The present invention relates to a composite electric wire that is small in diameter and can be suitably used for a small crimp connection terminal and a method for manufacturing the composite electric wire.
In recent years, there has been a strong demand for weight reduction and size reduction regarding components used in, for example, various electrical devices. In addition, as for signal wiring, it is necessary to further reduce the sizes of electrical connectors for wiring interconnection with the number thereof increasing as multiple sensors and the like are used.
In order to reduce the size of an electrical connector, it is necessary to reduce the size of a connection terminal used for the electrical connector and the diameter of an electric wire. Recently, connection terminals with a connection diameter of 1 mm or less have begun to be used and electric wires with a diameter of approximately 0.5 mm are required.
In this regard, so-called fiber electric wires unlikely to be cut even in the event of diameter reduction may be used instead of existing copper wires as electric wires. However, a fiber electric wire itself as a conductor is made of a plurality of strands, has poor plasticity, and is easy to disperse and it is difficult for the wire to respond to crimping to a crimp connection terminal.
Described in Patent Document 1 is a metal-coated carbon fiber electric wire in which one base metal layer and one or more metal layers are formed on the upper layer of a conductive carbon fiber. Although the diameter of this electric wire can be reduced, the wire is complicated in terms of manufacturing method and structure.
From such a technical background, there is a demand for an electric wire that is simple in structure, that is rich in conductivity and plasticity, and to which crimping to a crimp connection terminal can be satisfactorily applied.
An object of the invention is to solve the problems described above by providing a composite electric wire and a method for manufacturing the composite electric wire playing a role as a conductor and having predetermined functions such as conductivity and plasticity with a conductive metal wire arranged around a core wire and a low-melting metal satisfactorily bonded to the conductive metal wire.
According to the composite electric wire and the method for manufacturing the composite electric wire according to the invention, a conductive layer in which adjacent wires made of a conductive metal wire are welded and bonded to each other by means of a low-melting metal is disposed on the upper layer of a core wire made of a synthetic resin. As a result, high electrical conductivity is achieved, high plasticity is achieved, diameter reduction can be realized, a satisfactory connection by means of a crimp connection terminal is possible, and manufacturing is facilitated.
In addition, a coating layer made of a synthetic resin material is provided around the core wire, and thus a cleaning liquid cleaning the conductive metal wire does not enter the core wire.
The invention will be described in detail based on the illustrated examples.
The core wire 2 is made of, for example, four middle wires 2a to 2d twisted together. Each of the middle wires 2a to 2d is made by twisting a synthetic resin material such as a polymer strand made of 48 aramid fibers. The strands have a diameter of, for example, 12 μm. The diameter of the core wire 2 is approximately 200 μm. It should be noted that the aramid fiber is lightweight, has high strength, has high flexibility, and does not have electrical conductivity.
The conductive layer 3 includes a conductive metal wire that has a high melting point, examples of which include the copper wire (Cu: melting point 1085° C.) 3a, and a low melting point metal that bonds adjacent wires of the conductive metal wire to each other, covers the outer surface of the conductive metal wire, and is a metal lower in melting point than the conductive metal wire, examples of which include the tin (Sn: melting point 232° C.) layer 3b.
The copper wire 3a has a diameter of, for example, 80 μm, and 12 copper wires 3a are closely and spirally wound around the core wire 2 by a winding machine. Tin as a low melting point metal is melted and welded therearound, that is, the copper wire 3a is plated such that the circumference of the copper wire 3a is covered with the tin layer 3b and the adjacent wires are bonded to each other. It should be noted that the low melting point in the example is based on the temperature at which the low melting point metal melts in a plating tank to be described later.
The insulating coating layer 4 is formed of a soft synthetic resin material having electrical insulation, covers the upper layer of the conductive layer 3, and has a thickness of, for example, 50 μm. The diameter of the composite electric wire 1 including the insulating coating layer 4 is approximately 500 μm (0.5 mm).
Although the middle wires 2a to 2d in the core wire 2 are also loosely twisted in a spiral shape, the copper wire 3a is larger in spiral angle than the middle wires 2a to 2d. In addition, the direction of the spiral of the copper wire 3a is different from the direction of the spiral of the middle wires 2a to 2d and it is preferable that the directions of the spirals intersect with each other such that the copper wire 3a does not bite into the gap of the core wire 2. It should be noted that the copper wire 3a is robust when wound in a spiral shape although the copper wires 3a may be arranged along the longitudinal direction of the core wire 2.
In this manner, the surface of the core wire 2 with the copper wire 3a along the circumference thereof is shaped into a circle as a result of a metal wire shaping step B, in which a die or the like is used and the copper wire 3a is tightened from the circumference thereof as illustrated in
Subsequently, in a metal wire plating step C, the core wire 2 around which the copper wire 3a is wound is immersed during feeding into the plating tank in which tin (Sn) as a low melting point metal is melted. In the plating tank, the molten tin covers the surface of the copper wire 3a with a thickness of several micrometers and enters between the adjacent copper wires 3a, forms the tin layer 3b on outer surface of the copper wires 3a, and bonds the adjacent wires to each other. As a result of the metal wire plating step C, the copper wire 3a and the tin layer 3b are integrated, the tin layer 3b covers the outside of the copper wire 3a, and the conductive layer 3 in which the adjacent wires are bonded to each other is formed as illustrated in
Further, the circumference of the conductive layer 3 is coated with the insulating coating layer 4 made of a synthetic resin material in an insulating coating step D, in which the core wire 2 with the conductive layer 3 is passed through a coating molding machine. The composite electric wire 1 illustrated in
It should be noted that the composite electric wire 1 may include the core wire 2 and the conductive layer 3 with the insulating coating layer 4 not formed.
The metal wire winding step A, the metal wire shaping step B, the metal wire plating step C, and the insulating coating step D may be continuously carried out on the same production line. Alternatively, the next step may be carried out after one step is completed and the reel is wound once.
It should be noted that the composite electric wire 1 may be manufactured with the metal wire shaping step B omitted and through the metal wire plating step C and the insulating coating step 1) from the state of the cross-sectional view illustrated in
As described above, the conductive layer 3 of the composite electric wire 1 manufactured in Example 1 includes the tin layer 3b and the copper wires 3a, in which adjacent wires are bonded to each other with tin, and completely covers the circumference of the core wire 2.
When the insulating coating layer 4 is peeled off for crimping to a crimp connection terminal, the state illustrated in
It should be noted that a conductive metal wire such as an aluminum wire can be used instead of the copper wire 3a in the conductive layer 3. In addition, solder (with a melting point of, for example, 180 to 220° C.) made of, for example, a tin-zinc alloy, which is also a low-melting metal, may be used instead of tin as a low melting point metal in which the copper wires 3a are bonded to each other.
8 is a cross-sectional view of a composite electric wire 1′ according to Example 2. In the composite electric wire 1′, a coating layer 5 is provided around the core wire 2, the conductive layer 3 made of the copper wire 3a and the tin layer 3b is disposed outside the coating layer 5, and the insulating coating layer 4 is provided around the conductive layer 3.
Although the core wire 2 is similar in configuration to the core wire 2 of Example 1, the coating layer 5 is provided around the core wire 2, is made of, for example, a polyester-based resin, and has a thickness of several micrometers. In addition, the conductive layer 3 and the insulating coating layer 4 are similar in configuration to those of Example 1.
In the coating step E, the coating layer 5 is applied around the core wire 2 by immersing the core wire 2 in a resin tank in which, for example, a polyester-based resin is melted. The coating layer 5 blocks flux agent infiltration into the core wire 2 in the metal wire cleaning step F to be described later.
As illustrated in
Subsequently, in the metal wire cleaning step F, the copper wire 3a is pickled with a flux agent through a cleaning tank containing the flux agent made of a strong acid solution or the like such that plating easily adheres to the copper wire 3a in the next step. In this case, the flux agent does not infiltrate into the core wire 2 since the core wire 2 is covered with the coating layer 5.
Next, in the metal wire plating step C, the copper wire 3a is immersed during feeding into the plating tank in which tin (Sn) as a low melting point metal is melted. As illustrated in
In the metal wire plating step C, the melting point of the tin in the plating tank is 232° C. As a result, the melting point of the coating layer 5 in the case of using a polyester-based synthetic resin is approximately 250° C. and the coating layer 5 is hardly damaged by the molten tin.
Further, in the insulating coating step D, the electric wire provided with the conductive layer 3 is passed through a coating molding machine and the circumference of the conductive layer 3 is coated with the insulating coating layer 4 made of a synthetic resin material. The composite electric wire 1′ illustrated in
It should be noted that the composite electric wire 1′ in Example 2 may be manufactured with the metal wire shaping step B omitted and through the metal wire cleaning step F, the metal wire plating step C, and the insulating coating step D.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2020-191593 | Nov 2020 | JP | national |
2021-077841 | Apr 2021 | JP | national |