This present invention concerns a contact system for formation of an electrically conductive contact between an aluminum conductor and a contact component, where the term aluminum conductor in this case is used both for conductors of pure aluminum and for conductors of aluminum alloys.
It is known that aluminum tends to flow under very high pressure and because of that can become cold-welded to contacting materials. Such a connection is inseparable and electrically conductive.
Moreover, it is conventional in particular in the automotive industry, but in other fields as well, to use electrical conductors of a lightweight metal, for example aluminum or aluminum alloys, which are usually bonded in an electrically conductive way to contacts made of more noble metals such as copper. Because of the dynamic stresses that continuously arise over many years in automobile construction, there are particular requirements on the quality of the electrically conductive connections.
Making such connections is difficult in particular in the region of oxide layers present on the surface of aluminum alloys. For this reason the compression process that produces the cold weld in practice is frequently supported by friction welding processes such as ultrasound welding processes or rotary friction welding processes. Without such support by additional friction welding processes, a cold weld that is continuous over the entire cross section can often not be achieved especially in the case of aluminum conductors that have larger cross sections. Because of this, the formation of such an electrically conductive connection between an aluminum conductor and a contact component is dependent on the presence of costly welding units, which moreover are not portable and for this reason cannot be used flexibly.
A clamp for an axial connection of an electric conductor 3 is known from DE 8312497 U1. The conductor is inserted into a body that forms a cage along one wall of the body. A movable sliding block is moved at an angle against the wall by means of a screw in order to press the conductor against the wall without a weld occurring.
A connection system for cables having a case and a wedge that can be inserted into the case is known from WO 99/31762 A1. The case has channel-shaped segments, in each of which a cable can be inserted. The wedge can be inserted in between the segments in order to press the cables against the case from inside without a weld occurring.
It is therefore the problem of this invention to propose a contact system for producing an electrically conductive contact between an aluminum conductor and a contact component, which on the one hand is capable of making a continuous cold weld connection regardless of the thickness of the cross section of the aluminum conductor and on the other hand does without additional welding processes, for example friction welding processes.
According to the invention, this is achieved in that the contact system comprises a housing and a contact component having a shearing segment and a tapered compression segment and the housing has an insertion volume for the aluminum conductor and an insertion volume for the contact component and the two insertion volumes overlap within the housing and in this way form a common overlapping volume in order to enable the severing/shearing of the aluminum conductor and its cold welding to the contact component by means of the contact component when the aluminum conductor is pushed into the insertion volume for the aluminum conductor.
It turned out that the use of such a contact system in accordance with the invention makes additional friction welding processes and thus high-tech welding installations obsolete. Because of the shearing segment of the contact component, the aluminum conductor can be severed/sheared off at a defined point, so that an oxide- and oil-free cut surface is created. The tapered compression segment of the contact component serves to press the unseparated segment of the aluminum conductor against a part of the boundary wall of the inner volume of the housing and to compress this segment so that a cold weld arises between the now oil- and oxide-free cut surface of the aluminum conductor and the contact component.
The formation of such connections requires only the use of a hydraulic unit in order to enable the feed of the contact component into the insertion volume of the contact component and to be able to apply the force needed for the cold weld. As a rule, such hydraulic units are robust, easy to operate, and, in contrast to high-tech welding units, are commonly found, as a rule in the average equipped car repair shop and, in each case according to size, are often even portable and thus flexibly usable.
In order to facilitate guiding the aluminum conductor and the contact component in the housing, in a preferred variation of the invention it is provided that the insertion volume in the housing be made in the form of a channel.
Preferably, the channel-shaped insertion volume for the aluminum conductor has a cross section that corresponds in shape to the cross section of the aluminum conductor that is to be accommodated and the channel-shaped insertion volume for the contact component has a cross section that corresponds in shape to the cross section of the contact component that is to be accommodated. Due to the matching of the shape of the cross sections to each other, the possibility for guiding the aluminum conductor and the contact component in the housing can be improved further, so that in this way the possibility for installing the housing in a setting, for example in a vehicle, can also be made more flexible.
In an especially preferred embodiment of the invention, it is provided that the overlapping volumes end in an exit opening that leads out of the housing. In this way the severed segment of the aluminum conductor can be removed from the housing.
It is provided in another preferred embodiment that the lengthwise axis of the channel-shaped insertion volume for the aluminum conductor and the lengthwise axis of the channel-shaped insertion volume for the contact component enclose an acute insertion angle. In an especially preferred embodiment, this angle is between 1° and 70°, preferably between 1° and 45°. The angled positioning supports the compression process that brings about the cold weld and increases the cut surface area of the aluminum conductor that arises in the severing/shearing of it. The acute angle in any case is [sic; can be] smaller than noted above in each case according to the materials/alloys of the aluminum conductor and the contact component that are used.
It is provided according to an especially preferred embodiment of the invention that the channel-shaped insertion volume for the aluminum conductor have a round or rectangular cross section and/or that the channel-shaped insertion volume for the contact component have a rectangular cross section. This guarantees optimal compression of the aluminum conductor over the entire cross-sectional width of the contact component.
It is provided in another embodiment of the invention that the contact component have a first segment that is made rectangular in the longitudinal section and a segment, preferably immediately adjacent to the first segment, which is made tapered in the lengthwise section so that the severing/shearing of the aluminum conductor can be undertaken by the first segment, in particular by the shearing segment formed there, and, with appropriate dimensioning, the compression and thus cold welding by the second segment can take place only after complete severing/shearing of the aluminum conductor.
It is provided according to an especially preferred embodiment of the invention that the contact component have means for contacting via a terminal element, preferably a boring. In this case the contact component serves not only for severing/shearing and compression of the aluminum conductor, but also as contact element for direct contacting via a terminal element for the relevant use.
Especially preferably, said means are disposed for contacting at the first segment of the contact component.
It is provided according to another embodiment of the invention that in a cold-welded state of aluminum conductor and contact component, the contacting means projects from the housing, preferably from the exit opening. In this case the exit opening can be used not only to remove the severed/sheared segment of the aluminum conductor, but also serves for contacting via a terminal element.
To optimize the cold welding properties, the housing in a preferred embodiment of the invention is made of aluminum or an aluminum alloy or copper alloy with a nickel surface, and/or the contact component is made of copper or a copper alloy with a nickel surface.
According to another preferred embodiment, the aluminum conductor is made as a stranded conductor, so that in the course of the cold welding process, the strands also become cold-welded to each other.
The problem underlying the invention is also solved by a method for producing a cold weld between an aluminum conductor and a contact component by means of the described contact system, said method consisting of the following steps:
According to a preferred embodiment of the method according to the invention, the contact component is forced into the feed direction with a force between 5 N and 500 kN, especially preferably with a force between 0.5 kN and 500 kN, to produce the cold weld.
Another preferred embodiment of the invention calls for the severed/sheared segment of the aluminum conductor to be pushed out from the housing via the exit opening.
The invention will now be explained in more detail by means of embodiment examples. The drawings are exemplary and are intended to represent the idea of the invention but not to limit it in any way or to reproduce it in a final form.
Here:
For this purpose, as can be seen in
The two insertion volumes 4 and 5 overlap in housing 1, so that an overlapping volume 8 is formed, which in this embodiment example ends in an exit opening 9 that leads out of the housing 1. Preferably, the surface of the housing 1 in the region of an insertion opening 10 of the insertion volume 4 is made normal to the lengthwise axis 6 in order to facilitate the insertion of the aluminum conductor 3.
The described implementation of the surface of the housing 1 in the region of insertion opening 10 normal to the lengthwise axis 6 and the matching of the cross section of the insertion volume 4 to the cross section of the stripped segment of the aluminum conductor results, for a stripped aluminum conductor 3, in the ability to set the aluminum conductor 3 against the said surface with the insulation 11 and through this the depth to which the aluminum conductor 3 is pushed into the housing 1 can be specified exactly, so that in any case the conductor reliably projects into the overlapping volume 8 and in addition as shown, projects or does not project, as desired, from the housing 1.
For the sake of better understanding it should not be left unmentioned at this point that the cross section of the insertion volume 4 or 5 is understood to be the surface normal to the relevant lengthwise axis 6, 7 and “lengthwise section’ is understood to mean the cut surface through or parallel to said lengthwise axis or axes 6, 7.
In this embodiment example the contact component 2 has a first segment 12, which in a lengthwise section is made rectangular with respect to the lengthwise axis 7 and forms a shearing segment 13 on its front face, which is turned toward the insertion volume 5 or the aluminum conductor 3. This shearing segment can be made as a shearing edge, which simplifies the process of severing/shearing of the aluminum conductor 3 and/or reduces the force needed for that. Moreover, in many cases it can also be advantageous if the shearing segment 13 is made rounded off or chamfered in order to achieve a less precise but larger cut surface 16 at the aluminum conductor 3.
Immediately next to the first segment 12 is a second segment 14, which is made tapered in a lengthwise section. In this embodiment example, in the first segment there are also means 15 for contacting the contact component 2 through a terminal element (not shown), where in this case the means is a connection boring.
In order to enable the advance of the contact component 2 in the insertion volume 5, a hydraulic device is necessary in most applications; depending on the conductor cross section and the insertion angle 18 of the aluminum conductor 3, the hydraulic device must be capable of applying up to 500 kN, preferably between 0.5 kN and 500 kN, possibly even more, in the feed direction 20. Only in the case of especially small conductor cross sections can the advance of the conductor component 2 take place merely by manual operation and still have a cold weld be formed between the contact component 2 and the aluminum conductor 3, so that in these cases the contact component 2 can also be forced in the feed direction 20 even with lower forces, starting with 5 N.
The advance of the contact component 2 in the channel-shaped insertion volume 5 is determined by the geometry of the insertion volume 5 and the geometry of the contact component 2 itself, in particular by the transition between the first segment 12 of the contact component 2 and the second, tapered segment 14.
In the position of the contact component 2 shown in
Moreover, the means 15 for contacting project from the housing 5 so that a terminal element (not shown) can be affixed to it.
It goes without saying that one can conceive of embodiments in which the contact component 2 is disposed in a state welded to the aluminum conductor 3 completely within the housing 1 and that the housing 1 itself can be provided with means for contacting with various terminal elements.
In this case it must be ensured that the housing 1 is likewise designed to be appropriately electrically conductive for the intended purpose.
Correspondingly, the insertion volume 4 in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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A 50567/2014 | Aug 2014 | AT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/AT2015/050165 | 7/14/2015 | WO | 00 |