Many composite material panels include a discrete pair of solid skin layers, each bonded to a thick core material such that the solid layers sandwich the core. The solid skin layers are normally made of a strong, stiff, high-density material to resist compression, and the core is normally made of a lighter, weaker material that stabilizes the solid skin layers against buckling and shear loads. The core and the solid skin layers include a variety of materials such as plastic, wood, glass, ceramic, metal, textile or a blend thereof. Depending on their material and construction, composite material panels impart superior mechanical and thermal insulation properties that are highly desirable in a number of applications such as in building construction, transportation vehicles, and aerospace parts.
Cores of composite panels that are made of plastic often include a low-density, foamed plastic material that occupies much if not all of the core's volume. Panels that include such cores are often made by: (1) injecting between two solid skin layers a liquid plastic, such as polyisocyanurate, polystyrene, polyvinylchloride, or foam glass, mixed with a foaming agent and then allowing the liquid mix to expand (foam) and cure while attaching itself to the underside of the solid skin layers; (2) positioning a block of previously-foamed plastic between two solid skin layers and bonding the solid skin layers to the block of previously-foamed plastic with an adhesive; and (3) applying a resin onto the surface of a previously-foamed plastic and allowing the resin to cure to form the solid skin layers.
Unfortunately, although such foamed cores provide good insulating qualities, such foamed cores do not provide good structural qualities. These foamed cores have relatively low shear strength and can buckle and crack under normal pressure. One can structurally strengthen such foamed cores by including a high-density facing layer, increasing the density of the foamed core, increasing the thickness of the foamed core, and/or including a mechanical reinforcement, but each of these solutions tends to increase the weight of and the cost of producing the composite panel.
Another solution is to design a core to have a material that has a corrugated structure and that does not occupy much of the core's volume. For example, a honeycomb structure provides good flexural strength, and good load resistance. Such honeycomb structures also provide a high strength-to-weight ratio, which allows one to reduce the total weight of a panel without compromising the panel's mechanical performance.
Because of the geometry of a corrugated-material core, such cores often include material that is easily formed into a corrugated shape. For example, such cores may often include a metal material because most metals are malleable and can thus be easily shaped into a desired corrugated structure. Similarly, such cores may also include a plastic material because plastics can be warmed to make them easily malleable or easily cast into a desired corrugated shape. Unfortunately though, because of the geometry of a corrugated-material core, the material of such cores is also typically solid, and thus, heavy for the amount of volume in the core that the material occupies. In construction, transportation and especially aerospace applications excessive weight is not good because it causes one to consume more energy to move. Therefore, there is a need for a composite material panel that provides a high strength-to-weight ratio, that can be shaped into optimal geometric configurations, and that can be produced economically.
In an aspect of the invention, a composite material includes a core and a shell that covers the core. The core has a volume that includes a first material and a void wherein the first material occupies less than 50% of the core's volume and has a three-dimensional shape that includes a plurality of components each having the same shape and arranged to form a series of repeating components within the volume. The shell includes a second material joined to the first material. Each of the first and second materials includes a thickness having a middle region and an outer region, and at least one of the first and second materials, includes a microstructure. The microstructure includes a plurality of closed cells disposed in the middle region, each cell containing a void and each cell having a maximum dimension extending across the void within the cell that ranges between 1 micrometer and 200 micrometers long, and a skin that is substantially solid and disposed in the outer region.
With the first material's three-dimensional shape in the composite material's core and at least one of the first and second materials having the microstructure, the composite material may provide more strength and stiffness than a composite material whose core has much of its volume occupied by a foamed plastic material. And, with the first material's three-dimensional shape in the composite material's core and at least one of the first and second materials having the microstructure, the composite material may be lighter than a composite material whose core and shell includes solid material but still may provide a strength and stiffness similar to the strength and stiffness of the composite material whose core and shell includes solid material. In addition, because at least one of the first and second materials has a closed-cell microstructure, the composite material is resistant to moisture, termites, and other wood-eating pests, does not corrode, and insulates better than the composite material whose core and shell includes solid material.
In another aspect, the microstructure of at least one of the first and second material includes a substantially solid layer disposed in the middle region. This solid layer is typically produced by fusion bonding two sheets of the first material together or two sheets of the second material together to increase the thickness of the first material or the second material easily and cost-effectively. With the greater thickness in the first material, the second material or both, the core, the shell or both may provide even more strength and stiffness without significantly increasing the weight of the composite panel.
With the first material's three-dimensional shape in the composite material's core 24 and at least one of the first and second materials 28 and 30, respectively, having the microstructure, the composite material 22 may provide more strength and stiffness than a composite material whose core has much of its volume occupied by a foamed plastic material. And, with the first material's three-dimensional shape in the composite material's core and at least one of the first and second materials having the microstructure, the composite material 22 may be lighter than a composite material whose core and shell includes material that is solid, but still provide a strength and stiffness similar to the strength and stiffness of the composite material whose core and shell includes solid material. In addition, because at least one of the first and second materials has a closed-cell microstructure, the composite material is resistant to moisture, termites, and other wood-eating pests, does not corrode, and insulates better than the composite material whose core and shell includes solid material.
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The second material 30 of the shell 26 may be joined to the first material 28 of the core 24 using any desired means. For example, in this and other embodiments the second material 30 and the first material 28 are fused together by melting a portion of the outer surface of both of the first and second materials 28 and 30, respectively, and then exerting pressure on the portions to cause the melted material of each to coalesce. An example of such a fusion process is described in POT patent application PCT/US11/33075, filed 19 Apr. 2011, titled “A METHOD FOR JOINING THERMOPLASTIC POLYMER MATERIAL”, hereby incorporated by reference. In other embodiments, an adhesive (not shown) between the first and second materials 28 and 30, respectively, fastens the two materials together to form the panel 20. In still other embodiments, an agent disposed between the two materials 28 and 30 may join the two materials 28 and 30 to each other when heated to an activating temperature.
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The size of each dosed cell 42 may be any desired size, and the distribution of the dosed cells 42 throughout the thickness of the material 36 may be any desired distribution. For example, in this and other embodiments the size of each dosed cell ranges between 1 and 60 micrometers long at its maximum dimension that extends across the void within the cell, and the closed cells may be uniformly dispersed throughout the interior of the material 36. Because the geometry of each closed-cell is rarely, if at all, a perfect sphere, the size of each closed cell is arbitrarily identified as the length of the longest chord that extends through the void within the closed cell. For example, the size of an oblong cell would be the length of the longest chord that extends in the same direction as the cell's elongation, and the size of a sphere would be the length of the sphere's diameter.
With the many closed-cells 42 in the interior of the material 36, the material 36 is substantially thicker than and has a cross-sectional area substantially greater than, the same material before the closed-cells 42 are generated, but maintains the same amount of thermoplastic material. Thus, the material 36 has a relative density that ranges between 10% and 40%. The relative density is the density of the material 36 whose volume includes the closed-cells 42, divided by, the density of the same amount of material whose volume does not include any of the closed-cells 42—i.e. is solid. With the relative density of the material 36 less than the density of the same material in solid form, the material 36 may be lighter than a composite material whose core and shell includes solid material but still may provide a strength and stiffness similar to the strength and stiffness of the composite material whose core and shell includes solid material.
Other embodiments are possible. For example, the microstructure 38 of the thermoplastic material 36 may be similar to one or more of the microstructures discussed in greater detail in conjunction with
In this and other embodiments, the process includes dissolving into the material 50 (here shown as a film rolled around a drum 52, but may be a block or thin sheet) a gas 54 that does not react with the material 50. The process also includes heating the material 50 with the dissolved gas at a temperature that is, is close to, or above the glass-transition temperature of the material and dissolved gas combination. The glass-transition temperature is the temperature at which the material 50 is easily malleable but has not yet melted. With the temperature at, near, or above the glass-transition temperature, bubbles of the gas 54 can nucleate and grow in regions of the material 50 that are thermodynamically unstable—i.e. supersaturated. When the bubbles have grown to a desired size, the temperature of the material 50 is reduced below the glass-transition temperature to stop the bubbles' growth, and thus provide the material 50 with a microstructure having closed-cells whose size may range between and 500 micrometers long.
In the process, the first step 66 is to dissolve into the material 50 any desired gas 54 that does not react with the material 50. For example, in this and certain other embodiments of the process, the gas 54 may be carbon dioxide (CO2) because CO2 is abundant, inexpensive, and does not react with PET. In other embodiments of the process, the gas may be nitrogen and/or helium. Dissolving the gas 54 into the material 50 may be accomplished by exposing the material for a period of time to an atmosphere of the gas 54 having a temperature and a pressure. The temperature, pressure, and period of time may be any desired temperature, pressure, and period of time to dissolve the desired amount of gas 54 into the material 50. The amount of gas 54 dissolved into the material 50 is directly proportional to the pressure of the gas 54 and the period of time that the material 50 is exposed to the gas 54 at a specific temperature and specific pressure, but is inversely proportional to the temperature of the gas 54. For example, in this and certain other embodiments, the temperature may be 72° Fahrenheit, the pressure may be 725 pounds per square inch (psi), and the duration of the period may be 10 hours. This typically saturates the material 50 with the gas 54. In other embodiments, the pressure may range between 500 psi and 1000 psi, and the duration of the period may range between 4 hours and 48 hours.
Because the layers of the rolled material film 50 that lie between adjacent layers or between a layer and the drum 52 are substantially unexposed to the atmosphere when the roll is placed in the atmosphere, a material 56 is interleaved between each layer of the rolled material film that exposes each layer to the atmosphere. In this and certain other embodiments, the material 56 includes a sheet of cellulose, and is disposed between each layer of the material film 50 by merging the sheet with the film and then rolling the combination into a single roll 58. The material 56 exposes each layer of the material film 50 by allowing the gas 54 to easily pass through it. After the gas 54 has saturated the material film 50, the material 56 may be removed from the roll 58 and saved as a roll 60 for re-use.
The next step 68 in the process includes exposing the material film 50 with the dissolved gas 54 to an atmosphere having less pressure than the one in the first step to cause the combination of the material film 50 and the gas 54 dissolved in the material film 50 to become thermodynamically unstable—i.e. the whole material or regions of the material to become supersaturated with the dissolved gas 54. For example, in this and certain other embodiments, the reduction in pressure may be accomplished by simply exposing the material film 50 to atmospheric pressure, which is about 14.7 psi, in the ambient environment.
When the combination of the material film 50 and the dissolved gas 54 becomes thermodynamically unstable, the dissolved gas tries to migrate out of the film 50 and into the ambient environment surrounding the film 50. Because the dissolved gas in the interior regions of the material film 50 must migrate through the regions of the material film 50 that are closer to the film's surface to escape from the material film 50, the dissolved gas in the interior regions begins to migrate after the dissolved gas in the surface regions begins to migrate, and takes more time to reach the ambient environment surrounding the material film 50 than the dissolved gas 54 in the film's regions that is closer to the film's surface. Thus, before heating the material film 50 to a temperature that is, is dose to or above its glass-transition temperature, one can modify the concentration of dissolved gas 54 in regions of the material film 50 by exposing for a period of time the material film 50 to an atmosphere having less pressure than the one in the first step. Because the concentration of dissolved gas 54 depends on the amount of gas that escapes into the ambient environment surrounding the material film 50, the concentration of dissolved gas 54 is inversely proportional to the period of time that the film 50 is exposed to the low-pressure atmosphere before being heated to, close to, or above its glass-transition temperature.
In this manner, a skin, such as the skin 40 (
The next steps 70 and 72 in the process are to nucleate and then grow bubbles in the material 50 to achieve a desired relative density for the material film 50. The relative density is the density of the material film 50 with the closed cells divided by the density of the material 50 without the closed cells. Bubble nucleation and growth begin about when the temperature of the material film 50 is or is close to the glass-transition temperature of the material film 50 with the dissolved gas 54. The duration and temperature at which bubbles are nucleated and grown in the material 50 may be any desired duration and temperature that provides the desired relative density. For example, in this and certain other embodiments, the temperature that the PET material 50 is heated to is approximately 200°-280° Fahrenheit, which is about 40°-120° warmer than the glass-transition temperature of the material without any dissolved gas 54. The PET film 50 is held at approximately 200°-280° Fahrenheit for approximately 30 seconds. This provides a relative density of the closed-cell film of about 18.5%. If the PET film 50 is held at 200°-280° Fahrenheit for a period longer than 30 seconds, such as 120 seconds, then the bubbles grow larger, and thus the size of resulting closed-cells 42 (
To heat the material film 50 that includes the dissolved gas 54, one may use any desired heating apparatus. For example, in this and certain other embodiments, the PET film may be heated by a roll fed flotation/impingement oven, disclosed in the currently pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/423,790, titled ROLL FED FLOTATION/IMPINGEMENT AIR OVENS AND RELATED THERMOFORMING SYSTEMS FOR CORRUGATION-FREE HEATING AND EXPANDING OF GAS IMPREGNATED THERMOPLASTIC WEBS, filed 14 Apr. 2009, and incorporated herein by this reference. This oven suspends and heats a material film that moves through the oven, without restricting the expansion of the film.
The next step 74 in the process includes reducing the temperature of the heated material 50, and thus the malleability of the material 50 that occurs at, near, or above the glass-transition temperature, to stop the growth of the bubbles. The temperature of the heated material may be reduced using any desired technique. For example, in this and certain other embodiments, the material film 50 may be left to cool at ambient room temperature—i.e. simply removed from the heating apparatus. In other embodiments the heated material film 50 may be quenched by drenching it with cold water, cold air, or any other desired medium.
Other embodiments of the process are possible. For example, the material film 50 can be heated to a temperature that is or is close to its glass-transition temperature when the material film 50 is initially exposed to an atmosphere that causes the gas dissolved in the material film 50 to become thermodynamically unstable. This allows one to make a film that includes a skin having a minimal thickness.
In this and other embodiments, the process includes heating the first material 28 from the roll 80 just before thermoforming the first material 28 into the desired three-dimensional shape. The first material 28 in the roll 80 includes a substantial amount of gas that the material 28 has absorbed so that when the material 28 is heated the microstructure 38 is formed in the material. In other embodiments, the process may include simultaneously heating the first material 28 to form the microstructure 38 and thermoforming the first material 28 into the desired three-dimensional shape. In still other embodiments, the process may include heating the first material 28 to form the microstructure 38 a substantial amount time before thermoforming the first material 28. In such embodiments, the first material 28 in the roll 80 may already include the microstructure 38.
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Once thermoformed, the first material 28 is then inserted between two sheets of the second material 30, each unwound from a respective one of the roils 90 and 92. Each sheets' inner surface is then fusion bonded with the first material 28. To help fuse the two sheets of the second material 30 to the first material 28, heated rollers 94 heat the first material 28 and each sheet of the second material 30 to melt the regions of each to be fused together. In addition, nip rollers 96 exert pressure on each sheet of the second material to help fuse the two sheets of the second material 30 to the first material 28.
Other embodiments of the process are possible. For example, two or more sheets of a first material 28 may each be thermoformed into a desired three-dimensional shape and then joined together before the second material 30 is joined to them (discussed in greater detail in conjunction with
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Other embodiments are possible. For example, the three-dimensional shape of the first material may include a combination of two or more of the three-dimensional shapes 156, 158, and 160. For another example, the three-dimensional shape of the first material may include any other desired three-dimensional shape.
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The preceding discussion is presented to enable a person skilled in the art to make and use the invention. Various modifications to the embodiments will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art, and the generic principles herein may be applied to other embodiments and applications without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention. Thus, the present invention is not intended to be limited to the embodiments shown, but is to be accorded the widest scope consistent with the principles and features disclosed herein.
This application claims priority from commonly owned U.S. Provisional Patent Applications 61/617,278 filed 29 Mar. 2012, and titled “COMPOSITE SANDWICH CORES USING MICROCELLULAR PLASTICS”, presently pending and which is incorporated by reference.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US13/34668 | 3/29/2013 | WO | 00 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61617278 | Mar 2012 | US |