HYDROPHILIC MATERIAL AND COATING FOR AUTOMOTIVE LIDAR SENSOR COVERS
20240027583 ยท 2024-01-25
Assignee
Inventors
- Wing Li PAO (Oshawa, CA)
- Long LI (Oshawa, CA)
- Martin Agelin-Chaab (Oshawa, CA)
- Julian Knutzen (Aurora, CA)
- Alexis BALTAZAR-Y-JIMENEZ (Troy, MI, US)
Cpc classification
C03C17/3411
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C03C2217/78
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
International classification
G01S7/481
PHYSICS
C03C17/42
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Abstract
A weather resistant autonomous driving sensor unit for an autonomous vehicle driving system. The sensor unit further includes a cover having an inside surface facing the one or more light detection and ranging sensors, and an external surface facing an external environment of a vehicle. The cover is formed of molded polycarbonate and also forms a vehicle component selected from the group consisting of a vehicle grille, bumper and front end module. A hydrophilic coating applied to the external surface of the coating. The hydrophilic coating can be made of several different compounds that are applied to the external surface using spraying, dipping or vapor deposition. The hydrophilic coating selected must provide a droplet thickness to diameter ratio of less than 0.3 when the water contact angle on the external surface of the cover is less than 40 degrees or between about 25 degrees to about 40 degrees.
Claims
1. A weather resistant autonomous driving sensor unit comprising: one or more sensors connected to an autonomous vehicle driving system; a cover having an inside surface facing the one or more sensors and an external surface facing an external environment of a vehicle; a hydrophilic coating applied to the external surface of the cover, wherein the hydrophilic coating provides a droplet thickness to diameter ratio of less than 0.3 when the water contact angle on the external surface of the cover is less than 40 degrees or between about 25 degrees to about 40 degrees.
2. The weather resistant autonomous driving sensor unit of claim 1 further comprising the cover having a core layer formed of glass.
3. The weather resistant autonomous driving sensor unit of claim 2 further comprising: the core layer having an anti-abrasion coating layer applied to the inside surface of the cover over the core layer, and the core layer having an anti-abrasion coating layer applied to the external surface of the cover over the core layer.
4. The weather resistant autonomous driving sensor unit of claim 3 wherein the anti-abrasion layer applied to the inside surface of the cover and the anti-abrasion layer applied to the external surface of the cover are one selected from the group consisting of epoxy coatings, polyacrylic coating, ceramic coatings, polyurethane coatings, and fluoropolymer coatings.
5. The weather resistant autonomous driving sensor unit of claim 3 further comprising an anti-reflective coating layer applied over the anti-abrasion coating layer applied to the inside surface of the cover.
6. The weather resistant autonomous driving sensor unit of claim 5 wherein the anti-reflective coating layer is one selected from the group consisting of silicon dioxide, titanium dioxide and a polarizing coating material.
7. The weather resistant autonomous driving sensor unit of claim 5 further comprising a hydrophilic coating layer applied over the anti-abrasion coating layer applied to the external surface of the cover.
8. The weather resistant driving sensor unit of claim 7 wherein the hydrophilic coating is one selected from the group consisting of glass, ceramic and polycarbonate.
9. The weather resistant autonomous driving sensor unit of claim 1 further comprising the cover having a core layer formed of polycarbonate.
10. The weather resistant autonomous driving sensor unit of claim 9 further comprising: the core layer having an anti-abrasion coating layer applied to the inside surface of the cover over the core layer, and the core layer having an anti-abrasion coating layer applied to the external surface of the cover over the core layer.
11. The weather resistant autonomous driving sensor unit of claim 10 wherein the anti-abrasion layer applied to the inside surface of the cover and the anti-abrasion layer applied to the external surface of the cover are one selected from the group consisting of epoxy coatings, polyacrylic coating, ceramic coatings, polyurethane coatings, and fluoropolymer coatings.
12. The weather resistant autonomous driving sensor unit of claim 10 further comprising an anti-reflective coating layer applied over the anti-abrasion coating layer applied to the inside surface of the cover.
13. The weather resistant autonomous driving sensor unit of claim 12 wherein the anti-reflective coating layer is one selected from the group consisting of silicon dioxide, titanium dioxide and a polarizing coating material.
14. The weather resistant autonomous driving sensor unit of claim 12 further comprising a hydrophilic coating layer applied over the anti-abrasion coating layer applied to the external surface of the cover.
15. The weather resistant driving sensor unit of claim 14 wherein the hydrophilic coating is one selected from the group consisting of glass, ceramic and polycarbonate.
16. A weather resistant autonomous driving sensor unit comprising: one or more light detection and ranging sensors connected to an autonomous vehicle driving system; a cover having an inside surface facing the one or more light detection and ranging sensors and an external surface facing an external environment of a vehicle, wherein the cover forms a vehicle component one selected from the group consisting of a vehicle grille, bumper and front end module; a hydrophilic coating applied to the external surface of the cover, wherein the hydrophilic coating provides a droplet thickness to diameter ratio of less than 0.3 when the water contact angle on the external surface of the cover is less than 40 degrees or between about 25 degrees to about 40 degrees.
17. The weather resistant autonomous driving sensor unit of claim 16 further comprising the cover having a core layer formed of glass.
18. The weather resistant autonomous driving sensor unit of claim 17 further comprising: the core layer having an anti-abrasion coating layer applied to the inside surface of the cover over the core layer, and the core layer having an anti-abrasion coating layer applied to the external surface of the cover over the core layer.
19. The weather resistant autonomous driving sensor unit of claim 18 wherein the anti-abrasion layer applied to the inside surface of the cover and the anti-abrasion layer applied to the external surface of the cover are one selected from the group consisting of epoxy coatings, polyacrylic coating, ceramic coatings, polyurethane coatings, and fluoropolymer coatings.
20. The weather resistant autonomous driving sensor unit of claim 18 further comprising an anti-reflective coating layer applied over the anti-abrasion coating layer applied to the inside surface of the cover.
21. The weather resistant autonomous driving sensor unit of claim 20 wherein the anti-reflective coating layer is one selected from the group consisting of silicon dioxide, titanium dioxide and a polarizing coating material.
22. The weather resistant autonomous driving sensor unit of claim 20 further comprising a hydrophilic coating layer applied over the anti-abrasion coating layer applied to the external surface of the cover.
23. The weather resistant driving sensor unit of claim 7 wherein the hydrophilic coating is one selected from the group consisting of glass, ceramic and polycarbonate.
24. The weather resistant autonomous driving sensor unit of claim 16 further comprising the cover having a core layer formed of polycarbonate.
25. The weather resistant autonomous driving sensor unit of claim 24 further comprising: the core layer having an anti-abrasion coating layer applied to the inside surface of the cover over the core layer, and the core layer having an anti-abrasion coating layer applied to the external surface of the cover over the core layer.
26. The weather resistant autonomous driving sensor unit of claim 25 wherein the anti-abrasion layer applied to the inside surface of the cover and the anti-abrasion layer applied to the external surface of the cover are one selected from the group consisting of epoxy coatings, polyacrylic coating, ceramic coatings, polyurethane coatings, and fluoropolymer coatings.
27. The weather resistant autonomous driving sensor unit of claim 25 further comprising an anti-reflective coating layer applied over the anti-abrasion coating layer applied to the inside surface of the cover.
28. The weather resistant autonomous driving sensor unit of claim 27 wherein the anti-reflective coating layer is one selected from the group consisting of silicon dioxide, titanium dioxide and a polarizing coating material.
29. The weather resistant autonomous driving sensor unit of claim 27 further comprising a hydrophilic coating layer applied over the anti-abrasion coating layer applied to the external surface of the cover.
30. The weather resistant driving sensor unit of claim 29 wherein the hydrophilic coating is one selected from the group consisting of glass, ceramic and polycarbonate.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0005] The present invention will become more fully understood from the detailed description and the accompanying drawings, wherein:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
[0017] The following description of the preferred embodiments is merely exemplary in nature and is in no way intended to limit the invention, its application, or uses.
[0018] Referring now to the figures, this invention focuses on the findings made on passive soiling mitigation through coatings of different material properties. The effectiveness of the coating is quantified by the wettability and the respective LiDAR sensor visibility % in adverse weather conditions such as driving-in-rain.
[0019] Method
[0020] Coating properties are first identified and are classified according to their static water contact angle, which is linearly correlated to the droplet thickness to contact diameter ratio (T/D).
[0021] A wide range of coatings of different water contact angles (WCA) in the range of 25-150 is evaluated under controlled conditions in various driving-in-rain scenarios in a wind tunnel. LiDAR visibility is extracted based on the percent of point-cloud present. WCA measurements are defined herein to be a measure of surface wettability, where its value is commonly used to classify the material type and determine predicted droplet behaviors (e.g., shape and motion) that are related to the surface energy of adhesion. Droplet thickness and the droplet contact diameter are two critical parameters that affect optical behaviors. Referring to
[0022] A conventional low-cost approach to mitigate soiling on vehicle surfaces is to employ hydrophobic coatings; a lot of the products currently in the automotive market are hydrophobic in nature with WCA 90-100. However, our studies found that hydrophobic coatings are detrimental to LiDAR sensor signals due to the shape of the droplet adhering to the cover being hemispherical with T/D 0.35-0.5 (
[0023] On the other hand, hydrophilic coatings, which are typically not the general approach, are found to result in outstanding LiDAR visibility. When raindrops impact a hydrophilic surface, due to the higher surface adsorption energy than the molecular interactions within the droplet, a thin water film is formed.
[0024] Referring now to
[0025]
[0026] For mildly hydrophobic surfaces, the water contact angle is approximately 90 degrees, forming a semi-spherical shape, thus resulting in T/D of approximately 0.5. (
[0027] Referring now to
[0028]
TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Layers Combination (Corresponds to LiDAR visibility in dry reference numbers in FIG. 5) condition None 100% 44 only 97% 46 + 44 + 48 101% 46(already hydrophilic) + 44 + 48 + 52 102%
[0029] The description of the invention is merely exemplary in nature and, thus, variations that do not depart from the gist of the invention are intended to be within the scope of the invention. Such variations are not to be regarded as a departure from the spirit and scope of the invention.