This application claims priority from European Patent Application No. 06111727.1 filed Mar. 24, 2006 and Swiss Patent Application No. 00595/06 of Apr. 10, 2006.
The present invention concerns a micro-mechanical part made of an insulating material, and more specifically a fixed or mobile part of a timepiece movement whose proximity to other parts does not interfere with the working of a mobile part, directly or indirectly by attracting particles.
Insulating materials, such as silicon and its compounds, quartz, diamond, glass, ceramic or other materials are used more and more frequently to make micro-mechanical parts for the watch making industry, whether for fixed parts, such as plates or bridges, or for mobile parts forming, for example, part of the kinematic chain, or the regulating system, such as the balance spring, the balance or the escapement.
It has been observed, in particular on a balance spring that is totally isolated from the other parts for example by pinning up to the stud and bonding by means of a non-conductive adhesive, that the use of silicon has one drawback. Indeed, after a certain operating time, a certain number of coils located between the outer terminal curve and the inner terminal curve of the balance spring tend to adhere to the balance cock, which is necessarily detrimental to the isochronism of the regulating system. The same phenomenon can be observed with other parts made of silicon or another insulating material, which will also eventually have a detrimental effect on isochronism.
It is thus an object of the present invention to provide a solution to the aforementioned problem, by providing a fixed or mobile micro-mechanical part made of an insulating material whose surface treatment avoids the risk of adhesion.
The invention therefore concerns a micro-mechanical part made of an insulating material, such as silicon and its compounds, diamond, glass, ceramic or other materials, all or part of whose surface is coated with a thin deposition of an electrically conductive material such as a metallic material or a non-metallic conductive material. The conductive deposition preferably has a thickness of less than 50 nm. This very thin deposition, invisible to the naked eye, but perceptible via current analysis means, removes the risks of attraction and adhesion by a neighbouring part, this attraction being due to friction or tension liable to create electrostatic charges in the part.
This deposition can be carried out on a monobloc or composite part made of insulating material, i.e. wherein at least the external surface is made of insulating material.
From among materials able to achieve the aforementioned object non-oxidising and non-magnetic metals such as gold, platinum, rhodium and palladium will preferably be chosen.
From among the non-metallic conductive materials, graphite, carbon, doped silicon and conductive polymers will preferably be chosen.
These metals can be deposited by known methods allowing thickness to be controlled by adjusting operating conditions, for example by sputtering, PVD, doping, ionic implantation or by an electrolytic method. The same techniques could be used for depositing non-conductive metallic materials.
In a preferred application mode, said micro-mechanical part is a part in the kinematic chain of a timepiece movement, such as a balance spring, pallets, an escape wheel or a toothed wheel, or any other fixed part able for example to form the arbour bearing of a mobile part. In the following detailed description, the invention will be more particularly illustrated by a balance spring, which is the most sensitive part of a timepiece movement.
The invention also concerns a timepiece integrating a micro-mechanical part of this type.
Other features and advantages of the present invention will appear more clearly in the following description of an example embodiment, given by way of non-limiting illustration, with reference to the annexed drawings, in which:
The invention will be more particularly illustrated by sprung balance regulating device shown in
Given the small dimensions, the same silicon plate enables a batch of balance springs to be manufactured, whose features are determined by the thickness of the plate and the shape of the masks, said features being calculated for the balance spring to operate in one plane.
With reference now to
The right part shows balance spring 1 after treatment, the dotted line representing the position that coils 11 would occupy in the absence of treatment. As can be seen, the balance spring remains perfectly within one plane. It has in fact been observed that, surprisingly, by carrying out a treatment consisting of a very thin deposition of electrically conductive material such as a metallic material over all or part of the surface of the coils, the previously described detrimental effect is annihilated, without thereby altering the intrinsic mechanical properties of the balance spring. A “very thin deposition” means a deposition having a thickness of less than 50 nm preferably comprised between 10 and 20 nm. When the deposition is less than 50 nm, the intrinsic mechanical properties of the part are not altered and the deposition is invisible to the naked eye, but nonetheless perceptible via current analysis techniques. The material used is preferably a non-oxidising and non-magnetic metal such as gold, platinum, rhodium, palladium, when a conductive metallic material is used. This deposition can be carried out by means of various known methods, such as sputtering, PVD, ionic implantation or electrolytic deposition.
By way of example, a 15 nm gold deposition was carried out by sputtering, by applying a 60 mA current for 15 seconds.
When a non-metallic conductive material is deposited, it will preferably be selected from among the group comprising graphite, carbon, doped silicon and conductive polymers and the aforementioned deposition techniques and thickness will be used.
We have just described a silicon balance spring, but other amorphous or crystalline non-conductive materials could also be used, such as indicated previously, and treated with a surface metallisation avoiding the risks of attraction and adhesion.
It is also possible to use a composite material to make for example a balance spring with a silicon core and a thick silicon dioxide coating onto which the thin deposition of conductive material will be made.
A “composite material” can also include a metallic core embedded in an insulating material.
Likewise, the invention is not limited to a balance spring and can be applied to other moving parts, such as pallets, an escape wheel or a toothed wheel, and to other fixed or moving parts of a timepiece movement.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
06111727.1 | Mar 2006 | EP | regional |
00595/06 | Apr 2006 | CH | national |