This application claims priority to European Patent Application No 19163851.9, filed Mar. 19, 2019, of which is incorporated herein by reference.
The present disclosure relates to a method for operating a liquid dispenser comprising at least one liquid container and at least one positive displacement pump, in particular for dispensing a non-Newtonian liquid such as a tinting paste or paint colorant. The invention also relates to a dispenser configured to facilitate such a method.
Tinting pastes, also called colorants or pigment pastes, are concentrates of organic and/or inorganic pigments used for tinting base paints, for instance at a point of sale or a car refinish body shop. The dispensers typically comprise one or more canisters or containers on a rotatable turntable or other type of platform. The container may comprise a pump or can selectively be connected to a pump to dispense a selected amount of the tinting paste. The tinting pastes can be water borne or they can be solvent borne.
Different tinting pastes have different rheological profiles. Tinting pastes are typically non-Newtonian showing a shear dependent viscosity. The rheological behaviour is also dependent on the temperature. Moreover, viscosity may increase over time due to settlement of pigment particles and evaporation of water.
The dispenser is usually programmed to pump a tinting paste from the associated container to the dispense nozzle using set pumping speeds. If the rheological profile of a tinting paste results in high flow resistance, the tinting paste may be too viscous and slow to follow the pace of the pump, resulting in vacuum voids in the pump chamber. As a consequence, the pumped amount of tinting paste is less than intended, resulting in an aberrant colour of the final tinted paint.
The pumped amount of tinting pastes can also contain air, for instance air entrapped during production or mixing, or air entered into the tinting paste flow via a leaking seal or the like, or the pump may not be properly de-aired before use.
US 2016/0047371 discloses a dispenser generating a parameter indicative of the rheological quality of a tinting paste during a displacement stroke of a piston pump.
WO 2016/042104 discloses a dispenser for tinting pastes establishing the degree of compressibility or expandability of the tinting pastes or the encountered flow resistance. The degree of compressibility is an indication for the presence of entrapped air, whereas flow resistance is indicative for the condition of the tinting paste.
Notwithstanding the good results achieved with these prior art systems, there is still a need for further reducing the risk of aberrant tinting.
A method is disclosed for operating a liquid dispenser comprising at least one liquid container and at least one reciprocating pump, such as a piston pump or a bellows pump. The pump is configured to withdraw liquid from the container during a suction stroke. The method comprises the following steps:
If the pressure stroke is blocked almost immediately, the piston or bellows of the pump will not move down or move down along a distance not exceeding a set value. This means that the pumped content is not compressible, so it does not contain a void. However, if the piston or bellows moves down over a distance exceeding the set value, then such a void must be present.
A detected void can be a vacuum void or an air void, or a combination thereof. If the void is a vacuum void, it will not appear again if the steps are repeated with a slower speed during the suction stroke or with a waiting time at the end of the suction stroke. Accordingly, in order to examine whether the detected void is a vacuum void or an air void, the following additional steps can be carried out:
If this second pressure stroke is almost immediately blocked, the void detected after the first run, must have been a vacuum void.
Compared to the first suction stroke, the second suction stroke can for example be extended with a time period of at most 10 sec, e.g., about 1-6 second, e.g., about 1-3 seconds.
If the void is a vacuum void, the set pump speed for dispensing may be reduced for the specific liquid, so as to avoid vacuum voids during dispensing. Alternatively, or additionally, a warning signal can be issued to an operator, who may for example replace the liquid by a fresh amount or add water, solvent or rheological agents to lower the viscosity.
If, after this second run, the piston or bellows still moves down over a distance exceeding a set value, then a void must again be present. This is an indication that the void contains air. To examine this, the pressure stroke by the piston may be continued while the valve is still closed until the resistance exceeds an upper limit. Since liquids as such are not compressible, compressibility of the content in the pump chamber is indicative for the presence of air. The amount of air in the closed pump chamber can straightforwardly be calculated from the length of the partial pressure stroke. Since the pressure stroke is carried out while the valve is closed, it is preferred to run the motor with a lower power, e.g., with about 20% of the normal power consumption, e.g. using a pressure of at most 3 bar. This helps to reduce the influence of the flexibility of the construction on the outcome of the tests and helps to prevent damage.
Some types of liquid may contain entrapped air, e.g., as a result of mixing, stirring or the applied production process. In that case the ratio of air relative to liquid in the pump chamber will be independent from the pump stroke. It is also possible that air is enclosed above the liquid level, for instance resulting from a leaking seal in the dispense system. In that case the amount of air will be the same regardless whether the pump stroke is partial or full.
To examine whether the enclosed air is entrapped in the liquid or above liquid level, the test can be continued by:
The pressure stroke is carried out when the pump is closed off, so any dispense flow is blocked, just as any return flow to the container. The pressure stroke can be carried out with reduced pump power.
The method may for example be carried out with a liquid dispenser comprising:
The tests can for example be run fully automatically, for instance at night or at other moments not hindering normal use.
The dispenser may for example comprise an electric motor driving the pump, such as a stepper motor.
In a specific implementation, and the electric motor may comprise at least one sensor operatively coupled with the rotor, the sensor may comprise a home sensor, position sensor and/or an encoder. Using a stepper motor, the encoder counts the steps made by the stepper motor. In such an implementation, the control unit can be configured to receive and process the number steps counted by the encoder during an attempted pressure stroke. If the pressure stroke is almost immediately blocked, the number of steps counted by the encoder will not exceed a set limit. This means that there is no vacuum or air void in the pumped content.
Optionally, the programmed test may include proceeding with the pressure stroke until the encountered resistance exceeds a limit value, e.g., until stalling of the electric motor. Air enclosures will be compressed. As set out above, compressibility of the pump chamber content is indicative for the presence of enclosed or entrapped air. If an encoder is used, the number steps counted by the encoder during the suction stroke is indicative for the presence of air in the pump chamber.
Optionally, the control unit is programmed to repeat these steps applying a partial suction stroke and compare the calculated compressibility with the compressibility calculated with the complete suction stroke. The compressibility is calculated as the ratio of the piston's travel length during the pressure stroke and the piston travel length during the suction stroke. If the compressibility is the same, then the air is homogenously entrapped as bubbles in the tinting paste. However, if the length of the pressure stroke after the first suction stroke is the same as the length of the pressure stroke after the partial suction stroke, then the air must come from a leaking seal or a similar leakage.
The encoder can be an absolute encoder or an incremental encoder. Suitable encoders include for example conductive encoders, capacitive encoders, optical encoders, and on-axis or off-axis magnetic encoders.
The disclosed method and dispenser are particularly useful for tinting pastes or paint colorants and similar paint products, but can also be used for dispensers of other types of non-Newtonian or Newtonian liquids, such as liquid food concentrates, cosmetic gels or pastes, cement slurries or paper pulp slurries.
The invention is further explained with reference to the drawings by way of example.
Via a user interface, a user can input a paint of a desired colour or quality. A control unit determines a paint formulation producing the selected colour or quality. This includes a selection of one or more of the tinting pastes in the respective containers 4 and the required amounts. The control unit consecutively moves the selected containers to a dispensing position above a receptacle and meters the required amount of each selected tinting paste.
The piston pump 12 comprises a pump chamber 13 and a piston 18 with a piston rod 14 reciprocating within the pump chamber 13. The piston pump 12 is driven by a stepper motor 16. The stepper motor 16 drives the piston 18 via a spindle transmission 15, or via any other suitable transmission. An encoder 17 is linked to the stepper motor 16 to count the steps made by the stepper motor 16. A control unit 19 is linked to the encoder 17 to receive information from the encoder 17. The control unit 19 is also linked to the stepper motor 16 and with the valve 10.
To dispense the tinting paste, the control unit 19 triggers the stepper motor 16 to lift the piston 18 so as to make a suction stroke. During this suction stroke the valve 10 closes the outlet and clears a passage between the container 4 and the pump chamber 13. As a result, an amount of tinting paste flows into the pump chamber. When the pump chamber contains a desired amount of tinting paste, the valve 10 is turned to a position closing off the container and providing a passage between the pump chamber 13 and the dispense outlet 11. The control unit 19 triggers the stepper motor 16 to move the piston 18 downward, so as to make a dispense stroke to empty the pump chamber 18 and dispense the tinting paste via the outlet 11.
The control unit 19 can also move the valve 10 into a third position, closing off the pump chamber 13, as explained hereafter.
During the suction stroke the piston pump 12 is driven with a nominal speed. At the prevailing temperature and shear the viscosity of some tinting pastes may be too high. As a result the piston 18 draws a vacuum during the suction stroke in the pump chamber 13, so the pump chamber 13 is not completely filled with the desired amount of tinting paste. This will cause aberrant tinting of the final paint. The high viscosity can for instance be caused by aging, settling or evaporation of water, solvents or rheological agents.
The viscosity of the tinting paste can be tested by a test method illustrated in
Some movement may be possible during the attempted pressure stroke as a result from the mechanical flexibility of the system. For instance the encoder 17 may count a negligible number of steps not exceeding a set limit before stalling of the stepper motor 16. The control unit 19 can be programmed to compensate for this.
The same test run is shown in
If the pump 12 is driven by a stepper motor 16 with an encoder 17, a more accurate indication of the volume of drawn vacuum 20 is given by the number of steps counted by the encoder 17 during the piston's return movement.
If no air or vacuum is enclosed, then P1−P3=0, so the compressibility (P1−P3)/P1 would also be 0. This situation is in fact the same as the situation in
Enclosed air can be present as a layer between the fluid surface and the piston, as shown in
To check whether the enclosed air is entrapped within the tinting paste 5 or not, a further test is run with a partial suction stroke, as is shown in
If the air is partly within the paste and partly in a bubble, the measured results will be in between the above calculated values.
It is noted that the drawings are schematic, not necessarily to scale and that details that are not required for understanding the present invention may have been omitted. The terms “upward”, “downward”, “below”, “above”, and the like relate to the implementations as oriented in the drawings, unless otherwise specified. Further, elements that are at least substantially identical or that perform an at least substantially identical function are denoted by the same numeral, where helpful individualised with alphabetic suffixes.
The disclosure is not restricted to the above described implementations which can be varied in a number of ways within the scope of the claims.
Elements and aspects discussed for or in relation with a particular implementation may be suitably combined with elements and aspects of other implementations, unless explicitly stated otherwise.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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19163851.9 | Mar 2019 | EP | regional |