The present invention relates generally to the fabrication of long product or endless material. More particularly, the invention relates to a method for non contact degreasing with highly chemically reactive oxidative radicals of materials covered with oil and other hydrocarbons or organic impurities.
The long products or endless materials such as metal, plastic or ceramic wires, bands, tapes, and tubes or any other materials, become or are already surface contaminated with organic material and impurities during their production. Contamination is due to the contact of manufacturing material with production machines. More often, the components are also polluted with different organic and inorganic impurities. Organic impurities are often residues of oil or grease and other hydrocarbons applied during machining. Inorganic impurities include oxides as well as chlorides and sulphides. The thickness of inorganic impurities on surfaces depends on the environment in which the long products were stored as well as the environment temperature. But the thickness of organic impurities often depends only on material contact properties with machining material.
The layer of oil and other organic impurities on endless material should be removed prior to printing, painting, gluing, soldering, welding or metallization in order to assure good quality of processing. Traditional methods of degreasing include mechanical, chemical and heat treatments. Mechanical degreasing is often performed by brushing or sand blasting, while chemical cleaning is performed by dipping components in agent solution of chemicals, typically followed by rinsing with distilled water. Removal is also possible by heating the surface to high temperature to decompose oil or evaporate it from the surface.
In some cases, however, traditional degreasing or cleaning methods do not assure needed cleanliness of the endless material. A thin layer of oil and other organic impurities often still persists on the surface, when the classical degreasing is performed. To ensure better material cleanliness, non destructive and non contact degreasing is needed that does not modify the original material surface. Therefore, there is a need for an improved degreasing process that removes surface organic material and impurities, and is a good alternative to classical processes.
According to prior art degreasing is traditionally performed with wet chemical procedures, where the material covered with oil, hydrocarbons or other organic impurities is exposed to degreasing agent, normally prepared in liquid solution. In many cases, water is used as the agent carrier. Such wet chemical degreasing is used as a pretreatment to different production procedures (JP11200888, JP57039182, HU45091, JP60226873, JP61247740).
An alternative to classical wet chemical degreasing is thermal procedure by heating material to specific high temperatures from 600 to 900° C. in a heating furnace (JP63215316) or just thermal heating from 700 to 900° C. (JP3283321). Problems with both degreasing methods exist. In wet chemical degreasing, solvents and detergents mixed with oil or other hydrocarbons represent a problem as a waste that is difficult to purify and disintegrate, and is therefore ecologically unfriendly. The problem exists also with high temperature degreasing where chemical substances are volatilized with high temperature or/and removed by filtering (WO0061283). These volatilized substances are normally condensed on lower temperature parts of the system, and therefore cannot be completely removed from the system or they can even escape filtering in small percent, and therefore are released to environment.
The third alternative is degreasing with ignited or discharge gas atmosphere. There are different possible procedures to do the degreasing, but the main difference is the radicals used for it. The most interesting is oxidative atmosphere. In most cases oxygen ions are used. Reactive oxidative atmosphere is used only with small radical densities. The radicals can be created in a gas discharge or a liquid bubble discharge. Typically in water, a high voltage pulse creates the so called bubble discharge, where oxidative radicals, mainly ions, are produced inside the bubble (JP2005058887). Organic material in water interacts with the bubble atmosphere and gets decomposed.
Beside radical treatment in liquid medium, the most common treatment is treatment with gas discharge, many times in specific conditions called plasma. There are numerous different types of plasmas, generally divided to thermal and thermodynamic non-equilibrium plasmas. Interesting are non-equilibrium plasmas created in electrical discharge that also defines the type of radical created in discharge. There are no reports on plasma or oxidative radical degreasing of endless material or long products. For long products like wires, a report on discharge treatment of gold or gold alloy wire, found in pat. JP2000106384, was applied during the production to increase bonding. The wire is subjected after annealing at 500° C. to either of argon-hydrogen plasma treatment or alkaline electrolytic degreasing treatment in low vacuum.
Treatment of the surface with plasma gas containing oxygen is not a new procedure. In most cases, the plasmas are mostly ionized and have low density of chemically reactive oxidative radicals inside electrical discharge. Highly ionized plasma was applied for degreasing samples during CVD or PVD deposition of thin films, where magnetron sputtering was used. The degreasing is in the case of sputtering the result of physical interaction of oxygen ions with the surface (JP2004315250) of material from which surface hydrocarbons and also surface material leaving defects on treated material are removed. Sputtering can be improved by adding heavy inert atoms like argon. More selective is oxygen reactive ion etching where the surface hydrocarbon film can be removed by oxygen ions or a mixture of oxygen ions with other inert gas ions as a part of the degreasing method (DE19644153). Typically, very ionized plasma with low density of chemically reactive radicals can be created in an electrical discharge between two or more metal electrodes, sliding between them at a high voltage (FR2774400, JP6280071), many times also called arc discharges. Such a discharge can also be applied for metal surface treatment like degreasing, pickling or passivation. To create such a discharge, pressure in the reactor chamber has to be lower than 1 bar. In some cases, such plasma is created between 10−2 -10 Torr, like for degreasing a press-molding body by heating the thermosetting binder-containing press-molding body under plasma ionised atmosphere including oxygen (JP325302).
Degreasing connected with surface deoxidation can be also done by some other radicals created in an electrical discharge of hydrogen gas. In the pat. WO9946428 such procedure is disclosed, where radicals are created in microwave ECR (electronic cyclotronic resonance). Generally, radicals created in this discharge are mostly ions with a lower friction of chemically reactive radicals like neutral atoms.
As already stated, there are no patents on degreasing of long products or endless material with a high dose of oxidative radicals at low pressure, preferentially chemically reactive oxidative radicals, where oil or other hydrocarbons are removed, leaving the surface without structure damages.
The present invention provides a process for degreasing surfaces of running long products or endless materials, primarily from metal materials like iron or its alloys. The long products or endless materials are dragged through at least three chambers, where all three have the pressure lower than air atmospheric pressure. The low pressure is achieved by one or more vacuum pumps that pump one or all three chambers at the same time. The preferential pressure in all reaction chambers is less than 100 mbar. The first and third chambers, also called the pre-chambers, are preventing leakage of unwanted gas or air into the second chamber, also called the reaction chamber. In the reaction chamber, gas molecules get dissociated into chemically reactive radicals, preferentially neutral atoms which then interact with the surface of long products or endless materials. To enhance the density of particular radicals, a gas or a mixture of gases is leaked into the reaction chamber or even into the pre-chambers, and an appropriate high frequency electrical discharge is ignited. The high frequency discharge assures a high dissociation of molecules and a low ionization fraction. The endless material receives a high dose of chemically reactive radicals which interact with the surface impurities. The right dose of radicals is achieved through variation of partial pressure in the chambers, pumping speed, pressure of gas leaked into chambers, gas mixtures, discharge power, discharge type and type of the reaction chamber walls. High radical dose influx onto material surface results in oil, organic material or impurities removal from treated surface. The best results of organic material removal are achieved in oxidative environments with a high dose of oxidative radicals, created inside plasma, preferentially generated in inductively coupled high frequency discharge. Oxidative radicals that are produced in the discharge interact with organic surface materials or impurities oxidizing them to water vapour and carbon oxide that are desorbed from the surface and pumped away. After oxidizing plasma treatment, the surface becomes free of organic material. Due to oxygen polar groups formed on the surface, the material is functionalized and activated. Such surface is then ready for further processing and deposition or bonding with other materials including glue, paint and solder.
There are a number of distinct advantages in the use of hereinafter described method for treatment of long product or endless materials that enables degreasing and removal of organic material, oil or other hydrocarbons and impurities. By using oxidative reactive radical environment, the organic material is not only removed, but the surface exhibits better adhesion for most materials since it is functionalized with polar groups. The material temperature is low after the treatment and much lower than the melting point of treated material. This method for removal is also ecologically benign, and does not use any toxic material.
In schematic
The most important parts of the system are presented more in detail in
To get enough chemically reactive radicals, particularly oxidative radicals, appropriate gas or gas mixture has to be leaked into the reaction chamber from different flasks 16 thru gas valves 17. The simplest gas to create oxidative radicals is oxygen. Dissociation of oxygen can be in many times improved by adding a noble gas like argon, helium, xenon or neon. The source of oxygen radicals leaked into reaction chamber can be also prepared from gas or liquid such as water, water vapour, hydrogen peroxide, hydroxyl, ethanol and carbon dioxide. The dissociation of these chemical substances can be also improved by adding noble gases, especially argon, because additional noble gas increases the collision probability inside plasma and therefore probability of molecule dissociation. The air is also gas that gives enough oxidative radicals for treatment, but better dissociation can be achieved in the gas mixture or air and noble gas. The time of long product or endless material treatment to reduce organic material mostly depends on oxidative radical density inside reactor. To achieve efficient degreasing and removal of the organic material from the surface, oxygen radical density must exceed density 1E21 mE-3. If the surface of material is big, then the dose of radicals generated in reaction chamber and supplied to the material surface must exceed 1E24 mE-2. The density and dose of radicals is also controlled by gas pressure in reaction chamber with vacuum gauge 20 and catalytic probes 21. To ensure efficient control of the process the optical spectrometer 22 is also used. The highest dose of reactive radicals is achieved in gas or mixture pressures around 1 mbar, but depends also on parameters like discharge power of generator, discharge configuration, gas or mixture type, material temperature and type, pumping speed, etc. The oxidative radicals created inside discharge interact with material surface and remove organic material and impurities, in our example with iron band covered with oil. Most interactions happen through chemical interaction of neutral oxygen atoms with oil hydrocarbons. The chemical reactions of oxygen atoms produce mostly OH and CO molecules that are desorbed from material surface and pumped away. The desorbed reaction product molecules are on the way to pumps mostly recombined into water and carbon dioxide gas. The long product surface stays virtually organic material free after the treatment, with only thin atomic oxide layer on the surface and polar groups containing oxygen.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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A 1800/2006 | Oct 2006 | AT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/AT2007/000467 | 10/3/2007 | WO | 00 | 6/18/2009 |