Dryer
11559980 · 2023-01-24
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F26B21/004
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F26B13/108
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
B41F23/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F26B13/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F26B21/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
The present invention relates to a dryer for treating a moving printing web in a rotary printing press with gas, having a nozzle body. The dryer according to the invention is characterized in that the nozzle body has at least one opening for the exit of heated gas and has at least one opening for recirculating the cooled gas.
Claims
1. A dryer for a printing press, the dryer comprising: a nozzle body, wherein the nozzle body has a cavity to receive heated gas and at least two nozzles with outlet openings extending from the cavity over only part of a width of a printing web for an exit of heated gas from the nozzle body in a first direction; at least one inlet opening in the nozzle body between the at least two nozzles for the heated gas that exited the nozzle body to return as return gas into the nozzle body and flow in a path outside the cavity; at least one transverse opening for the return gas to flow inside the nozzle body past at least one nozzle of the at least two nozzles in a second direction transverse to the first direction; and at least one recirculating opening for recirculating the return gas from the at least one transverse opening through the nozzle body along a path inside the nozzle body and outside the cavity to a suction opening of the nozzle body.
2. The dryer as claimed in claim 1, wherein the at least two nozzles with outlet openings are arranged at least partially offset.
3. The dryer of claim 1, wherein the outlet openings have a round or oval shape or a shape approximating such a shape.
4. The dryer of claim 1, wherein the at least one recirculating opening includes an opening on opposite ends of the nozzle body.
5. The dryer of claim 1, wherein the nozzle body has a circumferential surface, and the at least two nozzles with outlet openings for the exit of the heated gas protrude from the circumferential surface of the nozzle body.
6. The dryer of claim 1, wherein an entrance of the at least one recirculating opening for recirculating the return gas is provided outside the cavity.
7. The dryer of claim 1, wherein a suction unit is connected to the suction opening for recirculating the return gas.
8. The dryer of claim 1, wherein the nozzle body has at least the width of the printing web.
9. A method for drying a running printing web in a rotary printing press, wherein the running printing web is dried by heated gas from the dryer as claimed in claim 1, wherein the return gas is at least partially returned into the dryer along a surface of the nozzle body opposite to the printing web, and there is a negative pressure at least in a region between an exit of the heated gas and the printing web.
10. The method of claim 9, wherein the negative pressure is present during operation.
11. The method of claim 9, wherein ambient air is used as the heated gas.
12. The method of claim 9, wherein the return gas is returned by suction.
13. The method of claim 9, wherein the return gas is supplied to filtration to reuse the return gas or return the return gas into the atmosphere.
14. A use of the dryer as claimed in claim 1 as a drying nozzle in a rotary printing press.
15. A rotary printing press comprising: a printing cylinder for printing a moving printing web, and the dryer as claimed in claim 1, wherein there is a negative pressure at least in a region between an exit of the heated gas and the printing web.
16. A dryer for a printing press, the dryer comprising: a cavity to receive gas; a nozzle outside the cavity and in fluid communication with the cavity to exhaust gas from the cavity in a first direction; an inlet outside the cavity to draw the exhausted gas from the nozzle in a second direction opposite to the first direction; and a recirculating inlet on an opposite side of the nozzle from the inlet to draw the gas from the inlet past the nozzle in a third direction transverse to the second direction.
17. The dryer of claim 16, further comprising: a suction outlet in fluid communication with the recirculating inlet to draw the gas from the recirculating inlet along a path inside the dryer and outside the cavity.
18. A dryer for a printing press, the dryer comprising: an inner wall forming a cavity; an outer wall surrounding the inner wall and forming a channel between the inner wall and the outer wall; a nozzle in the channel and in fluid communication with the cavity to exhaust gas from the cavity in a first direction; an inlet in the channel to draw the exhausted gas from the nozzle into the channel in a second direction opposite to the first direction; and a suction outlet to draw air from the inlet in a third direction.
19. The dryer of claim 18, wherein the third direction is transverse to a direction of travel of printing material through the dryer.
20. The dryer of claim 18, wherein the channel surrounds the cavity.
Description
(1) In the drawings:
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(10) The heated gas required for drying, for example, air, flows out of openings 2 which protrude from the nozzle main body 5 and are formed as nozzles, small “holes” here, is incident on the freshly printed material web or printing web, and is suctioned in again by other provided openings 3. It is thus possible to prevent air-solvent mixture from reaching the atmosphere. The openings can be seen well in
(11) In the embodiment shown, a type of plate 4 is provided on the nozzle body, which is formed here as a grid plate, which is fastened by means of rivets, for example, on the base body 5, which is milled, for example. This base body 5 is in turn fastened in a main frame, for example, by means of screws.
(12) According to the illustrated preferred embodiment, there is a uniform permanent negative pressure in the region between dryer and counter pressure cylinder, which prevents the solvent-laden air from flowing into the environment, on the one hand, and suctions in and discharges the solvent-laden air from the entire printing unit, on the other hand.
(13)
(14) An exemplary structure of a nozzle body 1 is shown in a perspective view in
(15) The air, which is either already heated or is still being heated, passes through a connecting piece 6 into the cavity 7 of the nozzle body 1 or the excess pressure region. The air leaves this through the small outlet openings 2 (arrow 8), strikes against the material of the web to be printed, reverses (arrow 10), and reaches a recirculating opening 21 in the lateral ends 11 by passing through the inlet openings 3 and then through transverse openings 20, where the inlet openings 3 are openings in the plate 4 and the transverse openings 20 are openings between the nozzles in a channel 22 outside the cavity 7 and inside the plate 4, in the milled base body (arrows 9 and 10). Arriving there, the medium flows “above” the excess pressure region or past the excess pressure region in the direction of the suction opening, or suction outlet, 12. Preferably so-called stud bolts 13, to which the air suction unit is attached, are located above this suction opening. Depending on the width of the nozzle, the air suction unit consists of different screwed-on connecting pieces. A flexible, solvent-resistant, and heat-resistant hose is attached to these connecting pieces, which transports the solvent-laden air to a manifold.
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(18) It can be seen that the entire drying unit is arranged here, for example, between a cross member 14 and a central cylinder 15 in a rotary printing press. Two dryers are visible for this purpose in
(19) As can be seen clearly from