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Registered Member #53
Joined: Thu Feb 09 2006, 04:31AM
Location: Ontario, Canada
Posts: 638
The plant at which I work has a problem with static charge accumulating on one of the products which causes one of our robots to go into a difficult to resolve fault. I would like to hear anyone's thoughts if you have idea on how to resolve the problem.
The process involves unrolling a metalized paper foil with a hot melt glue backing over a hot roller and onto a stone wool substrate. The foil/wool combo is then cut into individual pieces and then stacked, after stacking it is shrink wrapped with plastic and travels down several hundred meters of conveyor belts and metal rollers. When the shrink wrapped stacks get to the end of the conveyor system they are stacked by robots which are easily (it seems) disrupted by static discharge.
At the moment there are a bunch of ground straps hanging over the conveyor system just before the robots, they drag over the shrink wrapped stacks before they are picked up by the robot. Once every 20-30 stacks the robot will get a spark and lock up, requiring a lengthy re-start. As far as I can tell the unwinding of the foil and subsequent cutting and stacking acts like a mechanical voltage multiplier, adding up the voltage of each piece as they are stacked up and then shrink wrapped in plastic. I don't have any measurements with an electrostatic voltmeter but it will give you one hell of a shock from ~15cm.
My first thought is to add grounding brushes after the cutting process and before the stacking process to limit or completely eliminate the charge before it gets to the stacking process. My supervisor is hell bent on getting an "electrostatic expert" (salesman) to build a solution involving HVAC power supplies, compressed air and a regular maintenance contract but it seems like over kill for static build up.
If you have any ideas (or questions) let me know what you think. I'm gunning for the grounding brushes before the stacking process myself. Sorry if I was too vague in any part, there are limits on how detailed a description I can give :/ Thanks company secrets that everyone and china already knows.
Registered Member #3215
Joined: Sun Sept 19 2010, 08:42PM
Location:
Posts: 780
haha I have seen that already on similar processes
just put the cheapest christmas garland which contains shiny metallic pigment at places in the process where it can touch the material, hanging from a grounded cable or armature...
the garland touching the material will evacuate charge, and you can multiply it along the chain...
the idea comes from a major vinyl adhesive plant I have worked in which used electrostatic and UV treatment, so that was a major issue
Registered Member #4762
Joined: Sun May 06 2012, 05:59PM
Location: Russia
Posts: 93
In USSR they used powerful alpha radiation source to eliminate statics. Plutonium based. Extremely simple solution, but looks like not an option here, according modern tendencies of eliminating radiation hazard :)
Registered Member #3215
Joined: Sun Sept 19 2010, 08:42PM
Location:
Posts: 780
in that factory I worked in, they had corona rolls for vinyl adherence to a backing, thermal adhesive deposition, thermal polymer printing and speeds as high as 120m/min with heaters, coolers and vacuum pumps... I guess there was also a great static buildup there
as they had put garlands everywhere they could, I really think it was effective
when I first asked about this, the guy I worked with told me they had huge problems of the same kind you mention, and it led to replacement of much CMOS logic boards in robots and PLCs
they had a bunch of things replaced by pneumatics with antistatic tubing, but the rest had to be tamed using this trick
since then they had no more statics problem
they were also using frying oil as lubricant for the machines as it was far more resilient than industrial grade designed for the same purpose and discounts were high for big quantities...
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