The invention relates to a multi-layer, sound-absorbing lightweight component, in particular for motor vehicles, having an air-permeable cover layer and at least one air-permeable fleece layer of thermoplastic fibres, the cover layer being coupled to the fleece layer in a sound-transmissive manner.
A plurality of materials and systems for reducing sound emissions from motor vehicles, in particular for reducing the noise level in vehicle passenger compartments, have already been developed.
So-called resonance absorbers are often used for sound insulation in passenger vehicles. These are selective spring-mass systems which are excited to resonance and are optimally effective in the particular resonance range. Elastic fleece materials and/or foam materials coupled to a heavy layer of rubber or an elastomer as the mass are typically used as the spring. Conventional spring-mass systems have only a narrow-band effect. However, it is particularly disadvantageous that they have a relatively high mass per area unit due to the heavy layer mass, which is unfavorable with regard to the total vehicle weight and the permissible maximum load as well as with regard to a lowest possible fuel consumption.
DE 199 60 945 A1 describes a floor covering for motor vehicles which is said to have a particularly low mass per area unit without impairing the acoustic effectiveness. This known floor covering essentially consists of a carpet layer, an underlying sound-insulating element and a soft polyurethane foam layer, the sound-insulating element being formed by a double-layer fleece, namely a polyester fleece and an underlying polypropylene fleece. The double-layer fleece has a mass per area unit of 600 to 1,000 g/m2. The carpet layer is a polyamide tufted velour carpet and consists of a polyamide staple fibre layer, a base fleece, and a binding. The double-layer fleece is sintered via a polyethylene sinter layer over the entire surface of the backing of the carpet layer. A polyethylene/polyamide sealing film which seals the double-layer fleece against foam penetration from the polyurethane foam layer formed in the back-foaming process is laminated onto the rear side of the double-layer fleece.
The object of the present invention is to create a component of the type described in the introduction which is relatively light and at the same time has a high or even improved acoustic effectiveness.
According to the present invention, this object is achieved by a component having the features indicated in claim 1.
The sound-absorbing component of the present invention has an air-permeable cover layer and at least one air-permeable fleece layer of thermoplastic fibres, the cover layer being coupled to the fleece layer in sound-transmitting manner. The component is essentially further characterized in that the fleece layer has a thickness in a range of 2 to 7 mm for a weight per area unit in a range of 500 to 1,500 g/m2 and is not attached or is only partially attached to the cover layer with a surface area of less than 20% of its surface facing the cover layer.
The component of the present invention is very light compared to conventional sound-insulating coverings which form a spring-mass system having an air-tight heavy layer. According to the present invention, the fleece layer is not attached or is only partially attached to the cover layer. This essentially loose layering results in one or more thin air layers between the layers at least in some areas. Corresponding density differences and accordingly relatively high impedance discontinuities are present at the transitions from the layers to the air layers and provide the lightweight component of the present invention with excellent acoustic qualities. Measurements have shown that despite their low total mass per area unit, components of the present invention have good and in special embodiments even improved sound-insulating properties compared to conventional components having a heavy layer. In particular, measurements have shown that components of the present invention have a relatively high sound-absorbing and sound-insulating effect for medium and high sound frequencies.
The sound-absorbing and sound-insulating fleece layer of the component according to the present invention is preferably formed from polyethylene-terephthalate fibres and/or polypropylene fibres. The air permeability or the flow resistance of the fleece layer is set by compression such that an optimal sound-absorbing and sound-insulating effect is achieved. The thickness of the fleece layer lies preferably in a range of 2 to 5 mm for a weight per area unit in a range of 500 to 1,300 g/m2.
An advantageous embodiment of the lightweight component according to the present invention consists in that a further air-permeable fleece layer of thermoplastic fibres is arranged on the side of the fleece layer facing away from the cover layer, both fleece layers having a thickness in a range of 2 to 5 mm and a weight per area unit in a range of 500 to 700 g/m2. The two fleece layers may have the same thickness and weight per area unit, e.g., a weight per area unit of 600 g/m2 and a thickness of approx. 3 mm. The two fleece layers also preferably lie essentially loosely on or against one another so that their facing layer boundaries define a thin air layer or a density difference and a corresponding impedance discontinuity are present there.
According to a further advantageous embodiment of the present invention, spacers are formed in the at least one fleece layer of thermoplastic fibres. The spacers form thin, air-filled hollow spaces between the fleece layer and the adjacent layer or an adjacent sheet panel. In particular, this embodiment is acoustically particularly effective due to the impedance discontinuity present at the transition between the fleece layer and air layer.
Relatively high sound absorption may be achieved using the lightweight component according to the present invention when an open-cell foam layer is arranged between the cover layer and the fleece layer and has a thickness in a range of 7 to 15 mm and a weight per area unit preferably in a range of only 100 to 200 g/m2. In particular, the foam layer may consist of a polyurethane foam or melamine resin foam.
According to an advantageous embodiment, the cover layer of the lightweight component of the present invention may be formed by a polyester fibre fleece having a weight per area unit in a range of 70 to 110 g/m2 or a spunbond fabric having a weight per area unit in a range of 60 to 100 g/m2. A particularly high sound-absorption coefficient was achieved in an embodiment in which a polyester fibre fleece having a weight per area unit in a range of 70 to 110 g/m2 is arranged directly behind the spunbond fabric. In this case the air resistance of the spunbond fabric is preferably greater than that of the polyester fibre fleece.
The lightweight component according to the present invention may be used in a motor vehicle, in particular as an engine-side dashboard covering. Alternatively or additionally, it may also be used to cover the dashboard side facing the passenger compartment, its cover layer then preferably being formed by a carpet layer.
In a particularly preferred embodiment, the carpet layer is made from a tufted carpet having an acoustically open tuft backing and an air-permeable, netted tuft binding.
In this case a further advantageous embodiment consists in that the tuft binding is provided with mineral microbodies and/or hollow mineral microbodies. This renders possible a tufted carpet having a relatively low weight per area unit and simultaneously excellent form stability. The weight per area unit of the carpet layer is in a range of only 200 to 400 g/m2, for example.
Further preferred and advantageous embodiments of the lightweight component according to the present invention are described in the dependent claims.
The invention will be explained in the following with reference to a drawing which illustrates several exemplary embodiments. The figures show schematically:
To bind the pile loops 5 inserted into the tuft backing 3, a first adhesive 8 is first applied to the underside, which adhesive essentially accumulates only at pile bindings 5 when applied leaving perforations 7 created by the pile-threadless tufting needles essentially free. A further powder adhesive 9 is sintered onto this tuft binding. The first adhesive 8 and/or the sintered powder adhesive 9 preferably contain(s) mineral microbodies and/or hollow mineral microbodies (not shown). The carpet layer 2 has a weight per area unit in a range of 200 to 400 g/m2, e.g. 350 g/m2.
An air-permeable fleece layer 10 of thermoplastic fibres is arranged next to the carpet layer 2. The air resistance of the fleece layer preferably formed from PET fibres and/or PP fibres is set or optimized via compression. Given a weight per area unit in a range of 500 to 1,300 g/m2, the thickness of fleece layer 10 is in a range of 2 to 7 mm, in particular between 2 and 5 mm for a weight per area unit in a range of approx. 600 to approx. 1,000 g/m2.
The fleece layer 10 is not attached or is only partially attached to the carpet layer 2. The partial attachment is achieved via heat-sealing and is limited to an edge region and, in some instances, the edge region of one of more openings for cables, hoses, and/or mechanical control elements. The surface area of fleece layer 10 connected in a substance-to-substance bond to carpet layer 2 is max. 20%, but preferably significantly less than 20%, of it surface facing carpet layer 2.
A layer 11 formed from a cotton fibre fleece and resting on floor panel 12 of the vehicle is arranged underneath fleece layer 10. The cotton fibre fleece 11 has a weight per area unit in a range of approx. 600 to 1,100 g/m2, in particular in a range of approx. 700 to 1,000 g/m2. Given a weight per area unit in a range of approx. 600 to 700 g/m2, the thickness is approx. 6 mm. Given a weight per area unit in a range of 1,000 to 1,100 g/m2, the cotton fibre fleece has a thickness of approx. 15 to 20 mm.
It can be seen that the fleece layer 10 rests on cotton fibre fleece 11 in an essentially loose manner so that thin air layers or air chambers 13 are present between layers 10, 11. The two layers 10, 11 are not connected or are only partially connected to one another, the connection being arranged in the edge region of the lightweight component formed by layers 2, 10, and 11 and/or in the edge region of openings formed therein (not shown).
In
The dashboard coverings shown in
In the direction of the engine compartment, the dashboard covering has a relatively thin, air-permeable fleece layer 16 as a cover layer. In the exemplary embodiment according to
In the exemplary embodiment according to
The sections of the dashboard coverings according to the present invention shown in
As shown in
Layers 10, 10′, 10″, 15, 16 and in some instances 17 of the dashboard covering according to
Curve K1 shows the measured values for a layer structure made up of 3.2 kg/m2 of an air-tight heavy layer, an open-cell PUR foam layer having a thickness of approx. 9 mm, and an air-permeable PES fleece. Dashed curve K2 relates to a corresponding layer structure additionally having a spunbond fabric having a weight per area unit of approx. 80 g/m2 as the cover layer on the PES fleece.
Curve K3 corresponds to the absorption measurement for a layer structure according to the present invention in which a compressed, air-permeable fleece layer having a thickness of approx. 3 mm and a weight per area unit of only approx. 600 g/m2 is used instead of the mentioned heavy layer. Curve K4 which is characterized by triangles relates to a similar layer structure in which the weight per area unit of the compressed, air-permeable fleece layer is approx. 1,000 g/m2.
Curves K5 and K6 relate to layer structures according to the present invention having a compressed, air-permeable fleece layer, an open-cell PUR foam layer having a thickness of approx. 9 mm, and a relatively thin, air-permeable PES fleece layer. The layer structure belonging to curve K5 also includes a thin spunbond fabric having a weight per area unit of approx. 80 g/m2 as the cover layer, the compressed, air-permeable fleece layer having a thickness of approx. 3 mm and a weight per area unit of approx. 600 g/m2. Curve K6 belongs to a corresponding layer structure also having a thin spunbond fabric having a weight per area unit of approx. 80 g/m2 as the cover layer, but the weight per area unit of the approx. 3 mm thick, compressed, air-permeable fleece layer being approx. 1,000 g/m2 for this layer structure.
Curves K7 and K8 relate to layer structures differing from the layer structures of curves K3 and K5 in that a further corresponding fleece layer is arranged on the side of the compressed, air-permeable fleece layer facing away from the cover layer, i.e., both fleece layers lying loosely on one another have a thickness of approx. 3 mm and a weight per area unit of approx. 600 g/m2. Curve K8 belongs to the layer structure having a thin spunbond fabric having a weight per area unit of approx. 80 g/m2 as the cover layer.
As curves K3, K5, K7, K8 show, the thin, very light spunbond fabric and the use of the two air-permeable fleece layers lying loosely on one another result in a significant improvement of the sound absorption.
Finally,
Curve V10 belongs to a floor carpeting structure formed from a carpet upper fabric having a heavy layer backing and a cold foam layer positioned underneath it, the cold foam layer having a weight per area unit of approx. 1,200 g/m2. Measurement curve V9 is based on a floor carpeting structure including a corresponding cold foam layer but also having another carpet upper fabric with a foil backing.
Curve V1 shows the measurement results for a floor carpeting structure formed from a carpet upper fabric having a heavy layer backing, a fleece layer following thereon and having a weight per area unit of 1,000 g/m2, and a cotton fibre fleece following thereon and having a weight per area unit of 700 g/m2. Curve V2 shows the measurement results for a floor carpeting structure also having a fleece layer having a weight per area unit of 1,000 g/m2 and a cotton fibre fleece having a weight per area unit of 700 g/m2 as a sub-layer, but having the other carpet upper fabric having the film backing.
Curves V3 and V8 relate to floor carpeting structures having an acoustically open velour carpet layer as the upper fabric according to
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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203201027 | Dec 2003 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP04/10662 | 9/23/2004 | WO | 9/2/2005 |