The present invention relates to a nozzle with a deflector for a plasma cutting torch.
A plasma cutting torch generally comprises at least one nozzle for ejecting the plasma arc onto the workpiece to be cut, an electrode that forms the cathode, placed at a certain distance from the nozzle and coaxially therewith, means for supplying at least one plasma gas, generally chosen depending on the nature and the thickness of the material to be cut, and at least one means for delivering the plasma gas into the plasma chamber or volume that separates the electrode from the nozzle.
The cathode of the torch and the anode, which is formed by the workpiece to be cut, are connected to the negative and positive terminals, respectively, of a current generator.
During a cutting operation with a plasma torch, the latter is positioned in the immediate vicinity of the workpiece, a plasma arc is struck on the electrode of the torch in a suitable plasma gas medium, the arc is stretched out under the dust of the said plasma gas through the nozzle or nozzles via the central orifice of the latter and terminates on the workpiece where, owing to the thermal and kinetic characteristics of the plasma jet, it causes localized melting of the material forming the workpiece and ejects molten metal, thus forming a drillhole over the entire thickness, and then a cutting kerf is formed by relative displacement between the torch and the workpiece, which kerf determines, through the coordinated movements in the X and Y directions, the profile of the final part.
Several types of manual or automatic plasma torches are used in industry, namely those called single-flow torches and dual-flow torches. However, they all have as common characteristic an tip face that includes an ejection nozzle provided with a central orifice, opposite which nozzle the workpiece to be cut is placed, not far away and often perpendicular thereto.
Thus,
in
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in
In general, the plasma cutting nozzles used have, facing the workpiece, an tip of snub-nosed shape projecting beyond the retaining shroud, as illustrated by way of non-limiting example by the nozzle 3 in
This shape most generally consists of a succession of connecting plane surfaces and of volumes of revolution, such as truncated cones having straight generatrices, which are sometimes joined to one another via fillets of rounded general shape.
Moreover, it is quite widespread practice for the nozzles to be locked in position, in a housing made at the tip of the torch body, via a terminal shroud fastened to the tip of the torch body, as shown schematically by the shrouds 5 in
In addition, the outer profile of the shroud 5 and the outer profile of the nozzle 3, 7 usually form, in the region where they join, a change of slope, a shoulder or a profiled projection making a re-entrant angle, as shown by the angles 6 in
However, in practice it turns out that these arrangements have a number of drawbacks.
Thus, in the workpiece drilling phase, the front tip of the torch formed by the tip of the nozzle is brought close to the surface of the workpiece, and the plasma arc struck on the electrode of the torch terminates on the surface of the workpiece after the arc has passed through the ejection channel of the nozzle. The impact of the plasma jet on the workpiece then causes local melting of the constituent material of the workpiece, firstly surface melting and then, depending on the energy delivered by the plasma jet and on the thickness of the workpiece, deeper and deeper until the local melting fully emerges via the opposite face of the workpiece to be cut, as shown in
During this phase, which may, depending on the energy of the plasma jet and the thickness to be drilled, require a time ranging from a few hundredths of a second to more than one second, the tip of the torch is subjected to intensive spattering with molten metal 11 erupting from the drilling crater 10 until the thickness of the workpiece 9 has been completely drilled through.
This therefore results in deposits of spattered and resolidified metal on the tip of the torch, as shown schematically in
These deposits 12 form mainly at the re-entrant angle 6 connecting the shroud to the nozzle and on the snub-nosed tip part of the nozzles 3, 7.
The deposits 12, in the re-entrant angle 6 not only damage the shroud but also become fixed at the point of connection with the shroud. This may prevent or impede the removal of the shroud, during an operation to replace the nozzle, it may compromise the seal needed between shroud and nozzle, in order to prevent the leakage of cooling water or gas, depending on the case, and it may prevent the shroud from being reassembled correctly on the nozzle, after the maintenance operation.
This generally leads to shrouds and nozzles being replaced more frequently in order to resume correct operation.
Furthermore, since the deposits 12 on the tip of the nozzle 3, 7 project from the normal tip profile of the said nozzle 3, 7, they further reduce the actual distance separating the nozzle from the workpiece and do not fail to cause, during the drilling phase or subsequently during the cutting phase, problems of:
The problem to be solved is therefore to propose a plasma torch nozzle that does not have the problems and drawbacks mentioned above, that is to say in particular to propose a nozzle that has a longer lifetime than the conventional nozzles, when used under the same operating conditions, so as to allow a larger number of drillholes to be produced than with the nozzles of the prior art, without appreciable accumulation at its tip with metal expelled from the drilling crater, nor formation of a double arc prejudicial to correct execution of the cutting operations.
The solution of the invention is therefore a nozzle for a plasma torch, in particular a plasma cutting torch the body of which has the general shape of an axisymmetric dish and includes an outlet orifice for the plasma gas jet, comprising a first external face of circular shape and diameter d2, which includes, at its centre, the axial orifice for passage of the plasma jet, and an annular second external face, of outside diameter d3, which peripherally borders the first face, where d3>d2, characterized in that the said annular second external face has a concave axisymmetric profile.
Depending on the case, the nozzle of the invention may include one or more of the following technical features:
The invention also relates to a plasma cutting torch comprising a nozzle according to the invention, and also to the use of such a nozzle or of such a torch in a plasma arc cutting operation.
Expressed in another way, the inventor of the present invention has shown that, by modifying the tip geometry of the plasma jet ejection nozzle, the above-mentioned drawbacks have been virtually eliminated.
The proposed geometry within the context of the invention is advantageously applicable to any plasma cutting nozzle, whatever the use thereof, namely manual or automatic cutting, whatever the applications thereof, namely the cutting of structural steels, stainless steels, aluminium alloys or any other material that can be cut by a plasma cutting process, whatever the plasma-generating fluid, i.e. liquid, gas or gas mixtures, whether oxidizing or non-oxidizing, inert or chemically active, for example a reducing agent, and whatever the power of the plasma jet.
The retaining shroud 5 has an tip profile 16 of frustoconical general shape and the nozzle 14 has a tip, of snub-nosed general shape, projecting axially from the shroud 5 by a distance H.
According to the invention, the snub-nosed tip of the nozzle 14 is provided, going from its diameter d2 to its diameter d3, with an intermediate connecting surface 17 of axisymmetric concave profile forming a deflector for the high-temperature metal particles, that is to say particles at a temperature close to the melting point of their constituent material, emanating from the workpiece during the drilling operation, as described above.
To obtain an optimum hot-particle deflection effect while maintaining satisfactory thermal resistance of the nozzle 14 near the plasma jet passing through the latter via the orifice 15 of diameter d1, a number of arrangements must preferably be respected, namely that:
The nozzles produced according to the present invention and used instead of the nozzles of the prior art in plasma cutting torches, under standard operating conditions, make it possible to drill a larger number of holes, about 10 to 20 times more, than with the nozzles of the prior art without appreciable accumulation of metal expelled from the drilling crater near their tip, nor formation of a double arc prejudicial to correct execution of the cutting operations.
This spectacular effect is illustrated by
By way of non-limiting example, the table below gives tip dimensions for a few nozzles in accordance with the present invention, which result in a large number of drillholes, i.e. 10 to 20 times more than with a nozzle according to the prior art, with neither damage nor loss of cutting performance.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0351043 | Dec 2003 | FR | national |