UV curing system for heat sensitive substances and process

Coating processes – Direct application of electrical – magnetic – wave – or... – Polymerization of coating utilizing direct application of...

Reexamination Certificate

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C118S068000, C118S506000, C118S641000, C427S385500, C427S444000, C427S558000, C427S559000, C427S595000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06599585

ABSTRACT:

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to systems and processes for ultraviolet (UV) curing of materials. In particular, the present invention relates to a device and process that allows for UV curing of materials at a lower substrate temperature than that allowed by conventional systems and processes.
DESCRIPTION OF THE RELATED ART
In UV curing of materials, such as, for example, photopolymerizable organic materials, a problem that arises is that the UV source used in the process may generate a large amount of heat, which arises from the UV light itself as well as from non-useful light of other frequencies, including infrared (IR) radiation, which can adversely affect the substance being cured. Excess temperatures may then damage or destroy heat-sensitive materials, such as the substance being cured or a support material (such as paper, plastic, foil, etc.) on which the substance is being cured.
Efforts to reduce the amount of non-useful heat-producing light that impinges on a target substrate while maintaining an acceptable level of UV have included the use of indirect illumination, hot mirrors and dichroic coatings. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 4,644,899 to Glaus discloses a curing device wherein rays from a light source impinge on a mirror that is partially transmitting and set at an angle with respect to the axis of the light beam, so that IR light rays pass directly through the mirror to a cooling system and UV light rays are deflected towards the substrate to be cured. U.S. Pat. No. 4,048,490 to Troue discloses an apparatus having an arrangement of dichroic filter surfaces. Light from a UV light source is deflected off one of the dichroic filter surfaces and is directed toward the substrate to be cured. A cusp-like member is mounted in the path of the light beam to ensure that all of the light rays from the light source are deflected off a dichroic surface only once. U.S. Pat. No. 4,563,589 to Scheffer discloses an ultraviolet curing lamp device that includes a blocker tube located between the ultraviolet light source and an ultraviolet light permeable quartz plate window through which the ultraviolet light exits. The blocker tube reflects ultraviolet, visible and infrared light.
Many of the suggested solutions to lowering the temperature of an ultraviolet curing process add considerable complexity and expense to the ultraviolet curing apparatus. For example, quartz plates and large surface area dichroic coatings can be very expensive.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention is a UV curing system and process for curing a target substance which overcomes the aforementioned problems of the prior art. In particular, the UV curing system includes a light source, which produces useful UV light, as well as other unwanted wavelengths of light (each of which can produce unwanted heat), a shade member having a lamp-side surface which performs dichroically—absorbing heat producing light that is not within the range of useful UV light wavelengths, and reflecting useful UV light wavelengths, and a housing having another dichroic (UV reflect, IR pass) coated surface. As used herein, “useful” UV light refers to UV light of a wavelength that cures the target substance. The shade member is situated between the light source and the target substance so that some, or all of the light from the light source does not directly strike the target substance. The housing is situated on the opposite side of the light source from the target and partially encloses the light source. The shape of the reflecting surface of the housing, the shape of the shade member, and the location of the internal reflecting surface of the housing, the shade member and the light source with respect to each other are selected so that (1) at least some of the UV light that leaves the light source and travels in a direction in which it does not strike the shade member strikes the dichroic reflecting surface of the housing and is reflected onto the target substance and (2) at least some of the UV light that leaves the light source and travels in a direction in which it strikes the shade member is reflected from the lamp-side of the shade member onto the dichroic, reflecting surface of the housing, from which it is reflected onto the target substance. And since the materials used to fabricate the shade member prevent the target-side surface of the shade member from getting hot and re-radiating heat energy to the target substance, and the physical presence of the shade blocks all, or most, direct illumination (light/heat) from the lamp, the target surface is thereby kept cooler during a curing process than it would otherwise have been without the presence of the shade member.
In a preferred embodiment, the shade member possesses thermal insulating properties created by certain materials such as ceramic or quartz, which may or may not be coated with one of a variety of coatings applied to increase the shade's lamp-side to target-side temperature ratio. An example of a ceramic material which may be used is alumina.
In another preferred embodiment, the shade member may have at least one internal conduit that may be filled with a heat conducting material that conducts heat to heat sinks which are not located near the target substance. A metallic conductor may also serve to provide mechanical support for the material from which the shade is fabricated.
The invention further relates to methods of curing UV-curable substances by providing a UV curing system as described above and activating the UV light source so that the UV-curable substance is exposed to UV light from the UV curing system.


REFERENCES:
patent: 4048490 (1977-09-01), Troue
patent: 4563589 (1986-01-01), Scheffer
patent: 4644899 (1987-02-01), Glaus
patent: 5667850 (1997-09-01), Gaven et al.

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