This invention relates generally to process and apparatus for surface treatment of work pieces as they move along a production line, and more particularly to surface treatments of battery cans, including cleaning and electroplating of the interior and exterior surfaces of battery cans as they are transported along a continuously moving production line.
Battery cans are produced today in huge quantities for use in the manufacture of electrolytic cells, such as AA, AAA, C and D cylindrical batteries and also prismatic batteries for special applications. The battery cans are usually manufactured by transfer presses, which draw the battery cans from an initial metal stamping into hollow longitudinal casings open on one end with a substantially uniform cross section along the length of the casing. Intermediate manufacturing steps after drawing the battery cans usually requires degreasing the interior and exterior surfaces, washing, cleaning and drying the cans. In some cases, it is desirable also to electroplate the interior and exterior surface of the battery can. In the past, electroplating of battery cans has been carried out in a batch process, requiring loading the cans on a fixture and plating the interior and exterior surfaces in a tank containing the electroplating solution. This is a cumbersome process requiring loading and unloading the fixture, whereas it is desirable for the battery cans to be continuously processed as they move along a production line so as to achieve high volume consistent treatment of the products.
Electroplating a moving work piece is particularly difficult. Yet it would be desirable to manufacture the battery cans from cold rolled steel, and then to degrease them, clean them, electroplate them with a metal such as nickel or other metal alloy or metal co-deposited with other conductive material such as graphite, and clean them by washing and drying as they move along a production line. It is known to speed up the plating process of a cylindrical surface in a batch process by utilizing an anode forming close clearances with the interior wall of the work piece. The prior art describes circulating a plating solution up into a tube connected as an anode and down around the outside of the tube to plate the interior wall of automotive cylinders. U.S. Pat. No. 5,642,600 issued Jul. 1, 1997 to Ikegaya et al. shows such a high speed plating method, wherein the flow rate and electric current density can be varied. U.S. Pat. No. 5,909,721 to Ikegaya issued Jun. 8, 1999 discloses a similar process wherein a plating solution flows between an automotive engine cylinder wall and the exterior of an electrode to plate the inner wall of the cylinder bore with nickel. The foregoing patents do not address the problem of loading and unloading the workpiece in a continuous plating process.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,303,481 describes a system for suspending work pieces in a common tank of electrolyte suitable for coating components in mass production on an industrial scale. Gripping jaws hold a workpiece to be electroplated inside a sealed tank. Electrolyte is introduced while a plating voltage is applied between the part and the tank. While the apparatus is suitable for plating the exterior of the article, it requires a semi-batch type loading of the work piece and does not provide for high speed plating with close clearances between the work piece and the anode.
An inline process for manufacturing battery cans has been disclosed by the applicant's assignee in a pending application U.S. Ser. No. 10/705549 filed Nov. 10, 2003. In that pending application, battery cans are transported sequentially on a conveyor from one stage of the manufacturing process to the next. The manufacturing process includes washing and drying equipment for cleaning the battery cans after a graphite coating has been applied to the interior of the battery cans. All of the foregoing takes place in a continuously moving conveyorized production line. However, there is no provision for plating the interior and the exterior surfaces of the battery cans. It would be very desirable to enable electroplating a nickel or nickel cobalt alloy coating onto battery cans drawn from cold-rolled steel. Other surface treatment of the battery cans is necessary, such as degreasing to remove the drawing compound before electroplating and then rinsing and drying the plated cans. It would be desirable if this could be accomplished in an integrated fashion while the battery cans move continuously through the production process.
Accordingly, one object of the present invention is to provide an improved apparatus and process for sequential surface treatments of work pieces, including electroplating internal and external surfaces.
Another object of the invention is to provide an improved apparatus and process for moving battery cans through sequence of surface treatment operations in a continuous process rather than a batch process.
Another object of the invention is to provide an improved apparatus and process for electroplating the inside surface of a battery can.
Still another object of the invention is to provide an improved apparatus and process for electroplating the exterior surface of the battery can.
Briefly stated, the invention comprises apparatus for surface treatment of work pieces of the type having a hollow longitudinal casing open on one end with internal and external surfaces and a substantially uniform cross-section along the length of the casing, the apparatus comprising a stationary base defining a workpiece processing path between a loading station and an unloading station, a workpiece carrier arranged to traverse along the processing path, a plurality of guide members uniformly spaced along the workpiece carrier located so as to successively traverse the processing path, a plurality of workpiece holders disposed in the guide members and arranged to be movable in the guide members between a loading position and a processing position, a plurality of surface processing enclosures disposed on the carrier each having an open end and arranged to be movable with respect to a respective workpiece holder between an open position wherein a workpiece is openly disposed on a workpiece holder and a closed position wherein a workpiece is enclosed within a surface processing enclosure, and cam and follower means responsive to movement by the workpiece carrier with respect to the base, the cam and follower means being adapted to successively move a workpiece holder at the loading station from the loading position into the processing position and then to move the surface processing enclosure into the closed position, whereby a workpiece placed in the workpiece holder at the loading station may be processed in the surface processing enclosure while it moves along the processing path to the unloading station.
In its preferred form, the carrier is circular and the work piece holders include an upwardly extending projection arranged to receive a work piece casing placed over the projection. The surface processing enclosures are arranged to enclose the casings so that a work piece processing fluid may be injected. The work piece processing fluid may simply be a surface cleansing agent or, in the case of electroplating, the processing fluid is a liquid electrolyte. A plating voltage can be applied to plate either the external or internal surfaces of the work pieces casing. In its preferred form, the apparatus is designed to treat battery cans, although similar shaped work pieces are also suitable for surface processing in the apparatus.
Other objects and advantages of the invention will be made more clear by reference to the following specification, taken in connection with the accompanying drawing, in which:
Referring now to
Surface treatment unit 12 is adapted to plate the inside surface of the battery can using a plating solution fluid supplied from a plating solution and replenishing system 38 and plating voltage supplied by a plating rectifier 40. A suitable plating solution fluid for nickel-plating cold rolled steel battery cans consists of nickel sulfate, boric acid and deionised water.
Surface treatment unit 14 is arranged to plate the external surface of battery cans supplied from conveyor 24 and to transfer them to conveyor 26 through loading and unloading dials which are identical to dials 28, 30. A plating solution and replenishing system 42 supplies a plating solution fluid to unit 14, while a plating rectifier 44 imposes a plating voltage.
Surface treatment unit 16 receives battery cans from intermediate conveyor 26 and performs a rinsing and drying operation. A rinse tank 46 supplies water for rinsing off plating solution fluid. Drying with air may also be performed in the surface treatment unit 16.
The entire cleaning and plating system consisting of all four surface treatment units is controlled by a master control unit indicated at 48. Controller 48 provides power to rotate the loading and unloading dials and the workpiece carriers of units 10, 12, 14, 16 in synchronism, in accordance with a timing program.
Referring now to
The timing diagram for the circular path traversed by the work pieces is divided into circular segments 50 that show the relative time allocated to each of the operations of the surface treatment units. Two such segments or units of time 52 are required to load the work piece onto the work piece holder. Five time units 54 are required to move the work piece holder from a loading position to a processing position and to enclose a work piece within a surface processing enclosure. The battery cans are then processed during a time of seventy-eight time units 55. Five time units 56 are required to open the surface processing enclosure and move the work piece holder from a processing position to a loading position, and two time units 58 are required to strip the part from the work piece holder to a pocket corresponding to segment 30a on the unloading dial 30. The actual times for accomplishing these operations depend upon the rotational speed of the work rice carrier. The relative time for each operation are merely exemplary. However, in order to provide a universal cleaning and plating system at minimum cost, all four units and their timing diagrams are designed to be identical in the present case.
Referring now to
A circular work piece carrier 68 is rotatably mounted on an axis and is slowly rotated by a motor to carry out operations according to the timing diagram discussed in connection with
A surface processing enclosure 84 is supported by a guide block 86 slidably disposed on the vertical rods 74 of the guide members. A vertical cam follower 88 moves the guide block and surface processing enclosure 84 in a vertical direction between an open position seen in
Lastly, a fluid control valve 94 is shown mounted on guide member radial extension 72 with a hose 96 connecting its outlet to surface processing enclosure 84. Similarly, a fluid control valve 98 is mounted to the guide block 76 on the bottom of guide member 70, and has an outlet connected by hose 100 to work piece holder 78.
It remains to note that the cams 62 and 64 are designed so as to first move the work piece 78 horizontally to a processing position and then to move the enclosure 84 vertically to a closed position during the five time intervals 54 shown on the timing diagram of
Referring now to
First referring to
Referring to
A surface processing enclosure 132 includes an electrically conductive gripper 134 arranged to tightly enclose and make good electrical contact with a battery can 136. An electrical terminal 138 is connected as the cathode. The exterior of the anode tube 126 is so dimensioned as to form close clearances with the inside surface of the battery can 136. A plating solution is introduced through the fluid connection 130, flowing upward through tube 126 and down on its outside through the close clearances formed between the tube and the interior surface of the battery can. Application of a plating voltage performs rapid plating of the internal surface of the battery can. The rate of flow and plating voltage may be adjusted to perform high speed electroplating as the part moves on the carrier. Thereafter in the second portion of the processing cycle, the plating voltage is removed and rinse water is connected to hose connection 130 to flow up through tube 126 and down through the close clearance space to thoroughly wash the interior of the battery can.
Reference to
While the apparatus has been illustrated as processing cylindrical battery cans, any longitudinal shapes such as prismatic battery cans or other type of work pieces having a longitudinal shape of substantially uniform cross section can be processed in the apparatus according to the present invention.
While there has been disclosed what is considered the preferred embodiment of the invention, other modifications will occur to those skilled in the art, and it is desired to secure in the appended claims all such modifications as fall within the true spirit and scope of the invention.