The present invention relates generally to an air stabilizer device for non-contacting support of a moving flexible continuous web of material. The air stabilizer employs two opposite-facing nozzles that direct jets of gas onto the moving web thereby imparting tension in the web. An internal baffle is employed to channel air flow within each nozzle. The baffle equalizes the gas pressure across the nozzle and directs air flow towards it. By regulating the speeds of the two jets of gas that are exhausted from the opposite-facing nozzles, the profile of the web as it passes over the air stabilizer can be controlled.
In the manufacture of paper on continuous papermaking machines, a web of paper is formed from, an aqueous suspension of fibers (stock) on a traveling mesh papermaking fabric and water drains by gravity and suction through the fabric. The web is then transferred to the pressing section where more water is removed by pressure and vacuum. The web next enters the dryer section where steam heated dryers and hot air completes the drying process. The paper machine is, in essence, a water removal system. A typical forming section of a papermaking machine includes an endless traveling papermaking fabric or wire, which travels over a series of water removal elements such as table rolls, foils, vacuum foils, and suction boxes. The stock is carried on the top surface of the papermaking fabric and is de-watered as the stock travels over the successive de-watering elements to form a sheet of paper. Finally, the wet sheet is transferred to the press section of the papermaking machine where enough water is removed to form a sheet of paper.
It is well known to continuously measure certain properties of the paper material in order to monitor the quality of the finished product. These on-line measurements often include basis weight, moisture content, and sheet caliper, i.e., thickness. The measurements can be used for controlling process variables with the goal of maintaining output quality and minimizing the quantity of product that must be rejected due to disturbances in the manufacturing process. The on-line sheet property measurements are often accomplished by scanning sensors that periodically traverse the sheet material from edge to edge. It is conventional to measure the caliper of sheet material upon its leaving the main dryer section or at the take-up reel with scanning sensors, as described, for example, in U.S. Pat. No. 6,967,726 to King et al. and U.S. Pat. No. 4,678,915 to Dahlquist et al.
In order to precisely measure some of the paper's characteristics, it is essential that the fast moving sheet of paper be stabilized at the point of measurement to present a consistent profile since the accuracy of many measurement techniques requires that the web stay within certain limits of flatness, height variation and flutter. U.S. Pat. No. 6,743,338 to Graeffe et al. describes a web measurement, device having a measurement, head with a reference surface that includes a plurality of holes formed therein. The reference part is configured so that there is an open space or channel below the reference part. By generating a negative pressure in the open space, suction force is exerted on the web thereby supporting it against the reference surface substantially over the entire measuring area. With such contacting methods, debris and contaminants tend to build on the sensing elements and clog the holes in the reference surface which adversely affect the accuracy of the measuring device. Moreover, to avoid paper degradation, stabilization must be accomplished with minimal or no contact to the stabilizing device. This is critical at the high speed at which web material such as paper is manufactured.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,281,679 to King et al. describes a non-contact web thickness measurement system which has dual sensor heads each located on opposite sides of a moving web. The system includes a web stabilizer that is based on a vortex of moving air and includes a damp plate that is mounted near the web, which is to be stabilized, and a circular air channel within the clamp plate that is coincident with its upper surface. When air is introduced into the circular air channel, a field of low pressure is created over the channel and the web is pulled toward this ring of low pressure. While these vortex-type air clamps do provide adequate air bearing support they also create a “sombrero-type” profile on the web material in the center of its effective region, thus they do not generate a sufficiently flat profile for measurements. In measuring paper thickness, it has been found that this stabilizer system does not produce a sufficiently planar sheet profile.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,936,137 to Moeller et al. describes a linear air clamp or stabilizer, for supporting a moving web, which employs a single Coanda nozzle in conjunction with a “backstep” which is a depression downstream from the nozzle. As the web moves downstream over the air stabilizer, a jet of gas is discharged from the nozzle in a downstream direction that is parallel, to the movement of the web. With this stabilizer, a defined area of web material rides on an air bearing as the web passes over the air clamp surface where a thickness measurement device is positioned.
When employed in a papermaking machine, a non-contacting caliper sensor is particularly suited for measuring the thickness of the finished paper near the take-up reel. The heads of the sensor are positioned on a scanner system that generally includes a pair of horizontally extending guide tracks that span the width of the paper. The upper head and lower head are each secured to a carriage that moves back-and-forth, on the track, over paper as measurements are made. The guide tracks are spaced apart vertically by a distance sufficient to allow clearance for paper to travel between the sensor heads. The upper head includes a device that measures the height between the upper head and the upper surface of the web and the lower head includes a device that measures the height between the lower head to the lower surface of the web.
The lower or upper head includes an air stabilizer to support the moving paper. Ideally, the interrogations spots of the laser triangulation devices are directly above each other. Accurate and precise measurements are attained when the two heads are in alignment but scanner heads will deviate from perfect, alignment over time. A caliper sensor with misaligned sensor heads will not accurately measure a sheet that is not fiat and current air stabilizers do not adequately support the moving sheet to present, a sufficiently flat profile for measurement.
The present invention is based in part on the development of a Coanda air clamp or stabilization system that subjects a moving flexible web, which is traveling in the machine direction, to opposing forces sufficient to create local tension within the web. This can be achieved by employing two parallel, opposite-facing elongated Coanda nozzles positioned above or below the moving web with each nozzle exhausting gas at opposite directions. Each nozzle includes an elongated slot that is perpendicular to the path of the moving web. In addition, each Coanda nozzle incorporates an internal battle that channels or restricts gas flow to a region along the same side as the curved surface of the nozzle, which is referred to as the nozzle's downstream side. The baffle apparently equalizes the internal gas pressure across the nozzle.
The locations of the two Coanda nozzles serve as separate positions on the machine direction for controlling the height, of the moving web. By regulating the speed or pressure of the jets exiting the nozzles, the contour of the web can be manipulated to exhibit a planar contour between the two Coanda nozzles to enable accurate thickness and other measurements. Moreover, the air stabilization system's clamping capacity can be improved by optimizing the air pressure of the two exhausting gases so as to establish the requisite pressure region after each nozzle.
In the prior art, in which only a single Coanda slot was utilized, the plenum located underneath the Coanda nozzle was sufficiently large that the internal air pressure was effectively equalized. However, to fit two air clamps and a flag mechanism into the same diameter dome, the plenum for each slot had to be reduced. It was found that with the size reduction, the ratio between the inlet to outlet dimension and the cross direction became substantially bigger and that the air flow at the output, was uneven leading to problems in controlling the sheet. By forcing the air to flow through a narrow slot at the edge of the baffle, the pressure has become more equal at the Coanda slot. As we there may be some benefit derived from making the flow follow the surface before the Coanda contour. The flag is typically a piece of plastic that is mounted on a mechanism that is employed to calibrate the sensor and to periodically check that the sensor is working properly. In operation, the flag is inserted into the measurement aperture and readings are taking off it.
The air stabilization system 10 is positioned underneath a web of material 22 which, is moving from left to right relative to the system; this direction being referred to as the downstream machine direction (MD) and the opposite direction being the upstream machine direction. The cross direction (CD) is transverse to the MD. Upper lateral surfaces 34A and 34B are preferably coplanar with operative surface 32.
As further described herein, the contour of web 22 as it travels over operative surface 32 can be controlled with the air stabilization system. In a preferred application of the air stabilization system, the profile of web 22 is substantially planar. Furthermore, the vertical height between web 22 and operative surface 32 can be regulated by controlling the speed of the gases exhausting through Coanda nozzles 16A and 16B. The higher the speed of the gases, the greater the suction force generated by the nozzles that is applied to the web 22.
The body of air stabilization system 10 further defines a chamber 18A that serves as an opening for Coanda nozzle 16A and a chamber 18B that serves as an opening for Coanda nozzle 16B. Baffle 17A separates chamber 18A from plenum chamber 40A which in turn is connected to a source of gas 24A via conduit 30A. The gas flow rate into plenum 40A can be regulated by conventional means including pressure controller 28A and flow regulator valve 26A. The length of chamber 40A, as measured along the cross direction, preferably matches that of Coanda nozzle 16A. Plenum 40A essentially serves as a reservoir in which high pressure gas equilibrates before being evenly distributed along the length of Coanda nozzle 16 A via chamber 18A. Thus, baffle 17A serves to equalize the gas pressure in plenum 40A across the nozzle. Conduit 30A can Include a single channel which connects the source of gas 24A to plenum 40A; alternatively a plurality of holes drilled into the lower surface of the body can be employed. The plurality of holes should be spaced apart along the cross direction of the body in order to distribute gas evenly info plenum 40A.
Similarly, chamber 18B, through baffle 17B, is in gaseous communication with plenum chamber 40B which is connected to a source of gas 24B via conduit 30B. Baffle 17B serves to equalize the gas pressure in plenum 40B as well. Gas flowing into plenum 40B is regulated by pressure controller 28B and flow regulator valve 26B. The configurations of chamber 40B and conduit 30B are preferably the same as those of chamber 40A and conduit 30B, respectively. In practice, the pressure is regulated so that the measured How rates are the same.
Any suitable gas can be employed in gas sources 24A and 24B including for example, air, helium, argon, carbon dioxide. For most applications, the amount of gas employed is that which is sufficient to discharge the gas through the Coanda nozzles at a velocity of about 20 m/s to about 400 m/s. By regulating the velocities of the gaseous jets exiting Coanda nozzles 16A, 16B, the distance that moving web 22 is maintained above operative surface 32 can be adjusted. The air stabilization system can be employed to support a variety of flexible web products including paper, plastic, and the like. For paper that is continuously manufactured in large scale commercial papermaking machines, the web can travels at speeds of 200 m/min to 1800 m/min or higher. In operation, the air stabilization system preferably maintains paper web 22 at a distance ranging from about 100 μm to about 1000 μm above Coanda nozzles 16A and 16B.
As illustrated in
Similarly, as illustrated in
While the height of downstream Coanda nozzle 16B, as measured from the operative surface to the nozzle, is typically the same as that of upstream Coanda nozzle 16A, their heights can be different. By maintaining a height differential, the sheet profile between the nozzles can be modified. Preferably, the height of each Coanda nozzle ranges from 0.5 to 2.5 mm.
As shown in
The air stabilization system can be incorporated into on-line dual head scanning sensor systems for papermaking machines which are disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,879,471 to Dahlquist, U.S. Pat. No. 5,094,535 to Dahlquist et al., and U.S. Pat. No. 5,166,748 to Dahlquist, all of which are incorporated herein by reference. The width of the paper in the papermaking machines generally ranges from 5 to 12 meters and typically is about 9 meters. The dual heads, which are designed for synchronized movement, consist of an upper head positioned above the sheet and a lower head positioned below the sheet. The air stabilization system, which is preferably mounted on the lower head, clamps the moving paper to cause it to exhibit an essentially flat sheet profile for measurement as the upper and lower heads travel back and forth in the cross direction over the width, of the paper.
In practice, the air clamp can be located in the lower or upper head of a scanning sensor.
Non-contacting caliper sensors such as those disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,281,679 to King et al., which is incorporated herein by reference, include upper and lower heads equipped with laser triangulation devices. The caliper of a moving sheet that travels between the two heads is determined by identifying the positions of the upper and lower surfaces of the sheet with the laser triangulation devices and subtracting the results from a measure of the separation between the upper and lower heads.
The source and detector preferably comprise a laser triangulation source and detector, collectively being referred to as an interrogation laser. The source/detector arrangement is referred to generally as a distance determining means. From the measured path length from the source to the detector, values for the distance between each distance determining means and a measurement or interrogation spot on one of the web surfaces may be determined. The heads 13 and 15 are typically fixed in the position so that the interrogations spots do not move in the machine direction even as the heads are scanned in the cross direction.
For first distance determining means 4, the detected distance value between the distance determining means and a first measurement spot on the web surface (referred to as l1) and for second distance determining means 5, the detected distance value between the distance determining means and a second measurement spot on the opposite web surface (referred to as I2). For accurate thickness determinations, the first and second measurement spots (or interrogation spots) are preferably at the same point in the x-y plane, but on opposite sides of the web, i.e. the measurement spots will be separated by the web thickness. In an ideal static situation, the separation, s, between first and second distance determining means 4 and 5 would be fixed, resulting in a calculated value for web thickness, t, of: t=s−(l1+l2). In practice, separation s can vary. To correct for this inconstancy in the separation s, a dynamic measurement of the spacing between the scanning heads is provided by a z-sensor means, which measures a distance z, between a z-sensor source/detector 6, located in the first head 13, and a z-sensor reference 7, located in the second head 15.
Because the scanner heads do not retain perfect mutual alignment as a sheet scans between them, the air stabilization system of the present invention is employed with either the lower head, upper head, or both heads to keep the sheet flat so that small head misalignments do not translate into erroneous caliper readings, i.e., caliper error due to head misalignment and sheet angle.
As illustrated in
Similarly, as shown in
A stainless steel air clamp stabilizer having the configuration shown in
As illustrated in
Specifically, backstep 220 allows a Coanda jet to expand and create an additional suction force. It should be noted that jet expansion is necessary to create the suction force but vortex formation is not a prerequisite. Indeed, vortex formation does not always occur downstream from the backstop and is not necessary for operation of the air clamp stabilizer. The stabilizer's suction force initially draws the web closer to the stabilizer as the web approaches the stabilizer. Subsequently, the air bearing supports and reshapes the web so that the web exhibits a relatively flat profile as it passes over the backstep. While backstep 220 is most preferably configured as a 90 degrees vertical wall, the backstep can exhibit a more gradual contour so that the upper and lower surfaces can be joined by a smooth, concavely curved surface. Preferably, Coanda slot 270 has a width (b) of about 3 mils (76 μm) to 5 about mils (127 μm). The distance (d) from the upper surface 274 to lower surface 234A, which are preferably parallel to each other, is preferably between about 100 to 1000 μm. Preferably the backstep location (L) is about 1 mm to about 6 mm and preferably about 2 mm to 3 from Coanda slot 270.
Similarly, as shown in
Finally,
The foregoing has described the principles, preferred embodiments and modes of operation of the present invention. However, the invention should not be construed as being limited to the particular embodiments discussed. Thus, the above-described embodiments should be regarded as illustrative rather than restrictive, and it should be appreciated that variations may be made in those embodiments by workers skilled in the art without departing from the scope of the present invention as defined by the following claims.
This application claims priority to U.S. Provisional. Application 61/100,677 that was filed on Sep. 26, 2008,
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
61100677 | Sep 2008 | US |