The invention relates to an ultrasonic standing-wave atomizer arrangement for producing a paint spray mist for painting a workpiece, with a sonotrode, with a component arranged lying opposite the sonotrode, a standing ultrasonic field being formed in the intermediate space between the sonotrode and the component in the case of operation, and with a paint-feeding device, by means of which paint can be fed into the vicinity of a maximum of the sound particle velocity of the ultrasonic field.
For painting workpieces, in particular in mass painting as frequently encountered in the automobile industry, at present the generally known high-rotation atomizers are preferably used. In the case of high-rotation atomization, the paint is passed through the interior of a metal bell and in this way reaches the front side of the latter, facing the workpiece. The metal bell is usually driven by a compressed-air turbine and rotates at up to 80 000 revolutions per minute. The centrifugal forces acting in this case then cause the paint to reach the front-side edge of the bell, to break away there in fine droplets. This achieves the effect that the droplet size of the paint spray mist required for adequate quality of a coat of paint lies in the range from 10 μm to 60 μm.
Considerations of the fundamentals which have become generally known indicate that, in principle, paint can also be atomized by means of ultrasonic standing-wave atomization. Following these considerations of the principles concerned, however, average droplet sizes during atomization of between 100 μm. and 200 μm. have been measured, with some instances of still larger drops occurring. However, large drops of this kind adversely influence the quality of the coat of paint in such a way as to make use in painting technology unattractive.
It has been proposed how an ultrasonic standing-wave atomizer arrangement for producing a paint spray mist for painting a workpiece can be designed to achieve smaller droplet sizes. For example, specific designs of the sonotrode and of the component, shut-off elements or multi-piece rings, which improve the quality of the paint spray mist produced and consequently allow comparatively small droplet sizes to be achieved, have become known. A disadvantage is that only comparatively low delivery rates of paint can be atomized by the arrangement that has become known.
On the basis of this prior art, it is the object of the invention to provide an ultrasonic standing-wave atomizer arrangement for producing a paint spray mist with which it is possible to increase the atomized amount of paint, that is the rate of paint, and at the same time to maintain a selected range of droplet sizes occurring.
This object is achieved by the ultrasonic standing-wave atomizer arrangement according to the invention for producing a paint spray mist for painting a workpiece with the features specifed in Claim 1.
The ultrasonic standing-wave atomizer arrangement according to the invention, of the type stated at the beginning, accordingly has a paint-feeding device, which has in the region of the standing ultrasonic field at least two pieces of pipe for discharging paint. Moreover, at least two of the pieces of pipe are arranged in the region of a selected maximum of the sound particle velocity of the standing ultrasonic field. According to the invention, it is therefore provided that a selected maximum of the sound particle velocity of a standing ultrasonic wave is used for the purpose of atomizing a comparatively large amount of paint into paint droplets. This is so because it has been found that, in particular in the case of ultrasonic standing-wave atomizer arrangements of a simple construction, a selected maximum of the sound particle velocity is often particularly well formed in the standing ultrasonic field, for example in the case of standing ultrasonic fields with an uneven number of sound particle velocity antinodes, the middle sound particle velocity antinode. That is to say that this maximum is particularly stable, with a comparatively high sound particle velocity. These particularly good atomizing properties of the selected maximum are used according to the invention for increasing the amount of paint to be atomized or the flow of paint through the paint-feeding device and it is provided that at least two pieces of pipe for discharging paint are arranged in the region of the selected maximum. Consequently, the amount of paint to be atomized can be increased in an advantageous way. An advantageous design of the ultrasonic standing-wave atomizer arrangement according to the invention is achieved if the component is a further sonotrode. In this way, the atomizing capability of the standing ultrasonic field can be increased. Moreover, a more stable ultrasonic field can be formed in this way.
A further advantageous refinement of the subject-matter of the invention provides that the distance between the pieces of pipe in the region of the selected maximum is so great that sheets of paint that are separate from one another are formed for each piece of pipe. For technical vibration-related reasons, a sheet of paint is respectively formed in any case on the pieces of pipe, extending from the paint outlet point. If the distance between the pieces of pipe has been chosen to be great enough that the sheets of paint can form separately from one another without influencing one another, the region in which droplets of different sheets of paint collide and in this way can recombine to form larger droplets is avoided in any case. The quality of the paint spray mist is improved with the proposed arrangement.
It is particularly advantageous if the paint outlet openings of the at least two pieces of pipe in the region of the selected maximum of the sound particle velocity of a standing ultrasonic wave are arranged on a straight line, and if the straight line is perpendicular to an imaginary centre line which passes through the centroids of the opposing sound faces of the sonotrode and of the component. In the case of an arrangement of this type, the distance between the paint outlet points on the pieces of pipe and the sonotrode or the component are respectively of approximately the same size. A particularly advantageous position, seen in the X direction, is achieved in the region of the maximum of the sound particle velocity.
The advantage mentioned above may also be achieved if three pieces of pipe are arranged in the region of a selected maximum of the sound particle velocity of a standing ultrasonic wave, and if these pieces of pipe or their paint outlet openings are arranged in a triangle. An arrangement in an equilateral triangle is particularly favourable. It is a further improvement if that area which is determined by the triangle is perpendicular to an imaginary centre line which passes through the centroids of the opposing sound faces of the sonotrode and of the component. In this case, too, the effect is in turn achieved that, seen in the X direction, the paint outlet openings are situated in the region of the maximum of the sound particle velocity.
It has also been found that the atomizing operation or the atomizing rate can be improved by choosing the specific maximum such that it is closer to the sonotrode than to the component. There is then the possibility of the so-called capillary wave turbulence effect, that is to say the effect which keeps the paint droplets away from the sonotrode as a result of the vibrations of the latter and in this way assists the atomization process.
Further advantageous refinements of the subject-matter of the invention can be taken from the dependent claims.
The invention, its advantages and further improvements of the invention are explained and described in more detail on the basis of the example embodiments specified in the drawings, in which:
A first sonotrode 12 is arranged lying opposite a first reflection body 14. In this figure, the sonotrode 12 is schematically represented by a cylindrical basic body 16 and a sound body 18, which protrudes from the end face of the cylindrical basic body 16 facing towards the reflection body 14. The sound body 18 and the basic body 16 have an approximately cylindrical form. The opposing end faces of the sound body 18 and of the first reflection body 14 are to be referred to as the first sound face 20 for the end face on the sound body 18 and as the second sound face 22 for the end face on the reflection body 14. The first sound face 20 and the second sound face 22 are concavely formed, that is to say their form corresponds approximately to a portion of the surface of an imaginary hollow sphere. To illustrate this form, a first dotted line 24 and a second dotted line 26 have been drawn on the first sound face 20. The point of intersection between the first line 24 and the second line 26 lies exactly centrally on the first sound face 20. Lines corresponding to the first line 24 and the second line 26 are also shown on the second sound face 22, without however being provided more specifically with reference numerals. Also shown through the point of intersection of the first line 24 with the second line 26 and also the corresponding lines of the second sound face 22 is a centre axis 28, which runs exactly in the direction of the X coordinate.
Shown in the intermediate space between the first sound face 20 and the second sound face 22 is a first piece of pipe 30, a second piece of pipe 31 and a third piece of pipe 32, the free ends of which are arranged exactly midway between the sound faces 20, 22. That is to say that the pieces of pipe 30, 31, 32 are arranged next to one another, the free ends all lying in one plane, which is defined by the centre axis 28 and the second line 26. Moreover, all the free ends can be joined by an imaginary straight line. The longitudinal axes of the pieces of pipe 30, 31, 32 are arranged parallel to the Y direction and are connected by their ends remote from the ends to a paint-feeding device 29 (not represented any more specifically in this figure), which provides the required amount of paint to be atomized by the first ultrasonic standing-wave atomizer arrangement 10. However, the idea of the invention also includes the option of each of the pieces of pipe 30, 31, 32 being respectively connected to a separate paint-feeding device 29. This is in any event also to be intended by the paint-feeding device 29 described here.
The other end of the pieces of pipe 30, 31, 32 therefore ends as it were in “free space”, without which the connection to the paint-feeding device 29 would be represented.
To allow better illustration of the processes taking place in the standing ultrasonic field between the first sound face 20 and the second sound face 22, the profiles of five sound particle velocity antinodes of the standing ultrasonic wave have been shown in the intermediate space, the profiles being represented about the centre axis 28, to be precise in the plane defined by the X direction and Y direction. In the example chosen, a first distance 34 between the first sound face 20 and the pieces of pipe 30, 31, 32 and a second distance 36 between the pieces of pipe 30, 31, 32 and the second sound face 22 are of the same size. It is consequently clear that the free ends concerned of the pieces of pipe 30, 31, 32 are also situated at only one maximum of the sound particle velocity, that is to say in the middle one of the five sound particle velocity antinodes. In the design of the first ultrasonic standing-wave atomizer arrangement 10 that has been chosen for this arrangement, a first distance 34 and a second distance 36 of 17 mm are obtained for an ultrasonic frequency of 24 kHz and five sound particle velocity antinodes. That is to say that adequate space is available for cleaning or directing air which is possibly used for assisting the atomization process or for directing the particles of paint. With such an arrangement of three pieces of pipe 30, 31, 32 in only one sound particle velocity antinode, that is in the region of a maximum of sound particle velocity, the advantageous effect is therefore achieved that particularly high rates of paint, in particular rates of paint of more than 200 ml/min, are readily achievable. Moreover, it is ensured that the distribution of the diameters of the drops of atomized paint remain in an acceptable range. The atomizing operation is only symbolically represented in this figure at the respective free ends of the pieces of pipe 30, 31, 32, in that many small paint particles are indicated around an exaggerated atomization bubble.
In addition, the representation of the pieces of pipe 30, 31, 32 and the atomization bubbles indicated with the atomized paint particles show that the distance between the pieces of pipe 30, 31, 32 is chosen such that atomizing regions that respectively operate independently of one another form at the free ends of the pieces of pipe 30, 31, 32, that is to say that sheets of paint that are separate from one another are formed for each piece of pipe 30, 31, 32. This has the advantage that the regions in which the discharged paint is atomized into particles do not disturb one another. Consequently, the atomizing operation is improved and a comparatively high atomizing rate is achieved.
A major difference between the arrangement in this figure and that in
In this case, it proves to be an advantage if the imaginary centre axis of the cylindrical body runs parallel to that line 62 which runs through the paint outlet openings of the first small paint pipes 52. The projections 64 of the centre axis of the imaginary cylinder on the third sound face 56 and on the fourth sound face 58 are drawn as dotted lines. Such an arrangement achieves the effect that the maximum of the sound particle velocity in the stationary ultrasonic field is as wide as possible, that is to say it has an extent which is as great as possible in the direction of the line 62, which coincides here with the Z direction.
A fifth ultrasonic standing-wave atomizer arrangement 70 is shown in
Finally,
In none of the arrangements given above as examples was it shown in detail which further measures can act favourably on the atomization or on the painting process as such. For example, cleaning air can be used in the generally known way for substantially avoiding adherence of atomized paint to the sonotrode or to the reflection body. In addition, directing air can be used to make the atomized paint particles preferably fly in the desired direction of painting. The process of directed painting can also be assisted by the paint particles being electrostatically charged. This charging may be achieved internally, in the generally known way, that is to say with paint that is at a high-voltage potential being fed in, or by what is known as external charging, which usually charges the atomized paint through needles which carry a high voltage and are arranged in the vicinity of the atomizing location. The workpiece to be painted is then usually connected to earth potential, so that the electrically charged paint particles preferably fly towards the workpiece. A combination of internal and external charging is also quite possible.
Otherwise, it is quite conceivable that the reflection body is a further sonotrode, with the particular advantage that the standing ultrasonic field can be formed particularly strongly. Moreover, such a measure improves the controllability of the ultrasonic field.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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102 52 437.8 | Nov 2002 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP03/11967 | 10/29/2003 | WO | 3/3/2005 |