The invention first relates to a method for the heat treatment of a profile, in particular an extruded profile for aircraft. In addition, the invention relates to a device for the heat treatment of a profile, in particular an extruded profile for aircraft. Finally, the invention relates to a profile, in particular an extruded profile for aircraft.
Extruded profiles, in particular those formed with curable aluminum alloys, are extensively used in aircraft construction owing to the high mechanical loading capacity required there. The requirement for continual weight reduction is placing an ever-increasing demand on static loading capacity and other mechanical parameters of profiles made out of aluminum alloy.
For example, known treatment methods make it possible to specifically optimize extruded profiles made of curable aluminum alloys for maximum static strength or corrosion resistance. The same holds true for the achievable maximum fracture toughness of the used aluminum profiles. However, it is essentially impossible to simultaneously maximize static strength, fracture toughness and corrosion resistance, since each of these material properties can only be optimized to a theoretical maximum at the expense of at least one other material property. For example, this means that an extruded profile made of a curable aluminum alloy either exhibits a very high static strength, or reveals very favorable properties with regard to corrosion resistance and/or fracture toughness. Known treatment methods can generally not be used to optimize a profile relative to its material properties in such a way that both static strength and corrosion resistance and fracture toughness achieve the advantageous values to be realized during the isolated optimization of the profile for a single parameter.
This is because known methods involve subjecting the extruded profiles made of curable aluminum alloys to essentially the same treatment steps, so that they exhibit roughly identical material properties throughout, regardless of region. As a consequence, an aluminum profile cannot automatically be specifically optimized by region with respect to static strength, fracture toughness and corrosion resistance using the known methods.
The object of the invention is to provide a method and device for regionally optimizing several mechanical parameters of a profile, in particular an extruded profile for aircraft. Another object of the invention is to provide a profile, in particular an extruded profile, which exhibits different mechanical properties optimized in at least two respective regions. These mechanical properties relate in particular to static strength, fracture toughness and corrosion resistance.
This object is achieved by a method including subjecting at least two regions of a profile to a different heat treatment; a device with first and second chambers, in which each chamber envelops a respective region of the profile and in which different temperatures can be established in each chamber; and by a profile with at least two regions each having respectively varying material properties formed through differential heat treatment.
Because at least two regions of the profile are subjected to different heat treatments according to claim 1, varying material properties can be generated and optimized in these areas, especially with respect to static strength, corrosion resistance and fracture toughness.
In this case, the method according to the invention can be used for regionally optimizing varying material properties of profiles, in particular extruded profiles for aircraft, which are made of aluminum alloy throughout. As an alternative, the method can also be used for optimizing profiles made of two or more different aluminum alloys. For example, such profiles can be manufactured with a coextrusion method using a molding comprised of two different aluminum alloys.
According to one embodiment, a first chamber encompasses a first region of the profile, while a second chamber encompasses a second region of the profile, wherein different temperatures can be set in the first and second chambers, which makes it possible to generate and optimize varying material properties in the mentioned regions.
According to another embodiment, the profile exhibits at least two regions that are formed via differential heat treatment and exhibit varying material properties, which makes it possible to utilize the profile according to the invention for applications where the profile must simultaneously satisfy different requirements, for example with respect to static strength, fracture toughness and corrosion resistance. In this case, the profile preferably at least regionally exhibits varying, separately optimized material properties.
In another advantageous embodiment of the invention, the profile is made of an aluminum alloy, in particular a curable AlznCu alloy. Even when using a profile, in particular an extruded profile for aircraft, that consists only of an aluminum alloy throughout, this makes it possible to create regions with varying material properties, for example with respect to static strength, fracture toughness and corrosion resistance. At the same time, the profile exhibits regionally optimized material properties.
In another advantageous embodiment of the invention, the profile is made of at least two different, in particular curable aluminum alloys. By additionally using at least two aluminum alloys with different compositions to make a profile, regions inside the profile can be created or optimized in conjunction with differential heat treatment, which differ even more from each other with respect to their material properties, for example mechanical strength, fracture toughness or corrosion resistance.
The method according to the invention enables the advantageous treatment of aluminum profiles with curable aluminum alloys, which are used, for example, as frames for reinforcement purposes in fuselage cells of aircraft. In a first region of the frame formed by the profile oriented toward the outer skin of the fuselage cell (outer belt), the profile is subjected to a heat treatment based on the method according to the invention that is suitable to produce the high static strength desired in this region to the detriment of the fracture toughness and/or corrosion resistance.
By contrast, the method according to the invention can be used in a second region of the profile oriented toward the interior of the fuselage cell (inner belt) to subject the profile to another suitable heat treatment that enables a high corrosion resistance and/or fracture toughness given a simultaneously lower static strength. As a result, the properties of the aluminum profile desired in the region of the inner belt of the frame can be specifically set and optimized, at least within the limits prescribed by the alloy.
Hence, the method according to the invention enables the simple and cost-effective preparation of aluminum profiles that exhibit varying material properties that normally at least partially preclude each other in different regions. The method according to the invention allows the use in particular of extruded profiles made of aluminum alloys for applications with the most varied material requirements, wherein the profiles can be made with only a single alloy throughout.
Another example for the advantageous use of the method according to the invention involves extruded profiles with aluminum alloys, which are used in aircraft to secure seats or seat rows (seat rails), for example. The lower regions of such aluminum profiles are used to form the cabin floor, and must hence exhibit a high static strength, since they are an integral part of the entire fuselage cell statics, and have to absorb significant forces. By contrast, the upper sides of the aluminum profile, which accommodate the seats or seat rows, among other things, must exhibit in particular a high corrosion resistance and fracture toughness. The method according to the invention now makes it possible to treat the extruded profile made of a curable aluminum alloy in such a way that these varying requirements on the material in different regions of the seat rail can be satisfied with one and the same extruded profile. This yields a significant cost and weight savings.
The method according to the invention is here not limited to the use of profiles consisting of an aluminum alloy throughout.
As an alternative, for example, the extruded profile for the seat rails can also be fabricated using two different aluminum alloys in an extrusion process. This can be accomplished by the so-called coextrusion process, for example, in which a molding comprised of two different aluminum alloys is pressed through a die with a hole geometry roughly corresponding to the cross sectional geometry of the respective profile. For example, this makes it possible to use a curable aluminum alloy having a high corrosion resistance for the upper region of the seat rail. A curable aluminum alloy having another composition and high static strength values can be used for the lower region. The differential heat treatment method according to the invention then makes it possible to then optimize these varying alloy regions even further with respect to the desired material properties.
The other claims describe further advantageous embodiments of the invention.
In the drawing:
For example, the profile 1 shown on
It is desirable in the area of the outer belt, i.e., in the second region 3 of the profile 1, that the latter exhibit an elevated static strength by comparison to the first region 2. However, the static strength can only be increased via the deterioration in fracture toughness and/or corrosion resistance, although this is tolerable in the region of the outer belt.
By contrast, it is desirable that a high fracture toughness and/or corrosion resistance be achieved in the area of the inner belt of the profile 1, i.e., in the first region 2. However, this preferred combination of material can only be achieved at the expense of a lower static strength.
In order to achieve the property combinations mentioned above within the profile 1, which is made of a curable aluminum alloy throughout, the first region 2 and the second region 3 are each subjected to a different heat treatment. For this reason, the profile 1 in the first region 2 exhibits a high corrosion resistance and/or fracture toughness in particular, and the second region 3 advantageously exhibits a high static strength.
As illustrated based on the example of using the profile 1 as a round frame in aircraft construction, the profile 1 according to the invention exhibits regionally varying material properties, such as static strength, fracture toughness and/or corrosion resistance. This can yield a significant weight and cost savings, because the generation of profiles with regionally varying material properties no longer absolutely requires that the consist of a combination of different materials, in particular curable aluminum alloys if varying composition. In like manner, the method can also be used for profiles comprised of varying aluminum alloys. In this case, the differences in the mechanical parameters of the composite profile owing to the varying aluminum alloys can be optimized even further via the differential temperature treatment according to the invention.
As opposed to the straight shaped embodiment shown on
The y-coordinate of the diagram shows the temperature used on the respective region 2, 3 of the profile, while the x-coordinate plots the time. A first temperature progression 8 over time represents the exemplary progression of temperature exposure during the differential heat treatment according to the invention in the first region 2. A second temperature progression 9 shown with a dashed line represents the respective chronological progression of temperature exposure in the second region 3. The different heat treatments take place simultaneously in the exemplary embodiment shown on
During the course of two pretreatment phases 10, 11, both the first region 2 and the second region 3 are first exposed to a pretreatment temperature 12. Pre-treatment phases 10, 11 differ in terms of their duration. The pretreatment phase 11 in the exemplary embodiment shown on
The pretreatment phases 10, 11 are used in particular to first maximize the strength of the entire profile 1 within the limits prescribed by the alloy independently of the regions 2, 3. As opposed to the depicted exemplary embodiment on
In the phase involving the actual differential heat treatment of the first and the second region 2, 3, the regions 2, 3 are each subjected to different temperature progressions 8, 9. During a first exposure period 13, the first region is subjected to a first temperature 14. The second region 3 is correspondingly exposed to a second temperature 16 during a second exposure duration 15. According to the invention, the first temperature 14 is here greater than the second temperature 16, and the first exposure duration 13 is longer than the second exposure duration 15.
In an especially preferred exemplary embodiment of the method according to the invention, a value measuring roughly 8 to 12 hours is selected for the first exposure period 13. A value ranging from about 5 to 8 hours is used for the second exposure duration 15. In this case, the first temperature 14 measures roughly 170° C. or 443 K, while a value of roughly 150° C. or 423 K is selected for the second temperature 16.
This differential heat treatment yields an elevated corrosion resistance and/or fracture toughness in particular in the first region 2 of the profile 1. By contrast, this heat treatment produces an improved static strength, in particular in the second region 3 of the profile 1. The chronological temperature progressions 8, 9 can deviate from the trapezoidal ones denoted in the diagram, and follow nearly any constant curve desired, just as long as there is a sufficient temperature difference.
Therefore, the method according to the invention makes it possible to generate respectively varying material properties in the first and second region 2, 3 of the profile 1, even though the profile 1 consists of an essentially homogenous aluminum alloy throughout. In particular, these material properties relate to static strength, fracture toughness and/or corrosion resistance.
As an alternative, the method according to the invention can also be used to differentially heat treat profiles consisting of two or more different aluminum alloys. In this case, regions composed of the same aluminum alloy are preferably also subjected to the same temperature treatment and same temperature progression. However, as an alternative, those regions of the profile composed of the same aluminum alloy can also be subjected to a differential heat treatment. The temperature ranges and exposure intervals already mentioned above might here have to be varied as a function of the different alloy systems used.
Using aluminum alloys varying in composition to generate the profile 1 enables an even more differentiated formation of the most varied of material properties, in particular with respect to static strength, fracture toughness and corrosion rate, in respectively differing regions of the profile.
Finally,
A first temperature 24 can be established and maintained inside the first chamber 17, and a second temperature 25 can be established and maintained inside the second chamber 18. The set temperatures 24, 25 preferably differ. Any thermal compensation processes between the first region 2 and second region 3 due to leaks in the border area 22 and/or any heat conduction processes between the regions 2, 3 of the profile 1 can generally be disregarded given the prevailing temperature difference.
Primarily liquid and/or gaseous media are suited for heating the chambers 17, 18 as precisely as possible, e.g., hot air. The hot air is here generated with a device not shown in any greater detail, for example an electrically heatable hot-air bellows or the like. The chambers 17, 18 also incorporate temperature sensors not shown in any greater detail, so that an open- and closed-loop controller (also not depicted) can be used to keep the temperatures 24, 25 within the chambers 17, 18 as close to the values prescribed by the temperature progressions 8, 9. The open- and closed-loop controller can here be designed as a known computer, for example.
Sealing means not shown in any greater detail in the depiction on
In order to treat the profile 1 or implement the method according to the invention, the profile 1, the prescribed chronological temperature progressions 8, 9 keep the profile 1 inside the device for a total of up to 12 hours, plus the duration of the pretreatment phases 10, 11.
In an alternative embodiment of the device, the hoses 19, 20 can be interconnected along the longitudinal edges 23 below or above the profile 1. In this embodiment, the hoses 19, 20 can be detached and reattached in the area of the outer longitudinal edges, ensuring that they can be attached to the profile 1.
For example, in the exemplary embodiment shown, the profile 26 is fabricated by pressing a cylindrical molding 31 through a die 34 under a high pressure in the direction of arrows 32, 33. The opening geometry of the die 34 roughly corresponds to the cross sectional geometry of the profile 26 to be compression molded. The molding 31 is comprised of half-cylinders 35, 36 lying one atop the other. The high pressure prevailing inside the die 34 generates a rigid attachment between the alloy regions 27, 28 in the border area 29 in the arising profile 26. The half-cylinders 34, 35 here each consist of aluminum alloys varying in composition, so that the alloy regions 27, 28 each exhibit correspondingly different material properties. The mentioned material properties refer in particular to mechanical strength, fracture toughness, corrosion resistance and the thermal joinability of the profile 26. Materials used in creating the half-cylinders 35, 36 include in particular curable aluminum alloys such as AlMgSiCu, AlCuMg and AlZnMgCu systems.
As an alternative, the profile 26 can also be formed by joining already extruded partial profiles composed of different aluminum alloys using known joining procedures, e.g., welding, friction/agitation welding or the like.
Profile 26 is subsequently subjected to a differential heat treatment pursuant to the method described further above, or to a treatment in the device already described. Regions composed of the same aluminum alloy are here preferably also subjected to the same temperature treatment. In the exemplary embodiment depicted on
However, as an alternative, regions composed of the same respective aluminum alloys can also be subjected to a varying or differential temperature treatment. In this case, the regions 27, 37 or 28, 38 are no (longer) completely coincident.
Either in combination with the method according to the invention or in and of itself, using profiles 1, 26 consisting of at least two aluminum alloys varying in composition enables the formation of material properties that differ locally to an even greater extent than would be the case using profiles composed of only a single aluminum alloy. Finally, more than two different aluminum alloys can also be used to generate the profile 26.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2006/003442 | 4/13/2006 | WO | 00 | 10/8/2008 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2007/118489 | 10/25/2007 | WO | A |
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