POLYMER FABRICATION METHODS

20230287728 · 2023-09-14

    Inventors

    Cpc classification

    International classification

    Abstract

    There is provided a polymer fabrication method for forming 3-dimensional shapes from a sheet polymer blank (10) by machining at least one re-entrant, elongate groove forming a reduced thickness portion (25) permitting the blank to be folded and having opposed edges (12) at the surface, folding the blank about the groove to form at least a portion of the 3-dimensional shape, the re-entrant of the groove forming an elongate chamber (21) adjacent the reduced thickness portion and opening through an elongate gap (20) between the opposed edges, hot air welding the opposed edges across the gap with filler rod (22), and heating the reduced thickness portion to a selected thermo-reforming temperature via the chamber.

    Claims

    1. A door frame assembly including a pair of door frame upright members and a door frame header member, each comprising a jamb portion bounded by integral architrave portions and formed from a sheet polymer blank of selected thickness, said jamb portion and architrave portions being formed about respective re-entrant, elongate grooves across a surface of said blank, each said groove forming a reduced thickness portion of said blank permitting said blank to be folded to form said door frame members, and each said groove having opposed edges that overhang said reduced thickness portion.

    2. A door frame assembly as claimed in claim 1, wherein each of said grooves provide an elongate gap between the opposed edges that is closed by filler rod which is welded between said opposed edges across said gap.

    Description

    BRIEF DESCRIPTION ON THE DRAWINGS

    [0049] The invention will be described with reference to the following non-limiting embodiment of the invention as illustrated in the drawings and wherein:

    [0050] FIG. 1 is a section across a door frame blank for use in a method in accordance with the present invention;

    [0051] FIG. 2 is the folded and welded door frame section formed from the blank of FIG. 1;

    [0052] FIG. 3 is an oblique view of the black of FIG. 1 undergoing the method of the present invention;

    [0053] FIGS. 4 and 5 are variations on the general method described by FIG. 3;

    [0054] FIG. 6 is a flow chart of operation of a robot-executed method in accordance with the present invention;

    [0055] FIG. 7 is a perspective view of par of a robot implementation of the method of FIG. 6; and

    [0056] FIG. 8 is a graph showing the relationship between polymer welding tip's temperature and welding speed.

    DESCRIPTION OF THE EMBODIMENT

    [0057] In the figures, a 10 mm thick sheet of HDPT forms a door frame blank 10 comprising two uprights and a header. The blank 10 is CNC routed to provide re-entrant grooves having spaced outer edges 12, screw line dovetail grooves 13, door stop peg recesses 14 and edge rebates 15. A door stop portion 16 is retained by T-section key member 17 secured from the back of the blank 10 screws (not shown).

    [0058] The preformed blanks 10 are subjected to cold ending to form the door frame shape as in FIG. 2. The spaced edges 12 leave a gap 20 in the folded blank, leaving the reentrant grooves 11 forming an elongate chamber 21 having the gap 20 as an ingress point.

    [0059] Plastic welding uses hot air to melt a 4 mm diameter HDPE weld rod 22 into gap 20.

    [0060] The re-entrant grooves 11 leave a 2 mm web 24 of reduced thickness to provide a bending zone. The web 24 when bent forms an outer curved surface at the bend 25 with some crystalline embrittlement of the material. In order to restore the toughness and resilience of the material, heat needs to be applied to “de-stress” or “relax” the HDPE at the bend 25.

    [0061] As illustrated in FIG. 3, the weld rod 22 is fed into a feeder tube 26 of a metal speed welding attachment 27 heated by a hot air source 30. The speed welding attachment 27 has a welding tip 31 that slides along the forming joint, preheating the HDPE. A thermocouple sensor 28 is connected by wire 29 to a PLC for control of the welding process. Exhaust air passed through the welding tip 31 and into the gap 20, thermo-reforming the bend 25.

    [0062] The stressed HDPE at the bend 25 is heated to a thermo-reforming temperature of between 171 and 182° C. in order to de-stress it and avoid later cracking. A temperature higher that 182 degrees C. will result in unacceptable surface deformation as the material begins to melt. The elongate chamber 21 provides a pipe effect that channels the hot air through it, adding a degree controlled uniform heat to the thermo-reforming plastic, distributing even heat.

    [0063] In the embodiment of FIG. 4, the stressed HDPE at the bend 25 is preheated by a hot air nozzle assembly 33 having a flattened tip orifice 34 engaged with the gap 20 and moving in advance of the welding tip 31. By this means, the process is not completely reliant on welding tip heating air the thermo-reform the polymer at 25.

    [0064] In the embodiment of FIG. 5, the stressed HDPE at the bend 25 is preheated by a hot air feed tube assembly 35 having a round orifice 36 located in the elongate chamber 21 and moving (by progressive withdrawal of the hot air feed tube assembly 35) in advance of the welding tip 31. By this means, the process is again not completely reliant on welding tip heating air the thermo-reform the polymer at 25.

    [0065] FIG. 6 is a flow char of a robot-executed method of the present, with the tool end of a typical robot being illustrated in FIG. 7. In FIG. 7, the last stage mounting flange 40 of a 6-axis industrial robot mounts a tool head assembly 41 incorporating a welding assembly 42 mounted to an air heater 43 controlled by a PLC. The welding assembly 42 accepts air from the air heater 43 and delivers it to the welding tip 31, incorporating the thermocouple 28 providing tip temperature data to a PLC via the wire 29.

    [0066] A polymer rod feeder 44 is controlled by the PLC and delivers polymer welding rod 22 to the welding tip 31 via feed tube 45.

    [0067] Air is supplied to the air heater 43 by via a monitor assembly 46. The monitor assembly 46 consists of an air inlet 47 delivering pressurized air to a riser tube 50 containing a gravity ball (not shown and in this example a golf ball). The lower end of the riser tube 50 communicates with the air heater 43. The rise tube 50 is manually throttled by a ball valve 51. The upper end of the riser tube 50 is occluded by a microswitch and adjuster assembly 52 providing on-off control signal to the PC. An airlock eliminator aperture 53 bleeds air from above the golf ball.

    [0068] The parameters of welder temperature (hot air temperature), welder travel speed thickness of HDPE remaining at the bend 25, the size of the gap 20 and the ambient temperature of air and plastic material are all variables that are able to be managed to an acceptable degree with the use of visual indicators during the welding. Robotic technology is used to monitor these variables to use all of the input data to eliminate inconsistency. The robot technology is using continuous laser temperature readings of both the surface temperature of the plastic as well as the welder tip temperature to enable a continuously varying weld speed. The other variables (plastic thickness and weld gap) are controlled as constants in this example.

    [0069] The gap between plastics to be welded is relevant to the thickness of the plastic to be thermo-reformed. For example, the gap required for 2.0 mm thermo-reformed plastic may by 2.0 mm, the gap for 1.0 mm thermo-reformed plastic is reduced to 1.0 mm, otherwise the heat from the hot air welder (that cannot be lower than 171° C. in order to thermoform and prevent cracking) will unacceptably deform the plastic surface. This ensures that the heat reaching the thermo-reforming plastic surface is of the correct temperature to thermoform, but the volume of hot air is controlled by the gap to suit the plastic thickness.

    [0070] Visual indicators for successful non-robotic welding are as follows. [0071] (a) The welding tip produces a drag mark on the surface of the plastic weld area adjacent to the weld rod deposit. [0072] (b) The pipe produced by the bend begin to very slightly smoke with a slightly visible wisp of grey smoke produced from the welding process. If the smoke is not present, the weld is likely not hot enough (welder is too cold or not hot enough but moving too fast) and the plastic will not thermoform and will later crack. If the smoke is prolific, the welder is too hot or moving to slowly and the plastic surface will deform.

    [0073] Door frames produced by the present method do not rust. HDPE door frames are food grade and homogeneous, they do not require and in face, cannot be painted, will not rust, decay, flake or chip. The door frames are fitted after the complete installation of the water proof membrane. The door frame in no way detract from the integrity of the membrane. The door frames are designed to be a fast and effective retrofit solution, reducing retrofit door way installation from four days to several hours by elimination of all plastering and painting. They are able to be fitted with very minimal mess or disruption, reducing the cost of the current method by thousands of dollars.

    [0074] This joint makes the frames able to be custom and made to size instead of injection moulded. Injection moulding require a vast machinery and mould outlay to facilitate every different wall thickness, door size etc. It is calculated that there are approximately 4500 different combinations of wall thickness, door size, lock location etc, making routering or CNC machining of flat sheet the most viable solution.

    [0075] It will of course be realized that while the above has been given by way of illustrative examples of this invention, all such and other modifications and variations thereto as would be apparent to persons skilled in the art are deemed to fall within the broad scope and ambit of this invention as is set forth in the claims appended hereto.