Decentralised systems from machine builder Mikron ensure supply in times of the pandemic.
Protective masks have been in short supply in these times of coronavirus so why not just produce some yourself?! With a system from Mikron, this is almost within everybody’s reach.
Produces 50-100 face masks per minute
This scalable system produces 50-100 face masks per minute. With engineering support from Festo, Mikron managed to develop the system in a mere six weeks.
“Normally you would need six months for systems of this size,” says Nils Rödel, general manager of Mikron Berlin. But this is time we don’t have during the current coronavirus pandemic.
Globally and fast available: products from the Festo core product range like the guided drive DFM shown here preparing the ear loops
“So, 20 of our designers and fitters spent a week concentrating fully on this project and came up with a 3D model as the basis for this scalable system,” says Rödel.
The project was accelerated by the engineering support provided by Festo. “Even in this period of crisis, the electric and pneumatic components we needed were available quickly.
Integrating and commissioning electric drive solutions
"The fact that integrating and commissioning the electric drive solutions in the system as well as connecting them to the Beckhoff PLC was so quick and easy was also helpful,” says Rödel, adding, “the Festo Automation Suite software made integrating and commissioning the servo drive CMMT child’s play, and we were able to quickly make decisions about the correct sizes.”
The beauty of Mikron’s system is that it fits in a 20-foot shipping container, which can also act as a clean room. For example, in front of a hospital. or next to a shopping centre, or even behind a school.
The integrated air-conditioning system with air purification filters means that production is even possible in places with high risk of viral contamination. Depending on the raw materials, the system can operate autonomously for more than two hours.
“This reduces the number of people required, and as a result the risk of infection,” says Rödel. This means that the mini factory can also produce protective masks in remote areas or even in crisis zones where meeting hygiene standards is more challenging.
Meltblown non-woven fabric
It would, in effect, be possible to produce two million protective mouth-nose masks each month with just one system. The masks are based on meltblown non-woven fabric which is made up of many layers of fine fibres, and thus filter out even the smallest particles such as bacteria and viruses from the air being breathed in.
Most of the time, when we talk about factories we think of huge buildings far away from where the people who need the product live. Possibly even on faraway continents, thousands of miles away from the hospitals that urgently need protective masks.
Fits in a 20-foot shipping container: Mikron’s system for producing 50-100 protective masks a minute
This has been precisely the problem during the coronavirus pandemic: when demand skyrocketed, global supply chains were revealed to be less robust – and prone to corruption. When it comes to medical protective equipment, the failure of a delivery can cost human lives.
Eliminating the need for transport makes the end product cheaper, especially when it is possible to sell the masks to individual end consumers right where they are produced.
Shrink-wrapped for cleanliness
The system, depending on how it is configured, can make packs of 10 masks or individual ones, shrink-wrapped for cleanliness and in printed bags and boxes if required. “This involves docking an automated packaging station developed by our project partner pi4_robotics GmbH to the scalable system,” says Rödel.
Electric and pneumatic components from Festo ensure the reliable transport of the parts or perform clamping tasks in all process steps from the three-layer unwinding station, the shaping and folding station for the non-woven fabric, the ultrasonic sealing station for sealing the edges to attaching the ear loops.
The servo drives CMMT from Festo for controlling the electric drives EMMT are used in the application, since they can be easily connected to PLCs from other manufacturers such as Beckhoff, Siemens and Rockwell.
The pneumatic components from the Festo core product range installed in the system, such as the compact cylinder ADN, the guided drive DFM or the round cylinder DSNU are attractively priced, in stock worldwide and available within 24 hours.
The core range provided the ability to quickly and reliably build systems for producing masks within the shortest possible time. The pneumatic drives are actuated by MPA manifold mounted solenoid valves.
The safety valve MS6-SV-E ensures that safety-critical system components are exhausted and de-energised as quickly as possible in the event of an emergency stop.
Quickly available in 176 countries
Thanks to its international production and sales network, products from Festo are quickly available in 176 countries and enable systems to be built decentrally at locations around the world. This is entirely in keeping with the global open-source approach of the Carola project, which provided the impetus for designing the system.
The system needed to be as easy to commission as it is to build. “The current travel restrictions make it extremely difficult for commissioning technicians to get to where the systems are to be built,” says Rödel.
So Mikron came up with a digitised solution: “We use the HoloLens, which enables commissioning to also be done virtually using an interactive 3D projection.”
To watch a video of the mask production system in action visit: www.fes.to/mikron-yt-en