US3638330A - Web support nozzles for drier - Google Patents

Web support nozzles for drier Download PDF

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US3638330A
US3638330A US35855A US3638330DA US3638330A US 3638330 A US3638330 A US 3638330A US 35855 A US35855 A US 35855A US 3638330D A US3638330D A US 3638330DA US 3638330 A US3638330 A US 3638330A
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web
air
elongated
nozzle
drying apparatus
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US35855A
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Arthur G Stout
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WEB PRESS ENG Inc
WEB PRESS ENGINEERING Inc
Sequa Corp
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WEB PRESS ENG Inc
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    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F26DRYING
    • F26BDRYING SOLID MATERIALS OR OBJECTS BY REMOVING LIQUID THEREFROM
    • F26B13/00Machines and apparatus for drying fabrics, fibres, yarns, or other materials in long lengths, with progressive movement
    • F26B13/10Arrangements for feeding, heating or supporting materials; Controlling movement, tension or position of materials
    • F26B13/101Supporting materials without tension, e.g. on or between foraminous belts
    • F26B13/104Supporting materials without tension, e.g. on or between foraminous belts supported by fluid jets only; Fluid blowing arrangements for flotation dryers, e.g. coanda nozzles
    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D21PAPER-MAKING; PRODUCTION OF CELLULOSE
    • D21FPAPER-MAKING MACHINES; METHODS OF PRODUCING PAPER THEREON
    • D21F5/00Dryer section of machines for making continuous webs of paper

Definitions

  • ABSTRACT A nozzle structure for a web-drying apparatus, in which a web is supported between upper and lower pressurized airflows, is provided by a plurality of airflow passageways arranged in a honeycomb configuration, each passageway being supplied through a supply orifice of smaller cross section than the cross section of the passageway, and with the honeycomb providing multiple transverse rows in juxtaposition so as to provide an elongated layer of air between the nozzle and the web which operates to prevent contact between the web and the nonle during high-speed transport through the drier.
  • This invention relates to an improved nozzle arrangement for web-drying apparatus of the type wherein a web is transported and supported between upper and lower drying airflows.
  • the web being dried is transported between support nozzles which force heated air against opposite sides of the web to maintain a desired drying temperature.
  • Additional stripper nozzles that provide very high velocity flow are provided for penetrating the boundary layer adjacent the web in order to strip away the layers of air that are immediately adjacent the web and which contain vapors from the material being dried.
  • the web generally is transported and supported through the web-drying apparatus between upper and lower airflows from the support nozzles, with the air pressure hopefully adjusted to prevent the web from contacting any part of the apparatus.
  • the webdrying apparatus of the present invention includes air supply nozzles of a shape and configuration, and of an arrangement, such as to desirably provide for web support and transport that is superior in performance to nozzles and driers heretofore used, in that the web-tension requirements are reduced, the length of the drier in which support is effected solely by airflow is increased, the speed of transport of the web through the drier may be maintained and even increased without undesirable contact being effected between web and drier structure, and curl of the edge of the web may be avoided.
  • an air supply system and nozzle arrangement for use in a webdrying apparatus of the type having a passage for the transport of a web that is maintained between upper and lower airflows from supply nozzles.
  • an elongated tube is provided for supplying forced air at an elevated temperature to a plurality of air outlet nozzles arranged in juxtaposition as in a generally honeycomblike configuration, with each nozzle in the honeycomb of nozzles defined by a plurality of upstanding walls forming an elongated flow chamber with the air discharge end thereof having a larger cross section than the area of the orifice at the intake end of the chamber.
  • a drier is provided with a plurality of nozzle banks on opposite sides of the path along which the web travels.
  • each row includes a plurality of individual air outlet nozzles.
  • a return air opening is located between spaced nozzle banks and the width of the return, in the direction of movement of the web has a smaller dimension than the width of the nozzle bank.
  • the nozzle bank at the entry end of the web-drying apparatus is provided with more individual nozzle flow chambers than the other nozzle banks of the drier, and the nozde banks at the entry end of the drier may be provided with many more individual nozzles at the lateral ends of the nozzle bank to help prevent curling of the web.
  • FIG. 1 is a perspective view, with portions partially broken. away, of a web-drying apparatus utilizing the principles of the present invention
  • FIG. 2 is a fragmentary top plan view of the DRAWING lower set of nozzles used in the web-drying apparatus illustrated in FIG. 1;
  • FIG. 3 is a fragmentary sectional elevation taken substantially along the line 3-3 of FIG. 2, showing the sets of nozzle banks arranged longitudinally in the drier;
  • FIG. 4 is a fragmentary sectional elevation thereof, taken substantially along line 4-4 of FIG. 2, with the broken lines and arrows illustrating typical airflow paths;
  • FIG. 5 is an enlarged fragmentary plan view of a portion of the bank of air noules at the entry end of the drier, according to certain principles of the present invention.
  • web-drier 10 generally is shown as including a housing 12 with an entry slot 14 at the input wall 16 of the drier for accommodating passage of a web 22.
  • a similar outlet slot 18 is provided at the output wall 20 of the drier.
  • a typical web 22 used with the present invention comprises flexible paper stock having a 38 inch width that is being fed directly to the web drier from the output of ink-printing apparatus as is well known in the art.
  • Web 22 is intended to pass through housing 12 without contacting any portion of the drier apparatus located within the housing.
  • a lower line burner 24 and an upper line burner 26 lower and upper exhaust intake manifolds 28 and 30, respectively, a series of lower and upper airdrying supply nozzle sections 32 and 34, respectively, generally indicated at lower and upper exhaust intake manifolds 36 and 38, respectively, and upstream, or rearwardly, inclined stripper nozzles 40 and 42.
  • the heat-circulating system typically includes an electrically energized blower motor 41 which drives a circulating fan (not shown) located within conduit 43 for forcing air in the direction of the arrows downwardly into a manifold within the housing 16 for channeling the forced air through transverse ducts to the upper and lower nozzle bank sections 32 and 34.
  • a circulating fan not shown located within conduit 43 for forcing air in the direction of the arrows downwardly into a manifold within the housing 16 for channeling the forced air through transverse ducts to the upper and lower nozzle bank sections 32 and 34.
  • An air heater 46 may be located within a return conduit 48 into which recirculating air moves upwardly from the housing in the direction of the arrows, and via a coupling conduit 50 to the circulating fan within conduit 43.
  • a damper control handle 52 is provided on conduit 48 for adjusting the volume of recirculating air that enters conduit 43.
  • An exhaust duct 54 having an exhaust damper control handle 56 connected thereto, extends from the housing 12 and directs the exhaust air to outside the area, as required.
  • the improved air-drying nozzle sections 32 and 34 each includes a plurality of clustered nozzle banks. Typically there are four banks as seen in FIGS. 1 and 3, which are fed by ducts 60, 62, 64 and 66. In the arrangement disclosed herein, heated air is provided through the nozzles at approximately 500 to 600 F. and at about 10,000 feet per minute nozzle velocity.
  • the high temperature causes the solvents to evaporate, and when the ink solvents first evaporate, they enter the boundary layer of gas and tend to cling to the web.
  • the high velocity of heated air from the stripper nozzles 40, 42 operate to strip away said three boundary layers of gas containing solvent, so that the ink evaporate will not cling to the web.
  • Stripper nozzles 40, 42 are inclined upstream (toward the input end 16 of the housing) to obtain the desired stripper action, in contrast to the perpendicular direction of airflow provided by the air supply nozzles of sections 32 and 34.
  • Supply ducts for both air nozzle sections 32 and 34 each comprises four metal tubes 60, 62, 64 and 66 which are spaced by air return openings 61, 63 and 65.
  • the duct tubes each are closed off at one end 68 thereof and communicate at the other end thereof with intake manifold 70 which supplies heated air to each of the tubes.
  • Each of the tubes 60, 62, 64 and 66 leads to a separate nozzle bank that includes a large plurality of air-outlet nozzles 74.
  • each of the air-outlet nozzles has the cross section of a cubicle and each cubicle lies adjacent to other air-outlet nozzles of cubical cross section.
  • each cubicle can be considered an individual cell of a generally honeycomb configuration, with each of the cells having four vertical walls 78 which are equal in width and are perpendicular to, and connected to other walls 78 at the corners of the cubicle.
  • the air-discharge end 80 of each of the cubicles is open and is of the same cross section as the spacing of walls 78, while the air intake end 82 of each cubicle is of smaller cross section than the outlet, being defined by a transverse wall that would normally close the inlet end of the cubicle but for the presence of an inlet orifice in said transverse wall.
  • the orifice 84 leads to the inside of the respective cubicle for establishing communication between the feeder duct and the respective nozzle cubicle.
  • the opening of orifice 84 is much smaller than the opening at the air discharge end 80 of the cubicle. This provides that air entering through orifice 84 at a certain velocity pressure and static pressure exits from outlet end 80 at a lower velocity pressure and higher static pressure, which condition provides a superior lifting action at the face of the web 22.
  • each nozzle bank have at least two, and preferably three or more transverse rows of cubicles, with each row being immediately adjacent to another row.
  • no nozzle bank has less than four rows of cubicles lying transversely of the direction of movement of the web.
  • a substantially constant cushion of air is provided by dimensioning each air return opening 61, 63, 65 so as to be smaller in the web travel direction than the dimension of each adjacent nozzle bank taken in that direction. In this manner, the air from the cubicles of one duct and nozzle bank cooperates with the air from the cubicles of an adjacent nozzle bank, and the resulting air cushion provided thereby will help prevent the moving web from contacting any of the equipment in the drier.
  • the upper and lower nozzle banks supplied by ducts 60 which are closest to the input end of the housing, are provided with a greater number of cubicles than the other air nozzle banks.
  • smaller cubicles 90 which have onequarter the cross section area of cubicles 74, are located adjacent the ends of tube 60, as best seen in FIG. 1 and 5.
  • ducts 62, 64 and 66 each supply four rows of cubicles 74
  • duct 60 is arranged to supply five rows of cubicles 74 and ten rows of smaller cubicles 90 at each end thereof.
  • Cubicles 90 are constructed similarly to cubicles 74 except that the spacing of the upright walls 92 which define the cubicles are one-half the spacing of the walls 78 of cubicles 74, while the vertical dimensions of walls 92 are equal to the similar dimensions of walls 78 as seen most clearly in FIGS. 3 and 4.
  • the inflow orifice 94 of each cubicle 90 is proportionately smaller (approximately one-quarter the area) than the inflow orifice 84 of cubicle 74.
  • cubicles 74 are preferably arranged in offset, or nonaligned, longitudinal relationship with respect to adjacent cubicles.
  • the offset relationship is such that each row is transversely oflset relative to the previous transverse row by an amount approximating one-quarter of the width of a cubicle 74, so that the cubicles 74 in the first and fifth row of the first nozzle bank are aligned longitudinally with the intermediate rows each offset a reciprocal portion of the width of a cubicle.
  • upper air nozzle section 34 is desirably symmetrical to lower air nozzle 32 so that the airflow from nozzle section 34 can be balanced with the airflow from nozzle section 32.
  • one or more nozzle balance adjustments in the form ofa damper that diverts a portion of the airflow is provided for enabling the operator to balance the equipment to allow web 22 to be transported through housing 12 without contacting any of the equipment within the housing.
  • an improved nozzle-bank construction comprising, in combination, a large plurality of individual flow passageways arranged in at least two rows lying transversely of the direction of movement of the web through the drier and having sidewalls forming a generally honeycomb configuration, each of the passageways having a larger air discharge opening than the air intake opening to the passageway, and each of the rows of passageways being immediately adjacent to another row of passageways to combine to provide an elongated air cushion for the longitudinally moving web to maintain the web spaced from the nozzle-bank.
  • a web drier as described in claim 1 including a plurality of nozzle-banks with air-return openings located between adjacent banks, the dimension of each of the air-return openings in the direction of web transport being smaller than the dimension of each adjacent nozzle-bank in the said direction of web movement, whereby a more elongated cushion of air is provided for the longitudinally moving web.
  • a web-drying apparatus having a passage for the transport of a web that is maintained between an upper column and a lower column of air supply nozzles without physical contact against the nozzles, the improvement comprising, in combination, an elongated duct for carrying forced air at an elevated temperature, said duct having a plurality of air outlet nozzles disposed on a surface thereof, each of said air outlet nozzles comprising a cell, and a plurality of said cells being grouped together to form a generally honeycomb configuration whereby air is directed toward said web via each of said cells, each of said cells having a plurality of upstanding walls forming a closed-sided chamber with the air discharge end of the chamber having a larger opening than the opening at the air intake end of the chamber, said air intake end opening being in communication with the inside of the elongated duct.
  • said closed-sided chamber having a polygonal configuration with all of said walls extending perpendicularly with respect to a single-imaginary plane.
  • each elongated duct carries a plurality of rows of air outlet nozzles: and a return air opening located between adjacent elongated ducts, the return air opening having a smaller dimension in the direction of the web transport than the overall dimension of the outlet nozzle rows in said direction.
  • a web-drying apparatus as described in claim 3, including a plurality of elongated ducts and wherein the elongated duct closest to the input end of the web-drying apparatus carries more cells than other elongated ducts positioned toward the output end of the web-drying apparatus.
  • said air intake end opening has a generally curvilinear outline.
  • said elongated duct carries a plurality of rows of airoutlet nozzles with the nozzles of one row being offset with respect to the nozzles of an adjacent row.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Textile Engineering (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Drying Of Solid Materials (AREA)

Abstract

A nozzle structure for a web-drying apparatus, in which a web is supported between upper and lower pressurized airflows, is provided by a plurality of airflow passageways arranged in a honeycomb configuration, each passageway being supplied through a supply orifice of smaller cross section than the cross section of the passageway, and with the honeycomb providing multiple transverse rows in juxtaposition so as to provide an elongated layer of air between the nozzle and the web which operates to prevent contact between the web and the nozzle during high-speed transport through the drier.

Description

United States Patent Stout [54] WEB SUPPORT NOZZLES FOR DRIER [72] Inventor: Arthur G. Stout, Lincolnwood, Ill.
[73] Assignee: Web Press Engineering, Inc.
[22] Filed: May 8, I970 [2]] Appl. No.: 35,855
[52] US. (I ..34/l56 [51] Int. Cl. ..F26b 13/00 [58] Field of Search ..34/23, 156, 155, 115; 226/97 [56] References Cited UNITED STATES PATENTS 3,485,429 12/1969 Hutzenlaub ..34/156 3,199,224 8/1965 Brown ..34/156 1 Feb. 1,1972
2,952,078 9/1960 Litzler ..34/ 1 56 Primary Examiner-Carroll B. Dority, Jr. Attorney-Cynthia Berlow [57] ABSTRACT A nozzle structure for a web-drying apparatus, in which a web is supported between upper and lower pressurized airflows, is provided by a plurality of airflow passageways arranged in a honeycomb configuration, each passageway being supplied through a supply orifice of smaller cross section than the cross section of the passageway, and with the honeycomb providing multiple transverse rows in juxtaposition so as to provide an elongated layer of air between the nozzle and the web which operates to prevent contact between the web and the nonle during high-speed transport through the drier.
12 Claims, 5 Drawing Figures PATENTED FEB} INVEN TOR PATENTEU E I972 sum MP3 WEB SUPPORT NOZZLES FOR DRIER FIELD OF THE INVENTION This invention relates to an improved nozzle arrangement for web-drying apparatus of the type wherein a web is transported and supported between upper and lower drying airflows.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION In a typical web-drier arrangement, the web being dried is transported between support nozzles which force heated air against opposite sides of the web to maintain a desired drying temperature. Additional stripper nozzles that provide very high velocity flow are provided for penetrating the boundary layer adjacent the web in order to strip away the layers of air that are immediately adjacent the web and which contain vapors from the material being dried.
The web generally is transported and supported through the web-drying apparatus between upper and lower airflows from the support nozzles, with the air pressure hopefully adjusted to prevent the web from contacting any part of the apparatus. Heretofore, it has been an important requirement that the tension on the web be accurately maintained so as to achieve the said desired transport through the drier at high speed without the web contacting the nozzle or drier structure and without the edges of the web curling as it enters the drier. Since some webs are more than 3 feet wide and travel at speeds greater than 1,000 feet per minute, it is very important that the air forced against the web have a high enough pressure, temperature and uniformity of flow to achieve the results desired. While some acceptable results have heretofore been achieved, it will be readily understood that the foregoing variables present problems that have made successful operation difficult and expensive to achieve.
The webdrying apparatus of the present invention includes air supply nozzles of a shape and configuration, and of an arrangement, such as to desirably provide for web support and transport that is superior in performance to nozzles and driers heretofore used, in that the web-tension requirements are reduced, the length of the drier in which support is effected solely by airflow is increased, the speed of transport of the web through the drier may be maintained and even increased without undesirable contact being effected between web and drier structure, and curl of the edge of the web may be avoided.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION In accordance with the present invention, there is provided an air supply system and nozzle arrangement for use in a webdrying apparatus of the type having a passage for the transport of a web that is maintained between upper and lower airflows from supply nozzles. As part of the drier, an elongated tube is provided for supplying forced air at an elevated temperature to a plurality of air outlet nozzles arranged in juxtaposition as in a generally honeycomblike configuration, with each nozzle in the honeycomb of nozzles defined by a plurality of upstanding walls forming an elongated flow chamber with the air discharge end thereof having a larger cross section than the area of the orifice at the intake end of the chamber.
In the illustrative embodiment of the invention, a drier is provided with a plurality of nozzle banks on opposite sides of the path along which the web travels. In each there are a plurality of transverse rows of elongated tubes and each row includes a plurality of individual air outlet nozzles. A return air opening is located between spaced nozzle banks and the width of the return, in the direction of movement of the web has a smaller dimension than the width of the nozzle bank.
The nozzle bank at the entry end of the web-drying apparatus is provided with more individual nozzle flow chambers than the other nozzle banks of the drier, and the nozde banks at the entry end of the drier may be provided with many more individual nozzles at the lateral ends of the nozzle bank to help prevent curling of the web.
A more detailed explanation of the invention is provided in the following description and claims. and is illustrated in the accompanying drawings.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS FIG. 1 is a perspective view, with portions partially broken. away, of a web-drying apparatus utilizing the principles of the present invention;
FIG. 2 is a fragmentary top plan view of the DRAWING lower set of nozzles used in the web-drying apparatus illustrated in FIG. 1;
FIG. 3 is a fragmentary sectional elevation taken substantially along the line 3-3 of FIG. 2, showing the sets of nozzle banks arranged longitudinally in the drier;
FIG. 4 is a fragmentary sectional elevation thereof, taken substantially along line 4-4 of FIG. 2, with the broken lines and arrows illustrating typical airflow paths; and
FIG. 5 is an enlarged fragmentary plan view of a portion of the bank of air noules at the entry end of the drier, according to certain principles of the present invention.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE ILLUSTRATIVE EMBODIMENT Referring to the drawings, web-drier 10 generally is shown as including a housing 12 with an entry slot 14 at the input wall 16 of the drier for accommodating passage of a web 22. A similar outlet slot 18 is provided at the output wall 20 of the drier. A typical web 22 used with the present invention comprises flexible paper stock having a 38 inch width that is being fed directly to the web drier from the output of ink-printing apparatus as is well known in the art.
Web 22 is intended to pass through housing 12 without contacting any portion of the drier apparatus located within the housing. In a typical layout within the housing there may be positioned a lower line burner 24 and an upper line burner 26, lower and upper exhaust intake manifolds 28 and 30, respectively, a series of lower and upper airdrying supply nozzle sections 32 and 34, respectively, generally indicated at lower and upper exhaust intake manifolds 36 and 38, respectively, and upstream, or rearwardly, inclined stripper nozzles 40 and 42. The heat-circulating system typically includes an electrically energized blower motor 41 which drives a circulating fan (not shown) located within conduit 43 for forcing air in the direction of the arrows downwardly into a manifold within the housing 16 for channeling the forced air through transverse ducts to the upper and lower nozzle bank sections 32 and 34.
An air heater 46 may be located within a return conduit 48 into which recirculating air moves upwardly from the housing in the direction of the arrows, and via a coupling conduit 50 to the circulating fan within conduit 43. A damper control handle 52 is provided on conduit 48 for adjusting the volume of recirculating air that enters conduit 43. An exhaust duct 54 having an exhaust damper control handle 56 connected thereto, extends from the housing 12 and directs the exhaust air to outside the area, as required. The foregoing, except for general reference to the improved nozzle banks, describes a typical environment in which the improved nozzle banks of this invention are to be used.
Now, as web 22 passes through the housing, an open gas flame is first-applied to opposite sides of the web by line burners 24 and 26 to elevate the web temperature quickly. The web then is caused to pass between the upper and lower improved nozzle- banks sections 32 and 34 of this invention. As shown in the drawings, the improved air- drying nozzle sections 32 and 34 each includes a plurality of clustered nozzle banks. Typically there are four banks as seen in FIGS. 1 and 3, which are fed by ducts 60, 62, 64 and 66. In the arrangement disclosed herein, heated air is provided through the nozzles at approximately 500 to 600 F. and at about 10,000 feet per minute nozzle velocity.
The high temperature causes the solvents to evaporate, and when the ink solvents first evaporate, they enter the boundary layer of gas and tend to cling to the web. The high velocity of heated air from the stripper nozzles 40, 42 operate to strip away said three boundary layers of gas containing solvent, so that the ink evaporate will not cling to the web. Stripper nozzles 40, 42 are inclined upstream (toward the input end 16 of the housing) to obtain the desired stripper action, in contrast to the perpendicular direction of airflow provided by the air supply nozzles of sections 32 and 34.
Supply ducts for both air nozzle sections 32 and 34 each comprises four metal tubes 60, 62, 64 and 66 which are spaced by air return openings 61, 63 and 65. The duct tubes each are closed off at one end 68 thereof and communicate at the other end thereof with intake manifold 70 which supplies heated air to each of the tubes. Each of the tubes 60, 62, 64 and 66 leads to a separate nozzle bank that includes a large plurality of air-outlet nozzles 74. In the illustrative embodiment, each of the air-outlet nozzles has the cross section of a cubicle and each cubicle lies adjacent to other air-outlet nozzles of cubical cross section. In effect, each cubicle can be considered an individual cell of a generally honeycomb configuration, with each of the cells having four vertical walls 78 which are equal in width and are perpendicular to, and connected to other walls 78 at the corners of the cubicle.
The air-discharge end 80 of each of the cubicles is open and is of the same cross section as the spacing of walls 78, while the air intake end 82 of each cubicle is of smaller cross section than the outlet, being defined by a transverse wall that would normally close the inlet end of the cubicle but for the presence of an inlet orifice in said transverse wall. The orifice 84 leads to the inside of the respective cubicle for establishing communication between the feeder duct and the respective nozzle cubicle. The opening of orifice 84 is much smaller than the opening at the air discharge end 80 of the cubicle. This provides that air entering through orifice 84 at a certain velocity pressure and static pressure exits from outlet end 80 at a lower velocity pressure and higher static pressure, which condition provides a superior lifting action at the face of the web 22.
In order to provide an approximately elongated air cushion (elongated in the direction of motion of the web) for the longitudinally moving web to maintain the web spaced from the nozzles, it is desired that each nozzle bank have at least two, and preferably three or more transverse rows of cubicles, with each row being immediately adjacent to another row. In the illustrative embodiment, no nozzle bank has less than four rows of cubicles lying transversely of the direction of movement of the web. A substantially constant cushion of air is provided by dimensioning each air return opening 61, 63, 65 so as to be smaller in the web travel direction than the dimension of each adjacent nozzle bank taken in that direction. In this manner, the air from the cubicles of one duct and nozzle bank cooperates with the air from the cubicles of an adjacent nozzle bank, and the resulting air cushion provided thereby will help prevent the moving web from contacting any of the equipment in the drier.
Occasionally the lateral edges of the web tend to curl adjacent the input side 16 of the web drier housing. In order to alleviate such curl, the upper and lower nozzle banks supplied by ducts 60, which are closest to the input end of the housing, are provided with a greater number of cubicles than the other air nozzle banks. Thus, smaller cubicles 90, which have onequarter the cross section area of cubicles 74, are located adjacent the ends of tube 60, as best seen in FIG. 1 and 5. Additionally, while in the illustrative embodiment ducts 62, 64 and 66 each supply four rows of cubicles 74, duct 60 is arranged to supply five rows of cubicles 74 and ten rows of smaller cubicles 90 at each end thereof.
Cubicles 90 are constructed similarly to cubicles 74 except that the spacing of the upright walls 92 which define the cubicles are one-half the spacing of the walls 78 of cubicles 74, while the vertical dimensions of walls 92 are equal to the similar dimensions of walls 78 as seen most clearly in FIGS. 3 and 4. Of course, the inflow orifice 94 of each cubicle 90 is proportionately smaller (approximately one-quarter the area) than the inflow orifice 84 of cubicle 74.
Referring to FIGS. 2 and 5 in particular, it will be seen that cubicles 74, as well as cubicles 90, are preferably arranged in offset, or nonaligned, longitudinal relationship with respect to adjacent cubicles. As seen in FIG. 2, the offset relationship is such that each row is transversely oflset relative to the previous transverse row by an amount approximating one-quarter of the width of a cubicle 74, so that the cubicles 74 in the first and fifth row of the first nozzle bank are aligned longitudinally with the intermediate rows each offset a reciprocal portion of the width of a cubicle.
It will further be understood that upper air nozzle section 34 is desirably symmetrical to lower air nozzle 32 so that the airflow from nozzle section 34 can be balanced with the airflow from nozzle section 32. To this end, one or more nozzle balance adjustments (FIG. 1) in the form ofa damper that diverts a portion of the airflow is provided for enabling the operator to balance the equipment to allow web 22 to be transported through housing 12 without contacting any of the equipment within the housing.
Although one illustrative embodiment of the invention has been shown and described, it is to be understood that various substitutions and modifications may be made by those skilled in the art without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention. While the generic term web has been used herein, it will be understood that such term is not limited to any material, as the invention should be useful with all webs including those of paper, textile, metal foil, synthetic plastics and the like.
What is claimed is:
I. In a web drier wherein at least one of the opposite sides of an elongated web, moving longitudinally at great speed, is subjected to a flow from nozzles of drying air that also is intended to maintain the web spaced from said air-supplying nozzles during transport of the web through the drier, an improved nozzle-bank construction comprising, in combination, a large plurality of individual flow passageways arranged in at least two rows lying transversely of the direction of movement of the web through the drier and having sidewalls forming a generally honeycomb configuration, each of the passageways having a larger air discharge opening than the air intake opening to the passageway, and each of the rows of passageways being immediately adjacent to another row of passageways to combine to provide an elongated air cushion for the longitudinally moving web to maintain the web spaced from the nozzle-bank.
2. In a web drier as described in claim 1, including a plurality of nozzle-banks with air-return openings located between adjacent banks, the dimension of each of the air-return openings in the direction of web transport being smaller than the dimension of each adjacent nozzle-bank in the said direction of web movement, whereby a more elongated cushion of air is provided for the longitudinally moving web.
3. In a web-drying apparatus having a passage for the transport of a web that is maintained between an upper column and a lower column of air supply nozzles without physical contact against the nozzles, the improvement comprising, in combination, an elongated duct for carrying forced air at an elevated temperature, said duct having a plurality of air outlet nozzles disposed on a surface thereof, each of said air outlet nozzles comprising a cell, and a plurality of said cells being grouped together to form a generally honeycomb configuration whereby air is directed toward said web via each of said cells, each of said cells having a plurality of upstanding walls forming a closed-sided chamber with the air discharge end of the chamber having a larger opening than the opening at the air intake end of the chamber, said air intake end opening being in communication with the inside of the elongated duct.
4. In a web-drying apparatus as described in claim 3, said closed-sided chamber having a polygonal configuration with all of said walls extending perpendicularly with respect to a single-imaginary plane.
5. In a web-drying apparatus as described in claim 3, including a plurality of elongated ducts and wherein each elongated duct carries a plurality of rows of air outlet nozzles: and a return air opening located between adjacent elongated ducts, the return air opening having a smaller dimension in the direction of the web transport than the overall dimension of the outlet nozzle rows in said direction.
6. In a web-drying apparatus as described in claim 3, including a plurality of elongated ducts and wherein the elongated duct closest to the input end of the web-drying apparatus carries more cells than other elongated ducts positioned toward the output end of the web-drying apparatus.
7. In a web-drying apparatus as described in claim 6, wherein the elongated duct closest to the input end of the web-drying apparatus carries more cells per unit area adjacent the ends of the elongated duct than at the central portion thereof.
8. In a web-drying apparatus as described in claim 3,
wherein said air intake end opening has a generally curvilinear outline.
9. In a web-drying apparatus as described in claim 3. wherein said chambers are cubilinear and said air intake openings are circular in outline.
10. In a web-drying apparatus as described in claim 3, wherein said elongated duct carries a plurality of rows of airoutlet nozzles with the nozzles of one row being offset with respect to the nozzles of an adjacent row.
11. A web drier as in claim 1 wherein the individual flow passageways are substantially polygonal in cross section.
12. A web drier as in claim 1 wherein nozzle-banks are arranged in spaced, opposed relation to each other to define a space in which the web moves between similar nozzle-banks.
IF i

Claims (12)

1. In a web drier wherein at least one of the opposite sides of an elongated web, moving longitudinally at great speed, is subjected to a flow from nozzles of drying air that also is intended to maintain the web spaced from said air-supplying nozzles during transport of the web through the drier, an improved nozzle-bank construction comprising, in combination, a large plurality of individual flow passageways arranged in at least two rows lying transversely of the direction of movement of the web through the drier and having sidewalls forming a generally honeycomb configuration, each of the passageways having a larger air discharge opening than the air intake opening to the passageway, and each of the rows of passageways being immediately adjacent to another row of passageways to combine to provide an elongated air cushion for the longitudinally moving web to maintain the web spaced from the nozzle-bank.
2. In a web drier as described in claim 1, including a plurality of nozzle-banks with air-return openings located between adjacent banks, the dimension of each of the air-return openings in the direction of web transport being smaller than the dimension of each adjacent nozzle-bank in the said direction of web movement, whereby a more elongated cushion of air is provided for the longitudinally moving web.
3. In a web-drying apparatus having a passage for the transport of a web that is maintained between an upper column and a lower column of air supply nozzles without physical contact against the nozzles, the improvement comprising, in combination, an elongated duct for carrying forced air at an elevated temperature, said duct having a plurality of air outlet nozzles disposed on a surface thereof, each of said air outlet nozzles comprising a cell, and a plurality of said cells being grouped together to form a generally honeycomb configuration whereby air is directed toward said web via each of said cells, each of said cells having a plurality of upstanding walls forming a closed-sided chamber with the air discharge end of the chamber having a larger opening than the opening at the air intake end of the chamber, said air intake end opening being in communication with the inside of the elongated duct.
4. In a web-drying apparatus as described in claim 3, said closed-sided chamber having a polygonal configuration with all of said walls extending perpendicularly with respect to a single-imaginary plane.
5. In a web-drying apparatus as described in claim 3, including a plurality of elongated ducts and wherein each elongated duct carries a plurality of rows of air outlet nozzles; and a return air opening located between adjacent elongated ducts, the return air opening having a smaller dimension in the direction of the web transport than the overall dimension of the outlet nozzle rows in said direction.
6. In a web-drying apparatus as described in claim 3, including a plurality of elongated ducts and wherein the elongated duct closest to the input end of the web-drying apparatus carries more cells than other elongated ducts positioned toward the output end of the web-drying apparatus.
7. In a web-drying apparatus as described in claim 6, wherein the elongated duct closest to the input end of the web-drying apparatus carries more cells per unit area adjacent the ends of the elongated duct than at the central portion thereof.
8. In a web-drying apparatus as described in claim 3, wherein said air intake end opening has a generally curvilinear outline.
9. In a web-drying apparatus as described in claim 3, wherein said chambers are cubilinear and said air intake openings are circular in outline.
10. In a web-drying apparatus as described in claim 3, wherein said elongated duct carries a plurality of rows of air-outlet nozzles with the nozzles of one row being offset with respect to the nozzles of an adjacent row.
11. A web drier as in claim 1 wherein the individual flow passageways are substantially polygonal in cross section.
12. A web drier as in claim 1 wherein nozzle-banks are arranged in spaced, opposed relation to each other to define a space in which the web moves between similar nozzle-banks.
US35855A 1970-05-08 1970-05-08 Web support nozzles for drier Expired - Lifetime US3638330A (en)

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Cited By (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3751823A (en) * 1970-12-09 1973-08-14 Multitec Ag Drying apparatus
US3777408A (en) * 1970-08-10 1973-12-11 Air Ind Installations for the treatment, in gaseous medium, of a strip product
US5210961A (en) * 1989-11-15 1993-05-18 Stork Contiweb B.V. Drier with improved configuration of the air ducts
US5528839A (en) * 1995-01-18 1996-06-25 W.R. Grace & Co.-Conn. Control and arrangement of a continuous process for an industrial dryer
US5724259A (en) * 1995-05-04 1998-03-03 Quad/Tech, Inc. System and method for monitoring color in a printing press
US5752641A (en) * 1996-02-08 1998-05-19 Vits-Maschinenbau Gmbh Suspension dryer, in particular offset dryer
EP0864518A1 (en) * 1997-03-12 1998-09-16 Ingenieurgemeinschaft WSP Prof. Dr.-Ing. C.Kramer Prof. H.J. Gerhardt, M.Sc. Bed of air cushion nozzles to guide webs in a floating manner
US20070125876A1 (en) * 2005-07-28 2007-06-07 Ralf Bolling Nozzle system for the treatment of web-shaped material
US20080276488A1 (en) * 2007-05-07 2008-11-13 Paul Seidl Step air foil web stabilizer

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US2952078A (en) * 1953-11-30 1960-09-13 Cyril A Litzler Apparatus for controlled heating and cooling of continuous textile material
US3199224A (en) * 1962-04-03 1965-08-10 Wolverine Equipment Co Apparatus for treating continuous length webs comprising high velocity gas jets
US3485429A (en) * 1966-07-16 1969-12-23 Erwin Kampf Mas Fab Bielstein Device for heating and drying a material web by suspension in a tunnel

Patent Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2952078A (en) * 1953-11-30 1960-09-13 Cyril A Litzler Apparatus for controlled heating and cooling of continuous textile material
US3199224A (en) * 1962-04-03 1965-08-10 Wolverine Equipment Co Apparatus for treating continuous length webs comprising high velocity gas jets
US3485429A (en) * 1966-07-16 1969-12-23 Erwin Kampf Mas Fab Bielstein Device for heating and drying a material web by suspension in a tunnel

Cited By (12)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3777408A (en) * 1970-08-10 1973-12-11 Air Ind Installations for the treatment, in gaseous medium, of a strip product
US3751823A (en) * 1970-12-09 1973-08-14 Multitec Ag Drying apparatus
US5210961A (en) * 1989-11-15 1993-05-18 Stork Contiweb B.V. Drier with improved configuration of the air ducts
US5528839A (en) * 1995-01-18 1996-06-25 W.R. Grace & Co.-Conn. Control and arrangement of a continuous process for an industrial dryer
US5555635A (en) * 1995-01-18 1996-09-17 W. R. Grace & Co.-Conn. Control and arrangement of a continuous process for an industrial dryer
US5724259A (en) * 1995-05-04 1998-03-03 Quad/Tech, Inc. System and method for monitoring color in a printing press
US5752641A (en) * 1996-02-08 1998-05-19 Vits-Maschinenbau Gmbh Suspension dryer, in particular offset dryer
EP0864518A1 (en) * 1997-03-12 1998-09-16 Ingenieurgemeinschaft WSP Prof. Dr.-Ing. C.Kramer Prof. H.J. Gerhardt, M.Sc. Bed of air cushion nozzles to guide webs in a floating manner
US6231001B1 (en) 1997-03-12 2001-05-15 Ingenieurgemeinschaft Wsp, Prof. Dr.-Ing. C. Kramer, Prof. Dipl.-Ing. H. J. Gerhardt M. S. Nozzle array for levitational guidance of web material
US20070125876A1 (en) * 2005-07-28 2007-06-07 Ralf Bolling Nozzle system for the treatment of web-shaped material
US20080276488A1 (en) * 2007-05-07 2008-11-13 Paul Seidl Step air foil web stabilizer
US8061055B2 (en) * 2007-05-07 2011-11-22 Megtec Systems, Inc. Step air foil web stabilizer

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