The invention relates to a method for binding wood base elements with plastic, in particular for the production of functional elements using an injection moulding method, wherein the wood base element is placed in an injection mould and molten plastic material is injected at the previously selected location or locations.
In the usual products made of wood and plastic in which the plastic component is produced by the injection moulding method, the bond between wood and plastic is produced by adhesion at the interface and/or by undercuts or similar created in advance in a mechanical fashion on the wood base part. The production of wood/plastic laminates by rear injection or overspraying, insert moulding of components with plastic, moulding of plastic functional elements onto wood base parts, for example, are known for the production of snap hooks, protective coatings, wearing surfaces and similar.
Alternatively to this, it is known to bind wood to polymer materials by gluing, impregnating and adhesive bonding, reactively or by means of screws and nails. At the same time, screws and nails are joining elements which do not correspond to the anisotropy of the wood and therefore impair the strength of the bond.
It is the object of the invention to bind wood base elements with plastic by means of an injection moulding method to form a plastic part in such a manner that the strength and durability of the bond exceed those of the known methods. The method should further allow this bond to be produced in a single work step. In addition, the method should cover a plurality of areas of application in which a composite of wood with plastic can advantageously be used as material.
The formulated object is achieved according to the invention by setting the process parameters during the injection moulding in such a manner that the molten plastic material is irreversibly impressed into the wood base element and/or penetrates therein and/or passes through said wood base element.
The method according to the invention thus uses the naturally present anisotropic structure of wood, by specifically partially damaging the wood structure, in particular, deforming, opening or similar, so that the molten plastic material and ultimately the cured plastic material can bind firmly and durably with the wood at these locations.
During the injection moulding, cavities are formed in or on the wooden component by the injection pressure acting thereon. The molten plastic material can thus form indentations which it fills and molten plastic material pressed into the wood forms intercalations. Higher pressures enlarge the flow cross-section. The application of mechanical undercuts or a preparatory machining of the wood insert part are not necessary in the method according to the invention. The specific and relevant properties of the wood component for the application are fully preserved. The position of those regions of the wood insert part which are to be pressed in by plastic or through which said plastic is to flow can be predefined constructively in advance. These regions can be specifically influenced by the selection of the wood type, by the selection of the plastic material, the geometry of the insert part, the geometry of the moulding cavity and by the process parameters.
At the same time, the molten plastic material can form indentations acting in the manner of undercuts on the wood base element. These indentations are formed primarily at locations at which pressure is applied transverse to the longitudinal direction of the fibre during moulding-on. This is one of the possibilities for producing a very durable binding of the plastic part to the wood base part.
More intensive binding of the plastic or the molten plastic material to the wood base element can be achieved if the wood base element is moulded on in such a manner that the molten plastic material penetrates therein and forms at least one intercalation running substantially in the direction of the wood fibre. Under corresponding injection pressure, however, it is also possible that intercalations of plastic running transversely to the direction of the wood fibre are formed in the wood base element.
According to the method according to the invention, the plastic intercalations and/or the plastic-filled indentations or similar are formed at previously constructively defined locations of the wood base element. Intercalations of plastic can therefore be avoided on the wood base element at locations where they would be undesirable.
The method according to the invention allows the production of components wherein the molten plastic material forms a visible overspraying on the outer side. However, parts can also be produced in such a manner that the wood base element is moulded on and no overspraying takes place.
An injection pressure in the range of 10 bar to 2500 bar is favourable for forming indentations and intercalations. The mould internal pressure is between 50 bar and 1400 bar.
The usual plastics for the injection moulding method can be used as plastic material. In particular, the plastic can be a thermoplastic material, the temperature of the molten plastic material being selected between +130° C. and 400° C.
Alternatively, a reactive plastic, for example, an elastomer, can be used. In this case, the temperature of the liquid plastic can even correspond to room temperature or it can be higher.
Undesirable thermal damage to the wood base element is avoided not only by the selected temperature of the plastic melt but also by the injection time of the molten plastic material. This injection time is selected in the range between a few tenths of a second and a few seconds. Particularly suitable types of wood for the wood base element are balsa, spruce, oak or beech wood but other woods whose property spectrum at least substantially corresponds to the afore-mentioned types of wood are well suited.
According to the method according to the invention, indentations and/or intercalations having an extension of about 1 mm to several centimetres can be created in the wood base element depending on the selected process parameters.
The invention further relates to a wood-plastic composite component which is produced by the method according to the invention. Such wood-plastic composite components are preferably sports device, office articles, windows, doors, items of furniture, floor coverings, toys, packaged goods, machine or vehicle components, musical instruments, hand tools or similar.
The invention is now described in detail with reference to the drawings which schematically show several exemplary embodiments. In the figures
The invention is concerned with a method for binding wood to a plastic by means of injection moulding. A durable binding of the plastic part moulded during and by means of the injection moulding method, with the wood base part is achieved in various ways, as is now explained in detail with reference to the drawings.
In all the embodiments, the components are combinations of base elements made of wood with plastic functional elements. In the sectional views, the wood components are shown lined (hatched) in the longitudinal direction of the wood fibre, and the functional elements made of plastic are shown by cross-hatching in the sectional views. Those regions in the wood components which are the joining zones of the wood base element to the plastic material of the plastic functional elements are indicated by more closely spaced cross-hatching.
During the production of the plastic part, the interfaces between the wood base part and the plastic part to be formed are selected in such a manner that as a result of the preferential direction of the wood fibres and the geometry of the wood insert part, impression of the wood and/or penetration of the molten plastic material into the wood part can be achieved. In this case, the injection mould can be embodied in such a manner and the plastic can be inserted into the mould in such a manner that the wood insert part is either at least partly oversprayed externally or, if this is to be avoided, the wood base part is pressed against the mould wall and the mould cavity in such a manner that overspraying from outside does not take place.
The screw mandrel 11 shown in
An embodiment in which the molten plastic material penetrates through the wood base part is shown in
As an example,
The positions of those regions of the wood insert part in the injection mould which are pressed in by the molten plastic material or through which said molten plastic material penetrates are constructively predefined. The formation of intercalations or indentations can be influenced by the choice of wood type and plastic, by the geometry of the wood insert part and the geometry of the mould cavity which corresponds to the geometry of the plastic part to be formed as well as by the process parameters. As has already been mentioned on several occasions, the important process parameters for injection moulding, pressure (injection pressure at the system), temperature of the molten plastic material and duration of injection, are selected so that depending on the condition of the wood part, the wood structure is partially opened by penetration of the molten plastic material or impression and formation of indentations takes place at the surface. The anisotropic structure of wood is used in this case. The spaces formed in the wood by the injection pressure thus bring about a distribution of the liquid plastic, whereby the flow cross-section can be enlarged by higher pressures.
The indentations, deformations, intercalations or regions where the molten plastic material has penetrated completely through the wood material, which are formed in the wood component during the injection moulding process can have different dimensions. The penetration depth can range from about 1 cm up to several centimetres. The penetration depth is therefore an order of magnitude greater than the typical values for gluing.
Preferably suitable as plastic material is a thermoplastic material which is injected as liquid melt in a mould onto the wooden base part placed in the mould under temporally defined action of pressure and at a corresponding temperature and solidifies by cooling in the mould. The plastic can also be a reactive material, for example, an elastomer which is injected into the mould in the same way as a molten thermoplastic material but solidifies by reaction. The plastic can be inserted by compact injection moulding and/or in a special injection moulding technique such as injection compression moulding, multi-component injection moulding, decorative rear injection, gas injection technique and similar.
As has already been noted, the anisotropic structure of wood is used within the framework of the invention. As is known, most of wood consists of cells which are called tracheary elements (fibres) and are arranged in the direction of growth in the tree. They are held together by an amorphous matrix which is rich in lignin. The tracheary elements are 2 mm to 4 mm long and have a length/diameter ratio of 100:1. The fibres themselves have a strength which is up to five times higher than that of the total composite. The matrix thus has a correspondingly lower strength.
Wood and plastic are organic materials related in type and having different properties which can be combined particularly advantageously by the binding according to the invention. For example, relative to its specific weight, wood has high values for the strength and rigidity in its preferential direction (direction of growth). These properties are significantly lower transverse to the preferential direction. Plastic has advantages in the formation of functional geometries, it can also form very fine elements, it has largely isotropic material behaviour, absorbs little to no moisture and can be adjusted very flexibly, including in a rubber-elastic manner. Further advantages are its good weather resistance and chemical resistance.
The following table gives some characteristic types of wood which are particularly suitable for the method according to the invention, with their weight per unit volume and some strength values in the fibre direction, although other types of wood having a similar property spectrum can also be used:
On the injection moulding machine the injection pressure is set in a range between 10 bar and 2500 bar. Typical mould internal pressures for the method are between 50 bar and 1400 bar. These are therefore in the range of the compressive strengths of wood and significantly higher (1 N/mm 2=10 bar). Deliberate, controlled partial damage or deformation of the wood structure is therefore possible at internal pressures in this order of magnitude. The pressures during pressing are significantly lower compared to this, 10% up to a maximum of 20% for the values specified for the injection moulding.
The wood insert part can undergo surface pre-treatment after cutting to length and before placing in the mould, which can be effected manually or automatically. Roughening, pickling, etching, washing, mechanical processing by grinding, milling, or producing holes etc. are possible. Pre-formed holes and/or grooves can be provided to distribute the molten plastic material but this is not absolutely essential.
The insertion or penetration of cast masses at lower and moderate pressures of about 10 bar, max. 50 bar, in presses, in existing cavities in the wood such as scoring, holes etc. differs from the method according to the invention. These cavities are already present in the wood. In the method according to the invention, the existing wood structure is partially opened or deformed by higher pressure and the free spaces available for the binding for the plastic material are thus produced.
During the injection moulding of thermoplastics, temperatures for the melt are selected in the range of +130° C. to 400° C. Reactive plastics such as elastomers are also processed at lower temperatures, as far as room temperature. Although the temperature of the molten plastic material is mostly above that of the thermal resistance limit of wood, which is about +180° C., subsequent thermal damage can be avoided by short injection times of a few tenths of a second up to a few seconds. Short-term intensive contact is advantageous for the binding process however. Since wood is comparatively well thermally insulated, only the uppermost layers in the area of the contact surface are affected by the action of higher temperatures. The pressing processes used to produce composite boards made of wood in comparison last several minutes, even up to hours for cold pressing. The process temperature during pressing therefore cannot exceed the thermal resistance limit.
Possible areas of application for the production of components using the method according to the invention are primarily in all areas of application where wood can be used as a material. In addition to the examples contained in the drawings, sports equipment such as skis for integration of binding elements, office equipment such as writing implements, windows and doors, possibly moulded-on connecting and functional elements such as hinges, etc., furniture, in particular connecting elements, floor coverings, in particular parquet flooring with snap-on connections, toys and commodity articles, for example, moisture-independent connections of wooden handles and tools, wooden parts which are joined by means of plastic elements and moved with respect to one another, for example in the manner of Matador or Lego, are possible. Other areas of application are spring shock absorber systems, means of transport and packaged materials, such as pallets made of wooden boards which are joined with plastic, on which film hinges are moulded-on, furthermore machine and vehicle components such as sliding blocks, brake linings, bearing bushes, friction disks, V-belt pulleys, drive wheels, supporting elements as well as functional elements of musical instruments and the like.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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A 891/2003 | Jun 2003 | AT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP04/05895 | 6/1/2004 | WO | 2/28/2007 |