Extrusion device and method for influencing wall thicknesses of an extruded plastic profile
09636861 · 2017-05-02
Assignee
Inventors
- Erwin Krumböck (Ansfelden, AT)
- Leopold Weiermayer (Wartberg/Krems, AT)
- Karl Gebesmaier (Kirchdorf/Krems, AT)
Cpc classification
B29C48/11
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C48/9135
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C48/905
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C48/12
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C48/09
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C2948/92695
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C48/3001
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C48/92
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C48/872
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C48/904
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C48/885
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
Abstract
The invention relates to an extrusion device and an extrusion method for the extrusion of plastic profiles, in particular a nozzle plate, comprising at least one flow channel for plastic melt. At least one wall region of the flow channel can be temperature controlled in a targeted manner with a local temperature control device for setting the flow speed of the plastic melt.
Claims
1. An extrusion device for the extrusion of a plastic profile with at least one single walled profile section, in particular a nozzle plate, the extrusion device comprising: at least one plastic melt flow channel for the at least one single walled profile section; one or more other plastic melt flow channels for one or more other profile sections that exclude the at least one single walled profile section; and at least one local temperature control device positioned proximate to at least one wall region of the at least one plastic melt flow channel for the at least one single walled profile section to temperature control in a targeted manner the at least one wall region of the at least one plastic melt flow channel for the at least one single walled profile section for setting the flow speed of the plastic melt through the at least one plastic melt flow channel for the at least one single walled profile, wherein the extrusion device is devoid of local temperature control devices positioned proximate to the one or more other plastic melt flow channels.
2. The extrusion device according to claim 1, wherein the at least one wall region of the at least one plastic melt flow channel for the at least one single walled profile section is temperature controlled up to 30 C. above or below an average temperature of an extrusion nozzle.
3. The extrusion device according to claim 1, wherein the at least one local temperature control device is arranged in a spatial proximity to the at least one wall region of the at least one plastic melt flow channel for the at least one single walled profile section, in particular in proximity of an outlet opening of an extrusion nozzle.
4. The extrusion device according to claim 1, wherein the at least one wall region to be temperature controlled is arranged between 0 to 100 millimeters (mm) upstream from an outlet of an extrusion nozzle and/or the at least one wall region has a length dimension of about 20 to 80 mm and/or a width dimension of about 3 to 20 mm.
5. The extrusion device according to claim 1, wherein the at least one wall region to be temperature controlled is arranged in a nozzle outlet plate directly upstream of an outlet of an extrusion nozzle and the at least one wall region has a dimension in extrusion direction of 5 to 20 mm, and a dimension crosswise to the extrusion direction of about 20 to 150 mm.
6. The extrusion device according to claim 1, wherein the at least one local temperature control device comprises at least one temperature control channel, at least one electrical heating means, in particular an induction or resistant heating and/or at least one thermoelectric element.
7. The extrusion device according to claim 6, wherein the at least one local temperature control device comprises the at least one temperature control channel, and the at least one temperature control channel is flown through by a temperature control medium, in particular room air, cold and/or heated air, a gas and/or a liquid, wherein the flow through of a liquid occurs in particular in a closed cycle and the flow through of a gas occurs in an open cycle.
8. The extrusion device according to claim 7, wherein the cooled temperature control medium has a temperature between 50 to 30 C. in case of a gas and a temperature between 15 and 180 C. in case of a liquid, wherein in particular only an outlet zone of an extrusion nozzle is cooled.
9. The extrusion device according to claim 7, wherein the heated temperature control medium has a temperature between 250 to 500 C. in case of a gas and a temperature between 200 and 280 C. in case of a liquid, wherein in particular only an outlet zone of an extrusion nozzle is heated.
10. The extrusion device according to the claim 6, wherein the at least one local temperature control device comprises the at least one temperature control channel, and the at least one temperature control channel comprises a width extension according to a width dimension of an assigned wall region of the flow channel for the single walled profile sections and/or that a gap size of the at least one temperature control channel is between 0.3 to 5 mm.
11. The extrusion device according to claim 1, wherein the at least one local temperature control device is insulated thermotechnically in respect to an extrusion nozzle, in particular the nozzle plate, by an air gap and/or by means of a heat insulating intermediate layer such that higher temperature differences are effective on a surface of the at least one plastic melt flow channel for the at least one single walled profile section compared to on a surface of the one or more other plastic melt flow channels.
12. The extrusion device according to claim 1, further comprising an operating or control device for controlling the at least one local temperature control device for influencing a wall thickness of the plastic profile, wherein at least one measured value is the wall thickness, a gap size in a calibration device, a spatial extension of the plastic profile after leaving an extrusion nozzle and/or a measured back pressure in the calibration device.
13. The extrusion device according to claim 1, wherein at least one of a flow velocity, a rate of flow, a pressure or a temperature of a temperature control medium, in particular air, is set in a targeted manner before being fed into the at least one local temperature control device.
14. The extrusion device according to claim 1, further comprising an operating or control device for a timely change of a temperature of the at least one wall region of the at least one plastic melt flow channel for the at least one single walled profile section, in particular for setting a temperature transition of 5 to 15 K/min.
15. The extrusion device according to claim 1, further comprising a throttle device for setting a throughput of a temperature control medium in the at least one local temperature control device in a targeted manner, wherein the throttle device is coupled in particular to an operating or control device.
16. The extrusion device according to claim 1, further comprising a thermal insulating device for a temperature control medium for at least one sub region in the nozzle plate.
17. The extrusion device according to claim 16, wherein the insulating device comprises an air gap and/or an insulating material.
18. An extrusion device for the extrusion of a plastic profile with a plurality of single walled profile sections, in particular a nozzle plate, the extrusion device comprising: a plurality of plastic melt flow channels for the plurality of single walled profile sections; a main plastic melt flow channel for a main profile section that excludes the plurality of single walled profile sections; and at least one local temperature control device positioned proximate to: a single outer wall region of the main plastic melt flow channel for the main profile section; at least one wall region of a first plastic melt flow channel for a first single walled profile section, wherein the first plastic melt flow channel is positioned at a first end of the single outer wall region of the main plastic melt flow channel; and at least one wall region of a second plastic melt flow channel for a second single walled profile section, wherein the second plastic melt flow channel is positioned at a second end of the single outer wall region of the main plastic melt flow channel that is opposite the first end, wherein the at least one local temperature control device is configured to temperature control in a targeted manner the single outer wall region of the main plastic melt flow channel and the at least one wall region of each of the first and second plastic melt flow channels for setting glossiness of portions of the main profile section and the first and second single walled profile sections that pass by the single outer wall region of the main plastic melt flow channel and the at least one region of each of the first and second plastic melt flow channels; wherein the extrusion device is devoid of local temperature control devices positioned proximate to at least some remaining outer wall regions of the main plastic melt flow channel, the at least some remaining outer wall regions of the main plastic melt flow channel excluding the single outer wall region of the main plastic melt flow channel.
19. The extrusion device according to claim 18, wherein the single outer wall region of the main plastic melt flow channel for the main profile section and the at least one wall region of each of the first and second plastic melt flow channels for the first and second single walled profile sections are temperature controlled up to 30 C. above or below an average temperature of an extrusion nozzle.
20. The extrusion device according to claim 18, wherein the at least one local temperature control device comprises a single temperature control device arranged in spatial proximity to an outlet opening of an extrusion nozzle.
21. The extrusion device according to claim 18, wherein the at least one local temperature control device has a dimension in extrusion direction of less than 10 mm to influence a glossiness of portions of the main profile section and the first and second single walled profile sections that pass by the single outer wall region of the main plastic melt flow channel and the at least one region of each of the first and second plastic melt flow channels without influencing wall thickness.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The invention is explained by means of different embodiments.
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(22) In
(23) An extrusion device for the extrusion of plastic profiles comprises thereby an extrusion nozzle 60 with a flow channel 3 for the plastic melt. The extrusion nozzle 60 consists of multiple nozzle plates 1A, 1B (see
(24) The flow channel 3 pushes through each singular nozzle plate 1A, 1B. The flow channel 3 comprises at the inlet into the extrusion nozzle 60 and at the outlet of the melt from the extrusion nozzle 60 a singular closed cross section. The flow channel 3 can be separated along the flow path in multiple branches, that means that the flow channel 3 comprises within a singular nozzle plate 1A, 1B multiple singular cross sections, which are separated from each other often by so called spokes (see
(25) Within the meaning of this invention additional small-scaled local acting temperature control devices 2 are provided. Such a local temperature control device is assigned to a small section of the flow channel wall, a wall region A, in order to be able to locally change the temperature such that subsequently the flow velocity of the melt and thus the wall thickness of the profile in the effective area can be changed.
(26) The local temperature control device is provided according to the invention within an extrusion nozzle 60. Such an extrusion nozzle 60 consists of multiple nozzle plates 1. The extrusion nozzle 60 is thereby the entirety of the metallic parts which are permeated by the flow channel 3.
(27) The nozzle plate on the outlet side is also often designated as outlet plate 1A. As will be explained in the following, the wall region A to be locally temperature-controlled is arranged in close proximity to the flow channel 3, preferably and mostly sufficiently only in the outlet plate 1A or in the second nozzle plate 1B. It is however also possible to form the temperature control zone plate extending over multiple nozzle plates.
(28) In
(29) The extrusion direction E points vertically out of the drawing plane. The corresponding plastic profile 10 is illustrated in a cross section in
(30) The plastic profile 10 leaves the extrusion nozzle 60. At constant operating parameters in the flow channel 3 (for instance pressure at the inlet of the extrusion nozzle 60, melt throughput, constant temperature and rheological conditions of the melt at the nozzle inlet, temperature course in the extrusion nozzle 60 and others) a certain, local velocity profile of the melt at the outlet of the extrusion nozzle 60 is adjusted.
(31) In
(32) A medium velocity is obtained at each width section of the outlet gap, which provides a throughput which can be assigned to the respective width section via the corresponding crosssectional area. The wall thickness in this width section of the plastic profile 10 (see
(33) In general, it is an objective when constructing and manufacturing an outlet nozzle plate 1A to design the medium outlet velocity at the outlet of the extrusion nozzle 60 as constant as possible over the complete outlet gap. Physical and rheological effects contradict this objective more or less such that additionally the thickness of the outlet gap has to be adapted in order to change the assignable local wall thickness of the plastic profile 10 and to adapt it to the required profile geometry.
(34) It has now been shown that the local velocity profile at the outlet of the extrusion nozzle 60 can be influenced in a targeted manner by the local temperature of the channel wall of the extrusion nozzle 60, the nozzle wall temperature, at essentially unchanged boundary conditions. If in a width section of for instance 10 mm upstream (i.e. if looked at from the exit of the extrudate) the nozzle wall temperature is reduced and the remaining nozzle wall temperatures remain unchanged then the flow velocity is reduced in this width section. The reduced flow velocity provides a local reduction of the wall thicknessrelative to the almost unchanged wall thicknesses of all other profile sections.
(35) A profile section is here to be understood as a part of the plastic profile 10 related to the cross section. The single walled parts 11 on the four corners of the plastic profile 10 are such profile sections (see
(36) Changes of the nozzle wall temperatures (i.e. temperatures in the wall regions A in the extrusion nozzle 60) in selected profile or nozzle sections of about +/30 C. from the medium temperature at the extrusion nozzle 60 are allowable without having disturbing effects onto other quality parameters of the plastic profile 10. The adjustment of the extreme values of this temperature range provides changes of the medium flow velocity of about +/15% opening up the possibility to reduce almost all randomly occurring wall thicknesses deviations due to unavoidable disturbances to the given wall thickness.
(37) This device and this method are of an advantage, In particular during the profile extrusion of window profiles from hard PVC, since the flow profile of the plastic melt with the hereby used PVC formulations is determined in contrast to other plastics predominantly by wall sliding.
(38) The plastic melt slides directly along the steel wall of the flow channel 3; at best a thin lubricant layer of deposited lubricant is there between. The velocity at the wall of the flow channel 3 is not zero.
(39) Specific changes of the nozzle wall temperature effect therefore directly the sliding resistance of the plastic melt. A lower nozzle wall temperature increases the sliding resistance and provides thus a lower sliding speed.
(40) Almost all other plastic melts except PVC are dominated by shear flowing wherein the melt adheres to the steel wall. Hereby, the velocity on the wall of the flow channel 3 is zero and is the largest in the medium plane; the course corresponds to about a parabola of a higher order. In case of such melts a specific change of the nozzle wall temperature effects less the flow velocity or the medium flow velocity since no flow velocity exists here anyway, which is largely independent on the temperature of the steel wall.
(41) When lowering the nozzle wall temperature at first lower layers of the melt are slowly cooled down due to heat transfer and thus smaller shear velocities and subsequently smaller flow velocities are effected. A change of the nozzle wall temperature in the same range as mentioned above, i.e. +/30 C., has a less clear effect and provides changes of the medium flow velocity of about +/7%.
(42) However, the embodiments described in the following can be applied also to other plastics than hard PVC.
(43) Typically, the extrusion nozzles 60 are temperature controlled such that the nozzle body has a temperature which corresponds to about the average mass temperature of the plastic melt, i.e. the extrusion nozzle 60 is temperature controlled at about 190 C. (for instance in case of PVC). In case of hard PVC a nozzle wall temperature is adjusted in the main part of the nozzle gap from 190 C. to 195 C.
(44) If in case of a double extrusion two similar extrusion nozzles 60 are charged in parallel then it is to be expected that the same mass flow flows through both nozzles, in each case the half of the total mass flow. This applies more or less, but differences up to 10% can occur since the throughput reacts very sensitive to slight geometrical differences due to unavoidable manufacturing mistakes as well as to slight differences in the temperature field of both mass flows.
(45) By increasing the one nozzle wall temperature and lowering the other nozzle wall temperature in each case by up to 5 C. the throughput differences can be compensated. Since the whole extrusion nozzle 60 is affected in each case by the temperature change, all wall thicknesses of the plastic profile 10 are affected essentially in the same manner.
(46) However, in case of complex hollow chamber profiles (see
(47) Furthermore, the effect of the temperature control also depends on whether only a channel wall is affected by the temperature changeif said wall forms a hollow chamberor if both channel walls are affectedif single wall profile sections 11 sticking out are formed. Thereby, the limits of a general change of the nozzle temperature are also shown; single wall profile sections 11 change their wall thicknesses about twice as strong as a hollow chamberprofile sections 13, inner walls are almost not influenced.
(48) Within the scope of the device described here and the described method the nozzle wall temperature is temperature controlled in a targeted manner at least in a wall region A, i.e. a nozzle wall temperature is adjusted, which is above or below the average temperature at the extrusion nozzle 60.
(49) In principle, all means are suited for the embodiments, which can effect in a targeted manner (for instance for wall regions A of the flow channel 3, 12) a local change of the nozzle wall temperature.
(50) For instance, temperature controlled channels 2 are provided in the extrusion nozzle 60 in spatial proximity to the profile sections 11 to be temperature controlled, through which temperature control fluids such as oils, air and other gases are passed.
(51) Additionally or alternatively, electrical heating elements can be used in spatial proximity to the profile sections 11, 13 to be temperature controlled.
(52) It is preferred to use thermoelectrical elements, as for instance Peltier elements, which are arranged in spatial proximity to the wall region of the extrusion nozzle 60 to be temperature controlled. It is hereby of an advantage if a heating or a cooling can be directly provided by adjusting the current flow. A thermal processing of fluids is omitted.
(53) It is preferred if the local change of the nozzle wall temperature is required only in a small length area A in comparison to the total length of the extrusion nozzle 60. Thereby, the temperature control occurs preferably close to the nozzle outlet area. Extrusion nozzles 60 for window profiles have a total length of about 150 to 300 mm. The temperature changes by the local temperature control device occur preferably only on the outlet side in the length area up to 100 mm upstream, wherein the length dimension of the wall region to be temperature controlled should be itself about 20 to 80 mm. The further upstream the temperature change is affected, the broader is the profile section which is affected by the thickness change what is however in most cases not desirable.
(54) In case of extrusion nozzles 60 for window profiles this affects either only the outlet plate 1A (typical thickness about 15 to 25 mm) and/or the next following nozzle plate 1B upstream, i.e. counted against the extrusion direction E. The typical thicknesses of the nozzle plate 1 are about 20 to 50 mm.
(55) In view of the objective scope and surroundings of extrusion nozzles 60 (high pressure of the melt, insulating effect in parting planes for the plastic melt and the temperature fluid, panel heaters on the outside surfaces amongst others) air is very well suitable as temperature control medium.
(56) Air as temperature control fluid has the following advantages, wherein further preferred operations and controls are described later: No closed temperature control cycle is required. The air has only to be operated or controlled on the inlet side, on the outlet side it can be blown into the open air. If for instance pressurized air at room temperature is used for flowing through cooling channels with a gap width of about 2 mm and if the supply and drain holes in the extrusion nozzle 60 have a diameter in the range of 2 to 5 mm, then a pressure in the range of 0.05 to 0.3 bar is sufficient on the inlet side in order to lower the temperature at the flowing channel wall sectionally by about 3 to 20 C. If due to constructional reasons smaller dimensions are required for the temperature control channel and/or the supply holes, the desired cooling effect can be achieved by increasing the upcoming pressure up to 6 bar and above without a problem. No impurity at an uncontrolled discharge or in case of leakages has to be afraid of. The effect, that means the cooling or heating effect, can occur to the required extend primarily by changing the air throughput by constant temperature of the air (either air at room temperature for cooling purposes or air at an increased temperature up to 500 C. for heating purposes. The heating of the air can occur very simple in a heater fan or hot air dryer.) Different temperature control regions of the wall of the extrusion nozzle 60 can be charged with a common air supply. There is no interaction, if the power of the air supply (total throughput and pressure) is sufficiently high. The required power for supplying multiple profile sections 11, 13 is in any case comparatively low (the total blower powerwithout heating supplyof less than 300 W is sufficient most of the times), such that this power is negligible low when operating the extrusion line. If the main parameters for the temperature control are adapted beforehand well to the task (cross section of the temperature control channels 2, distance to the channel wall thereof, sufficient inlet pressure by supply via a simple blower amongst others), then hardly larger disturbances due to erroneous operation are to be expected since the local nozzle temperature cannot be changed as much that a profile breakaway is unavoidable. The changing of the air throughput can occur very simple via throttles or by changing the pressure on the inlet side. An overpressure of 0.3 bar as maximum pressure for the charging of a cooling (heating) zone is mostly sufficient. Already in case of an inlet pressure of 0.05 bar (after a throttle) the effect onto the wall thickness of the profile section 11, 13 is clearly recognizable.
(57) Although the invention shall not be restricted to air as a temperature control fluid, it could be shown in tests that the desired purpose, the lowering of the local nozzle wall temperature in narrow regions A (from a spatial point of view) and in temperature ranges up to 20 C. can be very simply achieved with a low technical effort by charging with room air and a starting pressure of less than 0.3 bar.
(58) It is a reasonable strategy when adapting the extrusion nozzle 60 by reworking to adapt the wall thicknesses of all profile sections such that the single walled projecting profile sections 11 correspond well to the set wall thicknesses without charging with cooling air or are at most slightly above the set values. A quality-conform profile production is then possible without specific measures.
(59) If the extrusion parameter change in a way that critical profile sections 11, 13 become relatively too thick and therefore a reduction of all wall thicknesses is required, the thickening of the wall strength can be prevented by charging these profile zones with cooling air.
(60) On the whole, it is possible with the embodiments described herein to adjust independently from each other the wall thicknesses of different critical regions in respect to the wall thicknesses of hollow chambers which cannot individually be influenced during the extrusion. This allows the lowering of the running meter weight of the plastic profiles 10 close to the lower limit, since the weakest member, thus the thinnest profile section, cannot require a general increase of all wall thicknesses. If one considers that the use of the usual thickness tolerances of the running meter weight would change about +1-10% then it is clear by which degree the efficiency increases if one could lower the average running meter weight by only a few percent.
(61) The use of the local temperature control is not restricted only to single wall profile sections 11, but can also be extended to any profile sections 13, thus also to hollow chamber regions. Even the thickness of inner walls 13 of profiles can be changed with these embodiments without mechanical rework in a running extrusion operation.
(62) Temperature control channels 2 with crosssectional dimensions in the millimeter range (for instance thickness vertical to the plastic profile 10: 1 to 2 mm, width parallel to plastic profile: 2 to 6 mm) can be placed preferably along the channel limitations for this purpose, such that these cooling channels can be charged with air in a targeted manner. Through the extrusion nozzle 60 a supply channel to the actual charging zone is provided in form of a hole or milled recess in a parting plane. The air outlet (see for instance
(63) On the other hand the flow direction of the cooling air could also occur in the opposite that means the air is aspirated at the nozzle housing, wherein the throttle part is located in the aspiration line, and the air is sucked in from the front side of the nozzle, possibly also from profile hollow chambers.
(64) A few embodiments will be explained in more detail in the following.
(65)
(66) The form shaping contour is typical for window profiles (see
(67) In
(68) It becomes apparent in the front view that the temperature control channels 2 are arranged and shaped spatially such that they surround the peripheral flow channels 12, which form the single wall profile sections 11, at least partially in proximity in order to allow an efficient and specific temperature control of the peripheral flow channels 12. Thus, at least one temperature control channel 2 is assigned to each of the peripheral flow channels 12. A temperature control zone is formed about the temperature control channels 2 within the wall of the flow channels 3, 12.
(69) The wall region A of the flow channels 3, 12 results from the temperature control zone, wherein said wall region a can be specifically heated or cooled by the local temperature control device 2.
(70) In
(71) In
(72) The air supply of the temperature control channels 2 occurs in the illustrated embodiment such that the air (for instance as cooling medium at room temperature) is transported sideways via the inlet lines 9 into the nozzle plate 1. The inlet lines 9 continue parallel to the width side of the nozzle plate 1. In the region of the peripheral flow channels 12, the inlet lines 9 meet the temperature control channels 2, which continue here parallel to the peripheral flow channels 12. It is deducible in the sectional view of
(73) The temperature control channels 2 are closed in each case by a plug 14 (for instance made of copper) in extrusion direction E looked at from the inlet side, such that in case of slight leakages in the parting plane to the neighboring nozzle plate no plastic melt can penetrate from the flow lines what could provide a clogging of the temperature control channels 2.
(74) Air as temperature control medium exits thus at the front side of the nozzle plate 1A.
(75) The temperature control channels 2 are preferably produced by means of wire erosion and are arranged in a distance of about 1 to 3 mm almost parallel to the flow channels 12.
(76) The flow velocity of the air in the temperature control channels 2 is mechanically adjusted for instance by a valve or another throttle device 30 and provides a corresponding temperature decrease of the wall of the temperature control channel 2, which affects due to heat transfer the wall temperature in the wall region A of the flow channel 12 for the plastic melt and changes the flow resistance and thus the local flow velocity of the plastic melt.
(77) In
(78) In context with
(79) Basically, in general, another gas or liquid as for instance water can also be used as temperature control medium.
(80) As will be explained later, the temperature control can occur with a suitable operation or control device depending on the profile characteristics.
(81) A second embodiment is illustrated in
(82) The temperature control channels 2 comprise an inlet line as well as an outlet line for the temperature control medium, wherein the inlet lines 9 are basically arranged such as illustrated in
(83) In contrast to the first embodiment the plastic melt exits only from the first nozzle plate 1A.
(84) In other embodiments temperature control channels 2 can be worked into the first nozzle plate 1A as well as in the second nozzle plate 1B. Basically, the temperature control medium can have the same temperature in the respective temperature control channels 2. It is however also possible that in the temperature control channels 2 temperature control media flow which are differently temperature controlled. The respective temperature control media can also be different.
(85) The temperature control does not have to occur exclusively with media as for instance cooling or heating air. Additionally or alternatively, an electrical thermo element can also be provided for heating and/or cooling as local temperature device 2 which sectionally heats or cools the wall of the extrusion nozzle 60, in particular in the flow channels 12.
(86) In the third embodiment the application of an electrically operated heating body 2 for the sectional temperature control of a nozzle plate 1 as extrusion device is illustrated. Heating cartridges 2 are inserted therefore in the drilled holes provided for this purpose. Instead of heating cartridges 2 cooling cartridges 2 can also be inserted, in which an electrically induced cooling effect, for instance due to the Peltier effect, is affected. Peltier elements are usually formed as flat component parts such that they can be arranged in the corresponding pockets in the nozzle plate 1 in a space saving manner.
(87) Additionally, it is of an advantage to thermally insulate the wall region A towards the nozzle body, wherein an air gap 6 as illustrated in
(88) In general local temperature control devices 2, which were described in the previous embodiments, can also be combined with each other. Thus, in one and the same nozzle plate 1 a temperature control channel 2, as well as an electrical thermo element can be used as local temperature control devices 2.
(89) The previous embodiments were directed in particular to a sectional temperature control of the nozzle channel 3 in the region of the single wall profile sections 11. This does not have to be necessarily the case. Additionally or alternatively the wall regions A of other profile sections 13 can also be specifically temperature controlled.
(90) This allows for changing also the wall thickness of inner walls 13 of a plastic profile 10 (hollow chamber profile) as this is illustrated in context of
(91) In the nozzle plate 1 the connecting channels 9 for the temperature control medium, here again air, are also illustrated besides the nozzle opening 60.
(92) In extrusion direction E after the bars 8 the singular strands weld with each other to the plastic profile 10 by forming so called welding seams.
(93) In
(94) Temperature control channels 2 are worked thereby into the nozzle plate 1 as extrusion device, which are located spatially in direct proximity to an inner wall 13 to be extruded (see
(95) The sectional view is in the area of the spokes 8 and within the temperature channel 2 and the inlet and outlet lines 9 of the temperature control medium. Thereby also parts of the flow channel 3 for the plastic profile 10 on the outlet side are recognizable.
(96) Due to stability reasons the temperature channel 2 is designed meander like shaped (see arrows in
(97) The wall region A in the embodiment according to
(98) As shown in the embodiments it is sufficient to temperature control the corresponding peripheral flow channel 12 of the extrusion nozzle 60 for the plastic melt only sectionally, like only on one side or on one side and the front limitation.
(99) The more wall regions A of the flow channels 3 are effected by the temperature change the more intensive the melt throughput reacts onto a certain temperature change, for instance a temperature decrease by 5 Celsius in the illustrated angular regions on the flow channel wall affects a reduction of the wall thicknesses (here PVC) in the assignable profile regions by about 0.1 mm. If the temperature decrease by 5 Celsius affects both sides and the front limitation of the flow channel 3 than the wall thickness reduces by about 0.1 mm.
(100) The temperature control channels 2 do not have to be arranged in the outlet plate 1, as partially described, but can also be provided in nozzle plates 1B arranged further upstream. It is thereby convenient to insulate the temperature control channels 2 on both ends, whereby an additional outlet hole has to be provided. Since preferably only the inlet lines 9 are used for the control of the temperature control intensity multiple outlets lines can be combined and can be guided outwards in a single hole or milling groove in the parting plane.
(101) In
(102) In
(103) If in the present case the wall thicknesses are also too thick in the region of the hollow chambers than the plastic profile 10 can be brought into the correct shape with known measures: the withdrawal velocity of the plastic profile 10 is increased relative to the throughput of the plastic melt. At the same time all wall thicknesses are reduced and the advancement of the hooks is reduced or completely eliminated.
(104) If in contrast the wall thicknesses in the hollow chambers are correct or even at the lower tolerance limit than the geometry mistake can be corrected by applying of one of the embodiments: cooling air as temperature control medium is blown through the temperature control channels 2, which are assigned to the overflown hooks 11 (i.e. to a single wall profile section). By changing the flow characteristics of the plastic melt in this spatially delimited region only the wall thickness of the hooks 11 is reduced. The pushing of the excess plastic melt towards the hollow chamber is prevented and the vertical wall obtains the desired straight shape without that the wall thickness is also here reduced.
(105) The described embodiments allow to adjust the wall thickness in different profile sections 11, 13 almost independently from each other during the profile extrusion and to optimize it separately in each case. The results are dimensionally correct plastic profiles 10, less waste and plastic profiles 10 close to the lower meter weight tolerance, since unavoidable wall thickness deviations at certain locations can be specifically compensated.
(106) In
(107) If the extrusion velocity is lowered in analogy to the above described proceeding the hook regions 11 are filled again, but simultaneously also all remaining wall thicknesses are increased. Due to the higher meter weight such an extrusion would not be economical.
(108) The wall thickness in the region of the hooks 11 can be increased with the described embodiments without that all remaining wall thicknesses are increased: the temperature channels 2 are now used as heating channels. The air introduced in analogy to above is preheated to a temperature of about 300 to 500 Celsius. Due to this temperature increase spatially limited regions in the walls of the flow channels 12 for the plastic melt are heated in a targeted manner.
(109) This increased temperature of the wall of the flow channels 12 reduces the flow resistance of the plastic melt and the flow velocity increases only in those regions, in which an increased temperature is effective. As a result dimensionally correct plastic profiles 10 are again obtained, less waste is accumulated and plastic profiles 10 are close to the lower meter weight tolerance, since unavoidable wall thickness deviations on specific locations can be specifically compensated.
(110)
(111) The inflow area of the dry calibration 20 is illustrated on the left, the outflow area of the extrusion nozzle 60 with the nozzle plate 1 is illustrated on the right. The plastic material moves through the flow channel 3 of the extrusion nozzle 60, then shortly free in space and reaches the dry calibration 2 on the left.
(112) According to common extrusion parameters the plastic melt strand expands after leaving the extrusion nozzle 60 by about 20% (i.e. the extruded plastic profile 10 is widened as schematically illustrated in
(113) A temperature control channel 2 for locally influencing the wall thickness of the plastic melt strand 10 is illustrated in the outlet plate 1A. In this example, the temperature control channel 2 is charged with air at room temperature; thus, the temperature control channel 2 is used for cooling. The air throughput through the temperature control channel 2 can be adjusted via a throttle device 30, for instance a manually operated valve. No air flows at a closed throttle device 30. The wall of the flow channel 3 for the plastic melt strand 10 is not actively cooled. Thereby, a temperature equilibrium is adjusted in the extrusion nozzle 30 and the local melt throughput in the illustrated region reaches its maximum.
(114) If this maximum provides an overcrowding in the calibrator inflow, which is recognizable if the illustrated air gap 17 is smaller than 0.1 mm and the melt builds up in the intermediate space between extrusion nozzle 60 and the dry calibration 20, and bulges characteristically then the cooling effect can be gradually increased by a gradually opening of the throttle device 30, in the simplest case per hand, what directly results in a reduction of the melt throughput.
(115) In case of the examples and embodiments or dimensions described here, the response time is about 2 to 10 seconds, at maximum about 1 minute, i.e. the effect of adjusting the temperature control can be recognized very fast and also the new temperature equilibrium of the extrusion nozzle 60 is adjusted comparatively fast. If a suitable adjustment is found, thus the local throughput in the respective segment is brought close to the target range the production runs stable over a long period of time as long as no disturbances occur.
(116) In principle, all known control procedures are more or less applicable. The wall thickness and/or the filling level in a specific profile section 11 is the control value and the input values of the temperature control device 2, e.g. the position of the throttle valve in the throttle device 30 and/or the temperature of the temperature control medium are the regulating variables. The regulating variables effect then the temperature of the channel wall and thus the throughput or the flow velocity.
(117) In
(118) For this purpose the wall thickness of the plastic profile 10 is observed by appearance or is measured by a suitable measuring device 40. The flow throttle 30 is adjusted by hand such that the profile section 11 has the desired thickness. Without a continuous observation or measurement, thus also without a further adjustment of the flow throttle, it can then be extruded over a longer period of time.
(119) If this arrangement is extended by a control device 50 (e.g. a controller or computer), then an automatic control circle can be formed. The measuring device 40 measures a characteristic dimension (wall thickness, air gap and/or bulging etc.). If this dimension deviates from the target dimension, then the control device 50 affects an adjustment of a flow throttle. Measurement and adjustment occur continuously and automatically, thus one talks about a control.
(120) Instead of the throughput of the temperature control medium, the temperature thereof can also be alternatively adjusted.
(121) If the wall thickness is detected electronically, then suitable algorithms can be integrated digitally and the regulating variables can be charged accordingly. However, a certain effort is hereby overall required since measuring devices 40 for wall thicknesses, electrically controlled adjusting members etc. are typically required for four to eight profile sections.
(122) Thereby, narrow process limits have to be met. If the maximum acceptable wall thickness is exceeded at only one position briefly, then this provides inevitably a breakaway of the plastic profile 10. Multiple working hours can be required until the renewed start-up and reaching of all quality parameters.
(123) The control value wall thickness can be detected in different ways: A direct measurement of the wall thickness can occur by an ultrasound, optical or laser measurement. Furthermore, the distance (air gap) between plastic profile 10 and calibrator wall can be used as measuring value using the mentioned measurement methods also therefore. The measurement methods can also be used in combination with each other.
(124) A difference pressure, e.g. the back pressure when charging the air gap with a specific starting pressure, can be used as a measuring signal comparatively easy to be generated. The measuring signal, the back pressure, changes with the gap width (see for instance
(125) A mechanical measurement is suitable as a measurement variable as well: A measuring probe rests against the surface of the plastic profile 10 and measures wall thickness deviations. It is in principle not required at all to know exact numeral values for the wall thickness, at the end it is only important to maintain a status defined as reliable or optimal by the control.
(126) The measurement of the wall thickness can occur in principle at any positions, somewhere downstream of the extrusion nozzle 30. If the measurement occurs in the intermediate space between the extrusion nozzle 60 and the dry calibration 20, or in the inflow area of the first dry calibration 20, then the final velocity profile, thus the constant velocity of all melt particles corresponding to the withdrawal velocity is not fully established and yet larger deviations are present locally, that means in particular that for instance single wall profile sections 11 (i.e. hook sections) form characteristic bulges and that when adjusting the alignment of the extrusion nozzle 60 and dry calibration 20, this bulge can experience comparatively large displacements or shape modifications. Although no good matching with the profile geometry exists at such a position, this bulging can provide a suitable measuring signal, which can be used as control variable. After the target status is available by the adjustment of different parameters, this status shall only be maintained by the control. That means, if the bulging gets smaller, then this is a sign for a smaller wall thickness and shall be counter-regulated by increasing the local throughput. That means also if manual or automatic adjustments are carried out, e.g. for adjusting the alignment between nozzle and calibration 20, the control has to be switched off for the time being in order to avoid undesired reactions. After activating the control said control has only maintain the present status and has not to approach certain absolute value. If the measurement of the control variable occurs in the region of the dry calibration 20 downstream after the inflow area the profile shape corresponds mostly to the final product. Absolute values of the wall thickness or the gap correlate exactly to the profile geometry, thus they are optimally suitable as control variable. If the measurement occurs indirectly via the backpressure than an overlapping with the applied vacuum in the calibration occurs. This also means here that the backpressure should not/cannot approximate as an absolute variable, but that the control can only be used for maintaining a target status. The measurement of the control variable can occur in principle also at the end of the extrusion process, thus after the cooling of the plastic profile 10 and obtaining the final contour, for instance after cutting to length the profile rods (for instance by sensing the front faces or scanning the front faces or measuring the outer contour of the complete profile by means of laser measurement methods and other methods). A disadvantage is hereby however the large time distance between adjusting and entry into force in the extruding nozzle 60 and measuring the control variable (practically about 5 to 10 minutes) such that interim erroneous adjustments cannot be compensated and profile breakaways have to be accepted in the extreme case.
(127) A simple self-control arrangement is described in context with
(128) The measurement variable is the back pressure in the air gap 17 of the dry calibration 20 on the inflow side. The wall thickness of the profile section 11 is indirectly detected. If the gap 17 between plastic profile 10 and the calibration wall is charged with a low overpressure (less than 1 bar, often less than 0.2 bar) than a back pressure builds up. This back pressure is larger the smaller the gap is, thus the larger the wall thickness of the plastic profile 10. The control actuator is charged with said back pressure, which changes the throughput of the temperature control medium in the desired manner.
(129) A slider can serve as a control actuator, which influences the flow velocity of the temperature control medium. The extrusion nozzle 60 is tuned in this example such that in the initial state the target wall thickness is reached if the temperature control channel 2 is flown through with a flow velocity partially reduced by the slider. Herewith a sufficiently large control leeway is available.
(130) The temperature control channel 2 as well as the outlet opening 15 for the measurement air are charged with an air flow 16. At first the desired thickness is adjusted by a manual adjustment of the throttle device 30, when the control is activated. As soon as the pressure in the measurement line changes the throttle 30 is adjusted due to the pressure or directly by this pressure as long as the same pressure is available gain which was present when activating the control. A complex control with a computer is not required. The throttle device 30 can be installed for this purpose similar to a servo valve. No electrical signal is required for the control, the adjustment occurs by the flowing media itself.
(131) The back pressure serves indirectly as measurement signal, the larger the gap is the smaller is the back pressure.
(132) In the present case the profile section 11 shall be cooled in the outlet plate 1 of the extrusion nozzle 60 in case of wall thicknesses becoming thicker, thus in case of a gap at the measurement position becoming smaller and a backpressure becoming larger. That means that the throughput of the cooling air as temperature control medium has to be increased, the control actuator has to open.
(133) If in the opposite case the wall thickness is too small than the control actuator has to reduce the throughput in reaction to the back pressure becoming smaller, thus closing.
(134) The initial situation of the control actuator (throttle device 30) can be manually adjusted, for instance via an adjusting screw, which is arranged between the automatic adjustment and the actual control actuator, the slider.
(135) The outlined control system can be adapted with simplest auxiliary means in respect to the reaction behavior. If stronger deflections are desired, than the initial pressure being at maximum available or the flow velocity in the temperature control channel 2 has to be higher (at room temperature). The more directly the control system shall react the higher the pressure of the branched off measurement airflow has to be.
(136) Different control systems can be charged in parallel by one single air supply in form of a blower. Since already a comparatively small blower (engine power 300 W, maximum pressure +0.2 bar (for comparison a household vacuum cleaner: engine power 1.8 kW, maximum vacuum pressure 0.2 bar)) is sufficient in order to control up to 10 segments wherein by no means the complete blower power has to flow through the temperature control channels 2, a mutual influence is not to be expected or only tolerably small.
(137) In case of an embodiment of a simple control illustrated in
(138) The correct shaping of the profile segment 11 can hereby also be at first adjusted manually. A certain back pressure corresponds in the following to this status. If the control is then activated this back pressure is maintained automatically.
(139) If a deviation from the target value occurs, since the air gap changes due to a change of the wall thickness of the profile section 11, then a control actuator, in this example a throttle organ 30, is charged, whereby the air throughput through the temperature control channel 2 is changed. The flow cross section in the throttle organ 30 is enlarged or reduced until the back pressure is again on the initial level when activating the control.
(140) This invention is not restricted to window profiles made of PVC or other profiles made of any plastic. An application in other extrusion profiles, such as tube extrusion or blown film extrusion, when extruding flat products with white slot nozzles (flat films or plates) and other extrusion processes is of course suitable. In various extrusion methods thickness adjustments are done by mechanically adjusting the outlet gap, the gap height or the gap height in a region arranged upstream in order to approximate the thickness of the extrudate sectional to the target value. Very often controls are used thereto. Instead of the wildly spread mechanical adjustment of the gap height in specific width sections of the extrudate also the change of the temperature of the flow channel wall in specific width sections according to this invention provides the desired effect.
(141) A further embodiment of an extrusion device with a local temperature control device 2 is illustrated in
(142) The difference to the previously described embodiments is that the wall region in which the local temperature control occurs extends predominantly in the width and less in the length (i.e. along the extrusion direction E). The temperature control medium does also not flow in extrusion direction E but across thereto thus in the plate plane.
(143) An increase of a temperature in the outlet region of the nozzle provides an increase of the glossiness of the surface. It is thus of an advantage to overheat the outlet region of the nozzle beyond the nozzle temperature.
(144) In this embodiment the wall region of the flow channel A to be temperature controlled overlaps the complete width of an outer wall of the plastic profile 10. In contrast to the embodiments described so far the temperature control channel has a larger extension crosswise to the extrusion direction E and a reduced extension in extrusion direction E. The purpose therefore is that for instance a temperature increase of the wall region shall not provide a very distinct increase of the wall thickness. Only the outer most surface of the melt shall be heated at present, since thereby the glossiness on the surface of the merging profile is also increased, what is desired for some applications. In contrast the glossiness can also be somewhat reduced by a lower temperature. The temperature control channel 2 for influencing the flow channel wall temperature is arranged in this embodiment only in the nozzle outlet plate 1A and has an extension in extrusion direction parallel to the flow channel surface at a minimum of about 5 mm and as a upper limit the thickness of the nozzle plate 1A, preferably about 6 to 10 mm. The in- and outlet 9 for the temperature control medium are preferably arranged in a plane parallel to the plate plane, the temperature control medium flows through the temperature control channel essentially across to the extrusion direction E.
(145) In
(146) In the illustrated embodiment the inlets 9 for the temperature control medium comprise a thermal insulating device 70, which provides an increased heat transfer resistance along the inlet 9. Here the thermal insulating device 70 comprises an air gap. The drilling hole for the actual inlet 9 is dimensioned somewhat larger for that purpose such that a temperature resistant plastic tube or a metal tube as fluid line 71 can be arranged in the drilling hole. The fluid line 71 has a smaller diameter than the surrounding drilling hole such that an air gap is formed about the fluid line 71. The temperature control medium flows through the fluid line 71 to the local temperature control device 2 (see in particular
(147) The fluid line 71 is insulated thermally by the air gap 70 against the surrounding, i.e. the nozzle plate. As a result the heat exchange between the temperature control fluid and the nozzle plate is hampered such that the temperature control fluid faces smaller temperature losses. At the actual effective area, i.e. at the local temperature control device 2, a higher temperature gradient is established in comparison to if no insulating device 70 is used. The temperature change in the nozzle wall can be efficiently operated and controlled therewith.
(148) If the temperature and/or the flow velocity is changed than the temperature field of the nozzle plate 1 changes. This can last for instance between 5 to 30 minutes what is relatively long. Due to the thermal insulation device 70 the nozzle plate 1 is better insulated against thermal influences by the temperature control fluid.
(149) In
(150) Basically also multiple head insulating means can be used, for instance an air gap 70 in which an insulated metal tube is arranged.
(151) This embodiment with a thermal insulating device 70 can be used with all other described embodiments.
LIST OF REFERENCE SIGNS
(152) 1 nozzle plate (for instance part of an extrusion tool) 1A Outlet plate (first plate) 1B second nozzle plate 2 Local temperature control device (for instance temperature control channel, electrical thermo element) 3 Flow channel for plastic melt 4 Inlet opening for temperature control medium 5 Outlet opening for temperature control medium 6 Air gap 7 Mandrel parts 8 Bars 9 Inlet/outlet for temperature control medium 10 Extruded plastic profile 11 Single wall profile section 12 Flow channel for single wall profile section 13 Inner wall of a hollow chamber profile 14 Sealing plug for temperature control channel 15 Outlet opening for measurement air 16 Inlet line for measurement air 17 Air gap in dry calibration 20 Dry calibration 30 Throttle device 40 Measurement device 50 Control device (computer) 60 Extrusion nozzle 70 Thermal insulating device 71 Fluid tube A Wall region of flow channel to be temperature controlled Z Detail of a profile section