The present invention relates to the field of coating delivery systems that are used in commercial applications to deliver paint and other liquids to surfaces requiring coatings for protection, enhancement, product coloring or texture and for multiple other reasons. There are many coating delivery technologies that have developed and are used in the field. The coatings field can be broken down by industry categories that use specific coating delivery technologies based on application, types of coatings and economy of delivery. Architectural coatings for building and structures require a different type of delivery system than does automotive or aircraft finishes. For coating buildings, the primary concern is the speed of delivery and getting a complete and heavy coating, whereas in automotive coating the focus is precision and control with attention to detail in getting a thin, even coat and adding multiple layers to achieve durability with a consistent finish. Each would have their own coating delivery system focused on the specific need or requirement of the end product and process.
The majority of coating applications systems found today utilize piston type compressors that pump air into storage tanks that supply multiple spray guns and deliver high pressure, low volume air for high speed, low cost performance. These systems are known as conventional compressed air delivery systems. They deliver coatings at pressures that range from 20 to 50 PSI and achieve only 40-60% transfer efficiency in the process. That means that on average for very gallon of paint applied about one half (½) of the paint is lost in the coating process. Another common high speed process involves pressurizing the coating solution direct and applying it without any air. This coating process is known as airless coating. It applies with liquid pressure in the range of 1000 PSI and although very fast and effective in applying coatings it also has a low transfer efficiency (40-60%) and wastes almost as much paint as is applied due to the extreme high pressures the coatings are under and the tremendous amount of overspray that is generated. Airless technology has evolved in recent years to include air assisted combinations where some air is introduced into the spray process to help atomize the coating before application but still has low transfer efficiencies and generates an abundance of overspray and material waste. There are other coating application technologies such as Electro-Coat where the coating material is charged with a current and the opposite current is induced into the material to be painted, creating an electron bond that increases the precision of the coating delivery and reduces overspray. Although highly efficient in use with good transfer efficiency this system is expensive, slow for large scale coating applications and cannot be used coating materials that do not conduct electricity such as plastics or wood.
The Field of the present invention is in the HVLP spray type coatings transfer where air is used to propel the atomized coating at pressures under 10 PSI. This is known as High Volume, Low pressure or the HVLP delivery system designed for precise coating delivery to smaller surfaces with little material waste or coating overspray or waste. The higher volume of air is used to more completely atomize or aerosolize the coating while the lower pressure is used to propel the paint. The result is a higher proportion of paint reaching the target surface with reduced overspray, material consumption and air pollution. This technology has been in use since the 1980's when various U.S. Federal EPA (Environmental Protection Agency) and State agencies started controlling the amount of overspray produced by painting in urban areas which generated volatile organic compounds (VOC's) know to cause adverse health risks. One such agency in Southern California known as the South Coast Air Quality Management District (SCAQMD) began regulating harmful emissions from paint overspray in the mid 1980's and tested HVLP spray systems finding them to be over 65% efficient in transferring their coatings, a major breakthrough in achieving less pollution for this industry. HVLP technology was adopted by the SCAQMD, EPA and others and was defined as high volume, low pressure coating system operated at air pressures of between 0.1 and 10 PSI. Since that time HVLP manufacturers have set 10 PSI as the goal for maximum output and have tried to achieve it in two different ways. One way was by using conventional compressed air pump systems attached to HVLP modified standard spray guns designed to deliver 10 PSI. This is known as standard HVLP technology. The second way was to use small turbine motors that generate more volume and less pressure and by designing an HVLP gun to operate at the lower pressures with larger internal passage ways and larger spray tip openings to accommodate the lower pressure outputs. This system is known as true HVLP technology. Transfer efficiencies have increased greatly and have even been tested at above 80% in some cases. HVLP technology has quickly become the standard for low waste, ecological sensitive coating applications.
HVLP technology has developed in two ways as mentioned above. The first and easiest adaptation was changing the gun design while continuing to use the standard compressed piston air system. Here the standard piston type pump pushes air into a storage tank which is connected directly to the paint gun and used on demand. Pressures from the tank can be 30 to 100 PSI (depending on where the tank pressure is set) which is then reduced to HVLP pressures of less than 10 PSI inside the spray gun. This type of system is know as Standard HVLP where the gun is designed to release a controlled amount of compressed air into a larger chamber that expands to create the air volume needed for HVLP application. U.S. Pat. No. 5,429,307 details such a design where a gun has been designed to accept either type of air source, compressed air from conventional piston pumps or HVLP air from a turbine pump, by means of a simple adjustment on the gun. Air volume for True HVLP systems is produced directly by turbine type pumps with guns designed to operate at the lower pressures. True HVLP guns are designed to have large passageways to accept the lower pressure from the HVLP turbine and propel the coating at almost the same pressure as it received minus air losses within the gun. The Standard HVLP compressors have high pressure but lack the volume necessary to atomize the coating whereas the True HVLP turbine has the necessary volume required for light atomizing but many times lacks the pressure to deliver the coating at 10 PSI, the maximum permitted by HVLP regulations. Standard HVLP is not as efficient as True HVLP and can typically achieve 55-65% maximum transfer efficiency while the True HVLP systems with stacked Turbines and True HVLP guns have achieved 70 to 80% transfer efficiencies and are therefore the preferred method of HVLP. An additional advantage that True HVLP systems have over the Standard HVLP is that the Standard piston type pumps that have rings and seals that often leak exhaust particles, water and lubricating oil. The air they pump cannot be used for atomizing coatings or for fresh air breathing without adding costly filters and regular maintenance. The True HVLP turbine pumps are oil less, and keep the air stream clean and free from contaminates so atomized coatings are particle and pollution free without such cost and maintenance.
Since the 1980's when HVLP technology became accepted as a viable alternative to convention spray systems, manufactures have developed turbine style motors like those found in vacuum cleaners that can be stacked to achieve larger amounts of pressure at the output. A typical flat or “pancake” style turbine can produce 20 CFM of air volume but only 2-3 PSI of output pressure. So HVLP manufactures began stacking the turbines in series to produce more air pressure and approximate the 10 PSI maximum allowed by HVLP protocol. Unfortunately stacking these individual turbine elements creates inherent heat and inefficiencies and the practical maximum any manufacturer has been able to achieve to date in output pressure is around 7 PSI, or 30% below the allowable and optimum HVLP pressure allowed. Not having the maximum 10 PSI allowed at the Spray gun tip limits the amount of coating that can be applied per hour (or throughput) so even though transfer efficiency is increased so is the application times leading to higher coating costs.
The secret to producing a good quality finish is finding a balance between atomizing pressure and fluid viscosity. When both are properly matched it will create good atomization of the coating and steady delivery of atomized coating suspended in air, producing a smooth, even and consistent finish when dry. Unfortunately, most present day HVLP systems are able to atomize only low solid coating formulations so their application and value is limited to only a small part of the coating business. The present invention details using a rotary vane HVLP turbine, as opposed to conventional “pancake” or stacked type HVLP turbine and has the advantage of being able to produce an excess volume of air which can be used to atomize high solid coating formulations, power multiple guns and simultaneously and provide a fresh air breathing system for the spray operators. The stacked pancake style HVLP turbine is limited in volume and therefore no extra air is available to supply breathing systems. The rotary vane pump of present invention has a clear advantage in output capacity but is expensive in comparison. So the present invention also provides a means to overcome the cost disadvantage of the rotary vane pump as applied to HVLP coatings applications by means of a manifold that allows one pump to supply multiple guns as well as a fresh air breathing system for the spray operator. By utilizing a rotary vane pump in place of the conventional stacked turbine the present invention has been able to achieve 10 to 16 PSI of pressure to allow for losses within the system so that the final output at the spray gun cap can be 10 PSI which meets the optimum operating conditions of HVLP operation. The use of the rotary vane pump in the present design also allows 50-70 CFM of output volume, for atomizing high solid coatings, supplying multiple HVLP guns and providing fresh air for controlled operator breathing through air mask assemblies. Current true HVLP technologies all utilize stacked style turbine motors because they are relatively inexpensive and inherently efficient. They have the disadvantages of having a short operational life and are noisy, but their greatest limitation is not having the capability to deliver the necessary 10 PSI air pressure required for most industrial HVLP applications and having enough volume to atomize high solid coatings. Another disadvantage is that they heat the air that is compressed causing heat curing, a premature chemical reaction within the coating as it is applied which affects the finish. The present invention overcomes all these limitations.
Due to the concern for VOC pollution, more coating producers are formulating their coatings with higher solid content, which helps limit VOC emissions but requires extra volumes of air to atomize. Convention HVLP turbines do not have the capacity to atomize many of these formulations. Because of these and other technical drawbacks, the HVLP field of coating applications today has been restricted to smaller project painting of limited sized objects with coatings of low solid content (easy to atomize). One popular HVLP application today is use in furniture spraying where small items such as chairs and tables are sprayed with lightweight materials like lacquer and clear enamel with delivery rates and production times that are not cost critical. The throughput of the current HVLP paint systems or the amount of paint that can be delivered per a given timeframe is small compared to other Systems so for many coating applications, HVLP has no practical or economical use despite the fact that it has much higher transfer efficiency. The present invention is designed to overcome the pressure delivery and atomization problems of the stacked turbine HVLP technology by providing a pump powered by a rotary vane turbine that is not limited in delivery pressure or atomizing volume. This excess pressure and volume capacity fit the HVLP model well since it can now deliver the maximum HVLP output pressures of 10 PSI at the spray gun cap or output with enough excess pressure to accommodate system losses, while its ability to generate large volumes of air, as compared to conventional HVLP stacked turbines allow it to atomize high solid coatings with ease. The added volume capacity along with the unique manifold design of the present invention allows the rotary vane pump to supply multiple spray gun outputs, increasing coating efficiency and lowering application costs. This added volume can also be used to supply a fresh air breathing and cooling apparatus for the spray gun operator. Fresh air for coating operators is a critical requirement where large amounts of coatings are sprayed in a closed or restricted space area such as an airplane hanger or a military maintenance depot or where toxic coatings are being used such as CARC, chemical agent reactive coatings. Current technology requires spray operators to carry their own air supply in these situations which consists of tanks strapped on their backs, limiting range and motion of the operator as well as causing operator fatigue. The present invention overcomes the problems by supplying fresh filtered air into a sealed mask at each spray station which can be individually adjusted by the operator. Air from the rotary vane pump is clean, there is no oil or water as there is with conventional piston pumps so the need for external air filtering is minimized. All this is accomplished from a single output manifold without the need for oxygen storage tanks, filters or elaborate breathing systems that hinder the efficiency and increase the costs of coating process. The present invention provides a break through design for the HVLP market because all previously mentioned limitations of HVLP spray technology are now eliminated. HVLP Spraying can now be applied to large scale coating targets with increased coating atomization, delivery speed and delivery performance. Coatings can be produced that are more even, contain less air bubbles, pits and other surface imperfections, all while creating less overspray and coating waste. Having the multiple spray stations possible from one pump source increases coating productivity and efficiency by orders of magnitude and having a fresh air source for operator breathing allows the system more versatility and range of applications never possible with previous HVLP designs.
The present design also has a coating supply system that is central and independently pressurized, which directly supplies each gun via a hose reducing the down time of the spray coating process. Typically, most HVLP spray systems utilize a gun that contains a cup reservoir that must be re-filled many times during the operation, causing time consuming delays and labor inefficiencies. The present design eliminates the need for a spray gun cup reservoir and supplies the coating direct via hose under operator adjustable pressure greatly increasing coating delivery efficiency and performance saving labor costs.
Understanding the limitations that Standard HVLP compressor pumps and convention flat turbine HVLP pumps present to the HVLP spray coating process and their inability to atomize high solid coatings and supply enough air pressure to meet the 10 PSI standard that allows for system losses, the present invention overcomes these current limitations by providing a system that allows commercially available rotary vane type pumps of adequate capacity to be attached to a manifold and regulator assembly to meet and exceed the air pressure requirements of the HVLP coating process and provide enough volume to atomize high solid type coatings that present day HVLP systems have not been able to. This while simultaneously supplying multiple spray guns/stations and a fresh air breathing system for each of its station operators. The pairing of the rotary vane type pump with the manifold design assembly will allow the HVLP coating process to be applied to a wider variety of applications not previously possible and to be more cost efficient by increasing the number of spray stations possible, increasing the speed and coverage of the delivery (feet/minute) along with the overall transfer efficiency achieved in the coating process. This is accomplished by supplying higher output air pressures (up to 10 PSI) without heating or polluting the air and having enough excess air volume to atomize higher solid coatings and provide a wider dynamic range within the atomization process, allowing greater control of coating coverage, thickness, and delivery rate. This control will increase the uniformity of the coatings delivered, reduce the amount of overspray of material wasted and increase the speed in which the coating can be applied, saving money in material and labor costs.
It is therefore an object of the present invention to provide a more balanced and efficient air pump and manifold system that will not be limited in meeting the maximum HVLP air pressure output of 10 PSI. Another objective of the present invention is to use a rotary vane type pump as an air pump source which is commercially available, extremely reliable, does not heat or pollute the air, is relatively economical to use when supplying multiple spray guns and which provides a better balance of air pressure and volume very well suited to the HVLP application. A further objective of the present invention is to provide a manifold and regulator design to create a reserve of air volume and to supply multiple HVLP spray guns, each with enough air volume to atomize a wider range of coating formulations in the HVLP spray process, including high solid coatings, allowing for a broader range of HVLP applications and a wider dynamic range between atomizing pressure and fluid viscosity. A further objective of the present invention is to provide a manifold design to supply multiple spray guns to allow teams of painters to work together in the HVLP coating of larger surfaces such as aircraft, transport vehicles, aerospace and military vessels. Yet a further objective of the present invention is to provide a manifold design to simultaneously accommodate a fresh air breathing and cooling system to be used in conjunction with each spray gun supply line. Yet a further objective of the present invention is to provide a new and improved coating supply system that allows the coating for each gun to be supplied from a centralized source under pressure from an external hydraulic pump, which regulates the pressure and supplies each spray gun coating by means of a hose, maintaining it at an operator adjustable level, replacing the conventional gun cup reservoir and the need to stop and re-fill it during the coating process. Yet a further objective of the present invention is to combine the above designs into a portable, centrally controlled and automated system which supplies the HVLP coating process with the air pressure and volume necessary to apply higher solid coatings with more consistent thickness and apply them with greater speed and throughput of coverage (amount of coating surface applied per hour), while delivering high coating transfer efficiencies and lower coating overspray, saving both labor time and material costs and minimizing the environmental impact (release of volatile organic compounds) in the coating process. The final objective of the present design is to make the above described system modular, interchangeable and able to work in conjunction with each other by means of a central computer processor with sensory feedback devices and wireless control, so that any number of core coating pods or stations (4, 6, 8, 10 units each) can be controlled and coordinated from a central source. By this means, very large coating targets such as jumbo jet aircraft could have multiple pod stations spraying multiple types of materials at multiple targets all controlled by a central system that monitors and regulates the performance of each core pod by means of sensors and computer feedback to the control station.
One preferred embodiment of the present invention is shown in
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20150224524 A1 | Aug 2015 | US |