Visit the Alfa Laval web site

IS viscometer solves viscosity control problems

A Hydramotion product story
Edited by the Processingtalk editorial team Sep 4, 2006

A Hydramotion IS viscometer is saving time and money and boosting productivity by solving viscosity control problems for Ricoh UK Products in Shropshire

Hydramotion viscosity control is saving time and money and boosting productivity for Ricoh UK Products (RPL) in Telford, Shropshire.

Established in 1984, RPL is a subsidiary of the Ricoh Company in Japan, the world's leading manufacturer of office automation equipment.

In 1972, Ricoh began development of the organic photoconductor (OPC) drums that are now a key component of the latest Ricoh digital copiers.

RPL was the first Ricoh copier production plant in Europe and is still their only OPC production facility outside Japan, producing up to 22,000 of the 60mm and 100mm diameter drums per month.

In the first stage of production, aluminium cores are automatically loaded onto a lathe where they are machined to the correct thickness and surface finish.

The drums are then given an initial inspection before being transported via conveyor to a degreasing line, which removes any remaining swarf, grease or coolant from the machining process and leaves the drums clean, dry and ready for coating with a photoconductive material.

Three different layers of coating are applied to each drum.

It is vital that each layer is applied uniformly and to the correct thickness, and since this depends on the flow characteristics of the coating solutions, maintaining the correct viscosity directly affects the quality of the finished product.

This is where Hydramotion viscometers are proving invaluable.

A hand-held Viscolite VL700 is used to make a preliminary check of the viscosity of the coating mix, which is made off-line and used to supply the process dipping tanks.

Measurement is quick and simple: "We simply take a 500ml sample in a glass jar and insert the probe into the liquid," says production engineer Matt Surmacz.

This ensures that the coating solution has the required properties right from the start.

The coating stage, known as "dipping", is carried out within a clean room, which is classed as a hazardous area because of the flammable materials used.

The drums are lifted from a central conveyor by robot and dipped slowly into tanks containing organic polymer-based coating solutions.

A Hydramotion XL7 intrinsically safe in-line viscometer is permanently installed on the dipping tank, enabling production staff to monitor the process liquid viscosity constantly.

This instrument also gives its measured output value to a PLC programme that automatically dilutes the dipping liquid back to the required viscosity to compensate for solvent evaporation during the process.

"The maximum viscosity we have to measure is 500 centipoise.

It's controlled at two different settings plus or minus 3 centipoise, depending on the product we're making," explains Matt Surmacz.

Temperature also has to be carefully controlled, since the liquid must be kept to within a degree of 20Celsius.

Matt Surmacz explains: "It is critical that the liquid is at the required viscosity at both the mixing and process dipping stages, because there is a direct relationship between the viscosity and temperature of the liquid and the robot dipping speed.

So if any of these set-points are incorrect the coating thickness of the drum will be too thin or too thick and the drum will be scrap".

During the final stage of production a flange is inserted at each end, the drums are wrapped in black light-protective sleeves and finally boxed ready for sale.

"We learned about Hydramotion through recommendation of our existing viscometer supplier at the time," said Matt Surmacz: "We decided to purchase the instruments from Hydramotion as they were suited to our process requirements and were easy to use, giving an instant reading.

They gave us the facility to put a live digital display in the hazardous area for the operators to monitor the viscosity, and they also gave us the facility to integrate it with our PLC software for the automatic dilution system".

The XL7 in-line viscometer has given Ricoh the high level of process control it needed.

"This system now gives us a stable dipping process with no fluctuation in the viscosity.

With a set lifter speed and liquid temperature we can now run this process with great efficiency".

Before discovering Hydramotion, Ricoh had to depend for viscosity measurement on an offline rotational instrument.

This had a number of disadvantages: it could not be integrated into the automated system and it had to be located in a lab away from the dipping process, which meant operators would lose time analysing the liquid.

Also, repeatability was adversely affected by the small sample size and solvent evaporation during the test.

"The Hydramotion viscometers are easy to use," says Matt Surmacz, "and they give us instant results for our process liquids.

They were easy to install using the hygienic fittings and clamps, and have required no maintenance.

The only check we carry out is a measurement of a known viscosity standard every month to confirm their accuracy".

These checks have only served to reinforce the company's faith in Hydramotion.

"Since the viscometers were installed they have proved to be 100% reliable, with no fluctuation on the measurement of our liquids," Matt Surmacz said.

"We would definitely recommend them to other companies considering buying them.".

Not what you're looking for? Search the site.

Back to top Back to top

Contact Hydramotion

Tel +44 1653 600294

Request information

Other Hydramotion stories

  • XL7 viscometers aid gelatine viscosity checks
    Hydramotion has reported how its XL7 inline viscometer has enabled a supplier of gelatine capsules to monitor the viscosity of the gelatine solution used in the capsule production process.
  • Viscometer checks food product viscosity
    Recognising the value of reliable viscosity measurement, a major manufacturer of spreadable cream cheese chose the XL7 on-line viscometer from Hydramotion.
  • Flow-through cell for online viscosity measurement
    New from viscosity measurement specialists Hydramotion is a flow-through measurement cell designed exclusively for use with its popular Viscolite VL700HP-T15 small-sample viscometer
  • Online viscometer optimises starch coating
    The XL7 online viscometer from Hydramotion has solved a long-standing viscosity measurement problem for the paper recycling operation of leading Australian packaging manufacturer Amcor
  • On-line viscometer monitors dense media
    An XL7 on-line viscometer from Hydramotion has proved "more than capable" of accurately monitoring the dense media used in the separation of mineral ores by a world leader in exploration and mining
Newsletter sign up

Request your free weekly copy of the Processingtalk email newsletter ...

Visit the Alfa Laval web site
A Pro-talk Publication

A Pro-talk publication