Assembly and method for sealing a bundle of wires
11670437 · 2023-06-06
Assignee
Inventors
- Sunny Sethi (Castro Valley, CA, US)
- Vijay Daga (Sunnyvale, CA, US)
- Kavitha Bharadwaj (Fremont, CA, US)
- Ting GAO (Palo Alto, CA, US)
Cpc classification
H01B7/285
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H01B7/285
ELECTRICITY
H01B13/00
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A structure for creating a sealed wire bundle includes a first adhesive material in the form of a circular or semi-circular shape. The first adhesive material has a first outer wall with first spoke arms extending inward from the first outer wall. The first adhesive material has a first viscosity. First wire receiving spaces are provided between the first spoke arms. Wires are positioned in the first wire receiving spaces. As heat is applied to the adhesive structure, the adhesive structure flows to fill voids between the plurality of wires to thereby seal the wires.
Claims
1. A structure for creating a sealed wire bundle comprising: a first adhesive material in the form of a circular or semi-circular shape, the first adhesive material having a first outer wall, the first adhesive material having a first viscosity; first wire receiving spaces; first spoke arms extend inward from the first outer wall, the first wire receiving spaces are provided between the first spoke arms; wherein wires are positioned in the first wire receiving spaces; wherein as heat is applied to the structure, the first adhesive material flows to fill voids between the plurality of wires to thereby seal the wires.
2. The structure as recited in claim 1, wherein the first adhesive material has a viscosity of less than about 300 Pa.Math.s.
3. The structure as recited in claim 2, wherein the first adhesive material is approximately 40% to approximately 95% ethylene-vinyl acetate or polyolefin or polyamide by weight.
4. The structure as recited in claim 2, wherein the first adhesive material includes filler material and stabilizer material to improve thermal conductivity without compromising viscosity.
5. A structure for creating a sealed wire bundle comprising: a first adhesive material in the form of a circular or semi-circular shape, the first adhesive material having a first outer wall, the first adhesive material having a first viscosity; first wire receiving spaces; the first outer wall includes at least one gap; wherein wires are positioned in the first wire receiving spaces; wherein the at least one gap facilitates insertion of wires through the first outer wall and into the first wire receiving spaces; wherein as heat is applied to the structure, the first adhesive material flows to fill voids between the plurality of wires to thereby seal the wires.
6. The structure as recited in claim 5, wherein the at least one gap is a plurality of gaps, with each gap of the plurality of gaps being disposed in line with each first wire receiving space of the first wire receiving spaces.
7. The structure as recited in claim 1, wherein the first spoke arms have first ends which extend from the first outer wall and second ends which are spaced from the first outer wall, the first ends having a larger cross-sectional area than the second ends.
8. The structure as recited in claim 1, wherein a second adhesive material in the form of a circular or semi-circular shape is positioned on a first side of the first adhesive material, the second adhesive material having a second viscosity.
9. The structure as recited in claim 8, wherein: the second adhesive material has a second outer wall with second spoke arms extending inward from the second outer wall; second wire receiving spaces are provided between the second spoke arms; wherein the wires are positioned in the second wire receiving spaces.
10. The structure as recited in claim 8, wherein the viscosity of the second adhesive material is higher than the viscosity of the first adhesive material.
11. A structure for creating a sealed wire bundle comprising: a first adhesive material in the form of a circular or semi-circular shape, the first adhesive material having a first outer wall, the first adhesive material having a first viscosity; a second adhesive material in the form of a circular or semi-circular shape, the second adhesive positioned on a first side of the first adhesive material, the second adhesive material having a second viscosity; a third adhesive material in the form of a circular or semi-circular shape, the third adhesive positioned on a second side of the first adhesive material, the third adhesive material having a third viscosity; first wire receiving spaces; wherein wires are positioned in the first wire receiving spaces; wherein as heat is applied to the structure, the first adhesive material flows to fill voids between the plurality of wires to thereby seal the wires.
12. The structure as recited in claim 11, wherein: the third adhesive material has a third outer wall with third spoke arms extending inward from the third outer wall; third wire receiving spaces are provided between the third spoke arms; wherein the wires are positioned in the third wire receiving spaces.
13. The structure as recited in claim 11, wherein the viscosity of the third adhesive material is higher than the viscosity of the first adhesive material.
14. The structure as recited in claim 13, wherein the viscosity of the second adhesive material is approximately equal to the viscosity of the third adhesive material.
15. The structure as recited in claim 11, wherein the thickness of the first adhesive material, the second adhesive material and the third adhesive material is between approximately 0.5 mm and 2.0 mm.
16. The structure as recited in claim 11, wherein the second adhesive material and the third adhesive material include filler material and stabilizer material to improve thermal conductivity without compromising viscosity.
17. The structure as recited in claim 7, wherein the first adhesive has a first center hub which is spaced from the first outer wall, the second ends of the first spoke arms extend to the first center hub.
18. The structure as recited in claim 17, wherein the first outer wall has a plurality of gaps which facilitate insertion of wires through the first outer wall and into respective first wire receiving spaces of the first wire receiving spaces.
19. The structure as recited in claim 11, wherein: the first adhesive has a first center hub which is spaced from the first outer wall, first spoke arms of the first adhesive extend from the first outer wall to the first center hub; the second adhesive has a second center hub which is spaced from the second outer wall, second spoke arms of the second adhesive extend from the second outer wall to the second center hub; and the third adhesive has a third center hub which is spaced from the third outer wall, third spoke arms of the third adhesive extend from the third outer wall to the third center hub.
20. The structure as recited in claim 11, wherein the first adhesive, the second adhesive and the third adhesive have a heat-shrinkable material which extends over the first outer wall, the second outer wall and the third outer wall.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(18) To overcome the problems discussed above, various structures formed from thermoplastic adhesives and sealant formulations that have desirable sealing and viscosity characteristics are disclosed below.
(19) Generally, the hot melt adhesives and sealants are desirable over mastics and silicones due to their ease of handling, application and high reliability. Hot melt adhesive system may be a thermoplastic or a thermoset. Key challenges in providing a hot melt adhesive-based solution for sealing a large wire bundle include formulating a material that has suitable rheological behavior, controlling adhesive flow direction, providing inward mechanical force and suitable heat delivery system to melt the adhesive. A large wire bundle can be defined as a system including 20 or more wires.
(20) Temperature rating of the sealant material can be based on their rheological behavior. After application, they should not flow out at or below their specification temperature. For example, for a 105° C.-rated product, the material should have little or no flow at temperatures less than or equal to 105° C. Similarly, for 125° C.-rated material, the adhesive should have no or little flow at temperatures less than or equal to 125° C. However, the viscosity of the material should be relatively low at installation temperatures (e.g., between 110° C. and 140° C.) to allow the adhesive to flow in between wires and to displace any trapped air. In general, during installation process, the temperature of the adhesive/sealant may be 10° C. higher than the temperature rating of the structure. So, for example, if the temperature rating were to be about 105° C., during installation process the sealant temperature—temperature is recommended to be >115° C. This is important to ensure a robust seal. For example, in large wire bundle systems that include wires with different diameters, so-called cannon ball geometries are formed between the wires. The voids between the wires can be challenging to fill. Thus, viscosity should be low enough to allow adhesive flow into the voids.
(21) As to adhesive flow direction, fluid flow is determined by the path of least resistance. For a bundle of wires, the path of least resistance is parallel to the wires. However, to form an effective seal, adhesive should flow perpendicular to the wires. Conventional methods that involve use of excess adhesive, like dipping the wires in liquefied adhesive or physically pushing adhesive in between wires, is undesirable for large-volume applications.
(22) As to application of inward mechanical force, as the adhesive liquifies with the application of heat, it is desirable to have a system that prevents dripping of the adhesive system and that provides an inward force to push adhesive in between wires.
(23) To flow in between wires and provide a reliable seal, it is desirable to have adhesive materials with viscosities less than 300 Pa.Math.s. at the installation temperature. The viscosity of the sealant/adhesive materials described herein was measured using a rotation rheometer. In this method, a small disk of sealant material (e.g., 1.5 mm-1.8 mm thick, 25 mm diameter disk) is placed between plates of the rotation rheometer and sheared (oscillatory mode) by means of a rotational motion frequency of 6.28 rad/sec. The temperature of the sealant material is gradually increased from 60° C. to 140° C. at a rate of 5° C./min and 5% strain and the complex viscosity is measured as a function of temperature. For adhesive materials with higher viscosities, adhesives may fail to flow in between so-called cannon ball geometries where three wires sit on top of each other forming a triangle. The space entrapped between the triangle is highly constrained and only low-viscosity fluids may be capable of flowing in between those spaces. The disadvantage of low-viscosity adhesives is that they tend to flow more in directions parallel to the wires than in directions perpendicular to the wires and in between cannon balls.
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(25) The adhesive material 105 may include a thermoplastic polymer and various additives, the combination and relative amounts of which being selected to provide an adhesive with a viscosity of less than about 300 Pa.Math.s. at a softening temperature of >105° C. for a 105° C.-rated application, which may be necessary to ensure adhesive flow between the wires and to provide a reliable seal. Similarly, for a 125° C.-rated application, the combination of thermoplastic polymer and various additives may be selected to provide a softening temperature >125° C. The combination and relative amounts of material in first, second, and third formulations of the adhesive material 105 are shown, respectively, in Tables 1-3 below:
(26) TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Chemical Description Wt % Polyolefins/Ethylene-vinyl acetate 40%-95%.sup. Waxes/tackifiers 0-50% IR absorbing pigments (e.g., 0-2% carbon black) Stabilizers and antioxidants 0-4% (e.g., sterically hindered phenolic antioxidants) Metal deactivators 0-2%
(27) TABLE-US-00002 TABLE 2 Chemical Description Wt % polyamide 40%-95%.sup. Waxes/tackifiers 0-50% IR absorbing pigments (e.g., 0-2% carbon black) Stabilizers and antioxidants 0-4% (e.g., sterically hindered phenolic antioxidants) Metal deactivators 0-2%
(28) TABLE-US-00003 TABLE 3 Chemical Description Wt % Polyolefins (e.g., ethylene vinyl 71%-90%.sup. acetate) Viscosity modifiers 0-10% Organic peroxide 1-9% Cross-linking promoters (e.g., 0-10% Trimethallyl isocyanurate (TAIC) or Trimethylolpropane Trimethacrylate (TMPTMA)) IR absorbing pigments (e.g., carbon 0-2% black) Stabilizers and antioxidants 0-4% (e.g., sterically hindered phenolic antioxidants) Metal deactivators 0-2%
(29) The adhesive material 105 may include a thermoset polymer and various additives, the combination and relative amounts of which being selected to provide an adhesive with a viscosity of less than about 300 Pa.Math.s. before curing which may be necessary to ensure adhesive flow between the wires and to provide a reliable seal. After curing the system, the adhesive material would not flow. An example of a cross-linkable adhesive is shown in the following table:
(30) Various materials may be added to any of the adhesive material 105 implementations described above to improve the sealing characteristics. For example, the adhesive material 105 may include filler materials to improve thermal conductivity without compromising the viscosity characteristics listed above. The filler materials may correspond to carbon (e.g., graphite, graphene, etc.), copper, nickel, aluminum, stainless steel, copper containing alloys, a copper-tin mixture, boron nitride, aluminum nitride, aluminum oxide, silicon carbide, beryllium oxide, silicon nitride, magnesium oxide, and/or other fillers.
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(32) As illustrated, the adhesive structure 200 may define a comb-like structure. For example, the adhesive structure 200 may include upper and lower portions 205A, 205B that extend in the same longitudinal direction. A plurality of vertical members 215 may extend between the upper and lower portions 205A, 205B. Adjacent vertical members 215 may define a space there between for placement of one or more wires 107.
(33) In some implementations, the upper and lower portions 205A and 205B may each define generally planar shapes with a width, W1, of about 10-50 mm. A depth of the upper and lower portions 205A, 205B (i.e., the distance into the drawing and not shown) may be about 4-15 mm. The vertical members 215 may have a width, W2, of about 1-5 mm, a height, H, of about 4-12 mm, and may be spaced apart by a distance, L, of about 3-10 mm. The vertical members 215 may be spaced evenly between first and second ends 210A, 210B of the adhesive structure 200 or may be spaced differently. The width of vertical members 210 maybe 1-5 mm. The protrusion 230 maybe 0.5-2 mm and the corresponding cut 235 maybe 0.5-2 mm such that adjacent combs maybe fitted together via 230 and 235.
(34) In yet other implementations, the top portion 205A may define a plurality of gaps 225. Each gap 225 may be disposed above the space 220 defined between adjacent vertical members 215. The gaps 225 may have a width, W3, of about 0.5 mm-2 mm that facilitates insertion of wires 107 through the top portion 205A and into the spaces 220.
(35) In some implementations, a vertical member at a first end 210A of the adhesive structure 205 may define a protrusion 230, and a vertical member at a second end 210B of the adhesive structure 200 that is opposite the first end may define a recess 235 that complements the protrusion 230. The protrusion and recess 230, 235 facilitate stacking a plurality of adhesive structures 200 end-to-end in the longitudinal direction, as illustrated in
(36) As illustrated in
(37) Exemplary operations for forming the sealed bundle of wires 100 are illustrated in
(38) At operation, 407, the adhesive structure 200 and wires may be inserted within, for example, a heat-shrinkable system like a heat shrinkable tubing, heat shrinkable sleeve, a heat shrinkable tape, heat shrinkable grommet or a heat shrinkable boot maybe used as illustrated in
(39) The heat-shrinkable system may be formed from materials such as cross-linked polyolefin (e.g., polyethylene copolymer) or fluoropolymer (e.g., ethylene-tetrafluoroethylene copolymer (ETFE) or non-cross-linked materials (e.g., polyethylene terephthalate (PET)) with or without sealants (e.g., sealants in which the polymer-based material is polyamide or a polyethylene copolymer such as ethylene-vinyl acetate copolymer (EVA)). Commercial heat-shrinkable sleeve 605 may be utilized. The material from which the heat-shrinkable sleeve 605 is formed may have a radial shrinkage of 5-80% between 75° C.-325° C.
(40) The wall thickness of the heat-shrinkable material before shrinking may be between about 0.5-2 mm. The heat-shrinkable material may have a shrink ratio of 4:1, 3:1, 2:1, 1.5:1, or a different shrink ratio. The shrink temperature may be between about 100-150° C. For fluoropolymer-based systems like PTFE, shrink temperature can be greater than 325° C.
(41) The heat-shrinkable system maybe a single-walled or a double-walled structure. A double-walled heat-shrinkable structure may include an outer jacket and an inner layer. The inner layer in the double-walled heat-shrinkable structure maybe composed of an adhesive system that can melt and flow on application of heat.
(42) At operation 410, a first heating operation may be performed to preheat the adhesive structure 200 with the wires 107 inserted therein. For example, a first amount of heat may be applied to the adhesive structure 200. The first amount of heat may allow softening or melting adhesive structure without recovering the heat shrinkable system significantly. For example, in an implementation, the adhesive structure 200 with the wires inserted therein may be subjected to a temperature of between about 50° C. and 120° C. for about one minute to raise the temperature of the adhesive structure 200.
(43) In some implementations, the adhesive structure 200 with the wires 107 inserted therein may be inserted into a heating apparatus specifically configured to heat the adhesive structure 200 such as the exemplary heating apparatus 600 and 610 illustrated in
(44) The heating apparatus 600 of
(45) It should be understood that the heating apparatus may be specifically configured to heat adhesive structures having different configurations.
(46) After waiting a predetermined amount of time at operation 415, at operation 425, a second heating operation may be performed to the adhesive structure 200 and wires 107 to melt the adhesive structure 200. The second heating operation allows fully recovery of the heat shrinkable system and allowing adhesive structure 200 to completely fill the voids in at least one cross-sectional plane. An example of second heating system may include an IR heater with surface temperatures of 300-700° C. Preheating of the structure in the first operation reduces the time needed to uniformly melt the structure in the second operation.
(47) In some implementations, a heating apparatus such as the heating apparatus 700 of
(48) At operation 430, the sealed wire bundle 100 may be allowed to cool before being removed from the second heating apparatus 700. Afterwards, the sealed wire bundle 100 may have the cross-section illustrated in
(49) While the assembly and method for sealing a bundle of wires has been described with reference to certain embodiments, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes may be made and equivalents may be substituted without departing from the spirit and scope of the claims of the application.
(50) For example, as illustrated in
(51) Following application of the voltage, the wrapped bundle with the resistive element 905 therein may be heated in the second heating operation. In this way, the combination of heat applied from the interior of the wrapped adhesive structure 200 and wires 107 and heat applied to the exterior of the adhesive structure 200 and wires 107 via the heating apparatus promotes uniform heating of the wrapped adhesive structure 200 and wires 107 in a reduced amount of time.
(52) In yet other implementations, the adhesive structure may have a different shape. For example, referring to
(53) As illustrated in
(54) Other operations may be performed to improve manufacturability of the sealed wire bundle 100. For example, as illustrated in
(55) The second and third adhesive structures 1205A, 1205B, 1210A, 1210B may have a thickness between about 0.5-2 mm and may be formed from adhesive material that has a higher viscosity than the low-adhesive material(s) described above. The high-viscosity adhesive material be characterized by the following parameters:
(56) TABLE-US-00004 Viscosity (V) >500 Pa s (preferably >1000 Pa s) at ≥110° C. for a 105° C. rated system
(57) The adhesive chemistry for high-viscosity adhesive may be similar to low-viscosity adhesive and the higher viscosity may be attained by, for example, using a higher molecular weight polymer and/or by adding fillers such as silica fillers. Other manners known to the skilled artisan may be utilized.
(58) The second and third adhesive structures 1205A, 1205B, 1210A, 1210B may include filler and stabilizer materials to improve thermal conductivity without compromising the viscosity characteristics listed above and to improve long-time temperature aging characteristics, respectively.
(59) All three structures 200, 1110, 1205A, 1205B, 1210A, 1210B may be preheated to raise the respective temperatures of the adhesive structures 200, 1110, 1205A, 1205B, 1210A, 1210B close to a melting point. Then during the second heating operation, the adhesive structures 200, 1110, 1205A, 1205B, 1210A, 1210B may be melted to seal the wires. The second and third adhesives structures 1205A, 1205B, 1210A, 1210B with the higher viscosity may help prevent the first adhesive structure 200, 1110, with the lower viscosity from seeping out through the wire bundle when melted.
(60) Other implementations that utilize a combination of low- and high-viscosity adhesive materials in the implementation of the adhesive structure are illustrated in
(61) As illustrated in
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(63) Alternatively, as shown in
(64) In some implementations, the adhesive strip 1400 may be arranged on one side of the interior surface of the heat-shrinkable sleeve 1404. In other implementations, the adhesive strip 1400 may wrap around most or all of the interior surface of the heat-shrinkable sleeve 1404. In yet other implementations, a second adhesive strip may be arranged within the heat-shrinkable sleeve 1404 on a side opposite the first adhesive strip 1400.
(65) In yet other embodiments, a heat shrinkable system may be utilized to form a sealed bundle of wires. The heat shrinkable system may have an outer heat shrinkable formed from any heat shrinkable material described above, and an inner adhesive layer formed from any adhesive material described above. The operations for forming a sealed bundle of wires are set out in steps 1500-1520 in
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(67) Other modifications may be made to adapt a particular situation or material to the teachings disclosed above without departing from the scope of the claims. Therefore, the claims should not be construed as being limited to any one of the particular embodiments disclosed, but to any embodiments that fall within the scope of the claims.