The inventions relate generally to powder coating booths such as may be used with powder coating material application systems and processes. More particularly, the inventions relate to a powder coating material spray booth that includes a cylindrically shaped exhaust duct below the spray booth floor with movable plates extending over the exhaust duct.
Powder coating materials are typically applied to objects or workpieces by spray application apparatus and processes. These spray application apparatus and processes include electrostatic and non-electrostatic processes as are well known. Spray application of powder coating material often is done in a spray booth that is used to contain and recover powder overspray. Powder overspray may be recovered from the booth and either recycled back to the feed center for re-use or otherwise disposed to waste or other uses. One of the more significant aspects of any powder coating system is a powder change operation and the associated system down time and labor involved in such changeovers. For example, when the color of the applied powder needs to be changed, the entire system must be cleaned and purged of the just used color before the next color can be applied. This involves the clean and purge of spray guns, feed hoses and most importantly the spray booth.
In accordance with one aspect of the one or more inventions disclosed herein, a powder spray booth is contemplated that makes use of an exhaust duct that is disposed below the surface of a floor of the booth. In one embodiment, the exhaust duct includes a tangential entry for powder falling into the exhaust duct through an opening in the floor surface above. In a more specific embodiment, the exhaust duct may be cylindrical. The exhaust duct may be formed of multiple sections.
In accordance with another aspect of one or more of the inventions herein, a plurality of movable plates extend over a portion of the exhaust duct and define one boundary of the floor opening. In one embodiment, each movable plate is hinged on one side to form a cantilever suspension of the plate over the exhaust duct. When the movable plates are in a raised or open position, an operator has full access to the exhaust duct for cleaning operations.
In accordance with another aspect of one or more of the inventions herein, a door mounting arrangement is provided in which an access door is oversized relative to an access opening in the spray booth, with the door hung on hinges or other supports that are mounted to an outside surface of the spray booth wall structure.
In accordance with another aspect of one or more of the inventions herein, a hose stress relief connector is presented for a non-metallic air manifold or plenum.
In accordance with another aspect of one or more of the inventions herein, a spray booth includes a floor having an upper surface, side walls extending up from the floor with each side wall including an air plenum at the bottom of the sidewall, each air plenum having an opening in a first wall to an interior volume of the air plenum, a hose fitting extending through the opening and that is supported by two walls of the air plenum, and a ceiling supported by the side walls.
These and other aspects and advantages of the one or more inventions will be readily understood and appreciated from the following detailed description hereinafter and the accompanying drawings.
Although the various embodiments herein illustrate a particular form and structure of a spray booth for applying powder coating material to workpieces, the various inventions may be used alone or collectively in a spray booth having many different designs and features. Except as otherwise noted, the size, materials, layout and structural aspects of the spray booth are design options. The present disclosure is directed to a powder recovery duct concept, and additional features that will be described in detail below. The spray booth may be used in any coating material application system with a wide variety of system features including a feed center for supplying powder coating material, spray guns, electronic control systems for the spray booth, spray guns, gun control systems, gun movers, reciprocators, oscillators and so on, overhead conveyor systems, and powder overspray recovery systems. While the exemplary embodiments illustrate use of a cyclone style recovery system, many other powder recovery technologies may alternatively be used. The only common feature would be the ability create a sufficient air flow to draw powder though the duct and out of the spray booth. The inventions also are not limited to any particular spray technology, and may include but not limited to electrostatic, tribo-electric, non-electrostatic, hybrid technologies, as well as automatic and manual application systems.
While various inventive aspects, concepts and features of the inventions may be described and illustrated herein as embodied in combination in the exemplary embodiments, these various aspects, concepts and features may be used in many alternative embodiments, either individually or in various combinations and sub-combinations thereof. Unless expressly excluded herein all such combinations and sub-combinations are intended to be within the scope of the present inventions. Still further, while various alternative embodiments as to the various aspects, concepts and features of the inventions--such as alternative materials, structures, configurations, methods, circuits, devices and components, alternatives as to form, fit and function, and so on--may be described herein, such descriptions are not intended to be a complete or exhaustive list of available alternative embodiments, whether presently known or later developed. Those skilled in the art may readily adopt one or more of the inventive aspects, concepts or features into additional embodiments and uses within the scope of the present inventions even if such embodiments are not expressly disclosed herein. Additionally, even though some features, concepts or aspects of the inventions may be described herein as being a preferred arrangement or method, such description is not intended to suggest that such feature is required or necessary unless expressly so stated. Still further, exemplary or representative values and ranges may be included to assist in understanding the present disclosure, however, such values and ranges are not to be construed in a limiting sense and are intended to be critical values or ranges only if so expressly stated. Moreover, while various aspects, features and concepts may be expressly identified herein as being inventive or forming part of an invention, such identification is not intended to be exclusive, but rather there may be inventive aspects, concepts and features that are fully described herein without being expressly identified as such or as part of a specific invention, the inventions instead being set forth in the appended claims. Descriptions of exemplary methods or processes are not limited to inclusion of all steps as being required in all cases, nor is the order that the steps are presented to be construed as required or necessary unless expressly so stated.
Typically, a plurality of powder coating material application devices are used to coat workpieces as they advance through the spray booth interior. These application devices may include automatic and manual spray guns, for example. Automatic guns often are mounted on a gun mover 23 (for simplicity the gun mover structural gun support framework is omitted as this will depend on the type of gun mover used) which may include a reciprocator or oscillator. The gun mover system may be used to both extend and retract the spray guns with respect to the spray booth 12 and also may be used to produce an up/down oscillatory motion of the guns during a spray operation. The application devices may be selected from any number of spray gun designs, including but not limited to a SURE-COAT™ spray gun available from Nordson Corporation, Westlake, Ohio. The spray guns may be electrostatic, noon-electrostatic, tribo-charging or other designs and spraying technology may be used. A series of vertical gun slots or openings 24 may be provided for automatic spray guns.
A feed center 26 may be provided that contains a supply of material that will be applied to objects or work pieces within the spray booth 12. The feed center 26 for example may include any number of hoppers, boxes or other containers of powder, along with suitable pumps and hoses to feed material to the application devices. An example of a feed center is described in U.S. Pat. No. 7,325,750 for POWDER COATING SYSTEM WITH IMPROVED OVERSPRAY COLLECTION, issued Feb. 5, 2008, and also United States published patent application no. US 2008/0017103 A1 for SUPPLY FOR DRY PARTICULATE MATERIAL which was published on Jan. 24, 2008; the entire disclosures of which are fully incorporated herein by reference. However, many different feed centers or other supplies for powder coating material may be used as needed. The U.S. Pat. No. 7,325,750 feed center may, for example, be used with Venturi type pumps for dilute phase systems and the 2008/0017103 feed center may be used, for example, with dense phase pumps for dense phase systems. But the present inventions may be used with dense phase or dilute phase pumps and systems.
A suitable operator interface 28 to a control system 30 may be provided to control operation of the spray guns, the powder recovery system 14, the spray booth 12 including an overhead conveyor (not shown) and the gun mover system. The control system 30 and the operator interface 28 may be selected from any number of well known control system concepts as are well known to those skilled in the art, or specifically designed for a particular system.
In the exemplary embodiment, the powder overspray recovery system 14 may be realized in the form of a cyclone system 32, however, other recovery system designs may be used. Depending on how much overspray powder needs to be extracted from the spray booth, a single cyclone alternatively may be used. A blower and after filter system (not shown) is in fluid communication with inlets (not shown) of the cyclone and provides the energy required for operation of the cyclone recovery system, in the foim of a substantial powder entrained exhaust air flow pulled from the spray booth interior to an intake duct 36 of the cyclone system 32. The air flow produced by the recovery system also produces a substantial flow of air into and through the spray booth 12, sometimes referred to as containment air. The containment air flow prevents the loss of powder overspray outside the spray booth 12. In the embodiments herein, the cyclone system 32 may be a twin cyclone system, however a single cyclone may alternatively be used. Typically, the after filter system draws a substantial flow or powder entrained air into the cyclones and the separated powder descends to an outlet 38. From the outlet 38 the recovered powder may be returned to the feed center or otherwise dumped to waste or reclaimed in some other manner. The powder entrained air into the cyclone 32 via the intake duct 36 is drawn through a vertical extraction duct 40. Although not shown in
In the exemplary embodiment, powder may either be recovered from the cyclone outlet 38, as is commonly done if the powder will be reused, or alternatively may be extracted from the booth 12 and pass through to the after filter system via a bypass outlet or duct arrangement 34.
The spray booth 12 may be generally rectangular in shape although other shapes and configurations may conveniently be used. A spray booth 12 will typically have a longitudinal axis X. The spray booth 12 may have a ceiling 46 supported by four vertical walls 48. The walls 48 include lateral side walls 48a, a first end wall 48b (illustrated in
The second end wall 48c includes a large exit opening 58 through which the coated workpieces pass out of the spray booth 12. Part doors 60 are mounted on hinges 62 and may be open during coating operations and closed during booth cleaning operations. The structure for hanging the part doors 60 will be further described with respect to the manual doors hereinbelow.
The first end wall 48b may include a large entrance opening 64 through which the workpieces enter the spray booth 12 interior. Doors typically are not used at the entrance to the spray booth 12 because during cleaning the operator begins at the entrance end and walks through the booth towards the exit end. Also, substantial air flow is desired in order to cause a substantial flow of air into the exhaust duct 44 to draw overspray powder from the spray booth 12 interior.
All of the panels for the spray booth structure, including by not limited to the floor 20, ceiling 46, walls 48 and door panels may each be made of composite materials including a foam core panel and gelcoat inner surface such as sold by Nordson Corporation as an Apogee® panel structure. Other materials may alternatively be used as required, for example, PVC walls and panels. The Apogee® panel constructions are also described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,458,209 for POWDER COATING BOOTH CONTAINMENT STRUCTURE issued to Shutic, Oct. 1, 2002, the entire disclosure of which is fully incorporated herein by reference.
It will also be noted that because the spray booth floor 20 is elevated above the shop floor 18, a scaffolding or other support structure 66 may be used as a stand for an operator H when using a manual spray gun for coating workpieces as they pass through the spray booth 12.
In order for an operator to have access to the spray booth 12 interior for manually spraying workpieces, one or more manual doorways 68 may be provided in the side walls 48a. In this example, each doorway 68 may include a single door or in this example two half doors including an upper door 70 and a separate lower door 72. The separate lower door 72 may be provided when a larger access opening is needed.
An access opening 74 is formed in the side wall 48b. The associated doors 70, 72 are sized so as to have a total perimeter that is at least as great and preferably slightly greater than the perimeter of the access opening 74. In a specific embodiment herein, the doors 70, 72 have a width dimension and a length dimension that are each greater than the corresponding dimensions of the access opening 74. This provides an overlap of the doors 70, 72 with the perimeter of the access openings 74. When the lower door 72 is closed, the upper door 70 has a perimeter that is at least as great and preferably greater than the perimeter of the open section of the access opening 74. Each door 70, 72 is mounted to the exterior surface of the side wall 48a using hinges 76 along one side of the access opening 74. On the opposite side of the access opening 74 a latch 78 may be used to hold the door 70, 72 tightly closed. In order to provide a leak tight seal for powder containment, a seal device 80, such as a flexible D-seal, may be used about the perimeter of the access opening 74 within the overlap region of the associate door 70, 72 to seal the doors 70, 72 when they are closed. Because the doors 70, 72 are slightly oversized relative to the access opening 74, from the inside of the spray booth 12 the door 72, 74 are recessed away from the spray booth interior wall surface but are sealed tight in the closed position.
In a similar manner, the part doors 60 may also be hung on hinges that are affixed to an exterior surface of the second end wall 48c, may be slightly oversized or at least have a perimeter as large as the exit opening 58. A seal device 82 may be disposed on each part door 60 so as to tightly seal the doors 60 when they are closed. Because the part doors 60 tend to be larger than the manual doors 70, 72, a more robust latching mechanism may be used to hold the part doors closed, such as, for example, a swing latch mechanism commonly used on semi-trailer doors.
With reference to
Below the surface 86 of the floor 20 is the exhaust duct 44. The exhaust duct 44 may extend along the entire length of the floor 20 or along at least a part of the length of the floor 20. The exhaust duct 44, as will be described further hereinbelow, may be a multi-piece member 88 or may be one continuous length of duct work. A series of movable panels or plates 90 are hinge mounted to one side of the floor opening 84 (see also
The lowered movable plates 90 extend laterally from the hinged lateral side 20a of the floor opening 84 and over the exhaust duct 44, but preferably not all the way to the other lateral side of the floor opening 84. This presents a longitudinal intake gap or slot 92 between an edge 94 of the floor opening 84 and an unhinged edge 96 of each of the movable plates 90. The intake slot 92 (mostly referred to herein as the “slot 92”) to the exhaust duct 44 allows overspray powder that did not adhere to the workpieces during a coating operation to enter into the exhaust duct 44 through the opening 84 in the floor surface 86. The opening 84 in the floor 20 and the intake slot 92 to the exhaust duct 44 may extend along the entire length of the floor 20 or spray booth 12, or may extend along at least a part of the floor 20. The opening 84 and the intake slot 92 need not coextend together the same length or location.
As shown in
With reference next to
The exhaust duct 44 in this example may be formed into a cylindrical shape with a multi-piece design. A first arcuate portion or section 102 of the exhaust duct 44 may be foimed using a flat sheet of metal 102a, for example a 20 gauge sheet of stainless steel. This material is somewhat bendable so that it can be installed into the frame 16 in the form of a partial cylindrical shape. The first arcuate portion 102 may be supported by flanges 104 in order to achieve the arcuate shape. The first arcuate portion 102 may extend the entire length of the exhaust duct 44 or may include end to end aligned shorter lengths. As shown in
The first longitudinal edge 106 may be further affixed to additional flanges 104 along the longitudinal length of the frame 16 as needed.
With reference to
It can now be noted that the first arcuate portion 102 of the exhaust duct 44 forms part of the cylindrical shape of the exhaust duct 44, in this example about 230 degrees of arc. This portion 102 is easily assembled from a flat sheet of metal 102a and bolted or otherwise affixed to the support frame 16 along each edge of the sheet 102a. This greatly simplifies manufacturing of the exhaust duct 44 as there is no need to preform a cylindrical piece of metal. The sheet 102a used to form the first arcuate potion 102 is somewhat flexible in that it can easily be bent to the desired 230 degree profile, but will also have a natural spring-like potential energy and hoop strength that will help keep the sheet 102a rigid and strong when installed on the frame 16. The second arcuate portion of the exhaust duct 44 is provided by the interior concave surface 114 of the movable plates 90. The arcuate surfaces 102 and 114 preferably have a single common radius so that the exhaust duct 44 is generally circular in shape when viewed end on or in lateral cross-section as in
The vertical inlet plate 124 and an inner edge portion 130 of the floor 20 forms one side of the slot 92 in the floor surface 86 on the unhinged side of the slot 92. The vertical surface of the inner or unhinged cantilever edge 132 of the movable plate 90 forms the other side of the slot 92 when the movable plate 90 is in the lowered position. From
Also from
With reference to
It is noted that although there will be small gaps between the adjacent movable plate 90 as well as along the hinged sides of the movable plate 90, the slot 92 defines by far the main inlet or entry and path of least resistance into the exhaust duct 44.
With reference to
In the example of
With reference to
With reference to
One way to connect an air hose to an air plenum would be with a customary bulkhead fitting (not shown) that is threaded onto one of the walls of the air plenum. However, I have found that such non-metal manifolds or plenums may be susceptible to stresses imparted by the air hose to the bulkhead connection when the air hose 152 is pulsed with pressurized air. Typical air pressures for the air plenums 98 may be about 150 psi, for example. This air pressure blast tends to try to force the air hose to straighten and become very rigid, which can result side load on the bulkhead threaded connection. After enough pulses, the non-metallic air manifolds can weaken and become compromised as to being able to support the air hose 152.
The embodiment of
In this embodiment, then, the fitting 150 may include a hose connector 158 in the form of a preferably single piece connector body 160 that is unthreaded with respect to a wall 162 of the air plenum 156 through which the connector body 160 passes. The connector body may be realized for example in the form of a spool body 160 (hereafter we refer to the connector body 160 as a spool body) and may include a generally cylindrical wall 162 that slides through a preferably unthreaded opening 164 in a wall 166 of the air plenum 156. The air hose end or proximate end 168 of the hose connector 158 may be adapted as needed to accept one end of an air hose 152 (see
The spool body 160 extends preferably transversely through the air plenum 156 so that a distal end 178 of the spool body abuts an interior surface 180 of an opposite wall 182 of the air plenum 156. The distal end 178 may also include a face seal groove 184 that retains a seal 186 such as an o-ring, for example. The distal end 178 may also include a threaded bore 188 which can threadably mate with a fastener 190 such as a screw that extends through an opening 192 in the opposite wall 182 of the air plenum. The spool body 160 being generally cylindrical comprises a main air passage 167 for pressurized air (“A”) to enter the air plenum interior volume 154 from an air hose.
Assembly of the hose fitting 150 to the air plenum 156 is easily accomplished by first inserting the spool body 160 into the air plenum 156 through the opening 164 in the first wall 166 until the distal end 178 contacts the opposite wall 182. The screw 190 is then installed and tightened. The second face seal 186 is disposed in the face seal groove 184 before the spool body 160 is inserted into the air plenum 156. Next, the nut 172, with the face seal 176 installed in the face seal groove 174, is tightened onto the proximate and threaded end 168 of the spool body 160. The nut 172 is tightened sufficiently to provide a strong support in tension of the spool body 160, supported at the spool body 160 proximate and distal ends 168, 178. The hose connector 158 is now in fluid communication with the interior volume 154 of the air plenum 156 and is ready for attachment of an air hose. When the nut 172 and the screw 190 are fully tightened, the face seals 176 and 186 are compressed to provide a fluid tight connection between the hose fitting 150 and the air plenum 156.
The spool body 160 may be provided with one or more lateral through bores 194. These through bores 194 act to diffuse pressurized air from the air hose end 168 of the hose connector 158 into the interior volume 154 of the air plenum 156 by allowing the pressurized air to flow axially into the air plenum 156 in both directions (as represented by the arrows A in
It is intended that the inventions not be limited to the particular embodiments disclosed for carrying out the inventions, but that the inventions will include all embodiments falling within the scope of the appended claims.