The present invention relates to the field of heating devices and in particular to deformable and formable heating mats, intended to allow heat to be supplied to mechanical parts, in particular during the production thereof. The present invention also relates to a method of manufacturing such a heating mat.
The technical background is illustrated by the documents DE-U1-20 2011 003 742, U.S. Pat. No. 5,002,335, US-A1-2011 114 619, FR-A-1 031 119 and KR-A-2013 008 14 52.
Nowadays, in the context of the manufacture of elements of composite materials, it is usual to use heating mats to enable the polymerisation steps. The heating mats are usually controlled by a heating unit which makes it possible to manage the various heating cycles, in particular: the rate of temperature rise, the plateau temperature (generally a maximum of 200° C.), the duration of the plateau and the rate of temperature fall.
In a conventional manner and known per se, these heating mats consist of a matrix made of elastic material (for example silicone) through which heating resistors in the form of resistive filaments circulate, connected by a wire to the management unit.
However, the heating mats of the prior art have two main disadvantages:
In the current technique, if a heating mat is used for the manufacture/finishing of a complex part (e.g. 3-dimensional or with ridges) then there is a significant risk that the heating mat will not correctly follow the shape and/or contour of the part in question. The risk of damage to the mat is also high, as if the heating mat is pressurised to be held in position (e.g. by means of a vacuum bag) along the contour of the part to be manufactured/finished, then the resistive filaments may break. These breaks result in the failure of the mat.
The present applicant has therefore set himself the objective of presenting a heating mat which allows to ensure the manufacture/finishing of a part made of composite material with a complex shape and/or contour and/or comprising at least one corner and/or ridge without risking damage to said heating mat.
This is achieved in accordance with the invention by means of a heating mat comprising a matrix made of elastic material, said matrix having at least one heating element passing therethrough and connected to a power source,
characterised in that:
Thus, this solution achieves the above-mentioned objective. In particular, both the layout of the cavities (allowing them to deform and extend), and the shape of the heating elements (also allowing them to stretch and deform within each cavity without the risk of damage), allow the elastic properties of the heating mat to be brought closer to those of a matrix made of pure elastic material, allowing greater deformations.
The invention also takes into account one or more of the following features, taken alone or in combination:
The invention also relates to a method for manufacturing a heating mat made of a matrix made of elastic material comprising the following steps:
The method may also comprise one or more of the following steps:
The invention will be better understood, and other purposes, details, characteristics and advantages thereof will become clearer on reading the following detailed explanatory description of the embodiments of the invention given by way of purely illustrative and non-limiting examples, with reference to the appended schematic drawings in which:
It can be seen that each heating mat 10 is connected to a power source 12, more particularly to a heating cycle management unit 12 having the usual possibilities of management units already present on the market, as described in the introduction. It can be seen from
In
As can be seen in
The layout of each cavity 16 is undulating in a three-dimensional space within the heating mat 10.
Each cavity 16 has a circular cross-section of 3 to 5 mm in diameter so as to form a kind of tube. It has a wall 17 made of Teflon® (polytetrafluoroethylene—PTFE) or of any other material which prevents the two silicone sheets from sticking together, such as high-temperature polypropylene. It also has an undulating layout and is separated from its two neighbouring cavities 16 by a minimum 3 mm matrix layer 14. Each cavity 16 may have a unique layout. Each cavity 16 is large enough to accommodate a heating element 18. In the case illustrated in
It can also be seen that each resistive filament 18 is curved: it has a zigzag or spiral shape (like a corkscrew). Each resistive filament 18 can thus move and stretch within the cavity 16, allowing for greater adaptability and positioning when the heating mat 10 is stretched and/or bent.
Each resistive filament 18 has a non-straight path within the cavity (16).
This reduces the risk of breaking any of the resistive filaments 18 compared to a conventional heating mat structure in which the filaments are inserted straight and linear within the silicone matrix 14.
The resistive filaments 18 may, for example, be composed of Nickel (Ni) and Chromium (Cr).
According to the present invention, each resistive filament 18 is, also heat treated after bending to further reduce their risk of breakage. The heat treatment typically consists of heating to 1200° C. for 5 to 6 hours.
This treatment of the resistive filaments 18 brings the deformation and elasticity characteristics of the heating mat 10 closer to those of a pure silicone matrix 14. Indeed, following this treatment and this arrangement of the resistive filaments 18 within the matrix 14 of the heating mat 10, the heating mat 10 is elastically deformable through an angle of 90° without compromising the proper functioning of the resistive filaments 18. Similarly, the heating mat 10 according to the invention can extend at least twice its length in all directions without compromising the proper functioning of the resistive filaments 18. By “proper functioning of the filaments 18” is meant the absence of breakage or damage that would no longer allow the temperature set points from the management unit 12 to be conveyed without difficulty.
The heating mat 10 is thus formable to any type of part/contour and deformable to a sufficient extent to allow its use in relation to parts with complex shapes/contours, such as turbomachine parts (e.g. flanges, casings, blades, etc.).
The heating mat 10 is manufactured in a process that comprises five steps:
In this way, at the end of the method, the resistive filaments 18 are enclosed in the cavities 16, protected in all directions by the walls 17 made of Teflon® and the layers of the silicone matrix 14, which now form a single, continuous heating mat 10.
Vulcanisation means a heat treatment above 200° C. over several tens of minutes. This step is adapted according to the types of silicone used to create the matrix 14.
Under these conditions, the heating mat according to the invention 10 is more flexible and extensible and it is, therefore, easier to apply it to complex shapes/contours including, in particular, ridges. The resistive filaments 18 are no longer the fuses of the system: the heating mat 10 can be extended in all three dimensions and within the elastic limits of the silicone. The possibilities of use are thus greatly extended and all methods for processing a material requiring heat input can benefit from this technical improvement. Even if the part is geometrically complex, a formable and deformable heating mat 10 makes it possible to dispense with an autoclave or oven in certain cases: composite lamination, gluing, preheating before welding or brazing, expansion of a part before clamping or crimping.
| Number | Date | Country | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1903212 | Mar 2019 | FR | national |
| Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| PCT/FR2020/050569 | 3/16/2020 | WO | 00 |