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| United States Patent | 4784491 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/4784491.html |
| Inventor(s) | Penney; Carl M. (Schenectady, NY);
Lund; Richard M. (Inverness, FL) |
| Abstract | An optical sensor head has deep, pitched grooves or screw threads in the
walls of the gas channel, and a gas flow swirled along the grooves to
protect optics against atmospheric debris and moving particles such as is
generated by an industrial process. The grooves are pitched to support
swirling motion of the gas. Use of swirled flow increases allowable flow
velocity and diverts incoming particles toward the channel walls. The
windows of an optical profiler, for instance, are protected against the
smoke and weld spatter created by a metal-inert-gas welding torch. |
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Title Information  |
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Drawing from US Patent 4784491 |
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System to protect optics against dirty environments |
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| Publication Date |
November 15, 1988 |
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Title Information  |
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Description  |
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BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates to protecting optical components against an
atmosphere containing moving particles and other debris, and more
particularly to an optical sensor and profiler which is shielded from the
smoke and weld spatter generated by an arc welding process.
The use of optical sensors to guide industrial processes is increasing
rapidly. One of the major problems encountered in this trend is
maintaining the transmission of those optical elements which form the
window through which the sensor views the industrial process. This problem
can be substantial even with clean processes because of dust and smoke
normally found in the work place. However, when a sensor must observe
directly a process producing smoke, spatter or other airborne debris, the
problem of window cleanliness can become critical, requiring that the
process be stopped frequently to clean or change windows, or that some
type of refreshable window mechanism or shutter be installed. Optical
sensors used for weld groove tracking and weld quality control are good
examples of devices which should tolerate a dirty atmosphere. A reasonable
goal is that windows should remain clean at least until some procedure
required by the process, such as placing another spool of wire on a MIG
(metal inert gas) weld system, or a natural work division such as a change
of shift provides a maintenance opportunity Furthermore, maintenance
should be inexpensive and easy to implement. The present window and optics
protection system meets these goals.
Window protection is used in various optical applications, of which laser
machining and medical cutting operations form good general examples. A
common protection mode is to flow gas around the optical element facing
the exterior of the device, and thence down an elongated channel (see FIG.
1). The drag of the out-flowing gas serves to stop most smoke, particles
and other debris from flowing up through the opening and contacting the
optical element. However, in the case of most MIG welding operations and
other industrial operations such as grinding, particles are driven with
substantial speed toward the optics, while light economy requires openings
at least several millimeters in diameter. In such cases it was found that
sufficient gas flow to stop most of the particles from reaching the optics
is either difficult to support or disturbs the process. Thus the
approaches used in the prior art to protect optics are either
insufficient, inconvenient, or disrupt the process when applied, for
instance, to MIG welding.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It has been found that a practical gas flow swirled down a much shorter gas
channel than just described, and a channel that has deep grooves in the
walls pitched to support the swirling motion of the gas, is more effective
to divert incoming particles and debris and prevents deposition on the
window or other external optical component.
According to one aspect of the invention, an optical sensor head with
improved protection against atmospheric debris is comprised of a housing
containing optical components and having an inlet to supply gas which
flows past the exterior optical component to the gas channel. Means are
provided inside the housing to impart swirling motion to the gas, and the
gas channel has in its walls relatively deep grooves, preferably screw
threads, pitched in the direction of gas motion as it swirls toward the
opening. Moving particles, smoke and debris such as is generated by an
industrial process are turned toward the grooved wall and prevented from
depositing on the optics, maintaining good light transmission. The means
to impart swirling motion to the gas is illustratively a gas nozzle next
to the window having tangential channels for passage of gas at high
velocity from the periphery to the central bore.
The preferred embodiment is an optical profiler head for weld groove
tracking which is comprised of an optical transmitter to project a
structured light pattern onto the workpiece and an optical receiver that
relays an image of the region in front of the weld puddle to a remote
television-like camera. The windows in both parts are protected from the
smoke and weld spatter produced by a MIG welding torch by the system just
described.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 shows a prior art configuration for protecting a window from
atmospheric debris.
FIG. 2 is a schematic vertical cross section of a triangulation optical
profiler having improved protection against smoke and weld spatter during
a welding operation.
FIG. 3 is an isometric view of the window mount.
FIG. 4 is an isometric view of the profiler part which imparts a swirling
motion to the shield gas.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
Obervations of steel weld spatter have indicated that in a typical MIG
welding operation, the predominant number of spatter particles lie within
0.1 and 0.3 mm in diameter, and move away from the weld puddle with
initial velocities within the range of 1 to 10 meters per second. It has
been found that these particles stick when they strike a glass plate, but
bounce nearly elastically off many metal surfaces. A long channel of gas
flowing at practical velocities is required to stop such particles as can
be seen in FIG. 1. which shows a standard configuration for protecting a
window from atmospheric debris. Here shield gas flows past a window 10
into a channel 11 of width d and height H. The shield gas velocity is
directed down the channel with a magnitude V. A particle impinges on the
channel with upward velocity U, initially equal to U.sub.o. The channel
height needed to stop the particle before it hits the window is determined
from the equation Z=U.sub.o.sup.2 .tau./2V, where .tau. is the drag
coefficient. This equation is interpreted for Z set equal to H, indicating
a particle just stopped.
A typical spatter particle from steel welding will have a diameter of 0.3
mm and will leave the region of the weld puddle with an initial velocity
of 200 cm/sec. The maximum shield gas flow can be limited by cost of the
gas, convenience of introducing it, or interference with the weld process.
The latter limitation is often the most stringent, and welding
interference has been found at flows greater than 50 standard cubic feet
per hour (about 400 ml/sec). Using these values it follows that H is
approximately equal to 10 d.sup.2. Thus a window with a 1 centimeter
diameter would require a 10 centimeter long channel for protection against
weld spatter at maximum allowable shield gas flow rates near the weld.
In accordance with this invention a practical gas flow swirled down a much
shorter, deeply threaded or deeply grooved channel will stop this kind of
particle flux. It was demonstrated that a window was protected by this
configuration during an arc-on exposure time of one hour. In this case,
the window channel was 1" in diameter, and 2" long, with a gas flow of
only 10 standard cubic feet per hour. An optical profiler has been
designed with a gas channel 3/4" in diameter and 11/2" long. Typically the
length of the gas channel is no greater than twice its diameter. The
effectiveness of this configuration arises from the combination of several
principles which are explained later.
FIG. 2 shows an illustrative embodiment of the invention, a triangulation
optical profiler used for MIG weld groove tracking. The profiler head is
comprised of an optical transmitter and an optical receiver indicated
generally at 12 and 13. The first projects a structured light pattern such
as light stripe 14 onto the workpiece 15 intersecting the groove or joint
16 a short distance ahead of the weld puddle 17. The receiving optical
unit images the light stripe and groove and surrounding region of the
workpiece. Structured light is relayed to the optical profiler head from a
remote laser source, and the groove location image is transmitted back to
a remotely located television-like camera, over separate coherent fiber
optic bundles. Optical receiver 13 is described in detail and
corresponding parts in optical transmitter 12 are identified by
corresponding primed numerals.
A metal housing 18 has at its upper end a support column 19 which holds
coherent fiber optic bundle 20. An optical lens system 21 and a
transparent window 22, the exterior optical component, are suitably
mounted in alignment inside the housing such that the lens system views
the weld seam through the window and focuses the image on the entrance of
fiber optic bundle 20. The housing has a gas inlet 23 to admit shield gas,
or nitrogen or filtered air, to the inside of the housing in the space
between the lens and window. As illustrated here, shield gas is supplied
to the optical profiler head through inlet tube 24.
Shield gas flows past window 22 and through holes in the periphery of a
window mount 25 into a gas nozzle 26 which imparts swirling motion to the
shield gas. A gas channel 27 at the lower end of housing 18 has in its
walls internal relatively deep grooves or threads 28 pitched in the
direction of gas motion as it swirls toward the exit of the channel. The
threads are pitched to support the rotation of the gas.
Window mount 25, see FIG. 3, has four equally spaced peripheral openings 29
to allow passage of shield gas to gas nozzle 26, shown in greater detail
in FIG. 4. The reduced diameter upper part of the gas nozzle has four
equally spaced, 45.degree. tangential slots 30 exiting into a central
tapered bore 31. The gas nozzle is held against the lower surface of
window 22 which encloses the tangential gas channels 30. A spiral motion
is imparted to the gas as it flows at high velocity through these
tangential channels 30, swirling down the central bore 31 into the deeply
threaded gas channel 27. Window mount 25 and gas nozzle 26 are made, for
instance, of anodized aluminum.
The several principles which in combination render this a more effective
configuration to protect the optics against smoke and weld spatter are now
explained. Because of the swirl motion imparted to the gas by gas nozzle
26, the gas can be given much higher velocity for the same flow rate,
increasing its ability to divert moving particles. The particles, under
the action of centrifugal force caused by the rotation of the gas, are
turned toward the walls of gas channel 27 by the swirling gas, where they
strike deeply grooved threads 28 which are pitched in the direction of gas
motion as its swirls toward the opening 32. The pitch of the threads
supports rotation of the gas, while the angled sides of the grooves
encourage particles 33 to bounce back out of the channel. Some of the
particles are deposited on the threaded channel wall. This configuration
is highly effective in preventing deposition of the atmospheric debris on
the external optical component. The novel features are the use of deep
grooves to encourage particles to bounce away and be diverted from the
window, the use of swirled gas flow to increase allowable flow velocity
and divert particles toward the channel walls, and use of grooves pitched
to support swirling motion of the gas. With this configuration the gas has
a high velocity; it does not take a large gas supply. The rotating shield
gas discharged by the optical profiler is not a directed flow, that can
disrupt a weld puddle or other similar process close to the region
observed. An incidental advantage of this configuration is that the
threads 28 trap light and reflected light does not get into the receiving
objects.
This invention has been described with respect to MIG welding applications
and was reduced to practice on an optical profiler used for MIG weld
groove tracking. However, there are many other applications for optical
sensors which benefit from the excellent optical protection provided by
this system.
While a specific embodiment of the invention has been illustrated and
explained, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various
changes in form and details may be made. The appended claims are intended
to cover all such modifications and changes that fall within the true
spirit and scope of the invention.
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Description  |
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