The present invention relates to an ultrasonic welding system and more particularly to an ultrasonic welding system utilizing a servo press.
Ultrasonic welding systems which attach like-material workpieces together are generally known, as exemplified in U.S. Pat. No. 6,588,646, issued Jul. 8, 2003 and incorporated herein in it's entirety. Ultrasonic welders utilize ultrasonic energy to join, for instance, plastic to plastic or nonferrous metal to nonferrous metal. Ultrasonic welding is not actually “welding” in the sense that there is no application of heat as is used in conventional welding, wherein metals are heated to the point of melting into each other. In the case of ultrasonic welding, the like-material workpieces are placed between a movable tip and a stationary anvil of the welder. A mechanical vibration is transmitted to the tip that is then applied to the workpieces.
The frequency and the amplitude of the vibration cause the generally like-material workpieces to mutually gall at their contact surfaces. This galling results in contaminants, such as for example surface oxidation, to be displaced. The galling further causes the contact surfaces to be polished. As galling continues, the contact surfaces become intimate, whereupon atomic and molecular bonding occurs therebetween, thereby bonding the like-materials together with a weld-like efficacy (ergo, the term “ultrasonic welding”).
A number of considerations determine the efficacy of the workpiece-to-workpiece surface bond, the major considerations being the amplitude of the vibration at the tip, the applied force at the tip and the time of the actual welding application. Typically, these variables are predetermined to achieve the most efficacious bond based upon the materials and the particular application. The accuracy of the weld time and applied force is generally dependent upon the ability to control tip movement. Known ultrasonic welders utilize pneumatic air cylinders to move the tip toward and away from the workpieces. Unfortunately, air cylinder speed does not change during the welding cycle. A compromise must be made to find the speed to approach the weld area as fast as possible without damaging the weld area from the tip impact. Moreover, known systems are depended on timing to approximate the time the air cylinder impacted the workpieces to be welded and thereby initiating a weld cycle. This approximation also leads to inconsistencies in welding. An approximation too early can produce an under-welded part. An approximation too late can produce a stall effect of known ultrasonic horns of the welder. The smaller the workpieces (i.e. stranded electrical wire of twenty gage or greater), the greater is the negative effects of these variables upon the quality of the completed weld.
The present invention is an ultrasonic welding system having an ultrasonic welder integrated with a servo press for galling and ultrasonic welding of a first workpiece to a second workpiece. The first and second workpieces are substantially disposed between a confronting tip and stationary anvil of the ultrasonic welder. Prior to welding, the servo press preferably quickly moves the tip toward and generally against the first workpiece. During welding, a variable speed motor of the servo press preferably slowly moves the tip toward the anvil compressing the workpieces together while a transducer of the ultrasonic welder transmits mechanical vibration to the tip for welding the workpieces together.
Preferably, prior to welding a programmable logic controller outputs an initiation and high speed signal to a motion controller of the ultrasonic welder. The motion controller then sends a torque limiting signal to a servo motor of the press for operating the motor and quickly staging the tip against the first workpiece. Position sensors of the press send signals to the motion controller for indication of tip placement. The position of the tip is inputted into the logic controller. When the tip is properly staged, the logic controller sends a weld initiation signal to a weld controller of the ultrasonic controller which sends a weld force analog signal to the motion controller. Simultaneously, the logic controller sends a slow speed signal to the motion controller for slow compression of the workpieces during welding.
Advantages of the present invention include a highly versatile ultrasonic welding system capable of approaching a weld article within millimeters at high acceleration and speed without contacting the article. Once within a small distance, the servo motor can contact the weld article with little impact and initiate welding at more precise timing. Other advantages include a more robust system that increases quality control with improved and more consistent ultrasonic welds.
The presently preferred embodiments of the invention are disclosed in the following description and in the accompanied drawings, wherein:
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Preferably, an ultrasonic welder 38 of the ultrasonic welding system 20 is an “Ultraweld 40” ultrasonic welder of AMTECH (American Technology, Inc.) of Milford, Conn. This class of commercially available ultrasonic welders include: a solid state power supply that is user adjusted via a weld controller 40, a transducer 42 where electrical energy of the power supply is converted into mechanical vibration and an amplitude booster 44 where the mechanical vibrations of the transducer are amplified, and an output tool in the form of a horn 46 that tunes the vibrations to a tip 82 generally designed for a particular application. The ultrasonic welder 38 is combined or integrated with a servo press 50 to generally comprise the ultrasonic welding system 20.
A sub-frame 52 of the ultrasonic welder 38 supports the transducer, booster horn and tip and is preferably attached rigidly to a plate portion 54 of a moving shuttle 56 of the servo press 50. The shuttle 56 preferably moves substantially vertically with respect to a stationary and substantially vertical track or frame 58 which carries two journals 60, 62 for rotational support of a worm gear or male threaded ballscrew drive 64 linked to a female threaded portion 66 of the shuttle 56 and mechanically attached to the servo motor 68 for rotation (as best shown in
A number of factors collectively determine the efficacy of the ultrasonic metal-to-metal surface bond, the major considerations being the amplitude of the vibration, the applied force and the time of application. The applied power (P) is defined by the amplitude (X) of vibration times the force (F) applied normal to the metal surfaces (P=FX), and the applied energy (E) is defined by the applied power (P) times the time (T) of application (E=PT). These variables are predetermined to achieve the most efficacious bond based upon the metals of the conductor core 28 of the wire 22 and terminal 24.
Prior to operation of the ultrasonic welding system 20, these operating values (i.e. amplitude, force and energy) must be entered into a logic controller 70 or the weld controller 40. The values are pre-established from empirical data previously taken which are further dependent upon many factors. These factors include but are not limited to: wire or core 28 gauge thickness, insulation jacket 26 thickness, terminal thickness 24, and the types of material applied. Other parameters controlled or monitored via the weld controller 40 include energy 72, force 74 or trigger pressure used during pre-height measurement 78, pressure 76, amplitude 80, time 81, power 83 and final height 85. Preferably, the operator enters energy 72 as opposed to time 81 or height 85 because empirical data has shown that better control of final product quality is achieved. Welding to height or time is less sensitive to the condition of the terminal 24 and insulated wire 22. For instance, a wire 22 with a missing strand of the conductive core 28 welded to a given height 85 does not provide the same weld quality as when all strands are present.
Trigger pressure 76 is used to compact the wire 22 on the terminal 24 for the purpose of measuring the pre-height 78 before welding for monitoring purposes. If this height does not fit a pre-established height range, a warning indication assumes, for example, that the wrong size wire 22 is being used, the wire is missing, or the terminal 24 is mis-positioned, and thus provides a warning indication. The trigger pressure should be set within about ten pounds per square inch of the final weld pressure. If the pre-height is within the pre-established range the ultrasonic welding system 20 will begin the weld process. For a typical weld, the process will take about 0.5 seconds for the illustrated example.
In regards to weld pressure, the actual pressure required to produce a good weld is derived in conjunction with inputted energy 72 and amplitude 80. The pressure that is ultimately set on the weld controller 40 is applied to the servo press 50 of the system 20 that will provide the clamping force of a welding tip 82 generally engaged to a distal end of the horn 46 on the wire 22 and terminal 24 combination. Knowing the torque applied by the electric servo motor 68 of the press 50 that exerts force between the tip 82 and an area 84 to be ultrasonically welded, and by calculation, a pound per square inch force on the actual welded area 84 can be calculated.
The amplitude 80 is preferably read in microns and moves generally co-planar to the terminal 24 and wire 22. Electrical energy is applied to the transducer or converter 42 of the welder 38 where a crystal like material is excited at its natural frequency. A typical frequency is about forty kilohertz. The minute vibrations are transferred through the acoustically designed tuned booster 44 and transferred along to the horn 46. The greater the voltage applied to the converter, the greater the amplitude.
During operation of the ultrasonic welding system 20, the wire 22 and the terminal 24, which is pre-crimped to the insulation jacket 26, are together placed between the tip 82 and a generally stationary anvil 86 of the ultrasonic welding system 20. The tip 82 projects and presses generally downward upon the insulating jacket 26 of the wire 22. The anvil 86 of the ultrasonic welding system 20 projects upward to directly contact a substantially planar bottom surface 88 of the terminal 24.
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The logic controller 70 outputs a weld initiation signal 104 to the weld controller 40 which sends an analog signal 106 of pre-weld and weld forces to the motion controller 94. Generally simultaneously, the logic controller 70 outputs a slow speed signal 108 to the motion controller 94 and the solid state power supply activates the transducer/booster, whereupon mechanical vibration arrives via the horn 46 to the slowly downward moving tip 82. The insulation jacket 26 thus vibrates with the work surface 96 of the tip 82 relative to the wire 22. With continued vibration, the insulation jacket 26 heats and melts, thus flowing away from the area 84 directly between the work surface 96 of the tip 82 and the top surface 98 of the terminal 24 as the tip vibrates and continues to be forced toward the anvil 86, as best shown in
Although the tip 82 and the anvil 86 have mutually facing or confronting work surfaces, only the anvil work surface 100 is preferably knurled to grip the bottom surface 88 of the terminal 24 as the tip 82 is forced toward the anvil 86. The tip work surface 96 is substantially smooth to reduce the time necessary to displace the insulation jacket 26. The frequency may be fixed at twenty kHz, at forty kHz or at another frequency, or the frequency may be other than fixed. In any event, the pre-established frequency shall be such that a resonance frequency is not produced within the terminal 24 which could potentially damage or crack portions of the terminal including the tuning-fork shaped prongs 110.
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The methodology according to the present invention has great utility for the handling of small gauge wires 22, ranging at about twenty-six gauge. Small gauge wires are frequently very difficult to strip without injuring the wire 22. This is especially true for wires having a stranded conductor or core 28. Consequently, ultrasonic welding of high gauge or small wires is costly and difficult. However, the method according to the present invention does not require pre-stripping of wires, so that now small diameter wires, including thin and ultra-thin wires ranging in insulator thickness from 0.4 to 0.2 millimeters, can be economically attached to the terminals 24.
Moreover, the utilization of ultrasonic welding technology allows for the assembly of wire harnesses having wire diameters smaller than twenty-two gauge and ranging at about twenty-six gauge. This results in reduced wire harness bundle size, reduced mass, reduced cost, and further eliminates wire stripping and the potential of strand breakage or cuts that stripping produces. Also, connection to ultra-thin wall wire or cable is now possible.
The welder 38 has a series of quality control features which monitor the welding process. These monitoring features are generally adjustable, thus capable of controlling the number of rejected or non-conforming parts. The first monitoring feature is a time feature which monitors the actual time that ultrasonic energy is running. The feature time is not the full cycle time but is the actual weld time. This time is a good indication of the nonferrous material quality and cleanliness. If the weld time exceeds a pre-established duration, it is a likely indication that contaminates exists. Oxides, or other contaminants are inherently slippery and do not allow the proper metal-to-metal friction necessary to produce the weld 84.
A second quality control feature is that of power which is similar to time because work done on the weld 84 is equal to power times time. Therefore, a weld that draws minimal power binds nonferrous metals that are more likely to contain higher levels of contaminants.
Aside from the pre-height feature 78 previously discussed, a final height quality control feature measures the final height 85 of the weld 84. Under typical welding scenario for a single wire 22, the variation in the final height 85 should be about 0.1 millimeters. If the final weld height 85 falls above this range, it is a warning indication of under welding most likely due to excess contamination. If the final weld height falls under this range, it is a warning indication that wire strands 28 have escaped or have not been captured within the weld area 84 and thus not included in the height reading.
While the forms of the invention herein disclosed constitute presently preferred embodiments, many others are possible. For instance, the ultrasonic welding system can be utilized for other applications such as bonding plastic parts such as fasteners together, or bonding various fabrics to name but a few applications. It is not limited herein to mention all the possible equivalent forms or ramifications of the invention. It is understood that the terms used herein are merely descriptive rather than limiting and that various changes may be made without departing from the spirit or scope of the invention.