Method for making brake discs in fiber reinforced material and brake disc made with such method
10591007 ยท 2020-03-17
Assignee
Inventors
- Massimiliano Valle (Bergamo, IT)
- Mirco Chiodi (Bergamo, IT)
- Furio Rozza (Bergamo, IT)
- Marco Orlandi (Bergamo, IT)
- Roberto Vavassori (Bergamo, IT)
Cpc classification
B29C70/545
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F16D69/023
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16D65/128
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16D2200/0047
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16D65/125
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B29C70/32
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F16D65/126
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16D2200/0091
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16D2065/1328
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B29L2031/16
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F16D2200/006
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F16D69/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B29C70/32
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C70/54
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F16D65/12
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A brake disc made of fiber-reinforced material includes a braking band having a predetermined thickness. The method for making the brake discs includes setting up a winding mandrel and forming at least one layer of fibers having a predetermined width. The layer of fibers is impregnated with a binder resin. The impregnated layer is wound about the mandrel, forming a hollow cylindrical body having a predefined outer diameter and an inner diameter substantially equivalent to the mandrel diameter. The layer of fibers is wound about the mandrel in a winding direction substantially parallel to the lengthwise direction of the layer. The cylindrical body is heated to at least partly cross-link the binder resin and obtain a solid semi-finished cylindrical body. The cylindrical body is cut in slices transversely to the cylindrical body axis according to predetermined thicknesses. Each slice is a disc-shaped body defining the disc's braking band.
Claims
1. A method for making brake discs of a fibre-reinforced material, each brake disc comprising a braking band having a predetermined thickness, said method comprising the following steps: a) arranging a winding mandrel having a predetermined outer diameter; b) forming at least one layer of fibres having a predetermined width, the layer of fibres comprising chopped fibres; c) impregnating the layer of fibres with at least one binder resin and positioning the layer of fibres on a transport film, forming a mat of randomly arranged fibres; d) winding the layer of fibres impregnated with resin and positioned on the transport film about the mandrel to form a coaxially hollow cylindrical body of a brake disc, having a predetermined outer diameter and an inner diameter substantially equivalent to a diameter of the mandrel, the layer of fibres being wound about the mandrel according to at least one winding direction substantially parallel to a direction of a length of the layer; and e) heating the cylindrical body to at least partially cross-link the binder resin to obtain a solid semi-finished cylindrical body of a brake disc.
2. A method according to claim 1, comprising a step f) of cutting the semi-finished cylindrical body into slices transversely to a longitudinal axis of the cylindrical body according to predetermined thicknesses, each slice being a disc-shaped body which defines at least the braking band of a brake disc.
3. A method according to claim 2, comprising a step g) of post-crosslinking thermal treatment, said step g) being carried out on the semi-finished cylinder body.
4. A method according to claim 3, comprising a step h) of moulding the cylindrical body or individual slices of the cylindrical body obtained as a result of the cutting step f), the moulding step h) being carried out before the step g) of post-crosslinking thermal treatment.
5. A method according to claim 2, comprising a step g) of post-crosslinking thermal treatment, said step g) being carried out on at least a portion of the slices of the cylindrical body obtained as a result of the cutting step f).
6. A method according to claim 2, wherein the semi-finished cylindrical body or disc-shaped bodies obtained by cutting the cylindrical body are subjected to at least a pyrolysis step and a subsequent densification step to obtain carbo ceramic bodies.
7. A method according to claim 2, wherein the semi-finished cylindrical body or disc-shaped bodies obtained by cutting the cylindrical body are subjected to at least a pyrolysis step and a subsequent silicon infiltration step to obtain carbo ceramic material bodies.
8. A method according to claim 1, wherein the heating step e) of the cylindrical body is carried out at temperatures and for a period of time such as to only partially cross-link the binder resin so as to obtain a semi-finished cylindrical body which is still plastically deformable.
9. A method according to claim 1, comprising a step i) of cutting out through openings on the layer of fibres, said cut out step i) being carried out before the step d) of winding the layer about the mandrel.
10. A method according to claim 9, wherein said through openings are obtained on the layer of fibres according to a row distribution, each row of openings extending in the direction of a width of the layer, the openings of one row being aligned with the openings of the other rows in the direction of the length of the layer of fibres.
11. A method according to claim 1, wherein during the winding step d), a pressure is applied to the layer of fibres being wound to make the portion of layer of fibres being wound adhere to the cylindrical body being formed.
12. A method according to claim 11, wherein the pressure is applied to the layer of fibres by-tensioning the layer.
13. A method according to claim 11, wherein the pressure is applied to the layer of fibres through pressing rollers arranged in the vicinity of the mandrel.
14. A method according to claim 1, wherein during the heating step e) the heating of the cylindrical body being formed is carried out so as to obtain a minimum thermal gradient inside the cylindrical body being formed.
15. A method according to claim 14, wherein the step e) of heating the cylindrical body is totally or at least partly carried out during the step d) of winding the layer of fibres about the mandrel.
16. A method according to claim 15, wherein the heating of the cylindrical body being formed is obtained at least partly through a heater arranged externally to the cylindrical body being formed.
17. A method according to claim 16 wherein the heating of the cylindrical body being formed is obtained at least partly by a second heater arranged in the winding mandrel, so as to heat the cylindrical body formed also from an interior so as to obtain a minimum thermal gradient inside the cylindrical body.
18. A method according to claim 1, wherein the layer of fibres consists of carbon fibres.
19. A method according to claim 1, wherein the layer of fibres consists of continuous fibres, chopped fibres or a mixture of chopped and continuous fibres.
20. A method according to claim 1, wherein the layer of fibres comprises continuous fibres arranged according to one or more predetermined directions.
21. A method according to claim 1, wherein the layer of fibres consists of a fabric of continuous fibres.
22. A method according to claim 1, wherein the layer of fibres consists of a non-woven fabric of fibre, chopped and/or continuous.
23. A method according to claim 1, wherein said at least one layer of fibres has a multilayer structure, the layers of said multilayer structure having fibre orientations and/or compositions differing from each other.
24. A method according to claim 1, wherein during the winding step d), the winding direction of said at least one layer of fibres about the mandrel is varied to vary fibre orientation in the cylindrical body being formed.
25. A method according to claim 1, wherein said at least one layer of fibres has a fibre orientation and/or composition variable along a length and/or width development.
26. A method according to claim 1, wherein during the winding step d), multiple layers of fibres are wound about the mandrel, having different fibre orientations and/or composition.
27. A method according to claim 1, wherein the operating steps are carried out continuously on the layer of fibres which is progressively formed and continuously wound about the winding mandrel.
28. A method for making brake discs of a fibre-reinforced material, each brake disc comprising a braking band having a predetermined thickness, said method comprising the following steps: a) arranging a winding mandrel having a predetermined outer diameter; b) forming at least one layer of fibres having a predetermined width; c) impregnating the layer of fibres with at least one binder resin; d) winding the layer of fibres impregnated with resin about the mandrel to form a coaxially hollow cylindrical body of a brake disc, having a predetermined outer diameter and an inner diameter substantially equivalent to a diameter of the mandrel, the layer of fibres being wound about the mandrel according to at least one winding direction substantially parallel to a direction of a length of the layer; and e) heating the cylindrical body to at least partially cross-link the binder resin to obtain a solid semi-finished cylindrical body of a brake disc; f) cutting the semi-finished cylindrical body into slices transversely to a longitudinal axis of the cylindrical body according to predetermined thicknesses, each slice being a disc-shaped body which defines at least the braking band of a brake disc; g) post-crosslinking thermal treatment, said step g) being carried out on the semi-finished cylinder body; h) moulding the cylindrical body or individual slices of the cylindrical body obtained as a result of the cutting step f), the moulding step h) being carried out before the step a) of post-crosslinking thermal treatment; wherein the moulding step h) is carried out on the cylindrical body or on individual slices of the cylindrical body by plastically deforming in the axial direction a central portion of the cylindrical body or of the disc-shaped body defined by a single slice to obtain a coaxial cap on the cylindrical body or on the disc-shaped body, axially protruding therefrom, said coaxial cap defining a bell of the brake disc, an unreformed peripheral annular part of the cylindrical body or of the disc-shaped body defining the braking band of the brake disc.
29. A method according to claim 28, wherein the mandrel has an outer diameter smaller than the inner diameter of the braking band of the brake disc to be obtained, so that the cylindrical body or the disc-shaped body defined by the single slice extends radially inwards over an annular portion adapted to define the braking band of the brake disc to be obtained.
30. A method for making brake discs of a fibre-reinforced material, each brake disc comprising a braking band having a predetermined thickness, said method comprising the following steps: a) arranging a winding mandrel having a predetermined outer diameter; b) forming at least one layer of fibres having a predetermined width; c) impregnating the layer of fibres with at least one binder resin; d) winding the layer of fibres impregnated with resin about the mandrel to form a coaxially hollow cylindrical body of a brake disc, having a predetermined outer diameter and an inner diameter substantially equivalent to a diameter of the mandrel, the layer of fibres being wound about the mandrel according to at least one winding direction substantially parallel to a direction of a length of the layer; e) heating the cylindrical body to at least partially cross-link the binder resin to obtain a solid semi-finished cylindrical body of a brake disc; and f) cutting out through openings on the layer of fibres, said cut out step f) being carried out before the step d) of winding the layer about the mandrel; wherein said through openings are obtained on the layer of fibres according to a row distribution, each row of openings extending in the direction of a width of the layer, the openings of one row being aligned with the openings of the other rows in the direction of the length of the layer of fibres; wherein interdistance between the rows of openings is adjusted as a function of the radial position that the single row must take in the cylindrical body relative to the other rows, so that during the winding step d) the openings radially overlap so as to form radial cavities, each of the radial cavities extends from the outer surface of a final cylindrical body up to a predetermined radial depth, said cavities defining radial ventilation channels formed in the thickness of the braking band of the brake disc to be obtained.
31. A method according to claim 30, wherein size and shape of the openings of the individual rows are adjusted as a function of a radial position that the single row must take in the cylindrical body relative to the other rows, so as to adjust the inner section of each radial cavity according to the radial dimension.
Description
DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) Further features and advantages of the present invention will appear more clearly from the following description of preferred and non-limiting embodiment examples thereof, in which:
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(9) With reference to the above figures, reference numeral 1 globally indicates a brake disc made of fibre-reinforced material obtained with the method according to the present invention.
(10) Brake disc 1 comprises an annular structure 2, or braking band, and a central fastening element 3, known as bell, through which the disc is fixed to the rotating part of a suspension of a vehicle, such as a hub. The braking band 2 has a predetermined thickness s (dimension defined in the axial direction) and is provided with opposed braking surfaces adapted to cooperate with friction elements (brake pads), accommodated in a caliper body arranged astride of such braking band and integral with a non-rotating component of the vehicle suspension. The controlled interaction between the opposing brake pads and the opposed braking surfaces of the braking band determine a braking action by friction which allows the deceleration or stopping of the vehicle.
(11) A brake disc 1 obtainable by the method according to the present invention has at least the braking band 2 made of a material reinforced by fibres, which may be of the CC or CCM families. Such material has a support matrix which acts as a binder for the fibres. The matrix cooperates with the fibres in the transfer of stresses applied to the material and protects the fibres from possible damages. The matrix is generally produced by subjecting organic resins to suitable heat treatments (e.g. heating and pyrolysis or carbonization). Preferably, additives are present in the matrix, which, as the binder resins used, vary depending on the type of material to be obtained and/or on the final features of the material itself. The above heat treatments alter the resins and additives.
(12) As will be explained in the following description, the method according to the present invention in particular allows the orientation of the fibres within the matrix to be adjusted. For example, the method according to the invention allows the fibres to be arranged circumferentially in the braking band. However, more complex fibre orientations may also be obtained. The method also allows a random arrangement of the fibres within the matrix.
(13) As will be explained in the following description, the method according to the present invention in particular allows the composition of the material forming the disc (both in terms of fibres and of matrix) to be adjusted.
(14) As will be explained hereinafter in the description, the method according to the present invention may provide for the braking band 2 to be made separately from bell 3 and for the two components to be combined in a final assembly step of the brake disc. In particular, the two componentsband and bellmay be made of different materials: the band of a fibre-reinforced material, CC or CCM, and the bell, for example, of a metal material. Advantageously, the method according to the present invention may alternatively provide for the bell to be made in one piece with the braking band, and thus to be also made of the same fibre-reinforced material, CC or CCM, of which the braking band is made.
(15) The method according to the invention will be described referring to elements/devices that will then be described hereafter in the description of some exemplary plants for carrying out the method, illustrated in
(16) According to a general embodiment of the present invention, the method for making brake discs of a fibre-reinforced material comprises the following operating steps:
(17) a) arranging a winding mandrel 10 having a predetermined outer diameter D1;
(18) b) forming at least one layer of fibres 20 having a predetermined width W;
(19) c) impregnating such layer of fibres 20 with at least one binder resin;
(20) d) winding the layer of fibres impregnated with resin about mandrel 10 to form a coaxially hollow cylindrical body 30, having a predetermined outer diameter De and an inner diameter Di substantially equivalent to diameter D1 of mandrel 10; the layer of fibres is wound about the mandrel according to at least one winding direction substantially parallel to the direction of length L of layer 20;
(21) e) heating the cylindrical body to temperatures and for a period of time such as to at least partially cross-link the binder resin so as to obtain a solid semi-finished cylindrical body.
(22) According to a particular embodiment of the present invention, the cylindrical body is sized so as to define itself a single disc-shaped body which defines at least the braking band of a brake disc.
(23) According to a preferred embodiment of the present invention, shown in particular in the block diagram of
(24) The method according to the invention allows the production process of brake discs made of a fibre-reinforced material to be greatly simplified.
(25) The advantages in terms of operational simplification are manifold. It is no longer necessary to control n distinct processes for making the green body, but only one. In fact, the semi-finished disc-shaped bodies (green bodies) that form the basis for making the brake discs need not be made one by one for each single disc, with n moulding and resin cross-linking steps.
(26) The advantage is not only in terms of reduction of the operating steps, but also in terms of simplification of the quality control of the resulting products. In fact, the production of the disc-shaped bodies in batches, rather than in individual pieces, leads to a reduction of the operations related to quality control. Moreover, the production has more homogeneous features, both in terms of fibre distribution within the matrix and in terms of cross-linking level of the binder resin. Also clear are the advantages in terms of reproducibility of the results.
(27) Preferably, mandrel 10 has a predetermined length L1, not less than width W of the layer of fibres. This is useful to prevent the risk that at one or both ends, the cylindrical body being formed is not supported by the mandrel and may collapse or deform, with waste of material and increase in costs.
(28) Preferably, the method comprises a step g) of post-crosslinking (post-curing) thermal treatment, aimed to complete or consolidate the cross-linking of the resin started in the heating step e). Such step g) is therefore carried out after the heating step e) of the cylindrical body.
(29) According to particular embodiments, after the heating step e) of the cylindrical body, the post-crosslinking step g) may be not provided, if the resulting solid semi-finished cylindrical body already has such mechanical strength and rigidity to be manipulated without being subject to deformation.
(30) Preferably, the post-curing step g) is carried out in a furnace, with temperatures which reach 150-250 C. and residence times ranging from 2 to 6 hours and in any case for about 150 s for each centimeter of thickness of the article to be treated.
(31) As shown in the block diagram of
(32) Alternatively, the post-crosslinking (post-curing) thermal treatment step g) may be carried out directly on the semi-finished cylinder body 30 if the cylindrical body is sized so as to define itself a single disc-shaped body which defines at least the braking band of a brake disc.
(33) As shown in the block diagram of
(34) The above specific thermal treatments, which vary depending on whether the braking band 2 should be made of fibre-reinforced CC or CCM, may also be carried out directly on the cylindrical body, if the latter is sized so as to define itself a single disc-shaped body which defines at least the braking band of a brake disc.
(35) What follows in the present description may be applied both if the discs are obtained by cutting the cylindrical body, and if the cylindrical body defines itself a single disc and no cutting step is provided.
(36) According to a particular embodiment of this method, the post-crosslinking step g) may conveniently be absorbed in the pyrolysis/carbonisation step (carried out, for example, in a continuous furnace) provided both in the case of CC discs and in the case of CCM discs.
(37) Advantageously, in addition to binder resins, additives may be applied to the layer of fibres 20. Such additives may be applied to the layer of fibres separately from the resins, for example in the form of separate deposition layers, or they may be applied to the layer of fibres mixed with the resins themselves. As already mentioned above, the binder resins and any additives are selected according to the type of material (CC or CCM) to be obtained.
(38) Advantageously, during the winding step d), a single layer of fibres 20 may be wound about the mandrel or more than one layer of fibres 20, which preferably but not necessarily differ from one other in terms of fibre orientation and/or composition of the resins and/or of the fibres.
(39) The winding of more than one layer about the mandrel may be made: simultaneously on different longitudinal positions of the mandrel, obtaining in this case a differentiation of the cylinder features along the mandrel axis, and thus in the disc thickness; or sequentially, with the layers wound one after another about the mandrel, obtaining in this case a differentiation of the cylinder features, and thus of the discs, in radial direction.
(40) A combination of the above two modes of winding a plurality of distinct layers may be contemplated.
(41) The single layer of fibres 20 (both in the case of winding a single layer or more than one layer distinct layers) comprises reinforcement fibres, of any composition suitable for the purpose. Mixtures of different fibres may be contemplated. Preferably, the fibres used are carbon.
(42) Also the size of the fibresin terms of diameter and cuttingare selected according to the features to impart to the brake disc 1.
(43) The single layer of fibres may consist of continuous fibres, chopped fibres or a mixture of chopped and continuous fibres.
(44) In particular, the layer of fibres comprises continuous fibres arranged according to one or more predefined directions, which in particular may be intersecting with one another.
(45) The fibres may be arranged in layer 20 either unidirectionally or according to multiple directions. A multi-directional arrangement of the fibres may be obtained by weaving the fibres (e.g. structure with warp and weft) or by overlapping several layers having different fibre orientations (as will be described hereinafter).
(46) In particular, the layer of fibres may consist of a fabric of continuous fibres.
(47) Alternatively, the layer of fibres may consist of a non-woven fabric of fibres, either chopped and/or continuous.
(48) The layer of fibres may also have a completely random fibre distribution.
(49) As will be described hereinafter, the single layer may have the fibres arranged in an orderly manner in some portions and the fibres randomly arranged in other portions.
(50) As will be described hereinafter, the layer of fibres 20 may be formed in different ways, depending also on the features of the fibres used.
(51) As shown for example in the diagrams of
(52) As shown for example in the diagram of
(53) Advantageously, the chopped fibres deposited on the transport film may be oriented by means of suitable orientation devices which may obtained on the same transport film (e.g. via ribs) or which may be external to the film, such as combs.
(54) According to embodiments of the method not shown in the attached figures, if the layer has portions with fibres orderly arranged and portions with fibres randomly arranged, the two embodiment modes (with continuous fibres and with chopped fibres) may be combined together.
(55) Preferably, as will be described hereinafter, the step b) of forming the layer of fibres 20 is continuous. The formed layer is thus progressively continuously wound on the mandrel. The layer forming step may then be carried out in line with the other steps of the method. This imparts greater operating flexibility to the method according to the invention.
(56) Alternatively, the layer of fibres may be made separately from the other steps of the method. The layer of fibres may be stored, for example, in the form of coils and be then fed to the production process for winding about the mandrel.
(57) Advantageously, the properties of the layer are selected according to the desired features to impart to the cylindrical body and thus to the disc-shaped bodies that can be made therefrom.
(58) The layer of fibres may have a fibre orientation differentiated along its development, in particular along the longitudinal development direction. In this way, by appropriately selecting the features of the layer in terms of fibre orientation, it is possible to differentiate the features of the cylindrical body, in particular in radial direction.
(59) For example, it is possible to form the layer of fibres 20 in such a way that the portions of the layer which will form the areas of the single disc (defined by the cylindrical body taken in its entirety) or of the discs (obtained from the cylinder by cutting) subject to greater load and physical stress have fibres arranged according to one or more predetermined orientations, while the other portions of the layer which will form areas less subject to load and physical stress have randomly arranged fibres.
(60) Advantageously, in combination with or alternatively to a differentiation in the fibre orientation, the layer of fibres may have a different composition in terms of fibres and/or resin binders and/or additives, along its development, in particular along the longitudinal development direction and/or along the width development direction. In this way, by appropriately selecting the features of the layer in terms of composition, it is possible to differentiate the features of the cylindrical body, in particular in radial direction and in the winding axis direction (i.e. in particular in the thickness of the single disc or of the final discs).
(61) In particular, if the layer of fibres 20 has a differentiated composition along the longitudinal development direction, a single disc-shaped body or multiple disc-shaped bodies are obtained with a composition differentiated in the radial direction. For example, it is possible to obtain discs in which the innermost sectors of the cylindrical body (and therefore of the disc-shaped bodies) are made with fibres of a first material, while the outermost sectors (e.g. those that form the braking band of the disc) are made with fibres of a second material.
(62) In particular, if the layer of fibres 20 has a differentiated composition along the width development direction, a single disc-shaped or multiple disc-shaped bodies are obtained with a composition differentiated in the thickness direction (which coincides with the winding axis). For example, it is possible to obtain discs formed from layers having a different composition. In this way it is for example possible to makein the single disc-shaped body (defined by the cylindrical body in its entirety) or in the disc-shaped bodies obtained by cutting the cylindersuperficial layers of different composition compared to more internal layers. This is particularly useful in particular in the braking bands where specific surface friction layers may be envisioned.
(63) Advantageously, the layer of fibres 20 may be single layer or multilayer, so as to form sandwich structures.
(64) Preferably the layers of the multilayer structure have fibre orientations and/or composition different from each other.
(65) Advantageously, if the layer of fibres has a multilayer structure, for each individual layer it is possible to envision a specific forming line. The different forming lines, operating in parallel, will convey their products on a single assembly line of the multilayer. The multilayer thus produced will then be sent to the rolling step.
(66) Advantageously, the differentiation of the features of fibre orientation and/or of composition of the material (fibres, resins and/or additives) may be obtained either by winding a single continuous layer of fibres about the mandrel with features which differ along its development (for example in length and/or width) or (as already mentioned) by sequentially winding distinct layers of fibres that differ from one another in their fibre orientation and/or composition. In the latter case, the winding order of the different layers of fibres depends on the features to be imparted to the single disc (defined by the cylindrical body in its entirety) or to the final discs (obtained by cutting the cylindrical body).
(67) The features of the layer of fibres 20 may be varied depending on the forming step of the cylindrical body in the process of winding about the mandrel. For example, the features of the layer of fibres 20 may be variedin terms of fibre orientation and/or compositionin such a way that the cylindrical body has different features, for example, in radial direction.
(68) Advantageously, changes in the fibre orientation inside the cylindrical body being formed may be obtained during the winding step d) by varying the winding direction of the layer of fibres about the mandrel. The change in the winding direction may be made both while maintaining constant the features of the layer of fibres constant and simultaneously varying the features of the layer itself.
(69) Operationally, the winding direction of the layer of fibres may be varied by changing the relative position between the mandrel and the layer of fibres.
(70) The method according to the present invention therefore provides a high flexibility in terms of ability to control and adjust the fibre orientation and/or composition inside the cylindrical body and thus inside the single disc-shaped body (defined by the cylindrical body in the its entirety) or disc-shaped bodies (obtained by cutting the cylindrical body) that form at least the braking bands of the brake discs.
(71) Advantageously, the step c) of impregnation of the layer of fibres 20 with resin may be performed using any technique suitable for the purpose. In particular, the binder resin may be applied to the layer of fibres by direct deposition on the layer or by dipping the layer of fibres inside a resin tank. As shown in the diagram of
(72) Any resin suitable for the purpose may be used as binder resin. One type only of resin may be used, or also mixtures of different resins.
(73) In general, any organic resin having a high yield of carbon may be used. Preferably, phenolic or epoxy resins are used. In the case of CCM, pre-ceramic resins such as siloxanes or silanes may also be used.
(74) As already mentioned above, the binder resin may be added in a mixture of additives of various nature, such as coke, graphite, carbon fibres.
(75) As already mentioned above, the impregnation of the single layer of fibres may be carried out in a differentiated manner so as to vary the composition of the resins and/or additives applied from portion to portion of the same layer.
(76) Preferably, during the winding step d), a predetermined pressure is applied to the layer of fibres being wound to make the portion of the layer of fibres being wound adhere to the cylindrical body being formed. The value of the applied pressure varies according to the features to be imparted to the brake disc 1. In particular, depending on whether the coils of the layer being wound should adhere more or less to one another, the value of the applied pressure will be increased or decreased.
(77) The pressure may be applied to the layer of fibres by tensioning the same layer of fibres and/or by pressing rollers 11 arranged in the vicinity of mandrel 10 (as shown in
(78) Preferably, the value of the applied pressure is selected depending on the type of resin used and on the process temperature. If the binder resins are epoxy, the pressure is preferably between 1 and 10 bar. If the binder resins are phenolic, the pressure is preferably between 1 and 5 bar. Such values are chosen to achieve a good penetration of the resin inside the layer of fibres and a good adhesion between the various wound layers, so as to obtain a body of solid material, compact and well formed.
(79) As already said, the heating step e) of the cylindrical body is carried out at temperatures and for a period of time such as to at least partially cross-link the binder resin so as to obtain a semi-finished cylindrical body. The at least partial cross-linking of the resin must be such as to impart such mechanical strength features to the cylindrical body as to make it easy to manipulate and processed. In particular, the cylindrical body should be compact, in order to prevent it from flaking if handled or if subject to subsequent processing. For example, the body must be able to be cut into slices without losing its shape.
(80) Preferably, said step e) of heating the cylindrical body is all or at least partially carried out during the step d) of winding of the layer of fibres about the mandrel. On the one hand, this allows the timing of the heat treatment to be optimized, which may already be started during the step of formation of the cylindrical body, and on the other hand it also allows the forming process of the cylindrical body to be improved. In fact, the resin cross-linking (even if partial) is induced immediately as the cylindrical body is formed, operating coil on coil and not on the final cylindrical body already formed. The body that is gradually forming is thus consolidated at the same time. This leads to substantial benefits in terms of improved mechanical strength properties and homogeneity of the body obtained.
(81) The cross-linking heat treatment may also be carried out almost independently of the size of the cylindrical body, since it is performed on the surface coil of the body being formed and not on the final body. This thus reduces the delays associated with temperature gradients between the outside and inside of the body.
(82) Preferably, the heating of the cylindrical body being formed is carried out so as to obtain the smallest possible thermal gradient inside the cylindrical body being formed, within the body itself, preferably zero. In other words, it is done so as to obtain a homogeneous heating of the cylindrical body as much as possible.
(83) Advantageously, the heating of the cylindrical body may be at least partly obtained through heating means 40 arranged outside the cylindrical body being formed. Such heating means may be of any type suitable for the purpose, such as resistive, by IR and/or UV lamps, ion bombing, etc.
(84) Preferably, the heating of the cylindrical body being formed may be at least partly obtained also by heating means arranged in the winding mandrel 10, in order to heat the cylindrical body being formed also from the inside, in combination with the aforesaid outer heating means. The combination of internal and external heating is aimed to obtain the smallest possible thermal gradient inside the cylindrical body being formed.
(85) The heating from the insidewhich is preferably carried out in association with heating from the outsidein particular allows the inner layers of the cylinder (i.e. those closest to the mandrel) to be kept warm, facilitating the consolidation of the body.
(86) More generally, it is preferable to heat the cylindrical body being formed in all its radial thickness. In particular, it is to be prevented that some sectors of the cylinder are subjected to more intense heat treatments than other sectors, with the risk that internal stresses are generated during the forming of the body itself such as to damage or crack the body itself. For this purpose, during the heating step it is possible to monitor the thermal gradient pattern, for example by detecting over time, by means of suitable sensors, the temperatures on the inner and outer surface of the body being formed itself.
(87) Preferably, if the binder resins impregnating the layer of fibres are epoxy, during the heating step e) of the cylindrical body, the temperature of the cylindrical body being formed is kept in the range between 120 C. and 250 C. If a complete cross-linking is desired, the temperature must be higher than 200 C. If a complete cross-linking is not desired, the temperature may be below 200 C.
(88) If the binder resins that impregnate the fibre layer are phenolic, the temperature of the cylindrical body being formed is kept between 100 C. and 230 C. The degree of cross-linking is adjusted according to the duration of the heat treatment. If a complete cross-linking is desired, the temperature must be higher than 180 C. If a complete cross-linking is not desired, the temperature may be below 180 C.
(89) Advantageously, the heating of the cylindrical body being formed may be also carried out in a differentiated manner as a function of the cylinder area being formed. As will be explained hereinafter, the composition and the inner structure of the cylinder may radially vary in order to impart different properties to different areas of the cylinder. For example, it is possible to differentiate the composition and structure between the braking surface and the bell coupling area. The differential heating as a function of the cylinder area being formed may therefore be used to adapt to production needs related to differences in the fibre composition.
(90) According to a particularly preferred embodiment of the invention, the method comprises a step i) of cutting out through openings 50 on the layer of fibres 20. Such cutting out step i) is carried out before the step d) of winding the layer about the mandrel.
(91) Preferably, as shown in
(92) Advantageously, from an operating point of view, interdistance H between the rows of openings 51-55 is regulated as a function of the radial position that the single row must take in the cylindrical body relative to the other rows, so that during the winding step d), openings 50 of different rows overlap radially so as to form radial cavities. Each of these cavities may be made to extend from the outer surface of the final cylindrical body up to a predetermined radial depth. Such radial cavities may therefore define ventilation channels obtained in the thickness of the braking band of the brake disc to be obtained.
(93) Preferably, the size and shape of the openings of the individual rows may be adjusted as a function of the radial position that the single row must take in the cylindrical body relative to the other rows, so as to adjust the inner section of each radial cavity according to the radial dimension. It is therefore possible to obtain radial cavities with variable inner section along the radial direction.
(94) This operating solution is extremely flexible and more efficient than the solution which provides for the use of internal cores. In the first place, it does not provide for the arrangement, positioning and extraction of cores. In the second place, it is not limited by the need of ensuring the removability of the cores from the cylindrical body, which requirement greatly limits the shapes adoptable for the internal cores. This system is an alternative to a system that uses disposable cores that pose operating complications related to the extraction of the cores.
(95) Operationally, openings 50 on the layer of fibres 20 may be made by suitable cutting devices (only schematically shown in
(96) According to a preferred embodiment of the method of the invention, step e) of heating the cylindrical body is carried out at temperatures and for a period of time such as to only partially cross-link the binder resin so as to obtain a semi-finished cylindrical body which is still plastically deformable.
(97) Advantageously, as already mentioned above, the semi-finished cylindrical body 30 thus obtainedstill plastically deformablemay be subjected to step f) of cutting into slices to obtain a plurality of disc-shaped bodies 31 that can be subjected to moulding. The method according to the invention may therefore comprise a step h) of moulding the individual slices of the cylindrical body obtained as a result of the cutting step f).
(98) Such moulding step may also be carried out on the cylindrical body if the latter is sized so as to define itself a single disc-shaped body that defines at least the braking band of a brake disc.
(99) Preferably, such moulding step h) is carried out before step g) of post-crosslinking/post-curing thermal treatment (if provided).
(100) According to a particularly preferred embodiment of the invention, as shown in the sequence of images of
(101) Making braking band 2 and bell 3 of a brake disc 1 in one piece allows the process of making a brake disc to be greatly simplified. In fact, the steps of setting up and assembling the bells to the braking bands are eliminated.
(102) Preferably, in order to make the bell and the band of a disc in one piece, the winding mandrel 10 used to make the cylindrical body has an outer diameter D1 smaller than the inner diameter dl of the braking band 2 of the brake disc 1 to be obtained, such that the cylindrical body 30 or the disc-shaped body 31 defined by the single slice extends radially inwards over the annular portion 32 intended to define the braking band of the brake disc to be obtained.
(103) Advantageously, as shown in particular in the block diagram of
(104) Advantageously, as shown in particular in the block diagram of
(105) Advantageously, as shown in particular in the block diagram of
(106) Advantageously, as shown in particular in the block diagram of
(107) Preferably, as shown in the system diagrams of
(108) More in detail, according to the system diagram shown in
(109) According to the system diagram shown in
(110) The system diagram of
(111) In all three systems shown in
(112) The object of the present invention is a plant to implement the method of making brake discs of a fibre-reinforced material according to the present invention, in particular as described above.
(113) The object of the present invention is a brake disc for disc brake, obtained by the method according to the present invention, in particular as described above.
(114) As can be understood from the description, the device according to the invention allows the disadvantages of the prior art to be overcome.
(115) In particular, thanks to the method according to the present invention it is possible to obtain a plurality of disc-shaped bodies 31 from a single semi-finished body (green body), each of which can then be processed to obtain at least the braking band 2 of a brake disc 1. The method according to the invention allows the production process of brake discs made of a fibre-reinforced material to be greatly simplified.
(116) The advantages in terms of operational simplification are manifold. It is no longer necessary to control n distinct processes for making the green body, but only one. In fact, the semi-finished disc-shaped bodies (green bodies) that form the basis for making the brake discs need not be made one by one for each single disc, with n moulding and resin cross-linking steps.
(117) The advantage is not only in terms of reduction of the operating steps, but also in terms of simplification of the quality control of the resulting products. In fact, the production of the disc-shaped bodies in batches, rather than in individual pieces, leads to a reduction of the operations related to quality control. Moreover, the production has more homogeneous features, both in terms of fibre distribution within the matrix and in terms of cross-linking level of the binder resin. Also clear are the advantages in terms of reproducibility of the results.
(118) The method according to the present invention offers a high flexibility in terms of ability to control and adjust the fibre orientation and/or composition of the materials that form the cylinder (in terms of composition of resins, fibres and/or additives, if present) within the cylindrical body itself and therefore within the single disc-shaped body (defined by the cylindrical body in its entirety) or disc-shaped bodies which form at least the braking bands of the brake discs.
(119) The method according to the present invention enables brake discs with ventilation channels to be made without having to necessarily use shaped cores. This makes the manufacturing process extremely more flexible and efficient compared to the solution which provides for the use of internal cores. Providing for the set up, positioning and extraction of cores is no longer required. Secondly, the process is not limited by the need to ensure the core removability from the cylindrical body.
(120) By the method according to the invention it is possible to form ventilation channels with uncommon geometries and sizes, with undercuts and geometric anomalies. This is not possible done with traditional methods which use internal cores to be extracted later.
(121) The method according to the present invention also allows a brake disc to be made in which braking band and bell are made in one piece. This constitutes an important element of simplification of the disc manufacturing process. In fact, the steps of setting up and assembling the bells to the braking bands are eliminated.
(122) In order to meet specific and incidental needs, a man skilled in the art may make several changes and variations to the disc brake calipers described above, all falling within the scope of the invention as defined in the following claims.