Method of manufacturing fuel tanks by blow moulding
09770861 · 2017-09-26
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B65D1/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C49/22
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B65D1/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C49/22
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A method of manufacturing fuel tanks made of polymer material using a blow molding technique, the method including: offering up at least one sheet form extrudate between two opposing cavities of an open mold with an impression that corresponds to a shape of a tank that is to manufactured; then bringing the two cavities together until the mold is closed; as the two cavities are being moved closer together and before the extrudate comes into contact with one of them, injecting a first fluid between the extrudate and at least one cavity; injecting a second fluid on the opposite side of the extrudate from each cavity, to press it firmly against the wall of the cavity; removing the first fluid present between the cavity and the extrudate before end of injection of the second fluid.
Claims
1. A method of manufacturing a plastic fuel tank from at least one sheet-form extrudate, comprising: offering up an extrudate between two opposing cavities of an open mold, an imprint of which corresponds to a shape of the tank that is to be manufactured; then bringing the two cavities closer together until the mold is closed; while the two cavities are being brought closer together, injecting a first fluid on a first side of the extrudate, which first side is situated between the extrudate and at least one cavity; injecting a second fluid on a second side of the extrudate; removing the first fluid present between the cavity and the extrudate before an end of injection of the second fluid to press the extrudate firmly against the cavity, the removing the first fluid including applying a suction from outside the mold or venting to atmospheric pressure.
2. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the extrudate includes two sheets each including a slab of plastic.
3. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the extrudate includes a tube including a plastic parison of any cross section.
4. The method as claimed in claim 3, wherein the parison is pre-blown before the two cavities of the mold are brought closer together, to give the parison a certain shape.
5. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the first fluid is injected between the extrudate and the cavity under at least one of the following injection conditions: at least two different temperatures; at least two different times; at least two different locations of the mold.
6. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein at least one of the cavities includes means allowing the fluid to pass but preventing a material of which the extrudate is made from flowing.
7. The method as claimed in claim 6, wherein at least one of the means allowing the fluid to pass but preventing a material of which the extrudate is made from flowing includes a directional nozzle allowing a jet of the first fluid to be directed toward a precise location in the mold.
8. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the second fluid is injected on the second side of the extrudate before the first fluid is removed.
9. A mold for manufacturing a plastic fuel tank by implementing the method as claimed in claim 1, including presence of orifices that allow the first fluid to be injected between the extrudate and the cavity, each orifice being connected to a pipe for the circulation of the first fluid.
10. The method as claimed in claim 3, wherein the plastic parison has a closed cross section.
Description
(1) The invention will be better understood from reading the attached figures which are given by way of nonlimiting example, in which:
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
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(9)
(10)
(11)
(12) This tank has been obtained by blow molding an extrudate in the form of a tubular parison in a blow-molding mold. The parison is itself obtained by extrusion just prior to blowing. It therefore constitutes an extrudate in sheet form, preferably a multilayer containing layers that form a barrier against hydrocarbons. The parison will be denoted indifferently by the terms parison and extrudate, given the way in which it is obtained. The invention would also be suited to the use of extrudates in the form of open tubes or even of slabs. One or more sheets may be blow-molded simultaneously in the mold, being welded together during the blow-molding or after the blow-molding.
(13) According to the known method of blow-molding, the extrudate is offered up between two opposing cavities of an open mold. These two cavities, when the mold is closed again, form the impression of an entire tank.
(14) To shape the parison, a fluid is injected under pressure on the opposite side of the extrudate to each cavity, in order to press it firmly against the wall of said cavity.
(15) The material of which the extrudate is made stretches and follows the shape of the mold, then, as it cools on contact with the wall of each cavity, sets and maintains this shape (give or take shrinkage) to form the wall 3 of the tank.
(16) In
(17)
(18) In the first position 11a, the parison has begun to swell, under the effect of the injection of fluid under pressure, hereinabove referred to as “second fluid” on its opposite side to the cavity 15. As it swells it begins to come into contact with the wall of the cavity 15 along two lines of contact 21 and 23 indicated schematically by stars which, at this point in the mold, are salient parts of the mold impression.
(19) As may be seen in
(20) These first contacts have the effect of cooling the parison around these two lines 21 and 23 and of sticking it to the wall of the cavity in the vicinity of these two lines.
(21) The parison therefore remains free between these two lines of contact 21 and 23 but finds itself constrained by its available length between these two lines in order to conform to the specific shape of the zone 5 of the cavity 15.
(22) In the invention there is created a circulation of fluid, hereinabove denoted “first fluid”, which in the example described consists of air, at the surface of the wall of the cavity 15, in the zone 5, by virtue of a vent indicated schematically by an arrow 25. The vent 25 is a conventional model, used in blow-molding molds to release the air trapped between the parison and the mold. One example of such vents is given in
(23) According to the invention, the first fluid may be air or any other gas or liquid or a mixture of one or more gases and of one or more liquids.
(24) The circulation of air creates, between the parison and the wall of the cavity in the zone 5, a cushion of air which prevents said parison from coming into contact with said wall. Thus, as depicted by the later position 11b, the parison conforms to the specific shape of the zone 5 without sticking to any other salient part of this zone.
(25) In other words, the circulation of air creates a cushion of air between the wall of the cavity 15 and the extrudate in order to prevent direct contact of the extrudate with the wall at the location of the cushion of air.
(26) As a result, the stretching of the parison is uniform between the two lines of contact 21 and 23 and no excessive reduction in thickness need be feared at certain points of the parison.
(27) After a certain time, which may be ten seconds or so and generally is comprised between a few seconds and twenty seconds or so, while air continues to be injected under pressure into the parison in order to make it conform to the mold 13, the injection of air through the vent 25 is halted (or even air is sucked out through the vent 25 with a view to accelerating its removal) to cause the air present between the parison and the wall of the cavity to be removed. Now that the cushion of air has disappeared, the parison then sticks to the wall of the zone 5 of the cavity at all points thereof, but without having experienced excessively localized stretching.
(28)
(29) This figure depicts the same blow-molding method except that no air cushion is created between the parison and the wall of the cavity 15. It is therefore a blow-molding method according to the prior art.
(30) It can be seen that having stuck to the two lines of contact 21 and 23, the parison, indicated schematically as a broken line 11c, enters the zone 5 and sticks again to a salient part, along a line of contact 27 (see also
(31) The result of excessive stretching of the parison is quantified using the measurements given in
(32)
(33) The most characteristic measures recorded are summarized in the following table.
(34) TABLE-US-00001 Region FIG. 5 FIG. 6 Line 27 4.6; 4.8; 5.0 4.7; 5.1; 5.3 Disk 9 4.4; 4.6; 5.4; 5.5 4.1; 4.9; 5.5; 5.6 Zone 29 3.9; 4.0; 4.4 3.6; 3.4; 4.1
(35) The units used are mm.
(36) It is clearly evident that, in zone 5 and more especially in the regions of the disk 9 and of the zone 29, the thickness of the parison is reduced far less by implementing the method according to the invention.
(37) The sequence of steps illustrated by the graph of
(38) Once the two cavities are in the final molding position, the moving-together step 42 ends and the cushion of air is maintained between the extrudate and the cavity or cavities of the mold by maintaining the injection of air (“first fluid”) during step 44.
(39) The injection of the second fluid, for blow-molding the extrudate in the mold, begins with a step 46 which starts before the end of the step 44 of injecting air (“first fluid”) and either before the start of this step 44 or during the latter. If it is preferable to pre-blow the extrudate in order to give it some volume before or during the moving-together of the two cavities 15 and 17 of the mold then the step 46 may have started before the start of the step 44.
(40) According to the invention, the step 44 of injecting air (“first fluid”) ends after the start of the step 46 of injecting the blow-molding fluid (“second fluid”), so that the firm pressing of the extrudate against the walls of the cavities caused by the blowing is controlled by the cushion of air. The end of step 44 of injecting air may consist of simply stopping the injection of air or of sucking air out through the vents.
(41) The invention therefore makes it possible to maintain better wall quality for the tank without the need to use an excessively thick parison. This results in a saving on material and a saving of weight.
(42) It is therefore clear that the stretching is better distributed over the entire surface of the parison that has benefited from the cushion of air.
(43) The vents 30 visible in
(44)
(45) The air injected into the canal 36 enters the small canal 38 whence it reemerges inside the mold in the form of a jet 40.
(46) Such a directional vent 34 allows air to be sent into the mold at a precise location in order to prevent premature contact of the extrudate with the wall of the cavity. Depending on the powerfulness of the air jet, it may be contemplated for the vent or vents to be positioned relatively distant from the locations of the cavity in which it is desirable to create an air cushion.
(47) The invention is not restricted to the embodiments set out and other embodiments will become clearly apparent to those skilled in the art.