Applicant claims priority under 35 U.S.C. § 119 of German Application No. 20 2015 102 166.6 filed Apr. 29, 2015, the disclosure of which is incorporated by reference.
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, in particular in the automotive industry.
Prior Art
Welding devices, in particular welding robots for automated industrial applications, require for their control electric cables which can withstand stresses. It is required that such electric cables are flame-retardant according to different standards such as IEC 60332-2, VDE 0482-265-2-2 and EN 50265-2-2. Furthermore, they must be able to be withstand contact with welding beads, i.e. metal which melts and sprays during the welding, over a long period of time.
For the functional control of electric cables, control lights, such as, for example LEDs, can be provided on these. However, this control possibility has not existed for electric cables for welding devices until now. Even electric cables known today without control lights, which are used in welding devices must be replaced regularly, as an exposure of cable wires occurs very often due to the rough conditions during welding. Conventional electric cables with control lights could not withstand these conditions even in the short term. It is therefore the object of the present invention to provide an electric cable which has a particularly high resistance to welding conditions and which can be used as a control line for a welding device, and which has at least one control light.
This object is solved by the electric cable according to the invention. This comprises at least one current line having a first end and a second end, comprising several wires, a first plug connector which is arranged on the first end of the current line and at least one second plug connector which is arranged on the second end of the current line. At least one plug connector consists of a material which has, as component A, 98.0% by weight to 99.8% by weight of a polymer which is selected from the group consisting of polyurethane (PU), styrene-butadiene block copolymers (SBS), perfluorocarbons and mixtures thereof, and which has, as component B, 0.2% by weight to 2.0% by weight additives. The total of components A and B results in 100% by weight. The electric cable furthermore has a first connection nut, which is arranged on the first plug connector and it has at least one second connection nut which is arranged on a second plug connector. At least one light source is arranged in a first plug connector and/or in a second plug connector which consists of the material with components A and B. Each light source is configured in order to be supplied with electrical energy by means of at least one wire of the current line.
The arrangement according to the invention of the light source in a plug connector protects this from the conditions of a welding insert. The material of the plug connector thereby enables, on the one hand, an extraordinarily high resistance of the electric cable to the conditions of the welding insert. Therefore, it is in particular suitable for use as a control line for a welding device. On the other hand, this material, however, is also sufficiently translucent in order to enable a light emission of the light source through the plug connector.
The additives B were added to polymer A preferably as a master batch which contains no flame retardants. An opaquing effect of the flame retardant is hereby prevented. A sufficient flame resistance of the plug connector in order to withstand the conditions of a welding insert is already ensured by the inherent material properties of polymer A.
The material of the plug connector is preferably not only translucent, but transparent. This enables a particularly good transmission of the light emitted by the light source through the plug connector.
An LED is preferred as a light source, as this has a high heat tolerance and emits only little heat itself. This is important as the material of the plug connector prevents the discharging of the heat.
The current line comprises at least two wires and preferably four wires. Therefore, it can be connected as a pole-rectified cable in which the magnetic fields of the four wires are partially compensated for. The wires each consist in particular of tin-plated copper. They can, in addition to a function as control wires, supply the at least one light source with electrical energy.
Each wire preferably has a wire insulation. All wire insulations are surrounded by a mutual coating. The wire insulations and the coating each comprise a material which is selected independently of each other, from the group consisting of silicones, perfluorocarbons, cross-linked polyolefins, mica, glass fibres, ceramic fibres and mixtures thereof. The material of the wire insulations and the coating is particularly preferably selected independently of each other, from the group consisting of silicones, perfluorocarbons and mixtures thereof. The wire insulations and the coating preferably consist of the same material. This enables a uniform behaviour of the wire insulations and the coating in the case of thermal stress. The silicones are in particular fluorosilicones and/or the copolymers thereof. The cross-linked polyolefins are in particular cross-linked polyethylenes.
Optionally, an electrical shield can be arranged between the wire insulations and the coating. This preferably consists of metal fibres, particular preferably of nickel fibres.
In order to ensure a high welding bead resistance of the coating, this preferably contains a flame retardant. A halogen-free flame retardant is particularly preferred in this case, which results in a particularly high resistance of the coating. Furthermore, the coating can optionally be impregnated with a silicone.
The connection nuts each preferably comprise a perfluorocarbon.
Perfluorocarbons are understood according to the invention in particular as perfluoroalkanes, perfluorocoalkylenes, perfluoroalkoxypolymers and copolymers of methacrylates and perfluoroalkyl acrylates. Polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), perfluoroethylenepropylene (FEP) and mixtures thereof are preferred.
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. Furthermore, it is preferred that the plug connectors each consist of a material that has a hardness of at least Shore 50D according to the standards DIN 53505 and ISO 868. The tensile strength of the material preferably amounts to at least 45 MPa according to DIN 53504. Its elongation at break preferably amounts to at least 425% according to DIN 53504. Its tear resistance preferably amounts to at least 140 N/mm according to DIN ISO 34-1 Bb. Its abrasion preferably amounts to a maximum of 35 mm3 according to DIN ISO 4649-A.
Exemplary embodiments of the invention are illustrated in the drawings and are explained in more detail in the subsequent description.
The resistance of cables to welding conditions was investigated in comparative examples (VB1 to VB7) and examples according to the invention (B1 and B2) of electric cables. The structure of such an electric cable is shown in three embodiments in
The wires 11a, 11b, 11c, 11d consisted in all examples of tin-plated copper and each had a cross-sectional area of 0.34 mm2. The materials M12 of the wire insulations 12a, 12b, 12c, 12d, the materials M13 of the coatings 13, the materials M2/3 of the plug connectors 2, 3a, 3b, 3c and the materials M4/5 of the connection nuts 4, 5 are listed in Tables 1 and 2:
Here, PVC stands for polyvinyl chloride, PP for polypropylene, PTFE for polytetrafluoroethylene, PU for polyurethane, FEP for perfluoroethylenepropylene and TPE-E for a thermoplastic polyester elastomer.
PVC Y17 (Shore hardness 90-95A) was used as a PVC for the wire insulation. PVC YM3 (Shore hardness AB0-B5) was used as a PVC for the coating and for the plug connectors. PP9Y (Shore hardness 54D) was used as a polypropylene. TPU 11YH1 (Shore hardness 54D) was used as a PU for the coating. Transparent Elastollan 1154D (Shore hardness 53D, tensile strength 50 MPa, elongation at break 450%, tear resistance 150 N/mm, abrasion 30 mm3) of the company BASF, Ludwigshafen, Germany was used as a PU for the plug connectors 2, 3a, 3b, 3c. Teflon® of the company E.I du Pont de Nemours, Wilmington, USA was used as a PTFE and Teflon® FEP as an FEP. A flame retardant-free coloured granulate was used as a master batch. The percent specifications each refer to 100 percent by weight of the total material of the polyurethane and master batch. In the examples according to the invention B1 and B2, cables of the company Berger Spezialkabel, Henstedt-Ulzburg, Germany were used as a current conductor 1.
All investigated cables were used as a control line in an intrinsically known welding device in 62,200 consecutive welding cycles. Only the electric cables according to the invention of examples B1 and B2 withstood these experimental conditions without at least one of the wires thereby being exposed. Consequently, these have a particularly high resistance to welding conditions.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20 2015 102 166 U | Apr 2015 | DE | national |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20160322740 A1 | Nov 2016 | US |