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2006-11-07
10/472,530
2002-03-09
US 7,132,025 B2
2006-11-07
WO; PCT/EP02/02608; 20020309
WO; WO02/076711; 20021003
Sam Chuan Yao
2022-07-16
The invention relates to a continuous method of producing a thick, thermoformable, from a thermoplastic material and reinforcing fibers. The inventive method comprises the following steps: A) blending thermoplastic fibers and reinforcing fibers to give a dry-laid blended web, B) consolidating the blended web by needle felting, C) heating the consolidated blended web, and D) compacting it to give a semi-finished product.
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D04H1/54 IPC
Non-woven fabrics formed wholly or mainly of staple fibres or like relatively short fibres from fleeces or layers composed of fibres without existing or potential cohesive properties by welding together the fibres, e.g. by partially melting or dissolving
1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to a method for producing a thick, thermoplastically deformable fiber-reinforced semifinished product from a mixed non-woven in which thermoplastic fibers and reinforcing fibers are present.
2. Description of the Related Art
Thermoplastically deformable semifinished products which comprise reinforcing fibers, in particular glass fibers, are increasingly used for producing moldings, in particular for motor vehicle parts. These “plastic panels” have high toughness and strength. The semifinished GMT products are produced on a large industrial scale by uniting continuous glass mats and webs of thermoplastic melt on a twin-belt press. However, this mode of operation is energy-intensive, because the high-viscosity melt has to be pressed into the mat. Fiber contents of more than 50% by weight are rarely achievable by this method. Since the glass mats are generally composed of fiber bundles, the saturation process is never entirely complete and uniform, the result being the occurrence of regions of microscopic inhomogeneity, leading to high standard deviations of mechanical properties.
Another process used in industry is similar to paper-making. Thermoplastic fibers and reinforcing fibers are mixed with one another in the form of an aqueous slurry, the slurry is squeezed, and the resultant mixed non-woven is dried and hot-pressed. This involves large amounts of water, and the purification of waste water contaminated with auxiliaries.
DE-A 36 14 533 describes a process for producing moldings from thermoplastics which comprise an inserted reinforcement. This is similar to textile fiber technology in that a mixed non-woven composed of thermoplastic fibers and reinforcing fibers is produced by the carding or airlay process and, for example, consolidated by needling. Cut-to-size pieces from this mixed non-woven are heated and are directly, with no prior consolidation, pressed to give three-dimensional moldings. However, complete and thorough saturation is rarely achieved here, especially in the case of components of complicated shape, and the mechanical properties of the moldings are therefore unsatisfactory.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,948,661 describes the production of a consolidated semifinished product whose thickness is from 1.25 to 2.5 mm. First, a dry process produces a mixed non-woven from thermoplastic fibers and reinforcing fibers. However, this mixed non-woven is not needled, but is folded together in the manner of corrugations, and is consolidated directly through hot-pressing to give the semifinished product. Because there is no consolidation of the mixed non-woven, the only practical problem-free consolidation method is batchwise consolidation. Although mention is also made of continuous consolidation on a twin-belt press, this would be associated with the disadvantages described above—if indeed it is feasible in practice.
Finally, EP-A 555 345 describes an air-permeable fiber structure made from a mixed non-woven produced by a wet or dry method and composed of thermoplastic fibers and reinforcing fibers. This mixed non-woven, which has not been needled, is partially consolidated by careful incipient melting of the thermoplastic fibers, by bonding these to the reinforcing fibers at the intersections. Continuous production of the fiber structure is not described. Another disadvantage of the process is that the non-wetted reinforcing fibers can corrode during storage, and here again it is difficult to obtain complete and thorough saturation during the production of moldings.
The German patent application P 101 05 813.6 describes a process for producing a thermoplastically deformable, fiber-reinforced semifinished product with a thickness of from 0.2 to 3.0 mm, by needling a mixed non-woven composed of thermoplastic fibers and of reinforcing fibers of length from 30 to 300 mm, and heating the mixed non-woven, and pressing it on a calender or in a polishing stack. If the intention is to press this relatively thin semifinished product to produce finished parts with a complicated three-dimensional shape, in particular those having filigree ribs, the ribs are found not to have a satisfactory filling of fibers. In the case of a thicker semifinished product, improved flowability should be assumed.
An object of the present invention was then to develop a continuous process for producing a relatively thick semifinished product from a thermoplastic and reinforcing fibers, the semifinished product being capable of forming to give finished parts which, in all directions, have mechanical properties which are excellent and highly reproducible.
The inventive method achieves this object. This encompasses the following steps of the process:
The semifinished product produced according to the invention may be separated into customer-specific cut-to-size pieces, and stacked on pallets, and shipped. It may then be thermoplastically deformed to give three-dimensional finished parts. For this, appropriate cut-to-size pieces are heated to temperatures above the softening point of the thermoplastic, and pressed in conventional two-part molds, or deformed by thermoforming. Since the semifinished product is relatively thick and comprises short fibers, these flow during the pressing process, even in fine regions of the mold, making it possible to produce finished parts with a complicated three-dimensional shape, and in particular with filigree ribs. The finished parts may be used in the transport sector as interior parts for automobiles, for railway equipment, and for aircraft, or else as bodywork parts, as large-surface-area panels, or else as furniture parts.
1. A continuous process for producing a thermoformable fiber reinforced semifinished product, comprising the following steps in the order given:
a) dry blending from 10 to 80 percent by weight of thermoplastic fibers having an average length of between 20 mm and 80 mm with from 90 to 20 weight percent of reinforcing fibers comprising at least one of glass fibers and carbon fibers by an airlay or carding process to form a continuous non-woven web, said weight percents based upon the total weight of the web, said reinforcing fibers having an average length of from 10 to 60 mm;
b) needling the web with felting needles to provide a needled web having an increased orientation of reinforcing fibers perpendicular to the surface of the needled web;
c) heating the consolidated web to a temperature above the softening point of the thermoplastic fibers to form a heated web;
d) compressing the heated web in a continuous fashion at a pressure of from 1 to 10 bar to provide a compressed and partially consolidated thermoformable semifinished product having a thickness greater than 3 mm,
wherein the thermoplastic is polypropylene having a melt viscosity MFI (230° C., 2.16 kp) to DIN 73735 of greater than 300 g/10 min.
2. The process of claim 1, wherein a thermoplastic film is laminated to at least one side of the heated web during said step of compressing.
3. The process of claim 1, wherein a thermoplastic film is laminated to both sides of the heated web during said step of compressing.
4. The process of claim 1, wherein the thickness of the thermoformable semifinished product is less than 10 mm.
5. The process of claim 1, wherein the average length of the reinforcing fibers is from 25 to 60 mm.
6. The process of claim 1, wherein the reinforcing fibers consist essentially of glass fibers.
7. A continuous process for producing a thermoformable fiber reinforced semifinished product, comprising the following steps in the order given:
a) dry blending from 10 to 80 percent by weight of thermoplastic fibers having an average length of between 20 mm and 80 mm with from 90 to 20 weight percent of reinforcing fibers comprising at least one of glass fibers, carbon fibers, and aramid fibers by an airlay or carding process to form a continuous non-woven web, said weight percents based upon the total weight of the web, said reinforcing fibers having an average length of from 10 to 60 mm;
b) needling the web with felting needles to provide a needled web having an increased orientation of reinforcing fibers perpendicular to the surface of the needled web;
c) stretching the needled web in one direction to provide an increased orientation of fibers in that direction;
d) heating the needled web to a temperature above the softening point of the thermoplastic fibers to form a heated web;
e) compressing the heated web in a continuous fashion at a pressure of from 1 to 10 bar to provide a compressed and partially consolidated thermoformable semifinished product having a thickness greater than 3 mm, and
f) heating the thermoformable semifinished product of step d) and allowing the product to expand in the thickness direction to produce a thermoformable semifinished product having a thickness greater than before heating in step f).
8. The process of claim 7, wherein a thermoplastic film is laminated to at least one side of the heated web during said step of compressing.
9. The process of claim 7, wherein the thickness of the thermoformable semifinished product is less than 10 mm.
10. The process of claim 7, wherein the reinforcing fibers consist essentially of glass fibers.