The invention relates to a component at least partially coated in black. This component is intended for the internal parts or the movement of a timepiece or piece of jewellery. It also relates to the process for manufacturing said component.
Black “colour” can be obtained in the mass of a material by means of the intrinsic colour thereof or via the addition of pigments or colourants in the material. Black “colour” can also be present only on the surface. This surface colouring can be obtained from different materials, generally by oxidation/sulphuration/carburisation of a metal substrate or by depositing an oxide/sulphide/carbide on a substrate. Carbon is therefore an element well known for blackening a surface. Deposited in a longilineal manner in the form of nanotubes, the material formed is comparable to a perfectly absorbent black body capable of giving light absorption coefficients of up to 99.96% in the visible and near infrared ranges. This black is so perfect that it can hide 3D shapes of an object viewed from the front.
The use of black coatings is known in the field of watchmaking. From the document EP 3 327 517, a dial is known with a first substrate coated with a black coat of nanotubes facing the watch glass and with a second substrate fastened to the first substrate on the surface opposite the glass. The first substrate is pierced in order to make openings acting as windows intended to form indexes. The second substrate comprises a luminescent coating at least in the zones facing the openings so as to create a contrast at the first substrate between the black coat and the illuminated indexes.
Thus, the contrast is obtained via the superposing of two substrates having separate coatings. This superposing makes it possible to avoid selectively depositing both coatings on the same surface and handling the coat of nanotubes, which is particularly fragile, more than necessary. This superposing nevertheless has the drawback of requiring the manufacture of two substrates which increases the production costs.
From the document CH 711 141, a process for manufacturing a dial is known, where the decoration, namely the indexes, is affixed on the carbon black coating. The decoration is manufactured separately from the dial and then simply mounted which helps facilitate the manufacture of the dial substantially.
At the present time, these ultra-black absorbent depositions are formed from a carbon nanotube forest with vertical growth using a chemical vapour deposition method. To maximise the intense black appearance of the coating on a substrate, the majority of the carbon nanotubes must be deposited in a controlled orientation perpendicular to the substrate. This process applied directly on timepieces is complex to implement. In another process, paints or varnishes based on carbon nanotubes can be applied by spraying. This second process is easier to implement but produces less intense blacks. In both cases, the application and use of carbon nanotubes is complex to implement and can pose potential hazards in terms of safety during the manufacture of the coatings, assembly of the timepieces and after-sales service operations. Moreover, the forest structure of the coating based on carbon nanotubes makes it very fragile and difficult to handle. These coatings have a very low mechanical strength and are easily crushed even under the effect of light mechanical pressures. The coat can be so friable that it is virtually impossible to touch it without damaging the surface, showing glossy blooms or holes contrasting with the original colour of the carbon nanotubes. Furthermore, the forest structure of the coating does not allow the surface application of an overlying decoration with routine direct printing techniques.
The aim of the present invention is that of overcoming the drawbacks of carbon nanotube-based coatings by providing another type of ultra-absorbent, stronger and more compact black coating to enable routine handling and decoration operations in the field of watchmaking or jewellery.
According to the invention, the black coating includes a metal oxide and in particular aluminium oxide deposited by PVD, CVD or PECVD type processes. This ultra-black decorative coating has the features of having:
The present invention relates to the component at least partially coated with this black coating as well as the process for manufacturing said component.
Further features and advantages of the present invention will become apparent in the following detailed description with reference to the appended drawings.
The invention relates to a component intended for the internal parts or the movement of a timepiece or piece of jewellery. It can be chosen from the non-exhaustive list comprising a dial, a flange, a hand, an index, an applique, an oscillating mass, a plate, a bridge, etc. According to the invention, this component is at least partially coated with a black coat. As described hereinafter, the invention also relates to an assembly of two of said components at least partially coated with the black coat.
The invention will be described hereinafter within the scope of an application to a watch dial 1 formed from a substrate 2 coated at least partially with the black coat 3 as represented schematically in
According to the invention, the black coat, also referred to as black coating, is a coat comprising principally aluminium oxides AlxOy such as Al2O3 with additionally non-ferrous metal oxides such as, for example copper, zinc, nickel, chromium, silver or manganese oxides. This coat includes at least 90% AlxOy, preferably 100% AlxOy. The aluminium oxide has an aluminium content between 45% and 65% by mass and preferably between 45% and 50% by mass. This layer has a thickness between 1 and 50 microns, preferably between 2 and 10 microns, and more preferably between 4 and 7 microns. It can be deposited by PVD (Physical Vapour Deposition), CVD (Chemical Vapour Deposition) or PECVD (Plasma-Enhanced Chemical Vapour Deposition).
The ultra-absorbent black depositions according to the invention has reflectance values in the visible range less than 2% and more specifically less than 1.5% as contained in Table 1 for coating thickness between 4 and 7 microns. The measurements are Total Hemispherical Reflectance (THR) measurements obtained by light absorption spectrometry.
In the CIELAB colour system (according to the standards CIE No. 15, ISO 7724/1, DIN 5033 Teil 7, ASTM E-1164), the brightness of timepieces thus coated is characterised by:
The black coating has a compact microstructure. This compact structure enables the application of decorations without damaging the black coating. The decorations can be of any type. They can consist of indexes, optionally photoluminescent, of jewels 4 set or glued onto the substrate 2 as shown in
The decorations are made or mounted on the black coating or on portions of the substrate devoid of black coating. These portions can be devoid of the black coating from the start or the coating can be selectively removed by mechanical machining, laser techniques or by ion or electron bombardment, for functional or aesthetic reasons. Pulse type lasers and in particular picosecond, nanosecond or femtosecond type lasers are chosen for the selective ablation of the black coating.
The decorations can be designed on the substrate by printing methods such as pad printing, digital printing or additive manufacturing. They can also be designed by electroforming or by hot forming of amorphous metals, for alternative embodiments where the decoration is produced on portions not coated with the black coat, directly on the metallic substrate. The decorations can also be mounted by gluing.
According to an alternative embodiment of the invention, the decoration can also be disposed under a discontinuous coat of the black coating. Thus, the component comprises a decoration on the surface of the substrate such as a metallic coating, a resin or a lacquer, including a photoluminescent lacquer. Then, the black coating is deposited on the decoration and removed selectively at chosen locations to reveal the decoration and thus create a contrasting decoration. Optionally, another decoration can be designed or mounted on the black coating.
The present invention also relates to an assembly comprising a first component and a second component each intended for the internal parts or the movement of a timepiece or piece of jewellery. According to the invention, the first and the second components include at least one portion coated with the black coat. Preferably, the first component has a relative movement with respect to the second component and is fitted facing the latter. This first component is decorated. For example, the first component is a hand coated with the black coat and decorated, and the second component is a dial coated with the black coat. For example, the hand is decorated with a jewel set or glued at the tip of the hand.
Different alternative embodiments for manufacturing the components according to the invention are represented in
The process for manufacturing the component includes at least:
Optionally, during step a), the substrate can undergo a micro-sandblasting or shot-blasting pre-treatment in order to increase the surface roughness (step not shown). The surfaces thus treated have a roughness Ra (arithmetic mean roughness) measured with an Altisurf 500 optical profilometer (ISO 4288:1996/4287:1997) between 0.4 and 5 microns and preferably between 0.4 and 2 microns.
Alternatively, once again optionally, the substrate can undergo an electrolytic oxidation pre-treatment of the plasma electrolytic anodisation or ceramisation type in order to give a rough black appearance on the surface of the part (step not shown). For this alternative embodiment, the substrate is preferably made of an alloy of titanium, e.g. Ti-6Al-4V or Ti-CP3, of aluminium, e.g. AA6061, AA2024, AA6082, of a mixed aluminium-titanium alloy or aluminium-lithium alloys. After this pre-treatment, the substrate undergoes the vacuum treatment in order to deposit the ultra-black coating on the surface.
Step b) can consist of a step of depositing the black coat on the substrate by PVD, CVD or PECVD. Alternatively, the black coat is deposited by PVD, CVD or PECVD on a thin film or strip type support and then glued onto the substrate (coat of glue or adhesive 5 in
The manufacturing process can furthermore include a decoration step c) before and/or after step b). The decoration step can consist of designing a decoration on the coated portion or on an uncoated portion by the printing method or by electroforming. The decoration step can also consist of mounting the decoration on the coated or uncoated portion, the decoration being capable of being fastened, for example by gluing.
According to the alternative embodiments in
Alternatively, the process can include a decoration step c) before step b) of depositing the black coat 3 as illustrated in
For all the alternative embodiments, the process can furthermore include an additional step (not shown) of depositing, on the black coat with or without decoration, a hard protective coating. This coating is an ALD (Atomic Layer Deposition) type transparent coating based on metal oxide such as TiO2, Al2O3, SiO2 or a mixture of at least two of these oxides. This hard coating has a thickness between 5 and 100 nm, preferably between 5 and 20 nm.
Key
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20190565.0 | Aug 2020 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2021/064933 | 6/3/2021 | WO |