NON-STICK BELT WITH IMPROVED ADHESION, PUNCTURE, CONFORMABILITY AND FLEX PROPERTIES
20230416004 ยท 2023-12-28
Assignee
Inventors
- William Christopher Lewis (Saint Charles, IL, US)
- Barton R. LEWIS (Algonquin |, IL, US)
- Malcolm Swift (Lake in The Hills, IL, US)
- William James LEWIS (Naples, FL, US)
- Ismael SALOMON (Dallas, GA, US)
Cpc classification
B65G15/34
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
Abstract
A flexible nonstick material for use in belting and/or press operations, such as for dough pressing or plastic sheet welding/cutting. The material comprises a nonstick polymer coated flexible substrate having a thickness of 15 mils or less, wherein the flexible substrate comprises a woven yarn fabric having a basket weave or a satin weave. The woven yarn fabric comprises yarns of fiberglass and/or high temperature resistant polymer materials. The nonstick coating is a fluoropolymer, a silicone rubber, and/or a thermoplastic having a sufficient heat resistance.
Claims
1-40. (canceled)
41. A flexible nonstick material for use in press operations, comprising a nonstick polymer coated flexible substrate having a thickness of 15 mils or less, wherein the flexible substrate comprises a woven yarn fabric having a conformable weave.
42. The flexible nonstick material of claim 41, wherein the woven yarn fabric comprises a basket weave or a satin weave
43. The flexible nonstick material of claim 41, wherein the woven yarn fabric comprises yarns of fiberglass and/or a polymer material selected from aramid, polyimide, polyphenylene sulfide, polyethersulfone, polyetheretherketone, or combinations thereof.
44. The flexible nonstick material of claim 41, wherein the woven yarn fabric includes two or more warp fibers alternately interlaced with two or more weft fibers.
45. The flexible nonstick material of claim 41, wherein the woven yarn fabric includes fibers extending in one direction over at least three of a plurality of fibers extending in a second direction before passing under one of the plurality of fibers extending in the second direction.
46. The flexible nonstick material of claim 41, wherein the woven yarn fabric comprises at least a 22 basket weave.
47. The flexible nonstick material of claim 41, wherein the woven yarn fabric comprises 4 to 8 harness satin weave.
48. The flexible nonstick material of claim 47, further comprising a thicker polymer coating on a rough side of the 4 to 8 harness satin weave than on a smooth side.
49. The flexible nonstick material of claim 41, further comprising a nonstick polymer coating of a fluoropolymer, a fluoroplastic, a fluoroelastomer, a silicone rubber, a thermoplastic having a heat resistance over 350 F. (177 C.), or combinations thereof.
50. The flexible nonstick material of claim 41, wherein the material is a continuous conveyor belt or a tensioned press platen.
51. The flexible nonstick material of claim 41, wherein the press operations are selected from food pressing or plastic welding, and the flexible nonstick material supports an object to be pressed.
52. A flexible belt, comprising a nonstick polymer coated flexible substrate having a thickness of 15 mils or less, wherein the flexible substrate comprises a woven yarn fabric comprising at least a 22 basket weave or a 4 to 8 harness satin weave.
53. The flexible belt of claim 52, wherein the woven yarn fabric comprises yarns of fiberglass and/or a polymer material selected from aramid, polyimide, polyphenylene sulfide, polyethersulfone, polyetheretherketone, or combinations thereof, and further comprising: a nonstick polymer coating of a fluoropolymer, a fluoroplastic, a fluoroelastomer, a silicone rubber, a thermoplastic having a heat resistance over 350 F. (177 C.), or combinations thereof.
54. The flexible belt of claim 53, wherein the woven yarn fabric includes two or more warp fibers alternately interlaced with two or more weft fibers.
55. The flexible belt of claim 53, wherein the woven yarn fabric includes fibers extending in one direction over at least three of a plurality of fibers extending in a second direction before passing under one of the plurality of fibers extending in the second direction.
56. The flexible belt of claim 53, wherein the woven yarn fabric comprises at least a 22 basket weave.
57. The flexible belt of claim 53, wherein the woven yarn fabric comprises 4 to 8 harness satin weave.
58. The flexible belt of claim 57, further comprising a thicker polymer coating on a rough side of the 4 to 8 harness satin weave than on a smooth side.
59. The flexible belt of claim 52, wherein the belt is a continuous conveyor belt or a tensioned press platen.
60. A method of using the flexible belt of claim 52, comprising: providing the flexible belt under a press platen; providing an object to be pressed on the flexible belt and under the press platen; and pressing the object on the flexible belt with the press platen.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0025]
[0026]
[0027]
[0028]
[0029]
[0030]
[0031]
[0032]
DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS OF THE INVENTION
[0033] The present invention is directed to improved materials such as for use in the lightweight belting (e.g., 15 mils thickness) in the food processing and plastic welding categories. Embodiments of this invention incorporate non-standard weaves with non-stick materials that result in unexpected improvements in longevity, such as improved adhesion resistance, puncture resistance, dimensional stability (resistance to bagging), tear resistance, and tensile resistance, as well as desirable or improved conformability and flex properties.
[0034] Embodiments of this invention include a flexible material for a continuous conveyor belt or other non-stick application, which includes a flexible substrate having a first face and a second face opposite the first face, and a coating on at least the first face of the flexible substrate.
[0035] The flexible substrate can be formed of, for example, fiberglass, aramid, polyimide, polyphenylene sulfide, polyethersulfone, polyetheretherketone (PEEK), or combinations thereof. In embodiments of this invention the flexible substrate is formed of yarns of, or including E-Glass, S-Glass, C-Glass, quartz, ECR-Glass, basalt, or combinations or blends thereof. The flexible substrate desirably includes a woven yarn fabric of these materials, the substrate fabric having a thickness (uncoated) of under 13 mils, such as 11 or 12 mils, or such as about 3 mils to about 8-10 mils, desirably about 5 mils to 8 mils.
[0036] The flexible substrate of embodiments of this invention includes a basket, crowsfoot, or satin weave, or any other conformable weave. A representative basket weave is shown in
[0037] A representative satin weave is shown in
[0038] Satin weave fabrics have a face and a back that look significantly different from each other, due to the harness crossings on one side. The weft yarns are predominant on the face of the cloth, and the warp yarns that bind the weft floats should be scattered as widely as possible. Satin-woven fabrics are strong due to the high number of yarns used, yet fewer interlacings provide pliability and resistance. Satin weaves tend to have a smooth weft side and a rough warp side. The rough side in embodiments of this invention receives a thicker polymer coating than the opposing side.
[0039] The flexible coating is coated on at least a first side, and desirably both sides of the substrate, with one or more coating materials that imparts a non-stick surface. The coating can be or include a fluoropolymer, such as a fluoroplastic (e.g., PTFE) or a fluoroelastomer, a silicone rubber, a thermoplastic having a suitable temperature rating for the intended use (such as heat resistance over 350 F.), or combinations thereof. The coating can be applied by any of various methods known in the industry, such as spray, knife over roll or dip coating. Once coated, the materials of this invention have a total thickness of under 20 mils, and more desirably under 15 mils, such as about 5 mils to about 15 mils, and desirably about 5 mils to about 10 mils.
[0040] It has been discovered that coating the particular weaves according to this invention provides significantly improved durability (puncture, tear, dimensional stability (resistance to bagging), and grease/oil resistance), thus providing measurable improvement in product life for desirable lightweight belting applications. The non-stick coated fabric materials of this invention can be used in any of numerous non-stick applications, such as in food processing (e.g., contact belt grilling, pressing of tortillas, flat breads, and pizza crust, and cooking/baking belting), high speed plastic welding (e.g., mylar balloon manufacture, plastic bag making, side sealing, form-fill-seal, overwrapping, high-speed sealing, and bag closure application (plastic bags)), bun toasting, processing of rubber, foam, or plastics (e.g., calendaring, pressing, and extrusion), textiles (e.g., nonwoven manufacture), manufacturing of vinyl windows, mylar balloons, plastic bags, etc., or other plastic processing.
[0041]
[0042]
[0043] The present invention is described in further detail in connection with the following examples which illustrate or simulate various aspects involved in the practice of the invention. It is to be understood that all changes that come within the spirit of the invention are desired to be protected and thus the invention is not to be construed as limited by these examples.
EXAMPLES
[0044] Belts according to embodiments of this invention were tested in tortilla processing applications, and compared to a current commercial belt being used for this process. In general, the market looks for belting that can be used with various food products, and is resistant to grease/oil penetration, tears, or holes. The tortilla industry further seeks good heat transfer for new products that are being processed in this market (e.g., low fat, high water content), where lower temps at the platen will allow for better tortilla quality. This will also address vaporization (excessive loss of water when pressing dough). Flexibility is important, as it resists puncturing and tearing particularly for tortillas made of whole grains, seeds, or other abrasive fillers/additives.
[0045] In a first example, an 8 mil coated belt according to this invention, having a 4 harness satin weave fiberglass substrate and PTFE coating was tested against the current 7 mil (total thickness), 2-ply laminate belt in commercial use. The new coated belt performed thermally equivalent to the current belt on a Lawrence 42 press. The test belt had no holes after two weeks, while the commercial laminate belt developed holes within one day.
[0046] In another test, the new belt ran for three weeks and consistently averaged a 97-98% efficiency vs. the control belt's 93-95%, thus reducing waste. The belt was removed for process maintenance and the testing concluded, but by making a minor repair on the seam the test belt could have run longer. The belt was run at 290 F. for top platen and 310 F. for the bottom. The belt developed only a few small holes and there was no need to apply any patches during the run time. No signs of oil ingress or delamination were seen.
[0047] The tortilla testing demonstrated that the belts of this invention had significantly improved puncture resistance, improved heat transfer, and significant improvement in dimensional stability, compared to the current commercial belting. The test belts were less prone to bagging and wrinkling (belt deformation), had improved anchorage and adhesion to the underlying substrate, and were less prone to slippage. The test belts according to this invention were also easier to add to the process equipment, and more flexibility prevented wrinkling during installation of belt on machine. An example test belt is shown in
[0048]
[0049] Thus, the invention provides improved belts and belt materials for use in thin, non-stick belt applications.
[0050] The invention illustratively disclosed herein suitably may be practiced in the absence of any element, part, step, component, or ingredient which is not specifically disclosed herein.
[0051] While in the foregoing detailed description this invention has been described in relation to certain preferred embodiments thereof, and many details have been set forth for purposes of illustration, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that the invention is susceptible to additional embodiments and that certain of the details described herein can be varied considerably without departing from the basic principles of the invention.