US3313643A - Method of making phosphor screens - Google Patents
Method of making phosphor screens Download PDFInfo
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- US3313643A US3313643A US559124A US55912466A US3313643A US 3313643 A US3313643 A US 3313643A US 559124 A US559124 A US 559124A US 55912466 A US55912466 A US 55912466A US 3313643 A US3313643 A US 3313643A
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H01—ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
- H01J—ELECTRIC DISCHARGE TUBES OR DISCHARGE LAMPS
- H01J9/00—Apparatus or processes specially adapted for the manufacture, installation, removal, maintenance of electric discharge tubes, discharge lamps, or parts thereof; Recovery of material from discharge tubes or lamps
- H01J9/20—Manufacture of screens on or from which an image or pattern is formed, picked up, converted or stored; Applying coatings to the vessel
- H01J9/22—Applying luminescent coatings
- H01J9/221—Applying luminescent coatings in continuous layers
- H01J9/223—Applying luminescent coatings in continuous layers by uniformly dispersing of liquid
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H01—ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
- H01J—ELECTRIC DISCHARGE TUBES OR DISCHARGE LAMPS
- H01J29/00—Details of cathode-ray tubes or of electron-beam tubes of the types covered by group H01J31/00
- H01J29/02—Electrodes; Screens; Mounting, supporting, spacing or insulating thereof
- H01J29/10—Screens on or from which an image or pattern is formed, picked up, converted or stored
- H01J29/18—Luminescent screens
- H01J29/187—Luminescent screens screens with more than one luminescent material (as mixtures for the treatment of the screens)
Definitions
- This invention relates to the making of phosphor screens for cathode ray tubes.
- the invention is particularly directed to the so-called slurry process used in making mosaic type screens having a plurality of different phosphors disposed in a systematically arrayed multiplicity of elemental areas, e.g., dots or lines.
- Such screens are used in apertured shadow mask type color cathode ray tubes.
- phosphor powder is mixed with a liquid, e.g., water, to form a slurry, and a quantity of the slurry is deposited onto and spread over a faceplate panel by spinning and tilting the panel.
- a photoresist photosensitized binder
- the photoresist may, for example, comprise a polymer such as polyvinyl alcohol (PVA), polvinyl pyrro-lidone, gelatin, gum arabic, or albumin as the binder which is mixed with a photosensitizer; e.g., a dichrornate such as ammonium dichromate or potassium dichromate.
- PVA polyvinyl alcohol
- polvinyl pyrro-lidone gelatin
- gum arabic gum arabic
- albumin e.g., a dichrornate such as ammonium dichromate or potassium dichromate.
- a layer of the photosensitized slurry has been spread over the faceplate panel and dried, selected areas of the phosphor-coated faceplate panel are exposed to a desired pattern of actinic light.
- the exposed panel is then developed by washing it to remove the unexposed areas. This process is repeated for each of a plurality of desired phosphors, such as red-emitting, green-emitting, and blue-emitting phosphors.
- the preferred practice has been: 1) to fill a dispensing apparatus with an initial charge of a desired slurry formulation; (2) to dispense more than the required quantity of the slurry therefrom onto the center of a faceplate panel; (3) to spin and tilt the panel so as to spread the slurry outward from the center and over the surface thereof; (4) to salvage the excess slurry from the panel by scooping or flinging the excess from the periphery of the spinning panel; (5) to return the salvaged slurry to the dispensing apparatus and mix it with the slurry still there, and to transfer additional makeup slurry like that of the initial charge from a separate slurry reservoir to the dispensing apparatus to replenish the slurry depleted therefrom to form a reconstituted slurry; and (6) to dispense a portion of the reconstituted slurry onto another faceplate panel.
- Another object of this invention is to provide a new and improved method of making cathode ray tube phosphor screens that is particularly adapted to mass production techniques.
- My invention is predicated upon, among other things: (a) the discovery that certain characteristics of the phosphor slurry are of primary importance in obtaining good adherence of the phosphors to the faceplate panel; and (b) the further discovery that good phosphor adherence can be continuously maintained by making these certain characteristics of the makeup slurry different from those of the initial charge of slurry.
- the excess slurry which is salvaged from the panel may have a different phosphor concentration and a different average particle size than that of the initial slurry charge.
- this salvaged slurry is returned to the dispensing apparatus and :mixed with makeup slurry and the slurry still there to form the reconstituted slurry, the phosphor concentration and average phosphor particle size of the slurry there is altered unless appropriate measures are taken.
- one or both of (1) the phosphor concentration and (2) the percentage of the phosphor which is constituted of large particles (larger than a given size) is made greater in the makeup slurry than in the initial charge slurry.
- the makeup slurry is characterized by having a greater concentration of total phosphor and/or large phosphor particles than does the initial charge slurry.
- the binder e.g., PVA
- sensitizer e.g., ammonium dichromate
- water slurry constituents apparently form a solution, it would seem that the ratio of these three constituents to each other should remain about the same in both the slurry dispensed into a faceplate panel and the slurry salvaged therefrom.
- a makeup slurry formulation having substantially the same binder to sensitizer to water ratio as does the initial slurry charge, provides a satisfactory, workable formulation.
- a mosaic dot phosphor screen may be made using as the red emitting phosphor silver activated zinc cadmium sulphide wherein the ratio by weight of zinc to cadmium is about 0.21:1 and which contains about 0.002% by Weight of silver activator.
- This phosphor is the red emitting phosphor of the All-Sulfide Group P22 phosphors as registered with the Joint Electron Devices Engineering Council. It is sold commercially by the Radio Corporation of America and identified by them as 33A237A.
- the initial phosphor slurry charge should preferably consist of approximately 17.9% phosphor, 4.0% PVA (a PVA/phosphor ratio of about 0.22), 04% ammonium dichromate, and 77.7% water by weight, and that the phosphor should have a particle size range of from 1 micron to 20 microns with 20-25% of the phosphor by weight comprising particles microns or greater in size.
- the size of a phosphor particle is designated as that which will settle at the same rate as a spherical particle having a diameter equal to the designated size.
- the makeup slurry should preferably consist of approximately 22.0% phosphor, 4.2% PVA (a PVA/phosphor ratio of about 0.19), 0.36% ammonium dichromate, and 73.44% water by weight, and that the phosphor should have a particle size range of from 1 micron to microns with 33-35% by Weight of the phosphor comprising particles of 10 microns or greater.
- a suitable method of practicing the invention involves the preparation of two batches of slurry which have different particle size characteristics and then blending these two batches in selected proportions to obtain a slurry having desired particle size characteristic intermediate that of the two batches.
- their particle size characteristics are determined by standard centrifugal extraction and sedimentation techniques.
- one batch may have a PVA concentration of 4.5%, and a phosphor concentration of 25% With 40% of the phosphor being particles larger than 10 microns; the second batch (designated Batch B) may have a PVA concentration of 5.0% and a phosphor concentration of 29% with 16% of the phosphor being particles larger than 10 microns.
- a suitable initial slurry charge with 25 of the phosphor being particles larger than 10 microns can be obtained by blending 41 parts of Batch A and 59 parts of Batch B.
- a suitable makeup slurry with 35% of the phosphor being particles larger than 10 microns can be obtained by blending 81.5 parts of Batch A and 18.5 parts of Batch B.
- appropriate amounts of water, PVA, and/or ammonium dichromate are added to produce the desired formulations as, for example, described above.
- the salvaged slurry may be processed in any one of several ways.
- the salvaged slurry is mixed with makeup slurry to form a blended slurry which is then added to the initial slurry, either in the same dispenser or prior to placement in the same dispenser, to form the reconstituted slurry.
- the salvaged slurry is returned directly to the same dispenser while makeup slurry is added to the same dispenser at the same time and mixed with the initial slurry to form the reconstituted slurry.
- the salvaged slurry is mixed with makeup slurry to form a reconstituted slurry, which is then used in a different dispenser with or without mixing with initial slurry.
- the reconstituted slurry may or may not include an amount of initial slurry.
- Procedural alternatives such as these provide more or less of blending of the constituent slurries, which reduces the variation in the physical properties of the reconstituted slurry.
- the reconstituted slurry is intended to approximate as closely as possible the properties of the initial slurry.
- the invention may be applied to initial slurry formulations in which the phosphor concentrations are in the range of 13 to 30 weight percent of the slurry, the binder concentrations are in the range of 2.0 to 5.5 weight percent of the slurry, and the ratio of binder/ phosphor is in the range of 0.05 to 0.25.
- the table gives some typical data for slurry formulations containing lower concentrations of PVA than those set forth above.
- the slurry contains an acrylic copolymer present in an amount equal to about 0.5 of the amount of PVA for the green and blue phosphor slurries, and 1.0 of the amount of PVA for the red phosphor slurry.
- the photosensitizer/binder ratio and the percentage of phosphor particles larger than microns is the same in both the initial and in the makeup slurries for each example in the table.
- said initial slurry including phosphor particles predominantly in the size range of 1 to 20 microns and References Cited y the Examiner containing at least 13.0 Weight percent phosphor, UNITED STATES PATENTS said portion of initial slurry being more than that 10 required to provide a coating of desired thickness 2739567 3/1956 f et 118602 on said surface of said first substrate, 2837429 6/1938 Whmng 117335 (b) spinning said substrate to spread said portion of 2592389 1 2 g i et initial slurry over the surface of said first substrate 3 23 7/ ey to said desired thickness, and to cause the fraction 15 9/19 8 eary of said portion of initial slurry which is in excess of 2330539 3/1960 Jones nsjoz that required to provide said coating of said desired 4/1960 Lems n 118 08 thickness to move toward the edges of the surface j gs et of said first substrate, (c) removing said excess fraction of initial slurry from 20 g
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- Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
- Manufacturing & Machinery (AREA)
- Formation Of Various Coating Films On Cathode Ray Tubes And Lamps (AREA)
- Luminescent Compositions (AREA)
Description
Patented Apr. 11, 196? 3,313,643 METHGD 6F MAKING PHQSPHGR SCREENS Phyllis B. Branin, Lancaster, Pa, assignor to Radio (Iorporation of America, a corporation of Deiaware No Drawing. Fiied dune 21, 1966, Ser. No. 559,324 10 Ciaims. (Cl. 117-335) This is a continuation-in-part of my patent application Ser. No. 190,771, filed Apr, 7, 1962 now abandoned.
This invention relates to the making of phosphor screens for cathode ray tubes. The invention is particularly directed to the so-called slurry process used in making mosaic type screens having a plurality of different phosphors disposed in a systematically arrayed multiplicity of elemental areas, e.g., dots or lines. Such screens are used in apertured shadow mask type color cathode ray tubes.
In making phosphor screens using the slurry process, phosphor powder is mixed with a liquid, e.g., water, to form a slurry, and a quantity of the slurry is deposited onto and spread over a faceplate panel by spinning and tilting the panel. In making mosaic type screens by the so-called direct photographic process, a photoresist, (photosensitized binder) is also included in the slurry. The photoresist may, for example, comprise a polymer such as polyvinyl alcohol (PVA), polvinyl pyrro-lidone, gelatin, gum arabic, or albumin as the binder which is mixed with a photosensitizer; e.g., a dichrornate such as ammonium dichromate or potassium dichromate.
After a layer of the photosensitized slurry has been spread over the faceplate panel and dried, selected areas of the phosphor-coated faceplate panel are exposed to a desired pattern of actinic light. The exposed panel is then developed by washing it to remove the unexposed areas. This process is repeated for each of a plurality of desired phosphors, such as red-emitting, green-emitting, and blue-emitting phosphors.
In making a plurality of mosaic screens on a production line basis, the preferred practice has been: 1) to fill a dispensing apparatus with an initial charge of a desired slurry formulation; (2) to dispense more than the required quantity of the slurry therefrom onto the center of a faceplate panel; (3) to spin and tilt the panel so as to spread the slurry outward from the center and over the surface thereof; (4) to salvage the excess slurry from the panel by scooping or flinging the excess from the periphery of the spinning panel; (5) to return the salvaged slurry to the dispensing apparatus and mix it with the slurry still there, and to transfer additional makeup slurry like that of the initial charge from a separate slurry reservoir to the dispensing apparatus to replenish the slurry depleted therefrom to form a reconstituted slurry; and (6) to dispense a portion of the reconstituted slurry onto another faceplate panel.
When a process as described in the preceding paragraph has been followed, an unexpected catastrophic reduction of phosphor-to-faceplate adherence has resulted. As successive faceplate panels are slurried and exposed to produce the desired phosphor patterns thereon, a gradual decrease of adherence sets in. Such reduced adherence continues to decrease with successively slurried panels and becomes so great that adequate adherence can no longer be obtained by other adjustments; such as in the exposure step. Satisfactory adherence may be restored only by completely emptying the slurry dispensing apparatus and reservoir and recharging them with a new quantity of slurry with the desired adherence. This is both time consuming, and costly.
It is an object of this invention to provide a new and improved method for making phosphor screens using a slurry process.
It is also an object of this invention to provide a new and improved method of making cathode ray tube phosphor screens by the slurry process in which excess slurry is salvaged and catastrophiolike reduction of adherence is prevented.
Another object of this invention is to provide a new and improved method of making cathode ray tube phosphor screens that is particularly adapted to mass production techniques.
My invention is predicated upon, among other things: (a) the discovery that certain characteristics of the phosphor slurry are of primary importance in obtaining good adherence of the phosphors to the faceplate panel; and (b) the further discovery that good phosphor adherence can be continuously maintained by making these certain characteristics of the makeup slurry different from those of the initial charge of slurry.
Specifically, I have discovered that for a given phosphor material, photoexposure, and developing rocedure, the following slurry characteristics are important to the obtaining of good adherence: 1) phosphor particle size distribution; (2) phosphor concentration; (3) binder concentration; and (4) photosensitizer concentration. The absolute values of these characteristics which will give optimum adherence, are therefore used in compounding the slurry with which the dispensing apparatus is initially charged or filled. However, I have also discovered that good adherence can be continuously maintained (and catastrophic-like reduction of adherence prevented) if one or more of the following changes is made in the makeup slurry as compared to the initial charge of slurry: (1) the percentage of phosphor whose particles are larger than a given particle size increased; (2) the phosphor concentration of the slurry increased; (3) the binder to water ratio of the slurry increased; (4) the photosensitizer to hinder ratio of the slurry decreased.
When a phosphor slurry is spread by spinning over a faceplate panel in a screening operation, phosphor particles begin to settle out of the slurry mixture and onto the panel. This phenomenon tends to decrease the concentration of the phosphor in the salvaged excess slurry. However, the centrifugal action of the spinning, tends to move the denser particles off the panel faster than the liquid in the slurry, tending to increase the concentration of the phosphor in the excess salvaged slurry. Also, evaporation of the liquid from the relatively large surface area of the slurry spread on the panel in combination with the wetting of the surface of the panel tend to increase the concentration of the phosphor in the salvaged excess slurry. The settling of the phosphor is sometimes more pronounced for the larger phosphor particles dispensed into the panel than for the smaller particles. Thus, the excess slurry which is salvaged from the panel may have a different phosphor concentration and a different average particle size than that of the initial slurry charge. As a consequence, when this salvaged slurry is returned to the dispensing apparatus and :mixed with makeup slurry and the slurry still there to form the reconstituted slurry, the phosphor concentration and average phosphor particle size of the slurry there is altered unless appropriate measures are taken.
I have discovered that these variations of the phosphor concentration and phosphor particle size distribution will be sufficient to adversely affect the adherence of subsequently made screens. Therefore, according to a preferred practice of the invention, one or both of (1) the phosphor concentration and (2) the percentage of the phosphor which is constituted of large particles (larger than a given size) is made greater in the makeup slurry than in the initial charge slurry. In such case, the makeup slurry is characterized by having a greater concentration of total phosphor and/or large phosphor particles than does the initial charge slurry.
Since the binder (e.g., PVA), sensitizer (e.g., ammonium dichromate), and water slurry constituents apparently form a solution, it would seem that the ratio of these three constituents to each other should remain about the same in both the slurry dispensed into a faceplate panel and the slurry salvaged therefrom. Thus, in formulating the makeup slurry, it is desired to provide a formulation which has about the same binder to sensitizer to water ratio as did the initial slurry charge. A makeup slurry formulation having substantially the same binder to sensitizer to water ratio as does the initial slurry charge, provides a satisfactory, workable formulation.
However, I have further discovered that, for reasons not clearly understood, optimum screening results are obtained frequently if the ratio of binder to water is made slightly higher and the ratio of sensitizer to water slightly less in the makeup slurry than in the initial charge slurry. Such a makeup slurry formulation has proved to provide the optimum in producing an equilibrium of the reconstituted slurry in the dispensing apparatus insofar as maintaining constant the percentages of the various slurry constituents is concerned.
As an example of the practice of my invention, a mosaic dot phosphor screen may be made using as the red emitting phosphor silver activated zinc cadmium sulphide wherein the ratio by weight of zinc to cadmium is about 0.21:1 and which contains about 0.002% by Weight of silver activator. This phosphor is the red emitting phosphor of the All-Sulfide Group P22 phosphors as registered with the Joint Electron Devices Engineering Council. It is sold commercially by the Radio Corporation of America and identified by them as 33A237A. In making mosaic dot screens with this phosphor, it has been determined that the initial phosphor slurry charge should preferably consist of approximately 17.9% phosphor, 4.0% PVA (a PVA/phosphor ratio of about 0.22), 04% ammonium dichromate, and 77.7% water by weight, and that the phosphor should have a particle size range of from 1 micron to 20 microns with 20-25% of the phosphor by weight comprising particles microns or greater in size. As used herein, the size of a phosphor particle is designated as that which will settle at the same rate as a spherical particle having a diameter equal to the designated size.
In order to continuously obtain good adherence, I have discovered that the makeup slurry should preferably consist of approximately 22.0% phosphor, 4.2% PVA (a PVA/phosphor ratio of about 0.19), 0.36% ammonium dichromate, and 73.44% water by weight, and that the phosphor should have a particle size range of from 1 micron to microns with 33-35% by Weight of the phosphor comprising particles of 10 microns or greater.
Even though it is attempted to maintain the slurry constituent percentages constant in the dispensing apparatus, they nevertheless vary somewhat because of the continuing nature of the process by which the slurry is formulated. In actual commercial practice wherein the above noted initial charge and makeup slurry formulations are used, the observed formulation of the slurry in the dispensing apparatus as determined by periodic sampling thereof is as follows:
These percentages and ratios are the result of the desired equilibrium of slurry constituent percentages in dispensing apparatus.
A suitable method of practicing the invention involves the preparation of two batches of slurry which have different particle size characteristics and then blending these two batches in selected proportions to obtain a slurry having desired particle size characteristic intermediate that of the two batches. For the two slurry batches which are to be blended, their particle size characteristics are determined by standard centrifugal extraction and sedimentation techniques.
For example, one batch (designated Batch A) may have a PVA concentration of 4.5%, and a phosphor concentration of 25% With 40% of the phosphor being particles larger than 10 microns; the second batch (designated Batch B) may have a PVA concentration of 5.0% and a phosphor concentration of 29% with 16% of the phosphor being particles larger than 10 microns. A suitable initial slurry charge with 25 of the phosphor being particles larger than 10 microns can be obtained by blending 41 parts of Batch A and 59 parts of Batch B. A suitable makeup slurry with 35% of the phosphor being particles larger than 10 microns can be obtained by blending 81.5 parts of Batch A and 18.5 parts of Batch B. In each case, appropriate amounts of water, PVA, and/or ammonium dichromate are added to produce the desired formulations as, for example, described above.
In practice, the salvaged slurry may be processed in any one of several ways. By one practice, the salvaged slurry is mixed with makeup slurry to form a blended slurry which is then added to the initial slurry, either in the same dispenser or prior to placement in the same dispenser, to form the reconstituted slurry. By another practice, the salvaged slurry is returned directly to the same dispenser while makeup slurry is added to the same dispenser at the same time and mixed with the initial slurry to form the reconstituted slurry. By still another practice, the salvaged slurry is mixed with makeup slurry to form a reconstituted slurry, which is then used in a different dispenser with or without mixing with initial slurry. Thus, the reconstituted slurry may or may not include an amount of initial slurry. Procedural alternatives such as these provide more or less of blending of the constituent slurries, which reduces the variation in the physical properties of the reconstituted slurry. In every one of the alternatives, the reconstituted slurry is intended to approximate as closely as possible the properties of the initial slurry.
Each of the foregoing alternative procedures may be carried out on a continuous production basis or on a batch basis.
The invention may be applied to initial slurry formulations in which the phosphor concentrations are in the range of 13 to 30 weight percent of the slurry, the binder concentrations are in the range of 2.0 to 5.5 weight percent of the slurry, and the ratio of binder/ phosphor is in the range of 0.05 to 0.25.
The table gives some typical data for slurry formulations containing lower concentrations of PVA than those set forth above. In each case, the slurry contains an acrylic copolymer present in an amount equal to about 0.5 of the amount of PVA for the green and blue phosphor slurries, and 1.0 of the amount of PVA for the red phosphor slurry. The photosensitizer/binder ratio and the percentage of phosphor particles larger than microns is the same in both the initial and in the makeup slurries for each example in the table. Also, in the table, the approximate molar formula of the blue phosphor is ZnS:Ag(0.015), of the green phosphor is 0.692118 0.3 ICdS :Ag(0.008 and of the red phosphor is Y Eu VO What is claimed is:
1. The method of making a plurality of phosphor screens comprising the steps of:
(a) applying a portion of initial slurry onto a first substrate, said initial slurry including phosphor particles predominantly in the size range of 1 to microns with a minor weight proportion of said particles greater than 10 microns in size, said portion of initial slurry being more than that required to provide a coating of desired thickness on said first substrate,
(b) spreading said portion of initial slurry over said first substrate to said desired thickness,
(c) removing from said first substrate the fraction of said portion of initial slurry which is in excess of that required to provide said coating of said desired thickness,
(d) mixing said removed fraction with makeup slurry to produce a reconstituted slurry, said makeup slurry containing phosphor particles predominantly in the size range of 1 to 20 microns with a larger Weight proportion of particles greater than 10 microns in size than the minor weight proportion in said initial slurry,
(e) and then dispensing a portion of said reconstituted slurry onto a second substrate.
2. The method of making a plurality of phosphor screens comprising the steps of:
(a) applying a portion of initial slurry onto a first substrate, said initial slurry including phosphor particles predominantly in the size range of 1 to 20 microns with a minor weight proportion of said particles greater than 10 microns in size, binder, photosensitizer, and water, said portion of initial slurry being more than that required to provide a coating of desired thickness on said first substrate,
(b) spreading said portion of initial slurry over said first substrate to said desired thickness,
(c) removing from said first substrate the fraction of said portion of initial slurry which is in excess of that required to provide said coating of said desired thickness,
(d) mixing said removed fraction with makeup slurry to produce a reconstituted slurry, said makeup slurry containing phosphor particles predominantly in the size range of l to 20 microns with a larger weight proportion of particles greater than 10 microns in size than the minor Weight proportion in said initial slurry, said makeup slurry having a greater phosphol concentration, a greater binder/water ratio, and a smaller photosensitizer/binder ratio than does said initial slurry,
(e) and then dispensing a portion of said reconstituted slurry onto a second substrate.
3. The method of claim 2 wherein said reconstituted slurry is comprised of said removed fraction, makeup slurry and initial slurry.
4. The method of making a plurality of phosphor screens comprising the steps of:
(a) applying a portion of initial slurry onto a first substrate, said initial slurry including phosphor particles predominantly in the size range of 1 to 20 microns with a minor weight proportion of said particles greater than 10 microns in size, binder, photosensitizer, and water, said portion of initial slurry being more than that required to provide a coating of desired thickness on said first substrate,
(b) spreading said portion of initial slurry over said first substrate to said desired thickness,
(c) removing from said first substrate the fraction of said portion of initial slurry which is in excess of that required to provide said coating of said desired thickness,
(d) preparing a reconstituted slurry comprised of said removed fraction and a makeup slurry, said makeup slurry containing phosphor particles predominantly in the size range of 1 to 20 microns with at least one of (1) a larger weight proportion of particles greater than 10 microns in size than the minor weight proportion in said initial slurry, (2) a greater phosphor concentration than in said initial slurry, (3) a greater binder/water ratio than in said initial slurry, (4) and a smaller photosensitizer/binder ratio than in said initial slurry,
(e) and then dispensing a portion of said reconstituted slurry onto a second substrate.
5. The method defined in claim 4 wherein said makeup slurry has a larger Weight proportion of particles greater than 10 microns in size than the minor Weight in said initial slurry.
6. The method defined in claim 4 wherein said makeup slurry has a greater phosphor concentration than in said initial slurry.
7. The method defined in claim 4 slurry has a greater binder/ water slurry.
8. The method defined in claim 4 wherein said makeup slurry has a smaller photosensitizer/binder ratio than in said initial slurry.
9. The method of making a screens comprising the steps of:
(a) applying a portion of initial slurry onto a first substrate, said initial slurry including phosphor particles predominantly in the size range of 1 to 20 microns, said portion of initial slurry being more than that required to provide a coating of desired thickness on said first substrate,
(b) spinning said substrate to spread said portion of initial slurry over said first substrate to said desired thickness and to cause the fraction of said portion of initial slurrywhich is in excess of that required to provide said coating of said desired thickness to move toward the edges of said first substrate,
(c) removing from said first substrate said excess fraction of initial slurry,
(d) preparing a reconstituted slurry comprised of said removed fraction and a makeup slurry, said makeup slurry containing a greater concentration of phosphor particles predominantly in the size range of 1 to 20 microns than in said initial slurry,
wherein said makeup ratio than in said initial plurality of phosphor 7 8 (e) and then dispensinga portion of said reconstituted predominantly in the size range of 1 to 20 microns slurry onto a second substrate. with a greater weight percent of phosphor than in 10. The method of making a plurality of phosphor said initial slurry, screens for cathode ray tubes comprising the steps of: (e) and then dispensing a portion of said reconstituted (a) applying a portion of initial slurry onto a dry sur- 5 slurry onto a second faceplate panel for a cathode face of a first faceplate panel for a cathode ray tube, ray tube. said initial slurry including phosphor particles predominantly in the size range of 1 to 20 microns and References Cited y the Examiner containing at least 13.0 Weight percent phosphor, UNITED STATES PATENTS said portion of initial slurry being more than that 10 required to provide a coating of desired thickness 2739567 3/1956 f et 118602 on said surface of said first substrate, 2837429 6/1938 Whmng 117335 (b) spinning said substrate to spread said portion of 2592389 1 2 g i et initial slurry over the surface of said first substrate 3 23 7/ ey to said desired thickness, and to cause the fraction 15 9/19 8 eary of said portion of initial slurry which is in excess of 2330539 3/1960 Jones nsjoz that required to provide said coating of said desired 4/1960 Lems n 118 08 thickness to move toward the edges of the surface j gs et of said first substrate, (c) removing said excess fraction of initial slurry from 20 g; g g f f g -ggg 1 said first substrate,
(d) mixing said removed fraction with makeup slurry and initial slurry to produce a reconstituted slurry, ALFRED LEAVlTT Puma]? Examme" said makeup slurry containing phosphor particles A. H. ROSENSTEIN, Assistant Examiner.
Claims (1)
1. THE METHOD OF MAKING A PLURALITY OF PHOSPHOR SCREENS COMPRISING THE STEPS OF: (A) APPLYING A PORTION OF INITIAL SLURRY ONTO A FIRST SUBSTRATE, SAID INITIAL SLURRY INCLUDING PHOSPHOR PARTICLES PREDOMINANTLY IN THE SIZE RANGE OF 1 TO 20 MICRONS WITH A MINOR WEIGHT PROPORTION OF SAID PARTICLES GREATER THAN 10 MICRONS IN SIZE, SAID PORTION OF INITIAL SLURRY BEING MORE THAN THAT REQUIRED TO PROVIDE A COATING OF DESIRED THICKNESS ON SAID FIRST SUBSTRATE, (B) SPREADING SAID PORTION OF INITIAL SLURRY OVER SAID FIRST SUBSTRATE TO SAID DESIRED THICKNESS, (C) REMOVING FROM SAID FIRST SUBSTRATE THE FRACTION OF SAID PORTION OF INITIAL SLURRY WHICH IS IN EXCESS OF THAT REQUIRED TO PROVIDE SAID COATING OF SAID DESIRED THICKNESS, (D) MIXING SAID REMOVED FRACTION WITH MAKEUP SLURRY TO PRODUCE A RECONSTITUTED SLURRY, SAID MAKEUP SLURRY CONTAINING PHOSPHOR PARTICLES PREDOMINANTLY IN THE SIZE RANGE OF 1 TO 20 MICRONS WITH A LARGER WEIGHT PROPORTION OF PARTICLES GREATER THAN 10 MICRONS IN SIZE THAN THE MINOR WEIGHT PROPORTION IN SAID INITIAL SLURRY, (E) AND THEN DISPENSING A PORTION OF SAID RECONSTITUTED SLURRY ONTO A SECOND SUBSTRATE.
Priority Applications (3)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
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US559124A US3313643A (en) | 1966-06-21 | 1966-06-21 | Method of making phosphor screens |
DE1614372A DE1614372B2 (en) | 1966-06-21 | 1967-06-21 | Process for the series production of fluorescent screens for cathode ray tubes |
US05/716,533 USRE29203E (en) | 1966-06-21 | 1976-08-23 | Method of making phosphor screens |
Applications Claiming Priority (1)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
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US559124A US3313643A (en) | 1966-06-21 | 1966-06-21 | Method of making phosphor screens |
Related Child Applications (1)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
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US05/716,533 Reissue USRE29203E (en) | 1966-06-21 | 1976-08-23 | Method of making phosphor screens |
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US3313643A true US3313643A (en) | 1967-04-11 |
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US559124A Expired - Lifetime US3313643A (en) | 1966-06-21 | 1966-06-21 | Method of making phosphor screens |
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DE (1) | DE1614372B2 (en) |
Cited By (5)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
DE2107631A1 (en) * | 1970-03-02 | 1971-09-16 | Rca Corp | Process for coating the concave side of a curved cathode ray tube faceplate |
US3649328A (en) * | 1970-06-22 | 1972-03-14 | Motorola Inc | Process for forming luminescent screens |
DE1762175B1 (en) * | 1968-04-24 | 1972-03-23 | Philco Ford Corp | METHOD OF MANUFACTURING A SCREEN |
US4025662A (en) * | 1974-12-05 | 1977-05-24 | The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Army | Method for making ultra high resolution phosphor screens |
US4445526A (en) * | 1981-09-30 | 1984-05-01 | Rca Corporation | System and method for controlling the specific gravity and viscosity of the slurry applied to television picture tube faceplates |
Families Citing this family (1)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
DE2904673A1 (en) * | 1979-02-08 | 1980-08-14 | Standard Elektrik Lorenz Ag | SHIELDING PROCESS FOR COLOR TUBES |
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US2739567A (en) * | 1954-03-08 | 1956-03-27 | George W Harding | Apparatus for dip coating articles |
US2837429A (en) * | 1955-06-21 | 1958-06-03 | Sylvania Electric Prod | Method of producing patterns |
US2845099A (en) * | 1956-09-17 | 1958-07-29 | Rauland Corp | Screening dispenser for cathode-ray tube manufacturing apparatus |
US2854413A (en) * | 1953-08-13 | 1958-09-30 | Du Pont | Phosphors |
US2897089A (en) * | 1956-03-14 | 1959-07-28 | Gen Electric | Method of printing color phosphor patterns |
US2930349A (en) * | 1958-10-20 | 1960-03-29 | Du Pont | Hot paint dip tank |
US2931527A (en) * | 1956-06-21 | 1960-04-05 | Philips Corp | Device for decanting a liquid from hollow objects |
US2932570A (en) * | 1956-01-23 | 1960-04-12 | Sylvania Electric Prod | Image reproduction device screen |
US3095317A (en) * | 1959-10-27 | 1963-06-25 | Gen Electric | Cathode ray tube screening |
US3143435A (en) * | 1962-01-05 | 1964-08-04 | Gen Electric | Round panel lamp phosphor coating |
US3226246A (en) * | 1960-08-06 | 1965-12-28 | Philips Corp | Method of manufacturing display screens for cathode-ray tubes |
-
1966
- 1966-06-21 US US559124A patent/US3313643A/en not_active Expired - Lifetime
-
1967
- 1967-06-21 DE DE1614372A patent/DE1614372B2/en active Pending
Patent Citations (11)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
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US2854413A (en) * | 1953-08-13 | 1958-09-30 | Du Pont | Phosphors |
US2739567A (en) * | 1954-03-08 | 1956-03-27 | George W Harding | Apparatus for dip coating articles |
US2837429A (en) * | 1955-06-21 | 1958-06-03 | Sylvania Electric Prod | Method of producing patterns |
US2932570A (en) * | 1956-01-23 | 1960-04-12 | Sylvania Electric Prod | Image reproduction device screen |
US2897089A (en) * | 1956-03-14 | 1959-07-28 | Gen Electric | Method of printing color phosphor patterns |
US2931527A (en) * | 1956-06-21 | 1960-04-05 | Philips Corp | Device for decanting a liquid from hollow objects |
US2845099A (en) * | 1956-09-17 | 1958-07-29 | Rauland Corp | Screening dispenser for cathode-ray tube manufacturing apparatus |
US2930349A (en) * | 1958-10-20 | 1960-03-29 | Du Pont | Hot paint dip tank |
US3095317A (en) * | 1959-10-27 | 1963-06-25 | Gen Electric | Cathode ray tube screening |
US3226246A (en) * | 1960-08-06 | 1965-12-28 | Philips Corp | Method of manufacturing display screens for cathode-ray tubes |
US3143435A (en) * | 1962-01-05 | 1964-08-04 | Gen Electric | Round panel lamp phosphor coating |
Cited By (5)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
DE1762175B1 (en) * | 1968-04-24 | 1972-03-23 | Philco Ford Corp | METHOD OF MANUFACTURING A SCREEN |
DE2107631A1 (en) * | 1970-03-02 | 1971-09-16 | Rca Corp | Process for coating the concave side of a curved cathode ray tube faceplate |
US3649328A (en) * | 1970-06-22 | 1972-03-14 | Motorola Inc | Process for forming luminescent screens |
US4025662A (en) * | 1974-12-05 | 1977-05-24 | The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Army | Method for making ultra high resolution phosphor screens |
US4445526A (en) * | 1981-09-30 | 1984-05-01 | Rca Corporation | System and method for controlling the specific gravity and viscosity of the slurry applied to television picture tube faceplates |
Also Published As
Publication number | Publication date |
---|---|
DE1614372B2 (en) | 1975-03-27 |
DE1614372A1 (en) | 1970-05-27 |
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