US3828725A - Curtain coater with restricted flow - Google Patents

Curtain coater with restricted flow Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US3828725A
US3828725A US00076427A US7642770A US3828725A US 3828725 A US3828725 A US 3828725A US 00076427 A US00076427 A US 00076427A US 7642770 A US7642770 A US 7642770A US 3828725 A US3828725 A US 3828725A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
cavity
coating
curtain
liquid
head
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US00076427A
Inventor
W Lewicki
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Armstrong World Industries Inc
Original Assignee
Armstrong Cork Co
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Armstrong Cork Co filed Critical Armstrong Cork Co
Priority to US00076427A priority Critical patent/US3828725A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US3828725A publication Critical patent/US3828725A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B05SPRAYING OR ATOMISING IN GENERAL; APPLYING FLUENT MATERIALS TO SURFACES, IN GENERAL
    • B05CAPPARATUS FOR APPLYING FLUENT MATERIALS TO SURFACES, IN GENERAL
    • B05C5/00Apparatus in which liquid or other fluent material is projected, poured or allowed to flow on to the surface of the work
    • B05C5/005Curtain coaters
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10STECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10S118/00Coating apparatus
    • Y10S118/04Curtain coater

Definitions

  • ABSTRACT Curtain coaters are utilized to provide a curtain of coating material through which an object to be coated 3 Claims, 5 Drawing Figures PAIENIED 3W V 3.828.725
  • V ATTORNEY CURTAIN COATER WITH RESTRICTED FLOW BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 1.
  • the invention herein is directed to a coater and, more particularly, to n coater which is used to create a continuous uniform falling curtain of liquid. to a slowly moving substrate.
  • U.S. Pat. No. 3,365,325 shows a curtain coater which uses the foam material as the lip of the coater. This foam lip in conjunction with other elements is used to control the flow of liquid forming the curtain. It is believed that this curtain coater, as with most conventional curtain coaters, provides a curtain of liquid which will lay a thin coating of material on a moving substrate only when the substrate is moving in excess of 100 feet per minute. Certain manufacturing processes do not lend themselves readily to speeds this high.
  • Foam materials having an open-called structure exist in the art.
  • An open-cell reticulated polyurethane foam is shown in U.S. Pat. No. 3,171,820, and an open-cell polyvinyl foam is shown in U.S. Pat. No. 3,352,802.
  • the invention relates to an apparatus for applying a thin and uniform coating to a moving surface by means of a modified curtain coating apparatus which permits the substrate to move at a speed considerably slower than the speed needed for conventional curtain coaters.
  • This coating at slow speed is accomplished by the reducing of the amount of fluid head in the coater and restricting the downward flow of coating material within the curtain forming head of the coater.
  • the above is accomplished by one of two techniques.
  • the first technique involves the placing of an open-cell foam material in the cavity of the coater head.
  • the foam material occupies a portion of the cavity of the coating head and thus reduces the amount of fluid head.
  • the cell structure tends to restrict the flow of coating material; therefore, less coating will flow from the coating head.
  • FIG. I is a showing of the prior art coating head structure
  • FIG. II is a showing of the coating head structure with the open-cell foam structure
  • FIG. III is an enlarged cross-sectional view of the foam structure
  • FIG. IV is a view of a coating head with the combination sphere and foam structure.
  • FIG. V is the showing schematically of a web coating structure.
  • the prior art coater head 2 has the material fed into the head by an input opening 4. Positioned by the opening 4 is a distribution channel 6 which extends along the cavity 8 of the coating head. This distribution channel spreads the coating material across the full length of the cavity 8.
  • the cavity 8 is as long as the coating curtain to be formed.
  • the coating material leaves the cavity 8 through a lip structure 10 which has a slot 12. As the material leaves the slot 12, it forms the curtain 14. It is the curtain 14 of the coating material which the moving substrate passes through to receive its coating.
  • the above prior art coating head will provide a thin coating of material to a moving substrate only when the substrate is moving in excess of feet per minute.
  • Other processing procedures on the moving substrate may require the substrate to be moving at speeds substantially less than 100 feet per minute.
  • the prior art structure is incapable of providing the coating of the required thinness.
  • the slow speed is required because of other processing steps on the floor product.
  • the following two techniques were found to be desirable to use so that a thin coating could be provided on a slowly moving substrate. Referring now to FIG. II, there is shown one technique of permitting the curtain 14 to provide a thin coating to a slow moving substrate.
  • the conventional coating head 2 has the conventional material inlet 4, distribution channel 6, cavity 8 and slot 12.
  • the modification involves placing in the cavity 8 an open-celled material having about 60 pores per inch.
  • the materials used may be an opencelled reticulated polyurethane foam, such as that shown in U.S. Pat. No. 3,171,820, or an open-celled polyvinyl foam, such as that shown in Us. Pat. No. 3,352,802.
  • FIG. III is a showing of an enlarged cross sectional view of a typical foam-type material. This foam material occupies a certain portion of the cavity and, therefore, reduces the amount of fluid which would be held in the cavity. Also, the structure of the foam is such that it will restrict the downward flow of coating material from the distribution channel 6 to the slot I2.
  • the reduced flow means that less material will flow out of the coating head to form the curtain 14. Therefore, a thin continuous coating is provided for placing a thin coating on a slowly moving substrate.
  • the prior art structures were incapable of doing this because,when the curtain thickness was reduced to that which was necessary to provide the thin coating, the continuous coating curtain would break and improper coating would be secured on the substrate.
  • FIG. IV there is shown a modification of the structure of FIG. II.
  • the foam material 16 of FIG. II has been replaced by a combination thin layer of foam material 18 and a plurality of /1 inch diameter nylon spheres or like inert spheres which are carefully stacked together in a nested relationship.
  • the spheres in effect form a structure which is very similar to that of an open-celled foam.
  • This structure provides the same results as that shown in FIG. ll.
  • FIG. V there is shown the general schematic layout of a coating operation.
  • the substrate 22 to be coated moves through the curtain 14 which is formed by the coater head 2. Excess material drops into a return trough 24 and is moved by a pump 26 back up to the coater head 2.
  • This apparatus will form a continuous thin curtain of coating material through which the substrate moves.
  • Apparatus for creating a uniformly thin, continuous curtain of liquid comprising a substantially elongated coating head structure having a cavity in which liquid is contained, at the bottom of the head structure there is provided an elongated slot which communicates with the cavity within the head structure, the improvement comprising reticulated open-celled foam material completely within the cavity of the coating head to occupy a portion of the cavity and to reduce the amount of fluid within the cavity and to restrict the downward flow of liquid through the cavity towards the slot.
  • Apparatus for creating a uniformly thin, continuous curtain of liquid comprising a substantially elongated coating head structure having a cavity in which liquid is contained, at the bottom of the head structure there is provided an elongated slot which communicates with the cavity within the head structure, the improvement comprising a plurality of spheres completely within the cavity of the coating head to occupy a portion of the cavity and to reduce the amount of fluid within the cavity and to restrict the downward flow of liquid through the cavity towards the slot.

Abstract

Curtain coaters are utilized to provide a curtain of coating material through which an object to be coated passes. The coater head cavity herein is provided with means to restrict the flow of material from the curtain coater and thereby prevent the flooding of a slow moving article which is meant to be coated with a controlled, relatively thin layer of material. The means restricting the flow may be an open-celled material or a group of nested spheres.

Description

United States Patent [191 Lewicki, Jr.
[ Aug. 13, 1974 CURTAIN COATER WITl-I RESTRICTED FLOW Inventor: Walter J. Lewicki, Jr., Lancaster,
Assignee: Armstrong Cork Company,
Lancaster, Pa.
Filed: Sept. 29, 1970 Appl. No.1 76,427
US. Cl. 118/324, 118/D1G. 4 Int. Cl. BOSc 5/00 Field of Search 53/140; 117/1053;
118/DIG. 4, 324, 325
References Cited UNITED STATES PATENTS 1/1968 Fraenkel et a1 118/324 FOREIGN PATENTS OR APPLICATIONS 601,546 6/1960 Canada 118/325 Primary ExaminerHenry S. .laudon [57] ABSTRACT Curtain coaters are utilized to provide a curtain of coating material through which an object to be coated 3 Claims, 5 Drawing Figures PAIENIED 3W V 3.828.725
PRIGR ART 2o INVENTOR I8 WALTER J. LEWICKLJR.
V ATTORNEY CURTAIN COATER WITH RESTRICTED FLOW BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 1. Field of the Invention The invention herein is directed to a coater and, more particularly, to n coater which is used to create a continuous uniform falling curtain of liquid. to a slowly moving substrate.
2. Description of the Prior Art Curtain coating structures have existed for a number of years. U.S. Pat. No. 3,365,325 shows a curtain coater which uses the foam material as the lip of the coater. This foam lip in conjunction with other elements is used to control the flow of liquid forming the curtain. It is believed that this curtain coater, as with most conventional curtain coaters, provides a curtain of liquid which will lay a thin coating of material on a moving substrate only when the substrate is moving in excess of 100 feet per minute. Certain manufacturing processes do not lend themselves readily to speeds this high.
Foam materials having an open-called structure exist in the art. An open-cell reticulated polyurethane foam is shown in U.S. Pat. No. 3,171,820, and an open-cell polyvinyl foam is shown in U.S. Pat. No. 3,352,802. These are general-purpose commercially available foam materials.
It has been the general practice within the art to attempt to control the flow of coating material forming the curtain by the use of restrictive lip structures or by control of the material volume being moved. It is an object herein to permit the utilization of conventional commercially available coaters and yet secure the ability to provide thin coatings to substrates with low speed of movement.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION The invention relates to an apparatus for applying a thin and uniform coating to a moving surface by means of a modified curtain coating apparatus which permits the substrate to move at a speed considerably slower than the speed needed for conventional curtain coaters. This coating at slow speed is accomplished by the reducing of the amount of fluid head in the coater and restricting the downward flow of coating material within the curtain forming head of the coater. The above is accomplished by one of two techniques. The first technique involves the placing of an open-cell foam material in the cavity of the coater head. The foam material occupies a portion of the cavity of the coating head and thus reduces the amount of fluid head. Also, the cell structure tends to restrict the flow of coating material; therefore, less coating will flow from the coating head. The same result is secured by the use of spheres of material tightly packed within the coater head cavity. At the bottom of the nested arrangement of spheres, there is placed a very thin layer of an open-cell foam material. Both of the above techniques'permit the use of a conventional coating head structure in such a manner as to permit the placing of a thin coating of material on a very slowly moving substrate.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING FIG. I is a showing of the prior art coating head structure;
FIG. II is a showing of the coating head structure with the open-cell foam structure;
FIG. III is an enlarged cross-sectional view of the foam structure;
FIG. IV is a view of a coating head with the combination sphere and foam structure; and
FIG. V is the showing schematically ofa web coating structure.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT The prior art coater head 2 has the material fed into the head by an input opening 4. Positioned by the opening 4 is a distribution channel 6 which extends along the cavity 8 of the coating head. This distribution channel spreads the coating material across the full length of the cavity 8. The cavity 8 is as long as the coating curtain to be formed. The coating material leaves the cavity 8 through a lip structure 10 which has a slot 12. As the material leaves the slot 12, it forms the curtain 14. It is the curtain 14 of the coating material which the moving substrate passes through to receive its coating.
Normally, the above prior art coating head will provide a thin coating of material to a moving substrate only when the substrate is moving in excess of feet per minute. Other processing procedures on the moving substrate may require the substrate to be moving at speeds substantially less than 100 feet per minute. Specifically, in trying to apply a 0.007 inch thick wet coating of polyurethane to a floor product moving at 50 feet per minute, the prior art structure is incapable of providing the coating of the required thinness. The slow speed is required because of other processing steps on the floor product. The following two techniques were found to be desirable to use so that a thin coating could be provided on a slowly moving substrate. Referring now to FIG. II, there is shown one technique of permitting the curtain 14 to provide a thin coating to a slow moving substrate. The conventional coating head 2 has the conventional material inlet 4, distribution channel 6, cavity 8 and slot 12. The modification involves placing in the cavity 8 an open-celled material having about 60 pores per inch. The materials used may be an opencelled reticulated polyurethane foam, such as that shown in U.S. Pat. No. 3,171,820, or an open-celled polyvinyl foam, such as that shown in Us. Pat. No. 3,352,802. FIG. III is a showing of an enlarged cross sectional view of a typical foam-type material. This foam material occupies a certain portion of the cavity and, therefore, reduces the amount of fluid which would be held in the cavity. Also, the structure of the foam is such that it will restrict the downward flow of coating material from the distribution channel 6 to the slot I2. The reduced flow means that less material will flow out of the coating head to form the curtain 14. Therefore, a thin continuous coating is provided for placing a thin coating on a slowly moving substrate. The prior art structures were incapable of doing this because,when the curtain thickness was reduced to that which was necessary to provide the thin coating, the continuous coating curtain would break and improper coating would be secured on the substrate.
Referring now to FIG. IV, there is shown a modification of the structure of FIG. II. Here the foam material 16 of FIG. II has been replaced by a combination thin layer of foam material 18 and a plurality of /1 inch diameter nylon spheres or like inert spheres which are carefully stacked together in a nested relationship. The spheres in effect form a structure which is very similar to that of an open-celled foam. This structure provides the same results as that shown in FIG. ll.
Referring now to FIG. V, there is shown the general schematic layout of a coating operation. The substrate 22 to be coated moves through the curtain 14 which is formed by the coater head 2. Excess material drops into a return trough 24 and is moved by a pump 26 back up to the coater head 2. This apparatus will form a continuous thin curtain of coating material through which the substrate moves.
What is claimed is:
1. Apparatus for creating a uniformly thin, continuous curtain of liquid comprising a substantially elongated coating head structure having a cavity in which liquid is contained, at the bottom of the head structure there is provided an elongated slot which communicates with the cavity within the head structure, the improvement comprising reticulated open-celled foam material completely within the cavity of the coating head to occupy a portion of the cavity and to reduce the amount of fluid within the cavity and to restrict the downward flow of liquid through the cavity towards the slot.
2. Apparatus for creating a uniformly thin, continuous curtain of liquid comprising a substantially elongated coating head structure having a cavity in which liquid is contained, at the bottom of the head structure there is provided an elongated slot which communicates with the cavity within the head structure, the improvement comprising a plurality of spheres completely within the cavity of the coating head to occupy a portion of the cavity and to reduce the amount of fluid within the cavity and to restrict the downward flow of liquid through the cavity towards the slot.
3. The apparatus of claim 2 wherein the spheres are combined with a layer of open-celled foam positioned beneath a nested arrangement of spheres.

Claims (3)

1. Apparatus for creating a uniformly thin, continuous curtain of liquid comprising a substantially elongated coating head structure having a cavity in which liquid is contained, at the bottom of the head structure there is provided an elongated slot which communicates with the cavity within the head structure, the improvement comprising reticulated open-celled foam material completely within the cavity of the coating head to occupy a portion of the cavity and to reduce the amount of fluid within the cavity and to restrict the downward flow of liquid through the cavity towards the slot.
2. Apparatus for creating a uniformly thin, continuous curtain of liquid comprising a substantially elongated coating head structure having a cavity in which liquid is contained, at the bottom of the head structure there is provided an elongated slot which communicates with the cavity within the head structure, the improvement comprising a plurality of spheres completely within the cavity of the coating head to occupy a portion of the cavity and to reduce the amount of fluid within the cavity and to restrict the downward flow of liquid through the cavity towards the slot.
3. The apparatus of claim 2 wherein the spheres are combined with a layer of open-celled foam positioned beneath a nested arrangement of spheres.
US00076427A 1970-09-29 1970-09-29 Curtain coater with restricted flow Expired - Lifetime US3828725A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US00076427A US3828725A (en) 1970-09-29 1970-09-29 Curtain coater with restricted flow

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US00076427A US3828725A (en) 1970-09-29 1970-09-29 Curtain coater with restricted flow

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US3828725A true US3828725A (en) 1974-08-13

Family

ID=22131938

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US00076427A Expired - Lifetime US3828725A (en) 1970-09-29 1970-09-29 Curtain coater with restricted flow

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US3828725A (en)

Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3873025A (en) * 1974-05-06 1975-03-25 Stora Kopparbergs Bergslags Ab Method and apparatus for atomizing a liquid medium and for spraying the atomized liquid medium in a predetermined direction
US4489671A (en) * 1978-07-03 1984-12-25 Polaroid Corporation Coating apparatus
FR2723863A1 (en) * 1994-08-31 1996-03-01 Sony Corp Extrusion coating device for magnetic recording medium manufacture
WO1996026016A1 (en) * 1995-02-22 1996-08-29 Minnesota Mining And Manufacturing Company Restricted flow die
US6527861B2 (en) * 1997-07-03 2003-03-04 Tokyo Electron Limited Developing apparatus with a porous film nozzle
US20130025535A1 (en) * 2011-07-27 2013-01-31 Sung An Machinery Co., Ltd. Slot die for improving coating uniformity
US9700912B2 (en) 2012-06-27 2017-07-11 William K. Leonard Fluid transport media

Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
CA601546A (en) * 1960-07-12 S. Tuttle Orvil Apparatus for applying a coating to sheet material
US3365325A (en) * 1964-02-13 1968-01-23 Continental Can Co Apparatus for creation of a falling curtain of liquid

Patent Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
CA601546A (en) * 1960-07-12 S. Tuttle Orvil Apparatus for applying a coating to sheet material
US3365325A (en) * 1964-02-13 1968-01-23 Continental Can Co Apparatus for creation of a falling curtain of liquid

Cited By (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3873025A (en) * 1974-05-06 1975-03-25 Stora Kopparbergs Bergslags Ab Method and apparatus for atomizing a liquid medium and for spraying the atomized liquid medium in a predetermined direction
US4489671A (en) * 1978-07-03 1984-12-25 Polaroid Corporation Coating apparatus
FR2723863A1 (en) * 1994-08-31 1996-03-01 Sony Corp Extrusion coating device for magnetic recording medium manufacture
WO1996026016A1 (en) * 1995-02-22 1996-08-29 Minnesota Mining And Manufacturing Company Restricted flow die
US5702527A (en) * 1995-02-22 1997-12-30 Minnesota Mining And Manufacturing Company Restricted flow die
US6527861B2 (en) * 1997-07-03 2003-03-04 Tokyo Electron Limited Developing apparatus with a porous film nozzle
US20130025535A1 (en) * 2011-07-27 2013-01-31 Sung An Machinery Co., Ltd. Slot die for improving coating uniformity
US9700912B2 (en) 2012-06-27 2017-07-11 William K. Leonard Fluid transport media

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US4521457A (en) Simultaneous formation and deposition of multiple ribbon-like streams
US3052211A (en) Apparatus for striping fabric material
US3241520A (en) Particle coating apparatus
US2931751A (en) Tile and method of sealing and mounting
GB2070459A (en) Method of simultaneously applying multiple layers of coating liquids to a web
US4089296A (en) Apparatus for spreading foam material
US4481248A (en) Buoyant fiber product and method of manufacturing same
US3828725A (en) Curtain coater with restricted flow
ES399706A1 (en) Activated polymer materials and process for making same
ES8307543A1 (en) Coating apparatus and process.
GB1429260A (en) Coating apparatus
US2962381A (en) Segment wheel feeder
US4348432A (en) Method for coating with radially-propagating, free, liquid sheets
US4366682A (en) Apparatus for the continuous treatment of textile materials
US2960727A (en) Methods of forming discrete thermoplastic granules into a sintered length
GB1292391A (en) Method of and device for forming a lacquer layer on a synthetic resin support
FR2362981A2 (en) WATERPROOF COATING DEVICE, ESPECIALLY FOR TERRACES, AND ITS MANUFACTURING PROCESS
US3996885A (en) Apparatus for coating a multiple number of layers onto a substrate
US1980923A (en) Method of and apparatus for coating paper
GB1317733A (en) Method of preparing decorative surface coverings
DE2055405B2 (en) Device for applying coating compounds to web-shaped supports
US3716023A (en) Latex applicator
US2840865A (en) Method and apparatus for depositing fibrous elements in the manufacture of fibrous structures
GB1276381A (en) Coating method and apparatus
CH597928A5 (en) Cascade distributor head for coating substances