Method of making filtercloths by induction heating

Adhesive bonding and miscellaneous chemical manufacture – Methods – Surface bonding and/or assembly therefor

Patent

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Details

1562739, 1562753, 1562757, 428 65, 428 78, B32B 3126

Patent

active

047658592

DESCRIPTION:

BRIEF SUMMARY
This invention relates to filtercloths of the kind used in filter presses for clay, chemical or mining industries. These filtercloths comprise relatively large areas of textile material forming the filtering surface, with (usually) rubber, plastic or material sockets attached by which the material to be filtered is introduced between successive chambers of the filter press. Sometimes gussets, reinforcing elements and fixing elements are also attached.
The conventional method of manufacturing a filter cloth of this kind is to sew the parts together. This is time consuming and expensive, and moreover tends to create weaknesses due to the stitch holes. Other methods used to avoid those problems involve the use of adhesives and bonding agents alone or more usually in conjunction with stitching. It is almost invariably necessary to use matched dies (which are complementary in shape to the components concerned--and hence possibly several sets of dies are needed for each pattern of filter) to clamp the parts under pressure during the bonding or whilst the adhesive sets.
The object of the present invention is to provide improvements.
According to the invention, a method of bonding filtercloth components together comprises locating a thermoplastic bonding agent, mixed with a ferrous metal powder, between the juxtaposed components and using induction heating to fuse the agent to the components.
By the term "components" is included both textile parts and non-textile parts such as moulded rubber, synthetic rubber or plastics components.
By the term induction heating is meant the use of (primarily) radio frequencies which act to heat the metal powder.
The ferrous metal powder may be for example iron oxide or a stainless steel powder. The particle size will be between 10's mesh and 400's mesh. The particle size is chosen according to the frequency range of the induction heater. The higher is the frequency the smaller the particles need to be.
The proportion of metal powder used will be between 1% and 50% by volume of the bonding agent.
The non-textile elements may be made of thermoplastic materials themselves, which hitherto have not been able to be welded because of the risk of damage by the heat, but according to the invention there is no difficulty in this because the heating effect is confined to the bonding agent where the metal powder acts as a susceptor.
The bonding agent is essentially sympathetic to the components. Conveniently it is of the same material as the filter cloth, where possible, e.g., where a polypropylene filter cloth is employed, the bonding agent may itself be polypropylene, and so on.
The bonding agent may be a sheet, or foil or strand with the metal powder distributed therein made e.g. by hot rolling an extruded mixture or extruding the thermoplastic and metal powder.
Matched dies are unnecessary with the invention because the heating effect originates in the bonding agent rather than being by conduction from the dies. The bonding agent can cool naturally when the induction heater is switched off, and high pressure is unnecessary to hold the parts together.
The invention is particularly convenient in enabling thermoplastic rubbers to be used as pre-formed mouldings, which is impossible when heat is applied from dies if the invention is not employed because of the risk of damage to the mouldings in fusing the bonding agent or adhesive.
The invention can also be applied to form impervious areas over or adjacent to the cloth face, by bonding two layers of the perforate material together with the interposed (imperforate or homogeneous layer of) bonding agent.
By the use of the invention sewing can be completely eliminated in the manufacture of filter cloths thus leading to stronger and more accurately assembled filters with substantial elimination of the possibility of leakage around the centre cores due to the complete bonding of the components.
The invention is further described with reference to the accompanying drawings wherein:-
FIG. 1 is a perspective view showing a portion of a filter bag;
F

REFERENCES:
patent: 2711828 (1955-06-01), Webb

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