Circuit for the inductive heating of a metal
10165628 ยท 2018-12-25
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B29C65/3644
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C66/91214
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
G01K2217/00
PHYSICS
B29C66/71
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C66/5221
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C66/71
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C66/963
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C66/9192
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C66/73773
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C66/91216
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C66/91951
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C66/73774
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C66/5229
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C66/73921
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C66/91443
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C66/91651
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
Abstract
An inductive welding device includes a circuit for the inductive heating of a metal that is embedded in a non-magnetic bed. A transformer induces eddy currents in the metal as a function of an exciter current and an exciter voltage and forms a load impedance together with the metal to be heated. Temperature monitoring is provided for the metal to be heated. The load impedance is operated in the region of the resonant frequency of the load impedance. The exciter current and exciter voltage and their phase shift relative to each other are measured and logged when the metal is heated. A temperature progression which is proportional to the phase shift is calculated from the exciter current, exciter voltage, and phase shift.
Claims
1. An induction welding device comprising: a non-magnetic bed, a metal embedded in the non-magnetic bed, a circuit for inductive heating of the metal and for monitoring a temperature of the metal, the circuit comprising a transformer and the metal, wherein the transformer induces eddy currents in the metal as a function of an exciter current and an exciter voltage, wherein the transformer and the metal together form a load impedance, wherein the load impedance has a resonant frequency, wherein the exciter current, the exciter voltage, and a phase shift of the exciter current and the exciter voltage relative to each other are measured and logged when the metal is heated, wherein a temperature progression of the metal is calculated from the exciter current, the exciter voltage, and the phase shift, and wherein the temperature progression is proportional to the phase shift.
2. The induction welding device according to claim 1, wherein the exciter voltage is applied to the load impedance, wherein an exciter frequency of the exciter voltage is changed for calibration such that the phase shift and a load impedance change are produced, wherein the metal comprises a PTC thermistor or an NTC thermistor, and wherein a change in resistance of the PTC thermistor or the NTC thermistor is calculated from the exciter current, the exciter voltage, and the phase shift using a mathematical model of the load impedance.
3. The induction welding device according to claim 2, wherein the load impedance change is logged.
4. The induction welding device according to claim 1, further comprising a memory, wherein the metal comprises a PTC thermistor or an NTC thermistor, wherein a resistance of the PTC thermistor or of the NTC thermistor is always calculated during operation, wherein the resistance remains constant in a region and subsequently rises, wherein the temperature progression is calculated from a progression of the resistance, and wherein the temperature progression is calibrated to a melting temperature inherent to a material of the non-magnetic bed before the temperature progression is stored in the memory.
5. The induction welding device according to claim 1, wherein the non-magnetic bed is a plastic bed.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The invention is schematically shown in the drawings by reference to an embodiment, wherein:
(2)
(3)
(4)
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
(5) In order to entirely avoid the systemic weaknesses which are linked to the supply or introduction of electrically conductive cables or wires both for welding and also for temperature monitoring in the welding zone, a contactless indirect temperature measurement is provided in accordance with the invention.
(6) For this purpose it is necessary to enable the determination of the temperature in the secondary coil, i.e. the closed heating metal, e.g. a heating metal strip, from the parameters which are transmitted via a primary coil during induction welding to the welding generator and are evaluated there. The solution to this measurement task will be described below.
(7) In the present application, energy transmission occurs inductively from a primary air coil to the secondary side, i.e. the metal to be heated, which is a metal strip. The temperature of the metal strip must be detected without direct measurement for process and testing reasons.
(8) Depending on the used material, the metal strip has a more or less high positive or negative temperature coefficient, i.e. it therefore consists of materials which conduct current better at lower temperatures than at high temperatures. Its electrical resistance therefore increases with rising temperature. This fact is exploited in order to detect the temperature progression during the welding process. As is shown from the drawing of the principal circuit diagram (
(9) In the illustrated model, a change in the resistance R.sub.L of the strip resistance leads to a change in the total resistance Z.sub.L of the entire circuit. Irrespective of other influences such as changes in power, voltage and current, this produces a phase shift in the power supply between the supply voltage U.sub.V and the supply current I.sub.V. If the circuit is operated in the range of the resonant frequency, this leads to highly useful results. In particular, R.sub.L is proportional to Z.sub.L, and Z.sub.L is equivalent to , and therefore R.sub.L is equivalent to . By measuring the supply voltage U.sub.V and the supply current I.sub.V over time, especially in real time, the phase shift in the power supply and subsequently the resistance R.sub.L of the metal can be calculated by means of the mathematical model. As a result, the resistance progression can be logged during the welding process. Due to the PTC thermistor properties of the metal, i.e. the temperature dependence, this resistance progression is proportional to the temperature progression during the welding process.
R.sub.L=R.sub.0*e.sup.b(.sup.T.sub.L.sup.T.sub.0)
In an alternative embodiment, the temperature-dependent metal resistor is an NTC thermistor.
(10) R.sub.0 is the nominal resistance at room temperature T.sub.0, b is the material constant, and T.sub.L the temperature to be determined, measured and associated with the respectively calculated resistance R.sub.L.
(11) Calibration of the circuit can be performed for example in such a way that the input frequency F of the supply voltage is changed by F. This leads to a change in the load impedance X.sub.L on the basis of the model calculation, and subsequently to a defined change R.sub.L in the strip resistance and a defined measured value .
(12) A calculated value can be determined by means of the invention which is proportional to the strip heating temperature, and by means of its progression it is possible to positively illustrate the relative change of the temperature value in the welding region. All induction heating methods (e.g. also the pan base material in induction ovens) in which the secondary winding consists of material with a positive temperature coefficient could be calibrated according to this method to a relative temperature change statement and can thus be monitored.
(13) An improved and more precise allocation to a physical measuring quantity ( C., K) can be achieved with the circuit described below.
(14) A reasonably constant temperature rise (
(15) This fact is used in accordance with the invention in such a way that in operation the resistance of the metal arranged as a PTC thermistor is always calculated and is preferably logged, wherein the resistance upon reaching the melting-down temperature of the bed B remains at least virtually constant until the melting down of the bed B and only rises again after the melting, and that the temperature progression calculated from the resistance progression is adjusted to the melting temperature of the bed material before the temperature progression is stored in a memory M.
(16) The measured data detected with respective software support during each welding process are attached to the crystalline melting point temperature after passing said temperature point, thus allowing the temperature progression to be allocated to real measured values. All values before and after can thus be allocated to a precise welding strip temperature which is precise up to a few degrees Celsius and the log files can be provided in form of respective temperature curves when calibration is performed between the temperature progression calculated from the resistance progression and the melting temperature associated with the bed material. For this purpose, the curve of the calculated temperature progression in the calculated melting range is shifted for example by the melting temperature characteristic to the material in the direction of the temperature axis. In one embodiment, the non-magnetic bed is a plastic bed.
(17) The invention further relates to an induction welding device IWD, especially for induction connecting sleeves for the melting connection of weldable thermoplastic bodies with a circuit as described above.