APPARATUS AND A METHOD FOR CONTINUOUS EXTRUSION OF MATERIALS WITH HIGH VISCOSITY
20260091421 · 2026-04-02
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
International classification
Abstract
An apparatus and method for continuous extrusion of materials with high viscosity, in particular materials containing metals such as aluminium, magnesium, titanium, zinc, copper, nickel and alloys thereof, the apparatus including an Archimedes screw rotationally provided within a liner of a screw housing provided with an feeding opening for feeding of the materials to be extruded, an extrusion zone and an extrusion die assembly with a die which forms the shape of the desired extruded product. The apparatus also having a preparation/mixing zone, further a feeding zone for material that communicates with the Feeding opening of the housing, a transport and compaction zone for the materials in the screw extruder, and a compacting and pressure generating zone for the materials in connection with said extrusion zone, where the required compaction and extrusion pressure and temperature is obtained.
Claims
1. An apparatus for continuous extrusion of materials with high viscosity, in particular materials containing metals such as aluminium, magnesium, titanium, copper, nickel, zink and alloys thereof, the apparatus includes an Archimedes screw (12) rotationally provided within a liner (L) of a screw housing or container (11) provided with an inlet (Fo) for the feeding of the materials to be extruded, an extrusion zone (Ez) with an extrusion die assembly which forms the shape of the desired extruded product (7), the apparatus comprising a feeding zone Fz for material, a transport and condition zone TCz for the materials, and a compacting and pressure generating zone CPz for the materials, and where the compacted material formed in the compaction and pressure generation zone PCz and the compact plug of materials in the extrusion zone Ez is restricted from rigid rotation thus obtaining the required compaction and extrusion pressure, wherein the apparatus is provided with means for controlling and adjusting the temperature of the material within a set range temperature before it is extruded to said product (7) and that the compaction pressure in the extrusion chamber is controlled within a set range pressure.
2. The apparatus according to claim 1, wherein the rotation of the Archimedes screw is provided by a motor (M) with torque and or speed control, and that the torque and or speed is monitored and applied for adjusting the compaction pressure in the extrusion chamber based upon an algorithm that calculates torque and/or speed based upon registered pressure in the extrusion chamber.
3. The apparatus according to claim 1, wherein the apparatus further comprises an upstream preparation/mixing zone PMz for treatment of the material.
4. The apparatus according to claim 1, wherein the feeding zone Fz comprises means for controlling the temperature of the feed material to a certain predefined temperature.
5. The apparatus according to claim 1, wherein the transport and conditioning zone TCz comprises means for controlling the temperature of the material to a certain predefined temperature.
6. The apparatus according to claim 1, wherein the Archimedes screw is a double flight screw.
7. A method for continuous extrusion of materials with high viscosity, in particular metals such as aluminium, magnesium, titanium, copper, nickel, zink and alloys thereof, the method is performed in an apparatus including an Archimedes screw (12) rotationally provided within a liner (L) of a screw housing or container (11) provided with a feed opening (Fo) for the feeding of the material to be extruded, an extrusion sone (Ez) and an extrusion die assembly which forms the shape of the desired extruded product (7), the method further comprising preparing a feeding material and feeding same from a feeding zone Fz through said feed opening Fo and further to a transport and conditioning zone TCz for pre-compacting said material and transporting it to a compacting and pressure generating zone CPz that forms part of an extrusion zone Ez, thus obtaining the pre-defined compaction and extrusion pressure, wherein the temperature of the material in the extrusion zone Ez is controlled and adjusted to a set range temperature before it is extruded to form said product (7) and that the compaction pressure in the extrusion chamber is controlled within a set range pressure.
8. The method according to claim 7, wherein the pressure of the material in the extrusion zone Ez is controlled and adjusted to a set pressure range before it is extruded for form said product (7).
9. The method according to claim 8, wherein the rotation of the Archimedes screw is provided by a motor with torque and/or speed control, where the torque and/or speed is monitored and controlled for adjusting the compaction pressure in the extrusion chamber.
10. The method according to claim 7, wherein the feeding zone Fz comprises means for controlling the temperature of the feed material to a certain predefined temperature.
11. The method according to claim 7, wherein the transport zone Tz comprises means for controlling the temperature of the material to a certain predefined temperature.
12. The method according to claim 7, wherein an upfront analysis and classification of the material is performed for tuning one or more process parameters of the apparatus before processing said material.
Description
[0020] The invention will be further described in the following by way of example and with reference to the drawings where:
[0021]
[0022]
[0023]
[0024]
[0025]
[0026]
[0027]
[0028]
[0029]
[0030]
[0031] As shown in
[0039] Before being fed into the screw extruder, the material is prepared and mixed in a preparation/mixing zone, PMz.
[0040] The screw extruder principally receives its material in feeding zone Fz provided with a feed opening Fo for the extruder, transport it and conditioning it in a transport and conditioning zone, TCz and exposes the material to compaction and pressure in zone, CPz.
[0041] The material is extruded in an extrusion zone Ez, and finally cut and packed in a cutting, packing and analysis zone CPAz.
[0042] A motor M is provided for generating rotation and torque of the screw of the screw extruder apparatus.
[0043] The screw can be single or multi flight, with fixed or without progressive pitch. A screw with multiple flights will improve material flow conditions, while a single flight screw will improve capacity. A progressive flight will enable a larger feeding volume, while a constant pitch result in easier control of the axial temperature gradient.
[0044] Preferably, the screw is prepared with a polished, hardened working surface and a core with more elastic properties.
[0045] Still further, as previously mentioned the input material can be of many different types and fractions. The feed of the material can preferably be a forced feed that is metered.
[0046] Still further, the input material can be pre-handled or prepared in several manners with regard to sorting, sizing (calibration), composition, cleaning, heating and more in one or more preparing and mixing steps, PMz. It should be understood that relevant steps can be done in vicinity of the apparatus or be performed at one other location depending on the design and layout of the plant.
[0047] The input material can be analyzed and classified according to pre-defined criterions before it is introduced in the apparatus. Based on this an appropriate adjustment of the apparatus's process parameters is enabled. For instance, the stick-slip criterion of an input material can be investigated upfront operating the apparatus.
[0048] There are several sources of general information that can be applied in this context. For instance the following paper:
[0049] Key Engineering Materials, Vol. 491; Conditions for Sticking Friction between Aluminium Alloy AA6060 and Tool Steel in Hot Forming; F. Widere, Torgeir Welo
[0050] URL: https://doi.org/10.4028/www.scientific.net/KEM.491.121
[0051] Here it is described a method for determining conditions of sticking friction of an AI 6060 material. In the abstract is described that;
[0052] The frictional conditions between an aluminium AA6060 alloy and tool steel in hot bulk forming have been investigated. The compressive-rotational method for frictional measurements, presented herein, represents an innovative approach for defining the thermo-mechanical conditions required for sticking friction at the interface between the two metals. Aluminium disks with inserted contrast material were subjected to a variety of pressures and rotated at one end at temperatures ranging from 250 C. to 500 C. Visual inspection of the surfaces in combination with sectioning of the deformed disks formed a method for studying how different factors affect a stick-slip criterion in metal forming. It was found that the normal contact pressure required for sticking to occur was strongly dependent on the instantaneous temperature. When comparing the normal contact pressure q with the characteristic shear strength k of the aluminium alloy, q/k>0.6 yielded sticking friction for temperatures above 300 C., while a ratio of 0.7 was required for the lower temperatures.
[0053] These principles can be benefited from in classifying other materials and composites related to the invention.
[0054] As shown in
[0055] The process of operating the screw extruder shall be explained further by reference to
[0056] The extruder is preferably fed through feed opening Fo with granular metal at T<Ts, where Ts is the temperature where the metal will have sticking friction in the apparatus.
[0057] To ensure that the metal will maintain this temperature, active cooling is employed to an extended zone from the feeding opening Fo. This ensures that it is freely moved via TCz towards an active zone CPz (
[0058] In front of the screw in the zone E.sub.z, a billet is continuously fed with material entering from the screw channels (
[0059] Thus, one can maintain a temperature well above Ts, for instance approximately 0.9 Tm (Tm=melting temperature) to ensure stable extrusion conditions. At the same time, the temperature outside the processing area is kept well below Ts by active cooling. Maintaining this gradient is key; further by manipulating this gradient (by the above-mentioned parameters) one can adjust the degree of mixing/deformation (
[0060]
[0061] Followingly, as the screw speed increases the heat generation is increased. Thus, maintaining the gradient (or low temperature at a section from the desired axial position) requires active cooling.
[0062] In this example, temperature control features are included in both screw and container, see
[0070] Alternatively, a response similar to active cooling can be achieved by increasing feed rate. This will affect the heat balance; if the feed rate is increased within the capacity of the screw, the same length will be an active (heat generating) volume. As more cold material enters the back of the screw and leaves as hot material through the die, the energy (heat) leaving the system will increase.
[0071] Q_(deformation heat)=Q_(active cooling)+Q_(out with the material)balancing active cooling and energy out with the material to the heat from the deformation of the processed material will give a stable process. Further, it is not insignificant where the active cooling is employed, to maintain a correct temperature gradient. Cooling too much in CPz and Ez is not beneficial as there the temperature should be well above Ts, as stated on the previous page.
[0072] Correct parameters are known for several materials, but optimum process windows are being developed for a range of tool geometries and processing materials. E.g., tool geometry (reduction ratio) affects the pressure needed to be generated by the screw, different material (and combinations) will have different Ts and flow stress, etc.
[0073] To maintain correct parameters for a given tool geometry and material, a system is used to monitor and control the various parameters. A typical extruder setup consists of the following main elements, see
[0082] The control unit regulates the feed rate by adjusting the rotation speed of an external feed screw, tuning the feed rate to measurements of weights in the feeding hopper. See above example.
[0083] The driveline monitors torque and set rpm. According to one aspect of the invention, torque is used as an indirect measure of the relation between the feed rate and a runout speed measured at the runout table. The runout speed should match the feed rate in steady state. unless the torque (and heat generation) increases and followingly a rise in temperature in the zones CPz or TC.sub.z happens. Thus, the extension of CPz can grow on the expense of the extension of TC.sub.z.
[0084] Once reaching steady state, the process is observed with only minor fluctuations within small time span, for example in the temperature measured along the container. To ensure a stable steady-state process, the control unit uses one or more measurements of parameters as feed rate, runout speed, torque and temperatures to maintain a correct axial temperature gradient (and thus the length of the active zone; mainly CPz).
[0085] In a worst case where a wrong response in the control is triggered, this will result in a snowballing effect where the heat generation lead to more compacted material in the screw channel. This again will generate more heat to a point where it exceeds the active cooling. However, in one embodiment of the invention, by monitoring the torque (and runout speed), this can be avoided by a slight reduction in feed rate. The computer can be programmed to handle this situation.
[0086] Further, according to one aspect of the invention, monitoring the torque at steady state will provide further process information. At a point where melting of the material is about to occur due to a too high temperature, the torque will drop significantly.
[0087] A similar situation regarding the torque is likely to occur if the sticking friction in the operation is lost partly or wholly due to a too low temperature. The torque is monitored constantly by a sensor and a signal is led to the controller. The controller compares this information with the temperature measured by one or more sensors in the compacting zone and if the temperature is higher or lower than a set value a signal is produced, and the controller adjust the cooling or heating rate to bring the process into its range again.
[0088] In short, the extruder control system can according to aspects of the invention typically be based on input parameters from different elements: [0089] Driveline: [0090] Screw torque and/or speed [0091] Screw axial load [0092] Container: [0093] Temperature distribution [0094] Dosing unit: [0095] Material feed rate [0096] Runout table: [0097] Extrusion Speed
[0098] According to aspects of the invention and based on the input parameters, the extrusion process can be controlled through the following parameters: [0099] Driveline: [0100] Screw rotational speed and/or torque [0101] Screw/container: [0102] Heating/cooling rates [0103] Runout table [0104] Cooling rate [0105] Saw [0106] Cut length
[0107] According to aspects of the invention, active cooling in the transport zone should be maintained at a high level. Active cooling in the processing region should be tuned to a minimum, just enough so that the desired temperature as described above is maintained.
Pre-Treatment, Feeding and Mixing of Material
[0108] The extruder uses a feeding system that can feed several materials mixed directly to the transport and conditioning zone TC.sub.z in the screw extruder, through the feeding opening Fo. According to aspects of the invention, this feeding system may apply the state of the art technology of feeders, for instance screw-feeders, and load cells to get the correct feed rate and mixing ratios.
[0109] As the material enters the transport and conditioning zone, it needs to be evenly merged onto the compacted material further forwards (in the extrusion direction) in the screw channel.
[0110] According to aspects of the invention, pre-treatment of the input material is beneficial to achieve a stable steady-state process.
[0111] For instance, and if needed a degreasing step may reduce gas evolution during heating of the input material towards the active zone and thus minimize fluctuations of the length where one has sticking friction. This is due to that gas evolution may result in lift-off between either the process material and the internal surfaces or between input material compacted matters themselves.
[0112] However, it has been experienced that the apparatus can be fed with material with a high degree of pollution.
[0113] Further, by pre-treatment the increase in the bulk density of the input material has been observed to aid an increased capacity of the system. An input material with a high bulk density is deemed to need shorter axial length to be compacted into the active zone. I.e., it is assumed that LPC, where LPC is the axial length where pre-compaction towards the active zone happens and is the change in bulk density from input state to a fully dense billet in front of the screw.
Controlling and Utilizing Surface Friction Conditions (manipulating Ts)
[0114] To ensure friction between the processed material and surrounding surfaces (including screw, tool, liner and prechamber region) it could be beneficial according to aspects of the invention to manipulate the friction of surrounding surfaces by coating, roughness or temperature to enable an optimum design.
[0115] In
[0117]
[0118]
[0119]
[0120]
[0121] Further,
[0122] It is also possible to coat selected parts of the liner to reduce heat generation and reduce the risk of sticking friction.