The present disclosure relates to furnaces, and more particularly to a furnace having a plurality of adjacent furnace chambers.
Hot forming is a process by which a metallic workpiece is heated to an elevated temperature in a furnace, and is then shaped to form a desired item, such as a part for a machine (e.g., doors, beams, and frames for automobiles). Constructing furnaces for hot forming has historically been costly and very labor intensive. Also, prior art furnaces have included workpiece supports that are prone to bowing and sagging, and have required cooling by air and/or water.
A furnace according to an example of the present disclosure includes a plurality of furnace components that are stacked to form a plurality of furnace chambers therebetween. Each furnace component includes opposing sidewalls and a support wall that extends between the opposing sidewalls, separates adjacent ones of the plurality of furnace chambers, and defines a plurality of channels. A plurality of heating elements are situated in the channels.
A furnace according to an example of the present disclosure includes a plurality of furnace components that are stacked to form a plurality of furnace chambers therebetween. Each furnace component includes a first sidewall, a second sidewall opposite the first sidewall, and a support wall that connects the first and second sidewalls and separates adjacent ones of the plurality of furnace chambers. Each furnace component includes a first mating feature defined along an upper perimeter of the furnace component and a second mating feature defined along a lower perimeter of the furnace component that is different from the first mating feature. The first and second mating features of a given one of the furnace components interfit with respective adjacent furnace components.
A method according to an example of the present disclosure includes stacking a plurality of furnace components to form a plurality of furnace chambers therebetween. Each furnace component includes opposing sidewalls and a support wall that extends between the opposing sidewalls, separates adjacent ones of the plurality of furnace chambers, and defines a plurality of channels. The method includes inserting heating elements into the channels of the plurality of furnace components.
The embodiments described herein may be taken independently or in any combination. Features described in connection with one embodiment are applicable to all embodiments, unless such features are incompatible.
The support wall 32 acts as a partition by separating adjacent furnace chambers 24. The sidewalls 30A-B each include respective openings 38 for receiving heating elements 40 into the channels 36. Although only four heating elements 40A-D are shown in
In the example of
In one example, the source 50 is an electrical power source, and the heating elements 40 are electric heating element rods heated by passing electrical current from the electrical power source 50 through the rods.
In one example, the heating element rods 40 of a given furnace component 22 are connected in series to each other. In one such example, the heating element rods 40 of a given furnace component 22 are connected in a staggered fashion such that rods 40A-B are connected by a first device 66 adjacent to sidewall 30B, rods 40B-C are connected by a second device 66 adjacent wall 30A, rods 40C-D are connected by a third device 66 adjacent to sidewall 30B, etc. Of course, other types of electrical connections could be used (e.g., a parallel connection which uses an elongated version of the device 66 that connects to more than two of the rods 40).
In this disclosure, like reference numerals designate like elements where appropriate and reference numerals with the addition of one-hundred or multiples thereof designate modified elements that are understood to incorporate the same features and benefits of the corresponding elements.
The furnace components 22 stack onto each other using a tongue 62 and groove 64 mating feature that is shown in
Referring now to
Referring again to
In one example, the furnace components 22 are made from a casting material, such as an alumina and mullite-based castable refractory. In a further example, the castable refractory has a high content of aluminum oxide (Al2O3) (e.g., greater than 50%) and includes metallic reinforcement fibers. In a further example, the ceramic mix is at least partially composed of ARMORMAX® 70 SR from Allied Mineral Products, which is includes Al2O3 (70.1%), SiO2 (25.5%), CaO (2.1%), TiO2 (1.1%), Fe2O3 (0.6%) and Alkalies (0.3%). ARMORMAX® 70 SR has exceptional structural and thermal properties that makes it useful for the construction of such furnace. Of course, it is understood that this is a non-limiting example and that other materials could be used.
In a further example, the ceramic mix is at least partially composed of a mullite-based refractory such as METAL-ROK® 70M from Allied Mineral products, which includes Al2O3 (70.2%), SiO2 (25.4%), CaO (2.2%), TiO2 (1.1%), Fe2O3 (0.7%), Alkalies (0.3%), and MgO (0.1%). The heating element rods 40 may be composed of steel or a steel alloy in some examples.
Use of a mold to form the furnace components 22 can lower production costs and provide uniformity between the components. Castable units are cost effective to produce in quantities and produce an accurate repeatable product, because the furnace components 22 will be identical coming off the same mold. In the prior art, molds were not used causing a lack of uniformity between furnaces, and manual labor costs were also high.
In one example, the insulating outer layer 26 of
Referring again to the example of
Although not shown in the figures, doors could be installed on the front of each furnace chamber 24 at the opening 25 which is opposite the rear wall 30C, so that the individual furnace chambers 24 can be enclosed and avoid heat loss.
The heating elements 40 are heated using the source 50 (e.g., which provides either electrical power or combustible gas) to heat the furnace chambers 24.
Although the examples shown above have illustrated six vertically stacked furnace components 22 (
The stackable furnace components 22 facilitate the construction of furnaces in a modular fashion which is efficient and cost-effective, with lower labor expenses than prior art furnaces. Additionally, the discrete furnace chambers 24 are isolated from each other, and can in some embodiments facilitate independent temperature control, such that various ones of the furnace chambers 24 are maintained at different operating temperatures. The furnace components 22 also provide good temperature uniformity within the furnace chambers 24. Still further, the workpiece supports of the prior art that were prone to sagging and/or bowing can be omitted in the designs discussed herein if desired, which can lower maintenance costs. Use of a casting mold to form the furnace components 22 provides consistent dimensions between the furnace components 22, which in combination with the stacking features discussed above make the overall furnace 20 geometrically stable and less susceptible to movement over prolonged exposure to temperature, and reduces process downtime and waste.
Although example embodiments have been disclosed, a worker of ordinary skill in this art would recognize that certain modifications would come within the scope of the claims. For that reason, the following claims should be studied to determine their true scope and content.
This application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Application No. 62/514,290, which was filed Jun. 2, 2017 and is incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62514290 | Jun 2017 | US |