Vacuum molding roll sleeves are used in applications where it is desired to draw a material into close contact with a molding surface. Such tools facilitate removal of air trapped between the material and the molding surface by providing vacuum channels that open at the molding surface. Often, design of vacuum molding roll sleeves is complex, time consuming, and expensive. For example the fabrication of a single tool may take several months and cost hundreds of thousands of dollars.
The present disclosure provides vacuum molding roll sleeves can be made using rapid prototyping design and fabrication methods wherein design time can be reduced (e.g., from months to weeks) and fabrication cost may be lowered many-fold. Accordingly, it is possible to quickly design and fabricate vacuum molding roll sleeve designs that would be difficult or impossible to make using other fabrication methods. Should adjustments be desired, they are relatively easier to design and fabricate based an original design template. The vacuum molding roll sleeves are useful in processes such as, for example, continuous cast extrusion forming and continuous thermoforming, Vacuum molding roll sleeves according to the present disclosure can be fabricated in monolithic forms or in modular forms having multiple components that assemble together to form a vacuum roll. In some embodiments, modular framing can allow for quick changes of one or more vacuum molding roll sleeve sections during a short pause in a manufacturing run.
In one aspect, the present disclosure provides a vacuum molding roll sleeve comprising:
In another aspect, the present disclosure provides a method of making the vacuum molding roll sleeve according to the present disclosure, the method comprising using an additive manufacturing technique to generate the vacuum molding roll sleeve according to a predetermined design.
In yet another aspect, the present disclosure provides a method of using the vacuum molding roll sleeve according to the present disclosure, the method comprising introducing a molten thermoplastic polymer onto the molding surface of the vacuum molding roll sleeve while applying vacuum to the at least one vacuum surface; and separating a molded article from the molding surface under conditions such that the molded article has a shaped surface that is a substantial inverse of at least a portion of the molding surface.
In yet another aspect, the present disclosure provides a method of using the vacuum molding roll sleeve according to the present disclosure, the method comprising contacting a thermoplastic polymer film with the molding surface of the vacuum molding roll sleeve while applying vacuum to the at least one vacuum surface; and separating a molded film from the molding surface under conditions such that the molded film has a shaped surface that is a substantial inverse of at least a portion of the molding surface.
As used herein:
Features and advantages of the present disclosure will be further understood upon consideration of the detailed description as well as the appended claims.
Repeated use of reference characters in the specification and drawings is intended to represent the same or analogous features or elements of the disclosure. It should be understood that numerous other modifications and embodiments can be devised by those skilled in the art, which fall within the scope and spirit of the principles of the disclosure. The figures may not be drawn to scale.
Referring now to
Vacuum surfaces 130 have second openings 132 disposed therein at second predetermined positions 134. First openings 112 are fluidly connected to second openings 132 by conduits 140. Vacuum molding roll sleeve 100 is configured such that at least partial vacuum can be applied to the first openings 112 through respective conduits 140 fluidly connected thereto.
Referring now to
The vacuum molding roll sleeve is mountable on a backup roll which can be used in a vacuum molding process such as, for example, the vacuum extrusion molding process shown in
In either process the vacuum molding roll sleeve 700 is mounted on rotatable backup roll 737. Backup roll 737 may be expandable (e.g., a hydraulic pressurized backup roll) in order to ensure a snug frictional engagement between the vacuum molding roll sleeve and the backup roll. Other methods for securing the vacuum molding roll sleeve to the backup roll may be used (e.g., mechanical interlocking ridges/slots that securely engage corresponding structures on the backup roll, mechanical fasteners, or adhesive). In use, driving the backup roll causes the vacuum molding roll sleeve to rotate around a common axis. During use, an external vacuum source may be applied to the vacuum ports, thereby evacuating the vacuum manifold in order to facilitate contact between molten or softened polymer and the molding surface.
In
The polymer may be cooled by at least one of cooling the backup roll or blowing air against the molded polymer, for example. As the polymer cools, it becomes dimensionally stable, and eventually passes by hollow pressure shoe 724. Hollow pressure shoe 724 operates in the same manner as hollow vacuum shoe 722, except that positive gas (e.g., air) pressure is applied to pressure port 769 to facilitate separating the now molded polymer film 779 from the molding surface 710 by urging the gas through fluidly connected conduits (not shown) and out associated first openings (not shown).
Referring now to
Referring again to
Referring now to
Vacuum molding roll sleeve 800 is configured such that at least partial vacuum can be applied to the first openings 812 through respective conduits 840 fluidly connected thereto and thereby also to vacuum manifolds 856 that are in fluid communication with vacuum inlet ports 814.
Regardless of the embodiment selected, the first and second openings may have any size and or shape (e.g., round, oval, square, triangular, rectangular, or trilobate). Typically, they are of sufficient cross-sectional area that the vacuum draw is sufficiently large to cause softened or molten polymer adjacent to the first openings into intimate contact with the molding surface; however, this is not a requirement. Preferably, they are sufficiently small that softened or molten polymer does not appreciably enter their respective associated conduits under intended process conditions.
Likewise, the first openings are typically arranged according to a predetermined pattern wherein most or all of the depressed features have one or more first openings disposed therein, preferably including at their most depressed locations. Additional first openings disposed at other locations on the molding surface may assist with retaining the molded article in contact with the molding surface (e.g., while cooling) until it is desired to separate it from the molding surface, thereby retaining its molded shape.
Conduits may connect the first and second openings on a one-to-one basis, a one-to many (i.e., at least two) basis, a many-to-one basis, or any combination thereof. A one-to-one relationship of a first and second opening with a respective conduit is common. Conduits may have any internal architecture as long as they terminate at, and fluidly connect, at least one first opening to at least one second opening. For example, conduits may be radially oriented, slanted (i.e., at an angle to a radial orientation), straight, arcuate, convolute, unbranched, branched, or a combination thereof.
At least 20 percent, at least 30 percent, at least 40 percent, at least 50 percent, or even at least 60 percent of the conduits may be longer than the minimum thickness of the mold wall portion at their respective first openings, although this is not a requirement. Relative to distance from the at least one vacuum surface, the molding surface comprises a plurality of local maxima, and local minima. In some embodiments, at least a majority of the local minima have one of the first openings disposed proximate thereto; however, this is not a requirement.
The vacuum molding roll sleeves described herein can be used to form a wide array of shapes and devices in a molded film. One exemplary device that can be formed using the vacuum molding roll sleeve and methods of using it is an exhalation airflow sample collection device of the type generally described in any of U.S. Patent Application No. 63/199,226 filed on 15 Dec. 2020; 63/200,058 filed on 12 Feb. 2021; 63/227,498 filed on 30 Jul. 2021; 63/200,901 filed on 2 Apr. 2021; 63/227,519 filed on 30 Jul. 2021; 63/273,300 filed on 29 Oct. 2021; 63/202,140 filed on 28 May 2021; 63/227,534 filed on 30 Jul. 2021; 63/200,958 filed on 6 Apr. 2021; 63/203,831 filed on 2 Aug. 2021; 63/201,981 filed on 21 May 2021; 63/202,143 filed on 28 May 2021; 63/227,608 filed on 30 Jul. 2021; 63/201,983 filed on 21 May 2021; 63/227,529 filed on 30 Jul. 2021; 63/260,828 filed on 1 Sep. 2021; 63/203,441 filed on 22 Jul. 2021; 63/203,442 filed on 22 Jul. 2021; 63/306,273 filed on 3 Feb. 2022; 63/136,723 filed on 13 Jan. 2021; 63/148,195 filed on 11 Feb. 2021; 63/222,745 filed on 16 Jul. 2021; 63/224,242 filed on 21 Jul. 2021; 63/237,909 filed on 27 Aug. 2021; 63/255,363 filed on 13 Oct. 2021; 63/283,075 filed on 24 Nov. 2021; 63/287,911 filed on 9 Dec. 2021; 63/142,874 filed on 28 Jan. 2021; 63/158,153 filed on 8 Mar. 2021; 63/051,116 filed on 13 Jul. 2020, now published as WO2022015765 A3; 63/029974 filed on 26 May 2020, now published as WO2021242907 A1, the entirety of each of which is hereby incorporated by reference herein. Sample collection devices of this type generally include a porous sample collection media disposed within a device housing and along an airflow channel defined by the device housing. The user may exhale into the sample collection device and load the porous sample collection media with a sample of the exhalation airflow to form a loaded porous sample collection media. In some embodiments, a fluid is passed through the porous sample collection media (e.g., metered dose of fluid) and carries away pathogen or virus that may be bound to the porous sample collection media. The fluid may then be analyzed.
In some embodiments, the housing includes a first part and a second part that cooperate to define an airflow path. In some embodiments, the first and second parts of the housing are removably coupled with one another. In an alternative embodiment, the first and second parts are permanently coupled with one another such that the parts cannot be separated without breaking or deforming. The first and second parts may be coupled with any suitable mechanism. For example, the first and second parts may be coupled by bayonet coupling, interference fit, snap fit, or threaded coupling. In one embodiment, the first and second parts are coupled by bayonet coupling. When configured for bayonet coupling, the first part may include one or more protrusions and the second part may include one or more corresponding grooves constructed to receive and guide the one or more protrusions. Alternatively, the one or more protrusions may be on the second part and the one or more grooves may be on the first part.
The first piece has a proximal end and an opposite distal end. The proximal end may form a mouthpiece. The second piece has a proximal end and an opposing distal end. The first and second pieces are capable of coupling with one another.
According to an exemplary embodiment, the housing has a longitudinal center axis. The airflow channel extends through both the first and the second part. The airflow channel may extend along the longitudinal center axis. One or both of the first and second parts may include a tubular, quadrilateral, rectangular, or cylindrical body. When the first and second parts are coupled, the tubular, quadrilateral, rectangular, or cylindrical bodies may be coaxial.
In some embodiments, one of the first or second piece may also include any suitable mechanism for coupling with a sample collection tube. For example, the one of the ends of the first or second pieces may by constructed for bayonet coupling, interference fit, snap fit, or threaded coupling. Many commercially available sample collection tubes or test tubes have a threaded top for attaching a cap. The tube coupling end of the second part may be constructed to couple with the threads of the sample collection tube. The tube coupling end of the second part may include internal threading configured to couple with the external threading of the sample collection tube. The tube coupling end of the second part may include two or more different threads having different configurations (e.g., size, spacing of threads, or angle of threads) to provide attachment for different types or sizes of the sample collection tubes. In some embodiments, the tube coupling end of the second part is configured for an interference fit with a sample collection tube. To facilitate an interference fit, the tube coupling end may include a protrusion sized to be received inside a sample collection tube.
One exemplary implementation is shown in
Vacuum molding roll sleeves can be made by any suitable technique. In many instances an additive manufacturing (AM) technique is preferred and/or necessary. In such cases, the body of the vacuum molding roll sleeve is often unitary, although this is not a requirement.
In typical additive manufacturing, objects are fabricated by sequentially depositing a material layer-upon-layer. The material may comprise an organic polymer (e.g., a crosslinked polymer or a thermoplastic), metal, or ceramic, for example.
Common to additive manufacturing technologies is the use of a computer, three-dimensional (3D) modeling software (also known as Computer Aided Design (CAD)), machine equipment and a layering material. Once a CAD sketch is produced, the AM equipment reads in data from the CAD file and lays downs or adds successive layers of liquid, powder, sheet material or other, in a layer-upon-layer fashion to fabricate a 3D object. Techniques of additive manufacturing include, for example, vat photopolymerization, material extrusion, powder bed fusion, material jet printing, binder jet printing, directed energy deposition, and sheet lamination.
Of these, vat polymerization, has been found to be particularly applicable to vacuum molding roll sleeve fabrication. Vat polymerization uses a vat of liquid photopolymer resin, out of which the model is constructed layer by layer. An ultraviolet (UV) light is used to cure or harden the resin where required, whilst a platform moves the object being made downwards after each new layer is cured. Regardless of the selected method, the vacuum molding roll sleeve (and also its molding surface) comprises conjoined discrete layers of a material, which will generally be apparent upon close inspection.
As the process uses photopolymerizable liquid to form objects, there is no structural support from the material during the build phase., unlike powder based methods, where support is given from the unbound material. In such cases, support structures often need to be added. Photopolymerizable liquids are cured using a process of photopolymerization where light (e.g., ultraviolet and/or visible light) is directed across the surface of the resin with the use of motor controlled mirrors. Where the resin comes in contact with the light, it polymerizes and hardens forming a crosslinked organic polymer, typically a crosslinker acrylic polymer.
A typical general process is as follows:
Specific types of vat photopolymerization include stereolithography (SLA), digital light processing (DLP), continuous liquid interface production (CLIP), and Daylight polymer Processing (DLP).
During the SLA manufacturing process, a concentrated beam of ultraviolet light or a laser is focused onto the surface of a vat filled with a liquid photopolymer. The beam or laser is focused, creating each layer of the desired 3D object by means of crosslinking monomer or degrading a polymer.
For DLP processes, a digital projector screen is used to flash a single image of each layer across the entire platform at once. Because the projector is a digital screen, the image of each layer is composed of square pixels, resulting in a layer formed from small rectangular bricks called voxels. DLP can achieve faster print times for some parts, as each entire layer is exposed all at once, rather than drawn out with a laser.
The CLIP vat photopolymerization technique uses a tank of resin as base material. Part of the vat bottom is transparent to ultraviolet light, and therefore called the window. An ultraviolet light beam shines through the window, illuminating the precise cross-section of the object. The light causes the resin to solidify (photopolymerize). The object rises slowly enough to allow resin to flow under and maintain contact with the bottom of the object. An oxygen-permeable membrane lies below the resin, which creates a dead zone. This persistent liquid interface prevents the resin from attaching to the window, which means the photopolymerization is inhibited between the window and the object being fabricated. Unlike standard SLA, the 3D printing process is continuous and claims to be up to 100 times faster than commercial 3D printing methods.
Instead of using a laser or a projector to cure the polymer, the DPP manufacturing process uses an LCD (Liquid Crystal Display).
Suitable materials and techniques are known in the art and are available, for example, from additive manufacturing equipment suppliers. Contract manufacturing companies also can fabricate parts when supplied with an appropriate digital CAD file of the part to be made.
In embodiments using vat polymerization, the resultant object produced generally comprises a crosslinked organic polymer. If material extrusion is used, the object may comprise a thermoplastic organic polymer. Of the two, crosslinked organic polymers are generally better suited for vacuum molding roll sleeve fabrication since they are not thermoplastic and prone to heat distortion.
Examples of suitable polymerizable materials for use in vat polymerization include methacrylate-based and/or acrylate-based monomers such as polyethylene glycol diacrylate (PEGDA), triethylene glycol dimethacrylate (TEGDMA), biphenol A-glycidyl methacrylate (Bis-GMA), trimethylolpropane triacrylate (TTA), flexible aliphatic urethane dimethacrylate (UDMA) which has the structural formula,
and bisphenol A ethoxylate diacrylate (Bis-EDA) which has the structural formula,
wherein n is an integer greater than or equal to 1. Useful free-radical polymerization photoinitiators are well known in the art and include, for example, 2-hydroxy-2-methyl-1-phenyl-propan-1-one, 2,2-dimethoxy-2-phenylacetophenone, phenyl bis(2,4,6-trimethylbenzyl)phosphine oxide, 2-hydroxy-2-methyl, -1-phenylpropan-1-one, and ethyl (2,4,6-trimethylbenzoyl)phenylphosphinate.
Other polymerizable systems include thiol-ene and thiol-yne polymerizable systems and cationically polymerizable epoxy monomer systems.
Further details concerning vat polymerization are well known, and are described, for example, by Bagheri et al. in “Photopolymerization in 3D printing”, ACS Applied Polymer Materials, 2019, vol. 1, pp. 591-611 and Pagac et al. in “A Review of Vat Photopolymerization Technology: Materials, Applications, Challenges, and Future Trends of 3D Printing”, Polymers, 2021, vol. 13, pp. 598-618 and references contained therein.
In one embodiment, a CAD template for a vacuum molding roll sleeve can be generated. In such cases, a regularly spaced array of radially oriented conduits is often used. All design elements in the CAD template are present except that the molding surface is featureless. Once a desired structure is applied to the molding surface software may relocate first openings to correspond to local minima in the molding surface. This may greatly reduce the CAD design time required to generate new rolls.
It is preferably to build the vacuum molding roll sleeve such that it is standing on its end either as a monolith or as modular sections that can be assembled to form the entire roll. This way, the need for supporting structures can be reduced or eliminated.
Advantageously, by using additive manufacturing it is possible to fabricate complex interior features (e.g., vacuum manifolds, supports, conduits, and molding surfaces (e.g., molding surfaces with overhanging features). Overhanging features typically impair access to portions of the molding surface directly below them, and are difficult to make using more traditional technologies such as engraving. An example of an overhanging feature is shown in
The preceding description, given in order to enable one of ordinary skill in the art to practice the claimed disclosure, is not to be construed as limiting the scope of the disclosure, which is defined by the claims and all equivalents thereto.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US2022/032504 | 6/7/2022 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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63210841 | Jun 2021 | US |