Moistening system for envelopes that reduces clogging caused by contaminants
09643448 ยท 2017-05-09
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B43M5/042
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B05C5/004
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B05C1/025
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B05C11/105
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B05C1/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A moistening system that significantly reduces the problems caused by contaminants in the moistening fluid is provided. The catch basin of a moistening system is provided with a filter that reduces the amount of contaminants contained in the recycled moistening fluid. Additionally, the moistening fluid is buffered with an acid that acts to dissolve the paper filler and other soluble debris that may be introduced into the moistening fluid, thereby significantly decreasing any blinding of components of the moistening system that would otherwise reduce the flow rate of the moistening fluid through the system. These ensure that sufficient moistening fluid is applied to the envelope flaps, which results in consistent and complete sealing of the envelope flaps.
Claims
1. A moistening system for moistening an envelope flap for sealing of an envelope, the moistening system comprising: a reservoir to hold moistening fluid; a moistening device for applying the moistening fluid to a flap of the envelope passing through the moistening system; a well located beneath the moistening device to collect moistening fluid discharged by the moistening device that is not carried away by the envelope, the well being coupled to the reservoir by a supply tube; and the moistening fluid including an acid buffer, such that the moistening fluid has an acidic pH value, to dissolve paper filler contained in the moistening fluid in the well, wherein dissolving of the paper filler reduces clogging of the moistening device that can be caused by the paper filler.
2. The moistening system of claim 1, wherein the moistening device is a contact moistening device.
3. The moistening system of claim 1, wherein the moistening device is a non-contact moistening device.
4. The moistening system of claim 1, wherein the moistening fluid has a pH value of approximately 3.0.
5. The moistening system of claim 1, wherein the acid buffer is a citric acid.
6. The moistening system of claim 1, wherein the acid buffer is a citric acid/sodium citrate buffer.
7. The moistening system of claim 1, wherein the acid buffer is a potassium hydrogen phthalate/hydrochloric acid buffer.
8. The moistening system of claim 1, wherein the acid buffer is an acetic acid buffer.
9. The moistening system of claim 1, wherein the acid buffer is an acetic acid/sodium acetate buffer.
10. The moistening system of claim 1, wherein the acid buffer is a hydrochloric acid/sodium citrate buffer.
11. The moistening system of claim 1, further comprising: a pump device coupled to the reservoir by the supply tube, the pump device being coupled to the moistening device to provide moistening fluid to the moistening device.
12. The moistening device of claim 11, further comprising: a filter to filter the collected moistening fluid that enters the supply tube from the well, wherein dissolving of the paper filler reduces clogging of the filter and moistening device that can be caused by the paper filler.
13. The moistening system of claim 1, further comprising: a wick to provide moistening fluid from the well to the moistening device, wherein dissolving of the paper filler reduces clogging of the wick and moistening device that can be caused by the paper filler.
Description
DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The accompanying drawings illustrate presently preferred embodiments of the invention, and together with the general description given above and the detailed description given below, serve to explain the principles of the invention. As shown throughout the drawings, like reference numerals designate like or corresponding parts.
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PRESENT INVENTION
(6) In describing the present invention, reference is made to the drawings, wherein there is seen in
(7) The base unit 14 further includes a horizontal feed deck 30 which extends substantially from the input end 16 to the output end 18. A plurality of nudger rollers 12 are suitably mounted under the feed deck 30 and project upwardly through openings in the feed deck so that the periphery of the rollers 12 is slightly above the upper surface of the feed deck 30 and can exert a forward feeding force on a succession of mail pieces placed in the input end 16. A registration wall 32 defines a mail piece registration surface substantially perpendicular to the feed deck 30 that extends substantially from the input end 16 to the output end 18. Mail pieces placed in the input end 16 are fed by the nudger rollers 12 along the feed deck 30, with the top edge of the mail piece being registered against the wall 32. The mail pieces may be passed through one or more modules, such as, for example, a singulator module and a moistening module that includes a moistening system according to the present invention as described below. Each of these modules is located generally in the area indicated by reference numeral 36. The mail pieces are then passed to a metering/printing module located generally in the area indicated by reference numeral 38.
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(10) As an envelope passes through the moistening device 70 or 70, the inside of the envelope flap, where the glue line for sealing the flap is located, contacts the wetting element 72, such that the wetting element 72 transfers moistening fluid to the flap to activate the glue. The moistening device 70 and 70 illustrated in
(11) Regardless of whether the moistening device 70 is a contact or non-contact, the well 60 beneath both types of moistening devices 70 and 70 collects moistening fluid that is discharged by the moistening device 70, 70 but not carried away by the envelope. This moistening fluid in the system 50 is recycled and stays within the moistening system 50 for subsequent usage via tube 56, while the moistening fluid in the system 50 is recycled by again coming in contact with the wick 74. Unfortunately, this recycled fluid becomes contaminated with different materials derived from the paper and adhesive. Contaminants include, for example, envelope adhesive and paper dust comprising paper fibers and filler used to make paper envelopes, which are released by the friction associated with the envelope contacting different parts of the mailing system, such as the stripper/moistening module. Such contaminants negatively impact the operation of the moistening system 50 such as, for example, by clogging of the pump 58, tubing 62, discharge device 76, or nozzles in a non-contact system. These situations can result in insufficient moistening fluid being applied to the envelope flaps, which results in inconsistent sealing of the envelopes. To prevent such clogging in the system 50, a filter pad 90 is provided at the junction between the well 60 and tubing 56. Filter pad 90 is preferably a rectangular cuboid comprised of woven polyester fibers. The fiber orientation is primarily homogenous, which allows the moistening fluid to freely pass through in multiple directions, but will catch contaminants. Thus, while the moistening fluid will freely pass through the filter pad 90, a majority of any contaminants contained within the moistening fluid in the well 60 will be trapped by the filter pad 90, thereby keeping the other moistening system components, e.g., pump 58, tubing 62, discharge device 76, free from contaminants which can cause clogging.
(12) Utilizing the filter pad 90 can resolve many of the problems associated with the clogging of the moistening device 70. However, a frequent cause of moistener system failure is the collection of contaminants on the filter pad such that the moistening fluid can no longer pass through the filter pad 90 (referred to as blinding of the filter pad). In addition, although the filter pad 90 can remove a large portion of the contaminants, any amounts that do pass through the filter pad 90 can eventually lead to blinding of the wetting element 72. For system 50, the collection of contaminants on the wick 74 and wetting element eventually lead to blinding of the wick 74 and wetting element 72. It was unexpectedly found that a weak acid-buffered moistening solution maintained flow rate through the filter, thus greatly increasing the filter life. Additionally, blinding of the wick 74 and wetting element 72 was significantly reduced. This was unexpected because paper fibers are not soluble in weak acids. The present inventors have surmised that the majority of the contamination is caused by carbonate paper fillers, which are soluble in weakly acidic solutions. To prevent such blinding, the moistening fluid is preferably buffered to an acidic pH using an appropriate acid buffer. Typical moistening fluids consist of distilled water, a biocide (to prevent biological growth) and a dye. Other ingredients may also include alcohol detergent and a fragrance. In accordance with the present invention, the pH of the moistening fluid is preferably buffered to approximately 3.0. The acid buffer could be, for example, citric acid, citric acid/sodium citrate, potassium hydrogen phthalate/hydrochloric acid, acetic acid, acetic acid/sodium acetate, hydrochloric acid/sodium citrate, etc. The acid buffer works to dissolve the paper filler and other soluble debris that may be introduced into the moistening fluid. The general composition of two exemplary moistening fluids are provided in Table 1 below.
(13) TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Moistening Solution Formulation With Acid Buffers Buffer Strength = 10 mM Citric Acid Buffered Acetic Acid Buffered Water 97.7699776 Water 99.3859776 Biocide 0.0000064 Biocide 0.0000064 Dye 0.0000160 Dye 0.0000160 Citric Acid 1.8000000 Acetic Acid 0.5900000 Sodium Citrate 0.4300000 Sodium Acetate 0.0240000 Total 100.0 100.0
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(15) TABLE-US-00002 TABLE 2 Flow rate (g/sec) Pad #1Acid Pad #2No Acid Baseline Average Cup: 0.786 0.699 Resistive: 0.621 0.386 Post-Exposure Average Cup: 0.686 0.543 Resistive: 0.511 0.034 Cup Performance Drop 13% 22% Total Performance Drop 18% 91% Resulting Drop due to Pad 5% 69%
(16) As can be seen from the graph in
(17) While the present invention has been described with respect to a mailing machine, it should be understood that the present invention is not so limited and can be utilized with any device that has a moistening/sealing system, such as, for example, an inserter and the like. While preferred embodiments of the invention have been described and illustrated above, it should be understood that these are exemplary of the invention and are not to be considered as limiting. Additions, deletions, substitutions, and other modifications can be made without departing from the spirit or scope of the present invention. Accordingly, the invention is not to be considered as limited by the foregoing description but is only limited by the scope of the appended claims.