34 research outputs found

    Direct forward gravure coating on unsupported web

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    YesThis experimental study of forward gravure coating considers the effects of operating variables on air entrainment, ribbing instabilities and the thickness of the film formed. The data show that this coating method can yield very thin films of thickness of order of 15 - 20% at most of the equivalent cell depth of a gravure roller. Air free and non ribbed stable uniform films can however only be obtained in a narrow window of operating conditions at very low substrate capillary number (CaS ~ 0.02) equivalent to substrate speeds typically less than 20m/min. The paper draws a similarity with flow features observed with smooth forward roll coating and slide coating. It is shown that the onset of ribbing and the flux distribution between the gravure roller and the substrate at the exit of the nip obey approximately the same rules as in smooth forward roll coating, whereas the onset of air entrainment actually corresponds to a low-flow limit of coatability similar to that observed in slide coating

    Reverse roll coating with a deformable roll operating at negative gaps

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    YesReverse roll coating is probably the most widely used coating operation, yet its full potential has not been exploited as it is shown in this paper which considers operation with a negative gap. We demonstrate through a wide range of experimental data that such operation can yield very thin and stable films with no ribbing or cascade instabilities when low viscosity fluids are used. Typically, stable film thickness less than 5ÎŒm can be obtained at speeds up to 150 m/min when a rubber roller is used at -100 ÎŒm gap with fluids of viscosity in the range 10-200 mPa.s. These film thicknesses can be made to decrease further down to 1 or 2 microns with a judicious choice of speed ratios (applicator to metering roller) and rubber hardness. Such new findings make this simple coating method an attractive roll to roll technique for application in the newer coating technologies, such as in the production of solar cells and plastic electronics. The data obtained in this study have been underpinned by a model based on the classical lubrication theory, well developed for such flow situations. Essentially it is shown that the film thickness non dimensionalised with respect to the set negative gap is controlled through a single parameter, the elasticity number Ne which combines all the operating parameters. Of course, this flow problem has complexities, particularly at high speed ratios and at zero gap so the data obtained here can serve as a basis for more comprehensive modelling of this classical fluid mechanic problem.Films R&D Centre of Toyobo Co. Ltd., Otsu, Japan and the Thin Films Research Group of the University of Bradford, UK

    The effect of continuous pore stratification on the acoustic absorption in open cell foams

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    This work reports new data on the acoustical properties of open cell foam with pore stratification. The pore size distribution as a function of the sample depth is determined in the laboratory using methods of optical image analysis. It is shown that the pore size distribution in this class of materials changes gradually with the depth. It is also shown that the observed pore size distribution gradient is responsible for the air flow resistivity stratification, which is measured acoustically and non-acoustically. The acoustical absorption coefficient of the developed porous sample is measured using a standard laboratory method. A suitable theoretical model for the acoustical properties of porous media with pore size distribution is adopted. The measured data for open porosity, tortuosity, and standard deviation data are used together with this model to predict the observed acoustic absorption behavior of the developed material sample. The transfer matrix approach is used in the modeling process to account for the pore size stratification. This work suggests that it is possible to design and manufacture porous media with continuous pore size stratification, which can provide an improvement to conventional porous media with uniform pore size distribution in terms of the attained acoustic absorption coefficient
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