New compounding technologies displayed at K 2004 included some unusual ways to
broaden the range of products a twin-screw compounder can make. One such machine
had a choice of interchangeable L/Ds and another was a hybrid of a twin- and
single-screw extruder in one barrel. New pelletizers and dies also emphasized
versatility with quicker changes and more wear-resistant surfaces. (Not covered
here are new equipment from Berstorff, Farrel, and Henschel that were reported
in our show preview in September.)
Quick barrel changing
Leistritz in Germany showed the first production-size compounder of any kind
capable of automatically exchanging one barrel for another. The idea is that
it allows one machine base and drive motor to run a choice of two different
L/Dse.g., a short barrel for masterbatches and a longer barrel for
filled compounds. A 50-mm prototype of the new ZSE-Flex demonstrated the
barrel change automatically in 15 min. The machine could handle L/Ds
from 32:1 to 52:1 powered with the same drive motor, Leistritz says.
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| Leistritz's new ZSE-Flex twin-screw compounder automatically changes
barrels in 15 minutes, and it can run different L/D's from 32 to 52:1. |
Mechanical
arms roll one twin-screw barrel section out on one side of the extruder,
while other arms insert the new pre-warmed barrel and screws on the other
side. Fast hook-up to dies and water lines is accomplished by mounting
all water connectors on a single panel. A new water-cooled shroud keeps the
barrel surface cool for operator safety as barrels are moved around. Under
the shroud, a new barrel-cooling loop has 30% greater cooling capacity. Leistritz
plans a full demonstration at an open house March 8-9 in Nurnberg, Germany.
Leistritz
also has a new shaft-element joint technology called ZSE Maxx. It uses splines
that have a higher OD/ID ratio of 1.66:1 vs. 1.53:1 previously. The deeper
splines are also trapezoidal, not triangular, so they conserve more torque
and allow more free volume for 25% to 35% higher output, Leistritz says.
CTE
Co. Ltd. of Japan showed its unusual dual-length HTM (horizontal twin mixer),
a type of twin-screw compounding extruder. The dual-length corotating machine
was actually developed 12 years ago, when the company was called IPEC Co.
Ltd. It was renamed CTE (Century 21 Engineering) in 1999. The initial compounding
section uses wing-shaped, Banbury-style mixing elements, which knead the
material and can incorporate filler levels of up to 70% magnesium hydroxide
for wire and cable, 80% wood flour or talc, and 70% titanium dioxide for pigment
masterbatches.
Material then passes a barrier section and a vacuum vent before
reaching the single-screw extension of one of the two corotating shafts,
which builds up pressure before the die. The design reportedly prevents overworking
the material and keeps processing temperatures 10° to 20° C
lower than conventional twin-screws. The twin-screw part is 28:1; the
single screw is 14:1, totaling 42:1 L/D.
CTE also launched a combination
of a dry-face and a water-ring pelletizer for wood-filled composites.
It's very compact and uses air, water, or both
for cooling, depending on wood content. CTE has built models with throughputs
from 440 to 1760 lb/hr.
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| CTE showed its hybrid HTM compounder. It starts with a 28:1 twin-screw kneader,
and then one screw extends another 14:1 L/D as asingle-screw extruder. |
Good housekeeping
C.A. Picard GmbHM of Germany showed an inexpensive device for stripping off
screw elements frozen onto shafts. Built in China, the FD-System strips elements
from shafts of 25 to 140 mm diam. A unit is installed at Picard's Ohio
service bureau.
Coperion Waeschle showed its Fluidcone Blender, a new static
mixer for blending free-flowing powders in silos. Internal baffles split
the powder flow into four pie-shaped zones around a small, round core zone.
It's retrofittable
in place of the silo's conical discharge and fits silos from 3 to 15
ft diam.
Dies and pelletizers
Black Clawson Converting Machinery launched a new underwater pelletizer die
design for low-viscosity materials such as compounds with high EVA content
(up to 40%). The Pelletor has a horizontal die plate and modified heat channels
close to the die surface to keep holes from freezing off. The die surface
is ceramic coated to insulate it from the water's heat sink. Black
Clawson will reface dies (its own or other brands) for water-ring and underwater
pelletizers with the high-wear ceramic facing or other facing materials if
required.
Coperion Werner & Pfleiderer showed a new SK series quick-change
strand die in which the die plate is held by clamping sections on the top
and bottom that open with six half-turn screws instead of fully threaded
bolts. The clamps hang on hooks when the die plate is removed.
Econ GmbH
in Austria showed underwater pelletizer dies coated with a few millimeters
of Ceconid, a mixture of resin and proprietary minerals that is said
to be harder than diamond. The first test samples reportedly showed no abrasion
after pelletizing glass-filled material.