Portable electronic devices, such as laptop computers, have become popular due to their relative light-weight as compared to desktop computers. Device manufacturers continue to change aspects of portable electronic devices to further increase their portability.
Some examples of the present application are described with respect to the following figures:
Housings of an electronic device, such as a laptop computer, a tablet computer, a mobile phone, etc. may be made with plastic to save weight. However, plastic housings may be lack structural rigidity. Thus, when a plastic housing is rotated, the plastic housing may wobble due to the low structural rigidity. The user experience may be negatively impacted as a user of the electronic device may perceive the electronic device to be of low quality.
Examples described herein provide an approach to manufacture a housing of an electronic device that is light-weight while having greater structural rigidity as compared to plastic. In an example, an electronic device may include a first housing having a first cover and a second cover. The first cover may be made from fiber composite material. The second cover may be made from metal. The first cover may be bonded to the second cover via adhesive. The electronic device may further include a display device disposed in the first housing.
In another example, an electronic device may include a first housing having a first cover and a second cover. The electronic device may also include a display device disposed in the first housing. The electronic device may further include a second housing having a third cover and a fourth cover. The third cover may be made from fiber composite material. The fourth cover may be made from metal. The third cover may be bonded to the fourth cover via adhesive. The electronic device may further include an input device disposed in the second housing.
In another example, an electronic device may include a first housing having a first cover and a second cover. The first cover may be made from fiber composite material. The second cover may be made from metal. The first cover may be bonded to the second cover via adhesive. The electronic device may also include a display device disposed in the first housing, a second cover, a display device disposed in the first housing, and a second housing having a third cover and a fourth cover. The third cover may be made from the fiber composite material. The fourth cover may be made from the metal. The third cover may be bonded to the fourth cover via the adhesive. The electronic device may further include a keyboard and a click pad device disposed in the second housing. Examples described herein may enable an electronic device to have light-weight yet structurally rigid housings.
First housing 102 may include a first cover 108 and a second cover 110. First cover 108 may be made from fiber composite material. In some examples, fiber composite material may include carbon fiber, such as carbon fiber made from a compression molding process, woven carbon fiber, etc. In some examples, fiber composite material may include glass fiber.
Second cover 110 may be made from metal. In some examples, metal may include aluminum. In some examples, metal may include aluminum alloy. In some examples, metal may include magnesium. In some examples, metal may include magnesium alloy.
To bond first cover 108 to second cover 110, adhesive may be used. A ring of adhesive 112 may be applied to a gap defined by first cover 108 and second cover 110. The gap may be defined by a difference between respective diameters of first cover 108 and second cover 110. In some examples, a diameter of first cover 108 may be smaller a diameter of second cover 110. Thus, when coupled together, the difference in diameters may define the gap. Ring of adhesive 112 may be applied via an injection molding process. In some examples, adhesive may be implemented using epoxy adhesive. In some examples, adhesive may be implemented using resin adhesive.
Second housing 104 may include a third cover 114 and a fourth cover 116. Third cover 114 and fourth cover 116 may be made from the same material, such as metal.
Process 400 may further include bonding the two covers together via adhesive, at 406. For example, ring of adhesive 112 may be injected to a gap between first cover 108 and second cover 110 via an injection molding process. Process 400 may further include painting the housing, at 408. For example, first housing 102 may be painted once first housing 102 is assembled. First cover 108 and second cover 110 may be painted to different colors. Process 400 may further include machining the housing, at 408. For example, edges of second cover 110 may be machined to form a particular shape (e.g., rounded corners).
The use of “comprising”, “including” or “having” are synonymous and variations thereof herein are meant to be inclusive or open-ended and do not exclude additional unrecited elements or method steps.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US2020/016585 | 2/4/2020 | WO |