A SEAL FOR USE IN CRYOGENIC APPLICATIONS
20170304882 ยท 2017-10-26
Inventors
Cpc classification
International classification
Abstract
A sealing device includes a flexible seal (10), a source of gas (15), a gas inlet (14) into the seal, and a gas outlet (17) from the seal 10, 17 whereby gas flows through the seal. A cryogenic source cools the seal and the gas from the cryogen helps seal the seal to the roll and to keep the seal flexible as the gas flows.
Claims
1. A sealing device comprising: a flexible seal; a gas inlet leading gas from a source of gas to the seal, and a gas outlet for the gas from the seal, wherein the gas inlet and gas outlet are adapted for continuous flow of a heated gas from the gas inlet, through the seal to the gas outlet; the flexible seal comprises a first sealing member comprising a flexible gas chamber and a second sealing member comprising a solid, flexible body; and the flexible gas chamber being configured and operable to apply pressure to the solid body with a continuous flow of warm gas from the gas inlet to the gas outlet to press the seal against an object.
2. A device according to claim 1, wherein the solid body of the second sealing member includes one or more gas passages therethrough, to receive gas from the flexible gas chamber and to receive the gas through the gas inlet and exit the gas from the gas outlet.
3. A device according to claim 2, wherein at least one of the gas passages exits the solid body where the solid body contacts a work roll in a rolling mill stand.
4. A device according to claim 1, wherein the source of gas is a cryogenic liquid.
5. A device according to claim 1, wherein the source of gas is nitrogen.
6. A rolling mill stand comprising a pair of work rolls and a cryogenic cooling system, located and configured so that the work rolls are cooled by a cryogenic liquid; a cooling chamber of the cooling system to which the liquid is supplied; and a sealing device according to claim 1, for sealing a gap between the cooling chamber and the work roll.
7. A method of sealing a chamber adjacent to a work roll of a rolling mill stand, during rolling, the method comprising: providing a seal located toward each lateral edge of the work roll; and supplying a continuous flow of heated gas warm enough to cause the seal to be flexible and through a flexible gas chamber which is in contact with the seal for causing the flexible gas chamber to apply pressure to the seal by using the continuous flow of warm gas through the flexible gas chamber from a gas inlet of the gas chamber through a gas outlet from the gas chamber.
8. A method according to claim 7, further comprising supplying the warm gas from the flexible gas chamber and through passages in the seal for causing the gas to exit the seal at an interface between the seal and the work roll.
9. A method according to claim 7, further comprising heating the gas before the gas enters the flexible chamber to a level that warms the second sealing member to maintain its flexibility.
10. A sealing device according to claim 1, wherein the solid body of the second sealing member is flexible such that pressure applied on the second sealing member by the first sealing member presses the second sealing member against a work roll on which the sealing device is applied even if the shape of the work roll changes.
11. A sealing device according to claim 10, further comprising a second chamber sized and configured to receive the flexible gas chamber, and the chamber is open to the second sealing member, wherein the second chamber causes the flexible chamber to apply pressure on the second sealing member.
12. A method according to claim 8, further comprising the flexible gas chamber being a cryochamber, and the flow of warm gas supplying heat to the second sealing member for maintaining the flexibility thereof under pressure from the first sealing member.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0014] An example of a seal and a method of sealing according to the present invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
[0015]
[0016]
[0017]
[0018]
[0019]
[0020]
[0021]
[0022]
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0023] In a rolling mill using cryogenic cooling of the work rolls and/or the strip or product being rolled, a shield, or chamber is provided to contain the coolant in the desired area and prevent it from escaping and causing moisture in the surroundings to condense and damage the strip. This shield is positioned close to, but not in direct contact with, the work roll and typically a gas seal is used to prevent the cryogenic coolant from escaping between the edges of the shield and the work roll surface.
[0024] After a period of use, the work rolls wear down or the surface finish is damaged and the rolls have to be re-ground. Thus, each work roll diameter changes, relative to the original roll diameter. The problem is that the seal is designed for the original roll diameter and cannot cope with multiple roll diameters. As can be seen from Fig. B, if the edge seal is simply a gas seal, then when the roll diameter changes, the gap for the gas seal changes at the edges and is no longer constant along the arc of the seal. If the gap is bigger along part of the arc, then the whole seal becomes less effective because more of the gas flows through the larger gap and the pressure of the gas seal drops.
[0025] WO2012110241 suggests the use of plastic seals at the edges of the work roll and shield to address the problem of different work roll diameters, but it can be a problem to keep the plastic seal sufficiently flexible to accommodate the different roll diameters. Materials which are sufficiently elastic to accommodate the different roll diameters, such as rubbers, do not generally work very well at cryogenic temperatures, as they lose their elasticity and in some cases become brittle.
DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS
[0026] The present invention addresses the problems of sealing, and of changing or gradually changing multiple work roll diameters by having a seal in which gas pressure is used to push the seal against the surface of the roll and a flow of gas through the seal keeps the seal warm and hence elastic.
[0027] Examples of seals for a cryogenic application are illustrated in
[0028] Preferably, the gas is warm nitrogen, above the dew point, which can be obtained by letting the liquid cryogen evaporate to a gas. The liquid cryogen may be allowed to warm to room temperature, or heat may be applied. When the nitrogen is in its gaseous state, it may be further warmed to provide a warm enough gas for keeping the inflatable tube and the plastic seal flexible. Nitrogen is preferred, but any dry gas may be used to inflate the tube. Gases containing water vapor, which could leak into the shroud, should be avoided. The continuous flow of warm gas ensures that the walls of the inflatable tube remain warm and hence, stay flexible. If there was no flow of gas through the inflatable tube (i.e. if the tube was simply pressurized), then the material of the tube on the cold side of the wall would get colder and colder and lose its elastic properties.
[0029] The gas flow may be provided only through the tube 14 to keep the tube warm and flexible and apply pressure to hold the seal 7 against the roll, relying on conduction of heat to the seal to keep the seal flexible. An improvement is to provide passages 16, 17 in the seal. The passages allow the flow of the gas 17 through the inflatable tube 10 and through the seal 7. The gas exiting at 18 from a surface of the seal in contact with the surface 11 of the work roll allows a continuous flow of gas.
[0030]
[0031] The continuous flow of warm gas also helps to ensure that no cold gas escapes from the chamber 2, past the seal 7. Even if the seal does not create a perfect gas tight seal against the surface 8 of the roll, the flow of warm gas 18 out of the face of the seal 7 ensures that cold gas cannot escape from and that air cannot get into the chamber.
[0032] A further feature which may be provided to increase the volume of flow through the seal passages 16 is to form grooves in the seal surface, or preferably to shape the surface of the seal, for example, as a convex surface where the contact face is in the center and the gas passages are at either side of the contact face, as illustrated in
[0033] When the work rolls are rolling a strip or plate, there is friction between the seal surface and the roll surface, and this friction imparts a force to the seal which needs to be counteracted, in order to stop the seal from rotating with the roll. The walls of the inflatable tube may be adapted to restrain the seal from rotating, or the seal may be provided with protrusions which engage with holes, or recesses in the base of the chamber side wall, or connect to the chamber in a similar fashion.
[0034] The end seals as described above may be used in combination with an air knife, as used in WO2012110241, across the central part of the work roll for the top and bottom work roll to chamber seals. The air knife 22a, 22b can be seen in
[0035] The present invention provides a seal which can accommodate different roll diameters by using a flexible material for the sealing and pressing it in place and which can also handle cryogenic temperatures by keeping that material flexible using the warm gas flow. As mentioned above, prior art systems may use gas or plastic seals, but these both have problems with maintaining an effective seal when the roll changes shape after regrinding, or due to the cryogenic temperatures at which the seal must perform.
[0036] An alternative embodiment would be to dispense with the inflatable tube and simply pressurize the back of the seal itself with gas. To make this work the seal itself would effectively become a piston and it would need seals against the walls within which it moves. This arrangement is more difficult to seal properly than the inflatable tube design and it would need additional guiding and restraints.
[0037] Another solution would be to spring load the seal and use only the gas for keeping the seal warm. If leaf or blade type springs were used, they would restrain the seal from rotation with the roll. The complication with this design is how to get the gas connections to the seal. One possibility is to retain the chamber where the inflatable tube sits. But, then the seal needs piston seals or similar. Another possibility is to have the gas supply via a flexible tube or tubes connected directly to the seal. But, this is more complex than the inflatable tube design.
[0038] The advantage of the inflatable tube arrangement is that it achieves multiple requirements in one easily manufactured and assembled unit. It restrains and guides the seal, it pressurizes the seal against the roll and it provides a simple way of supplying the gas to the seal.
[0039]