The present invention relates to a facility for coating a substrate with at least one organic coating layer. The inventive facility makes it possible in particular to apply a coating layer by means of spraying.
To apply such a coating layer to a substrate, a number of process steps are generally required.
In a first step, the substrate surface is typically cleaned. This can be achieved for example by means of air pressure and/or by means for ionizing the surface resp. by means of irradiating the surface with a liquid medium such as water or an aqueous or alcoholic or solvent-based solution or with a solid, such as shot or C02, or by dipping the substrates in an aqueous or alcoholic or solvent-based solution, possibly under the influence of waves, such as ultrasound waves or microwaves.
In a second step, the actual coating layer is then deposited for example by spraying a coating dispersion. This is followed by a step during which the already coated substrate is baked. This can be achieved by heating in air circulation and/or by exposure to infrared radiation (IR) for example at 50-80° C. In this connection, the solvent usually present in the coating dispersion is essentially evaporated. In case of UV-curable coating material that is very widespread nowadays, i.e. a coating that is cured by ultraviolet light, this curing takes place in one of the step following the solvent evaporation.
Most coatings used are based on organic substances dispersed in solvents. As solvent, aqueous solutions, organic or also inorganic solvent can be considered. The coatings can also be water-based. The curing can be achieved thermally or by radiation curing.
All the above steps can be completed in a single chamber with a substantially stationary substrate. However, in such a multi-function chamber, there is a problem with batch operation in that the equipment that is to be used for cleaning and curing the coating risks being contaminated with coating dispersion or attacked by the evaporated solvent.
For this reason, it is common nowadays to carry out the above steps in different places and in spatially separate sections in the inline operation.
Generally, the fresh air supply is provided in the upper portion of each section 11, 13, 15, 17 and 19, and in the bottom area an extraction device is provided that removes air and gases from the chamber portions and feeds them to a cleaning system (not shown). By separating the sections for the different process steps according to the prior art, it is indeed possible to achieve that the different process steps do not adversely affect each other. However, such a coating facility has the disadvantage that it can only be transported with considerable logistical effort because of its size. The assembly and installation of this system thus also involves great effort; it is important in particular to note that for this reason, these systems are not fully constructed at the equipment manufacturer's, which has the major disadvantage that the complete and final fine-tuning of all system functions and the corresponding process steps can only be carried out at on the customer's premises.
A further embodiment of a coating installation 301, see
The essentially inseparable portions of the cleaning operation, paint application and curing are not arranged inline, but immediately adjacent to the transport device 303, e.g. as separate process chambers 305, 307, 309, 311 with work stations. For this purpose, appropriate handling devices 313, 315, 317, 319 are required, which remove the substrates resp. the carriers loaded with substrates from the transporting device 303 and position them in the respective processing station within each separate process chamber. The transport means 303 is operated intermittently in this case, i.e. the transport of the substrates resp. of the carrier is not continuous.
The individual process chambers 305, 307, 309, 131 in this case can be very well separated from each other, but other significant drawbacks will remain, such as the size of the entire coating facility, and the fact that the transport device continues to form an inseparable unit. There are further disadvantages, such as the required overhead for handling devices, the increased installation size for deploying these handling devices and in particular the need to build a larger room 321 in the complete transport device with an extraordinary quality of space in terms of freedom from dust and air purity. The corresponding air treatment is very expensive, not just the investment for the purchase of the equipment, but also the increased operating costs, mainly for energy and with respect to filter technology.
There is therefore a need for a coating facility that overcomes the aforementioned disadvantages of the prior art. The present invention therefore has as its aim to provide a coating facility with which the above disadvantages are overcome.
This aim is achieved according to the invention by means of a modular coating facility according to claim 1. In contrast to the individual elongated processing chambers resp. the arraying of parallel processing chambers known from the prior art, the chamber according to the invention, depending on the number of process steps, is divided in individual, completely separate work modules. Each of these modules preferably includes in its upper part a fresh air supply and at the bottom an extraction device for air and gas, and also in its lower part a transport device. Each of these modules includes an entrance door as well as an exit door. The term “door” in the context of this description means any type of shutter or closing mechanism for an opening through which the substrates can be transported in or out of the respective module.
The individual modules are then arranged in relation to one another in such a manner that the exit door of one module has in each case a connection with the entrance door to the subsequent module. Connection here means that a carrier loaded with substrates can be conveyed from the exit door of one module to the entrance door of a subsequent module. Preferably, the exit door of a module is arranged in the immediate vicinity of the entrance door of the subsequent module resp. the exit door and entrance door form one unit with a common driving mechanism. Only the entrance door of the first module of the system and the exit door of the last module of the system are isolated, i.e. not associated with a door of another module. It is possible for the purpose of this invention to possibly omit entrance and/or exit doors in individual modules if the respective process step allows it and/or the airflow conditions are selected so that cross-contamination respectively contamination or carryover of contaminants between the individual modules can be avoided.
The modules are each individually controlled by a central control unit. Preferably, each module receives its own control components, to which all system components to be controlled are connected; the control components thus arranged in a de-centralized manner are then to be connected to the central controller via a simple cable or via wireless communication or may possibly be managed with a master-slave configuration.
This inventive design has the significant advantage that only those components belonging to each module are connected electrically to one another and thus significantly less cable material and installation costs are required; a further advantage is that the need to providing a central control cabinet is not necessary.
Due to the modular design of the coating facility with completely independent modules, the latter can be transported easily and with little effort in single modules to their destination. Also the erection, installation and commissioning will thus be considerably simplified. Advantages include among others the cost and time savings, but also the reliability of operation achieved within the shortest possible time at the customer's facility by having the coating system already assembled and tested at the premises of the equipment manufacturer.
The invention will now be described in detail by way of example with the aid of the figures.
The coating facility according to the prior art (
For the insertion into the first module, a transport device as shown can also be used. The same applies for the ejection out of the coating installation. Specifically, the whole system including insertion and ejection apparatus can be designed as a cycle process so that the fitting of the substrates to be coated and the removal of the coated substrates can take place in one location, possibly by means of a robot and/or automatic device. This pure transport section need not be implemented in a clean room environment.
Due to the modular design of the coating facility, it is very simple to set it up and dismantle it. If a module of the coating system is defective, it can be easily replaced by another structurally equivalent one, without the whole coating installation having to be dismantled. Moreover, it is possible to complete the coating facility in an easy manner by adding further modules and thus further processing steps such as for example PVD coating. On the other hand, should the corresponding process step not be required by the customer, modules can be omitted. The manufacturer of the coating facility thus has the option of designing, on the basis of standardized modules, customized overall concepts for a coating facility.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2011 106 196 | Jun 2011 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2012/002304 | 5/31/2012 | WO | 00 | 1/22/2014 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2012/167885 | 12/13/2012 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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4096300 | William | Jun 1978 | A |
6647918 | Welch | Nov 2003 | B1 |
20050266171 | Noguchi | Dec 2005 | A1 |
20060260938 | Petrach | Nov 2006 | A1 |
20090277384 | Spangler | Nov 2009 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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10 2006 005 629 | Aug 2007 | DE |
2007090538 | Aug 2007 | WO |
2009018841 | Feb 2009 | WO |
Entry |
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International Search Report for PCT/EP2012/002304 dated Sep. 19, 2012. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20140123894 A1 | May 2014 | US |