This application is a national stage of, and claims priority to, Patent Cooperation Treaty Application No. PCT/EP2017/081152, filed on Dec. 1, 2017, which application claims priority to German Application No. DE 10 2016 014 9483.5, filed on Dec. 14, 2016, which applications are hereby incorporated herein by reference in their entireties.
The disclosure concerns a printhead for the application of a coating agent to a component, in particular for painting a vehicle body component with a paint. The disclosure also includes an operating method for such a printhead.
For the serial coating of vehicle body components, rotary atomizers are usually used as application devices, but these have the disadvantage of limited application efficiency, i.e. only part of the applied paint deposits on the components to be coated, while the rest of the applied paint has to be disposed of as so-called overspray.
A newer development line, on the other hand, provides for so-called printheads as application devices, as known for example from DE 10 2013 002 412 A1, U.S. Pat. No. 9,108,424 B2 and DE 10 2010 019 612 A1. In contrast to the known rotary atomizers, such printheads do not emit a spray of the paint to be applied, but a narrowly confined paint jet, which is almost completely deposited on the component to be painted, so that almost no overspray occurs.
Such printheads have control valves for controlling the release of the coating agent.
Here there is a nozzle opening 2 in a nozzle plate 1, which is either released or blocked by the control valve. In the nozzle plate 1 there are further nozzle openings beside the nozzle opening 2, which are each controlled by a separate control valve, whereby these further nozzle openings are not shown for simplification.
Furthermore, the printhead contains a base plate 3, which confines a coating agent supply 4, i.e. the coating to be coated is supplied via the coating agent supply 4 and can then exit through the nozzle opening 2 when the control valve is open.
A coil tube 5 is arranged on the upper side of the base plate 3 and is wound with a coil 6 on the outside.
In the coil tube 5 there is a magnetic coil core 7, which is fixed and sealed against the coil tube 5 by a seal 8.
In addition, there is a magnetic armature 9 in the coil tube 5, which can also be called a valve needle and can be moved in the direction of the double arrow depending on the current supplied to the coil 6 in order to either release or close the nozzle opening 2.
The armature 9 carries a seal 10 at its lower end to seal the nozzle opening 2 in the shown closed position so that no paint can escape from the nozzle opening 2.
In addition, the control valve has a return spring 11, which pushes the armature 9 and thus also the seal 10 in the drawing downwards into the shown closing position.
To open the control valve, the coil 6 is energised in such a way that the armature 9 with the seal 10 is actively pulled upwards in the drawing against the force of the return spring 11.
To close the control valve, on the other hand, the coil 6 is de-energised so that the return spring 11 can push the armature 9 and thus also the seal 10 in the drawing downwards into the closed position shown.
A disadvantage of this well-known control valve is the fact that the interior of the control valve and especially an interior 12 of the coil tube 5 is exposed to the paint.
On the one hand, paint residues in the interior 12 of the coil tube 5 can therefore impair the functionality of the control valve. For example, paint deposits in the control valve can impair the freedom of movement of the armature 9.
On the other hand, the paint residues in the interior 12 of the coil tube 5 also prevent a colour change, since the control valve cannot be rinsed during operation. The well-known printheads with control valves of this type also offer the possibility of applying a different colour paint.
One possibility is to remove, disassemble, clean and reassemble the control valve, which, however, takes 1-2 hours and therefore prevents a colour change during operation.
Another possibility for a colour change is to rinse the printhead with an extremely high amount of rinsing agent of several litres and over a longer period of several minutes, which also prevents a colour change during operation due to the required amount of rinsing agent and the required rinsing time.
Finally, it is possible to replace the control valve or the complete printhead, but this is also not possible during operation and therefore prevents a colour change.
The known printheads described above therefore do not allow a practical color change during operation.
The technical background of the disclosure can also be found in DE 696 22 407 T2 and DE 36 34 747 A1.
The disclosure is therefore based on the task of creating a correspondingly improved printhead and specifying a corresponding operating method.
The disclosure comprises the general technical teaching to design the printhead technically in such a way that a colour change is possible during the coating process. This is achieved by the fact that the printhead can be rinsed with a rinsing agent during a colour change in order to rinse out coating agent residues from the printhead.
In accordance with the state of the art, the printhead according to the disclosure has a coating supply in order to feed the coating to be applied to the printhead. In addition, printhead according to the disclosure preferably also has a separate rinsing agent supply to supply a rinsing agent. It should be mentioned here that the coating agent supply is preferably separated from the rinsing agent supply, so that the printhead preferably has separate inlets for the supply of the coating agent on the one hand and for the supply of the rinsing agent on the other hand.
For a few colors, one color hose (coating agent supply) per color could be connected to the applicator (printhead). Then there is a rinsing agent connection and a pulse air connection in or on the applicator. These are then used for rinsing.
In addition, the printhead according to the disclosure also may have a return system in order to return coating agents and/or rinsing agents, either to a ring line or to disposal. In addition to the separate connections for the supply of the coating agent and the rinsing agent, the printhead in accordance with the disclosure therefore also preferably has a further separate connection in order to return coating agent or rinsing agent.
The return flow to the return system, in one example is controlled by a controllable return valve, which can be designed as a self-actuated return valve or as a proportional valve. Such valve types are known from the state of the art and therefore do not need to be described in detail.
In one example, the printhead has several nozzles to dispense the coating agent. The individual nozzles are preferably each assigned a control valve in order to control the release of coating agent through the respective nozzle. The above mentioned rinsing agent supply then has branch lines leading to the individual control valves so that all control valves of the printhead can be rinsed simultaneously with the rinsing agent.
In one example, the individual branch lines of the rinsing agent supply are y designed in such a way that the rinsing agent supplied is evenly distributed to the branch lines to the control valves, so that the individual control valves are essentially rinsed with the same amount of rinsing agent.
In one example the printhead has at least one nozzle for dispensing the coating agent and an associated control valve for controlling the dispensing of the coating agent through the nozzle, as explained briefly above. The control valve may have an electrical coil, as in the known design described above, which may be wound onto a coil tube. It was already explained at the beginning about the state of the art that coating residues can be deposited in this coil tube, which on the one hand can impair the functionality of the control valve and on the other hand can prevent the colour change capability. Therefore, the rinsing agent supply line of the printhead according to the disclosure preferably flows into the coil tube in order to rinse the inside of the coil tube.
It should be mentioned here that the coil tube—as with the conventional control valve described at the beginning—preferably has a circular internal cross-section and contains a coil core. Here it can be advantageous if the coil core has a profile cross section that does not completely fill the inner cross section of the coil tube in order to leave space for the rinsing agent between the coil tube and the coil core so that the rinsing agent can flow through in the axial direction. For example, the coil core may have a star-shaped profile cross-section with radially projecting ribs running in the axial direction, so that the rinsing agent can flow between the ribs of the coil core in the axial direction.
Alternatively, it is possible for the coil core to have a rinsing groove in its circumferential surface that can run axially, in the circumferential direction or spirally, for example.
In addition, axial rinsing channels can also be arranged in the coil core.
Another example provides that the profile cross-section of the coil core is grid-shaped and can be flowed through by the rinsing agent.
It should also be mentioned that the coil core is preferably sealed against the coil tube with a seal, in particular with a pressure resistance of more than 2 bar, 4 bar or 6 bar.
It has already been briefly mentioned above that the printhead may have several control valves, all of which can be rinsed. The individual control valves usually have one coil tube each, whereby the rinsing agent supply then opens into all coil tubes in order to rinse all coil tubes.
It should also be mentioned that the control valve usually has a movable armature, as in the known control valve described at the beginning, which is moved depending on the current supplied to the coil and closes or releases the nozzle depending on its position.
In one example, this armature runs coaxially on part of its length in the coil tube and preferably has an axially permeable profile cross-section so that rinsing agent can flow between the armature and the inner wall of the coil tube. For this purpose, the armature preferably has a non-circular profile cross-section which does not completely fill the circular internal cross-section of the coil tube and therefore permits axial flow of the rinsing agent. For example, the profile cross-section of the armature can be star-shaped or cross-shaped.
In a variant of the disclosure, the rinsing agent supply opens into the coil tube axially between the armature and the coil core.
In another variant of the disclosure, on the other hand, the rinsing agent supply opens into the coil tube in the axial direction in the area of the coil core, in particular at the end of the nozzle tube remote from the moving armature.
In another variant of the disclosure, the movable armature is arranged in a guide cage permeable to rinsing agent, in particular in a slotted cylinder. This offers the advantage that the movable anchor can be rinsed during a rinsing process, thus avoiding coating deposits on the anchor.
In another variant of the disclosure, the sliding anchor has a central guide hole with a guide pin projecting into the guide hole. This results in a linear guide, which can also be rinsed.
In another example of the disclosure, a flexible diaphragm is provided which separates the control valve from the coating agent supply so that the control valve is protected by the diaphragm against contact with a coating agent. This means that the control valve itself does not have to be rinsed at all, as the control valve itself does not come into contact with the respective coating agent at all. Rather, only the smooth surface of the membrane on the coating agent side should be rinsed, which is, however, very easy and efficient, since the smooth membrane surface hardly forms any starting points for paint deposits.
The printhead according to the disclosure preferably enables a fast color change within a color change time of less than 1 h, 20 min, 10 min, 30 s, 10 s or even less than 5 s.
The aim is to achieve the lowest possible paint change losses, which are preferably smaller than 51, 21, 200 ml, 20 ml, 10 ml, 5 ml or even smaller than 2 ml with the printhead according to the disclosure.
This also leads advantageously to a very low rinsing agent consumption during a colour change, whereby the rinsing agent consumption is preferably smaller than 101, 51, 21, 200 ml, 100 ml, 50 ml, 20 ml or even smaller than 10 ml.
Furthermore, the disclosure allows the printhead to have several separate rinsing agent supplies to supply different rinsing agents, which can be adapted to the respective coating agent, for example.
It should also be mentioned that the printhead with its media-carrying parts is preferably designed in such a way that the media-carrying parts are free of dead space and/or undercutting in order to improve the rinsing capability.
To improve rinsability, it is also possible for the printhead to have a cleaning-enhancing coating on its surfaces that come into contact with the coating agent, whereby such a coating is also known as an “easy-to-clean coating”.
Furthermore, it should be noted that the disclosure does not only claim protection for the printhead according to the disclosure described above as a single component or as a replacement part. Rather, the disclosure also claims protection for a complete coating device with such a printhead.
In addition, the coating device according to the disclosure preferably also includes a color changer, such as a linear color changer, a rotary color changer, a color changer integrated in the printhead or an A/B color changer. These types of color changers are known from the state of the art and therefore do not need to be described further.
Finally, the disclosure also includes a corresponding operating method for such a printhead, whereby the individual process steps already result from the above description and therefore do not need to be described in more detail.
However, it should be mentioned that the rinsing agent can be a universal rinsing agent suitable for both water-based and solvent-based coatings. In addition, the rinsing agent can be a VOC-free (VOC: volatile organic compounds) rinsing agent.
During the rinse process, the printhead can also be rinsed together with the rinse agent or alternately with pulsed air.
It is also possible to supply the printhead with an aerosol for rinsing.
The disclosure also offers the possibility of supplying the printhead with different rinsing agents one after the other.
In a variant of the operating method a solvent-based paint is first supplied and applied. The printhead is then rinsed with a solvent-based rinsing agent to rinse out residues of the solvent-based paint. An optional release agent can then be added, such as alcohol. In the next step, a water-based paint is added and applied. Finally, the printhead is rinsed with a water-paint-based rinsing agent to rinse out residues of the water-based paint.
The above description explains a change from a solvent-based coating paint to a water-based paint. It is also possible to change from a water-based paint to a solvent-based paint, which requires a correspondingly changed sequence of the process steps described above.
After a colour change, the printhead is preferably pre-filled with the new coating agent, i.e. filled. A defined amount of coating agent is preferably applied through the nozzle of the printhead.
When operating the printhead according to the disclosure, there is also the possibility that all fluids (coating agent and rinsing agent) released during a rinsing process can be collected for disposal.
It is also possible to rinse the outer surface of the nozzle head during the colour change in order to remove any residues of coating agent adhering to it.
It should also be mentioned that the rinsing agent can be discharged one after the other or alternately into the return system or through the nozzle. In addition, there is also the option of rinsing with a mixture of rinsing agent and pulsed air.
In the following, the schematic representation of a control valve according to the disclosure in
A feature of this example is that the control valve has a rinsing agent supply 13 which opens into the interior 12 of the coil tube 5. This rinsing agent supply 13 can therefore be used to supply rinsing agent in order to rinse the control valve with a rinsing agent during a colour change. This makes it possible to change the colour during operation within a short period of time.
In addition, the control valve in this example has a design of the seal 8 between the coil core 7 and the coil tube 5, whereby the seal 8 enables a pressure resistance of more than 2 bar.
A feature of this example is that rinsing agent can flow around the sliding armature 9 freely so that the rinsing agent can also rinse the interior 12 of the coil tube 5. For this purpose, the armature 9 has a cross-shaped profile cross section with axially running ribs, so that the rinsing agent can flow between the ribs of the armature 9 in the axial direction into the interior 12 of the coil tube 5. The rinsing agent is therefore not supplied via the rinsing agent supply 13, as in
A feature of this example is that the sliding armature 9 is arranged in a rinsable guide cage 14 consisting of a slotted cylinder so that the inside of the guide cage 14 can be rinsed. The seal 8 seals the interior of the coil tube 5 against the media-carrying area.
The armature 9 has a central guide hole 15 in which a guide pin 16 engages, whereby the fit of the guide hole 15 and the guide pin 16 is also accessible for rinsing agents.
In addition, the seal 8 seals the annular gap between the coil tube 5 and the coil core 7.
The example shown in
A feature of this example is that the rinsing agent supply 13 does not open between the coil core 7 and the armature 9 into the interior 12 of the coil tube. Rather, the rinsing agent supply 13 opens into the coil tube at the upper end of the coil tube 5.
It is noted here that the coil core 7 does not completely fill the free internal cross-section of the coil tube 5, as the rinsing agent can flow downwards from the rinsing agent supply 13 at the top into the interior 12.
The colour changer 19 can supply the printhead 20 with different coloured coating agents, whereby the printhead 20 can optionally be rinsed with rinsing agent either via a rinsing agent supply (not shown) or via the coating agent supply 18.
Any residues of coating agent and rinsing agent arising during a rinsing process can then be discharged into the return 22.
Finally,
In addition, the coating device has a common rinsing agent supply 26 which is connected to the individual control valves 23.1-23.4 via one branch line 27 each, so that all control valves 23.1-23.4 of the printhead can be rinsed with rinsing agent.
The disclosure is not limited to the preferred examples described above. Rather, a large number of variants and modifications are possible which also make use of the disclosure idea and therefore fall within the scope of protection.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2016 014 948.5 | Dec 2016 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2017/081152 | 12/1/2017 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2018/108577 | 6/21/2018 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20190308212 A1 | Oct 2019 | US |