This invention relates to a process and a coating plant for containers. More particularly, it relates to a process and the relating device for coating plastic containers, for example bottles, with protective paint.
Thermoplastic materials, such as PET (polyethylene terephthalate), have been used for some time now to make containers. This is particularly true for food-containing containers, especially drinks. Although said containers can be of different types, they shall be referred to hereinafter generically as bottles, which happen to be the most popular.
One of the main problems encountered when thermoplastic materials such as PET are used for making bottles is that the necessarily thin and inherently somewhat microporous wall of the formed material make the bottle walls permeable to gas. The result is that oxygen can permeate into the bottle from the outside environment possibly altering the contents of the bottle through oxidation, and carbon dioxide found in carbonated drinks can seep out of the bottle possibly negatively affecting the taste characteristics of the product and damaging the image of the drink manufacturer.
Furthermore, bottles may suffer from impacts during transport, handling, and warehousing leading to visible damage to their outer surface.
To resolve these inconveniences, containers, especially bottles, can be protected with a thin, clear coating that is not very permeable to gas; is able to resist impacts and abrasions if possible; and does not affect the overall appearance of the product.
For example, U.S. Pat. No. 5,658,619 describes a process for coating bottles. This process involves sending bottles to a coating segment where the bottles are gripped and dipped one at a time in one of many containers filled with a coating solution consisting of a resin dispersed in a solvent. Then, after removing the bottles from the coating solution, the bottles are released and sent to a flash-off segment where the solvent of the coating solution is removed from the coating applied to the outer surface of the bottle. After the flash-off process, the bottles are sent to a curing station where the resin of the coating is cured.
Such a plant is complex and not easy to run, particularly when it comes to transferring the bottles from one treatment segment to the next since each segment uses a specific bottle-handling device. Furthermore, this plant requires long drying times, meaning that the time the bottles stay in the drying furnace is very long. The conceivable solution of increasing the drying temperature is not viable due to the low softening point of the thermostatic material used to make the bottle; obviously, this solution could result in deformations to the bottle.
Today, thus, no paint-drying process exists that is simple, effective, and fast; in addition, no relating plant exists that is compact and effective.
It is an object of this invention to provide a process for applying a protective coating to plastic containers, especially bottles. This coating should improve the impermeability of the bottle to air, and protect the outer surface of the bottle from damage.
It is an object of this invention to provide a process for applying a protective coating to plastic containers, especially bottles, suitable for high-output bottle-making lines; this process must be simple to implement and able to produce high-quality coatings using different types of paints.
It is another object of the invention to provide a plant for carrying out the aforementioned process having high producing capacity, and is cost effective to construct and run.
These objects, in accordance with a first aspect of the invention, are achieved by means of a process for treating the outer surface of containers with the characteristics as claimed in claim 1. In accordance with another aspect of the invention, the above objects are achieved by means of a plant with the characteristics as claimed in claim 12.
Other advantages of the invention shall become apparent from the detailed description of preferred embodiments of the invention, given by way of nonlimiting examples that do not exclude further embodiments and improvements.
In accordance with the invention, coating the external surface of containers, especially bottles, with a protective layer of resin involves sending containers to a coating plant, conveying the containers through the coating section of said plant where the containers are dipped into a coating solution, removing the containers from said solution, removing any excess coating solution from the surface of the bottles, removing the solvent of the solution from the coating, and solidifying and curing the resin of the coating. More specifically, this process consists of the following steps:
Ideally, the bottles, or the containers, are secured to the single transferring chain by means of grippers, which are evenly spaced along the chain, that grip the bottles by the neck placing them in a vertical position.
Said grippers can be rotated on a plane that is perpendicular to the feeding direction of the chain, in order to place the bottles in the horizontal position. Ideally, this rotation takes place thanks to the movement of the chain itself, which turns during the necessary changes in direction.
When the bottles, being conveyed by the chain, reach the tanks containing the coating solution, the tanks are raised one by one in order to contain each several bottles to be coated. At the same time, the tanks also move horizontally: the movement is synchronized with the translation movement of the bottles to be coated; in this way, the bottles are immersed in the coating solution and accompanied in their movement.
The bottles are dipped into and removed from the coating solution at a speed of 120 mm/s at most, preferably between 50 and 200 mm/s.
The total dipping time of the bottles in the coating solution is preferably less than 0.6 s.
After removal from the coating tanks, the bottles remain in the vertical position, a protective guard is raised around the bottles, and the bottles are spun in order to allow most of the excess coating to drip off. Then, the bottles are transferred to the next segment of the plant, the drying station, where they are rotated around their axis longitudinally at a speed of rotation included between 500 and 3000 revolutions per minute, preferably between 500 and 5000 revolutions per minute. Centrifuging time equals 1.5 s, preferably included between 1 and 3 s.
After centrifuging, the grippers of the bottles are rotated so that the bottles are placed in the horizontal position. In this position, the bottles rotate at a speed included between 100 and 300 revolutions per minute, preventing the paint from dripping.
In the coating segment described above, it is feasible to have several groups of bottles at different stages of the process. For example, a first group of bottles may have just entered the coating area, and may be hovering above a rising first tank filled with paint; simultaneously and further along the line, a second group of bottles may be already immersed in a second, fully raised tank; and, finally, simultaneously and further along the line, a third group of bottles may be placed above a third tank that is quickly being lowered. After the coating area, the bottles are transferred to the drying segment where a protective guard is placed around each bottle, and the bottles are spun in order to drain off the excess paint. Then, the rotation of the bottles around their own axis is stopped, and the bottles are quickly sent to the next station where they are placed in the horizontal position before entering the drying furnace.
Finally, the bottles are sent to a coating-drying and/or curing segment.
A two-layer coating can also be used; in this case, after coating, centrifuging, and drying and/or curing the first layer, a second layer of coating is applied to the bottles. This second coat is applied in exactly the same way as the first; furthermore, the bottles are always in the vertical position, and are always held by the same gripping devices of the conveyor chain. This second coating process is followed by identical operations: dripping by centrifugation, and drying and/or curing of the second coat.
The above-described process is carried out by means of a coating plant, comprising the following:
Preferably, said devices suitable to rotate the gripping devices to place the bottles from a vertical position in a horizontal position, and vice versa later on, are made up of devices for changing the feeding direction of the chain that holds the grippers, meaning that said devices for changing the feeding direction turn the chain.
A plant suitable to carry out the process in accordance with the invention shall be described below, given as a nonlimiting example of the scope and size of the invention and in conjunction with the following accompanying drawings:
Referring to
Said area (70) is followed by another area (40′) of rotation where the bottles are again placed in the vertical position, a coating carousel (20.1′) for applying a second layer of paint on the bottles, a centrifuging carousel (20.2′), an area (40″) for rotating the bottles in the horizontal position, a paint-flow area (50′) for distributing the paint evenly, in the lower part of the furnace, and an area (60′) for curing the resin in the upper part of the furnace, which is similar to the one in the lower part of the furnace.
In this area, the paint (V) is supplied to the tanks by means of a toroidal tank (23) supplied with paint by a pipe (24). In a first embodiment of the invention, the toroidal tank (23) and the tank (22) are connected by means of a pipe (21), like communicating vessels, so that the paint reaches a specific level (25) in said tanks (22 and 23). In another embodiment of the invention, a pump and a rotating joint are used to supply the tank (22) with paint. While the carousel (20.1) is turning, the tank (22) is raised to a specific position (22′) so that the bottle (B) is dipped into the paint; a valve (27) prevents the paint from flowing out of the bottom of the tank (22), if one uses the principle of the communicating vessels, while an overflow (26) conveys any paint that overflows from the tank at the raised position to a collecting tank (28) (shown on the right of
Then, the coated bottles are transferred to a second wheel (20.2) or second carousel (sectional view shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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RM02A000453 | Sep 2002 | IT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP03/10039 | 9/10/2003 | WO | 3/10/2005 |