Pressurized enclosed gravure applicator and method

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6210757
  • Patent Number
    6,210,757
  • Date Filed
    Friday, March 19, 1999
    25 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, April 3, 2001
    23 years ago
Abstract
An enclosed pressure gravure roll coating applicator, particularly designed for applying pressure sensitive films to web types substrates, and method of operating such coater. A downstream blade and an arcuately spaced upstream blade are positioned with respect to a roll to be coated. An intermediate gap-forming body between the blades forms a running gap with the surface of the roll to be coated. Substantially air free liquid coating is applied under pressure to an offrunning chamber adjacent the offrunning blade with excess coating flowing through the gap to an onrunning chamber adjacent the upstream blade. The pressure in the onrunning chamber is regulated at a relatively constant positive value sufficient to prevent air from entering the onrunning chamber past the upstream blade.
Description




BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION




This invention relates to an enclosed pressure applicator and system and methods for coating gravure or anilox rolls.




There is an increasing tendency to use gravure printing for applying patterns of an adhesive material to a web, particularly pressure sensitive adhesives.




Pressure sensitive adhesives (PSA) are used for a variety of applications with a range of quality requirements. The most demanding application is that of protective films used on computer screens and windows. In this case optical clarity is the major concern; a concern very much affected by the application process.




The manufacturers of pressure sensitive films for computer screens and windows use extensive quality checks and manufacturing protocols to make a clear film free of bubbles, slugs, scratches, and haze—the last three usually caused by gels or clumps of latex particles. In some cases the protocol will basically require a shutdown and extensive cleanup every few hours.




All the above quality attributes add speed sensitive aspects to the process. A pressure sensitive latex particle is sticky and wants to stick to its neighbors, but this cannot be allowed to happen in the application process in that it would make gels, slugs, and debris that cause haze, streaks, and scratches. The opportunity for the latex particles to stick to each other is increased with increased shear or speed. On the other hand the uniformity of coating thickness or “coating lay” is enhanced by shear and one must “work” a viscous coating to some extent to get it to lay flat.




The competitive pressure is to improve clarity of the coating and at the same time to lower costs by reducing cleaning and shutdown times and/or increase speed of production.




Pressure applicators have been used to apply PSA coatings and ink to gravure rolls and anilox rolls. These pressure applicators may be located at about the 9 o'clock position, the 6 o'clock position, or the 3 o'clock position or at intermediate positions with respect to the roll. Generally, channeled gravure rolls, having a helix channel similar to a screw, are used so that there is always a path for the coating to flow under the blade.




A particular function of the pressurized applicator is that of removing the air in the gravure cells and substituting ink or coating therefore, with a weight of the coating being variable by varying the pressure within the applicator. Applying an air free coating to the applicator is important to prevent coating streaks.




Many designs of gravure pressure applicators emulate the designs of applicators that have been engineered for applying a coating material directly to a web supported on a roll. Such designs are not as successful as one might suppose. This is due at least in part, to the fact that the gravure applicator must perform a function that is not performed by coating applicators, namely, that of removing the air from the recesses or channels of the gravure roll and carrying the air out of the applicator without allowing it to affect adversely the quality of the coating. In a gravure applicator, thousands of small discrete air bubbles are released into the ink or coating material, a condition that does not obtain in the design of pressure coating for webs, and a problem that has not adequately been addressed in the design of pressure applicators for gravure rolls.




In any gravure coating or ink applicator, the coating is applied to a closed chamber and is doctored off the roll at the exiting side with a steel blade. Generally, the direction of flow within the chamber is parallel to or concurrent with the direction of rotation of the roll across the chamber opening.




Generally, the size of the gravure channels controls the coating weight. The chamber has end seals and often a number of inlets and outlets. The outlets are often of a larger diameter to maintain the internal pressure relatively low. In some instances, the chamber is not totally filled with ink or coating and an air space is maintained within the chamber. In those cases where the exiting blade is at the top, the coating can cascade inside the applicator and generate foam. The coating in any event will pick up air because the empty gravure cells release air bubbles into the reservoir.




Early enclosed applicators were not specifically pressurized except for the back pressure required to get the coating out of the applicator. More recently, enclosed pressure applicators have been used, and the amount of pressure controls the weight of inking or coating. The channeled gravure roll provides a path for the coating to flow under the blade, and coating weights can be varied from 100% to 150% of the cell volume. Internal pressure within the applicator prevents air from entering the reservoir by forcing air out of the grooves as they enter.




Existing pressure applicators have certain inherent problems. One problem is that of variation in pressure within the chamber. Since the fluid inlet pressure (at the roll inlet side) has been used to control the coating weight, it is extremely difficult to exclude air using this pressure. If the pressure is too high, the coating will bleed from the inlet and if it is too low, it will let air into the chamber. Since pressure is used to control coating weight in existing applicators, the internal pressure is never right for the entering conditions. An applicator is needed in which the inlet and outlet pressures may be independently controlled, and this concept is lacking in existing enclosed applicators.




A variety of closed chamber applicators have been designed in an attempt to deal with the entrained air that must be purged from the channels, and to prevent the influx of air and prevent air from degrading the filling or the coating results. Examples are shown in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,054,392, 5,031,529, 5,497,702, 5,213,037 and EPO Patent 0368485. Some systems have included barriers to deaerate the coating prior to entering the channels. Others have established rotation or vortical flow within chamber cavities, but such flow can develop or form an air bubble in the center, which is undesirable. Most applicators employ a concurrent flow path for the coating material so that the coating material flows with the movement of the roll surface, not against it. That means that the entrained air bubbles move toward the exit blade and accordingly have the greatest chance for disturbing the integrity of the cell-filling process and are then carried back through the system with the overflow coating.




SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION




This invention relates to a closed countercurrent flow pressure applicator, applicator system, and method in which the direction of flow through the applicator is opposite to the direction of rotation of the roll at the applicator opening. The applicator forms a coating entrance side or chamber at the off-running side of the roll and the coating exit side or chamber at the on-running side of the roll, separated by an intermediate body which forms a clearance gap between itself and the roll surface. The incoming coating is made free of air and filtered, and applied to the gap under pressure. Preferably, an inlet feed slot is fed from a tapered inlet header which header is wider at the side where the coating enters the applicator, to maintain a scouring flow in the header across the full width of the applicator.




The coating travels in the applicator against the motion of the roll through a narrow channel or gap parallel to the roll surface defined by the intermediate body, and exits the chamber through a substantially wider slot into a tapered collection header or collection passageway on the exit side of the applicator. This taper also allows cleaning by flushing similar to that of the distribution header.




The intermediate body divides the coating chamber of the applicator into an upstream off-running side with respect to the direction of rotation of the roll and downstream on-running side, with the previously mentioned clearance gap extending between these respective sides or chambers, and the ink or coating material flows from the previously described tapered header into a chamber portion formed at the off-running side, and through the generally parallel gap between the intermediate body and the roll to a chamber formed at the on-running side, hereinafter referred to as an on-running chamber.




Pressure within the on-running chamber is controlled by an adjustable stand pipe arrangement which accurately maintains a substantially constant pressure head in the on-running chamber that is independent of flow rate. This pressure head can be set to match that required to keep air from entering the chamber cavity. As noted above, the coating enters the off-running chamber through a metering slot at a controlled rate. The coating travels against the motion of the roll through the channel or slot defined between the roll and the intermediate body. In practice, the flow establishes a pressure drop and in turn, the pressure in the roll exiting cavity. This channel is in high shear [so that air which is] left in the gravure channels is swept out as small bubbles by the direction of coating flow into the on-running chamber within the applicator at the gravure roll entering side. In other words, the shear of the coating flowing from the entrance to the exit, contra to the direction of roll movement, serves to purge any remaining air from the gravure channels with the air bubbles being directed away from the exit blade and into the on-running chamber.




As noted above, the passageway formed in the applicator at the inlet and outlet sides are preferably tapered to form collection chambers which respectively empty into or from slots formed along the intermediate body at each of its sides. The flows through the respective inlet and outlet cross-machine distribution cavities are maintained at a scouring rate by having the inlet feed header and outlet collection header tapered so that the rate of flow tends to remain relatively constant within these headers.




The novel and unobvious advantages of the applicator according to this invention may be summarized as follows:




1. Deaerated coating is injected at the gravure roll exiting blade side of the applicator. This means that the exit blade sees only filtered deaerated coating. This is particularly important for applying pressure sensitive adhesives since air bubbles cause slag or dried coating to hang up on the blade tip, and cause streaks. The applicator uses a regulated pressure to prevent air from entering with the gravure roll. Further, this applicator uses the excess coating flow to scour out any air remaining in the gravure channels, then fully rejects this coating out of the applicator for deaeration and filtering before returning to the applicator. There is a minimum of intermixing of the air with the deaerated coating at the inlet side of the applicator. Preferably, quality deaeration equipment is employed on the coating inlet side such as that shown in U.S. Pat. No. 5,149,341.




2. The applicator of this invention provides for independent control of the pressures in the exiting blade chamber and the entering (on-running) blade chamber. The latter is controlled by a standpipe or other pressure regulation arrangement independent of flow rate. The exiting blade side chamber can be controlled by flow rate and by back pressure developed by passing through the metering slot and the pressure formed by the parallel gap with the roll.




3. The applicator of this invention uses a relatively small volume of coating within the applicator, thereby providing a high turnover rate to keep the coating clean and save coating materials.




4. The applicator according to this invention has certain features that are considered to be unique for this class of apparatus. Thus, a generally parallel channel is formed between the intermediate body and the gravure cells, which performs a better job of scouring the air out of the gravure roll channels. Additionally, the apparatus forms on-running and off-running blade chambers in which the pressures are independently controlled, the entrance or lead in chamber (the chamber adjacent the exit blade) being controlled by the flow rate and its resistance to flow through the gravure roll/body gap. The outlet or collecting chamber (adjacent the inlet blade) is controlled at a constant pressure by a regulating pressure head device, e.g. the height of a standpipe has very little pressure drop so that the pressure seen by the roll entering blade is independent of flow rate or viscosity. Since the pressure in the on-running chamber is regulated and controlled to be relatively constant, a pressure can be selected that prevents excess air from being entrained past the entrance blade and avoids conditions where excessive pressure can cause back flow of coating through the entrance blade. The channel or gap between the intermediate body and the gravure roll is sized to provide back pressure so that the off-running chamber operates at a higher and flow resistance regulated pressure.




It is therefore an important object of this invention to provide a counter flow type of gravure coating applicator and method in which the pressure in the gravure roll on-running chamber is maintained at a relatively constant value.




A further object of the invention is to provide a counterflow coater with deaerated coating or inking material at an inlet side that is also the exit side of the gravure roll and causing such coating to flow against the rotation of the roll through an accurate slot or gap defined by an internal separator body to an outlet side in which the pressure is maintained by the flow rate through such slot independently of the pressure in the roll inlet side, and in which air bubbles scoured out of the gravure channels are prevented from intermingling with the deaerated coating at the inlet side.




A still further object of the invention is the provision of an applicator with tapered inlet manifolds and outlet collection passageways that are proportioned to have scouring flow therethrough to prevent stagnation.




Other objects and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the following description, the accompanying drawings and the appended claims.











BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS





FIG. 1

is a somewhat diagrammatic cross-sectional view of a coating applicator for gravure or anilox roll according to this invention;





FIG. 2

is a flow chart showing a preferred arrangement of the components making up the coating system; and





FIG. 3

is a perspective view illustrating the principles of a weir standpipe used to maintain a constant pressure.











DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT





FIG. 1

represents a cross-sectional view through a gravure roll ink or coating applicator


10


. The applicator


10


has a central or intermediate body


12


and a pair of side bodies


14


and


16


bolted to opposite sides of the body


12


. The body


12


is formed with generally planar side walls


15


and


17


to form a mating surface with the side bodies


14


and


16


, in which side bodies function as blade holding bodies. The side bodies


14


and


16


mate with and close with the central body


12


along the side wall surfaces


17


and


16


at the lower end, but at the upper end, define the wall of a tapered inlet header


20


on one side, cooperating with the body


16


, and a tapered outlet header


22


on the opposite side of the body


12


, cooperating with the body


14


. It may be preferred to form the header passageways


20


and


22


in the respective side bodies


16


and


14


for ease of access and cleaning.




The side bodies


14


and


16


are doctor blade holders and each support a blade on an upper inclined surface, so that the end of the blade is in co-acting relation with the surface of a gravure roll


15


. Preferably, the applicator is placed at the 6 o'clock position to better balance the pressures therein, but it is within the scope of the invention to place the applicator at orthogonal positions such as 3 o'clock and 9 o'clock or at positions in between.




The body


16


, at its upper surface, is provided with a clamp


27


to position an off-running or downstream coating blade


30


. Similarly, the body


14


is provided with a clamp


28


to support and position an on-running or upstream coating blade


32


. The direction of rotation of the gravure roll


25


is indicated by the arrow


36


and on-running and off-running blades are defined in terms of the movement of the roll


25


over the applicator


10


. The blades


30


and


32


form acute angles to the surface of the roll so that the blade


30


is inclined against the direction of roll rotation and is the primary coating blade, while blade


32


is inclined in the direction of rotation and becomes the air-excluding blade and prevents back flow of coating or inking material out of the coater.




The intermediate body


12


is formed with an upper arcuate face having a radius of curvature approximating that of the roll


25


thereby defining a flow channel defined by a narrow gap


40


from the roll surface. This spaced relation between the arcuate upper surface


39


and the roll is defined herein as a “parallel” relationship but it may be more accurately defined as a substantially constant gap relationship.




The tapered inlet header


20


opens along the top at a narrow clearance gap or inlet flow passage or slot


45


between the body


12


and the surface


17


whereby coating material is applied into a small volume off-running chamber


48


in common with an inlet end of the gap


40


. The chamber


48


is, to the coating, an inlet chamber and to the roll


25


, an exiting or off-running chamber, closed by the blade


30


. The coating applied, as described below, is air free and this air free coating contacts the roll surface at the chamber


48


and in the slot or gap


40


. Fluid flows in the channel or slot in the direction of arrow


49


into a small volume fluid outlet chamber


50


also called an on-running chamber, having a wall defined by the on-running blade


32


. The chamber


50


is an exit chamber for the fluid flow and an entrance chamber to the roll


25


. The chamber


50


communicates with the outlet header


22


, previously described, through a gap or channel


55


, between the body


12


and the body


14


.




It will be noted that the flow


49


in the channel or gap


40


is against, not with, the direction of rotation of the roll


25


. Fluid is brought into the chamber


48


at a controlled rate through the slot


45


. As previously noted, the headers


22


and


20


are tapered, that is they are largest at an inlet and narrowest at the end remote from the inlet, so that a scouring flow may be maintained. If desired, the tapered and narrow ends may be tapped to form a bleed through flow, if desired, to maintain the headers clear of obstruction, and in effect, self cleaning. Where the inlet and outlets are conveniently placed at one remote end of the applicator


10


, then the tapers for each of these headers or passageways can be in the same direction, that is the widest or largest at the inlet end and the smallest at the remote end or they can be in the reversed direction.




As the roll


25


rotates in the direction of the arrow


36


, entrapped air in the helix channels, in the case of a helically grooved gravure roll, encounters coating forced under the blade by the internal pressure of the applicator and is not allowed to enter the applicator. The width of the gap or slot


40


may be such as to control the pressure within the downstream or offrunning chamber


48


and to provide a scouring and high shear flow therethrough, and this width of the gap


40


be as narrow as 0.01″ or as great as 0.090″ or more, depending upon the nature of the coating material, the surface speed of the roll


25


, the depth of the channels and other variables. The entrance slot


45


providing fluid flow from the distribution header


20


into the cavity or chamber


48


is relatively narrow, such as in the order of about 0.012 inches to provide a uniform flow rate across the width of the coater.




As the fluid flows in the direction of the arrow


49


in the gap


40


, its counter movement assists in scouring any air out of the gravure channels which air is then entrained as small bubbles with the flow and moves away from the downstream blade


30


into the chamber


50


. This arrangement therefore provides a pool of coating material under pressure in the cavity or chamber


48


at the blade


30


which is totally or substantially free of air that could impair the quality or integrity of the coating applied to the roll


25


.




The pressure within the chamber


50


is independently controlled at a low but regulated value as described below in connection with the flow diagram (FIG.


2


). By maintaining a relatively constant pressure in the chamber


50


, a condition can be maintained such as to match that required to keep air from entering this cavity past the blade


32


and to prevent coating from weeping past the blade, as a is result of too high a pressure. The passage


55


leading from the chamber


50


into the return header


22


will be relatively wide compared to the width of slot


45


, such as, for example, in the order of 0.080 inches.




Referring to the flow diagram of

FIG. 2

, a supply of the material to be applied, such as ink or coating is contained in tank


60


. The gravure applicator of this invention is particularly adapted but not limited to the use of pressure sensitive adhesive coatings. Coating is withdrawn from the tank


60


by a pressure pump


62


and delivered to one or the other of selectable filters


65


to an air purger or separator


70


. The separator


70


is preferably apparatus as disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,149,341 incorporated herein by reference.




The output from the air purger or air separator


70


is applied at a controlled rate, to the applicator


10


by applying the air free material to the inlet end of header


20


. The pressure drop from chamber


48


to chamber


50


is controlled by flow rate but is affected by roll speed, viscosity and gap


40


. The material flowing out of header


22


is connected by line


79


to an automatic pressure regulating device preferably in the form of an overflow weir


80


as shown in FIG.


3


. An overflow weir


80


is elevated above the level of the applicator


10


to provide a predetermined and desired head, and the air laden coating material flows from line


79


into the first compartment


81


, through the slot in a V-slotted weir plate


82


, and down into an outlet compartment


83


and into the return pipe


86


. The level of fluid in compartment


81


defines the pressure head in chamber


50


. Such overflow weirs are well known in the art and fairly accurately control and provide a constant head in the chamber


50


.




The air laden coating is then returned from the weir chamber


83


through a line


86


to the tank


60


.




Good results have been obtained with a pressure applicator, described according to this invention in which the supply cavity


20


feeds into a slot orifice


45


of about 0.020″ in width. The small of running chamber


48


at the doctor blade has a dimension of about 0.1″×0.1″. The coating then flows against the direction of the roll


25


to the onrunning chamber


50


followed by a slot


55


of about 0.080″ in width and into the second tapered cavity or outlet port


22


. The deaerator process and apparatus, as defined in


70


in

FIG. 2

is preferably positioned downstream of the filters


65


, as shown, but may be place upstream of the filters. The particular air removal preferred apparatus, according to U.S. Pat. No. 5,149,341, works better with filtered material. A air free coating in some cases could also be obtained by using a settling tank


60


of sufficient size so as to let the bubbles rise to the top.




In the same example, the pressure regulating tank controls a controlled column pressure, translated into a column of water of between of about 6 to about 12 inches of pressure and experience has found that no air will enter to coating past the blade and in appropriate circumstances, such as a sufficiently long dwell time in a sufficiently large tank, the deaeration equipment or air separator may be eliminated.




Flow rates of 0.3 gallons per minute across 40″ of deckle, providing an application rate of 0.008 gallons per inch [per minute], have provided good results. Excellent results have been obtained in the range of 0.008-0.4 gallons [per inch] per minute. Also good results have been obtained with a pressure


50


in the chamber at 12″ of water equivalent. A gap


40


of about 0.060″ has provided satisfactory results.




Generally, the pressure in the application chamber


48


is higher than that in the chamber


50


and the pressure in the chamber


48


regulates the coating weight. Accordingly, the coating weight may be changed by changing the flow rate to the applicator. Good results have been obtained, under the conditions described above with this example, operating at a roll


25


surface speed of 800 feet per minute.




While the methods herein described, and the forms of apparatus for carrying these methods into effect, constitute preferred embodiments of this invention, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited to these precise methods and forms of apparatus, and that changes may be made in either without departing from the scope of the invention, which is defined in the appended claims.



Claims
  • 1. The method of applying a coating material to a rotating grooved gravure roll by a coater that has a downstream blade and an arcuately spaced upstream blade, each blade placed against such a gravure roll, and each blade positioned in relation to the direction of rotation of such grooved gravure roll and whereby the coater has an intermediate gap-forming body between the blades, whereby an offrunning coating chamber is formed by the gap-forming body, the gravure roll, and the downstream blade, an onrunning coating chamber is formed by the gap-forming body, the gravure roll, and the upstream blade, and with the roll a gap is formed connecting such chambers, with fluid passageways opening into such chambers for the delivery or removal of liquid coating material therefrom, comprising the steps of:applying substantially air free liquid coating material under pressure to the passageway leading to said offrunning chamber and causing said liquid coating material to move through said gap into onrunning chamber, and causing an excess of such coating material to flow out through the passageway associated with said onrunning chamber; regulating the liquid pressure in said onrunning chamber at a relatively constant positive value, said pressure being sufficient to prevent air from entering the onrunning chamber as the gravure roll rotates past the upstream blade through said roll grooves; and regulating the liquid pressure in said offrunning chamber to control coating weight by means of controlling the rate of coating material flow into said offrunning chamber and the flow resistance of the gap leading to said onrunning chamber.
  • 2. The method of claim 1 in which said regulated pressure in said onrunning chamber is between about 5 and 12 inches of water.
  • 3. The method of claim 1 in which said gap has a width of between about 0.010″ and 0.9″.
  • 4. The method of claim 3 in which said gap width is about 0.060″.
  • 5. The method of applying a liquid coating to the recesses of a rotating grooved gravure roll by an applicator in which the applicator has an onrunning blade placed against the gravure roll in an upstream position in relation to the direction of rotation of the gravure roll, an offrunning blade placed against the gravure roll in a downstream position also in relation to the rotation of the gravure roll, and whereby a first chamber is formed at the onrunning blade, a second chamber is formed at the offrunning blade, and a flow constriction passageway bordered on one side by the gravure roll is provided between the blade chambers, such that the first chamber is formed by the onrunning blade, the gravure roll and the passageway, and the second chamber is formed by the offrunning blade, the gravure roll and the passageway, comprising the steps of:applying liquid coating under pressure to the second chamber in sufficient volume to cause such coating to flow in a direction contrary to said rotation of the gravure roll through said flow constriction passageway to the first chamber, and maintaining the pressure of coating in the first chamber at a relatively constant value sufficient to exclude air from entering said first chamber between the onrunning blade and the surface of the gravure roll as the gravure roll rotates past the onrunning blade.
  • 6. The method of claim 5 in which the coating material is applied to said second chamber at a rate of between about 0.08 gallons per minute per inch of roll width to about 0.2 gallons per minute per inch of roll width.
  • 7. The method of claim 5 in which said relatively constant value is between about 6″ to about 12″ water column pressure.
PRIOR PROVISIONAL APPLICATION

Applicant claims the benefit of the filing date of Provisional Application Serial No. 60/078,986, filed Mar. 23, 1998.

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Entry
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Provisional Applications (1)
Number Date Country
60/078986 Mar 1998 US