This application is a national stage application filed pursuant to 35 U.S.C. § 371 of International Application No. PCT/IB2017/050267, filed Jan. 18, 2017, which claims priority of Italian Patent Application No. 102016000003929, filed Jan. 18, 2016, the entire contents of each application being herein incorporated by reference.
The present invention relates to an oven and to an associated method for carrying out heat treatments of friction elements, in particular of braking elements such as brake pads.
The friction materials used as linings in the brake shoes of drum brakes and as brake pads of disc brakes for vehicles or in other equipment (for example in clutch disks), after the completion of the braking element forming step, need to be subjected to heat treatments which will improve the characteristics thereof and which allow to eliminate any gaseous residues.
In particular, in the case of brake pads, the pads, upon leaving the forming press, are heated for a certain period of time at temperatures generally slightly higher than 200° C., usually by means of convection ovens.
Next, the brake pads, preferably cooled to room temperature, are subjected to a surface heat treatment using IR lamps; the brake pads, deposited on trays or on a conveyor belt, are fed through a tunnel oven having infrared heating, i.e. through a thermally insulated tunnel provided upon the ceiling thereof of a plurality of IR lamps that irradiate the pads placed upon the underlying conveyor belt. This type of treatment, unlike that one in a convection oven, the objective of which is to heat “the core” of the friction material, is designed to substantially heat only the surface of the blocks of friction material which are present on the braking elements undergoing the treatment step.
In general, the infrared radiation to which the brake pads are subjected has a power density of between 50 and 150 kW/m2. Moreover, in order to control the temperature of the brake pads, the infrared treatment step is performed in the presence of a current of cooling air that continuously flows over the brake pads during treatment.
This type of oven and heat treatment are expensive and produce pollution; furthermore they also involve the use of generally very cumbersome plants.
In fact, firstly, in order to manage different volume quantities of brake pads, according to production requirements from time to time, infrared heating ovens are generally oversized and therefore work most of the time below the maximum rated output. This means that the oven and its accessories (filters, electrical and handling equipment, etc.) which make up the heat treatment plant are cumbersome and, above all, involve a large amount of wasted energy.
In addition, the IR lamps, in order to work properly, must be placed relatively far away from the elements to be treated, which means, on the one hand, that the beam of infrared rays emitted by the lamps radiates in the form of a cone consequently irradiating the underlying brake pads with varying intensity; and, on the other hand, there is the presence of a vast air chamber above the brake pads being treated within the tunnel, an air chamber that is crossed by the cooling air flow.
As a result, the air flow needed to adequately cool the brake pads during an IR treatment is very high (about 10,000 m3/h), implying once again a considerable waste of energy and the heating of the brake pads t may not be uniform.
Lastly, during the heat treatment, the cooling air removes dust and volatile chemicals, which are released from the friction material. Due to the high volume of air that is circulated within the oven, however, these pollutants are dispersed at low concentrations within the cooling air, which, once the air is released into the atmosphere, renders the removal of said pollutants from the cooling air itself problematic. Also because of the relatively high temperature of the exhaust air, the filtering systems that must be adopted for the high volumes of air to be treated are in fact very cumbersome, expensive, and not completely reliable.
The purpose of the present invention is to provide an oven and an associated method for carrying out heat treatments of friction elements, in particular braking elements such as brake pads, which allow a large number of braking elements to be treated relatively quickly and with a relatively reduced bulk, while simultaneously ensuring low energy consumption, the use of a reduced cooling air flow rate and low or no environmental pollution.
The invention therefore relates to an oven and an associated method for carrying out heat treatments of friction elements, in particular a surface heat treatment for braking elements such as brake pads, having the features set forth in the annexed claims.
Further characteristics and advantages of the present invention will become clear from the following description of an exemplary non-limiting embodiment thereof given purely by way of example and with reference to the figures in the accompanying drawings, wherein:
With reference to
The plant 1 comprises a tunnel oven 3 specifically designed for the surface heat treatment of friction elements 2 as a substitute for traditional ovens with infrared lamps; the oven 3 comprises a tunnel shaped protective casing 4 extending longitudinally between its first and second open end 5 and 6, mutually opposing, the open ends delimiting an inlet opening 7 and an outlet opening 8 of the tunnel oven 3.
The tunnel oven 3 further comprises a conveyor device 9, clearly illustrated in
According to an aspect of the invention, each heating device 11 comprises (
Here and hereinafter, by “relatively small distance” is meant a distance of the order of magnitude of centimeters, and therefore comprised between 1 and 19 centimeters. In particular, the distance H is chosen such that in use each radiating plate 12 is arranged at a distance not exceeding 1 cm from the friction elements 2 arranged side-by-side upon the resting surface 10, such a distance of a maximum of 1 cm having to be measured vertically from the side of the radiating plate 12 facing towards the resting surface 10.
The at least one inductor 13 of each device 11 is arranged facing the radiating plate 12 spaced apart therefrom on the side opposite to the conveyor device 9 and is designed to uniformly heat the radiating plate 12 by electromagnetic induction to a predetermined temperature; with reference to the diagram shown in
The transport device 9 is an endless belt conveyor of a known type comprising a flat belt 16 (
According to an aspect of the invention, the tunnel oven 3 comprises a fan and/or a suction fan, in the non-limiting example schematically illustrated in
With reference to
In particular (
The flow F of cooling air is then, according to an aspect of the invention, fed into the chamber 25 through the resting surface 10 of the conveyor device 9, from the bottom upwards.
The suction slots 24 are connected to a collecting manifold 30 for the cooling air flow F coming out from the tunnel casing 4; the manifold 30, which is partially illustrated in
The manifold 30 is provided with lateral branches 32 connected directly to the suction slots 24 and terminates at a tube 33 that connects to the filtering device 31; upstream of the filtering device 31, according to a further aspect of the invention, within the collecting manifold 30 and, in particular, on top of the tube 33, an inlet 34 (
At least one, two or all of the lateral branches 32 of the manifold 30 are preferably equipped with a choking valve 35 in order to adjust the flow rate of the cooling air flow F.
As already stated, the radiating plate/the radiating plates 12 is/are made of a ferromagnetic material and preferably of a stainless steel; and the inductors 13 are designed to heat each radiating plate 12 to a temperature of between 400° C. and 700° C.
In the example illustrated, the tunnel oven 3 forms part of the plant 1 for the heat treatment of the friction elements 2; there are two suction openings 23 on each side of the conveyor device 9, positioned beneath the same and beneath the tunnel casing 4 and protected by screens 36 (
As it is schematically shown in
From what described above, it is finally clear that the invention also relates to a method for the heat treatment of friction elements 2, in particular braking elements such as brake pads, comprising the following steps:
Furthermore, the method of the invention includes the step of feeding a cooling air flow F between the resting surface 10 and the radiating plate 12, which cooling air flow F is directed in counterflow to the feeding direction D of the conveyor device 9 and, preferably, also transversely to the feeding direction D of the conveyor device 9; the radiating plate/radiating plates being made of a stainless steel material and being heated to a temperature of between 400° C. and 700° C. With these parameters, the cooling air flow can be less than or equal to 1,000 m3/H.
In essence, the applicant has surprisingly found that using metal plates heated by means of induction, heating of the friction elements 2 is obtained that is comparable to that obtained to date using IR lamps, but obtaining thereby more uniform heating and therefore better results.
Also, the use of metallic radiating plates heated by induction allows a reduction in energy consumption of 40-50% to be obtained and a drastic reduction in the volume of cooling air, from 10,000 m3/h to 1,000 or even only 500 m3/h.
Furthermore, other than a reduction in the pollutants introduced into the atmosphere of more than 70%, insofar as these are more concentrated within the outlet cooling air flow F, which is also found to be at a lower temperature, and can therefore be effectively eliminated of dust by means of the bag filter 31 and of volatile products by means of post-combustion or by a catalyst downstream of the filter 31. Finally a reduction in bulk is obtained with more than a 50% reduction in the costs for the tubing with respect to a traditional system with IR lamps.
Each object of the invention has thus been achieved.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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102016000003929 | Jan 2016 | IT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/IB2017/050267 | 1/18/2017 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2017/125865 | 7/27/2017 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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2454708 | Middleton | Nov 1948 | A |
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20050035116 | Brown et al. | Feb 2005 | A1 |
20140352550 | Haas | Dec 2014 | A1 |
20190306930 | Huang | Oct 2019 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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10 2011 102 659 | Nov 2012 | DE |
WO 2010108744 | Sep 2010 | WO |
WO 2014162282 | Oct 2014 | WO |
Entry |
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International Search Report and Written Opinion for PCT/IB2017/050267; dated Apr. 26, 2017; 13 pages. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20210207887 A1 | Jul 2021 | US |