Applicant claims priority under 35 U.S.C. §119 of German Application No. 20 2013 002 911.0 filed Mar. 27, 2013, the disclosure of which is incorporated by reference.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to an electric cable. Furthermore, the invention relates to the use of the electric cable as a control line for a welding device.
2. Prior Art
Welding devices, in particular welding robots for automated industrial applications, require for their control electric cables which can withstand high stresses. It is required that such electric cables are to be flame resistant according to different standards such as IEC 60332-2, VDE 0482-265-2-2, and EN 50265-2-2. In addition, they must be able to withstand the contact with welding beads, i.e., the metal which melts and sprays during the welding, over a long period of time.
Currently known electric cables, which are used in welding devices, must be regularly replaced, since cable cores are exposed very often due to the rough conditions during welding. It is therefore the object of the present invention to provide an electric cable that has a particularly high resistance with respect to welding conditions and which can be used as a control line for a welding device.
This object is achieved by the electric cable according to the invention. It comprises at least one power line having a first end and a second end, comprising multiple cores, wherein each core has a core insulation and all core insulations are enclosed by a common sheath, and the sheath is surrounded by an oversheath, wherein the oversheath comprises a material which is selected from the group consisting of silicones, perfluorocarbons, mica, glass fibers, metal fibers, ceramic fibers, and mixtures thereof, a first plug connector, which is arranged on the first end of the power line, and at least one second plug connector, which is arranged on the second end of the power line, wherein the plug connectors each are completely coated with the oversheath and comprise a polyurethane (PU), which contains a flame retardant, and a first connecting nut, which is arranged on the first plug connector, and at least one second connecting nut, which is arranged on a second plug connector, wherein the connecting nuts each comprise a perfluorocarbon. The combination of materials according to the invention results in an extraordinarily high resistance of the electric cable with respect to the conditions of welding use. Therefore, it is suitable in particular for use as a control line for a welding device.
The power line comprises at least two cores and preferably four cores. It can thus be connected as a polar-rectified cable, in which the magnetic fields of the four cores partially compensate for one another. The cores each consist in particular of Cu-ETP1 according to DIN EN 13602.
The core insulations preferably comprise a material, which is selected from the group consisting of polyalkylenes, polyvinyl chloride and mixtures thereof. The sheath preferably comprises a material, which is selected from the group consisting of polyurethane, polyvinyl chloride, thermoplastic polyester elastomers, thermoplastic copolyesters and mixtures thereof. Particularly preferred are the following combinations of core insulation material and sheath material: core insulation and sheath of polyvinyl chloride; core insulation of polyvinyl chloride and sheath of thermoplastic polyester elastomers; core insulation of polypropylene and sheath of polyurethane.
The complete coating of the sheath by the oversheath seals the transition between the conductor and the plug connectors especially such, that the electric cable of the invention complies with the protective class IP67 according to the norm DIN EN 60529.
Perfluorocarbons are understood according to the invention in particular as perfluoroalkanes, perfluorocoalkylenes, perfluoroalkoxypolymers, and copolymers of methacrylates and perfluoroalkyacrylates. Polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), perfluoroethylenepropylene (FEP), and mixtures thereof are preferred.
The glass fibers preferably consist of E-glass yarn (CAS-number 65997-17-3).
The metal fibers are preferably nickel fibers.
The oversheath can optionally be saturated with a silicone.
The plug connectors preferably comprise a polyurethane which is based on a polyester, a polyether, or a polyester ether as a polyol. Among these, a polyether is particularly preferred. The flame retardant in the material of the plug connector is in particular a halogen-free flame retardant. Furthermore, it is preferable for the plug connectors to each consist of a material which has a hardness of at least Shore 54D according to the standards DIN 53505 and ISO 868. The tensile strength of the material is preferably at least 28 MPa according to DIN 53504. Its ultimate elongation is preferably at least 380% according to DIN 53504. Its tear resistance is preferably at least 100 N/mm according to DIN ISO 34-1Bb. Its abrasion is preferably at most 25 mm3 according to DIN ISO 4649-A. Its notched impact strength (Charpy) at +23° C. is preferably at least 45 kJ/m2 according to DIN EN ISO 179.
Exemplary embodiments of the invention are illustrated in the drawings and explained in greater detail in the following description.
The resistance of cables with respect to welding conditions was studied in comparative examples (VB1 to VB7) and examples according to the invention (B1 and B2) of electric cables. The construction of such an electric cable is shown in three embodiments in
The cores 11a, 11b, 11c, 11d consisted in all examples of Cu-ETP1 and had a cross-sectional area of 0.34 mm2 each. The materials M12 of the core insulations 12a, 12b, 12c, 12d, the materials M13 of the sheaths 13, the materials M14 of the oversheaths, the materials M2/3 of the plug connectors 2, 3a, 3b, 3c, and the materials M4/5 of the connecting nuts 4, 5 are listed in Table 1:
Therein, PVC stands for polyvinylchloride, PP for polypropylene, PTFE for polytetrafluoroethylene, PU for polyurethane, TPE-E for a thermoplastic polyester elastomer, glass for E-glass fiber yarn, aramid for para-aramid and metal for metal fibers
All materials M14 being marked with a * were pushed as hose over the sheath 13 (VB1-VB4). In the example, in which the material M14 is marked with a #, the sheath 13 was weaved with the oversheath 14 and the plug connectors 2, 3a, 3b, 3c were completely coated with the material M14 of the oversheath 14 (B5). In all examples, in which the materials M14 are not marked with a * or a #, the oversheath 14 was pushed as a hose over the sheath 13 and the plug connectors 2, 3a, 3b, 3c were completely coated with the particular material M14 of the oversheath 14 (VB6-VB7, B1-B4 and B6)
PVC Y17 (hardness Shore 90-95 A) was used as a PVC for the core insulation. PVC YM3 (hardness Shore AB0-B5) was used as a PVC for the sheath. PP9Y (hardness Shore 54D) was used as a polypropylene. TPU 11YH1 (hardness Shore 54D) was used as a polyurethane for the sheath.
All combinations of the core 11a, 11b, 11c, 11d, core insulation 12a, 12b, 12c, 12d and sheath 13 were provided as complete power lines by the Franz Binder GmbH+Co. Elektrische Bauelemente KG, Neckarsulm, Germany. WIGAFLEX SV 13 of the Garnisch GmbH, Memmingen, Germany was used as an E-glass fiber yarn. Kevlar® of the company E. I. du Pont de Nemours, Wilmington, USA was used as para-aramid. A metal hose UA 2 was used as metal fibers. Elastollan 11 54 D FHF (hardness Shore 58D, tensile strength 30 MPa, elongation at tear 400%, tear resistance 110 N/mm, abrasion 30 mm3, notched impact strength (Charpy) 50 kJ/m2 at +23° C.) from BASF, Ludwigshafen, Germany was used as a polyurethane+flame retardant for the plug connectors 2, 3a, 3b.
All studied cables were used as a control line in a welding device known per se in 62,200 successive welding cycles. Only the electric cables according to the invention of the examples B1 and B2 withstood these experimental conditions without at least one of the cores being exposed. Therefore, these have a particularly high resistance with respect to welding conditions.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
20 2013 002 911.0 | Mar 2013 | DE | national |