TIRE SUITABLE FOR RUNNING FLAT, PROVIDED WITH AN ELECTRONIC UNIT
20200148011 ยท 2020-05-14
Inventors
- Mathieu Greco (Clermont-Ferrand, FR)
- Severine Glibert (Clermont-Ferrand, FR)
- Olivier Muhlhoff (Clermont-Ferrand, FR)
Cpc classification
B60C17/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B60C2017/0081
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
H01Q1/36
ELECTRICITY
H01Q1/3291
ELECTRICITY
B60C17/0009
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
H01Q9/16
ELECTRICITY
International classification
B60C17/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
H01Q1/36
ELECTRICITY
H01Q9/16
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A tire suitable for running flat comprises a crown, two sidewalls and two beads, a carcass reinforcement anchored in each bead and a sidewall insert placed in each of the two sidewalls axially internally relative to the carcass reinforcement, such that it is equipped with an electronic device comprising at least one radiofrequency transponder and such that the electronic device is placed radially in a zone representing over 55% of the section height of the tire.
Claims
1.-18. (canceled)
19. A tire suitable for running flat, the tire comprising a crown, two sidewalls and two beads, a carcass reinforcement anchored in each bead and a sidewall insert placed in each of the two sidewalls axially internally relative to the carcass reinforcement, wherein the tire is equipped with an electronic device comprising at least one radiofrequency transponder, and wherein the electronic device is placed axially internally relative to an outer rubber layer of the sidewall and externally relative to the carcass reinforcement and radially at above 55% of a section height of the tire.
20. The tire according to claim 19, wherein the electronic device is placed radially in a zone representing over 65% of the section height of the tire.
21. The tire according to claim 19, wherein the electronic device is placed at an interface between the outer rubber layer of the sidewall and the carcass reinforcement.
22. The tire according to claim 19, wherein the outer rubber layer of the sidewall has a radially outer end, and the electronic device is placed radially internally at a distance larger than 5 mm from the radially outer end of the outer rubber layer of the sidewall.
23. The tire according to claim 22, wherein the electronic device is placed radially internally at a distance larger than 10 mm from the radially outer end of the outer rubber layer of the sidewall.
24. The tire according to claim 19, wherein the sidewall insert has a maximum thickness between 6 and 16 mm.
25. The tire according to claim 19, wherein the electronic device consists of the radiofrequency transponder.
26. The tire according to claim 19, wherein the electronic device consists of the radiofrequency transponder encapsulated in at least one electrically insulating encapsulating rubber mass.
27. The tire according to claim 26, wherein an elastic modulus of the encapsulating rubber mass is lower than or equal to an elastic modulus of adjacent rubber blends.
28. The tire according to claim 26, wherein a relative dielectric constant of the encapsulating rubber mass is lower than a relative dielectric constant of adjacent rubber blends.
29. The tire according to claim 19, wherein the radiofrequency transponder of the electronic device comprises an electronic chip and a radiating antenna able to communicate with an external radiofrequency reader.
30. The tire according to claim 29, wherein the radiating antenna comprises two helical antenna segments, and the electronic chip is galvanically connected to the two helical antenna segments.
31. The tire according to claim 29, wherein the radiofrequency transponder of the electronic device further comprises a primary antenna electrically connected to the electronic chip, wherein the primary antenna is inductively coupled to the radiating antenna, and wherein the radiating antenna is a dipole antenna consisting of a single-strand helical spring defining a first longitudinal axis.
32. The tire according to claim 31, wherein the primary antenna is a coil having at least one turn defining a second longitudinal axis that is circumscribed in a cylinder the axis of revolution of which is parallel to the second longitudinal axis and the diameter of which is between one third and three times the average diameter of the helical spring of the radiating antenna.
33. The tire according to claim 32, wherein the radiating antenna has a central zone between two lateral zones and the primary antenna has a median plane perpendicular to the second longitudinal axis, wherein the first and second longitudinal axes are parallel to each other, and wherein the median plane of the primary antenna is placed in the central zone of the radiating antenna.
34. The tire according to claim 31, wherein the primary antenna is placed in an interior of the single-strand helical spring of the radiating antenna.
35. The tire according to claim 19, wherein the tire has a preferential running direction, and an electronic device is placed in each of the two sidewalls.
36. The tire according to claim 19, wherein the tire has an outer side and an inner side for mounting on a vehicle, and the electronic device is placed in the sidewall on the outer side of the tire.
Description
DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
[0043] The various subjects of the present invention will be better understood by means of the following detailed description and the attached drawings, the same reference numbers having been used in all the drawings to reference identical parts, and in which drawings:
[0044]
[0045]
[0046]
[0047]
[0048]
[0049]
[0050]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0051] Hereinafter, the terms rubber blend, rubber and blend are used in an equivalent manner to identify rubber constituents of the tyre.
[0052]
[0053] This figure also indicates the section height SH of the tyre, i.e. the radial distance between the nominal diameter of the mounting rim of the tyre NRD and the radially outermost part of the tread of the tyre. In the context of this invention, the nominal diameter of the mounting rim of the tyre is taken to be the diameter of the tyre as indicated by its size.
[0054] In all the figures, the tyre is shown free, not mounted on a rim and such that the width between the two beads is decreased to the width of the nominal ETRTO rim.
[0055] As regards the axial direction, what is meant by axially external is an axial direction directed toward the exterior of the tyre and by axially internal what is meant is an axial direction directed toward the median plane EP of the tyre.
[0056] This run-flat tyre 30 comprises a crown 32 reinforced by a crown reinforcement or belt 36, a sidewall 33 and a bead 34, the bead 34 being reinforced with a bead wire 35. The crown reinforcement 36 is surmounted radially externally by a rubber tread 39. A carcass reinforcement 37 is wound around the bead wire 35 in the bead 34, the turn-up 38 of this reinforcement 37 being, for example, arranged towards the exterior of the tyre 30. In a manner known per se, the carcass reinforcement 37 is made up of at least one ply reinforced by what are known as radial cords, for example here of textile, that is to say that these cords are disposed virtually parallel to one another and extend from one bead to the other so as to form an angle of between 80 and 90 with the median circumferential plane EP. An airtight inner liner 40 extends from one bead to the other radially internally with respect to the carcass reinforcement 37. The bead 34 comprises a protective rubber (or protector) 42 able to make contact with the surface of a rim. It also comprises a first filling rubber 46 extending radially externally relative to the bead wire 35.
[0057] The tyre 30 is able to run flat because of the presence of a sidewall insert 44 placed axially internally relative to the carcass reinforcement 37. This insert comprises two circumferential adjacent rubber masses 441 and 442. This insert 44 allows the structure of the tyre to withstand the load thereon at zero pressure. The order of magnitude of the elastic modulus of the rubber of a sidewall insert is of the order of twice the value of the modulus of the sidewall rubber or greater.
[0058] The sidewall 33 of
[0059] This zone Z is preferentially limited radially to a distance D of 5 mm from the radially outer end P of the outer sidewall rubber layer 48. This radial distance D is very preferentially larger than 10 mm so that the service lifetime of the electronic device is not negatively affected.
[0060] On account of the high modulus of the rubber from which the sidewall insert is made, which is necessary to ensure the bearing capacity of the tyre and of the vehicle when running flat, the electronic device is, in the zone Z, much less mechanically stressed in inflated running mode than is the case with a conventional tyre without sidewall insert, and thus has an acceptable service lifetime.
[0061] In
[0062]
[0063] A third favourable position for an electronic device is also shown in
[0064] The three positions illustrated are located in the zone Z, which zone is favourable in the case of a tyre comprising sidewall inserts.
[0065]
[0066] The encapsulating elastomer blend contains 100 phr (parts per 100 parts of elastomer by mass) of a polymer such as EPDM (ethylene propylene diene monomer rubber), butyl rubber, neoprene or a diene elastomer such as SBR (styrene-butadiene rubber), polybutadiene, natural rubber or polyisoprene.
[0067] The blend may contain fillers such as fillers of silica, carbon black, chalk and kaolin type: [0068] with a filler of silica type in a maximum amount of 50 phr; [0069] with a filler of the type consisting of carbon black of ASTM grade higher than 700, in an amount lower than 50 phr; [0070] with a filler of the type consisting of carbon black of grade lower than or equal to 500, in a maximum amount of 20 phr. [0071] It is possible to add or replace these fillers with chalk or kaolin.
[0072] Such amounts and types of fillers make it possible to guarantee a relative permittivity lower than 6.5, in particular at a frequency of 915 MHz.
[0073] The stiffness in the cured state of the encapsulating blend is preferably lower than or close to those of the adjacent blends.
[0074] In a first embodiment shown in
[0075] The radiofrequency transponder 1 of the electronic device 2 such as shown in
[0076] The radiofrequency transponder 1 according to the second embodiment of the electronic device 2 comprises an electronic chip 22 and a radiating antenna 10 able to communicate with an external radiofrequency reader. It in addition comprises a primary antenna 24 electrically connected to the electronic chip 22 and inductively coupled to the radiating antenna 10. The radiating antenna is a dipole antenna consisting of a single-strand helical spring defining a first longitudinal axis.
[0077]
[0078]
[0079]
[0080] The electromagnetic conduction of such an antenna occurs mainly via a skin effect, i.e. it mainly occurs in the exterior layers of the antenna. This thickness of skin is in particular dependent on the frequency of the radiation and of the material from which the conduction layer is made. By way of example, for a UHF frequency (for example 915 MHz), the skin thickness is about 2.1 m for silver, 2.2 m for copper, and 4.4 m for brass.
[0081] The steel wire may be coated with these layers then formed; alternatively it may also be formed then coated.
[0082] The helical spring is primarily defined by a winding diameter of the coated wire and by a helix pitch. Thus, given the diameter of the wire, the inside diameter 13 and outside diameter 15 of the helical spring may be precisely determined. The length 17 of the spring 10 here corresponds to one half-wavelength of the transmission signal of the radiofrequency transponder 1 in a rubber mass. It is furthermore possible to define a median plane 19 of the helical spring 10 perpendicular to the axis of revolution 11 separating the radiating antenna into two equal portions. This plane is in the middle of the central zone 16 of the radiating antenna, this central zone 16 corresponding to about 25% of the total length of the antenna and preferably 15%.
[0083]
[0084] This radiofrequency transponder 1 has the advantage of being much more mechanically resistant than conventional transponders and thus is particularly suitable for a hostile use such as encountered with run-flat tyres.