.
The first object of the present invention is therefore a method for re-establishing a symmetrical distribution of temperatures between the right-hand and left-hand sides of the cross section of a flow of molten glass that has been routed in a feeder including at least one bend area, thermal asymmetry having been induced by flowing round a bend, the feeder comprising:
A sole plate inclination of 2° to 12° relative to the horizontal may be chosen in the area of the bend or of each bend.
A sole plate inclination of 9° to 10° relative to the horizontal may in particular be chosen in the area of the bend or of each bend.
A sole plate inclination is advantageously chosen that decreases progressively from the area of the bend to the horizontal, on the one hand, in an entry area of the bend that constitutes an area of connection with the channel in the entry branch of the feeder and, on the other hand, in an exit area of the bend constituting an area of connection with the channel in the exit branch of the feeder.
According to the present invention the flow channel may be modified in a bend area for which the entry branch and the exit branch form an angle greater than or equal to 80° and less than 180°, in particular an angle of 90°.
The present invention also provides a device for transferring molten glass from the area of production of the glass to the forming or molding area, constituted by a feeder including at least one bend area, the feeder comprising:
The sole plate inclination in the area of the bend or of each bend may be chosen as indicated above.
According to one particular embodiment the sole plate inclination decreases progressively from the area of the bend to the horizontal, on the one hand, in an entry area of the bend which constitutes an area of connection with the channel in the entry branch of the feeder and, on the other hand, in an exit area of the bend constituting an area of connection with the channel in the exit branch of the feeder.
According to the invention the flow channel is modified in a bend area for which the entry branch and the exit branch form an angle greater than or equal to 80° and less than 180°, in particular an angle of 90°.
To better illustrate the object of the present invention, one particular embodiment thereof will be described hereinafter by way of nonlimiting illustration and with reference to the appended drawing.
In the drawing:
Referring to
The branch 3 is fed transversely via its outside edge 3a by the flow of glass leaving the melting furnace used to produce the glass. The branch 4 has at its free end a device 5 for feeding a forming machine.
The path of the glass in the feeder is represented by the arrows F.
The structure of the feeder is known and will not be described in more detail here. There may be seen in
The burners 9 rest on the horizontal upper wall of the walls 8b, 8c of the channel 8.
The portion of the channel 8 in the bend area 2 is represented to a larger scale in
In a classic feeder channel 8, the sole plate 8a is horizontal and the lateral walls 8b, 8c are the same height.
According to the present invention, the sole plate 8a has been modified to feature a downwardly inclined outside portion in the bend area 2.
In the example shown, starting with a channel 8 having a sole plate 8a 1300 mm wide and lateral walls 8b, 8c 200 mm high, the geometry of the channel 8 was modified as follows: the bend area 2 of the channel 8 was divided along the flow path F of the glass into:
In
The dimensions of the areas 2a to 2d are as follows:
height of outside wall 8c in area 2b: 302 mm at an angle of 90°; and
length of flow analysis area 2d: 1600 mm.
The height of the outside walls 8c in the areas 2a and 2c decreases progressively in the direction of the standard areas disposed at the entry and the exit of the bend.
The downward and outward inclination of the sole plate of the invention relative to the horizontal is approximately 10° in the bend region 2b. This inclination decreases progressively in the areas 2a and 2c in the direction of the standard bend entry and exit areas.
The entry temperature profile is a so-called hot vein profile and corresponds to a flow rate of 100 t/d.
In the left-hand part of
The temperature level curve in the right-hand part of
In the case of the inclined sole plate, the speed level curves (left-hand part of
The inclination of the sole plate enables the hot vein to be rendered symmetrical again within the width of the feeder. The apparent modification of the internal profile of the bend in
Referring to
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 50729 | Feb 2010 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/FR2011/050153 | 1/26/2011 | WO | 00 | 9/12/2012 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2011/095728 | 8/11/2011 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4569055 | Williamson | Feb 1986 | A |
4662927 | Blumenfeld | May 1987 | A |
4803698 | Stephens | Feb 1989 | A |
5862169 | Martlew et al. | Jan 1999 | A |
Number | Date | Country |
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0 512 900 | Nov 1992 | EP |
WO 2010015964 | Dec 2010 | WO |
Entry |
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International Search Report Issued May 24, 2011 in PCT/FR11/50153 Filed Jan. 26, 2011. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20130031936 A1 | Feb 2013 | US |