Method and system for optical camber measurement of flat sheet membranes, films, and webs
09541384 ยท 2017-01-10
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
International classification
Abstract
A system, method, and device for measuring camber in a film is disclosed. The system generally includes: a flat surface with a longitudinal axis, at least three sensors spaced apart along the longitudinal axis, and a computing device operatively connected to each sensor. When the film is positioned in relationship to the sensors, the computing device computes the camber of the film. The flat surface may be a table with a film holder. At least one of the sensors may be a LED sensor. The computing device may have an output means, such as a monitor, a printer, or both. The computing device defines a straight line between the first and third sensor based on the position of the film, and the camber is a deviation of the film, measured by the second sensor, from the straight line.
Claims
1. A system for measuring camber in a stationary film comprising: a flat surface with a longitudinal axis, said flat surface is part of a table, said table has a film roll holder, the stationary film lays flat on said flat surface, at least three stationary sensors spaced apart along said longitudinal axis, each of said sensors includes a light emitting diode (LED) sensor, a scanning laser, a translating laser, a charged coupled device (CCD) camera, or a high definition video camera, the first and third sensors being at least one meter apart, and a computing device operatively connected to each said sensor, whereby when the stationary film is positioned in relationship to said sensors, said computing device computes the camber of the stationary film by defining a straight line between the first and third sensor at an actual lateral edge of the stationary film, measuring the actual edge of the stationary film by the second sensor between the first and third sensors, and the camber is a deviation of the measurement from the second sensor measurement and the straight line, the computed camber is accurate to less than 0.5 mm.
2. The system of claim 1 wherein at least one of the sensors is a LED sensor.
3. The system of claim 1 wherein each said sensor is a LED sensor.
4. The system of claim 1 wherein said computing device has an output means.
5. The system of claim 4 wherein said output means is a monitor, a printer, or both.
6. A method for measuring camber in a stationary film comprising the steps of: positioning a stationary film having a lateral edge on a flat surface adjacent at least three stationary sensors, each of said sensors includes a light emitting diode (LED) sensor, a scanning laser, a translating laser, a charged coupled device (CCD) camera, or a high definition video camera, the first and third sensors being at least one meter apart, said flat surface is part of a table, said table has a film roll holder, the stationary film lays flat on said flat surface, determining a straight line between an actual edge position of the lateral edge of the stationary film at a position of the film at the first and third sensor, determining an actual edge position of the lateral edge of the stationary film at the second sensor, and calculating a deviation of the actual edge position of the film at the second sensor from the straight line, the deviation is the camber, the calculated camber is accurate to less than 0.5 mm.
7. A device measuring camber in a stationary film comprising: a flat surface with a longitudinal axis, said flat surface is part of a table, said table has a film roll holder, the stationary film lays flat on said flat surface, at least three stationary sensors spaced apart along said longitudinal axis, each of said sensors includes a light emitting diode (LED) sensor, a scanning laser, a translating laser, a charged coupled device (CCD) camera, or a high definition video camera, the first and third sensors being at least one meter apart, and a computing device operatively connected to each said sensor, whereby when the stationary film is positioned in relationship to said sensors, said computing device computes the camber of the stationary film by defining a straight line between the first and third sensor at an actual lateral edge of the stationary film, measuring the actual edge of the stationary film by the second sensor between the first and third sensors, and the camber is a deviation of the measurement from the second sensor measurement and the straight line, the computed camber is accurate to less than 0.5 mm, the stationary film is a membrane, film, or web.
8. The device of claim 7 wherein at least one of the sensors is a LED sensor.
9. The device of claim 7 wherein each said sensor is a LED sensor.
10. The device of claim 7 wherein said computing device has an output means.
11. The device of claim 10 wherein said output means is a monitor, a printer, or both.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) For the purpose of illustrating the invention, there is shown in the drawings a form that is presently preferred; it being understood, however, that this invention is not limited to the precise arrangements and instrumentalities shown.
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
(7) Referring to the drawings wherein like element have like numerals, there is shown in
(8) Flat surface 12 may be any flat surface. The flat surface may have a surface finish such that the film may freely move thereon after flattening (discussed below). Thus, the surface finish may have a low co-efficient of friction. That finish may be obtained by highly polishing the surface with a jeweler rouge (e.g., a mirror finish). The surface may be a highly polished metal surface, for example, a highly polished, clear anodized aluminum surface. Flat surface 12, as shown, by way of non-limiting example, may be a part of a table 14. Table 14 may include a film roll holder 16 at one end of the table 14. The film being tested will be positioned on the flat surface 12 during the test procedure (discussed below).
(9) The sensors 20, 22, and 24 are positioned on the flat surface. These sensors are for sensing the lateral edge of the film, as will be described in greater detail below. The first sensor 20 and third sensor 24 may be positioned at any distance X from one another. The distance X may be arbitrarily assigned, but, in most cases, may be 1 or 2 or 3 meters apart. The second sensor 22 is located between the first sensor 20 and the third sensor 24. For example, the second sensor may be located at the mid-point between the first and third sensors. All of the sensors are aligned in a straight line along a lateral edge portion of the flat surface 12, and are, therefore, equidistant from the longitudinal axis 18 of the flat surface 12.
(10) The sensors 20, 22, and 24 may be any sensor capable of determining the position of an edge of a film located within the range of the sensor. Such sensors include, by way of example, LED (light emitting diodes) sensors, scanning lasers, translating lasers, charged coupled device (CCD) cameras, and high definition video. In one embodiment, the sensor may be a LED sensor, BALLUFF BGL 30C or 50C from Scott Equipment Company of Charlotte, N.C. (having a maximum resolution of 0.08 mm). For example, see
(11) Computing device 26 may be any computer-like device capable of translating information received from the sensors 20, 22, and 24 about the position of the lateral edge of the film, defining a straight line between the actual lateral edge of the film at the first sensor 20 and the third sensor 24, and calculating the camber of the film by calculating the deviation of the actual lateral edge of the film F located at the second sensor 22 from the calculated (or theoretical) straight line. Since the camber measurement is taken at the middle of the sample length, the system 10 reports the difference between the actual position of the lateral edge of the film at the mid-point of the sample and the theoretical line projected from the actual position of the film determined by the first and second sensors. Additionally, the computing device 26 may include an output means 28. The output means may be a display, a printer, or both.
(12) The operation of system 10 is illustrated by reference to
EXAMPLE
(13) In order to demonstrate the improvement in accuracy using the inventive system and method as compared to the prior art method, a Gage Repeatability and Reproducibility (R&R) study was performed using 10 samples of flat sheet Celgard brand microporous battery separator membrane. The test samples had varying levels of camber. Test results comparing the prior manual camber test method (described in the Background section of this application) and the inventive method are shown in the Table 1 below. The Total Gage R&R % Contribution listed in column 3, consists of Repeatability which is defined as the variability from repeated measurements by the same operator and Reproducibility which is the variability when the same part is measured by different operators. The R&R study included a total of three test operators.
(14) TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Total Gage Testing Testers/ R&R % % Study Distinct Machine Operators Contribution Variation Categories Inventive Operator 1, 2 3.19 17.85 7 system and 3 Inventive Operator 1 and 2 1.99 14.12 9 system Prior Art Operator 1 and 2 12.28 35.04 3 method
The Percent (%) Study Variation compares the measurement system variation to the total variation. A lower value of % Study Variation is preferred. The Number of Distinct Categories value estimates how many separate groups of parts the system can distinguish. A higher value in the Number of Distinct Categories is preferred.
(15) TABLE-US-00002 TABLE 2 General Acceptance Criteria for Gage R + R Performance % Study Distinct % Contribution Variation Categories Good <5% <10% 5 Marginal 5% to 15% 10% to 30% 2-4 Reject >15% >30% <2
The test results in Table 2 show that for all three Gage R&R metrics, the performance for the inventive OCM device was significantly better than for the prior art manual camber test method.
(16) The inventive system and method has improved the resolution of the camber measurement from +/0.5 mm, typical of prior art systems, to +/0.1 mm which is an 80% improvement in the accuracy of the camber measurement.
(17) The present invention may be embodied in other forms without departing from the spirit and the essential attributes thereof, and, accordingly, reference should be made to the appended claims, rather than to the foregoing specification, as indicated the scope of the invention.