The invention relates to the field of the automotive industry, and more particularly to a motor vehicle bodywork part comprising a transparent or translucent element.
An element is described as transparent when it allows light to pass through in the visible domain. An element having a transmittance of about 90% is considered to be transparent. An element is qualified as translucent when it allows light to pass through in the visible domain, but without making it possible to clearly distinguish the objects. An element having a transmittance of about 60% is considered to be translucent.
The transmittance of a material is the fraction of the luminous flux passing through it. Thus, the transmittance represents the ratio of the light intensity transmitted by the material to the incident light intensity.
Elements are known that are attached to a bodywork part having the particular aim of enhancing a line or emphasizing a shape in order to reinforce the image that the manufacturer wishes to associate with its vehicle model.
For example, the chrome strips running along the side of the vehicle, the rocker panels, the brand logo, the door handle trims, the mirror caps are these style elements whose design is subject to special care by the designers of the vehicle.
In order to enhance the effect produced by these bodywork elements, it has been proposed to place a light source behind a surface of the bodywork element formed from a transparent material.
All of the bodywork parts visible from the outside of the vehicle, such as an opening, a bumper, a grille, can also be considered to be bodywork elements falling within the scope of the invention.
Bodywork parts are known that result from molding plastic material, and on which a transparent element is attached in a housing provided for this purpose.
These transparent elements have the drawback of having to be perfectly adapted to the housing present in the bodywork part. In addition, the assembly of such optical elements on bodywork parts has the drawback of revealing assembly clearances and significant projections, which are incompatible with the visual quality required for a motor vehicle. Finally, such attached elements create complexity in the management of the seal.
To avoid these problems of an element attached to a part, bodywork parts are also known that result from the molding of plastic material, overmolding one or more inserts. These inserts are preformed parts incorporated into, and/or integral with, said molded part that generally serve to reinforce said molded part and/or for the subsequent fixing of mechanical elements.
Furthermore, the transparent material used to manufacture a transparent element must allow optimum diffusion of the light passing through it, while having a fairly large capacity to withstand impacts. The transparent materials used in automobiles are PMMA (headlight inserts, excluding impact zones) and polycarbonate (PC).
However, these materials are not compatible with polypropylene (PP). Yet the bodywork parts resulting from molding are mainly manufactured with a material based on polypropylene (PP). As a result, there is not sufficient adhesion to create an insert that is not attached with fixing means with this material in an outer part made from polypropylene (PP).
As for the various polypropylene-based plastics, they are opaque, and therefore cannot be used to manufacture a transparent element.
Although it is possible to add additives in order to improve their transparency, they are then unable to meet the specifications, in particular with regard to impact resistance and for thermal resistance, such as the coefficient of expansion. And conversely, if they are modified by the addition of elastomers, filler, fibers or dyes, their optical properties are modified and their transmittance decreases.
Furthermore, unfilled polypropylene elements have different thermal properties from those of the polypropylenes used in bodywork parts. This causes design errors, stresses at the interfaces, causing variable geometries and separations, inter alia.
The object of the invention is to address these drawbacks by using a transparent or translucent element made from amorphous polyolefin, such as COC or COP.
Thus, the object of the invention relates to a motor vehicle bodywork part comprising at least one overmolded insert made from amorphous polyolefin.
Using amorphous polyolefin makes it possible to obtain very good chemical adhesion to the bodywork part made from polypropylene, and therefore allows the insertion of a transparent or translucent element by overmolding. In addition, such adhesion allows the transmission of forces from the overmolded transparent element to the main body of the polypropylene part.
Indeed, an insert alone does not have satisfactory impact resistance, and an insert attached to a part is also easily damaged during an impact. The advantage of using an overmolded insert is, surprisingly, that the overmolding makes it possible to transmit the energy of an impact on the insert into the main body of the polypropylene part. It is the overmolding and the good adhesion at the interface between the polyolefin insert and the rest of the polypropylene part that makes it possible to obtain such a mechanical effect.
In addition, the amorphous polyolefin elements are very strong and can be bent (naturally deformable) without detriment to the aesthetics or the geometry of the part. This property comes from the amorphous nature of the polyolefin.
Lastly, the thermal properties (thermal contraction, expansion) of the amorphous polyolefin elements are compatible with those of polypropylene, in particular of filled polypropylene as used in the automotive field, which makes it possible to avoid dimensional problems during the baking steps of the painting line for example.
Thus, an amorphous polyolefin element is painted in the same way as a polypropylene part because its chemical compatibility with the components of the paint is equivalent. When the transparent insert is made from polycarbonate (PC) or PMMA, it is not possible to varnish or paint it with the same products as polypropylene (PP), because the adhesion of these products would not be the same on the polypropylene (PP) parts and on the PC or PMMA parts.
The bodywork part may also include one or more of the following features, taken alone or in combination:
The invention also relates to a motor vehicle comprising at least one bodywork part according to the invention.
The invention also relates to a first method of manufacturing a part according to the invention, in which:
The invention also relates to a second method of manufacturing a part according to the invention, in which:
The invention will be better understood upon reading the appended
According to the examples of
The bodywork part 10 comprises a zone intended to allow the light coming from a light source placed behind said zone to pass, at least partially.
To that end, the part 10 comprises a transparent or translucent element at this zone.
The transparent or translucent element is overmolded in the part 10, and thus constitutes an overmolded insert 20.
This overmolded insert 20 is transparent or translucent, and it is made of a plastic material with a base of amorphous polyolefin.
An amorphous polyolefin is a chemical compound whose atoms do not respect any order at medium and long distance, which distinguishes it from crystalline compounds. The amorphous character gives the polyolefin a property of transparency.
Preferably, an amorphous polyolefin is used having a transmittance chosen based on the desired use. Thus, it is possible to use an amorphous polyolefin having a transmittance:
The insert 20 comprises a surface intended to be visible from the outside of the vehicle (surface facing the outside of the vehicle) and an opposite surface (surface facing the inside of the vehicle). The insert 20 is partially overmolded so that at least one of the two surfaces (preferably the surface intended to be visible) is not entirely covered by the overmolding material (polypropylene of the main body 30), in order to allow at least part of the light to pass.
However, the opposite surface (surface facing the inside of the vehicle) may be covered directly or indirectly by the material of the main body 30.
Indeed, it is for example possible to overmold the insert 20, by interposing a light guide between this surface and the material of the main body 30. Thus, the light transmitted to the insert 20 by the guide could pass through the insert 20 to the outside of the vehicle. It is also possible to overmold the insert 20, by positioning a light guide on its edge. That is to say, the light would be transmitted to the insert 20 not by its surface facing the inside of the vehicle, but by one side (substantially perpendicular to the two surfaces of the insert 20). Thus, the light transmitted to the insert 20 by the guide could pass through the insert 20 toward the outside of the vehicle, and the opposite surface (surface facing the inside of the vehicle) could be in direct contact with the overmolding material (polypropylene of the main body 30).
According to one embodiment, at least one of these surfaces (the surface facing the inside of the vehicle and/or the surface facing the outside of the vehicle) undergoes a treatment, such as graining, in order to modify the transparency or the translucency of the insert (and not of the amorphous polyolefin). In fact, it is also possible to use an amorphous polyolefin having a transmittance greater than 90%, then to emboss a surface of the insert 20 in order to conceal the light sources or the hot spots from the outside of the vehicle.
The part 10 thus comprises a main body 30, the insert 20 being overmolded in the main body 30.
According to a particular embodiment, the main body 30 is made from a plastic material with a base of polypropylene (PP). According to one example, this material is opaque and/or black in color.
The amorphous polyolefin-based plastic material makes it possible to meet the need for transparency or translucency, in order to at least partially allow the light coming from the light source to pass, and the need for mechanical strength, substantially equivalent to that of the main body 30.
According to one embodiment, the insert 20 is made from a material with a base of cyclic polyolefin.
Preferably, the insert 20 is made from a material with a base of at least one of the following materials: cyclo-olefin-copolymers (COC) and cyclo-olefin-polymers (COP).
It is also possible to add additives to the material of the insert 20. For example, at least one of the following additives can be added:
As illustrated in
The invention also relates to a first method of manufacturing a part 10 according to the invention.
The first method is a molding method comprising the following steps:
The invention also relates to a second method of manufacturing a part 10 according to the invention.
The second method is a bi-injection molding method in a single mold, and it comprises the following steps:
Alternatively for this second method, a rotary mold can be used to replace the movable wedges.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1853141 | Apr 2018 | FR | national |
This application claims priority under 35 U.S.C. § 371 to the International Application No. PCT/EP2019/059158, filed Apr. 10, 2019, and to the French Application No. 1853141, filed Apr. 10, 2018, now pending, the contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2019/059158 | 4/10/2019 | WO | 00 |