Nip roller and method of manufacturing film roll body
10370215 ยท 2019-08-06
Assignee
Inventors
- Takashi Ichinomiya (Otsu, JP)
- Nobuhiro Naito (Otsu, JP)
- Naohiro Takashima (North Kingstown, RI, US)
- Jeffrey Stephen L'Heureux (North Kingstown, RI, US)
Cpc classification
F16C2208/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B65H27/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F16C3/026
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16C13/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16C13/006
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16C2208/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
B65H27/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F16C13/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A nip roller includes a core material having a surface coated with rubber. The nip roller having a support length L.sub.1 of 5 m or longer. The rubber surface has a hardness H (deg) equal to or lower than 65 deg as measured by a JIS K6253 Type A durometer (A type). Mass W (kg) of the nip roller and second moment of area I.sub.1 (m.sup.4) and the Young's modulus E.sub.1 (Pa) of the core material satisfy E.sub.1I.sub.1/W80000.
Claims
1. A nip roller comprising a core material having a surface coated with rubber, the nip roller having a support length L.sub.1 of 5 m or longer, wherein the rubber coating the surface has a hardness H (deg) equal to or lower than 65 deg as measured by a JIS K6253 Type A durometer (A type), and mass W (kg) of the nip roller and second moment of area I.sub.1 (m.sup.4) and Young's modulus E.sub.1 (Pa) of the core material satisfy a mathematical expression (1) below:
E.sub.1I.sub.1/W80000(1).
2. The nip roller according to claim 1, wherein the core material of the nip roller is CFRP.
3. The nip roller according to claim 2, wherein the CFRP has a Young's modulus S.sub.1 equal to or greater than 250 GPa.
4. A method of manufacturing a film roll body, comprising conveying a film by a plurality of conveyance rollers and winding the film into a film roll body, wherein a nip roller is provided in proximity to the film coming into contact with one or more of the conveyance rollers, the nip roller is configured to squeeze the film with the conveyance roller(s), the nip roller includes a core material having a surface coated with rubber, the nip roller having a support length L.sub.1 of 5 m or longer, the rubber surface has a hardness H (deg) equal to or lower than 65 deg as measured by a JIS K6253 Type A durometer (A type), and mass W (kg) of the nip roller and second moment of area I.sub.1 (m.sup.4) and Young's modulus E.sub.1 (Pa) of the core material satisfy a mathematical expression (1) below:
E.sub.1I.sub.1/W80000(1).
5. The method of manufacturing a film roll body according to claim 4, wherein a corona treatment electrode is arranged, downstream from the nip roller in a film conveyance direction, on an opposed surface to a surface of the conveyance roller in contact with the film so as to sandwich a film conveyed between the nip roller and the conveyance roller.
6. The method of manufacturing a film roll body according to claim 4, wherein rotation frequency f.sub.2 (Hz), mass W.sub.2 (Kg), support length L.sub.2 (m), second moment of area I.sub.2 (m.sup.4), and Young's modulus E.sub.2 (Pa) of a conveyance roller arranged in proximity to the nip roller as well as rotation frequency f.sub.1 (Hz), mass W (Kg), and support length L.sub.1 (m) of the nip roller, and second moment of area I.sub.1 (m.sup.4) and Young's modulus E.sub.1 (Pa) of the core material satisfy mathematical expressions (2) and (3) below:
7. The method of manufacturing a film roll body according to claim 4, wherein each of the nip roller and the conveyance rollers has a damper at an axial end of each of the nip roller and the conveyance rollers.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS OF THE INVENTION
(8) Preferable embodiments of the present invention will be described below with reference to the drawings by taking the example of the application to a method of manufacturing a plastic film roll body.
(9)
(10) Here, a plastic film to form a plastic film roll body 170 by way of example is supplied from any source. As a preferable example, as illustrated in
(11) Subsequently, the unstretched sheet 161 is introduced to a longitudinal stretched process 120 and stretched by a plurality of rollers in the sheet conveyance direction. Thereafter, with both ends of a uniaxially stretched sheet 162 held by clips continuously as necessary, while the sheet is heated and kept warm in an oven 130 in a lateral stretched process 140, the sheet conveyed in the direction of travel is stretched in the sheet width direction (the direction orthogonal to the conveyance direction) to obtain a biaxially stretched film 163. Alternatively, the produced plastic film may be kept unstretched or may be uniaxially stretched.
(12) The illustrated biaxially stretched film 163 passing through the oven 130 in
(13)
(14) In a case where corona discharge treatment is performed on a single surface of the biaxially stretched film 163, surface treatment is not to be performed on the surface of the biaxially stretched film 163 that does not face the electrode 303. In order to prevent discharge between this surface and the conveyance roller 302 serving as the ground-side electrode, it is necessary to bring the conveyance roller 302 and the biaxially stretched film 163 into intimate contact with each other. Since the amount of accompanying air between the conveyance roller 302 and the biaxially stretched film 163 increases with increasing conveyance speed of the biaxially stretched film 163, a nip roller 301 is attached as illustrated in
(15) In the manufacturing process for a plastic film roll body, a nip roller may be used to divide a tension control section between the upstream zone and the downstream zone of the process. For example, in the manufacturing apparatus for the plastic film roll body 170 in which the extruder 101, the longitudinal stretched process 120, and the lateral stretched process 140 as illustrated in
(16) This is because, for example, when cutting is performed in the upstream zone and the film roll body is wound in the downstream zone, tension suitable for cutting and tension suitable for winding are not always the same. For example, when the optimum tension in the upstream zone is 100 [N] and the optimum tension in the downstream zone is 50 [N], the tension difference of 10050=50 [N] has to be balanced somewhere. When a nip roller is used, friction force of P is produced according to Coulomb's law, where the pressing force of the nip roller is P [N] and the coefficient of friction between the opposing roller and the film is . When the above-noted tension difference 50 [N] is equal to or smaller than this friction force of P, the tension difference can be balanced by a nip roller system. This is generally called tension cut.
(17) In the manufacturing process for a film roll body, a nip roller may be used as a contact roller. The contact roller is pressed against the film roll body to reduce the air accompanying the film roll body, thereby alleviating or preventing wrinkles or meandering in winding.
(18) These nip rollers need to have a uniform pressing force in the film width direction and the roller axial direction. For this reason, in order to achieve a pressing force as uniform as possible even in the presence of uneven thickness of the film or small deflection of the roller, the surface of the core material 305 of the nip roller 301 is coated with the rubber 306 as illustrated in
(19) The inventor of the present application has conducted a study and found that this rubber hardness is an important factor that determines whether the surface of the nip roller 301 deforms into a polygonal shape when the nip roller 301 and the conveyance roller 302 (this pair will hereinafter be referred to as a nip roller system) resonantly vibrate due to flexural deformation while mutually acting as a vibration source and a support. In order to suppress resonance in addition to achieving a uniform pressing force, the rubber hardness H need to be further smaller than 80 [deg] and equal to or smaller than 65 deg. The rubber 306 layer on the surface of the nip roller 301 may be monolayer or multilayer including two layers or three layers. When the rubber 306 layer is multilayer, the hardness of the softest layer is equal to or smaller than 65 [deg].
(20) When the rubber hardness H is equal to or smaller than 65 [deg], the softness of the rubber 306 acts as damping force for preventing resonance that is the cause of polygonal deformation. The lower limit of hardness of the rubber 306 is preferably equal to or greater than 25 [deg] in terms of forming homogenous rubber.
(21) The rubber 306 has a coating thickness t of, preferably 1 to 20 mm, suitably, 5 to 15 mm, in terms of preventing resonance. The thickness of 5 mm or more ensures a sufficient damping force. The thickness of 15 mm or less increases the eigen frequency of the nip roller 301 itself and facilitates implementation of the condition of the mathematical expression (1) described later.
(22) Preferable examples of the material of the rubber 306 include general vulcanized rubbers, for example, nitrile butyl rubber (NBR), chloroprene rubber (CR), ethylene propylene rubber (EPDM), and Hypalon rubber (CSM). In particular, rubber is required to have resistance against ozone degradation because discharge produces ozone in the corona treatment process. Therefore, in this case, among vulcanized rubbers, EPDM and SCM are suitable. Other suitable examples include silicone rubber and fluoroe-rubber.
(23) In order to ensure that the damping force by the rubber 306 acts in the width direction, it is preferable to minimize local variation in pressing force due to deflection of the nip roller system. It is therefore preferable to apply crowning such that the outer diameter Dr of the surface of the nip roller 301 is increased at the center and reduced at the ends in accordance with the amount of nip roller deflection.
(24) Polygonal deformation resulting from resonance is more likely to occur because the rotation of the nip roller 301 becomes unstable as the roller surface length B [m] or the support length L.sub.1 [m] increases. In particular, this issue will be discussed for the nip roller 301 having a support length L.sub.1 [m] of 5 [m] or more, considering its operating speed range and the suitable nip roller diameter, in the manufacturing process for a plastic film roll body.
(25) The inventor of the present application has found that in a nip roller structure as illustrated in
E.sub.1I.sub.1/W80000(1).
(26) In the mathematical expression (1), the product of the Young's modulus E.sub.1 and the second moment of area I.sub.1 represents the flexural rigidity of the core material 305. The mass W of the nip roller 301 functions as the mass m of the nip roller 301 in the resonance phenomenon and forms part of the eigen frequency with the flexural rigidity E.sub.1I.sub.1 above. Therefore, this means that the eigen frequency of the nip roller 301 alone and the eigen frequency of the entire nip apparatus as a nip system become larger as the value of the mathematical expression (1) becomes larger.
(27) Here, a rotor such as the nip roller 301 is rotatably supported, for example, by a frame (not illustrated) with shaft bush such as bearings on both ends of the shaft thereof. Pressing force is applied by a pressuring device such as an air cylinder attached to the nip roller 301 or the conveyance roller 302. In order to convey a plastic film generally thin and wrinkly, it is necessary to accurately set the degree of parallel between the conveyance rollers. For this reason, preferably, the nip roller 301 is moved by the air cylinder.
(28) For the same reason, to control the operating speed, preferably, the conveyance roller 302 fixed in position is coupled to and driven by a rotation drive source such as a motor, and the nip roller 301 is driven to rotate by the conveyance roller 302 with the biaxially stretched film 163 interposed.
(29) The mass W of the nip roller 301 also serves as a vibrating force source for producing vibration. As previously mentioned, the nip roller 301 rotates about the rotation center of the bearing, but the rotation completely free from eccentricity throughout the roller longitudinal direction is impossible in actuality. In fabrication of the nip roller 301, it is impossible to form the front surface or the inner surface of the core material 305 into a perfect cylinder throughout the longitudinal direction by machining and polishing, and in addition, the material itself has density variation to some extent. As illustrated in
(30) According to JIS B0905 above, given the operating number of rotations n [rpm], n/9550 is called balance quality. In general, a roller used in the manufacturing process for a plastic film roll body is produced by adjusting unbalance of the roller such that the balance quality of the above-noted expression falls within 6.3 or less, or 2.5 or less. Here, according to JIS B0905, noted above is the amount of eccentricity of the entire roller that is calculated from three values: the mass of the entire roller, the mass of the weight in a balancing test, and the attachment radius of the weight, and expressed in m. The value n is the test number of rotations to simulate the use number of rotations of the roller and is expressed in rpm. Accordingly, for the nip roller 301 for a plastic film roll body fabricated based on these standards, the mass W of the nip roller 301 is the cause of vibration.
(31) As described above, the left side of the mathematical expression (1) represents the eigen frequency as the cause of resonance and the centrifugal force as the vibration source, and the hardness H of the rubber 306 represents the damping force of the system. The inventor of the present application has found that in a method of producing a plastic film roll body using a nip roller having a support length L.sub.1 [m] of 5 [m] or longer and the rubber hardness H of 65 deg or lower, it is possible to prevent resonance and prevent the nip roller 301 from being deformed into a polygonal shape for the long term by satisfying the mathematical expression (1), even in a severe condition that conventionally produces resonance or polygonal deformation when the frequency N times the normal rotation frequency matches or approaches the eigen frequency.
(32) If the left side of the mathematical expression (1) is less than 80000, the centrifugal force serving as a vibration source exceeds the damping force in the above-noted preferable range of hardness of the rubber 306 and the rigidity E.sub.1I.sub.1 of the core material 305 itself of the roller to cause resonance. Specifically, the resonance phenomenon to be solved by the invention of the present application occurs when Nf, which is an integer multiple of the operating frequency of the nip roller 301 or the conveyance roller 302, matches or approaches the eigen frequency of the apparatus. When the nip roller 301 and the conveyance roller 302 that satisfy the mathematical expression (2) are operated, the waveform as illustrated in
(33) Here, the second moment of area I.sub.1 of the core material can be obtained according to (D.sup.4d.sup.4)/64 from the outer diameter D and the inner diameter d of the core material 305 in
(34) In other words, in order to increase I.sub.1, the outer diameter D of the core material 305 is increased. Given that the preferable range of the thickness t of the rubber 306 layer is 1 to 20 mm as previously mentioned, D=(Dr40) mm to (Dr2) mm holds, where Dr is the outer diameter of the rubber 306 layer. In order to obtain a linear pressure such that no air intrudes between the conveyance roller 302 and the biaxially stretched film 163, the outer diameter Dr of the rubber 306 layer and the outer diameter D of the core material 305 should not be unnecessarily increased. For this reason, the outer diameter Dr of the rubber 306 layer is preferably equal to or smaller than 1000 mm, more preferably equal to or smaller than 800 mm.
(35) Although the mass W of the nip roller 301 includes the mass of the rubber 306 and the ends of shaft supported by bearings, the mass of the pipe portion of the core material 305 is dominant in a case where L.sub.15 [m]. The mass of the pipe is proportional to the cross-sectional area A=(D.sup.2d.sup.2)/4. For the sake of explanation, when the second moment of area I.sub.1 is divided by the cross-sectional area A, I.sub.1/A=(D.sup.2+d.sup.2)/16, indicating that a pipe having a larger inner diameter d can increase the left side of the mathematical expression (1) where the outer diameter D of the core material 305 is the same.
(36) Attention is further given to the Young's modulus E.sub.1 and the mass W as means for increasing the mathematical expression (1). The mass W is proportional to the density of the material in addition to the cross-sectional area A as described above. To increase the left side of the mathematical expression (1), E.sub.1/W is increased, that is, E.sub.1/ is increased. In general, when steel generally used for the core material 305 of the nip roller 301 is used as a reference, the Young's modulus E.sub.1 is about 206 GPa and the density is 7.85 g/cm.sup.3, and then E.sub.1/26. In a case of aluminum alloy, E.sub.1=73 GPa, =2.77 g/cm.sup.3, and then E.sub.1/26, which is almost the same as that of steel.
(37) CFRP (carbon fiber reinforced plastic) has been widely used for industrial rollers as well as automobiles, air planes, and other applications. Carbon fibers used in CFRP include PAN fibers formed by baking acrylic fibers and pitch fibers derived from petroleum and are made of anisotropic material having high strength and rigidity in the longitudinal direction of fibers. Such carbon fibers are arranged in some directions and bonded by thermosetting resin such as epoxy resin to form CFRP, which is a structure serving as an alternative material to isotropic materials such as steel. The density of this composite material is about =1.5 g/cm.sup.3 and the Young's modulus E.sub.1 can be selected based on the material of carbon fibers used and the orientation design of carbon fibers arranged in the structure. In general, industrial rollers are often designed from about 100 GPa up to about 200 GPa as an alternative to steel.
(38) With the Young's modulus of about 200 GPa, CFRP has E.sub.1/ of 133, which value is five times as high as iron or aluminum alloy. CFRP used as a material of a pipe, being formed from yarn or sheet material of carbon fibers, has fewer restrictions in fabrication of inner and outer diameters compared with steel and aluminum alloy and has a higher degree of freedom of choice in the second moment of area I.sub.1. Noting such characteristics, the inventor of the present application has found that CFRP is suitable for satisfying the condition of the mathematical expression (1).
(39) Further preferably, with E.sub.1250 GPa, the second moment of area I.sub.1 can be reduced while the mathematical expression (1) is satisfied, so that it is possible to reduce the outer diameter Dr of the nip roller 301 and to improve the performance of removing the air, which is the essential function of the nip roller 301. A long nip roller 301 having a support length L.sub.1 equal to or longer than 5 [m] inherently has a larger mass W, and therefore E.sub.1250 GPa is preferred in order to satisfy the value of the mathematical expression (1) to prevent vibration. The CFRP having such high elasticity can be implemented with carbon fibers or stacked structures and can prevent vibration and polygonal deformation to be solved the invention of the present application, but is usually not used because it is expensive. Although the higher E.sub.1 is advantageous to prevent resonance, as a matter of course, industrial rigid carbon fibers having a Young's modulus of about 800 GPa, commonly available, are expensive. Therefore, CFRP with E.sub.1=250 to 350 GPa or so that can be used in the invention of the present application is in a preferable range in terms of a trade-off between costs and performance.
(40) The flexural Young's modulus E.sub.1 of the nip roller using CFRP can be known from the stack design in designing and fabricating CFRP. In this case, the elastic modulus E.sub.11 in the axial direction of the roller or the cylinder is employed as E.sub.1. In the stack design of CFRP, manufactures of rollers can calculate, for example, the practical ratio at which carbon fibers actually contribute to rigidity and strength from the direction of carbon fibers, the volume content Vf of fibers relative to resin in the form of a composite material, and single yarn breakage. Alternatively, E.sub.1 may be obtained through actual measurement. The actual E.sub.1 is known to be reduced compared with E.sub.11 by the effects of shear deformation due to anisotropy, in addition to the design parameters of CFRP as described above. The most reliable value can be obtained by putting the core material 305 (pipe having the outer diameter D, the inner diameter d, and the effective surface length B) of the nip roller 301 in
(41) The nip roller of the invention of the present application is suitable as a nip roller in each process for a plastic film roll body as previously mentioned, and more suitable as the nip roller 301 for use in the corona discharge treatment process in
(42) In the method of manufacturing a film roll body including a corona discharge treatment process according to an embodiment of the present invention, the electrode 303 for producing corona discharge in
(43) The conveyance roller 302 serving as a ground electrode has a surface coated with a dielectric layer, for example, formed of metal or preferably semiconductor such as rubber having excellent ozone resistance and strength, such as silicone rubber, fluoroe-rubber, EPDM rubber, CSM rubber, and ceramics in order to prevent spark discharge. Electrical insulation performance is preferably 10.sup.11 cm or higher.
(44) Preferable examples of the raw material of the plastic film of the present invention include polyesters such as polyethylene terephthalate and polyethylene-2,6-naphthalate, polyolefins such as polyethylene and polypropylene, polyvinyls such as polyvinyl chloride and polyvinylidene chloride, and polymers such as polyamides, aromatic polyamides, and polyphenylene sulfide. Particularly preferable examples are polyethylene terephthalate films and polypropylene films having excellent stretchability and being excellent in optical properties, electrical properties, and gas barrier characteristic.
(45) The resonance phenomenon that is the cause of polygonal deformation will now be examined theoretically. As previously mentioned, when a nip roller having a predetermined support length L.sub.1 [m] is operated, a vibration waveform is observed at the nip roller surface and the bearing unit. The relation between frequency and amplitude of the fast Fourier-transformed vibration waveform is as illustrated in
(46) In a situation in which no resonance occurs, the largest one of vibration components is the roller rotation frequency component f denoted by if, which means one time of f. When the rotation frequency of the nip roller is defined as f.sub.1 [Hz], the mass of the nip roller is defined as W [kg], and the amount of eccentricity of the nip roller is defined as [m], the centrifugal force F [N/m] due to residual unbalance illustrated by the mathematical expression (7) below always acts on the nip roller and the conveyance roller to produce a vibration component 1f.sub.1. This is fast and has greater amplitude because F increases as f increases.
F=2f.sub.1.sup.2(7)
(47) The integer multiple components following 2f are nonlinear vibration caused by, for example, small looseness of the roller support. Such a nonlinear component is difficult to remove and always exists, as is the case with centrifugal force due to residual unbalance as described above.
(48) For example, when 6f, which is six times as high as the roller rotation frequency, matches the eigen frequency of the apparatus, resonance occurs to cause the nip roller to be deformed with a polygonal number of 6 over time as illustrated in
(49) Conventionally, attention has been focused on finding a condition in which an integer multiple component Nf does not perfectly match the eigen frequency of the apparatus by adjusting the speed or the roller diameter. Unfortunately, the eigen frequency changes over time due to hardening of rubber, and moreover, it is not easy to adjust the production speed in the manufacturing process for a plastic film roll body as previously mentioned.
(50) The inventor of the present application has paid attention to the vibration characteristics in
(51) In addition, the inventor of the present application has found a more detailed determination condition concerning the condition of suppressing resonance or polygonal deformation. The nip roller system as illustrated in
(52)
(53) As a eigen frequency of the entire nip roller system, this antiphase mode is a high-order eigen frequency and changes with the structure, rigidity, and mass of the rollers. The inventor of the present application has found that when the antiphase eigen frequency of the entire nip roller system matches or approaches the N-time frequency Nf that subordinately occurs due to nonlinear rattle of one-time vibration 1f resulting from roller unbalance, the nip roller system exhibits resonance in the antiphase mode as illustrated in
(54) Therefore, the roller structure, rigidity, and mass are set to satisfy the mathematical expression (1) of the invention of the present application, so that the nip roller 301 applied in the method of producing a plastic film roll body can increase the antiphase eigen frequency appearing in high orders, for example, fourth-order and fifth-order and can have a large N of the N-time frequency Nf of a roller unbalance cycle that matches or approaches the antiphase eigen frequency. Because of a combination of Nf with sufficiently small amplitude illustrated in
(55) The high-order antiphase eigen frequency of the nip roller system as the cause of polygonal deformation can be obtained by eigenvalue analysis such as numerical structure calculations such as the finite element method for the entire nip roller apparatus or can be estimated from the actual vibration displacement and frequency observation by analogy.
(56) Here, the inventor of the present application has found a method of avoiding polygonal deformation as a method of producing a plastic film roll body in a simpler way, based on a relation between the high-order antiphase eigen frequency and the operating frequency, by replacing the vibration model of the entire nip system with a two-degree of freedom system in
(57) When the nip roller 301 has a mass of W and an equivalent rigidity of k.sub.1, and the conveyance roller 302 has a mass of W.sub.2 and an equivalent rigidity of k.sub.2, the mass ratio m0 (W.sub.2/W) and the corresponding eigen frequencies f.sub.01 and f.sub.02 of the rollers are as illustrated by the mathematical expression (5) below. Here, the equivalent rigidity is calculated by the mathematical expression (6) below.
(58)
(59) The eigen frequency of the two-degree of freedom system in
(60)
(61) Furthermore, assuming that the vibrating force is the centrifugal force resulting from the unbalance of the nip roller 301 and the conveyance roller 302 as illustrated by the mathematical expression (7), the response amplitude of forced vibration in this case is thought to be proportional to the right sides of the mathematical expression (2) and the mathematical expression (3) based on the linear vibration solution of a one-degree of freedom system. The denominator of the right side indicates that the amplitude becomes larger during resonance, because it approaches zero when the operating frequencies f.sub.2 and f.sub.1 of the conveyance roller 302 serving as a counter electrode and the nip roller 301 match or approach the eigen frequency fe. The numerator W indicates that the centrifugal force as the vibrating force increases in proportion to the roller masses W, W.sub.2.
(62) Based on such parameters, the inventor of the present application has searched for a stability condition that has a large Nf to such an extent that resonance and polygonal deformation do not occur, and found that the inequalities of the mathematical expression (2) and the mathematical expression (3) below should be satisfied.
(63)
(64) All of the numerical solutions of the antiphase eigen frequency of the nip system using the above-noted finite element method and the two-degree of freedom system eigen frequency illustrated by the mathematical expression (4) are essentially linear vibration solutions. For the consistency with that the N-time frequency results from nonlinear vibration, it is assumed that the mechanism of occurrence of N-times vibration per se results from nonlinear rattle and the mechanism per se by which the N-time frequency matches or approaches the eigen frequency to cause resonance does not include many errors in linear vibration analysis. Under this assumption, a stability boundary as to the presence/absence of resonance and polygonal deformation was set through measurement in the actual apparatus to obtain the determination formulae of the mathematical expressions (1) to (5).
(65) It has been found that polygonal deformation results from the antiphase mode. In this mode, nodes of vibration, that is, the sections where displacement is zero are located not on the axial ends of the nip roller but between both axial ends as illustrated in
EXAMPLES
(66) Although a specific description will be given with examples below, the present invention is not limited by those examples.
Example 1
(67) The extruder 101, the longitudinal stretched process 120, and the lateral stretched process 140 illustrated in
(68) The nip roller to be used in Example 1 had the structure as illustrated in
(69) In the nip roller of Example 1, the value of the left side of the mathematical expression (1) is 266339, greater than 80000. The value of the right side of the mathematical expression (2) is 6.6, and the value of the right side of the mathematical expression (3) is 2.9, both smaller than 20.
(70) The antiphase eigen frequency obtained beforehand by finite element analysis in the present nip roller system is 43 Hz, which is about nine times as high as the operating frequency of the nip roller and about eight times as high as the operating frequency of the conveyance roller.
Example 2
(71) In the almost same configuration as Example 1, the corona discharge treatment process 150 having the nip roller 301 in
(72) In the nip roller of Example 2, the value of the left side of the mathematical expression (1) is 266339, greater than 80000. The value of the right side of the mathematical expression (2) is 7.2, and the value of the right side of the mathematical expression (3) is 3.1, both smaller than 20.
(73) The antiphase eigen frequency obtained beforehand by finite element analysis in the present nip roller system is 50 Hz, which is about ten times as high as the operating frequency of the nip roller and about ten times as high as the operating frequency of the conveyance roller.
Example 3
(74) A film roll body was produced under the same conditions as in Example 2, except that CFRP having a Young's modulus of 107 GPa was used as the core material of the nip roller 301.
(75) In the nip roller of Example 3, the value of the left side of the mathematical expression (1) is 89057, which is considerably smaller than that in Examples 1 and 2 but greater than 80000. The value of the right side of the mathematical expression (2) is 19.7, and the value of the right side of the mathematical expression (3) is 8.4, both smaller than 20.
(76) The antiphase eigen frequency obtained beforehand by finite element analysis in the present nip roller system is 40 Hz, which is about eight times as high as the operating frequency of the nip roller and about eight times as high as the operating frequency of the conveyance roller.
Example 4
(77) A film roll body was produced under the same conditions as in Example 3 except that rubber having a rubber hardness H of 60 [deg] was used for the rubber layer of the nip roller 301.
(78) In the nip roller of Example 4, the value of the left side of the mathematical expression (1) is 89057, greater than 80000. The value of the right side of the mathematical expression (2) is 19.7, and the value of the right side of the mathematical expression (3) is 8.4, both smaller than 20.
(79) The antiphase eigen frequency obtained beforehand by finite element analysis in the present nip roller system is 41 Hz because of a high rubber hardness and is about eight times as high as the operating frequency of the nip roller and about eight times as high as the operating frequency of the conveyance roller.
Comparative Example 1
(80) A film roll body was produced under the same conditions as in Example 2 except that CFRP having a Young's modulus of 90 GPa was used for the core material of the nip roller 301.
(81) In the nip roller of Comparative Example 1, the value of the left side of the mathematical expression (1) is 74908, smaller than 80000. The value of the right side of the mathematical expression (3) is 9.6, smaller than 20, whereas the value of the right side of the mathematical expression (2) is 22.8, greater than 20. This is attributable to a low rigidity E.sub.1I.sub.1 of the nip roller although the support length L.sub.1 of the nip roller exceeds 5 m.
(82) The antiphase eigen frequency obtained beforehand by finite element analysis in the present nip roller system is 35 Hz, which is about seven times as high as the operating frequency of the nip roller and about seven times as high as the operating frequency of the conveyance roller.
Comparative Example 2
(83) A plastic film roll body was produced under the same conditions as in Example 2 except that the nip roller as described later was used as the nip roller in the corona discharge treatment process. The outer diameter of the nip roller is 400 mm and the core material is steel. The inner and outer diameters of the core material and other characteristics are as illustrated in Table 1.
(84) In the nip roller of Comparative Example 2, the value of the left side of the mathematical expression (1) is 30564, smaller than 80000. The value of the right side of the mathematical expression (2) is 31.6, and the value of the right side of the mathematical expression (3) is 45.5, both greater than 20. This is attributable to a low rigidity E.sub.1I.sub.1 and a large mass W of the nip roller although the support length L.sub.1 of the nip roller exceeds 5 m.
(85) The antiphase eigen frequency obtained beforehand by finite element analysis in the present nip roller system is 30 Hz, which is about six times as high as the operating frequency of the nip roller and about five times as high as the operating frequency of the conveyance roller.
Comparative Example 3
(86) A film roll body was produced under the same conditions as in Example 3 except that rubber having a rubber hardness H of 70 [deg] was used for the rubber layer of the nip roller 301.
(87) In the nip roller of Comparative Example 3, the value of the left side of the mathematical expression (1) is 89057, greater than 80000. The value of the right side of the mathematical expression (2) is 19.7, and the value of the right side of the mathematical expression (3) is 8.4, both smaller than 20.
(88) The antiphase eigen frequency obtained beforehand by finite element analysis in the present nip roller system is 42 Hz because of a high rubber hardness and is about eight times as high as the operating frequency of the nip roller and about eight times as high as the operating frequency of the conveyance roller.
Comparative Example 4
(89) Based on the description in the related art of Patent Literature 2, vibration evaluation was conducted for a press roller in a papermaking process. For the details not described in Patent Literature 2, the evaluation was conducted according to the specifics in Table 2 based on specifications in a general papermaking process.
(90) The value of the left side of the mathematical expression (1) is 714599, greater than 80000, but the rubber hardness corresponding to a pressing force of 30 kN required for dewatering is H=80 deg, higher than 65 deg.
(91) The value of the right side of the mathematical expression (2) and the value of the right side of the mathematical expression (3) are both 23.6, greater than 20. This is because the operating speed differs greatly from that in the method of producing a plastic film roll body.
(92) The antiphase eigen frequency obtained beforehand by finite element analysis in the present nip roller system is 89 Hz, which is about 13 times as high as the operating frequency of the nip roller and about 13 times as high as the operating frequency of the conveyance roller.
(93) [Presence/Absence of Resonance]
(94) An acceleration detector manufactured by ONO SOKKI CO., LTD. (Type: NP-2090) was attached to the nip roller bearing member to obtain acceleration data. Displacement converted data was fast Fourier transformed and determined on the following criterion.
(95) Presence: an amplitude of displacement of 10 m or more was observed with the expected eigen frequency (in a 10 Hz range).
(96) Absence: an amplitude of displacement of 10 m or more was not observed with the expected eigen frequency (in a 10 Hz range).
(97) [Presence/Absence of Polygonal Deformation]
(98) For the roller in which resonance was observed, the nip roller was removed and supported rotatably, and displacement of the roller surface was measured at low speed rotation (rotation by hand) and determined on the following criterion.
(99) Presence: in displacement data, the ratio between the operating frequency and the eigen frequency N1 protrusions were observed on the roller surface, and the height of protrusions was equal to or greater than 50 m after swelling was removed.
(100) Absence: the above-noted conditions for presence are not applicable.
(101) [Other Problems Caused by Polygonal Deformation]
(102) A plastic film subjected to the corona discharge treatment was steamed, and whether periodical wettability appearing on the surface opposite to the treated surface was observed. If the opposite surface is unintentionally treated, many water drops of steam adhere to the treated portion, and a stripe pattern corresponding to the polygon cycles is observed in appearance.
(103) Presence: unintentional discharge treatment occurring on the surface opposite to the corona discharge treatment surface.
(104) Absence: unintentional discharge treatment did not occur on the surface opposite to the corona discharge treatment surface.
(105) The conditions and results of Examples 1 to 4 and Comparative Examples 1 to 4 are illustrated in Tables 1 to 4.
(106) TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Example Example Example Example 1 2 3 4 Manufacturing process for plastic film roll body Manufacturing process Nip roller for Nip roller for Use application tension cut corona discharge treatment Operating speed [m/min] 450 450 450 450 Convey- Rubber outer diameter [mm] 450 500 500 500 ance Core material outer diameter [m] 0.430 0.494 0.494 0.494 roller Core material inner diameter [m] 0.405 0.464 0.464 0.464 Second moment of area I.sub.2 [m.sup.4] 0.000358 0.000648 0.000648 0.000648 Core material Steel Steel Steel Steel Young's modulus E.sub.2 [GPa] 206 206 206 206 Support length L.sub.2 [m] 10 10 10 10 Spring constant k.sub.2 716759 1299057 1299057 1299057 Mass W.sub.2 [kg] 1439 1823 1823 1823 Rotation frequency f.sub.2 [Hz] 5.3 4.8 4.8 4.8 Nip Rubber outer diameter [mm] 490 490 490 490 roller Rubber hardness H [deg] 45 45 45 60 Core material outer diameter [m] 0.442 0.442 0.442 0.442 Core material inner diameter [m] 0.4 0.4 0.4 0.4 Second moment of area I.sub.1 [m.sup.4] 0.000617 0.000617 0.000617 0.000617 Core material CFRP CFRP CFRP CFRP Young's modulus E.sub.1 [GPa] 320 320 107 107 Support length L.sub.1 [m] 9 9 9 9 Spring constant k.sub.1 2930786 2930786 979982 979982 Mass W [kg] 741 741 741 741 Rotation frequency f.sub.1 [Hz] 4.9 4.9 4.9 4.9
(107) TABLE-US-00002 TABLE 2 Comparative Comparative Comparative Comparative Example 1 Example 2 Example 3 Example 4 Manufacturing process for Papermaking plastic film roll body process Manufacturing process Nip roller for Dewatering Use application corona discharge treatment press roller Operating speed [m/min] 450 450 450 2000 Convey- Rubber outer diameter [mm] 500 500 500 1500 ance Core material outer diameter [m] 0.494 0.494 0.494 1.5 roller Core material inner diameter [m] 0.464 0.464 0.464 1.453 Second moment of area I.sub.2 [m.sup.4] 0.000648 0.000648 0.000648 0.0297 Core material Steel Steel Steel Steel Young's modulus E.sub.2 [GPa] 206 206 206 206 Support length L.sub.2 [m] 10 10 10 10 Spring constant k.sub.2 1299057 1299057 1299057 59563877 Mass W.sub.2 [kg] 1823 1823 1823 8557 Rotation frequency f.sub.2 [Hz] 4.8 4.8 4.8 7.1 Nip Rubber outer diameter [mm] 490 400 490 1500 roller Rubber hardness H [deg] 45 45 70 80 Core material outer diameter [m] 0.442 0.340 0.442 1.5 Core material inner diameter [m] 0.4 0.302 0.4 1.453 Second moment of area I.sub.1 [m.sup.4] 0.000617 0.000248 0.000617 0.029712 Core material CFRP Steel CFRP Steel Young's modulus E.sub.1 [GPa] 90 206 107 206 Support length L.sub.1 [m] 9 9 9 10 Spring constant k.sub.1 824284 756697 979982 59563878 Mass W [kg] 741 1668 741 8557 Rotation frequency f.sub.1 [Hz] 4.9 6.0 4.9 7.1
(108) TABLE-US-00003 TABLE 3 Example 1 Example 2 Example 3 Example 4 Manufacturing process for plastic film roll body Manufacturing process Nip roller for Nip roller for Use application tension cut corona discharge treatment Eigen frequency Mass ratio m.sub.0 0.515 0.406 0.406 0.406 of two-degree of f.sub.02 [Hz] 22 27 27 27 freedom system f.sub.01 [Hz] 63 63 36 36 f.sub.e [Hz] 78.5 76.1 46.1 46.1 Actually measured eigen frequency 43 50 40 41 of nip roller system [Hz] Mathematical E.sub.1I.sub.1/W 266339 266339 89057 89057 expression (1) Right side of mathematical expression (2) 6.6 7.2 19.7 19.7 Right side of mathematical expression (3) 2.9 3.1 8.4 8.4 Results Presence/absence of Absent Absent Absent Absent resonance Occurrence of polygonal Absent Absent Absent Absent deformation Back surface discharge Absent Absent Absent treatment defect
(109) TABLE-US-00004 TABLE 4 Comparative Comparative Comparative Comparative Example 1 Example 2 Example 3 Example 4 Manufacturing process for Papermaking plastic film roll body process Manufacturing process Nip roller for Dewatering Use application corona discharge treatment press roller Eigen frequency Mass ratio m.sub.0 0.406 0.914 0.406 1.00 of two-degree of f.sub.02 [Hz] 27 27 27 83 freedom system f.sub.01 [Hz] 33 21 36 83 f.sub.e [Hz] 43.0 36.6 46.1 135.0 Actually measured eigen frequency of nip roller system [Hz] 35 30 42 89 Mathematical E.sub.1I.sub.1/W 74908 30564 89057 714599 expression (1) Right side of mathematical expression (2) 22.8 31.6 19.7 23.6 Right side of mathematical expression (3) 9.6 45.5 8.4 23.6 Results Presence/absence of Present Present Present Present resonance Occurrence of polygonal Present Present Absent Present deformation Back surface discharge Present Present Absent treatment defect
(110) [Discussion of the Results of Examples and Comparative Examples]
(111) In Example 1, since CFRP having high rigidity is employed as the core material of the nip roller, a nip roller having a high Young's modulus of 320 GPa was produced while an increase in mass W was suppressed. The resulting nip roller satisfies the mathematical expression (1) and has a low vibrating force and a high eigen frequency. Moreover, since the rubber layer on the nip roller surface has a rubber hardness H of 65 deg or lower, the rubber hardness is adapted for the pressing force under a preferable condition for the manufacturing process for a plastic film roll body. The resulting nip roller satisfies the mathematical expression (2), exhibits a damping force for vibration, and is excellent in preventing vibration while the support length L.sub.1 exceeds 5 m. In particular, the Young's modulus of the core material exceeds 250 GPa and the left side of the mathematical expression (1) is far greater than 80000 that is the boundary value of the stabilization region, thereby achieving sufficient stability. Since the eigen frequency is sufficiently high for the operating frequency of each roll suitable in the method of manufacturing a plastic film roll body, and the mathematical expression (2) and the mathematical expression (3) are satisfied, resonance can be suppressed and polygonal deformation can be prevented. This nip roller is suitable for a tension cut roller, because polygonal deformation is suppressed to eliminate the need for frequently replacing rollers and make the film less damaged.
(112) The nip roller of Example 2 employs CFRP having high rigidity as the core material as in Example 1 and also employs a rubber layer having a predetermined rubber hardness H and a nip roller having a predetermined support length L.sub.1. The resulting nip roller thus satisfies the mathematical expression (1) and suppresses resonance and polygonal deformation. In the operating conditions suitable for manufacturing a plastic film roll body, the mathematical expressions (2) and (3) are satisfied. No resonance occurred in the corona discharge treatment process. By preventing polygonal deformation caused by resonance, unintentional discharge treatment was suppressed on the surface opposite to the corona treatment surface of the plastic film roll body.
(113) Example 3 was set under the same conditions as in Example 2 except for the Young's modulus of the nip roller core material. Since the Young's modulus is as low as 107 GPa, the value of the left side of the mathematical expression (1) is significantly reduced. Nevertheless, since the mathematical expression (1) is satisfied, resonance was not observed, and thus Example 3 was able to be used in the stabilization region. In the operating conditions suitable for manufacturing a plastic film roll body, since the mathematical expressions (2) and (3) were satisfied, resonance did not occur. Polygonal deformation caused by resonance was prevented, and preferable results were exhibited also in corona treatment.
(114) Example 4 was set under the same conditions as in Example 3 except for the rubber hardness of the surface of the nip roller. Although the rubber hardness is as high as 60 deg, which is smaller than 65 deg, a sufficient damping force acted, and vibration did not occur.
(115) Comparative Example 1 was set under the same conditions as in Examples 2 and 3 except for the Young's modulus of the nip roller core material, and the Young's modulus was further reduced compared with that in Example 3. Since the Young's modulus is as low as 90 GPa, the mathematical expression (1) is not satisfied, and thus resonance occurred. In the operating conditions suitable for manufacturing a film roll body, since the mathematical expression (2) was not satisfied, polygonal deformation occurred, and unintentional discharge treatment occurred on the surface opposite to the corona discharge treatment surface to cause a defect.
(116) In Comparative Example 2, steel was employed as the core material of the nip roller. This nip roller has extremely poor dynamic stability because the value of the left side of the mathematical expression (1) is far smaller than 80000 that is the boundary value of the stabilization region. In the operating conditions suitable for manufacturing a film roll body, since the mathematical expression (2) and the mathematical expression (3) were not satisfied, resonance was observed. Polygonal deformation caused by resonance occurred, and unintentional discharge treatment occurred on the surface opposite to the corona discharge treatment surface to cause a defect.
(117) Comparative Example 3 was set under the same conditions as in Examples 3 and 4 except for the rubber hardness of the surface of the nip roller, and the rubber hardness was set higher than that in Example 4. Since the rubber hardness is as high as 70 deg, the damping force was insufficient. Although Comparative Example 3 satisfies the mathematical expressions (1), (2), and (3), vibration occurred because the damping force of the nip roller is insufficient. However, in Comparative Example 3, polygonal deformation did not occur.
(118) Comparative Example 4 is an example of application to a press roller in a papermaking process. Although the press roller in Comparative Example 4 satisfied the mathematical expression (1), the rubber hardness H was extremely high because of a high pressing force. Because of a high rubber hardness, sufficient damping was not obtained, and resonance occurred. Polygonal deformation also occurred. In the operating conditions suitable for a paper making process, since the mathematical expression (2) and the mathematical expression (3) are not satisfied, the eigen frequency is not sufficiently high for the operating frequency of each roller, which is thought to be one of the reasons of intense vibration.
(119) As described above, the present invention can avoid resonance of the nip roller applied in the manufacturing process for a plastic film roll body and suppress polygonal deformation of rubber, and therefore can provide a plastic film roll body having excellent quality with excellent productivity with high speed and large width.
(120) The present invention is extremely suitable for a method of manufacturing a plastic film roll body usable for packaging materials, capacitors, optical films for use in flat display panels and the like, and process protection films, although the application range is not limited to those.
REFERENCE SIGNS LIST
(121) 101 extruder 102 die 103 cooling drum 120 longitudinal stretched process 130 oven 140 stretched process 150 corona discharge treatment process 170 film roll body 180 winding process 161 unstretched sheet 162 uniaxially stretched sheet 163 biaxially stretched film 301 nip roller 302, 404 conveyance roller 303 electrode 304 AC high-voltage power supply 305 core material 306 rubber 401 nip roller (conventional product) 402 high surface-pressure portion 403 low surface-pressure portion 405 nip roller deformed into a polygonal shape a surface displacement of the nip roller 301 at 0 phase a surface displacement of the nip roller 301 half a cycle after 0 phase b surface displacement of the conveyance roller 302 at 0 phase b surface displacement of the conveyance roller 302 at phase half a cycle after 0 phase c node at which vibration displacement of the nip roller 301 is zero c node at which vibration displacement of the conveyance roller 302 is zero