Claims
- 1. A frictionally welded thermoplastic article, comprising:
a. a first thermoplastic workpiece and a second thermoplastic workpiece, each of said first and second thermoplastic workpieces having a mating surface; b. said mating surface of said first thermoplastic workpiece and said mating surface of said second thermoplastic workpiece being joined in a melt down region; and said mating surface of said first workpiece having been comprised, prior to welding, of a restriction to lateral flow of the melt from between the workpieces, and said mating surface of said second workpiece being substantially flat.
- 2. An article as recited by claim 1, wherein the restriction to lateral flow of the melt from between the workpieces is a substantially rectangular projection along each lateral edge of the first workpiece.
- 3. An article as recited by claim 2, wherein the thickness of each of said projections is between about 5% and about 35% of the thickness of the first workpiece and the height of each of said projections, relative to the lowest point on the initial mating surface is at least about 25% of the dimension of the melt down region.
- 4. An article as recited by claim 2 wherein;
a. the thickness of each of said projections is between about 5% and about 35% of the thickness of the first workpiece; and b. prior to welding, the cross-sectional area of the space defined by a line between the upper edges of the rectangular projections and the material surfaces between them is at least about 15% of the product of the thickness of the first workpiece and the dimension of the melt down region.
- 5. An article as recited by claim 2, wherein the mating surface of the first workpiece has an undulation or wave along its length having an amplitude (peak-to-trough) less than about 800% of the melt down.
- 6. An article as recited by claim 3, wherein at least one of said first and second workpieces is comprised of a fiber reinforced thermoplastic.
- 7. An article as recited by claim 6, wherein each of said first and second thermoplastic workpieces comprises a thermoplastic polymer selected from the group consisting of polyamides, polyesters, polycarbonates, polysulfones, polyimides, polyurethanes, polyethers, polyolefins, vinyl polymers and mixtures thereof.
- 8. An article as recited by claim 6, wherein the fiber comprises a material having a melting point at least 50° C. higher than the thermoplastic polymer which it reinforces.
- 9. A vibration welded thermoplastic article, comprising:
a. a first thermoplastic workpiece and a second thermoplastic workpiece, each of said first and thermoplastic workpieces having a mating surface; b. said mating surface of said first thermoplastic workpiece and said mating surface of said second thermoplastic workpiece being joined in a melt down region; c. said mating surface of said first workpiece having been comprised, prior to welding, of a restriction to lateral flow of the melt from between the workpieces, and said mating surface of said second workpiece being substantially flat; d. wherein the restriction to lateral flow of the melt from between the workpieces is a substantially rectangular projection along each lateral edge of the first workpiece; e. wherein the thickness of each of said projections is between about 5% and about 35% of the thickness of the first workpiece; and f. the height of each of said projections, relative to the lowest point on the initial mating surface is at least about 25% of the dimension of the melt down region.
- 10. A vibration welded thermoplastic article, comprising:
a. a first thermoplastic workpiece and a second thermoplastic workpiece, each of said first and thermoplastic workpieces having a mating surface; b. said mating surface of said first thermoplastic workpiece and said mating surface of said second thermoplastic workpiece being joined in a melt down region; c. said mating surface of said first workpiece having been comprised, prior to welding, of a restriction to lateral flow of the melt from between the workpieces, and said mating surface of said second workpiece being substantially flat; d. wherein the restriction to lateral flow of the melt from between the workpieces is a substantially rectangular projection along each lateral edge of the first workpiece; e. wherein the thickness of each of said projections is between about 5% and about 35% of the thickness of the first workpiece; and f. prior to welding, the cross-sectional area of the space defined by a line between the upper edges of the rectangular projections and the material surfaces between them is at least about 15% of the product of the thickness of the first workpiece and the dimension of the melt down region.
- 11. A method of frictional welding a first thermoplastic workpiece to a second thermoplastic workpiece, comprising the steps of:
a. pressing the first and second workpieces together under a compressive clamping pressure; b. moving the first workpiece relative to the second workpiece in a plane parallel to their interface sufficient to frictionally heat the interface; c. melting the interfacial surfaces of the first and second workpieces creating a melt down region; d. providing a means to restricting the lateral flow of molten material out of the gap between said interfacial surfaces; and e. retaining a molten pool of substantial depth between the workpieces from the beginning of melting to the onset of solidification.
- 12. A method as recited by claim 11, wherein said restricting means is a substantially rectangular projection along each lateral edge of said first workpiece, and said mating surface of said second workpiece is substantially flat.
- 13. A method as recited by claim 11, wherein the thickness of each of said projections is between about 5% and about 35%of the thickness of said first workpiece, and wherein the height of each of said projections, relative to the lowest point on the initial mating surface, is at least about 25% of the dimension of the melt down region.
- 14. A method as recited by claim 11, wherein;
a. the thickness of each of said projections is between about 5% and about 35%of the thickness of said first workpiece, and b. prior to welding, the cross-sectional area of the space defined by a line between the upper edges of the rectangular projections and the material surfaces between them is at least about 15% of the product of the thickness of the first workpiece and the dimension of the melt down region.
- 15. A method as recited by claim 11, wherein the relative motion between the first and second workpieces is a linear vibratory motion.
- 16. A method as recited by claim 11, wherein the relative motion between the first and second workpieces is an orbital motion.
- 17. A method as recited by claim 11, wherein the relative motion between the first and second workpieces, the motion is a rotational motion.
- 18. A method as recited by claim 11, wherein each of said thermoplastic workpieces comprises a thermoplastic polymer selected from the group consisting of polyamides, polyesters, polycarbonates, polysulfones, polyimides, polyurethanes, polyethers, polyolefins, vinyl polymers and mixtures thereof.
- 19. A method as recited by claim 18, wherein each of said thermoplastic workpieces comprises a polyamide.
- 20. A method as recited by claim 11, wherein at least one of said first and second workpieces is comprised of a fiber reinforced thermoplastic.
CROSS-REFERENCES TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
[0001] This application is related to co-pending application Ser. No. 09/443,595 filed Nov. 15, 1999, entitled “Multi-Purpose Universal Weld Test System”.
Divisions (1)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
09470709 |
Dec 1999 |
US |
Child |
10172966 |
Jun 2002 |
US |