Method and device for producing a particle foam part
11358310 · 2022-06-14
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B29K2859/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C35/0805
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29K2075/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C33/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C44/3426
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29K2833/12
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C44/445
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29K2071/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29K2871/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29K2879/08
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29K2867/003
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C33/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29K2067/046
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
Abstract
This invention concerns a process for producing particle foam part in which foam particles are heated in a molding tool so that they weld to the particle foam part. Heat is supplied to the foam particles by means of electromagnetic RF radiation. The foam particles are made of polyurethane (PU), polylactate (PLA), polyethylene block amide (PEBA) or polyethylene terephthalate (PET).
Claims
1. Method for producing a particle foam part in which foam particles, formed from polyurethane, polylactate, polyethylene block amide (PEBA) or polyethylene terephthalate, are heated in a molding tool fusing the foam particles into the particle foam part, the foam particles being heated by electromagnetic radio frequency (RF) radiation.
2. Method according to claim 1, wherein the RF radiation has a frequency of at least 1 MHz and/or a maximum of 100 MHz.
3. Method according to claim 1 wherein the foam particles consist of a uniform material.
4. Method according to claim 1, wherein the foam particles are compressed in the molding tool.
5. Method according to claim 1, wherein the temperature of the foam particles in the molding tool is measured, the supply of the heat being controlled by means of electromagnetic RF radiation as a function of the measured temperature.
6. Method according to claim 1, wherein the surface of the molding tool defining a molding chamber is tempered.
7. Method according to claim 1, wherein a vacuum is applied to the molding tool so that gases and/or moisture contained therein are removed.
8. Method according to claim 1, the molding tool defining a molding chamber, wherein at least two capacitor plates are arranged adjacent to the molding chamber and are connected to an RF radiation source, wherein the RF radiation source is designed for emitting RF radiation.
9. Method according to claim 8, wherein the molding tool is formed from a material which is substantially transparent for electromagnetic RF radiation.
10. Method according to claim 8, wherein the capacitor plates are designed with a flat surface.
11. Method according to claim 8, wherein the molding tool has different thicknesses in the region between the respective capacitor plates so that the molding chamber is limited by three-dimensionally contoured inner delimiting surfaces.
12. Method according to claim 8, wherein the molding tool is tempered in the region of an inner delimiting surface defining the molding chamber and/or for supplying a heating medium to the regions adjacent to the inner delimiting surfaces.
13. Method according to claim 12, wherein the molding tool comprises a porous molding body which forms at least a part of the inner delimiting surface and is communicatively connected to a device for supplying a heating fluid.
14. Method according to claim 12, wherein the molding tool has at least one channel for supplying or passing through a heating fluid.
15. A device for producing a particle foam part, comprising: a material container holding loose polyurethane, polylactate, polyethylene block amide (PEBA) or polyethylene terephthalate foam particles, a molding tool defining a molding chamber, wherein at least two capacitor plates are arranged adjacent to the molding chamber and are connected to an RF radiation source, wherein the RF radiation source is designed for emitting RF radiation having a frequency of less than 300 MHz to heat the foam particles supplied from the material container, and the molding tool is provided at its inner delimiting surface with a passive heating layer made of a material which is not transparent to RF radiation and/or an electrical heating device.
16. Device according to claim 15, wherein the passive heating layer is formed from a ferrite.
17. Device according to claim 15, wherein the capacitor plates of the molding tool are adapted to the contour of the inner delimiting surfaces of the molding tool.
18. Apparatus for producing a particle foam part, comprising: a material container holding loose polyurethane, polylactate, polyethylene block amide (PEBA) or polyethylene terephthalate foam particles, a molding tool defining a molding chamber for receiving the foam particles from the material container, wherein at least two capacitor plates are arranged adjacent to the molding chamber and are connected to an RF radiation source, wherein the RF radiation source is designed for emitting RF radiation, and wherein the capacitor plates have a three-dimensional contoured shape, a portion of the capacitor plates facing an area of the mold space in which in use the foam particles are more densified than in another area further away from the molding chamber than a portion of the capacitor plates that forms an area of the molding chamber in which the foam particles are less compressed.
19. Method according to claim 8, wherein the capacitor plates are each formed from a plurality of segments which can be set independently of one another at a distance from the molding chamber repeatedly or once.
20. Method according to claim 8, wherein the RF radiation source is designed to emit RF radiation, has a frequency of at least 1 MHz and/or a maximum of 100 MHz.
21. A method for producing a particle foam part, comprising: providing polyurethane, polylactate, polyethylene block amide (PEBA) or polyethylene terephthalate foam particles in a molding tool; and heating the foam particles with RF radiation to weld the particles, into the particle foam part, wherein the molding tool has a molding chamber and at least two capacitor plates are arranged adjacent to the molding chamber and are connected to an RF radiation source, wherein the RF radiation source is designed for emitting RF radiation.
22. Method according to claim 1, wherein the foam particles are formed from polylactate.
23. Method according to claim 1, wherein the foam particles are formed from polyethylene block amide (PEBA) or polyethylene terephthalate.
24. Method according to claim 1, wherein the RF radiation source is designed to emit RF radiation having a frequency of less than 300 MHz.
Description
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4) A device 1 for producing a particle foam part comprises a material container 2, a molding tool 3 and a line 4 leading from the material container 2 to the molding tool 3.
(5) The material container 2 serves to hold loose foam particles. The material container 2 has a bottom 5, whereby it is connected to a compressed air source 7 via a compressed air line 6 in the bottom area. The compressed air line 6 is connected to several nozzles arranged in the bottom 5 (not shown), so that several air streams (fluidizing air) can be introduced into the material container 2, which swirl the foam particles contained therein and thereby separate them.
(6) In the region of the bottom 5 of the material container 2 there is an opening to which the delivery line 4 is connected. The opening can be closed with a slide (not shown).
(7) Adjacent to the material container there is a jet nozzle 8 in delivery line 4. The propelling nozzle 8 is connected to the compressed air source 7 by another compressed air line 9. Compressed air supplied to this propelling nozzle 8 serves as propelling air, as it enters the delivery line 4 through the propelling nozzle 8 and flows in the direction of the molding tool 3. This creates a vacuum at the blowing nozzle 8 on the side facing the material container 2, which sucks foam particles from the material container.
(8) Delivery line 4 flows into a filling injector 10, which is coupled to molding tool 3. The filling injector 10 is connected to compressed air source 7 via another compressed air line 11. The compressed air supplied to the filling injector 10 is used on the one hand to fill the molding tool 3 by applying the flow of foam particles by means of the compressed air in the direction of the molding tool 3. On the other hand, the compressed air supplied to the injector 10 can also be used to blow back the foam particles from the delivery line 4 into the material container 2 when the filling process at the molding tool 3 is completed.
(9) Molding tool 3 consists of two molding halves 12, 13. Between the two molding halves at least one molding chamber 14 is limited in which the filling injector 10 opens for the introduction of the foam particles. The volume of the molding chamber 14 can be reduced by closing the two molding halves 12, 13. When molding halves 12, 13 are moved apart, a gap is formed between the molding halves 12, 13, which is referred to as the crack gap. For this reason, such a molding tool 3 is also called a crack-gap molding tool.
(10) Device 1 has no steam generator and no steam supply to the molding chamber 14 as it is usual with conventional devices for producing particle foam parts. Moisture in molding chamber 14 comes solely from the residual moisture contained in the material of the foam particles and from the moisture contained in the compressed air. No water or steam is added to the foam particles in material container 2 or during transport to molding chamber 14.
(11) A capacitor plate 15, 16 is arranged at each of the molding halves 12, 13. These capacitor plates each consist of a well electrically conductive material, e.g. copper. The filling injector 10 is arranged on the molding half 13. The filling injector 10 extends through a recess in the capacitor plate 16, which is mounted on the molding half 13.
(12) The capacitor plates 15, 16 are connected to an AC voltage source 18 via electrical lines 17 for the transmission of high-frequency voltages.
(13) The molding halves 12, 13 each have a base body which is made of an electrically non-conductive and particularly for electromagnetic RF radiation 35 transparent material, such as polytetra-fluoroethylene (PTFE), polyethylene, particularly UHMWPE, polyether-ketone (PEEK). Only the capacitor plates 15, 16 are electrically conductive.
(14) The molding tool can optionally be connected to a vacuum pump 31, so that a negative pressure or vacuum can be applied to the molding chamber 14. This negative pressure causes the moisture contained in the molding chamber 14 to be removed.
(15) The capacitor plates 15, 16 are preferably equipped with a cooling device. In the present design example, the cooling device is formed by fans 32, which direct cooling air to the side of the capacitor plates 15, 16 facing away from the molding chamber 14. For increasing the cooling effect, cooling fins 33 are provided on the capacitor plates 15, 16.
(16) Alternatively, or additionally, cooling lines can also be arranged at the capacitor plates 15, 16, through which a cooling medium is passed. The preferred cooling medium is a liquid, e.g. water or oil.
(17) In the following, a process for producing particle foam parts with the device described above is explained:
(18) The method comprises the following steps: Filling the molding chamber 14 Welding of the foam particles Stabilization (optional) Demolding Cleaning of the tool (optional)
(19) To fill the molding chamber 14, air is blown in via the compressed air line 6 in the region of the bottom 5 of the material container to swirl and separate the foam particles contained therein. At the same time propelling air is fed to the propelling nozzle so that 2 foam particles are sucked from the material container into the conveying line 4 and transported with the propelling air in the direction of the molding tool 3. Molding chamber 14 is closed, whereby molding halves 12, 13 can be fully collapsed or spaced apart by a crack gap.
(20) The slide of material container 2 can be opened and closed in succession. Opening and shutter speeds typically range from 500 ms to 1 s. By this cyclic opening and closing of the slider, the foam particles are fed intermittently from the material container 2 to the delivery line 4. This can break up bridging of the foam particles in material container 2 and the foam particles are separated. This is particularly useful for foam particles with an adhesive surface, such as eTPU foam particles.
(21) Alternatively, intermittent suction can also take place by an intermittent supply of the propelling air from the compressed air line 9 at the propelling nozzle 8 arranged directly adjacent to the material container 2.
(22) Molding tool 12, 13 is equipped with at least one valve (not shown) which is open when foam particles are fed so that the compressed air flowing into molding chamber 14 can escape. When filling the molding chamber 14, this valve can be adjusted such that a counter pressure forms in the molding chamber 14.
(23) This allows the pressure in the delivery line and in the molding chamber 14 to be maintained, which keeps the foam particles at a small volume. This allows more foam particles to be fed into the molding chamber 14 than would be possible without applying counterpressure.
(24) After reducing the back pressure expands the foam particles in the molding chamber 14. Another parameter for setting the filling quantity is the crack gap, i.e. the gap with which the two molding halves 12, 13 are spaced apart during filling. The use of a crack gap during filling mainly increases the density in the thin area of the particle foam part to be produced.
(25) As soon as it is determined that the molding chamber 14 is filled with foam particles, the filling injector 10 is closed. The foam particles in the line are blown back into the material container 2 with the compressed air supplied to the filling injector 10.
(26) The filling of molding chamber 14 with foam particles is described in detail in the German patent application DE 10 2014 1 17 332, which is why reference is made to this patent application.
(27) After filling the molding chamber 14 with foam particles, these are heated by electromagnetic RF radiation. This RF radiation is generated by applying a high-frequency voltage of about 10.sup.4V with a frequency of 27.12 MHz to the capacitor plates 15, 16.
(28) The foam particles are based on polyurethane (eTPU). Polyurethane has a dielectric loss factor D of 0.2 with electromagnetic radiation at a frequency of 1 MHz. The dielectric loss factor of polypropylene (PP) at an electromagnetic radiation with a frequency of 1 MHz is only 0.00035. The absorbency of polyurethane is therefore much higher than that of polypropylene.
(29) This makes it possible, without additional heat transferring substances, particularly aqueous solutions, to introduce the necessary heat for welding the foam particles in the molding chamber 14, since the foam particles themselves absorb the electromagnetic waves.
(30) In place of foam particles based on polyurethane, foam particles based on polyethylene block amide (PEBA) or based on polyethylene (PE) can also be used.
(31) The duration over which the electromagnetic RF radiation is applied depends on the volume of molding chamber 14, on the density of the foam particles and on the applied electrical power or voltage.
(32) Tests have shown that, depending on the volume and the material from which the foam particles are formed, it takes about 30 s to about 2 min to weld the foam particles reliably and completely. An electrical voltage of 5 kV to 20 kV was applied in that case.
(33) Preferably the temperature of the foam particles is measured during welding and the electrical power is regulated accordingly. The electrical power is preferably controlled so that the foam particles have a temperature slightly above their softening temperature.
(34) The surface delimited by the molding chamber 14 can also be tempered. For this purpose, heating wires 34 can be arranged in the molding tool adjacent to the surface delimiting the molding chamber 14. The heating wires 34 are connected to a power source 35, with which a heating current can be fed into the heating wires.
(35) Instead of heating wires, fluid channels can also be provided in the molding halves 12, 13 through which flows an appropriate temperature-controlled fluid. Preferably the fluid is water or steam.
(36) After the application of the electromagnetic RF radiation, the molding chamber 14 is kept closed for a predetermined time, whereby the heat introduced is distributed evenly in the particle foam part and a very uniform weld is formed between all foam particles.
(37) This process step is called stabilization. During stabilization, the particle foam part also cools slightly. Since the molding halves 12, 13 are made of a material that is essentially transparent to electromagnetic RF radiation and is usually a plastic material that conducts heat poorly, little heat is generally given off to the outside in closed molding chamber 14.
(38) Molding halves 12, 13 made of plastic have the advantage over molding halves made of metal that they insulate much better thermally and have a lower heat capacity. This allows the desired temperature cycles to be carried out much faster and with less energy, whereby the supplied heat is fed almost completely to the foam particles.
(39) During the stabilization period or part of the stabilization period, the capacitor plates 15, 16 can be actively cooled by the cooling device 32, 33, whereby heat is extracted from the basic bodies of the molding halves 12, 13 and thus also from the particle foam part.
(40) After stabilization, the particle foam part is demolded by moving the two molding halves 12, 13 apart. The molding tools can be provided with demolding rods for demolding with which the particle foam part is pushed out of one of the two molding halves 12, 13.
(41) Stabilization is an optional process step. It can also be omitted for certain materials and shapes. The larger the volume of the particle foam part to be produced, the more expedient it is to stabilize the particle foam part in the mold after welding.
(42) Electromagnetic RF radiation can be applied during the filling and/or closing of a crack gap to increase throughput.
(43) The RF radiation can be applied during filling or only after filling the molding chamber 14 with foam particles, initially with low electrical power or low electrical voltage, to preheat the material to a certain temperature and then gradually or abruptly increase the electrical power or voltage.
(44) It may also make sense to gradually increase the power or voltage of RF electromagnetic radiation so that a ramp is executed over a period of, for example, 30 seconds to 3 minutes by the gradual increase in the electrical power or voltage of RF electromagnetic radiation. This results in a very uniform heating of the foam particles.
(45) Optionally, a negative pressure and/or vacuum can be applied to the molding chamber 14. This is useful if the foam particles and/or the supplied compressed air have a certain humidity.
(46) The method described above is a dry process compared to steam welding. This ensures that the produced particle foam parts are dry after the production process and can be immediately added to further processing steps. It may also be advisable to remove the warm particle foam parts from the molding tool and feed them directly for further processing. For example, when manufacturing shoes, a midsole made of a particle foam part can be welded to a profile body made of another plastic material, whereby not as much energy is required to weld to the still warm or still hot particle foam part as would be the case with a steam process in which the particle foam part must be completely cooled and dried. As a result, substantial increases in efficiency can be achieved in production, since on the one hand the breaks between individual process steps can be shortened, on the other hand, the heat introduced for welding the foam particles can also be used at least in part for subsequent process steps.
(47) In the following, different tools are explained which each have two molding halves 12, 13 and can be used in the device 1 described above.
(48) These tools are schematically simplified in
(49) Molding tool 3 according to a second design example (
(50) The molding halves 12, 13 each have a flat outside surface 20 on which a capacitor plate 15, 16 is arranged. The space between the contoured delimiting surfaces 19 and the outside surfaces 20 is filled by the transparent material. The capacitor plates 15, 16 are flat. With this molding tool 3 three-dimensional contoured particle foam parts can be produced, whereby the shape of the particle foam part is defined by the inner delimiting surfaces 19 of the molding halves 12, 13. Such a molding tool 3 is particularly suitable for producing small particle foam parts with essentially uniform density.
(51) The problem with large or thick particle foam parts is that they heat up more in the middle than in the edge area, which can destroy the particle structure.
(52) This can lead to a complete melting of the foam particles in the central area of the particle foam part (
(53)
(54) The RF radiation was applied here for a duration of 300 s with a frequency of 27.12 MHz, the voltage at the particle foam part shown in
(55) To avoid unequal heating of the central area and the edge area of a particle foam part, the molding tool 3 can be tempered and/or additional heat can be added to the foam particles in the edge area of molding chamber 14.
(56) For tempering molding tool 3, molding halves 12, 13 can be designed with fluid channels through which a fluid is passed which is tempered to approximately the softening temperature of the material in molding chamber 14. Alternatively, or additionally, 3 heating wires can be provided for tempering the molding tools, as described above. As a result, no heat flows from the foam particles into molding 3 when the foam particles are heated, so that the foam particles are heated uniformly throughout the molding chamber 14.
(57) It may even be appropriate to heat the molding tool 3 to a temperature slightly above the temperature set in the foam particles to fuse them by introducing RF radiation to ensure reliable welding of the particle foam part in the surface area. Tempering of molding tool 3 can also be carried out before welding with RF radiation.
(58)
(59) The molding halves 12, 13 are made of two parts: an outer non-porous shell wall 21 and an inner porous molded body 22.
(60) The porous shaped bodies 22 define the inner delimiting surface 19 to define the molding chamber 14. On the sides facing away from the inner delimiting surface 19, the shaped bodies 22 are positively surrounded by the shell wall 21. The molding halves 12, 13 each have one or more channels 23, which each open at the shell wall and extend into the porous molded bodies 22 and end there. A hot medium can be introduced through channels 23 into the 10 molding halves 12, 13, which is distributed in the porous molded body 22 and partly enters the molding chamber 14. On the one hand this heats the foam particles in the edge area of molding chamber 14 directly through the medium and on the other hand the molding halves 12, 13, particularly their porous molded bodies 22, are also heated. Hot gases, especially hot air or steam, can be used as media.
(61) To cool the molding tool or the particle foam part produced in it, it may also be advisable to introduce a cool medium into the channels 23 and thus into the molding chamber 14.
(62) A medium is cool if it is colder than the mold half 12, 13 or colder than the particle foam part in mold chamber 14. This can accelerate the stabilization of the particle foam part.
(63) Both the jacket wall and the shaped bodies 22 are each made of materials that are essentially transparent to RF radiation, such as polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), polyethylene, particularly UHMWPE, polyether ether ketone (PEEK). The shaped bodies 22 are produced, for example, by sintering a granulate from one of these materials.
(64) Another alternative to tempering the inner delimiting surfaces 19 of molding tool 3 is to provide the inner delimiting surfaces 19 with a layer of a material that is not transparent to RF radiation. This layer is referred to below as passive heating layer 24 (
(65) Materials with a moderate loss factor, such as polyoxymethylene (POM) and polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA) can also be used as passive heating layer 24. Polyoxymethylene has a dielectric loss factor D of about 0.008 and polymethyl methacrylate of about 0.02. Due to the relatively low loss factor, these heating layers shall be provided with a certain thickness which is preferably at least 2 mm, in particular at least 2.5 mm and in particular at least 5 mm. Such a heating layer can also have a thickness of 10 mm or more. Such heating layers can also be formed as separate plates, which are arranged adjacent to the inner delimiting surfaces 19 of the form halves 12, 13.
(66) The heating layer 24 can not only be provided at the delimiting surfaces 19 adjacent to the capacitor plates, but also at all delimiting surfaces 19 of the molding halves 12, 13, so that they completely surround the particle to be formed 15 foam part. The same also applies to the other heating and tempering devices mentioned above, such as temperature channels or heating wires.
(67) The different possibilities for tempering the inner delimiting surfaces 19 listed above can also be used in combination in a molding tool.
(68) The design examples of molding tools 3 explained above each have flat capacitor plates 15, 16. According to a further embodiment of the molding tools 3, these can be designed such that the capacitor plates 15, 16 are adapted to the shape of the particle foam part or of the mold space 14 to be produced. The design example shown in
(69) On the outside surfaces 20 the capacitor plates 15, 16 are designed as an electrically conductive layer and have essentially the same shape or contour as the corresponding outside surface 20 of the respective molding half 12, 13.
(70) As the capacitor plates in the molding tool are adapted to the particle foam parts to be produced or to the molding chamber 14, the distance between the opposing capacitor plates is approximately the same everywhere, whereby the distance between the opposing capacitor plates 15, 16 can be kept small, so that a high electrical 10 field strength is achieved at relatively low voltage.
(71) Such a formal adaptation of the capacitor plates to the shape of the particle foam parts to be produced is particularly useful for shell-shaped particle foam parts. Such shell-shaped particle foam parts are for example boxes or spherical segment shaped shells. If such a case were to be formed between two flat capacitor plates, the distance between the capacitor plates would have to be so large that the entire case would have space between them. The distance between the two capacitor plates can only be slightly larger than wall thickness of the particle foam part. Such a formal adaptation of the capacitor plates therefore makes it possible to produce large-volume, particularly shell-shaped particle foam parts, while keeping the requirements for the voltage source low to provide a sufficient electrical field for welding the foam particles.
(72) The problem with particle foam parts of different densities is that the areas with higher density absorb more heat than the areas with lower density. Areas with higher density are created, for example, in the cracking gap process, in which the two molding halves 12, 13, after they are already filled with foam particles, are pressed together a bit, whereby the foam particles contained therein are compressed. The thin areas of the molding chamber 14 are compressed more strongly relative to the thicker areas, since the displacement path is the same in all areas. This causes the foam particles in the thinner areas to be compressed more strongly.
(73)
(74) The segment rods 26 are slidably arranged in a holder 27, in which they can be fixed in a predetermined position. The bracket 27 can be designed in such a way that the segment rods 26 can be detachably fixed, whereby segment rods 26 and thus the capacitor plates 28 can be fixed in different positions. However, the brackets 27 can also be designed to fix the segment rods 26 once. Such supports 27 can, for example, be formed from a potting body which surrounds the segment rods 26 at least in certain areas and is poured out in a predetermined desired arrangement after the segment rods 26 and of the capacitor plates 28 have been arranged. Such once-fixable capacitor plates 15, 16 are mainly used for particle foam parts, which are produced very often or in large quantities and for which the corresponding tool is repeatedly used. The capacitor plates 15, 16 are then assigned the corresponding form halves 12, 13, with which they are used repeatedly.
(75) The greater the distance between the sections of the capacitor plates 15, 16, the smaller the electrical field generated between the respective sections. Therefore, the capacitor plates 28, which are arranged to areas of the molding chamber 14, in which the foam particles are present in high density during the production of a particle foam part with a greater distance to the molding chamber than in the areas, in which the foam particles are present with low density. This can compensate for the areas with higher density absorbing more heat than the areas with lower density, so that the foam particles are heated uniformly in the mold chamber 14.
(76) The molding tool 3 shown in
(77) The foam particles 29 have a higher density in area A than in areas B and C. Therefore, the capacitor plates 28, which are arranged adjacent to the range A or point to range A, are arranged further away from a central plane 30 than the capacitor plates 28, which point to ranges B and C, respectively. The center plane 30 is arranged approximately centrally between the two capacitor plates 15, 16.
(78) Since with the invention the foam particles are heated primarily by direct absorption of the RF radiation, i.e. that the heat is not or only to a small extent absorbed by a heat-transferring medium that absorbs the RF radiation and releases it to the foam particles, the temperature in the molding chamber cannot be controlled by parameters that act on a heat-transferring medium. In the state of the art, for example, it is known to use water as heat-transferring medium and to regulate the temperature in the molding chamber by adjusting the pressure. Due to the predominantly direct absorption, the foam particles can become as hot as desired and heat up to different degrees in different densities.
(79) The basic aim is to heat the foam particles in the molding chamber as evenly as possible, in case they are made of the same material. By shaping the electric field with areas of different intensity or field strength by varying the distance of the capacitor plates 15, 16 to the molding chamber 14 or to the central plane 30, an even heating of the foam particles can be achieved in molding chamber 14, even if they are arranged there with different density. Therefore, it may be advantageous to provide capacitor plates 15, 16 with a non-planar configuration.
(80) In the design example shown in
(81)
(82) The capacitor plates 15, 16 can, for example, be produced by an electrically conductive coating which is applied to the outside surfaces 20 of the molding halves 12, 13 is applied. The capacitor plates 15, 16 can also be designed as flexible sheet metal parts, which consist of an electrically well conducting metal or an electrically well conducting metal alloy and are adapted in the form to the outside surface 20 and are glued to the outside surfaces.
(83) Also in this design, 30 as in the type shown in
(84) The distance of the individual sections of the capacitor plates 15, 16 to the center plane 30 is approximately proportional to the density of the foam particles 29 in the ranges between the opposite sections of the capacitor plates 15. The proportionality factor differs between the different materials and depends on their absorption capacity of the RF radiation.
(85) Molding tool 3 for producing large particle foam parts can have several separate segments of capacitor plates 15, 16. It is advisable that the capacitor plates are in no direction greater than a quarter of the wavelength of the RF radiation.
(86) At a frequency of 27.12 MHz, the wavelength v is about 11 m. The maximum extension of the segments of the capacitor plates should therefore not exceed about 2.75 meters. Practice has shown that capacitor plates up to a size of about two meters generate a very uniform electric field at a frequency of 27.12 MHz.
(87) If the capacitor plates are larger than γ/4 the radiation of the individual points of the capacitor plates is different and they no longer emit synchronously. For capacitor plates larger than R/4, it is advisable to provide distributed inductances on the capacitor plate, each forming an LC element.
(88) This allows the synchronicity of the vibrations of the different sections of the capacitor plates to be restored. However, the provision of such LC elements is very complex. It may therefore be more expedient to use the capacitor plates into separate sections which are independently supplied with an AC voltage.
(89)
(90) The following table shows the parameters of the voltage U, the duration t, the electrical loss factor D at 1 MHz and room temperature, the designation of the material and the reference to the figure.
(91) TABLE-US-00001 FIG. Material U(KV) T(s) D 7a ePEBA 7.5 50 0.12 7b oTPU 7.5 25 1 0 0 1 1 1 0 2 1 2 7c eTPU 7.5 50 1 0 0 1 1 1 0 2 1 2 7d eTPU 9 30 0.112 7e eTPU 9 60 0.112 7f PLA 9 70 <0.1 7g PLA 9 70 <0.1 7h PLA 9 120 <0.1 7i PLA 9 90 <0.1 7j PET 10 300 0 014-0 048 7k PET 7.5 300 0.014-0.048
(92) It has been shown that all materials ePEBA (polyether block amides), eTPU (expanded thermoplastic polyurethane), PLA (polylactate) and PET (polyethylene terephthalate) can have been well welded together by entry of heat by means of RF radiation alone. In the example shown in
(93) The above examples show that the inventive process can be used to process a wide variety of materials. PET is 100% recyclable. PET is obtained in large quantities at low cost from a recycling process. PET has so far been the preferred material for plastic beverage bottles. It is also very hard and allows the production of particle foam bodies with similar properties such as expanded polypropylene (epp) particle foam body.
(94) PLA is also 100% recyclable, fully biodegradable and has mechanical properties such as expanded polystyrene (ePS) particle foam parts. Initial measurements have shown that PLA has a dielectric loss factor in the region of about 0.1 to 0.01. Exact measurements are not yet available. PLA has a softening temperature of approx. 100° C.
(95) In comparison, the softening temperature of eTPU is about 125° C. to 130° C. and that of polyethyl enterephtalate about 200° C. to 260° C.
(96) ePEBA is very light and highly elastic. It has similar properties to particle foam parts made of expanded thermoplastic polyurethane.
(97) The invention can be summarized as follows:
(98) The present invention pertains to a process for manufacturing a hybrid component such as a metal and plastic component. Foam particles are heated in a molding tool so that they are welded to the particle foam part. Heat is supplied to the foam particles by means of electromagnetic RF radiation. The foam particles are made of polyurethane, polyethylene block amide (PEBA), polylactate (PLA) or polyethylene terephthalate (PET).
REFERENCE NUMBERS
(99) 1. Device 2. Material Container 3. Molding tool 4. Line 5. Flooring 6. Compressed air pipe 7. Compressed air source 8. Propelling nozzle 9. Compressed air line 10. Filling injector 11. Compressed air line 12. Molding half 13. Molding half 14. Molding chamber 15. Capacitor plate 16. Capacitor plate 17. Electrical cable 18. AC voltage source 19. Delimiting surface (inside) 20. Outside surface 21. Jacket wall (non-porous) 22. Shaped body (porous) 23. Channel 24. Passive heating layer 25. Segment 26. Segment bar 27. Mounting 28. Capacitor plates 29. Foam particles 30. Center plane 31. Vacuum pump 32. Fan 33. Cooling fin 34. Heating wire 35. Current source