drying a coated substrate which includes magnetic particles includes a condensing surface spaced from the substrate. This creates a longitudinal gap between the substrate and the condensing surface. Liquid is evaporated from the substrate to create a vapor and the vapor is transported to the condensing surface without requiring applied convection. The vapor is condensed on the condensing surface to create a condensate which is removed from the condensing surface. Removal is performed, using more than gravity, without allowing non-uniformities of the condensate film to occur. The magnetic particles are oriented on the coated substrate by subjecting the coated substrate to a magnetic field created at a location outside of the dryer space.
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0. 23. A method for drying a coating on a substrate, wherein the coating has particles that can be affected by a magnetic field, comprising:
locating a condensing member adjacent and spaced from the substrate to create a gap between the substrate and a condensing surface of the condensing member; forming a condensate on the condensing surface from the coating; and subjecting the coating to a magnetic field created at a location outside the gap.
0. 44. An apparatus for drying a coating on a substrate, wherein the coating can be affected by a magnetic field, comprising:
a condensing member spaced from the substrate forming a gap between the substrate and a condensing surface of the condensing member; means for forming a condensate on the condensing surface from the coating; and at least one magnetic field generator located outside of the gap forming a magnetic field that is imposed upon the coating.
0. 96. A method for drying a coating on a substrate comprising the steps of:
providing a substrate having a coating thereon, wherein the coating can be affected by a field imposed upon the coating; providing a first drying member, wherein the first drying member comprises a condenser; transporting the substrate adjacent the first drying member forming a gap between the first drying member and the substrate; providing a field generator outside the gap; and affecting the coating by imposing a field upon the coating with the field generator.
0. 75. A method for affecting a coating on a substrate comprising the step of:
providing a condensing member and a field generator along a process path; providing a substrate having a coating thereon that can be affected by a field generated by the field generator; and transporting the substrate through the process path such that the condensing member is between the field generator and the substrate, wherein the condensing member condenses vapor from the coating and the field generator generates a field that passes through the condensing member to the coating.
0. 57. A method for drying a coating on a substrate, wherein the coating comprises particles that can be affected by a magnetic field, the method comprising the steps of:
locating a condensing member spaced from the substrate along the path of the substrate forming a gap between the substrate and a condensing surface of the condensing member; heating the coating causing vapor to emanate from the coating; condensing vapor emanating from the coating on the condensing surface; and creating a magnetic field from outside the gap and imposing the magnetic field upon the particles.
0. 55. An apparatus for drying a coating on a substrate, wherein the coating comprises particles that can be affected by a magnetic field, the apparatus comprising:
a condensing member spaced from the substrate along the path of the substrate forming a gap between the substrate and a condensing surface of the condensing member; a heating member adjacent the condensing member for heating the coating causing vapor to emanate from the coating and condensate to form on the condensing surface; and a magnetic field generator located outside the gap for imposing a magnetic field upon the particles in the coating.
0. 94. A method for drying a coating on a substrate comprising the steps of:
providing a substrate having a coating thereon, wherein the coating can be affected by a field imposed upon the coating; providing a first drying member, wherein the first drying member is configured to dry the coating by substantially other than heated air blown onto the coating; transporting the substrate adjacent the first drying member forming a gap between the first drying member and the substrate; providing a field generator outside the gap; and affecting the coating by imposing a field upon the coating with the field generator.
0. 89. A method for affecting a coating on a substrate, wherein the coating comprises a liquid and particles that can be affected by a field, and wherein the method comprises the steps of:
providing a member spaced from the substrate forming a gap between the substrate and the member; providing vapor to the gap; controlling the temperature of the member creating a vapor concentration gradient that achieves one of removing liquid from the coating, preventing removal of liquid from the coating, and adding liquid to the coating; and subjecting the coating to the field generated by a field generator positioned outside the gap.
20. A method for drying a coating on a substrate, wherein the coating comprises particles in a liquid, the particles being capable of being affected by a magnetic field, the method comprising the steps of:
locating a condensing surface spaced from the substrate along the path of the substrate to create a gap between the substrate and the condensing surface; evaporating the liquid from the coating to create a vapor; condensing the vapor on the condensing surface to create a condensate; and creating a magnetic field from outside of the space between the condensing surface and the coated substrate and imposing the field upon the particles in the coating.
18. An apparatus for drying a coating on a substrate, wherein the coating comprises particles in a liquid, the particles being capable of being affected by a magnetic field, the apparatus comprising:
a condensing surface locatable spaced from the substrate along the path of the substrate to create a gap between the substrate and the condensing surface; means for evaporating the liquid from the coating to create a vapor; means for condensing the vapor on the condensing surface to create a condensate; and a magnetic field generator located outside of the space between the condensing surface and the coated substrate for imposing a magnetic field upon the particles in the coating.
0. 59. A method for drying a coating on a substrate comprising the steps of:
providing a substrate having a coating thereon, wherein the coating can be affected by a field imposed upon the coating, and wherein the coating has a coating temperature; providing a first drying member, wherein the first drying member has a first drying member temperature, wherein the first drying member temperature is less than the coating temperature; transporting the substrate adjacent the first drying member forming a gap between the first drying member and the substrate; providing a field generator outside the gap; and affecting the coating by imposing a field upon the coating with the field generator.
8. An apparatus for drying a coated substrate, wherein the coated substrate comprises magnetic particles, comprising:
a condensing surface locatable spaced from and facing the substrate which substantially corresponds to the path of the substrate in the longitudinal direction to create a longitudinal gap between the substrate and the condensing surface; means for evaporating the liquid from the substrate to create a vapor; means for transporting the vapor to the condensing surface without requiring applied convection; means for condensing the vapor on the condensing surface to create a condensate; means for removing, using more than gravity, the condensate from the condensing surface without allowing non-uniformities of the condensate film to occur; and at least one magnetic field generator located outside of the space between the condensing surface and the coated substrate.
1. A method for drying a coated substrate, wherein the coated substrate comprises magnetic particles, comprising:
locating a condensing surface spaced from and facing the substrate which substantially corresponds to the path of the substrate in the longitudinal direction to create a longitudinal gap between the substrate and the condensing surface; evaporating the liquid from the substrate to create a vapor; transporting the vapor to the condensing surface without requiring applied convection; condensing the vapor on the condensing surface to create a condensate; removing, using more than gravity, the condensate from the condensing surface without allowing non-uniformities of the condensate film to occur; and orienting the magnetic particles on the coated substrate by subjecting the coated substrate to a magnetic field between the condensing surface and the coated substrate that is initially created at a location outside of the space between the condensing surface and the coated substrate.
0. 92. A method for drying a coating on a first surface of a substrate, wherein the coating has particles that can be affected by a magnetic field, the method comprising the steps of:
providing a condensing member and a heating member spaced from the condensing member to form a substrate path; providing a magnetic field generator adjacent the substrate path; transporting the substrate through the substrate path such that the condensing member is adjacent and spaced from the first surface of the substrate forming a gap between the condensing member and the first surface and such that the heating member is adjacent the substrate; heating the coating with the heating member forming a vapor in the gap from the coating; condensing the vapor on the condensing member; and subjecting the coating to a magnetic field created outside the gap by the magnetic field generator, wherein the subjecting step comprises magnetically orienting the particles in the coating during at least a portion of the heating and condensing steps to hold the particles in a desired orientation while the coating is being dried.
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This is a continuation-in-part of U.S. application Ser. No. 08/699,522, filed Sept. 4, 1996, U.S. Pat. No. 5,694,701.
The present invention relates to a method and apparatus for transporting mass and energy and for drying coatings on a substrate. More particularly, the present invention relates to substrate drying with magnetic particle orientation.
Drying coated substrates, such as webs, requires supplying energy to the coating and then removing the evaporated liquid. The liquid to be evaporated from the coating can be any liquid including solvents such as organic solvent systems and inorganic systems which include water-based solvent systems. Convection, conduction, radiation, and microwave energy are used to supply energy to coated webs. Applied convection or forced gas flow is used to remove the evaporated liquid. Applied convection is defined as convection produced by the input of power and caused intentionally. It excludes convection caused merely by web movement, natural convection, and other, unavoidable, forces. In some instances where the vapors are non-toxic, such as water evaporation, the vapor is removed by flashing off into the ambient atmosphere.
In conventional drying technology, large volumes of gas, inert or not, are required to remove evaporated liquid from the gas/liquid interface. These dryers require large spaces between the coated web being dried and the top of the drying enclosure to accommodate the large gas flows. Drying is governed at the gas/liquid interface by diffusion, convection, boundary layer air from the moving web and impinging air streams, vapor concentrations, and liquid to vapor change-of-state convection, among other factors. These phenomena occur immediately above the coated web, typically within 15 cm of the surface. Because conventional dryers have a large space above the coated web, and they can only control the average velocity and temperature of the bulk gas stream, they have limited ability to control these phenomena near the gas/liquid interface.
For organic solvent systems, the vapor concentrations in these bulk gas streams are kept low, typically 1-2%, to remain below the flammable limits for the vapor/gas mixture. These large gas flows are intended to remove the evaporated liquid from the process. The expense to enclose, heat, pressurize, and control these gas flows is a major part of the dryer cost. It would be advantageous to eliminate the need for these large gas flows.
These gas streams can be directed to condensation systems to separate the vapors before exhausting, using a large heat exchangers or chilled rolls with wiping blades. These condensation systems are located relatively far from the coated web in the bulk gas flow stream. Due to the low vapor concentration in this gas stream, these systems are large, expensive, and must operate at low temperatures.
It would be advantageous to locate the condensation systems close to the coated substrate where the vapor concentrations are high. However, conventional heat exchangers would drain the condensed liquid by gravity back onto the coating surface and affect product quality unless they were tilted or had a collection pan. If they had a collection pan they would be isolated from the high concentration web surface. If they were tilted dripping would probably still be a problem. Also, conventional heat exchangers are not planar to follow the web path and control the drying conditions.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,365,423 describes a drying system which uses a foraminous surface above the web being dried to shield the coating from turbulence produced by the large gas flows to prevent mottle. However, this system does not eliminate applied convection, requires using secondary, low efficiency solvent recovery, and has reduced drying rates. Also, because of the reduced drying rates, this patent teaches using this shield for only 5-25% of the dryer length.
German Offenlegungeschrift No. 4009797 describes a solvent recovery system located within a drying enclosure to remove evaporated liquid. A chilled roll with a scraping blade is placed above the web surface and removes the vapors in liquid form. No applied convection removes the evaporated liquid. However, the roll is only in the high vapor concentration near the surface for a short section of the dryer length. This does not provide optimal control of the conditions at the gas/liquid interface. In fact as the roll rotates it can create turbulence near the web surface. Also, this system can not adapt its shape to the series of planar surfaces of the coated web as it travels through the dryer. Therefore, the system can not operate with a small, planar gap to control drying conditions and can not achieve optimum condensing efficiency.
U.K. patent No. 1 401 041 describes a solvent recovery system that operates without the large gas flows required for conventional drying by using heating and condensing plates near the coated substrate. The solvent condenses on the condensing plate and then condensed liquid drains by gravity to a collection device. This apparatus uses only gravity to remove the liquid from the condensing surface. Accordingly, the condensing surface can not be located above the coated substrate since gravity will carry the condensed liquid back onto the coated substrate. In the drawings and discussion (page 3, lines 89-92) the condensing surface is described as vertical or with the coated substrate, coated side facing down, above the condensing surface. Applying a coating to the bottom side of the substrate or inverting the substrate after application of the coating is not the preferred method in industry. Coating in an inverted position and inverting a coated substrate before drying can create coating defects. These limitations greatly reduced the flexibility of the method and entail significant costs to adapt it to standard manufacturing methods. This requirement for vertical or inverted drying is very likely the reason this method has not been adopted or discussed in the industry.
U.K. patent No. 1 401 041 also describes, on page 2 line 126 to page 3 line 20, the problems of this method with growth of the liquid film layer on the condensing surface and droplet formation. Because "the resulting liquid film 14 may increase in thickness towards the lower end of the condenser," the length of the condensing surface is limited by the buildup and stability of this film layer. Limiting the length of the condensing surface will limit the dryer length or require exiting the drying system with the coating not dried. This has the undesirable effect of losing some of the solvent vapors to the atmosphere, losing control of the drying phenomena, and creating defects. Another limitation is that the distance of the condensing surface from the coated substrate "can hardly fall below about 5 millimeters" to prevent contacting the condensing liquid film with the substrate, and to prevent droplets from contacting the substrate.
The limitations of this system to vertical or inverted drying, limits in the length of the dryer, and the inability to operate at desired distances from the coated substrate render it inadequate to achieve the desired drying benefits.
Dryers used to dry magnetic coatings also are known. Known systems place a magnetic field generator inside the dryer to orient the magnetic particles within the coating being dried. However, conventional orienting devices inside the dryer disrupt the air flow and impair drying, causing the surface of the product to roughen. As the particles leave a conventional orienting device in the early stages of drying, any components of the magnetic field which are not in the plane of the coating will reorient the particles in a non-preferred direction.
There is a need for a system for drying coated substrates while orienting magnetic particles in the coating, which provides improved control of the conditions near the gas/liquid interface and in which the orientation process does not interfere with the drying. There is also a need for a system that can operate with small gaps adjacent the substrate.
The invention is a method and apparatus of drying a coated substrate that includes magnetic particles. A condensing surface is spaced from the substrate and substantially corresponds to the path of the substrate in the longitudinal direction. This creates a longitudinal gap between the substrate and the condensing surface. Liquid is evaporated from the substrate to create a vapor and the vapor is transported to the condensing surface without requiring applied convection. The vapor is condensed on the condensing surface to create a condensate, and the condensate is removed from the condensing surface. Removal is performed, using more than gravity, without allowing non-uniformities of the condensate film to occur. The magnetic particles are oriented on the coated substrate by subjecting the coated substrate to a magnetic field created at a location outside of the space between the condensing surface and the coated substrate. The magnetic field can be created by a magnetic field generator.
The magnetic field can be created at various locations: a location separated from the substrate by the condensing surface, a location separated from the condensing surface by the substrate, a location surrounding the substrate, and any combination of these locations.
The magnetic particles can be oriented at the beginning of the evaporating step and holding the magnetic particles in a preferred direction during the evaporating, condensing, transporting, and removing steps.
The system of this invention is a method and apparatus for transporting mass and energy and for drying coatings on a coated substrate, such as a moving web, with a condensing surface creating a small, controlled-environment gap above the coating surface. Other physical and chemical phenomena that occur during the drying process, such as chemical reactions, curing, the phase changes, an also be affected by the invention. The coated substrate includes magnetic particles, particles which are capable of being attracted or repelled by a magnet, such as ferrous particles used in audio, video, and data storage tape or media. The method and apparatus also orient these particles in a magnetic field as described below.
In the embodiment of
All versions use condensation to remove evaporated liquid in a gap which can be substantially planar without requiring applied convection forces, and where ambient and boundary layer convection forces are minimized. The drying system has numerous advantages over the conventional drying technology by creating a small, controlled-environment gap adjacent the coating surface, and by eliminating the requirement for applied convection from the drying mechanism. In some products a chemical reaction or other physical and chemical processes occur in the coating during drying. The drying system functions whether or not these processes are proceeding within the process. The drying system can affect these processes during drying. One example is of moisture-cured polymers dispersed or dissolved in a solvent that can be adversely affect during the drying process due to the presence of humidity in the drying atmosphere. Because the invention can create a small, controlled environment gap above the coating surface, it is substantially simpler to provide a controlled humidity drying atmosphere to improve the curing of these polymers. By improving control of the drying phenomena and creating a small, controlled environment gap above the coated surface, there are many other applications where other physical and chemical processes occurring during the drying process can benefit.
In an alternative method the drying system can be combined with applied convection, and the applied convection can be produced by forcing gas across the coating, either longitudinally, transversely, or in any other direction. This can provide additional mass transfer or other modification to the atmosphere above the coated surface. This method could be used where applied convection is not a detriment to product properties.
The inventors have found that in drying coated substrates, significant drying improvements and increased drying rates occur when the distance from the condensing surface to the coated substrate is below 5 millimeters. The system of U.K. patent No. 1 401 041 is not practically operable in the range where significant drying control improvements can be made.
Many kinds of condensing structures can be used, such as plates of any type, whether flat or not, porous or not, structured or not, or other shapes such as tubes or fins. The condensing surface structure can combine macro, meso, and micro scale geometries and dimensions. Plates include fixed or moving platens, moving belts with or without liquid scrapers, and similar devices. The condensing structure can be parallel to the web or angled with the web, and can have planar or curved surfaces.
The condensing surface must satisfy three criteria. First, it must be capable of sufficient energy transfer to remove the latent heat of condensation. Second, the condensate must at least partially wet the condensing surface. Third, the condensing surface must prevent the condensed vapor (the condensate) from returning to the coated surface of the web. Associated with a condensing surface is an effective critical condensate film thickness which marks the onset of film non-uniformities. This thickness is a function of the condensing surface material, geometry, dimensions, topology, orientation, configuration, and other factors, as well as the physical properties of the condensate (such as surface tension, density, and viscosity). Another feature of the system is condensate transport and removal. This maintains the condensate film thickness less than the effective critical thickness and can be accomplished by capillary forces, gravitational forces, mechanical forces, or various combinations of these forces.
Capillary force, or capillary pressure, can be described as the resultant of surface tension acting in curved menisci and is governed by the fundamental equation of capillarity known as the Young-LaPlace equation. The Young-LaPlace equation is ΔP=σ(1/R1+1/R2), where ΔP is the pressure drop across the interface, σ is the surface tension, and R1 and R2 are the principal radii of curvature of the interface. Capillarity is discussed in detail in Adamson, A. W. "Physical Chemistry of Surfaces, 4th ed.", John Wiley & Sons, Inc. (1982).
Gravitational forces result from the position of the fluid mass in a gravitational field, which is the hydrostatic head.
Other mechanisms can be used to remove the condensed liquid from the condensing surface to prevent the condensed liquid from returning to the substrate. For example, mechanical devices, such as wipers, belts, scrapers, pumping systems, or any combination, can be used to remove the condensed liquid.
In
The condensing platen 12, which can be stationary or mobile, is placed near the coated surface (such as 10 cm away, 5 cm away, or closer). The arrangement of the platens creates a small gap adjacent the coated web. The gap is substantially constant, which permits small amounts of convergence or divergence. Also, the gap is substantially constant notwithstanding any grooves (discussed below) on the condensing surface. The orientation of the platens is not critical. The condensing platen 12 can be above the web (as shown in
The heated platen 14 supplies energy without requiring applied convection through the web 16 to the coating 18 to evaporate liquid from the coating 18 to dry the coating. Energy is transferred by a combination of conduction, radiation, and convection achieving high heat transfer rates. This evaporates the liquid in the coating 18 on the web 16. The evaporated liquid from the coating 18 then is transported (using diffusion and convection) across the gap h1 between the web 16 and the condensing platen 12 and condenses on the bottom surface of the condensing platen 12.
As shown in
A specific type of condensing surface is one which has open channels or grooves with corners. This type of capillary condensing surface, shown for example in
The grooves 24 also can be longitudinal or in any other direction. If the grooves are in the longitudinal direction, a suitable collection system can be placed at the ends of the grooves to prevent the condensed liquid from falling back to the coated surface 18. This embodiment limits the length of a condensing plate 12 and also limits the minimum gap h1.
When the liquid reaches the end of the grooves 24 it intersects with the angle between the edge plates 26 and the condensing surface 22. A liquid meniscus forms and creates a low pressure region which draws the condensate from the condensing surface to at least one edge plate. Gravity overcomes the capillary force in the meniscus and the liquid flows as a film or droplets 28 down the face of the edge plates 26. The edge plates 26 can be used with any condensing surface, not just one having grooves. The droplets 28 fall from each edge plate 26 and can be collected in a collecting device (not shown). For example, a slotted pipe can be placed around the bottom edge of each edge plate 26 to collect the liquid and direct it to a container. The edge plates 26 are shown throughout the application as contacting the ends of the condensing surface of the condensing platens. However, the edge plates can be adjacent the condensing platens without contacting them as long as they are functionally close enough to receive the condensed liquid.
Alternatively, the condensed liquid need not be removed from the platen at all, as long as it is removed from the condensing surface 22, or at least prevented from returning to the web 16. Also, the edge plates 26 are shown as perpendicular to the condensing surface 14, although they can be at other angles with it, and the edge plates 26 can be smooth, grooved, porous, or other materials.
The heated platen 14 and the condensing platen 12 can include internal passageways, such as channels. A heat transfer fluid can be heated by an external heating system and circulated through the passageways to set the temperature T2 of the heated platen 14. The same or a different heat transfer fluid can be cooled by an external chiller and circulated through the passageways to set the temperature T1 of the condensing platen 12. Other mechanisms for heating the platen 14 and cooling the platen 12 can be used.
The apparatus 30 of
In
The apparatus 64 of
In another use, the system can first remove fluid from a coated substrate. Then, the system, at a downweb location from the driving location, can be used "in reverse" to add some small portion of moisture or additional reactant to the substrate to modify the coating.
The apparatus can operate outside of a dryer configuration without any applied energy, and with only ambient heat to evaporate the liquid. By controlling the temperature of the condensing surface 22 to be at or near the ambient temperature, the liquid evaporation will only occur until the vapor concentration in the gap h1 between the condensing surface and the web 16 is at the saturated concentration as defined by the condensing surface 22 and web 16 temperatures. The liquid that has evaporated will be contained and carried by the viscous drag of the web through the gap h1 to the exit of the system. Undesirable drying can be reduced and vapor emissions can be isolated from ambient conditions.
The drying system of the invention can be used to reduce or virtually stop the drying of the coating. The rate of drying is a function of the gap height and vapor concentration gradient between the coated surfaces 18 of the web 16 and the condensing surface 22. For a given gap h1, the temperature differential between the web 16 and the condensing surface 22 defines the vapor concentration gradient. The higher the coated surface 18 temperature relative to the condensing surface 22, the greater the rate of drying. As the temperature of the condensing surface 22 approaches the coated surface 18 temperature, the drying rate will tend to zero. In conventional drying the vapor concentration gradient cannot be controlled without using an expensive inert gas drying system. Some liquid coatings have multiple solvents where one or more of the solvents function to slow down the rate of drying for optimum product properties. By adjusting the coated surface 18 and condensing surface 22 temperatures, the invention can reduce the drying rate and possibly eliminate the requirement of using solvents to retard the drying rate.
The rate of drying is controlled by the height of the gap h1 and the temperature differential between the coated surface 18 and the condensing surface 22. Therefore for a given temperature differential, the rate of drying can be controlled by the position of the condensing plate which defines the gap h1. Thus by changing the dimensions of the drying system, such as by changing the relative gaps, it is possible to control the rate of drying. Conventional dryers do not have this capability.
Drying some coated webs using applied convection can create mottle patterns in the coatings. Mottle patterns are defects in film coatings that are formed by vapor concentration or gas velocity gradients above the coating which cause non-uniform drying at the liquid surface. Normal room air currents are often sufficient to create these defects. The invention can be used to reduce and control natural convection induced defects, such as mottle, at locations outside the desired drying position. In locations where the coated surface is not in the drying region and would otherwise be exposed to convection from either ambient air currents or from a turbulent boundary layer air due to web movement, the apparatus, with grooves or other liquid transport and removal features, devices, structures or without, can be located adjacent to the coated web 16 separated by a graph h1. The location of the condensing plate 12 adjacent the coated web 16 can isolate the ambient air currents from the coating surface. It can also prevent the boundary layer air above the coated surface from becoming turbulent. Accordingly, defects due to convection outside the drying position, such as mottle, can be reduced or eliminated. The apparatus can be operated with condensation and solvent removal similar to
In all embodiments it may be desirable to provide multiple zones of heating and condensing components using multiple pairs. The temperatures and gaps of each pair of heating and condensing components can be controlled independently of the other pairs. The zones can be spaced from each other or not.
The systems of all of the embodiments use condensation close to the coated web 16 with a small gap between the coating on the web 16 and the condensing surface 22. There is no requirement for applied convection and there is very little vapor volume. The vapor concentration and convection forces can be controlled by adjusting the web temperature, the gap, and the condensing surface temperature. This provides improved control of the conditions near the gas/liquid interface. Because the plate temperatures and gap can be continuous and constant throughout the drying system, heat and mass transfer rates are more uniformly controlled than with conventional drying systems. All of these factors contribute to improved drying performance. It also improves the efficiency of the condensation vapor recovery systems, providing for liquid recovery at high efficiencies at no additional cost compared to known expensive methods of burning, adsorption, or condensation in a secondary gas stream.
Also, there is less of a concern about the ambient air above the web exploding or being above the flammability limit. In fact, where the gap is very small, such as less than 1 cm, flammability concerns may be eliminated because the entire space above the web has insufficient oxygen to support flammability. Additionally, this system eliminates the need for large gas flows. The mechanical equipment and control system is only 20% of the cost of a conventional air flotation drying system.
Experiments were conducted with 30.5 cm wide platens having transverse grooves. The bottom platen was heated to temperatures in the range of 15°C C. through 190°C C. with a heat transfer fluid circulated through passageways in the platens. As the heat is transferred to the coating, the liquid in the coating evaporates. The temperatures of the condensing platen was controlled by any suitable method in the range of -10°C C. through 65°C C. to provide the driving force for vapor transport and condensation. An effective range of the gap h1 is 0.15-5 cm. Mottle-free coatings were obtained.
In one example, a mottle-prone polymer/MEK solution at 11.5% solids, 2 centipoise, 7.6 micron wet thickness, and 20.3 cm wide was coated. The web was 21.6 cm wide and traveled at a speed of 0.635 m/s. The temperature of the heated platen used to heat the web was controlled at 82°C C. The condensing platen temperature was controlled at 27°C C. The overall length of the platens was 1.68 m and they were mounted at a 3.4°C angle from horizontal with the inlet side at a lower elevation. The inlet to the platens was located 76 cm from the coating application point. The heated platen was separated from the web by a gap of approximately 0.076 cm. The gap h1 was set at 0.32 cm. The capillary grooves were 0.0381 cm deep with a 0.076 cm peak-to-peak distance, an angle α of 30°C, and 0.013 cm land at the top of the grooves. The web was dried mottle-free in the 1.68 m length of the platens although there was some residual solvent in the coating when it left the platens. A conventional dryer would require approximately 9 m to reach the same drying point, requiring the dryer to be more than five times larger.
Other applications for this system include drying adhesives where blister defects are common. Blister defects may be caused by the coating surface forming a dried skin before the rest of the coating has dried, trapping solvent below this skin. With conventional drying, the solvent vapor concentration in the bulk gas is very low because of flammability limits. If too much heat is applied to the coating, the solvent at the surface will flash very quickly into the low vapor concentration gas stream and will form the skin on the surface. The system of this invention creates a controlled vapor concentration in the space above the web which can reduce the tendency to form a skin on the surface. Other applications are in areas where dryers are run at high solvent concentrations to obtain specific product performance.
This system simplifies the process of subjecting the coating fluid to a magnetic field. Rather than positioning a magnetic field generator within a known dryer, with the present invention the magnetic field generator can be positioned outside of the dryer (outside of apparatus 10, 30). Locating the magnetic field generator outside of the dryer means that it is outside of the space between the condensing surface and the coated substrate. For example, it could be adjacent (whether spaced from or not) a side of the condensing plate opposite the side with the condensing surface (location separated from the substrate by the condensing surface); it could be adjacent a surface opposite the coated surface of the substrate (separated from the condensing surface by the substrate); or it could be at other locations. At these isolated locations, the magnetic field generator can use bucking fields to orient the magnetic particles. Also, as described below, the magnetic field generator can surround the dryer.
The magnetic field generator can be any of various known devices including permanent magnets and solenoid coils. A solenoid coil 15, as shown in
This configuration is enabled by the compact nature of the apparatus. This is especially suitable when coating a metal particulate-loaded fluid onto a substrate to make such products as video and audio recording tape, computer and data storage tape, computer diskettes, and the like. Being outside of the apparatus, the magnetic field generators are easily adjustable and maintained.
This setup also improves magnetic output by physically orienting the particles in the direction of recording. One advantage of this is that the magnetic orienting device is outside of the dryer and is non-intrusive (conventional orienting devices inside the dryer disrupt the convection heat and mass transfer (air flow) and orient the particles at a single point or multiple points as the solvent is removed). Because orientation is non-intrusive, it will not affect the solvent removal rates in any way. This allows uniform solvent removal and uniform coating drying while exposing the substrate to the magnetic field. The magnetic particles are easily oriented when the fluid is less viscous at the early stages of drying with this invention. (As the particles leave a conventional orienting device in the early stages of drying, any components of the magnetic field which are not in the plane of the coating will reorient the particles in a non-preferred direction, such as vertical. As the solvent is removed, the viscosity increases, making it difficult for the orienting device to rotate the particles. The particles will not be reoriented when leaving the field or by interparticle forces.)
Another advantage is that because of its small size and increased solvent removal rates, the invention allows orienting particles at the beginning of the dryer. The uniform field holds the particles in the preferred direction as the solvent is removed in a uniform drying environment to such a level that the viscosity is increased to the point that the viscous forces dominate. This prevents undesirable particle disorientation as it leaves the orienting device or from interparticle forces. (Drying at elevated rates in conventional dryers causes the surface of the product to roughen.) Removing the solvent in the controlled environment of the dryer of this invention appears to create smoother surfaces at elevated solvent removal rates. This also improves magnetic output as, for example, the resulting tape will ride closer to the recording head.
Various changes and modifications can be made in the invention without departing from the scope or spirit of the invention. For example, the invention has been described as a method and apparatus for performing magnetic orientation on a web while the web is inside a dryer by locating a magnetic field generator outside of the dryer. Other operations can also be performed on a web inside of a dryer from a device located outside the dryer when the dryer is as compact as the dryer enabled by the present invention. For example, some operations that can be performed include curing such as by UV radiation or electron beam radiation; decontaminating or sterilizing with, for example, a radiation source; and corona treating or light treating (whether through the dryer or through a hole or slot in the dryer plate through which the corona or light can pass). Other operations that do not require physically contacting the web also can be performed from outside of the dryer. Also, magnetic orientation and other operations can be performed outside of other types of dryers.
Kolb, William B., Munter, John D., Huelsman, Gary L.
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Aug 25 2000 | LIN, CHIH-CHAN | Chi Mei Optoelectronics Corp | ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS | 011168 | /0524 | |
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Sep 29 2000 | MINNESOTA MINING AND MANUFACTURING COMPANY A CORPORATION OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE | 3M Innovative Properties Company | ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS | 011178 | /0416 |
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