[0001] The present invention relates to plasma-coating of rolls, such as anilox rolls.
[0002] An anilox roll is a cylinder used to deliver a certain amount of ink to a flexographic
printing plate. The anilox roll has a metal core coated by ceramic material, such
as Cr
2O
3, the surface of which contains fine cells engraved by laser. The amount of ink that
is transferred to the plate depends on the angle of the cells, cell volume and line
screen (specifying the number of cells per linear inch). The development of flexographic
printing technology requires anilox rolls of increasing line screen. This can be achieved
by increasing the precision and resolution of laser engraving. However, increased
line screen also requires increased quality, i.e. uniformness, of the ceramic coating
that is engraved.
[0003] An exemplary process for making anilox rolls is presented in US patent application
US 2010/0015354, wherein the anilox roll is manufactured by blurring a roller surface, forming a
ceramic layer on the roller surface, grinding the roller surface, polishing the roller
surface, forming a pattern on the roller surface using laser, polishing the roller
surface and cleaning the roller surface.
[0004] In the plasma coating process, a high frequency arc ionizes a gas flowing between
electrodes such that a plasma plume which is several centimeters in length develops.
The temperature within the plume can reach 16,000°C. Into the plasma plume a material
in powder form, such as Cr
2O
3 is injected. It is melted and propelled at high speed to the roll surface, where
it rapidly cools and forms the coating of the roll. The roll is coated by performing
a plurality of spiral passes of the spray along the roll. Usually, a few dozen passes
are performed over the roll.
[0005] Conventional coating systems have certain limits that are not acceptable for high-quality
anilox rolls coatings, such as high porosity (in the range of 4-6%, which limits the
raster size to about 400 lines/cm) and unevenness of the coating (related to separation
of layers).
[0006] Certain improvements have been introduced to conventional coating systems, such as
the Triplex system by Sulzer Metco company, as described in
US patents 5225652 and
5406046. It provides porosity reduced to 1,6-2% and high effectiveness, above 50%. Such system
allows reduction of time and costs for processing the coating. Lower porosity allows
engraving smaller cells and lower probability of unevenness of the coating.
[0007] The aim of the present invention is to provide further improvements to coating of
anilox rolls.
[0008] The object of the invention is a method for plasma-coating of rolls by forming a
ceramic layer on the roll surface with a plasma plume emitted by a plasma spray apparatus,
the plasma plume containing a powdered coating material, wherein the coating material
is applied to the roll in a plurality of spiral passes of the plume along the roll,
wherein the plasma plume emitted by the plasma spray apparatus is limited by a ceramic
disc (14) mounted in the path of the plasma plume and having an aperture (15) via
which only the hot zone of the plasma plume is transmitted, and wherein the spiral
passes of the plume along the roll are delayed by an angle dependent on the number
of spiral passes to be applied to the roll, such as to be distributed evenly along
the roll.
[0009] Preferably, the delay angle between the passes is a prime number.
[0010] Preferably, the delay angle is not less than 23 degrees.
[0011] Preferably, the spiral passes of the plume are grouped in sets, wherein the passes
of one set are delayed between each other by an angle different than the angle of
delay for passes of another set.
[0012] Another object of the invention is a roll, in particular an anilox roll, plasma-coated
by the method according to the invention.
[0013] The invention is shown by means of an exemplary embodiment on a drawing, in which:
Figs. 1A, 1B show the concept of temperature variation in the plasma plume.
Fig. 2 shows a plasma spray apparatus,
Figs. 3A-3F show various spray passes,
[0014] The present invention takes into account the results of the research work presented
by
Liangde Xie et al. in an article "Processing parameter effects on solution precursor
plasma spray process spray patterns" (Surface and Coatings Technology 183 (2004),
pp. 51-61). The article shows that the plasma plume has a large temperature variation, as shown
in Fig. 1A. The precursor droplets fed into the plasma regions at different temperature
will experience different physical and chemical reactions. During the fixed scan spray,
the first coating material arriving at a given location in the substrate comes from
the outer or colder region of the plasma jet, and is in the form of powdery deposits,
as illustrated in Fig. 1B. The powdery deposits are then covered over by the coating
material from the hotter region of the plasma jet for locations near the axis of the
plasma torch and by the material from colder part of the plasma jet at all other locations.
Therefore, the adherent deposits in the sample are a mixture of the coating material
from both the hot and cold regions, and the powdery deposits originate only from the
precursor fed into the cold region of the plasma jet. The hot zone is the zone in
which the plasma plume has a temperature over 3400°C and the cold zone is the zone
in which the plasma plume has a temperature below about 1200°C.
[0015] The present invention develops this concept by providing a plasma spray apparatus
equipped with a ceramic aperture as shown in Fig. 2. The plasma spray apparatus comprises
a rear gun body 11, to which a front gun body 12 is connected. The front gun body
comprises an insulator block, neutrode insulator housing, electrodes and neutrode
stack and nozzle (inside front gun body, not shown for clarity). A powder injector
13 is installed at the front of the front gun body 12. In addition to the conventional
elements 11-13, the plasma spray apparatus according to the invention comprises a
ceramic disc 14 with a central aperture 15 mounted on holders 16 attached to the front
gun body 12. The central aperture blocks the outer cold zone (region) of the plasma
plume exiting the gun. The length of the holders 16 is adjustable so that the distance
of the aperture 15 from the plasma gun can be adapted to a particular application.
The ceramic disc 14 is formed of a ceramic material, such as Carbon/Graphite, that
can withstand high temperatures, i.e. temperatures up to 3000°C and has a non-sticking
surface, i.e. a surface to which the powdered material from the cold zone of the plasma
plume will not adhere. The disc may have a diameter of about 100 mm and width of about
8 mm. The aperture 15 can have a diameter of about 12-15 mm. The aperture 15 may have
conical edges with fillets at the entrance to make it aerodynamic and avoid introduction
of turbulences in the plasma plume.
[0016] By introducing the ceramic disc into the plasma plume, the cold zone of the plume
is blocked from reaching the roll being coated, and therefore a much higher ratio
of adherent deposit with respect to powdery deposits is achieved on the roll, which
increases the coating density and uniformity.
[0017] Due to a limited width of the plasma plume, the roll has to be coated a plurality
of times, for example the plasma plume passes over the roll in a spiral manner a few
dozen times. In case the width of the plume is reduced, the coating process has to
be accurately controlled in order to avoid build-up of patterns along the roll, which
make the coating non-uniform.
[0018] When the plasma gun coats the roll and reaches the end of the roll, a certain angular
delay has to be introduced, so that the coating in the opposite direction is not followed
along the same path as the previous pass, which would result in a pattern such as
shown in Fig. 3A. The angular delay has to be chosen appropriately, such as to limit
forming patterns. Fig. 3B shows a roll coated with 15 double passes of the plasma
gun, wherein an angular delay of 7 degrees has been introduced at the front of the
roll and no angular delay has been introduced at the end of the roll - such delay
will result in unacceptable, uneven coating.
[0019] In turn, Fig. 3C shows a roll coated with 15 double passes of the plasma gun, wherein
an angular delay of 23 degrees has been introduced at the front and at the end of
the roll - the lines are distributed evenly, which guarantees even coating. For more
detailed analysis of this case, Fig. 3A shows the roll after 1 pass, Fig. 3D shows
the roll after 5 passes with the delay of 23 degrees, Fig. 3E shows the roll after
10 passes.
[0020] The delay has to be selected depending on the number of passes to be applied to the
roll. For example, for the coating scheme as shown in Fig. 3D, the following angular
delays have proved to be effective depending on the number of passes:
- For 1 double pass, the delay should be 179 degrees
- For 2 double passes delay should be 89 degrees (as shown in Fig. 3G)
- For 3 double passes delay should be 59 degrees
- For 4 double passes delay should be 43 degrees
- For 5 double passes delay should be 37 degrees (as shown in Fig. 3G)
- For 6 double passes delay should be 29 degrees
- For 7 double passes delay should be 23 degrees
[0021] The delay is the largest prime number which is smaller than the division of 180 degrees
by the number of double passes. By selecting the delay to be a prime number, it is
guaranteed that the passes will not overlay.
[0022] In practice, delays should not be less than 23 degrees, as the passes would be too
close to each other. Therefore, in case more than 7 double passes are to be applied
to the roll, they should be grouped in sets not larger than 7 double passes. Then,
each set should be applied with a delay for the particular group. For example, if
16 double passes are required, they should be performed in three blocks: 3 double
passes with a delay of 59 degrees, 6 double passes with a delay of 29 degrees and
7double passes with a delay of 23 degrees. By selecting the delay to be a prime number,
it is guaranteed that the passes will not overlap.
1. A method for plasma-coating of rolls by forming a ceramic layer on the roll surface
with a plasma plume emitted by a plasma spray apparatus, the plasma plume containing
a powdered coating material, wherein the coating material is applied to the roll in
a plurality of spiral passes of the plume along the roll, characterized in that the plasma plume emitted by the plasma spray apparatus is limited by a ceramic disc
(14) mounted in the path of the plasma plume and having an aperture (15) via which
only the hot zone of the plasma plume is transmitted, and wherein the spiral passes
of the plume along the roll are delayed by an angle dependent on the number of spiral
passes to be applied to the roll, such as to be distributed evenly along the roll.
2. The method according to claim 1, wherein the delay angle between the passes is a prime
number.
3. The method according to claim 1, wherein the delay angle is not less than 23 degrees.
4. The method according to claim 1, wherein the spiral passes of the plume are grouped
in sets, wherein the passes of one set are delayed between each other by an angle
different than the angle of delay for passes of another set.
5. A roll plasma-coated by the method of any of claims 1-4.
6. An anilox roll plasma-coated by the method of any of claims 1-4.