1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates generally to ultrasonic cleaning and liquid processing methods and apparatus and other uses involving two or more piezoelectric transducers, and relates more particularly to improving performance by using ultrasonic energy at multiple frequencies.
2. Description of the Relevant Art
Ultrasonic devices are used in a variety of processes, including cleaning, emulsifying, and dispersing components or parts in a liquid medium, and other applications such as metal welding, plastic joining, and wire bonding. All these devices and processes use ultrasonic transducers to supply ultrasonic frequency sound waves to a liquid or solid medium.
Cleaning parts in a liquid medium is one common use of ultrasonics. Cleaning with ultrasonics uses ultrasonic waves to generate and distribute cavitation implosions in a liquid medium. The released energies reach and penetrate deep into crevices, blind holes and areas that are inaccessible to other cleaning methods.
Ultrasonic waves are -pressure waves formed by actuating the ultrasonic transducers with high frequency, high voltage current generated by electronic oscillators (typically referred to as power supplies or generators). A typical industrial high power generator produces ultrasonic frequencies ranging from 20 to 300 kHz or more. Ultrasonic transducers typically include piezoelectric (PZT) devices that expand and contract when subjected to the oscillating driving signals supplied by generators. The transducers are normally mounted on the bottom and/or the sides of the cleaning tanks or immersed in the liquid. The generated ultrasonic waves propagate perpendicularly to the resonating surface. The waves interact with liquid media to generate cavitation implosions. High intensity ultrasonic waves create micro vapor/vacuum bubbles in the liquid medium, which grow to maximum sizes proportional to the applied ultrasonic frequency and then implode, releasing their energies. The higher the frequency, the smaller the cavitation size.
The energy released from an implosion in close vicinity to the surface collides with and fragments or disintegrates the contaminants, allowing the detergent or the cleaning solvent to displace it. The implosion also produces dynamic pressure waves which carry the fragments away from the surface. The cumulative effect of millions of continuous tiny implosions in a liquid medium is what provides the necessary mechanical energy to break physically bonded contaminants, speed up the hydrolysis of chemically bonded ones and enhance the solubilization of ionic contaminants.
In general, at low frequencies (20–30 kHz), a relatively smaller number of cavitations with larger sizes and more energy are generated. At higher frequencies, much denser cavitations with moderate or lower energies are formed. Low frequencies are more appropriate for cleaning heavy and large-size components, while higher frequency (60–80 kHz) ultrasonics is recommended for cleaning delicate surfaces and for the rinsing step.
In some applications it is advantageous to use multiple transducers operating at different frequencies in combination. See, for example, U.S. Pat. No. 6,019,852 and U.K. Patent 1,488,252. These patents disclose cleaning apparatus with rectangular grids of two different frequency transducers, separately driven by two power supplies or generators.
One aspect of the present invention is an ultrasonic processing apparatus and method having multiple transducers of at least two different resonant frequencies supplying ultrasonic energy to a liquid filled tank containing components to be cleaned or processed ultrasonically. The transducers are preferably of a stacked construction and are arranged in equilateral triangular patterns along diagonal lines on the bottom wall or side walls of the tank so that each transducer has an adjacent transducer of a different frequency.
A second aspect of the present invention is an ultrasonic processing apparatus and method having one or more rod transducers (push-pull or single-push types) with ultrasonic converters or transducers mounted on one or both ends and installed in a liquid-filled tank containing components to be cleaned or processed ultrasonically. The rod transducers have different resonant frequencies so that the apparatus provides a mixture of various frequencies of ultrasonic energy to the tank.
A third aspect of the present invention is an ultrasonic processing apparatus and method having multiple transducers or piezoelectric crystals with different resonant frequencies and a generator or power supply that powers the transducers or piezoelectric crystals operating throughout a frequency range that spans the different resonant frequencies. Preferably, the transducers or piezoelectric crystals are paired together and have at least a minimum difference in resonant frequencies. In other words, within the frequency range of driving signals supplied by the generator, there is a predetermined subrange in which none of the transducers or piezoelectric crystals have a resonant frequency.
These aspects of the present invention provide, either individually or in combination, an improved performance ultrasonic cleaning and liquid processing method and apparatus.
The features and advantages described in the specification are not all inclusive, and particularly, many additional features and advantages will be apparent to one of ordinary skill in the art in view of the drawings, specification and claims hereof. Moreover, it should be noted that the language used in the specification has been principally selected for readability and instructional purposes, and may not have been selected to delineate or circumscribe the inventive subject matter, resort to the claims being necessary to determine such inventive subject matter. For example, the specification uses the terms transducer, converter, and piezoelectric crystals to refer to devices that generates ultrasonic vibrations in response to an electrical driving signal. Also, the term resonant frequency includes a fundamental harmonic frequency of a transducer or piezoelectric crystal, and also includes higher order harmonics.
The drawings depict various preferred embodiments of the present invention for purposes of illustration only. One skilled in the art will readily recognize from the following discussion that alternative embodiments of the structures and methods illustrated herein may be employed without departing from the principles of the invention described herein.
A first aspect of the present invention, illustrated in
One arrangement of transducers is shown in
Another arrangement of transducers is shown in
A third arrangement of transducers is shown in
Another arrangement of three types of transducers 14, 16, and 20 is shown in
The different operating or resonant frequencies of the transducers are preferably selected so that the lowest frequency does not damage the parts being cleaned and the higher or highest frequency optimally removes smaller particulates or rinses off debris loosened by the lower frequency. It is preferred that all transducers of each type are powered by a separate generator 17 or 19 (
A second aspect of the present invention includes multiple rod transducers (push-pull or single-push types) having ultrasonic converters mounted on one or both ends.
The rod transducers 26 and 28, also known as push-pulls or single-push transducers, have ultrasonic converters 30 and 32 mounted in end caps on one or both ends. Two or more rod transducers, each with a different resonant frequency, are used to create a superior cleaning or liquid processing process. Alternatively, two or more frequencies are provided by the same transducer rod by intermittently or simultaneously switching the frequencies of the driving signals.
Another way to obtain multiple frequencies using one push-pull transducer is to drive one converter at one end at one frequency and the other converter at the other end at a different frequency. Preferably, the rods used in the rod transducers are sized so that they resonate at the desired multiple frequencies. For example, if the half wavelength of one frequency is five inches and the half wavelength of the other frequency is seven inches, then a rod of thirty-five inches will resonate at both frequencies. Another way to obtain multiple frequencies from one push-pull transducer is to set one frequency to be an integer multiple of the other frequency.
Multiple frequencies may also be obtained by a single-push rod transducer by sizing the rod transducer for multiple resonant frequencies, and using an alternating driving signal that alternates between the two frequencies.
A third aspect of the present invention involves sweeping the driving signal applied to the transducers throughout a range of frequencies. This aspect of the invention can be applied to multiple piezoelectric (PZT) crystals within a single transducer or to multiple transducers used in the same system. In either case, either the piezoelectric crystals or transducers are selected to have different resonant frequencies that are different by at least a minimum amount.
For example, assume that the sweep frequency range is 39 to 41 KHz, and that the minimum differential is 0.5 KHz centered in the range. That means that each pair of transducers or piezoelectric crystals has one with a resonant frequency of between 39 and 39.75 KHz and another with a resonant frequency of between 40.25 and 41 KHz. None of the transducers or piezoelectric crystals in this example have a resonant frequency in the excluded subrange of 39.75 to 40.25 KHz.
This aspect of the invention is illustrated in
According to this third aspect of the invention, the piezoelectric crystals or transducers are manufactured with the desired differential and only those piezoelectric crystals or transducers that meet the predetermined criteria are used. The resonant frequencies may be determined by testing the transducers or piezoelectric crystals and selecting them according to the test results.
This aspect of the invention applies to an ultrasonic cleaning or liquid processing process wherein the predetermined resonant frequency differential (excluded subrange) and the sweep frequency range are selected according to the application. This aspect of the invention may also be applied to metal welding, plastic joining, wire bonding and/or other medical or manufacturing processes using ultrasonics. Furthermore, this aspect of the invention may be used with an equilateral arrangement of stacked transducers of different frequencies or with push-pull or single-push transducers of different frequencies, as described above.
From the above description, it will be apparent that the invention disclosed herein provides a novel and advantageous ultrasonic processing apparatus and method using multiple transducers of at different frequencies to supply ultrasonic energy to a liquid filled tank containing components to be cleaned or processed ultrasonically. The foregoing discussion discloses and describes merely exemplary methods and embodiments of the present invention. As will be understood by those familiar with the art, the invention may be embodied in other specific forms without departing from the spirit or essential characteristics thereof. Accordingly, the disclosure of the present invention is intended to be illustrative, but not limiting, of the scope of the invention, which is set forth in the following claims.
This application claims priority from U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/517,501, filed Nov. 5, 2003, entitled ULTRASONIC PROCESSING METHOD AND APPARATUS WITH MULTIPLE FREQUENCY TRANSDUCERS, invented by J. Michael Goodson and Sebastian K. Thottathel. This provisional application is expressly incorporated herein by reference.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20050122003 A1 | Jun 2005 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60517501 | Nov 2003 | US |