CORE ELEMENT FOR SANDWICH ELEMENTS, USE OF SUCH A CORE ELEMENT, AND METHOD FOR PRODUCING SUCH A CORE ELEMENT
20220152959 · 2022-05-19
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
Y02B10/20
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
F24S20/66
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24S20/64
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B29D24/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B37/182
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B5/18
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B7/12
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B3/06
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29D99/001
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F28F3/044
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B32B3/28
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F24D3/12
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Y02B30/00
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
E04C2/32
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
B32B7/05
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
E04C2/296
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
Y02E10/40
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
B32B37/18
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B3/30
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B29D24/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
E04C2/32
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
E04C2/34
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
Abstract
Core element for sandwich elements, wherein the core element has at least two hemisphere panels which are combined with one another, wherein each hemisphere panel has, between planar portions, and spaced apart from one another, uniform hemispherical elevations, wherein the two or in each case two hemisphere panels face one another by way of their elevations, wherein, with two or in each case two hemisphere panels combined with one another, the elevations of one hemisphere panel each bear with their apexes or apex surfaces against a planar portion of the other hemisphere panel, and wherein two hemisphere panels are connected to one another by virtue of the elevations being connected, in the region of their apexes or apex surfaces, to the planar portion of the other or another hemisphere panel against which they bear. Moreover, the invention also relates to the use of a core element and to a method for producing a core element.
Claims
1. A core element (20), in particular for sandwich elements, wherein the core element (20) has at least two hemisphere panels (16, 18) combined with each other, each hemisphere panel (16, 18) having uniform hemispherical elevations (12) or elevations (12) in the shape of a sphere segment or a sphere layer between planar regions (10) and spaced at a distance from one another, the two or in each case two hemisphere panels (16, 18) face each other with their elevations (12), and when two or in each case two hemisphere panels (16, 18) combined with each other, the elevations (12) of a hemispherical panel (16, 18) respectively make contact with their apex points or apex surfaces to a planar region of the other hemisphere panel (16, 18), wherein two hemisphere panels (16, 18) are connected to each other in that the elevations (12) are connected in the region of their apex points or apex surfaces with the planar region of the other or another hemisphere panel (16, 18) to which they make contact.
2. The core element (20) according to claim 1, wherein the elevations (12) of the hemisphere panels (16, 18) combined with each other are arranged at a distance to each other.
3. The core element (20) according to claim 1, wherein each hemisphere panel (16, 18) has the elevations (12) in a matrix-shaped elevation array, and the elevation array of the hemisphere panels (16, 18) combined with each other is equivalent.
4. The core element (20) according to claim 1, wherein the elevations (12) carry a dimple (26) pointing radially outward in the region of their apex points or apex surfaces, each hemisphere panel (16, 18) has openings (28) in the area of its planar regions and in the elevation array to accommodate respectively one dimple (26), and for two or in each case two hemisphere panels (16, 18) combined with each other, the dimples (26) of one hemisphere panel (16, 18) engage into the opening (28) of the respectively other hemisphere panel (16, 18) with a shape lock.
5. The core element (20) according to claim 1, comprising at least two hemisphere panels (16, 18) connected to each other on two perimeter sides, wherein the two hemisphere panels (16, 18) connected to each on two perimeter sides accommodate a volumetric flow of a liquid or gaseous medium (34) from one the remaining perimeter sides to the other remaining perimeter side.
6. The core element (20) according to claim 1, comprising lines (30) embedded between two hemisphere panels (16, 18) facing each other and between the elevations (12) of these hemisphere panels (16, 18).
7. The element (20) according to claim 1, wherein a free space between two hemisphere panels (16, 18) facing each other and between the elevations (12) comprised by said hemisphere panels (16, 18) is filled with an insulating material (34).
8. The core element (20) according to claim 1, comprising elevations (12) filled with an intumescent construction material.
9. The use of a core element (20) according to claim 1 as panel heater or panel cooler.
10. The use of a core element (20) according to claim 1 as sun collector.
11. A method for producing a core element (20) according to claim 1, wherein at least two hemisphere panels (16, 18) are oriented to face each other with their elevations (12) and are combined with each other in a configuration, wherein the apex points or apex surfaces of the elevations (12) make contact to a hemisphere panel (16, 18), respectively on a planar region of the other hemisphere panel (16, 18) between elevations (12) located there, wherein the at least two hemisphere panels (1, 18) are combined by connecting the apex points or apex surfaces of the elevations of one hemisphere panel (16, 18) with respectively one planar region of the other hemisphere panel (16, 18) between elevations (12) located there.
12. The method according to claim 11, wherein the at least two hemisphere panels (16, 18) are combined by connecting the apex points or apex surfaces of the elevations of one hemisphere panel (16, 18) with respectively one planar region of the other hemisphere panel (16, 18) between elevations (12) located there such that the elevations (12) of the hemisphere panels (16, 18) combined with each other are arranged at a distance to each other.
13. The method according to claim 11, wherein the at least two hemisphere panels (16, 18) are combined by gluing or melting together radially outward pointing dimples (26) originating in the region of the apex points or apex surfaces from the elevations (12) of a hemisphere panel (16, 18) with respectively one opening (28) in a planar region of the other hemisphere panel (16, 18) between elevations (12) located there.
Description
[0032] The drawings show in:
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[0047] Reference is made to the discussion and definitions in the general specification section regarding the geometry of the elevations 12. When the elevation 12 is labeled as hemispherical, this expressly does not mean a restriction to the geometric shape of a hemisphere. A hemisphere is instead only one of many possibilities. Other possible geometries are in particular geometries having the shape of a sphere segment, a hemisphere segment, a sphere layer, hemisphere layer, and those geometries based on an ellipsoid in place of a sphere. Without reference to such geometries, any one elevation 12 can also be defined in that it has an elliptical, in particular circular base, an at least sectionally convex outer surface, and an upper apex point, and in place of an apex point, has an apex surface with an elliptical, in particular circular, perimeter.
[0048] Any further mention of an elevation 12 in the specification to follow at all times implies including the aforementioned geometries and/or the above definition that omits reference to such geometries.
[0049] The elevations 12 are for example molded into an originally planar panel 10 by deep drawing. The panel 10 can alternatively also be formed with all elevations 12 in a production process, in particular along a production line.
[0050] The panel 10 together with the elevations 12 comprised by the panel 10 as a single piece (only individual elevations 12 shown) is hereinafter called a hemisphere panel 14. Here too, the specification at all times implies that the geometry of the elevations 12 of a component referred to as a hemisphere panel 14 is expressly not limited to an exact hemispherical shape. Irrespective of what exact geometry the respective elevations 12 have, it is always implied that the elevations 12 of a component referred to as a hemisphere panel 14 have the same height and the same shape, or least within the framework of typical manufacturing tolerances have the same height and the same shape; every hemisphere panel 14 has uniform elevations 12.
[0051] For the hemisphere panels 14 shown in
[0052] For a hemisphere panel 14 with true hemispherical elevations 12, these elevations 12 all have the same radius and therefore also the same height. The radius of a hemispherical elevation 12 determines the respective diameter of its circular base surface area. Elevations 12 with consistently equivalent radius and consistently equivalent circular base surface area and consistently equivalent curvature radius have consistently uniform (equivalently-shaped) elevations 12. This applies likewise for all other shapes of the elevations 12.
[0053] These uniform elevations 12 are spaced at a distance from each other and—for the embodiment shown—are in a principally optional manner distributed over the surface area of the hemisphere panel 14 in a uniform matrix array. The uniform array (elevation array) is characterized in that an imagined connecting line between an elevation 12 and an adjacent further elevation 12 (for example a connecting line between the apex points of these elevations 12 or a connecting line between the centers of the apex surfaces of these elevations 12) results in a distance between these elevations 12 that is regularly repeated as one progresses along the connecting line (array dimension). Different connection lines and therefore different directions of connecting lines are conceivable with the elevation array. The regularly repeating distance is implied along all such connecting lines, wherein parallel connecting lines have equivalent distances between respectively two elevations 12, and non-parallel connecting lines can also result in differences between the distances between respectively two elevations 12 along a first connecting line and along a second connecting line not parallel thereto.
[0054] The following are examples of materials conceivable as materials for a hemisphere panel 14: plastics such as PP, PE, PS, PVC, PMMA, PC, PET, and bio-polymers, composites such as carbon-fiber composites, fiberglass composites, Litecor, metal composites, and composite-coated sheetmetal, paper, casting materials such as resins, concrete, gypsum, and metal, and metals such as steel, titanium, aluminum, copper, brass, etc. Foam materials such as XPS foam, PE foam, PET foam, PUR foam, etc. can also be used for special applications.
[0055] The representation in
[0056] We already note here that the shown arrangement of the elevations 12 relative to each other on the surface of the panel 10 is strictly an exemplary arrangement. Other arrangements are likewise conceivable and at least individual particularly preferred arrangements will be shown below.
[0057] For purposes of differentiation, the hemisphere panels 14 shown in the representation in
[0058] Exactly one hemisphere panel 14; 16, 18 forms a part of the core element 20 proposed here and is hereinafter referred to as core or core element for sandwich elements. Exactly one first hemisphere panel 16 and exactly one second hemisphere panel 18 together form a simple embodiment of a core element 20 for sandwich elements proposed here. When a first hemisphere panel 16 and a second hemisphere panel 18 are combined, the two hemisphere panels 16, 18 face each other with the outer surfaces of their elevations 12. When a first hemisphere panel 16 is combined with a second hemisphere panel 18, every elevation 12 of the first hemisphere panel 16 is positioned in a free space between adjacent elevations 12 of the second hemisphere panel 18. Likewise, every elevation 12 of the second hemisphere panel 18 combined with the first hemisphere panel 16 is positioned in a free space between adjacent elevations 12 of the first hemisphere panel 16. The apex point or apex surface of every elevation 12 of one of the hemisphere panels 16, 18 contacts a planar region of the panel 10 of the respectively other hemisphere panel 16, 18. At that contact location, a point-shaped or substantially point-shaped contact location 22 is created for an apex point, and a circular contact point 22 is created for an apex surface. The two hemisphere panels 16, 18 are connected to each at these contact locations 22 (
[0059] In order to show this arrangement of the elevations 12 relative to each other of two hemisphere panels 14; 16, 18 combined to a core element 20,
[0060] The top region of
[0061] In its center region, the representation in
[0062] The two cross-section representations—in particular their enlargements—clearly show that every elevation 12 of the first hemisphere panel 16 is positioned in a free space between adjacent elevations 12 of the second hemisphere panel 18. The enlarged representation in the bottom region of
[0063] The latter likewise makes lateral contact in the plane of the core element 20 to the only elevation 12 of the bottom hemisphere panel 16 shown completely in the enlargement. The same applies likewise for a further not shown elevation 12 of the upper hemisphere panel located in front of the cross-section plane. The only elevation 12 shown completely in
[0064] What is stated above for the elevations 12 of the bottom hemisphere panel 16 applies likewise for the elevations 12 on the upper hemisphere panel 18.
[0065] In the configuration shown in
[0066] When the two hemisphere panels 16, 18 are combined, the apex point or apex surface of every elevation 12, that is to say every elevation 12 of the bottom hemisphere panel 16 and every elevation 12 of the upper hemisphere panel 18, makes contact to a planar region of the panel 10 enclosed by other elevations 12 of the respectively other hemisphere panel 16, 18, and respectively point-shaped or substantially point-shaped contact locations 22 or circular contact locations 22 are created there. The effective size (thickness, height) of the core element 20 is determined by the contact of the elevations 12 at their apex point or their apex surface to the (then inner) surface of a planar region of the panel 10 of the respectively other hemisphere panel 16, 18. A height of the elevations 12 determines the size of the core element 20. The actual size is determined as the sum of the radius and/or the height of the elevations 12 plus the size of the panels 10 of the two hemisphere panels 16, 18.
[0067] For purposes of combining the two hemisphere panels 16, 18 to obtain a core element 20, the two hemisphere panels 16, 18 are connected at these contact locations 22, for example by gluing. The contact locations 22 are labeled in the enlarged section of the cross-section rendering. We note in this regard that the reference arrows strictly point to, and do not directly label, the contact locations 22. The contact locations 22 are located between the opposing surfaces of the hemisphere panels 16, 18 at the locations indicated by the arrows.
[0068] A plurality of such contact locations 22 are created along the plane of a core element 20. Every contact location 22 is also a force introduction location for force transfer from one hemisphere panel 16, 18 to the other hemisphere panel 16, 18. The geometry of each elevation 12 (hemispherical, in the shape of a sphere segment or a sphere layer, etc.) ensures a particularly high strength, in particular compressive strength, of the core element 20 formed from two hemisphere panels 16, 18. Given a force exerted onto the core element 20 from a direction of a vector perpendicular to one of the major surfaces of the core element 20, every elevation 12 distributes the exerted forces starting from the contact location 22 along the circumferential line of the elevation 12 and directs the exerted forces into the panel 10 forming a single part with the elevation 12.
[0069] A special advantage of the core element 20 proposed here is that the latter is already stable without additional outer cover layers. Cover layers 24 can nevertheless by applied on one or both sides of the major surfaces of the core element 20, as shown in the example represented in
[0070] Using similar views and similar cross-sections as those shown in
[0071] Firstly from left to right, the representation in
[0072] Below the already discussed regions of the representation in
[0073] It can be seen in the cross-sections that cover layers 24 applied on the outer side of a core element 20 formed with hemisphere panels 16, 18 conceal the back sides or inner sides of the elevations 12 (that is to say the indentations resulting from the elevations 12). This creates a contiguous surface area on the core element 20.
[0074] The representation in
[0075] The special feature of this embodiment is that at least a plurality of elevations 12, in particular all elevations 12, have hump-shaped extensions hereinafter called dimple 26 pointing radially outward and forming a single part with the remaining elevation 12. An elevation 12 with an apex point has—as shown—exactly one dimple 26. An elevation 12 with an apex surface—not shown—has at least one dimple 26, in particular in the center of the apex surface, or a plurality of dimples 26, for example distributed equidistantly along the circumference line of the apex surface. Dimples 26 on the apex points of the elevation 12 are readily evident specifically in the enlargements of the side views and cross-section view.
[0076] The dimples 26 of the elevations 12 of a hemisphere panel 16, 18 reach through the openings 28 arranged to accommodate said dimples 26 in the respectively other hemisphere panel 16, 18. The width and the geometry of the openings 28 are matched to the cross-section geometry of the dimples 26. The openings 28 accommodate the dimples 26 (respectively one opening 28 for exactly one dimple 26) in at least a shape lock.
[0077] Based on the at least shape-locking accommodation of the dimples 26 in the openings 28, the openings 28 can barely be differentiated from the dimples 26 in the top view onto such a core element 20. Regarding the sole—upper—hemisphere panel 18 visible in the top view, the vantage point shows the inner surface of the elevations 12, and the dimples 26 (essentially the rear sides of the dimples 26 or the inner surfaces of the dimples 26) are visible in the center of the elevations 12. In the interest of maintaining clarity of the representation, this is only labeled once. The dimples 26 of the bottom hemisphere panel 16 (not visible in the top view) are accommodated by the openings 28 in the upper hemisphere panel 18. The representation shows this as a circle with a noticeably smaller diameter in comparison to the representation of the elevations 12 in the upper hemisphere panel 18. In the interest of maintaining clarity of the representation, this too is only labeled once and the relevant reference lines essentially point to the same location, that is once to the center of the circle and to the dimple 26 located there, and once to the outer circumference line of the circle and the opening 28 it represents.
[0078] The connection between two hemisphere panels 16, 18 by means of the dimples 26 captured by the latter and the openings 28 effects at least an adjustment of the hemisphere panels 16, 18 relative to each other in an orientation substantially determined by the position of the openings 28. All openings 28 of each hemisphere panel 16, 18 are distributed in a uniform matrix array along the surface area of the respective hemisphere panel 16, 18. This array corresponds to the elevation array, that is to say to the array of the distribution of the elevations 12 of the same hemisphere panel 16, 18, and therefore also to the array of the dimples 26 of the same hemisphere panel 16, 18. Because a combination of two hemisphere panels 16, 18 into a core element 20 involves combining two equivalent (as defined further above) hemisphere panels 16, 18, the array of the dimples 26 and of the openings 28 of both hemisphere panels 16, 18 are equivalent. Each dimple 26 of one of the hemisphere panels 16, 18 therefore has an associated, matching opening 28 in the respectively other hemisphere panel 16, 18.
[0079] In the embodiment shown in
[0080] A connection of two hemisphere panels 16, 18 using the dimples 26 and openings 28 comprised by these can already represent a connection sufficient to obtain a core element 20 formed by the two hemisphere panels 16, 18 connected to each other in this manner. Preferably, but principally optionally, the hemisphere panels 16, 18 are additionally connected to each other in the region of the dimples 26 and openings 28, for example by gluing or by melting regions of the dimples 26 that reach through the openings 28. For the purpose of melting, the dimples 26 have an effective height that is at least greater than the thickness of the panel 10 in the region of the opening 28. The melting operation regularly results at least sectionally in a single-part connection of the melt of the dimples 26 with the immediate contact region of the openings. The melting of the regions of the dimples 26 that reach through the openings 28 results in a deformation of the dimples 26 at least in said regions, said deformation in the manner of a rivet connection preventing the dimples 26 from detaching from the respective opening 28.
[0081] Precisely as previously specified based on the representations in
[0082] The representation in
[0083] This concludes the specification of the basic structure and of one embodiment (with dimples 26 and openings 28) of a hemisphere panel 14 that is conceivable in a core element 20 as the bottom hemisphere panel 16 or as the upper hemisphere panel 18, and for a core element 20 having two hemisphere panels 14.
[0084] The representations in
[0085] Such a core element 20 comprising several planes is for example (
[0086] More or less than two planes are principally also conceivable, for example five, ten, or one-hundred planes, and are also covered by the invention. With regard to details of the individual planes, reference is made to the specification for a core element 20 comprising exactly two hemisphere panels 14; 16, 18. A region of a core element 20 with a larger number of planes, for example ten, twenty planes, or the like can for example act as a (load-bearing) structural member (automotive body member, load-bearing structural component, shock absorber system).
[0087] The representation in
[0088] A single-layered or multi-layer core element 20 with a hemisphere panel 14 and/or hemisphere panels 14 with elevations 12 pointing in opposite directions can be covered on one or both sides with a hemisphere panel 14 with elevations 12 respectively pointing in only one direction or with a cover layer 24.
[0089] What is stated above regarding the number of planes and use of a core element with a higher number of planes also applies likewise for a multi-layer core element 20 with at least one hemisphere panel 14 with elevations 12 pointing in opposite directions. The number of planes is therefore principally arbitrary and an application involving use as a (load-bearing) structural member is for example conceivable.
[0090] The specification will now address the possible applications of the core element 20 proposed here. The discussion to follow applies to core elements 20 with hemisphere panels 14; 16, 18 with and without dimples 26 and openings 28 and to single-layer core elements 20 (
[0091] Based on representations similar to those shown in individual preceding Figures (top view, side view, lengthwise cross-section, and enlargement from the lengthwise cross-section, and isometric view), the representation in
[0092] An outer diameter of the lines 30 and a distance between the hemisphere panels 16, 18 in the interior of the core element 20 are preferably and in a principally optional manner matched to each other. On such an embodiment, the core element 20 secures the lines 20 in its interior at least based on a friction lock. Additionally or alternatively, the lines 30 are connected to at least one hemisphere panel 16, 18, for example by gluing.
[0093] Using such lines 30, a core element 20 of the type specified in this application can for example be used as a wall, floor, or ceiling heater—collectively called panel heater—or as part of a panel heater formed from several core elements 20. A core element 20 usable as a panel heater or part of an panel heater is likewise conceivable for cooling purposes. The core element 20 itself has no influence on the function, and the function as a heater or for cooling purposes is only determined by the respective temperature of the flowing medium. Accordingly, using such lines 30, a core element 20 of the type specified in this application can also be used as a wall, floor, or ceiling cooler—collectively called panel cooler—or as part of a panel cooler formed from several core elements 20. Use of at least one core element 20 as a panel heater or panel cooler is part of the invention.
[0094] Likewise, such a core element 20 can be used as a sun collector or as part of sun collector formed from several core elements 20. The lines 30 in this case are lines 30 through which a flowable medium/a liquid heat transfer medium, such as oil, water, or the like, can be guided. When operating a panel heater formed with at least on such core element 30 or when operating a sun collector formed with at least one such core element 30, a flowable medium/a liquid heat transfer medium of the aforementioned type flows through the lines 30. Use of at least one core element 20 as a sun collector is part of the invention.
[0095] When a core element 20 acts as a sun collector or as part of a sun collector, the core element 20 is preferably black on the side facing the sun's radiation, for example fitted with a black cover layer 24. For an embodiment without cover layer 24, the core element 20 is fitted with a black paint layer or the like or is produced from black material. Black is in this case defined as any coloring or any body color that reflects essentially no light when the core element 20 is illuminated with at least different light frequencies.
[0096] The core element 20 of the type specified in this application can generally also accommodate a volumetric flow of a liquid or gaseous medium without special lines 30 in the interior of the core element 20. In this case, the two hemisphere panels 14; 16, 18 forming the core element 20 are then connected on two perimeter sides, in particular on two opposing perimeter sides, in a manner that makes a seal for the respective medium (edge seal), for example by gluing, welding, and the like. The respective medium can then flow through the resulting core element 20 with the two remaining open perimeter sides from one of the open perimeter sides to the other open perimeter side.
[0097] Such a core element 20 is also conceivable as a panel heater or panel cooler, as part of a panel heater or panel cooler formed from several core elements 20, as sun collector or as part of a sun collector formed from several core elements 20. Use of such a core element 20 in the specified sense in also part of the invention.
[0098] When such a core element 20 functions as a sun collector or as part of a sun collector formed from several core elements 20, such a core element 20 is preferably embodied black as defined above.
[0099] For the two embodiments of a core element 20 that accommodate a volumetric flow (with lines 30; with edge seal), an embodiment is also conceivable wherein the core element is translucent on one side, that is to say translucent, or substantially translucent, at least for infrared radiation. One of the hemisphere panels 14; 16, 18 is then in this sense radiation-permeable and is for example made from a corresponding plastic.
[0100] Based on an example of a core element 20 with dimples 26 on the elevations 12 and openings 28 in the planar regions of the hemisphere panels 14; 16, 18, the representation is
[0101] The representation in
[0102] The representation in
[0103] Such an embodiment is likewise conceivable for a core element 20 with hemisphere panels 14; 16, 18 with and without dimples 26 and openings 28. Depending on the type of insulating material 34 and depending on the type of filling of the interior of the core element 20 with the respective insulating material, a filling of the core element 20 is also conceivable without a perimeter seal of the core element 20, for example when the insulating material 34 does not flow or has limited flow propensity and/or when the filling is applied in a mold surrounding the core element 20.
[0104] The further representations (
[0105] The yet further representations (
[0106] The representation in
[0110] Intumescent construction materials are also called “insulation layer forming agents”. The—essentially known—effects of intumescent construction materials described above can also be advantageously combined together with the core element 20 proposed here, in that its elevations 12 (or at least a large number of the elevations 12 comprised by the core element 20) are filled with such a construction material.
[0111] Although the invention was illustrated and specified in detail by the exemplary embodiment, the invention is not restricted by any one, or the, disclosed examples, and the person skilled in the art can derive other variations from these without departing from the protected scope of the invention.
[0112] Individual aspects that are the primary focus of the specification submitted hereby can then be briefly summarized as follows: first and foremost, a core element 20 for sandwich elements is specified, wherein the core element 20 comprises at least two hemisphere panels 16, 18 that are combined with each other, wherein each hemisphere panel 16, 18 comprises uniform hemispherical elevations 12 or elevations 12 shaped as sphere segments or sphere layers—generalized as elevations 12—between planar regions 10 and spaced at a distance between each other, in particular in a matrix-shaped elevation array, the elevations 12 in at least one region or one section having the shape of an ellipsoid layer, in particular in a region or section that has an outer surface in the shape of an ellipsoid layer along a contiguous circumferential line, wherein both or respectively two hemisphere panels 16, 18, in particular hemisphere panels 16, 18 with an equivalent elevation array, face each other with their elevations 12, and wherein on two or in each case two hemisphere panels 16, 18 combined with each other, the elevations 12 of a hemisphere panel 16, 18 make contact with their apex points or apex surfaces respectively in one planar region of the other hemisphere panel 16, 18.
[0113] The core element 20 proposed here is not only conceivable as a core element 20 for sandwich elements, but can also be used independently and primarily also by itself as a sandwich element or in place of previous sandwich elements.
[0114] An individual hemisphere panel 14 that based on the approach proposed here forms a core element 20 together with at least on further hemisphere panel 14, is also conceivable for applications without a further hemisphere panel 14. In that case, the elevations 12 of the individual hemisphere panel 14 are covered by a cover layer 24, and the individual hemisphere panel 14 and the cover layer 24 together form a sandwich element. Such a sandwich element can principally also be used in the same manner as was specified above for the core element 20 formed from at least two hemisphere panels 14, and the above discussion also applies likewise for such a sandwich element. The elevations 12 of the individual hemisphere panel 14 can have all shapes specified here, and can also have dimples 26 or no dimples 26. For elevations 12 with dimples 26, the cover layer 24 has recesses 28 to accommodate the dimples 26—as specified further above. Everything stated above also applies likewise for the arrangement and distribution of the elevations 12 on such a hemisphere panel 14 combined into a sandwich element together with at least one cover layer 24.
[0115] The core element 20 proposed here with at least two hemisphere panels 14 or alternatively also a sandwich element with one hemisphere panel 14 is conceivable by itself or together with further core elements 20 and/or sandwich elements, for example for the following applications: interior wall, cabin wall, outer wall, bulkhead wall, automotive body, fire protection element, fire protection wall, acoustic panel, thermal insulation panel, sun collector, panel heater/panel cooler, construction panel with line guides (cables, pipes, etc.), and so on.
LIST OF REFERENCE SYMBOLS
[0116] 10 Panel; planar region [0117] 12 Elevation [0118] 14 Hemisphere panel [0119] 16 (Bottom) hemisphere panel [0120] 18 (Upper) hemisphere panel [0121] 20 Core element [0122] 22 Contact location [0123] 24 Cover layer [0124] 26 Dimple [0125] 28 Opening [0126] 30 Line [0127] 32 Perimeter connection [0128] 34 Medium; insulating material [0129] 36 Annular region