Electric heating – Metal heating – By arc
Reexamination Certificate
1999-08-27
2001-03-13
Heinrich, Samuel M. (Department: 1725)
Electric heating
Metal heating
By arc
C219S121840
Reexamination Certificate
active
06201212
ABSTRACT:
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The invention relates to a process for the continuous welding of guided and abutted strips or plates, using a laser beam to which follow-up process gas is supplied at the welding location, the weld being cooled with a sprayed-on coolant adjacent to the location of welding.
The invention also relates to an apparatus for the continuous welding of guided and abutted strips or plates, using guiding and conveying means and also a fixed laser radiator which is followed in the conveying direction of the strips or plates by a nozzle arrangement having a process gas nozzle directed at the welding point and a coolant nozzle directed at the immediate surroundings of the location of welding.
Processes for the laser beam continuous welding of guided and abutted strips or plates are known (DE 195 37 924 A1; EP 0 450 349 B1).
In one of these prior art devices (DE 195 37 294 A1) three nozzles are disposed one after the other in the conveying direction of the strips, protective gas being supplied to the welding location via a first nozzle. Inert gas is blown on to the weld via a following nozzle. The weld is acted upon by a liquid coolant via a third nozzle. The inert gas of the second nozzle and the liquid coolant are directed away from the welding location at a certain angle. In practice the inert gas of the second nozzle produces a gas curtain which screens the welding location from the coolant.
Such an apparatus is expensive, since it requires three separate supply lines for gas and coolant. Another disadvantage is that in view of the given geometrical relationships with the three nozzles, cooling cannot start very close to the welding location. Nor can the relationships be simply altered in dependence on the process. Corrosion can be prevented only if after cooling the liquid coolant is removed by suction from the strip surface. This requires an expensive suctional removal device.
In the other known apparatus (EP 0 450 349 B1) the cooling nozzle consists of a cooling plate having a plurality of nozzle openings, and a beak which also has a plurality of nozzle openings and extends as far as adjacent the welding location. In this case, air is blown on as coolant over the nozzle apertures. Quite apart from the very expensive construction of this cooling plate, experience shows that particularly intensive cooling cannot be achieved using air.
A more intensive cooling of the welding place is supposed to be obtained by means of a gas/liquid coolant mixture applied by nozzle (SU 18 24 268 A1).
It is an object of the invention to provide a process and an apparatus for the continuous welding of guided and abutted strips or plates using a laser beam, said process and apparatus enabling the weld to be intensively cooled using comparatively simple means.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
In the process according to the invention this problem is solved by the features that the coolant used is a water and gas mixture in the form of a flat jet which extends in the direction of the weld and lies in a plane standing perpendicular to the plane of the strip or plate and whose leading edge, extending in the direction of the laser beam, encloses an acute angle with the laser beam.
In the apparatus according to the invention the solution is that the coolant nozzle is a slot jet nozzle for a water and gas mixture whose flat jet lies in a plane which stands perpendicular to the plane of the strip or plate, extends along the weld and by its front edge encloses an acute angle with laser beam.
In comparison with the prior art the invention produces a substantially improved and more readily controllable intensity by the fact that not only gas and air or water is used as the coolant, but a mixture of gas and water. For this purpose only one further nozzle is required in addition to the nozzle for the process gas, since the welding place need not be screened off from the coolant by inert gas. Since the water is supplied in the form of droplets, substantially better use is made of the cooling effect than in the case of a full jet of liquid. The physical explanation of this cooling effect is probably that the sprayed-on droplets pierce a vapor layer forming on the sheet, so that they make direct contact with the weld to be cooled and possibly its surroundings. Experience has shown that, in comparison with cooling exclusively using water and air, the same cooling effect can be achieved with only a fraction of {fraction (1/10)} in the case of water and a fraction of {fraction (1/40)} in the case of air. This improved cooling effect is also to be ascribed to the fact that use of the flat jet limits the cooling effect substantially to the zone of the weld. The special geometry of the flat jet, whose front edge encloses an acute angle with the laser beam and can preferably be effected by a trapezoidal widening of the jet, ensures that cooling is started immediately adjacent the welding point. Because of the early start of cooling, welding speed can be increased and productivity thereby improved. The start of cooling can be changed by pivoting the nozzle in the plane of the weld, with an unchanged distance between the nozzle and the plate. However, the cooling of plates can also be changed with an unchanged angular position of the nozzle, by changing the distance horizontally or vertically. Since no large volume of liquid coolant is supplied, there is no adverse effect on welding quality due to the cooling starting immediately adjacent the welding point. Neither is any expensive suctional removal required.
One advantageous feature of the invention has been found to be that the weld surface acted upon by the flat beam has a length-to-width ratio of 1:5 to 1:30. It has also been found to be advantageous if the mass flow ratio of the water and gas mixture is 0.1 to 3, preferably 0.5. This mass flow ratio can be maintained in various ways, for example, it can be provided by the nozzle itself, but can also be varied via the delivery pressure and delivery speed of the two associates, water and air.
The slot jet nozzle preferably takes the form of an injector nozzle. Operation has been found to be very reliable if the slot jet nozzle is a pin-shaped mouthpiece with a chamfered end face edge and an end face slot extending as far as the edge.
REFERENCES:
patent: 3629546 (1971-12-01), Fry
patent: 4127761 (1978-11-01), Pauley et al.
patent: 4990741 (1991-02-01), Moores et al.
patent: 5902497 (1999-05-01), Alber et al.
patent: 195 37 924 A1 (1996-05-01), None
patent: 6-297173 (1994-10-01), None
patent: 9-295011 (1997-11-01), None
SU 1824268A (Ashirbekov et al.) Jun. 30, 1993 (abstract) WPI, Derwent Pub. Ltd., London GB AN 94-364758.
Koch Martin
Thiem Steffen
Zeimes Manfred
Heinrich Samuel M.
Rose LLP Proskauer
Thyseen Stahl AG
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