US2291807A - Apparatus for treating sheet material in electrostatic fields - Google Patents

Apparatus for treating sheet material in electrostatic fields Download PDF

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Publication number
US2291807A
US2291807A US377710A US37771041A US2291807A US 2291807 A US2291807 A US 2291807A US 377710 A US377710 A US 377710A US 37771041 A US37771041 A US 37771041A US 2291807 A US2291807 A US 2291807A
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Prior art keywords
belts
rolls
sheet material
conveyor
guide
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Expired - Lifetime
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US377710A
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Jr George T Hart
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United Shoe Machinery Corp
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United Shoe Machinery Corp
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    • HELECTRICITY
    • H05ELECTRIC TECHNIQUES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • H05BELECTRIC HEATING; ELECTRIC LIGHT SOURCES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; CIRCUIT ARRANGEMENTS FOR ELECTRIC LIGHT SOURCES, IN GENERAL
    • H05B6/00Heating by electric, magnetic or electromagnetic fields
    • H05B6/64Heating using microwaves
    • H05B6/78Arrangements for continuous movement of material
    • 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
    • Y10S264/00Plastic and nonmetallic article shaping or treating: processes
    • Y10S264/46Molding using an electrical heat

Definitions

  • This invention relates to treating sheet material by means of a high-frequency electrostatic field and is herein illustrated as embodied in an apparatus for progressively subjecting skins to successive portions of said field to dry the skins.
  • anpbject of the present invention is to provide a simple and economical apparatus for presenting skins to such a field without requiring skill upon the part of the operchiefly of a dielectric material such as wood.
  • a conveyor having superposed belts is employed with the assurance that the skins will be held substantially fiat as they are passed through an electrostatic field.
  • These belts in accordance with a plan frequently utilized in conveyors, are separated at the entrance and delivery ends, thus permitting the easy presentation of the skins to the conveyor and their removal after treatment.
  • One important feature of the invention resides in improved apparatus utilizing insulated guide rolls spaced along the conveyor runs and alternately connected with opposite sides of a source of high-frequency current. These guide rolls are arranged alternately upon opposite sides of the coacting belts and set up a series of electrostatic fields which intersect the belts and the skins which are carried between them.
  • Fig. l is a vertical section extending lengthwise of my apparatus
  • Fig. 2 is a similar section on a larger scale showing two groups of electrode guide-rolls.
  • Fig. 3 is a fragmentary section at right angles to Fig. 2 along the axis of one of these rolls.
  • the superposed belts extending from the roll 26 past the rolls 22, 24 and I6 hold these belts in skin-gripping relation while they pass through a plurality of overlying runs 36, 38 and 40.
  • the belts could be carried in a series of straight-line courses which might or might not be parallel, but it is preferred to guide them along a tortuous course by means of guide rolls #2, 44!, 4t, 48, etc., which are arranged in overlapping vertical groups of two rolls each rotatable upon pairs of upright metal channels 50, 52 bolted at their lower ends to dielectric frame members 54 and joined at their upper ends by spacing rods 56.
  • any one individual roll is best shown in Fig. 3 in which it will be seen that it comprises a metal cylinder carried by ball bearings 62 upon an axle 64 which is supported in a pair of uprights 58.
  • the uprights are attached to the frame members 56 by means of a bolt 66 to which there is joined a lead 68 extending to one side of a source of high-frequency electric current such as an oscillator it. The other side of this source is joined by a lead it to other uprights alternating with those mentioned.
  • Each roll is The guide rolls serve as supports for the superposed belts it and n2, between which are positioned skins S, and help to keep the runs of the conveyor belts in spaced relation and, if desired, help thedashlinesinl'lg.2sothatasaskinpasses from any one guide roll to the next guide'roll it intersects an electrostatic field-which sets up heat in the skin and causes the drying action de-
  • a skin will be laid upon the horizontal run oi the belt I! adjacent to the guide roll 2' and allowed to travel (orward in the direction indicated by the arrow in Fig. 1 until it is gripped betw n that belt and the belt Ill.
  • the skin will then be carried between the guide rolls acting as electrodes as it moves along the superposed runs II, 38 and 40 and will be subjected repeatedly to the action of electrostatic fields until it emerges upon the returning run ll of the belt II from which it may be removed and set aside it the drying action is completed or, if necessary, it may be repositioned for one or more successive traverses through the apparatus.
  • conveyor guiding means disposed alternately above and below the worksupporting portion thereof and arranged to determine the path of movement of the conveyor
  • a conveyor comprising superposed belts whereby pieces of work may be carried through the conveyor between 'said belts, insulated guide rolls arranged upon opposite sides of said coacting belts and positioned to cause said belts to assume a tortuous path, and means for connecting said rolls to opposite sides of a source of highfrequency electric current thereby to set up one or more electrostatic fields intersecting piece of work between the belts.
  • a conveyor having superposed belts between which a piece of work may be positioned, means arranged to guide said belts in a plurality of superposed runs, groups of guide rolls, each group comprising superposed rolls, said groupsbeing distributed along the length of said belt with the rolls 10f adjacent groups alternately upon opposite sides thereof and having metallic portions, those guide rolls which form one group being electrically connected to one another and collectively to one side of a source of high-frequency electric current, and means for connecting the metallic portions of an adjacent group to the other side of said source.
  • a frame provided with supporting rolls, endless belts drawn around said rolls with portions of the belts superposed and together arranged in overlying runs, groups of metallic guide rolls engagingsaidoverlyingrunsanddisposedwiththe rolls of adjacent groups upon opposite sides of the respective runs, means for supporting said groups of said guide rolls arranged to interconnect electrically the guide rolls of any one group, and means for connecting adjacent guide-rollsupports to opposite sides of a source of highfrequency electric current whereby a piece of work passing from one group of guide rolls to the next is subjected to an electrostatic field.
  • endless belts In an apparatus for treating sheet material, endless belts, a frame provided with supporting rolls around which said endless belts are drawn with a portion of each belt in engaging relation to the adjacent portion of the other belt, and guide rolls disposed upon opposite sides of the engaging portions to cause an article of sheet material interposed between said belts to be bent first in one direction and then the other, and means for connecting said rolls in groups to opposite sides of a source of high-frequency electric current whereby said pieces of work are subjected to electrostatic fields set up between said rolls and intersecting the belts and the work.
  • a conveyor comprising superposed belts whereby pieces of work may be carried through the conveyor between said belts, said conveyor being arranged in overlying runs.
  • a guide roll engaging the under side of an upper run of the conveyor and the upper side of a next lower run of the conveyor, another guide roll beneath the latter run of the conveyor, and means for connecting said rolls to opposite sides of-a source of highfrequency electric current-thereby to set up an electrostatic field intersecting pieces of work between the belts;
  • endless belts In an apparatus for treating sheet material, endless belts, a frame provided with supporting rolls around which said endless belts are drawn with a portion of each belt in engaging relation to the adjacent portion of the other belt to grip an interposed piece of material, guides disposed in contact with-the .outer surfaces of said belt which are opposed to the work-contacting surfaces thereoi', and means for connecting said guides to opposite sides of a source of highfrequency electric current.

Description

APPARATUS FOR TREATING ,SHEET MATERIAL IN AN ELECTROSTATIC FIELD g- 1942. sir. HART, JR
Filed Feb. 6, 1941 1942- G. T. HART, JR
APPARATUS FOR TREATING SHEET MATERIAL IN AN ELECTROSTATIC FIELD Aug. 4,
Filed Feb. 6, 1941 2 Sheets-Sheet 2 Patented Aug. 4, 1942 APPARATUS FOR TREATING SHEET MATE- RIAL IN ELECTROSTATIC FIELDS George '1. Hart, Jr., Lynn, Mass., assignor to United Shoe Machinery Corporation, Flemington, N. J., a corporation of New Jersey Application February 6, 1941, Serial No. 377,710
Claims. (CL 34-1) This invention relates to treating sheet material by means of a high-frequency electrostatic field and is herein illustrated as embodied in an apparatus for progressively subjecting skins to successive portions of said field to dry the skins.
It is well understood that leather articles and, in particular, skins may be dried, when desired, by positioning these articles in an electrostatic field, and while theoretically this may be done by merely placing the skins'between two electrode plates, such an arrangement is not satisfactory because of the resultant distortion of the field and' the danger of sparking if the skin is not perfectly flat, Accordin y, anpbject of the present invention is to provide a simple and economical apparatus for presenting skins to such a field without requiring skill upon the part of the operchiefly of a dielectric material such as wood. The
ator and in which variations in sizes and contours of skins are immaterial.
In the illustrated embodiment of the invention, a conveyor having superposed belts is employed with the assurance that the skins will be held substantially fiat as they are passed through an electrostatic field. These belts, in accordance with a plan frequently utilized in conveyors, are separated at the entrance and delivery ends, thus permitting the easy presentation of the skins to the conveyor and their removal after treatment. One important feature of the invention resides in improved apparatus utilizing insulated guide rolls spaced along the conveyor runs and alternately connected with opposite sides of a source of high-frequency current. These guide rolls are arranged alternately upon opposite sides of the coacting belts and set up a series of electrostatic fields which intersect the belts and the skins which are carried between them.
These and other features of the invention wil best be understood from a consideration of the following specification taken in connection with the accompanying drawings, in which Fig. l is a vertical section extending lengthwise of my apparatus;
Fig. 2 is a similar section on a larger scale showing two groups of electrode guide-rolls; and
Fig. 3 is a fragmentary section at right angles to Fig. 2 along the axis of one of these rolls.
It is well understood that skins and hides are never perfectly fiat when they are passing through the tannery and that the marginal portions are apt to be scalloped and folded. Accordingly, provision has been made in my illustrated apparatus for gripping suchskins between a belt 10 and a belt l2. The belt H] has several runs in which it is superposed upon the belt I2 and provided with an insulating covering 12.
arrangement shown is merely intended to be illustrative, as many other well-known conveyor arrangements could readily be employed.
As indicated in Fig. 1, the superposed belts extending from the roll 26 past the rolls 22, 24 and I6 hold these belts in skin-gripping relation while they pass through a plurality of overlying runs 36, 38 and 40. Along these runs, the belts could be carried in a series of straight-line courses which might or might not be parallel, but it is preferred to guide them along a tortuous course by means of guide rolls #2, 44!, 4t, 48, etc., which are arranged in overlapping vertical groups of two rolls each rotatable upon pairs of upright metal channels 50, 52 bolted at their lower ends to dielectric frame members 54 and joined at their upper ends by spacing rods 56.
The structure of any one individual roll is best shown in Fig. 3 in which it will be seen that it comprises a metal cylinder carried by ball bearings 62 upon an axle 64 which is supported in a pair of uprights 58. The uprights are attached to the frame members 56 by means of a bolt 66 to which there is joined a lead 68 extending to one side of a source of high-frequency electric current such as an oscillator it. The other side of this source is joined by a lead it to other uprights alternating with those mentioned. Each roll is The guide rolls serve as supports for the superposed belts it and n2, between which are positioned skins S, and help to keep the runs of the conveyor belts in spaced relation and, if desired, help thedashlinesinl'lg.2sothatasaskinpasses from any one guide roll to the next guide'roll it intersects an electrostatic field-which sets up heat in the skin and causes the drying action de- In the use of the apparatus, a skin will be laid upon the horizontal run oi the belt I! adjacent to the guide roll 2' and allowed to travel (orward in the direction indicated by the arrow in Fig. 1 until it is gripped betw n that belt and the belt Ill. The skin will then be carried between the guide rolls acting as electrodes as it moves along the superposed runs II, 38 and 40 and will be subjected repeatedly to the action of electrostatic fields until it emerges upon the returning run ll of the belt II from which it may be removed and set aside it the drying action is completed or, if necessary, it may be repositioned for one or more successive traverses through the apparatus.
Having thus described my invention, what I claim as new and desire to secure by Letters Patent of the United States is:
1. In an apparatus for treating sheet material,
a belt-like conveyor upon which the pieces of work may be supported, conveyor guiding means disposed alternately above and below the worksupporting portion thereof and arranged to determine the path of movement of the conveyor,
be supported, guide rolls determining the path of said belt and arranged upon opposite sides thereof, and means for connecting said rolls to opposite sides of a source of high-frequency electric current thereby to set up one or more electrostatic fields intersecting pieces of work upon the belt.
3. In an apparatus for treating sheet material, a conveyor comprising superposed belts whereby pieces of work may be carried through the conveyor between 'said belts, insulated guide rolls arranged upon opposite sides of said coacting belts and positioned to cause said belts to assume a tortuous path, and means for connecting said rolls to opposite sides of a source of highfrequency electric current thereby to set up one or more electrostatic fields intersecting piece of work between the belts.
4. In an apparatus for treating sheet material, superposed belts between which a piece of work may be positioned, insulated metallic guide rolls arranged upon opposite sides of said belts and spaced along the length thereof, and means for connecting alternate rolls to opposite sides of a source of high-frequency electric current.
5. In an apparatus for treating sheet material, a conveyor having superposed belts between which a piece of work may be positioned, means arranged to guide said belts in a plurality of superposed runs, groups of guide rolls, each group comprising superposed rolls, said groupsbeing distributed along the length of said belt with the rolls 10f adjacent groups alternately upon opposite sides thereof and having metallic portions, those guide rolls which form one group being electrically connected to one another and collectively to one side of a source of high-frequency electric current, and means for connecting the metallic portions of an adjacent group to the other side of said source.
6. In an apparatus for treating sheet material, a frame provided with supporting rolls, endless belts drawn around said rolls with portions of the belts superposed and together arranged in overlying runs, groups of metallic guide rolls engagingsaidoverlyingrunsanddisposedwiththe rolls of adjacent groups upon opposite sides of the respective runs, means for supporting said groups of said guide rolls arranged to interconnect electrically the guide rolls of any one group, and means for connecting adjacent guide-rollsupports to opposite sides of a source of highfrequency electric current whereby a piece of work passing from one group of guide rolls to the next is subjected to an electrostatic field.
7. In an apparatus for treating sheet material, endless belts, a frame provided with supporting rolls around which said endless belts are drawn with a portion of each belt in engaging relation to the adjacent portion of the other belt, and guide rolls disposed upon opposite sides of the engaging portions to cause an article of sheet material interposed between said belts to be bent first in one direction and then the other, and means for connecting said rolls in groups to opposite sides of a source of high-frequency electric current whereby said pieces of work are subjected to electrostatic fields set up between said rolls and intersecting the belts and the work.
8. In an apparatus for treating sheet material. a conveyor comprising superposed belts whereby pieces of work may be carried through the conveyor between said belts, said conveyor being arranged in overlying runs. a guide roll engaging the under side of an upper run of the conveyor and the upper side of a next lower run of the conveyor, another guide roll beneath the latter run of the conveyor, and means for connecting said rolls to opposite sides of-a source of highfrequency electric current-thereby to set up an electrostatic field intersecting pieces of work between the belts;
9. In an apparatusdor treating sheet material, superposed-conveyor belts between which pieces of work may be supported, said superposed belts being arranged in overlying runs, metallic guide members, one under each run, said guide members being displaced laterally along the belts, and means for connecting said guide members to opposite sides of a source of high-frequency electric current thereby to set up an electrostatic field between the guide members which will intersect a work-piece upon the conveyor.
10. In an apparatus for treating sheet material, endless belts, a frame provided with supporting rolls around which said endless belts are drawn with a portion of each belt in engaging relation to the adjacent portion of the other belt to grip an interposed piece of material, guides disposed in contact with-the .outer surfaces of said belt which are opposed to the work-contacting surfaces thereoi', and means for connecting said guides to opposite sides of a source of highfrequency electric current.
' -GEORGE T, HART, Ja.
US377710A 1941-02-06 1941-02-06 Apparatus for treating sheet material in electrostatic fields Expired - Lifetime US2291807A (en)

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Cited By (21)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2423902A (en) * 1943-07-21 1947-07-15 Joseph N Nielsen High-frequency electric field heating apparatus
US2433067A (en) * 1942-06-26 1947-12-23 George F Russell Method of and apparatus for highfrequency dielectric heating
US2438227A (en) * 1944-07-10 1948-03-23 Jonas & Naumburg Corp Apparatus for treating fur-bearing animal skins
US2457498A (en) * 1945-12-11 1948-12-28 George F Russell Radio-frequency parallel bonding
US2459623A (en) * 1945-05-05 1949-01-18 Fred K H Levey Co Inc Method and apparatus for drying sheet materials
US2473251A (en) * 1945-05-29 1949-06-14 Gen Electric High-frequency dielectric heating apparatus
US2483933A (en) * 1947-10-15 1949-10-04 Gen Electric Ultra high frequency dielectric heater
US2485609A (en) * 1945-04-19 1949-10-25 American Viscose Corp Drying apparatus
US2492187A (en) * 1945-01-05 1949-12-27 Ralph A Rusca Method and apparatus for electrical heating
US2502129A (en) * 1942-04-10 1950-03-28 American Viscose Corp Method of treating filamentary materials
US2501776A (en) * 1947-07-17 1950-03-28 Kuljian Harry Asdour Method of and apparatus for drying
US2512311A (en) * 1948-09-01 1950-06-20 Gen Electric High-frequency heating apparatus
US2565161A (en) * 1945-10-06 1951-08-21 Wilmotte High-frequency dielectric heating
US2575251A (en) * 1943-09-09 1951-11-13 Orlan M Arnold Method of welding bodies
US2588218A (en) * 1946-06-01 1952-03-04 Hartford Nat Bank & Trust Co Method of drying photographic material
US2588811A (en) * 1946-06-01 1952-03-11 Hartford Nat Bank & Trust Co Process of drying gelatine layers
US2596636A (en) * 1949-03-10 1952-05-13 Weltronic Co Dielectric heating apparatus
US2629808A (en) * 1950-11-15 1953-02-24 Eastman Kodak Co Apparatus for sealing wrapping material
US2633166A (en) * 1946-07-26 1953-03-31 Gillespie Gluing machine
US2640142A (en) * 1946-10-04 1953-05-26 Westinghouse Electric Corp Microwave heating
US6557741B2 (en) * 2000-12-19 2003-05-06 The Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company Storage carriage and method of storing a longitudinal component in the storage carriage

Cited By (21)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2502129A (en) * 1942-04-10 1950-03-28 American Viscose Corp Method of treating filamentary materials
US2433067A (en) * 1942-06-26 1947-12-23 George F Russell Method of and apparatus for highfrequency dielectric heating
US2423902A (en) * 1943-07-21 1947-07-15 Joseph N Nielsen High-frequency electric field heating apparatus
US2575251A (en) * 1943-09-09 1951-11-13 Orlan M Arnold Method of welding bodies
US2438227A (en) * 1944-07-10 1948-03-23 Jonas & Naumburg Corp Apparatus for treating fur-bearing animal skins
US2492187A (en) * 1945-01-05 1949-12-27 Ralph A Rusca Method and apparatus for electrical heating
US2485609A (en) * 1945-04-19 1949-10-25 American Viscose Corp Drying apparatus
US2459623A (en) * 1945-05-05 1949-01-18 Fred K H Levey Co Inc Method and apparatus for drying sheet materials
US2473251A (en) * 1945-05-29 1949-06-14 Gen Electric High-frequency dielectric heating apparatus
US2565161A (en) * 1945-10-06 1951-08-21 Wilmotte High-frequency dielectric heating
US2457498A (en) * 1945-12-11 1948-12-28 George F Russell Radio-frequency parallel bonding
US2588811A (en) * 1946-06-01 1952-03-11 Hartford Nat Bank & Trust Co Process of drying gelatine layers
US2588218A (en) * 1946-06-01 1952-03-04 Hartford Nat Bank & Trust Co Method of drying photographic material
US2633166A (en) * 1946-07-26 1953-03-31 Gillespie Gluing machine
US2640142A (en) * 1946-10-04 1953-05-26 Westinghouse Electric Corp Microwave heating
US2501776A (en) * 1947-07-17 1950-03-28 Kuljian Harry Asdour Method of and apparatus for drying
US2483933A (en) * 1947-10-15 1949-10-04 Gen Electric Ultra high frequency dielectric heater
US2512311A (en) * 1948-09-01 1950-06-20 Gen Electric High-frequency heating apparatus
US2596636A (en) * 1949-03-10 1952-05-13 Weltronic Co Dielectric heating apparatus
US2629808A (en) * 1950-11-15 1953-02-24 Eastman Kodak Co Apparatus for sealing wrapping material
US6557741B2 (en) * 2000-12-19 2003-05-06 The Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company Storage carriage and method of storing a longitudinal component in the storage carriage

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