3D THERMOFORMED ELEMENT
20210323215 · 2021-10-21
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B32B38/1866
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F16L59/065
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B60R13/0815
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B60R13/08
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Y10T428/231
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
Y10T428/2457
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
B29C51/002
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C51/082
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C51/006
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B64C1/40
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
E04B2001/742
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
B62D25/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Y10T428/24992
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
B29C51/145
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Y10T428/237
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
B29K2105/08
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B60K1/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Y10T428/24479
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
B29K2105/12
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B29C51/14
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C51/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A three-dimensional vacuum thermal insulation element having a compressed three-dimensional porous structure and a shell closed in an airtight manner. The shell includes a thermoformable barrier wall and encloses the porous structure arranged between two major surfaces of said barrier wall. The porous structure has a pressure of between less than 105 Pa and more than 10-2 Pa at ambient external temperature and pressure. The barrier wall is thermoformed at the site of said two major surfaces, between which the porous structure has a curved shape and/or reliefs and/or depressions.
Claims
1. An assembly comprising: a structural element interposed between an external environment and an internal volume to be thermally and/or acoustically protected, and an inner lining member for lining the structural element, the inner lining member comprising a thermal insulating element which is three-dimensional and under vacuum, the thermal insulating element comprising: a porous structure which is three-dimensional, an envelope closed in an airtight manner: comprising a barrier wall which is thermoformable and airtight, in which envelope is enclosed the porous structure whose shape is followed by the barrier wall, and in which envelope, at outside ambient temperature and pressure, a pressure of between less than 10.sup.5 Pa and more than 10.sup.−2 Pa prevails, and in which assembly: the structural element is a door panel, metal, composite or plastic that defines a structural frame of an automobile door, and the assembly also includes: on an outer side of the structural element, a door panel defining an outer skin of the door and which is attached to the structural member, and, on an inner side of the structural element, an interior trim fixed to the structural element so that the inner lining member including said heat insulating element is interposed between the door panel and the interior trim.
2. An assembly comprising: a structural element interposed between an external environment and an internal volume to be thermally and/or acoustically protected, and an inner lining member for lining the structural element, the inner lining member comprising a thermal insulating element, which is three-dimensional and under vacuum, the thermal insulating element comprising: a porous structure (5) which is three-dimensional, an envelope closed in an airtight manner: comprising a barrier wall which is thermoformable and airtight, in which envelope is enclosed the porous structure whose shape is followed by the barrier wall, and in which envelope, at outside ambient temperature and pressure, a pressure of between less than 10.sup.5Pa and more than 10.sup.−2 Pa prevails, and in which assembly: the structural element is a vehicle body part or a protective tray, and the inner lining element is interposed between the external environment and a cooling plate of a battery pack of the electric power supply of the vehicle disposed in the internal volume, which vehicle is of a hybrid or all-electric type, said at least one thermally insulating element being sandwiched between the protective plate and the cooling plate, which comprises channels for circulation of a cooling fluid disposed in thermal exchange with the battery pack.
3. The assembly according to claim 2, wherein: the cooling plate has reliefs and depressions, at least some of which are defined by the coolant flow channels, the structural element has said reliefs and depressions, said thermal-insulating element having said reliefs and said depressions, said respective reliefs of said thermal-insulating element being engaged with the respective depressions of the cooling plate and the structural element, and vice versa.
4. An assembly comprising: a structural element interposed between an external environment and an internal volume to be thermally and/or acoustically protected, and an inner lining member for lining the structural element, the inner lining member comprising a thermal insulating element, which is three-dimensional and under vacuum, the thermal insulating element comprising: a porous structure which is three-dimensional, an envelope closed in an airtight manner: comprising a barrier wall which is thermoformable and airtight, in which envelope is enclosed the porous structure whose shape is followed by the barrier wall, and in which envelope, at an outside ambient temperature and pressure, a pressure of between less than 10.sup.5Pa and more than 10.sup.−2 Pa prevails, and in which assembly: the structural element comprises a part of a body of a vehicle surrounding a passenger compartment of the vehicle, and the assembly further comprises, between the structural element and the thermal insulating element: either a layer of air and another part of the structural element which is metallic or plastic or made of a mixing between a synthetic resin and synthetic fibers or mineral fibers or natural fibers, either a layer of air at least 20 mm thick and a primary layer of insulation material.
5. An assembly comprising: a structural element interposed between an external environment and an internal volume to be thermally and/or acoustically protected, and an inner lining member for lining the structural element, the inner lining member comprising three-dimensional vacuum thermal insulating elements, which each comprises: a porous three-dimensional structure, an envelope closed in an airtight manner: comprising a barrier wall which is thermoformable and airtight, in which envelope is enclosed the porous structure whose shape is followed by the barrier wall, and in which envelope, at outside ambient temperature and outside ambient pressure, a pressure of between less than 10.sup.5Pa and more than 10.sup.−2 Pa prevails, and in which assembly the structural element is a body part of a vehicle comprising: outer panels belonging to a fuselage or a body of a vehicle and, frames and/or rails and/or stringers, which are individually surrounded by one of said three-dimensional vacuum thermal insulating elements attached to the respective frames and/or rails and/or stringers.
6. The assembly according to claim 1, wherein: the structure defines a first porous structure comprising a porous material having a first density, the inner lining member further comprises a second porous structure comprising the same porous material, or a different porous material, having a second density, the second density is lower than the first density, the first and second porous structures are superimposed, and further, in the assembly: the second porous structure has an internal pressure which is the ambient pressure, and/or the porous material of the first porous structure has a density between more than 100 kg/m.sup.3 and 800 kg/m.sup.3, and the porous material of the second porous structure has a density between 5 kg/m.sup.3 and less than 100 kg/m.sup.3.
7. The assembly according to claim 6, wherein: the second porous structure is bent-shaped and/or has reliefs and/or depressions, and the thermal insulating element and the second porous structure are enclosed together in a second envelope.
8. (canceled)
9. A process for manufacturing a three-dimensional thermal-insulating element under vacuum, in which process: a) a compressed porous structure is used, and b) said compressed porous structure is arranged in an envelope having an airtight barrier wall, the compressed porous structure being interposed between two major surfaces of the airtight barrier wall, then, by contact between two minor surfaces of said airtight barrier wall, the envelope, in which a reduced pressure of between less than 10.sup.5Pa and more than 10.sup.−2 Pa has been established, is closed with an airtight sealing, wherein: c) after the airtight sealing of the envelope, the compressed porous structure is given a three-dimensional shape, bent-shaped and/or with reliefs and depressions, by pressing the envelope against a male element and a female element of a mold for bending and/or embossing, which provides a deformation of the airtight barrier wall and the compressed porous structure.
10-14. (canceled)
15. The process according to claim 9, wherein: at said step c), the airtight barrier wall and the compressed porous structure are heated so that the two major surfaces and the porous structure are thermoformed, and the heating and deformation are applied up to: bending the airtight barrier wall and the compressed porous structure, and/or, embossing said reliefs and depressions.
16. An assembly comprising: a three-dimensional structural element having a curved shape and/or reliefs and depressions, interposed between an external environment and an internal volume to be thermally and/or acoustically protected, and an inner lining element for lining the three-dimensional structural element, the inner lining element comprising a thermally insulating element which is interposed between the external environment and the internal volume to be protected, the thermal insulating element being bent-shaped and/or having reliefs and depressions, engaged at least partly with respectively the curved shape and/or the depressions and the reliefs of the structural element, in order to substantially follow at least part of a contour thereof, the thermal insulating element comprising: a structure made of a three-dimensional porous material, an envelope closed in an airtight manner, comprising an airtight barrier wall, in which envelope is enclosed the three-dimensional porous material whose shape is followed by the airtight barrier wall, and in which envelope, at outside ambient temperature and pressure, a pressure of between less than 10.sup.5 Pa and more than 10.sup.−2 Pa prevails, characterized in that: the barrier wall is thermoformable and being thermoformed, the structure is compressed, the bent-shaped is defined by a bending of said thermal insulating element, and/or the reliefs and the depressions are defined by embossings and the thermal insulating element.
17. The assembly according to claim 16, in which: the three-dimensional porous material is free of chemical binder and has a density between 10 kg/m.sup.3, and the thermal insulating element has at least one zone of attachment where the thermal insulating element is attached to the structural element and where the density of the three-dimensional porous material is higher than at other zones of the three-dimensional porous material.
18. The assembly according to claim 16, in which: the three-dimensional porous material comprises a chemical binder, and the thermal insulating element has at least one zone of attachment where the thermal insulating element is attached to the structural element and where the density of the three-dimensional porous material is higher than at other zones of the three-dimensional porous material.
19. The assembly according to claim 16, in which the airtight barrier wall is a film having a tensile strength between 10 MPa and 300 MPa.
Description
[0079] The invention will if necessary be better understood and other details, characteristics and advantages of the invention may appear when reading the following description made as a non-limiting example with reference to the annexed drawings in which:
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[0091] We have thus represented, in
[0092] This set includes: [0093] a porous structure 5 in three dimensions, and [0094] an external envelope 7 comprising (or consisting of) a wall 7a.
[0095] It is to be understood that the expression “in three dimensions” (3D) is equivalent, as in the common sense, to not (integrally) plane. The thermoformed set 1, like thus the fibrous textile structure 5, is represented bent-shaped; but they may also present local corresponding reliefs and/or depressions, as for example in zones respectively 25, 27 in
[0096] The porous structure 5 will be advantageously based on powder or a fibrous textile structure and thus will include fibers 3 which are polymeric, mineral (glass, basalt for example) or natural (cellulose, flax, hemp for example). The fibrous textile structure 5 is then a woven or non-woven fabric. A felt will be interesting for its intrinsic compression (felt is a compressed, non-woven structure obtained by pressing and agglutinating fibers). In addition to this intrinsic compression, the felt would advantageously be compressed later in the shaping mold (30a or 30b below;
[0097] Felt, or more generally the fibrous textile structure 5, may be presented as a slab (see
[0098] Wall 7a is thermoformable, in the sense that it then comprises a polymer film that has been thermoformed: polymer alone or metal lined, such as a complex or composite film: metallized PET film where PET has been sprayed with aluminum.
[0099] The polymer film (alone or thus metal-backed) 7a will have been thermoformed at the location of the two major (or main) surfaces, S1 and S2
[0100] Envelope 7 contains in a closed manner the porous structure 5; and its wall 7a follows the shape of this porous structure, where it faces it (major surfaces S1 and S2).
[0101] As shown in
[0102] As mentioned above, the sealing of the wall 7a could have consisted of gluing or welding. This confirms that, in the three-dimensional set 1 formed in three dimensions, the porous structure 5 and the envelope 7 retain, as initially, their respective structural identities. They are not fused together. They remain distinctly identifiable; they are structurally independent of each other: It is possible to cut the envelope 7 and remove it from its position around the fibrous structure 5 without having to tear it off. It is therefore not a coating or surface layer (coating as in U.S. Pat. No. 4,035,215).
[0103] If it is a “film”, material 7a will have a favorable thickness between 30 and 800 microns, preferably between 50 and 150 microns.
[0104] In the hypothesis of a porous structure 5, such as for example fibres 3 without binder (see below and
[0105] This tensile strength (“tensile strength”, often abbreviated as (TS), or “ultimate strength”, Ftu) of a typical 7a film, whether in a version after the above-mentioned thermoforming step, or before (state of this film as marketed before its implementation in accordance with the present invention), will be favorably higher than 1 MPa, and preferably between 10 MPa and 300 MPa and even more preferably between 50 MPa and 100 MPa.
[0106] If these characteristics are not respected, the relatively free character of the porous structure 5 and the mechanical resistance of the envelope 7, whose thermoforming will thus have fixed a common “3D” shape by constraint of the said structure and softening of the film 7a, will not be able to ensure that the thermoformed assembly 1 maintains its 3D shape over time: [0107] following the relaxation of stress of the porous structure after thermoforming, [0108] and the wrapping film will not be able to prevent this.
[0109] Hence a possible preference for a slightly thicker metal 7a wall.
[0110] As will also be seen in connection with
[0111] If the porous structure 5 is free of binder 9, the respective densities of porous material 3 in the first zones 10a1 and second zones 10b1 will each be uniform (equal) throughout the respective thicknesses e1, e2. These density variations between zones such as 10a1, 10b1 may be achieved by starting from different thicknesses of these zones from each other (e1+X and e2+X respectively). The globally uniform compression on the outer surface of the porous structure 5, created during the thermoforming of the barrier wall 7a, will allow the above-mentioned thicknesses, e1 and e2 respectively, to be achieved.
[0112] As a second hypothesis, it is therefore possible that a chemical binder is present in the porous structure 5. Once compressed/formed in 3D, the porous material 3 will then keep this state by itself. The manufacturing technique may be that of EP-A-2903800, a fibrous structure and a manufacturing process are known from the documents DE 103 24 735. Epoxy or phenolic resin may be used as binder 9.
[0113] In this case, it may be assumed that the formed unit 1 has a maximum thickness e,e2,e3 of more than 3 mm. Binder 9 is used both to shape the porous structure 5 (during thermoforming) and to maintain its shape integrity over time.
[0114] When using a heat-reactive binder 9, such as polypropylene or phenolic resin, the porous material should be heated so that the porous material melts and a rigid, non-deformable molded part is formed.
[0115] With or without binder 9, the forming of set 1 may take place in a forming mold 30a or 30b (
[0120] Although an exclusively metallic 7a wall of a few tenths of a mm thickness may be suitable, it may be preferable, in step a), to choose a thermoformable wall and then, in step d), to heat this wall so that the two heated major surfaces S1,S2 soften. This ductility is then used to shape the wall 7a and the material of structure 5 under pressure by means of casting, after which it is allowed to cool.
[0121] If the polymer film 7a option is chosen, it may be a polyimide or PEEK film, or polyethylene, or polypropylene.
[0122] In step d), the molding may include a casting between a male element 340a and a female element 340b of a mold 30a, for bending and/or embossing, as shown in
[0123] However, to facilitate the making of the shapes, it may be proposed a deformation by pressure against a mold 30b including: [0124] a molding between: [0125] a male element or female element, both for bending and/or embossing, 340a or 340b, from which a first of said two major surfaces S1,S2 is approached, and [0126] a deformable membrane 340c which, by depression (arrow F
this until the porous structure 5, interposed between the male element or female element and the membrane 340c (which will substantially conform to the shape), be given a three-dimensional shape, bent-shaped and/or having the aforementioned reliefs and/or depressions, as shown in
[0128] The deformable membrane 340c may be made of flexible plastic or rubber-based material that may withstand a temperature of 140 to 200° C.
[0129] At least one thermal insulator 11 may be usefully added to the above assembly 1, in the envelope 7, so that at ambient temperature and pressure, assembly 1 presents, through the film 7a, a coefficient of thermal conductivity (λ) lower than 40 mW/m.K, and preferably lower than 20 mW/m.K; see
[0130] In addition, with the protective wall 7a, the thermal insulation 11 may then be usefully dispersed in structure 5.
[0131] With particles as material of the thermal insulation 11, a variable concentration may be achieved at different locations.
[0132] This is also possible if at least one phase-change material (PCM) is also present in the envelope 7, which may be dispersed in structure 5 (
[0133]
[0134] In the example in
[0135] In the example in
[0136] In the example shown in
[0137] In zone(s) 10d the structure 5 is (over)loaded with MCP 13, where part 1 has one or more thermal exchange zone(s) with a refrigerant or heat transfer fluid 19. Thus, the areas of (over)densification or (over)concentration of particles and/or fibres may be precisely and appropriately located where required.
[0138] As already mentioned, a notable field of application of the invention is that of vehicles. The three-dimensional assembly formed 1 may in particular define there an internal lining member of a structural element, said structural element separating between them an external environment and an internal volume to be insulated or thermally and/or acoustically protected from this external environment, this with constraints of exiguous volume, particular shapes and/or weight to be limited as much as possible.
[0139] Thus one may see
[0142] The lining member 39 is thus interposed between volumes 35 and 37.
[0143] The structural element 33 may be a door panel, made of metal, of composite (i.e. composed of several materials; for example a mixture of synthetic resin and mineral, natural or synthetic fibres) or of plastic. It defines in the example the structural frame of a car door. At the exterior side, a door panel metal sheet 41 may be attached to it, for defining the exterior body of the door. At the interior side (passenger side), an interior trim panel 43 may be attached to it, so that assembly 1 is interposed between the metal sheet 41 and the interior trim panel 43.
[0144] The bent-shaped form (or bending) and/or reliefs 21 and/or depressions 23 of structural element 1 are engaged at least in part with the complementary curved shape and/or recessed shape 231 and/or reliefs 211 of the structural element 33, so that they respectively substantially conform to at least part of the contour thereof; see
[0145] In the totally closed envelope 7 of this set 1 may be found, as shown in
[0149] These attachments to structural element 33 may include screwing, riveting or other fasteners, for example, via rods 17.
[0150] And the envelope 7 will then also contain at least one of: [0151] a filler of (particles of) a phase change material 13 (PCM) and/or a filler of (particles of) a thermal insulator 11, where the said preferred thermal exchange zone(s) 10d is/are located, [0152] and/or an overload of material 3, where the attachment zone(s) is located and/or where the zone(s) of lesser thickness (e1) is located.
[0153] Rather than, as shown in
[0154] In
[0155] The environment is that of part of the body 44 of an all-electric or hybrid motor vehicle 45 or of a protective plate 33a attached to the battery compartment 36 and/or the body 44 of the vehicle (here, body and chassis of the vehicle are confused). An electric battery pack 47 for the electrical supply of the vehicle, contained in the closed compartment 36, is to be installed: [0156] in the interior volume 37, [0157] or in the immediate vicinity of it, for example outside just under the box 44, in the said compartment 36, via for example the protective plate 33a which may be fixed to the box, under it, by screwing.
[0158] The above-mentioned structural element 33 may therefore be defined by a protective plate 33a. The metal plate 33a extends like a floor (or is a part of it) and provides protection against, for example, scratches. A part of it may be seen in
[0159] The above-mentioned inner lining member 39 e is in the example defined by one or more trays 390 comprising one or more elements 1, with a 3D shape (here partly bent-shaped), interposed between the external environment 35 and a cooling plate 41 of the battery pack 47.
[0160] The cooling plate 41 comprises channels 49 for the circulation of a cooling fluid arranged in thermal exchange with the battery pack 47. In communication with a thermal exchanger 51 located further in the vehicle, the coolant flows through channels 49 via an inlet 49a and outlet 49b that communicate with channels 49. The underside of the support plate 53, on which the electric battery pack 47 rests, forms a cover for the channels 49, which rest tightly against it by their edges. In addition or alternatively the support plate 53 may be part of the battery compartment in which the battery pack 47 is enclosed. To form a thermal barrier to the external environment 35, especially for battery pack 47, the (each) thermally insulating element 1 is sandwiched between plate 33a and cooling plate 41.
[0161] With its lower side 41a and upper side 41b being the mirror image of each other, plate 41 has reliefs and depressions, at least some of which are defined by channels 49 on the upper side. The protective plate 33a also has reliefs 330 and depressions 331.
[0162] And element(s) 1 itself has, as already indicated, said reliefs 210 and depressions 230, here on the two major surfaces (lower and upper) of the thermoformed barrier wall; but these reliefs and depressions are different on the lower and upper faces, since, facing each other, the reliefs and depressions of plate 33a and plate 41 are different from each other, but complementary to those of element(s) 1.
[0163] Therefore, on the said major surfaces of the barrier wall (7a): [0164] the respective reliefs of element(s) 1 are engaged with the respective depressions of plate 41 for cooling and plate 33a for protection, [0165] and said respective depressions of element(s) 1 are engaged with the respective reliefs of cooling plate 41 and plate 33a.
[0166] It must also be understood that the solutions that may be associated between the modes of realization, as well as between the figures, are transferable from one realization to another and may thus be associated between them.
[0167] Another efficient aspect has been schematized in
[0168] This solution proposes in fact to obtain a reinforced thermal insulation and a relevant acoustic insulation, by associating: [0169] with a structural element 33 thus separating an external environment 35 from an internal volume 37 to be thermally and/or acoustically protected, [0170] an inner lining member 391 of structural element 33, element 391 comprising at least one said thermal insulating element 1.
[0171] More precisely, it is first proposed to use the above assembly, with the said at least one thermal insulating element 1 comprising its porous structure 5 in its envelope 7 formed by the barrier wall 7a. This wall 7 is always thermoformed at the location of the said two major surfaces (S1, S2) between which the porous structure 5, which is three-dimensional, thus bent-shaped and/or having reliefs and/or depressions, as shown in the diagram.
[0172] However, in this solution it is furthermore provided: [0173] that this porous structure 5 defines a first porous structure comprising a porous material 5a having a first density, [0174] that the inner lining member 391 further comprises a second porous structure 50 comprising the same porous material (5a), or a different porous material 5b, having a second density.
[0175] The second density is lower than the first density, and the first porous structure 5 is superimposed with the second porous structure 50.
[0176] Superimposed here means that we have a double thickness: the cumulative thickness of the porous structures 5.50 between zones 35 and 37.
[0177] The superimposition of these structures is not necessarily in a horizontal plane; it may be for example in a vertical plane, as in the example of a car door
[0178] This being said, one should also note: [0179] that the second porous structure 50 is bent-shaped and/or has reliefs 21 and/or depressions 23, and [0180] that element 1 thermal insulation and the second porous structure 50 are: [0181] enclosed together in a second envelope 70 having wall 70a, [0182] and interposed between two major surfaces S10,S20 of said wall 70a, said wall 70a being thermoformed at the location of said two major surfaces S10,S20.
[0183] It will have been understood that the two major surfaces S10,S20 are the image on envelope 70 and its wall 70a of the two major surfaces S1,52 on envelope 7 and its wall 7a. The minor/marginal peripheral zone in terms of surface, here 70b image of 7b, remains.
[0184] The second envelope 70 is not necessarily under vacuum. The second porous structure 50 may be in a third vacuum envelope, itself then housed, with the first envelope 70, in the second envelope 70.
[0185] Typically less compressed than the first porous structure 5, the second porous structure 50 will have a thickness e20 greater than the thickness e10 of the first porous structure 5, this being to be considered everywhere or on most of at least the larger of the surfaces of the two porous structures 5.50.
[0186] The thickness e20 may be from 3 to 15 mm. The thickness e10 may be from 0.5 to 2.5 mm. The first density may be from more than 100 to 800 kg/m.sup.3; the second density may be from 5 to less than 100 kg/m.sup.3.
[0187] The first porous structure 5 provides relevant thermal and acoustic insulation. The second porous structure 50 ensures a reinforced thermal insulation and a more limited acoustic insulation in low frequencies, but good in high frequencies. We thus obtain a hybrid solution with a heavy assembly (mass effect) that absorbs in low frequencies (20 to 200 Hz) through the first porous structure 5 and in high frequencies (above 200 Hz) through the second porous structure 50.
[0188] Several other applications are further presented below, with reference to
(a) Firstly, the applications relative: [0189] to a part of the vehicle body (30 or 45), such as a roof (or part of the roof) 60, or more generally: [0190] to a structure of limitation of the passenger compartment 61 of a vehicle.
[0191] The uprights or the body and their lining in the passenger compartment are therefore concerned.
[0192] The term passenger compartment is to be understood as “space receiving occupants to be transported” and an aircraft is a “vehicle”; therefore an aircraft fuselage is also concerned.
[0193] In the example in
[0201] Typically, the liner 67 may be a fabric (woven, woven or non-woven yarns) and is lined with a foam layer 69 on the inside, between barrier wall 7a and liner 67.
[0202] Together, the foam layer 69 and the liner 67 may be of 2 to 5 mm thick, the thermal insulation element 1 of 3 to 6 mm, the structural element 33 of 4 to 10 mm.
[0203] The structural element 33 (which may be composite) actually forms a second part of the so-called “structural element”, the first part being formed by the outer body 63.
[0204] An approximate top view of the roof part 60 of the vehicle, which is lined by the structure shown below, is shown in
[0205] Through the part of the roof 60 (and of the thermal insulating element(s) 1, may be if necessary provided passages 71a, 71b, for ceiling lights of the front and rear seats respectively.
[0206] Following the cross section line XVII-XVII, the roof part 60 is rounded off laterally, in 60a (idem on the opposite side, in 60b), in particular. Thus, the porous structure 5, which is three-dimensional, is at least bent-shaped, as shown in
[0207] As schematized on these
[0213] Further, in the direction of thickness, one may also prefer: [0214] that a so-called first layer 81 of thermal (for example a bagged fibrous material) and acoustic insulation material be interposed between the said at least one thermal insulation element 1 and the said trim lining 80 (which forms the “surface” or innermost wall of the fuselage wall 75/the one you see in the passenger compartment (known as the “interior” 37/61), and/or [0215] that a layer of foam 83 be interposed between the so-called first layer 81 and the trim lining 80.
[0216] To further strengthen the insulation, a so-called second layer 85 of thermal and acoustic insulation may be interposed between sheets 77 and the air layer 79.
[0217] Typical thickness of the sheets 77 is 1.5 to 3 mm; the first and second layers 81,85 are 15 to 30 mm thick.
[0218] Apart from the plates 77, at least part of the above-mentioned elements (thus forming the set 75
[0219] As for the part of the roof 60, following a cutting line parallel to the thickness of the overall fuselage wall 75, this wall has a curved shape (or said bent-shaped form), as illustrated in
(c) Then again (see
[0220] In a conventional way, the most structuring structures are the stringers 93 which, like the rails 91, extend parallel to the longitudinal axis (aircraft axis) X2. Frames 89 extend circumferentially, around the X2 axis.
[0221] In this case, the said “structural element” of the insulation assembly already presented is considered to be the assembly formed by the outer body (defined by the plates 77) and the frames, or the rails or the stringers, fixed with radially inner. As shown in the diagram, the proposed solution is to equip at least part of this assembly by insulating individually the frames in the example, each with an inner lining member comprising at least one said three-dimensional, vacuum thermal insulating element 1, the thermal insulating element 1 always comprising: [0222] the porous three-dimensional, compressed 5 structure, [0223] the envelope 7 closed in an airtight manner and whose barrier wall is thermoformable.
[0224] Thermal insulating element 1 may be covered with an aesthetic coating 99 (such as a liner) that may be found in 101 as an inner lining of the outer body/sheet 77.
[0225] In the example, the insulated portions (frames 89) protrude radially inward from the sheets 77. Each thermal insulating element 1 extends around the accessible part of the frame concerned. It may be conformed to the shape of the frame because the barrier wall 7a (and/or 7b; not shown) has been thermoformed and the porous structure 5 (idem) is three-dimensional and has been shaped by compression. The two elements 1 and 89 are then engaged one within the other.
[0226] The result is a solution that combines efficient insulation, light weight, small dimensions, ease of installation and maintenance.
[0227] Between the insulated part (frame 89) considered and the thermal insulation element 1 that extends around it, one may even interpose a layer of traditional insulation 97 (such as glass wool) whose maintenance in place is facilitated/assured by the fixed shape of the thermal insulation element 1, which may be fixed to the said insulated part (frame 89), by gluing or other means.
[0228] In terms of fixing or holding, the cohesion between the elements of the roof part 60 or the fuselage structure 75 may for example be ensured by gluing and/or screwing, with the presence of spacers if necessary.
[0229] The assembly is made up of two layered structures wrapped or not in a bag 70: [0230] the first one (element 5) is a porous material (density more than 100 to 800 kg/m.sup.3) in a vacuum envelope of the PIV type, [0231] the second one (element 50) is a porous material of very (more) low density (from 5 to less than 100 kg/m.sup.3) with good thermal insulation properties and good sound absorption properties in high frequencies (above 200 Hz).
[0232] The combination of these materials allows a good compromise of thermo-acoustic insulation.
[0233] It should be noted that the solution described in connection with
[0236] In the application to the passenger compartment wall as shown in
[0237] Although not shown, element 1 for the thermal insulation of the solutions shown in connection with