Flameless thermal spray system using flame heat source
09533318 ยท 2017-01-03
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B05B7/1486
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B05B7/14
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
An apparatus and method for forming a fusible coating or structure comprising a combustor that is operative to combust a fuel and contain the resulting flame to produce combustion products; means for cooling the combustion products to produce a hot carrier gas stream; and means for introducing fusible material into the hot carrier gas stream.
Claims
1. A thermal spray gun, comprising: an exterior surface; an inner chamber located within the exterior surface having a forward end and an aft end; a flame source located within the inner chamber; a first fluid passageway located within the inner chamber for carrying a combustible mixture to the flame source, wherein the flame source produces a combustion gas when a flame is present; a second fluid passageway located within the inner chamber for carrying excess gas to a flame produced by the flame source; a third fluid passageway located between the exterior surface of the thermal spray gun and a wall of the inner chamber of the thermal spray gun, wherein the third fluid passageway is configured to carry a cooling gas to cool the exterior surface and to carry the cooling gas to the inner chamber to mix with the combustion gas; a nozzle for introducing a gas-particle mixture into the combustion gas mixed with the cooling gas; and a deflector positioned adjacent a distal end of the second fluid passageway and extending radially outward therefrom; wherein the deflector is configured to direct the excess gas at least partially across the flame source; wherein an outlet of the third fluid passageway is located downstream from the flame source and between the flame source and an outlet of the nozzle.
2. The thermal spray gun of claim 1, wherein the flame is anchored at the flame source.
3. The thermal spray gun of claim 2, wherein the flame source is a burner plate.
4. The thermal spray gun of claim 3, wherein the burner plate comprises a perforated plate and a perforated material covering at least a portion of the perforated plate.
5. The thermal spray gun of claim 4, wherein the perforated material is located around a perimeter of the perforated plate.
6. The thermal spray gun of claim 1, wherein the distal end of the second fluid passageway includes two annular spaces formed on both sides of the deflector.
7. The thermal spray gun of claim 1, wherein the flame source is positioned concentric to the deflector.
8. The thermal spray gun of claim 1, comprising a fluid amplifier located at the forward end of the inner chamber relative to the flame source, wherein the excess gas and cooling gas are drawn into the inner chamber by the fluid amplifier.
9. The thermal spray gun of claim 8, wherein the fluid amplifier comprises a first Coanda fluid amplifier.
10. The thermal spray gun of claim 9, wherein the first Coanda amplifier is configured to deliver compressed air to the inner chamber to create a primary stream that adheres to a Coanda profile.
11. The thermal spray gun of claim 1, wherein at least a portion of the second fluid path is located between the nozzle and the flame source.
12. The thermal spray gun of claim 1, wherein the inner chamber is configured for preventing the flame from contacting the gas-particle mixture.
13. The thermal spray gun of claim 1, wherein the thermal spray gun emits the gases from the inner chamber at a rate of less than 100 meters per second.
14. The thermal spray gun of claim 1, further comprising a pre-mixer to provide the combustible gas mixture to the inner chamber, wherein the pre-mixer comprises a pre-mix fluid amplifier.
15. The thermal spray gun of claim 14, wherein the pre-mixer fluid amplifier is configured to generate the combustible mixture.
16. The thermal spray gun of claim 15, wherein the pre-mix fluid amplifier includes a second Coanda fluid amplifier.
17. The thermal spray gun of claim 1, wherein the inner chamber comprises a combustion chamber and a mixing chamber.
18. The thermal spray gun of claim 17, wherein the first fluid passageway is configured to deliver the combustible mixture from the mixing chamber to the combustion chamber, wherein the flames source is located within the combustion chamber.
Description
DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The features of the invention will be better understood by reference to the accompanying drawings which illustrate exemplary embodiments of the invention. In the drawings:
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(18) The following reference numerals are used to indicate on the drawings the parts and environment of an illustrative embodiment of the invention: 1 thermal spray system 2 cart 3 umbilical 4 spray gun applicator 5 air supply 6 fluidized bed hopper, hopper 7 propane/fuel and air/gas controls 8 propane/fuel, combustible fuel gas, combustible fuel, fuel gas 9 primary air, primary oxidant gas, motive air 10 mixing chamber 11 combustion chamber 12 excess air, excess oxidant gas 13 cooling or dilution air, cooling or dilution gas 14 hot carrier gas 15 burner nozzle, burner plate 16 vibrator 17 propane tank 28 powder injection nozzles/nozzle 29 fusible powder entrained in hot gas 30 fluid amplifier, second fluid amplifier 31 compressed air 32 annular manifold 33 annular nozzle 34 Coanda profile 35 low pressure area 36 pre-mix fluid amplifier, pre-mixer 52 flame/combustion gas 100 mixing and combustion step 102 flame anchoring step 104 combustion containment step 106 temperature reduction step 108 create and project carrier gas stream step 208 propane fuel gas nozzle 209 educted primary air, additional air, additional oxidant 210 combustible gas mixture 211 deflector, gas diverter 212 educted excess air 228 powder transport tube 229 powdered coating material, fusible powder 231 round hole mesh 233 square mesh
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(19) Referring to
(20) In this embodiment, material is supplied to spray gun applicator 4 by means of a fluidized bed hopper 6. The rate of supply is controlled by two venturis (not shown). The first venturi transports a stream of the powder material particles in compressed gas from fluidized bed hopper to umbilical 3. The second venturi adds additional transport air to the umbilical 3 and ejects the stream of powder material particles into spray gun 4. Each of the first venturi and second venturi is independently controlled by a different individual stream of compressed gas. Fluidized bed hopper 6 is commercially available in several hopper sizes from a number of manufacturers, such as Powder Parts Inc., Elgin, Ill. 60123.
(21) Referring to
(22) In a preferred embodiment, a combination of vibrator 16 and fluidized bed hopper 6 provides superior powder transport capabilities. The combination is effective at de-agglomerating and fluidizing powders for transport between fluidized bed hopper 6 and spray gun applicator 4 through a powder hose within umbilical 3, with the types of thermoplastic powders used to create thermoplastic fusible coatings.
(23) The thermal spray system described herein may be used for depositing a variety of coating materials, including zinc, aluminum, zinc-aluminum alloy, ferrous metal alloys, copper, copper alloys, ceramics, carbon, graphite and combinations thereof. They may also be used for depositing other materials, such as colorants, electrically conductive materials, fluorescent materials, phosphorescent materials, anti-fouling agents, reflective materials, radar absorbent materials, anti-microbials, microballoons, foaming agents, leveling agents, lubricants, ultraviolet (UV) protectors and combinations thereof. Still other materials suitable for deposition using thermal spray system 4 include thermoplastic or thermoset polymeric materials, such as epoxy resins, polyurethanes, polyethers, nylons, polyesters, polycarbonates, polyethylene, polypropylene, acrylic polymers, polyvinylchloride (PVC) resins, fluorocarbon polymers, ethylenevinylacetate (EVA), ethyleneacrylicacid (EAA), acrylonitrilebutadienestyrene (ABS), polyetheretherketone (PEEK), Polyvinylidenfloride (PVDF), silicones and chemical or physical combinations thereof. Coating materials may be combined with other materials. Particle sizes for the coating materials may range from about 5 microns to about 5,000 microns.
(24) Referring to
(25) Referring to
(26) In the embodiment of
(27) A person having ordinary skill in the art would know that a variety of other flame anchoring means are used in flame systems, such as stoves and fueled jets. These flame anchoring means may also be incorporated into embodiments of the invention. Thus, the foregoing examples provide a basic insight into the process of flame anchoring and should not be construed as limitations on the invention.
(28) The heat of combustion at stoichiometric conditions for burning propane in air is 1,980 C. This temperature is too high to be contained by most common refractory materials. For example, high temperature steel alloys have a service temperature of 537 C. Nickel-chromium-iron alloys are used up to 677 C. Even ceramic coated jet engine parts only operate at a maximum temperature of 1,371 C. Therefore, background art flame generating devices are configured so that the flame burns outside the device architecture in free air. For these reasons, in certain embodiments of the invention, in order to contain combustion, film cooling on the flame containment surfaces and heat transfer management are employed.
(29) The desired process temperature for a thermoplastic sprayer device is a hot gas temperature that exits the device in the neighborhood of 700 C., but could range from 100 C. to around 1,000 C. Here, around means approximately as it is defined above. Most fusible materials are processed in this temperature range. Because combustion temperatures are much higher than preferred fusible material processing temperatures, and to provide a stream of heated carrier gas, in illustrative embodiments of this invention, excess air 12 and cooling gas 13 are introduced to the process during combustion and after combustion is completed.
(30) Referring to
(31) Coanda or attached flow fluid amplifiers are known in the art of fluidics. It is the coupling of a fluid amplifier to a burner or flame tube located within combustion chamber 11 that provides at least two functions. First, excess air 12 serves to complete combustion and begin cooling the flame. Second, the cooling or dilution air 13 serves to further reduce the temperature of the combustion products to achieve the desired flameless hot carrier gas for processing of polymer powders or other materials. Both described functions are accomplished using relatively low quantities of compressed air by means of a Coanda fluid amplifier.
(32) Referring to mix fluid amplifier 36 acting as a pre-mixer. Motive air 9 is introduced to pre-mix fluid amplifier 36 and as previously described, the geometry of the pre-mix fluid amplifier 36 draws in additional fluid, in this case additional oxidant 209, e.g., air. Pre-mixed fuel/oxidant 8, 9 is then delivered via a first fluid path to a flame source, e.g., burner 15, located inside a combustion chamber 11, said combustion chamber being located within an exterior surface. A second fluid amplifier 30, previously discussed, may then be used to reduce the temperature of the combustion products (e.g., a combustion gas) in order to produce hot carrier gas 14.
(33) Background art venturi style eductors generally do not provide enough primary air to create a stoichiometric mixture and therefore tend to burn rich and require additional oxidant air at the burner. This problem is solved by the applicants by de-coupling the propane gas flow 8, which is typically the motive flow in a pre-mix venturi eductor, from the air venturi and instead using an independent Coanda pre-mix fluid flow amplifier 36, run by primary air 9 and educting additional air 209, in combination with propane fuel gas nozzle 208, e.g., a propane jet orifice, that discharges into the entrance of pre-mix fluid amplifier 36.
(34) Referring to
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(41) This shape was determined through experimentation with converging, straight, and diverging shapes of different lengths. The shape of the diverging cone enables the hot gases from combustion chamber 11 to expand. Hence, the flame is not propelled out of combustion chamber 11 but stays anchored to burner plate 15. The applicants also discovered that the diverging shape also discouraged the heating up of powder nozzle 28. In contrast, straight walled and converging shapes for combustion chamber 11 caused powder nozzle 28 to heat up and foul with fusible powder.
(42) Many variations of the invention will occur to those skilled in the art. Some variations include trip plates, trip lips and/or bluff bodies. Other variations call for flame tubes holes or perforated walls, serpentine paths and/or fluid amplifiers with annular nozzles and/or air knives. All such variations are intended to be within the scope and spirit of the invention.
(43) Although some embodiments are shown to include certain features, the applicants specifically contemplate that any feature disclosed herein may be used together or in combination with any other feature on any embodiment of the invention. It is also contemplated that any feature may be specifically excluded from any embodiment of the invention.