Method of manufacturing soundproof material
12115705 ยท 2024-10-15
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B60R13/0815
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29K2021/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
Abstract
A soundproof material includes rubber sponge having a specific gravity of 0.2 or less, which is formed by extrusion molding and a subsequent crosslinking and foaming of a rubber composition using a microwave heating device. The rubber composition includes at least raw material rubber, a crosslinking agent, a foaming agent, and carbon black. The soundproof material has a rectangular cross-sectional outer shape, has at least two hollow parts inside formed by a lateral partition wall extending in a left-right lateral direction and at least two hollow parts formed by a vertical partition wall extending in a vertical direction. The method includes adding carbon nanotubes to the rubber composition.
Claims
1. A method of manufacturing a soundproof material, the soundproof material comprising rubber sponge having a specific gravity of 0.2 or less, the rubber sponge being formed by extrusion molding and a subsequent crosslinking and foaming of a rubber composition using a microwave heating device, the rubber composition including at least raw-material rubber, a crosslinking agent, a foaming agent, and carbon black, the soundproof material having a rectangular cross-sectional outer shape, the soundproof material having at least two hollow parts inside formed by a lateral partition wall extending in a left-right lateral direction, the soundproof material having at least two hollow parts formed by a vertical partition wall extending in a vertical direction, the method comprising adding carbon nanotubes to the rubber composition.
2. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the amount of the carbon nanotubes to be added is 3.0 phr or less.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(18) The structure of a soundproof material 50 manufactured by the method according to an embodiment of the present invention will be described with reference to the drawings. This sound proof material 50 is applied to a sheet body part 31 of a door hole seal 30 to be attached to an automobile door 100. When constituents or items correspond to those in prior arts, the same symbols are used.
(19) As illustrated in
(20) The door hole seal 30 includes a sheet body part 31 having an excellent sound insulation and absorption performances and a synthetic resin film (PE film) 32 integrally united to the sheet body part 31 by thermal welding (welding part T), to place the sheet body part 31 in the door inner panel 102.
(21) A butyl rubber seal agent 33 as an adhesive is provided on an outer side surface of the synthetic resin film 32 so that the door hole seal 30 is firmly attached to the door inner panel 102.
(22) Alternatively, the sheet body part 31 may be integrated with a resin mold product in place of the PE film 32, or it may be integrated directly with the door inner panel 102. The resin mold product may be provided with claw-shaped engaging parts as engagement means to integrate the sheet body part 31 with the resin mold product. The sheet body part 31 may be provided, in advance, with fixing means such as clips, double-sided tapes, adhesive, and hot melt for attachment to the door inner panel 102 to integrate the sheet body part 31 directly to the door inner panel 102.
(23) As illustrated in
(24) When attached to the door 100, the upper and lower ends of the sheet body part 31 are opened.
(25) The soundproof material 50 to be applied to the sheet body part 31 has a belt shape, has a specific gravity of 0.2 or less, is formed by EPDM sponge, is entirely extrusion molded, and is crosslinked and foamed. The soundproof material 50 is more preferably further highly foamed one with a low specific gravity of 0.15 or less. In this embodiment, EPDM is employed as the raw-material rubber of the rubber sponge forming the soundproof material 50 in view of sound control performance, productivity, durability, etc. Alternatively, other rubbers can be used as far as they can form skin layers through extrusion molding and crosslinking and foaming. Those rubbers include, for example, natural rubber (NR), nitrile rubber (NBR), silicone rubber (Q), styrene rubber (SBR), and chloroprene rubber (CR).
(26) As illustrated in
(27) The dimensions of the soundproof material are defined as illustrated in
(28) As illustrated in
(29) The sheet body part 31 has holes or notches, not illustrated, on its side surfaces for penetration of various cables and insertion of hands of operators during installation operation.
(30) In actual manufacture, forming uniform hollow parts 58 by provision of lateral and vertical partition walls 55, 56 is difficult and the upper and lower surfaces within a permissible range of flatness cannot be achieved in a soundproof material that is extrusion molded and crosslinked and foamed from EPDM sponge having a specific gravity of 0.2 or less.
(31) Thus, the soundproof material 60A as illustrated in
(32) Thus, in the present embodiment, the flatness is defined as follows and a soundproof material 50 satisfying the definition is successfully manufactured.
(33) Here, the soundproof material having an ideal shape is denoted by reference numeral 50 as illustrated in
(34) Specifically, the flatness is defined by a cross-sectional shape of a soundproof material 50A illustrated in
(35) Specifically, a cross-sectional width L in the left-right direction of the upper surface 51 of the soundproof material 50A is obtained, first. The cross-sectional width L is a distance between a left side surface 53 and a right side surface 54 of the soundproof material 50A. The left side surface 53 in the cross-sectional width L is a vertical plane passing through the leftmost part of the soundproof material 50A while the right side surface 54 in the cross-sectional width L is a vertical plane passing through the rightmost part of the soundproof material 50A.
(36) Next, a flat reference line SL is defined that is in parallel with a horizontal plane and passes through the highest point of the upper surface 51.
(37) Then, within the range of the cross-sectional width L, the flat reference line SL is divided, with a laterally equal distance, into a plural number, 10 points (E1 to E10) in this case, and the distances (M1 to M10) of the lines extending downward from the 10 points and intersecting the upper surface 51 are obtained. Defining 10 dividing points (E1 to E10) within the cross-sectional width L results in the flat reference line SL equally divided into 11. Here, the leftmost point E1 is not aligned with the left side surface 53 while the right most point E10 is not aligned with the right side surface 54. For improved accuracy, the number of the plurality of points laterally dividing the flat reference line SL with an equal distance is preferably 10 or more.
(38) Next, the average value (MA) is obtained from the distances (M1 to M10).
(39) Then, the flatness of the upper surface 51 is defined by the percentage that is obtained by dividing the average value (MA) by the cross-sectional width (L) ((MA/L)?100). The percentage of the flatness is defined 2% or less for improved flexibility of the sheet body part 31 of the present invention.
(40) Similarly, the flatness of the side of the lower surface 52 can be defined through 180-degree reversal of the soundproof material 50A in the corner part, formed of the horizontal surface 201 and the vertical surface 202, before bringing it into contact with the horizontal and vertical surfaces 201, 202 in a non-deformed manner.
(41) The particular size of the soundproof material 50A illustrated in
(42) Here, the percentage of the flatness becomes 1.5%, that is below 2%, with which it can be said that the upper surface 51 of the soundproof material 50A is flat. The percentage is obtained by diving the average value MA (1.07 mm) by the cross-sectional width L (70.2 mm) ((MA/L?100)).
(43) The soundproof material 50B illustrated in
(44) The size of the soundproof material 50B is such that the cross-sectional width L=58.6 mm, M1=0.7 mm, M2=0.8 mm, M3=0.9 mm, M4=0.5 mm, M5=0.1 mm, M6=0.1 mm, M7=0.1 mm, M8=0.6 mm, M9=1.3 mm, M10=1.5 mm, and the average value=0.66 mm.
(45) Here, the percentage of the flatness becomes 1.1%, that is also below 2%, with which it can be said that the upper surface 51 of the soundproof material 50B is flat. The percentage is obtained by diving the average value MA (0.66 mm) by the cross-sectional width L (58.6 mm) ((MA/L?100)).
(46) The size of the soundproof material 61 illustrated in
(47) In this case the percentage of the flatness becomes 5.7%, that is above 2%, with which it can be said that the upper surface of the soundproof material 61 is not flat. The percentage is obtained by diving the average value MA (3.00 mm) by the cross-sectional width L (52.5 mm) ((MA/L?100)).
(48) The vertical incidence sound absorption coefficient for frequencies of the soundproof material 50A (embodied product 1) illustrated in
(49) The comparative product 1 is a sound absorbing material based on fiber with a thickness of 13 mm while the comparative product 2 is a sound absorbing material based on fiber with a thickness of 27 mm.
(50) The sound absorbing effect of the comparative product 2 is better than the comparative product 1 in the low frequency of about 800 Hz to 1,000 Hz; however, it is less than half that of the embodied products 1, 2, and thus it cannot be said that the sound absorbing effect thereof is sufficient.
(51) To provide a similar effect as the embodied products 1, 2, it is required to have a great thickness such as 40 mm, as in the related art.
(52) The soundproof materials 50 (50A, 50B) have improved hydrophobicity since, as discussed above, it is formed by EPDM sponge that has a specific gravity of 0.2 or less and is entirely extrusion molded, and crosslinked and foamed. Furthermore, they can be used in locations, for example, between the door outer panel and the door inner panel where water containing impurities splashes, since both ends are opened allowing drainage of splashed water non-accumulatively.
(53) In addition, because of the improved flexibility, they can be easily deformed in accordance with the shape of an opposing member to which they are attached, preventing formation of gap for noise with respect to the opposing member. Furthermore, they would not generate contact noise or would not break even when something contacts them caused by vibration.
(54) EPDM sponge in particular has on the cross-sectional outer side part a thin layer called a skin layer that has elasticity with the density higher than that of a foamed layer. This elastic thin layer does not allow penetration of water inside but allows entrance of sound by vibration of this layer. The sound (sound waves) entered inside causes attenuation of energy inside, effectively absorbing sound.
(55) The soundproof materials 50 (50A, 50B) each are partitioned by lateral and vertical partition walls 55, 56 forming the plurality of hollow parts 58 each making an air layer. This configuration can shift the sound absorption peak to the low frequencies of about 800 Hz to 1,000 Hz.
(56) Changing the positions of the lateral and vertical partition walls 55, 56 allows for change in the size of the hollow parts 58, resulting in an easy fine adjustment of the sound absorption peak.
(57) The degree of flatness of the upper and lower surfaces 51, 52 of the soundproof materials 50 (50A, 50B) may be determined by definitions other than that of the present embodiment. In this embodiment, the percentage to be obtained by dividing the average value MA by the cross-sectional width L ((MA/L?100)) is 2% or less is acceptable. Here, the average value MA is an average of the lengths of the lines extending downward from a plurality of points, which equally divide the reference line SL in the lateral direction within the range of the cross-sectional width L, and intersecting the upper surface 51.
(58) For example, the degree of flatness can be determined in the following manner. First, the cross-sectional width L, in the left-right direction, of the upper surface 51 of the soundproof material 50A is obtained from the cross-sectional shape of the soundproof material 50A that is not deformed and is brought into contact with the corner part composed of the horizontal plane 201 and the vertical plane 202 as illustrated in
(59) In this case, the degree of flatness can be determined further smaller by defining it less than 5% or less.
(60) The soundproof material 50A illustrated in
(61) Likewise, the soundproof material 50B illustrated in
(62) Defining the degree of flatness as described above prevents irregular gaps that can otherwise be generated between the soundproof material and an opposing member and that are difficult to control. Furthermore, this allows mass production of the soundproof material in accordance with the determined definition.
(63) Next, a manufacturing method of the soundproof material 50 will be described.
(64) First, a rubber composition is passed through an extrusion die 200, illustrated in
(65) The extrusion die 200 has a cross-sectional shape including so-called an outer rectangular annular part 201 formed of a seamless continuous belt part having a rounded rectangular shape with a uniform width. The extrusion die 200 also has a lateral muscle part 202 extending laterally so as to divide evenly and vertically the rectangular annual part 201 into two sections. The extrusion die 200 further has vertical muscle parts 203 (two vertical muscle parts 203A, 203B in this case) extending vertically to divide evenly and laterally the rectangular annular part 201 into three sections. These parts 201, 202, 203 are connected together in a continuous manner. Here, the rounded rectangular shape is a rectangle with rounded corners and is determined to be one of the variations of the rectangle.
(66) The rubber composition used as material of extrusion molding includes at least EPDM, a crosslinking agent, a foaming agent, and carbon black (CB) as reinforcing material. Furthermore, as a characteristic feature, the rubber composition is added with a small amount of carbon nanotube (CNT), which performs high heat generation by microwaves.
(67) Examples of the non-conjugated diene of the ethylene/?-olefin copolymer (EPDM; ethylene-?-olefin-nonconjugated diene copolymer) include 1,4-hexadiene, dicyclopentadiene, and 5-ethylidene-2-norbornene. etc. Examples of ?-olefins include propylene, 1-butene, 1-pentene, 1-hexene, 4-methyl-1-pentene, 1-octene, 1-decene and the like.
(68) Examples of the crosslinking agent include sulfur and peroxides, etc., and sulfur is used in the present invention.
(69) Examples of the foaming agent include azo compounds, nitroso compounds, hydrazine derivatives, sodium bicarbonate compounds, and microcapsules, etc. Physical foaming may be performed without use of a foaming agent, or both may be used in a combined manner.
(70) Alternatively, inorganic fillers, softening agents, vulcanization accelerators, or the like may be selected and added to the rubber composition.
(71) Examples of the inorganic filler include calcium carbonate, and examples of the softening agent include liquid polybutene, mineral oil, liquid polyisobutylene, and liquid polyacrylic acid ester.
(72) Examples of vulcanization accelerators include thiazole-based and thiuram-based accelerators.
(73) Usable carbon nanotubes include single-walled carbon nanotubes and multi-walled carbon nanotubes. The aggregate shapes of carbon nanotubes include a particulate shape (hair-ball shape) and a bundle shape (bunch shape) etc, but are not limited.
(74) The soundproof material 60A illustrated in
(75) This is because of the deviation of timing in crosslinking and foaming between an outer part and an inner part of the soundproof material 50. Specifically, the outer part receiving the hot air is initially locally crosslinked, foamed, and cured before the inner part is crosslinked and foamed. The deviation of timing adversely and greatly affects the quality of the shape of the soundproof material 50 that is made of belt-like seamless rubber sponge with a uniform width and is formed into a rectangular cross-sectional shape with a plurality of hollow parts.
(76) It is well known that the microwave heating is effective to evenly heat outer and inner parts simultaneously.
(77) When the ratio of carbon black contained in the rubber composition is increased to generate sufficient heat by microwaves, the generation of heat by microwaves is enhanced as illustrated in
(78) Acknowledging that carbon nanotubes have much higher heat generation performance by microwaves than the carbon black, the inventors of the present invention have invented to add a small amount of carbon nanotubes to the rubber composition to provide a rubber composition having both a high heat generation performance and low viscosity, which results in the rubber composition with a low specific gravity after being foamed.
(79)
(80) As shown in
(81) The minimum Mooney viscosity (Vm) and Mooney scorch time (T5) of the nonvulcanized (not crosslinked) rubber composition were determined according to JIS K 6300. The vulcanization speed was measured using a JSR curelastometer. The evaluation was made based on the time T10 (minutes) to reach 10% ME and the time T90 (minutes) to reach 90% ME, while the difference between the minimum value ML and the maximum value MH of the torque obtained from the vulcanization curve is defined as ME (=MH?ML). The result is shown in Table 1 below.
(82) TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 related present art Y invention X added amount 1 of CNT (phr) mooney scorch test Vm 16.9 18.3 (125? C.) T5 (minutes) 7.0 7.0 curelastometer ML (kgf ? m) 0.60 0.68 vulcanization MH (kgf ? m) 6.59 7.10 test (180? C. T10 (minutes) 0.63 0.61 for 10 minutes) T90 (minutes) 2.08 2.12 occupied amount of 14.5 14.5 CB (%) *1 CNT + occupied 14.5 14.8 amount of CB (%) *2 *1 Added weight of CB ? Gross weight of rubber kneading *2 Added weight of (CNT + CB) ? Gross weight of rubber kneading
(83) As shown in Table 1, the rubber composition X and the rubber composition Y indicate almost identical result in the Mooney scorch time (T5), and T10 and T90 by the curelastometer. Accordingly, it is understood that they have similar vulcanization (crosslinking) speed by heating. In addition, the rubber composition X is slightly higher than the rubber composition Y in the minimum Mooney viscosity (Vm) and the minimum value ML and maximum value MH by the curelastometer. This is considered to be an effect of carbon nanotubes that the rubber composition X additionally contains.
(84)
(85) As shown in
(86) A soundproof material 60B illustrated in
(87) In this case, the amount of carbon nanotubes added is 2.0 phr; however, it is not limited. Although 2.0 phr or more of carbon nanotubes can be added for better heat generation by microwaves, smaller amount is preferred from an economic viewpoint. Thus, the amount of carbon nanotubes to be added is preferably 3.0 phr or less, and more preferably 2.5 phr or less, and further preferably 2.0 phr or less and 0.5 phr or more. The amount less than 0.5 phr is not preferred due to reduced heat generation by microwaves.
(88) The extrusion die 200 illustrated in
(89) The soundproof materials 50A, 50B each have a lateral partition wall 55 to form two columns of hollow parts 58 in the vertical direction. Alternatively, each of them may have two lateral partition walls 55 to form nine hollow parts 58 in total, three columns in the vertical direction and three rows in the lateral direction, with use of an extrusion die having a corresponding shape. The number of partition walls 55, the number of rows and columns of the hollow parts 58 in lateral and vertical directions, and the shape of the hollows parts 58 may be modified into various modes, which are included in the present invention within the requirement of the present invention. They are formed into the predetermined shapes with use of the extrusion dies having cross-sectional shapes corresponding to those of the soundproof materials.
(90) Although carbon nanotubes are sometimes used as composite materials with rubber because of their excellent electrical and thermal conductivity, the method to form the soundproof material using such carbon nanotubes, as discussed in the present embodiment, does not exist and no prior art document discusses such an idea. In the present embodiment, the soundproof material 50 is extrusion-molded, which has the rounded rectangular outer shape in cross section, has at least two hollow parts 58 in the vertical direction formed by the lateral partition wall 55 extending in the left-right lateral direction, and has at least two hollow parts 58 in the lateral direction formed by the vertical partition wall 56 extending in the vertical direction. The rubber composition, which is the material to be extrusion-molded, is added with carbon nanotubes to achieve high heat generation by microwaves and low specific gravity after being foamed, to provide the soundproof material 50 that is formed by rubber sponge having the specific gravity 0.2 or less after crosslinking and foaming and has the hollowed shape with stabilized flat upper and lower surfaces 51, 52.
(91) The soundproof material 50 manufactured by the method of this embodiment is applied to the sheet body part 31. Alternatively, the soundproof material 50 may be provided as a component inside an engine and a tire, besides the automobile door 100.
(92) Also, the soundproof material 50 is applicable to doors of trains, ships, aircraft, etc., and floors and walls of houses, besides the automobiles.
(93) Moreover, the soundproof material 50 is usable as a heat insulation material with an additional process of closing both ends by die molding or the like.