The invention is related to a molded body comprising a wall having a wall thickness between a minimum and a maximum value, the wall comprising a transparent polymeric material and glass particles being embedded in the polymeric material.
The invention further relates to an appliance comprising a molded body, a use of glass particles, a polymer composition and a method of manufacturing a molded body.
There is a need to create the effect of air bubbles as visual appearance in products.
The state-of-the-art way to create the visual effect of air bubbles in transparent materials is to use and control air to initiate voids.
In U.S. Pat No. 6,672,552, a supporting rod is described made of a transparent plastic material through injection molding and having a row of air bubbles formed therein during the injection molding process.
The process to create air bubbles in a plastic injection molded part is a difficult one.
If voids or gas inclusions are desired, a way to obtain them is by using a natural stress process, as described below, or adding gas to the molded plastic.
During injection molding, plastic is molded and at elevated temperature injected into a mold. Thereafter the plastic in the mold cools down to room temperature and as a result the plastic shrinks The cooling down process of a plastic part starts at the surface of the part, the surface being in contact with the mold. After a certain time the plastic at the surface of the part solidifies, this is referred to as an outer layer, while the inside of the part is still in a fluid-like state. The shrinking causes forces of contraction, also called stress, in the plastic material. As a result of this stress, voids may form in the region of the core of the plastic and/or sink marks at the surface of the part. In case the outer layer has solidified to a sufficiently thick layer providing a certain strength, the layer can withstand the forces caused by the cooling and shrinking of the plastic and the surface of the part does not, or only partly, yields to the stress.
A common procedure to reduce void and/or dent formation is to introduce an additional feed of plastic material into the mold to compensate for the shrinking effect and to make sure the mold is filled. If voids are intended, skipping the additional feed of material, also called a packing, is a possibility to try to get the voids on purpose. The voids usually form at those places in the part where stress occurs, typical places are thicker portions of the part and a transition location where a rib part is connected to a wall part. These places are the locations where the effect of the cooling of the outer layer, while at the core of the part the plastic mass is still hot, is the biggest. Chemicals are sometimes added to the material to initiate voids more easily, for example foaming agents.
It is rather difficult to obtain voids in a controlled manner. This is especially the case for thin walls. In thin walls there is hardly any stress formation that can cause voids, the distance from the outsides of the wall to the center is small and the cooling process easily reaches the center without causing the stress caused by warm plastic at the inside. If the outsides of the wall are substantially parallel, stress simply pulls the outsides of the wall towards each other, resulting in a thinner wall without creating voids.
It is an object of the invention to provide a molded body having a desired appearance, which appearance can be manufactured in an easier way.
This object is achieved by the molded body according to the invention, as defined in claim 1.
The molded body according to the invention comprises
It is to be noted that in this paper the term air bubble-shaped particles includes, without being limited thereto, particles being sphere-shaped, ball-shaped, droplet-shaped, soap bubble-shaped, kidney-shaped, bowl-shaped, rugby ball-shaped and egg-shaped.
The effect of using air bubble-shaped glass particles having a particle size in the range of 0.3 mm to 0.9 times the maximum wall thickness, is that the particles inside the transparent body are individually visible to the human eye. These individually visible particles give the visual appearance of inclusions of air-bubbles or droplets inside the transparent polymeric material.
The molded body can be obtained by mixing glass particles into a transparent polymer matrix material by injection molding techniques known per se. This way the molded body according to the invention, as claimed in claim 1, can be obtained in an easy way. This way the object of the invention is achieved.
The presence of bubbles or droplets provides an attractive visual appearance.
Glass particles having a particle size of at least 0.3 mm in the transparent polymer matrix can be seen individually by the average naked human eye.
The particles should not be too large in relation to the thickness of the wall of the body, because otherwise they may stick out of the surface of the wall. Particles having a particle size which is less than 0.9× the maximum value of the wall thickness are suitable and prevent such unwanted effect.
In this application the particle size refers to the largest distance in the particle.
The skilled person may take the design of the mold and the location of the injection nozzle into account in selecting the size of the particles. The skilled person may for instance select a particle size of 0.3 mm to 0.9 times the value of the wall thickness of the wall portion located at the injection nozzle.
In case the skilled person wants a distribution of the particles throughout the molded body, a particle size of 0.3 mm to 0.9 times the minimum value of the wall thickness is a safe choice.
The body according to the invention may be manufactured using a known molding technique such as injection molding, insert molding, pipe extrusion, sheet extrusion, blow molding, rotational molding, compression molding, two-component injection molding etc., to obtain the body according to the invention.
The size of the glass particles used has to be such that they can pass through the nozzle of the molding machine. In that situation a practical choice is to select the particle size so as to be less than 0.7× the smallest gate size of the injection nozzle.
Selecting the particle size in a range of 1.0-2.0 mm may result in a body resembling the appearance of a bubbling or fizzing soft drink. The molded body comprising glass particles having a particle size in the range of 1.0-2.0 mm provides a sparkling visual appearance. Such an appearance is in particular provided if transparent sphere-shaped particles are used.
The glass particles used may not all be exactly the same size, this means that the stand deviation of the particle size distribution of the particles is larger than zero. Preferably the standard deviation of the amount average particle size is in a range of 0.05-0.1 mm. The standard deviation that can be used depends on the wall thickness. The skilled person knows how to select the appropriate particle size and standard deviation for a particular body having the minimum and maximum wall thickness such that the polymer matrix of the wall encapsulates the particles.
The process conditions used are normal injection molding process conditions. Under such conditions the packing can be applied to avoid dents in a similar manner as under regular molding conditions. This way the appearance of air bubbles can be obtained without dent formation other than that would appear under normal molding conditions. The molded body can thus have a surface evenness that is equal to that obtained under normal injection molding conditions and at the same time have the appearance of for instance air inclusions.
It is known per se that the haze value is the percentage of light which, in passing through a specimen, is deviated by “forward scattering.” To determine the haze, only light scattered more than 2.5° from the incident light is considered. When measuring haze, the percentage of light diffusely scattered compared to the total light transmitted is recorded.
ASTM D1003: Haze is the percentage of light that, in passing through a specimen, deviates from the incident beam by forward scattering. Only light flux deviating more than 2.5 degrees on average is considered to be haze.
% Haze=[intensity of light scattered more than 2.5 degrees/(intensity of scattered+regular transmitted light)]×100%
In this paper the transparent polymeric material is a polymeric material having a % Haze of maximally 60%.
The transparent polymeric material having a % Haze of maximally 30% may have a more pronounced effect.
Examples of suitable polymeric materials include, without being limited thereto, Polyethylene terephthalate (PET), Polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA), polypropylene (PP homoplymer and copolymer), polystyrene (PS), Ethylene-vinyl acetate (EVA), polyethylene (PE), high density polyethylene (HDPE), low density polyethylene (LDPE), polycarbonate (PC), Styrene Methylmethacrylate copolymer (SMMA), Transparent acrylonitril butadiene styrene (MABS), polyvinylchloride (PVC), styrene acrylonitrile (SAN), polyether sulphone (PSU or PES), thermoplastic polyurethane (TPU), polyamide (PA), Cyclo Olefin Copolymer (COC), perfluoro-alkoxyalkane (PFA) and polyethylene imine PEI.
The polymeric material may comprise a dye or a pigment or other additives as long as the haze is maximally 60%, measured according to ASTM D 1003.
Hence, the molded body according to the invention may comprise a colourless or a coloured polymeric material.
The coloured polymeric matrix material may increase the visual contrast between the glass particle and the polymer matrix and thus enhance the visual effect. In case for instance a blue colourant is used, the body may get a water-like appearance, such as a spa or a sparkling pool. An example of the body according to the invention is a blue transparent body comprising transparent glass beads.
The particles embedded in the polymeric material of the molded body according to the invention may be colored, such as yellow, green blue, red orange or a combination thereof. The skilled person can select any color or combination to obtain for instance a cheerful or festive appearance in an easy way.
In an embodiment of the body according to the invention the particles are transparent. This gives an attractive see-through, in-depth visual appearance. For instance transparent blue particles in the colourless transparent polymeric material give the visual effect of water droplets or water inclusions being present inside the colourless transparent polymer matrix.
Transparent, colorless particles in the transparent polymeric material give the effect of air bubbles being present inside the polymer matrix. In this way, the body having the visual effect of comprising air bubbles is provided in an easier way. This may result in a fresh appearance of the molded body in an easy way. The look-like-air particles will be distributed throughout the part, the wall thickness permitting the glass particles to fit in a polymeric volume of a particular region of the part. Because each part is molded individually, each part may have a slightly different distribution of the particles; this way each part may have a unique appearance.
Successful results were obtained by mixing glass balls of diameter 1 mm into MABS Terlux TR2802 Q434 (transparent Acrylonitril Butadiene Styrene polymer) and injection molding the composition into a thin walled part. The polymer of the thin-walled part appears to include air bubbles.
The invention may be used to create a visual effect of air bubbles in thin-walled transparent molded products. In an embodiment of the body according to the invention, the wall has the visual appearance of comprising gas bubbles, without gas-like inclusions actually being used. This way the invention provides the body with air bubble-shaped inclusions (?), which is very difficult to realize by means of the techniques known and used thus far.
A fresh appearance is for instance achieved by transparent colorless particles embedded in the colorless, transparent polymeric material. In an embodiment of the body according to the invention, a difference between the refractive index of the polymer matrix and the particles results in the effect that the particles are visible with the naked eye. This way the average human eye is able to see the particles inside the polymer matrix and the visual effect resulting from the particles is obtained in an easy way.
In an embodiment of the body according to the invention the particles comprise a notch or a protrusion. Air bubble-shaped particles having a notch or protrusion are more coarsely shaped; examples of such shapes are star-shaped particles, polyhedron-shaped particles such as pyramid-or golf ball-shaped particles, i.e. a ball having dents. These more irregularly shaped particles result in a coarser, rougher effect compared to the air bubble-shaped particles as such.
A translucent particle may give a frosted-particle or ice-crystal effect. Especially if the particles are shaped like a star or have very irregularly rock-like shapes.
In an embodiment of the body according to the invention, the wall is thin; in such a thin-walled body the minimum wall thickness is at least 0.4 mm and the maximum wall thickness is at least 6 mm. In the context of this application the wall thickness of a thin wall is in a range of 0.4-6.0 mm.
The known techniques described above are not suitable to make thin-walled plastic products: due to the shrinking process the surface has dents after ejection of the part out of the mold.
It is very difficult to obtain voids in a thin-walled body during injection molding. Usually no voids are obtained because no stress occurs, or in case stress does occur, usually mainly dents are formed in the surface of the body.
By including transparent, colourless glass particles having the shape of an air bubble into the transparent polymeric wall, the visual appearance of air inclusions is obtained in an easy way. By using the packing, dents in the surface of the wall of the molded body may be prevented.
The invention is especially suitable to create the body according to the invention, wherein the wall has a wall length such that the ratio of the wall length to the wall thickness is at least 5. In an embodiment of the body according to the invention the wall has a length in a range of 5 to 200 times the maximum value of the wall thickness, e.g. the wall has a length in a range of 15 to 150 times the maximum value of the wall thickness.
The length is defined as the largest distance the polymer has to travel in the mold: from the center of the injection nozzle to the furthest edge of the part.
During injection molding, the polymeric material is pushed towards the end of the mold, using pressure. As the polymer travels from the nozzle to the edge of the part the pressure in the polymer decreases. The longer the path to travel, the higher the pressure has to be at the beginning, i.e. at the nozzle. If a gas is injected at or close to the nozzle, the gas bubbles travel along with the polymer material towards the edge. During this journey the pressure in the polymer matrix decreases and the gas bubble will expand. The effect is that the gas bubbles close to the nozzle are smaller than those close to the edge. In the body according to the invention, glass particles are used. The particles at the nozzle and at the edge will have the same size or size distribution; this is the size they were when they were added to the polymer matrix material. They are not influenced by the difference in pressure the polymer matrix is subjected to as it travels from the nozzle to the edge. This leads to a more homogenous distribution of the particles and a more homogeneous visual appearance. The skilled person can select a bubble appearance beforehand by selecting the size of the glass particles.
In an embodiment of the body according to the invention, the wall comprises 0.5-40 wt % glass particles and 60-99.5 wt % transparent polymeric material. The amount of particles in the body is preferably between 3 wt % and 20 wt %.
The visual appearance of the molded body depends on the amount of particles in combination with the size of the particles.
In an embodiment of the body according to the invention, the body comprises a film attached to at least a part of the wall.
The film may be present, from the viewer's point of view, above or underneath the body.
Having a coloured layer underneath the body may increase the visual contrast between the matrix and the particles.
Having a transparent colored layer above the body may increase the impression of bubbles situated at a depth.
In an embodiment of the body according to the invention, the film comprises a decoration, logo or information to provide the user with a visual impression.
In an embodiment of the body according to the invention, the body is at least a part of a reservoir for holding a substance such as a liquid or a gel. This visual effect, obtained in an easy way by the invention, can for instance be attractively applied to a water reservoir of a coffee maker, or to a part of a housing of a shaver.
In an embodiment of the body according to the invention, the body is at least a part of a housing of a domestic appliance, a personal care appliance or a health care appliance.
In an embodiment of the body according to the invention, the body is a covering piece which is intended to be positioned at an outer side of a domestic appliance such as a coffee maker, an iron, a vacuum cleaner and various personal care products such as a shaver, an epilator, a depilator or a toothbrush.
Embodiments of the holder according to the invention are a bottle, a beaker, a water reservoir for a coffee or thee maker, a jar, a jug, a box, a bijouterie casket, a terrine, a bowl, a container, a vase and a cartridge. Examples of the substance are a liquid such as water, a gel such as a shaving gel, a crème, a powder, granules, particles, beads, paperclips, fruit, soup, milk, soft drinks.
The invention further relates to a polymer composition.
The polymer composition according to the invention comprises a transparent polymeric material and glass particles having the shape of an air bubble, at least part of said particles being in a particle size range of 0.6-3.0 mm.
In case the composition is in the form of granules of up to 3 mm diameter, the particle size range of 0.6-1.2 mm may be practical.
The polymer composition may be used to manufacture the molded body according to the invention.
In an embodiment of the polymer composition, the amount of particles is between 0.1 wt % and 80 wt %.
In an embodiment of the polymer composition, the amount of particles is between 0.4 and 40 wt %.
The invention further relates to an appliance comprising the molded body according to any one of the claims 1-12 and being defined by these claims, the molded body comprising
The invention further relates to the use of transparent, colorless, air bubble-shaped glass particles in a molded body comprising
This way the effect of the apparent presence of air inclusions is obtained in an easy way.
The invention further relates to a method of manufacturing a molded body comprising a wall having a thickness between a minimum and a maximum value, the wall comprising a transparent polymeric material and the glass particles being embedded in the polymeric material, said method comprising the steps of:
This way the body according to the invention is obtained.
The glass particles may for instance be added as such to polymer granulate in the hopper of the molding machine or they may be added as a masterbatch.
A masterbatch is a concentrate of a polymer matrix comprising a concentration of particles that is higher than the concentration in the molded body. During the molding process the masterbatch is added to polymer granules; this way the concentration of particles is diluted to obtain the desired concentration in the molded body. A suitable masterbatch comprises 40-80 weight % glass particles in a transparent polymer matrix having the shape of an air bubble and having a particle size in a range of 0.3-6 mm.
Alternatively, the polymer granules comprise the desired amount of particles and are used as such for molding.
It is to be noted that US 2003/0175499 describes compositions and methods for imparting a translucent optical effect to transparent thermoplastic polymers. The translucent optical effects described are obtainable in a continuum of very smooth to very grainy. The composition comprises the thermoplastic polymer and 0.01 to 15 parts per hundred weight of a light-diffusing material having an average maximum size of from about 0.1 micron to about 200 microns. The mixture may be molded, extruded or formed by conventional means to form a translucent polymer product. In US 2003/0175499 the term transparent is intended to encompass all grades of thermoplastic polymers that are nearly transparent as well as transparent.
A slightly grainy visual translucency is obtained by using transparent particulates, such as solid glass microspheres having a particle diameter of about 2 to about 100 microns (preferably about 4 to about 44 microns) or hollow glass microspheres having a particle diameter of about 10 to 100 microns (preferably about 65 to about 75 microns).
The invention also includes any possible combination of features or subject matter as claimed in any one of the claims.
The invention will now be exemplarily described with reference to the accompanying drawings. In principle, aspects can be combined.
a schematically depicts the ninth embodiment of the molded body according to the invention, taken along the line I-I indicated in
b schematically depicts an alternative to the ninth embodiment of the molded body according to the invention, taken along the line I-I indicated in
a schematically depicts a first visual impression of a part of the embodiment of the molded body according to the invention.
b schematically depicts a second visual impression of a part of the embodiment of the molded body according to the invention.
a schematically depicts a third visual impression of a part of the embodiment of the molded body according to the invention.
b schematically depicts a fourth visual impression of a part of the embodiment of the molded body according to the invention.
a schematically depicts a fifth visual impression of a part of the embodiment of the molded body according to the invention.
b schematically depicts a sixth visual impression of a part of the embodiment of the molded body according to the invention.
In
The particles size (S) refers to the largest distance in the particle. In
The water tank may for instance have a wall length (indicated by letter L) of 25 cm and a wall thickness, measured at a position covered by this length (position indicated by letter W) of 2 mm. The wall thickness is oriented perpendicularly to the wall length. The ratio wall length:wall thickness is 250:2=125:1. Thus, the wall has a length of 125 times the maximum value of the wall thickness.
The glass particles have the shape of an air bubble and have a particle size in a range of 0.3 mm to 1.5 mm.
Reference 2A schematically depicts an enhanced view of a part of the water tank 102, indicating glass balls 104 having the shape of an air bubble.
Reference 3A schematically depicts an enhanced view of a part of the housing 112, indicating glass balls 114 having the shape of an air bubble.
Reference 4A schematically depicts an enhanced view of a part of the housing 122, indicating glass balls 124 having the shape of an air bubble.
The toothbrush 120 further comprises a brush stick 126 according to the invention, made from transparent plastic material such as co-polyester comprising glass particles embedded in the polymeric material.
Reference 4B schematically depicts an enhanced view of a part of brush stick 126, indicating glass balls 128 having the shape of an air bubble.
These features—the part of housing 122 and the brush stick 126—may be applied separately.
Reference 5A schematically depicts an enhanced view of a part of jar 152, indicating glass balls 154 having the shape of an air bubble.
Reference 6A schematically depicts an enhanced view of a part of the steaming mask 162, indicating glass balls 164 having the shape of an air bubble.
Reference 7A schematically depicts an enhanced view of a part of the water tank 192, indicating glass balls 194 having the shape of an air bubble.
Reference 8A schematically depicts an enhanced view of a part of the beaker 180, indicating glass balls 184 having the shape of an air bubble.
Reference 9E schematically depicts an enhanced view of a part of the covering piece 210, indicating glass balls 204 having the shape of an air bubble.
a schematically depicts an embodiment of the molded body 210 according to the invention, taken along the line I-I indicated in
Reference 9F schematically depicts an enhanced view of a part of the covering piece 210, indicating glass balls 204 having the shape of an air bubble.
b schematically depicts an alternative to the embodiment of molded body 210 according to the invention, taken along the line I-I indicated in
Reference 9G schematically depicts an enhanced view of a part of the covering piece 210, indicating glass balls 204 having the shape of an air bubble.
Into MABS Terlux TR2802 Q434 (transparent Acrylonitril Butadiene Styrene polymer) from BASF, 5 wt % 1.0 mm glass balls 304 were dry mixed. The mixture was introduced into an injection molding machine (Engel EC100HL) and a test part called—“Cone”—310, was molded. A photograph of the bottom of the Cone 310 thus obtained is shown in
In
The results of these experiments illustrate the effect of the concentration of glass balls in combination with the size of the glass balls on the visual impression of a part of the molded body according to the invention.
In the experiments the following data were used:
Specific weight of the polymer matrix 0.0014 g/mm3.
Specific weight of the glass balls 0.0025 g/mm3.
Two types of concentrations are defined:
Area concentration in the product as number of balls/surface area.
Weight concentration in the material as weight of glass/weight of polymer.
72 glass balls (404) in a transparent polymer matrix (444),
the balls having a diameter of 0.6 mm,
the balls being randomly distributed over an area of 5 cm×5 cm
Area concentration: 2.9 ball/cm2
Weight concentration: 1 wt %
Result: a quiet visual impression.
b depicts the results of
261 glass balls (404) in a transparent polymer matrix (444),
the balls having a diameter of 0.6 mm,
the balls being randomly distributed over an area of 5 cm×5 cm
Area concentration: 10.4 ball/cm2
Weight concentration: 3 wt %
Result: a wild visual impression.
a depicts the results of
25 glass balls (504) in a transparent polymer matrix (544),
the balls having a diameter of 1 mm,
the balls being randomly distributed over an area of 5 cm×5 cm
Area concentration: 1 ball/cm2
Weight concentration: 1 wt %
Result: a quiet visual impression.
b depicts the results of
72 glass balls (504) in a transparent polymer matrix (544),
the balls having a diameter of 1 mm,
the balls being randomly distributed over an area of 5 cm×5 cm
Area concentration: 2.9 ball/cm2
Weight concentration: 3 wt %
Result: a wild visual impression.
a depicts the results of
6 glass balls (604) in a transparent polymer matrix (644),
the balls having a diameter of 3 mm,
the balls being randomly distributed over an area of 5 cm×5 cm
Area concentration: 0.24 ball/cm2
Weight concentration: 2 wt %
Result: a quiet visual impression.
b depicts the results of
15 glass balls (604) in a transparent polymer matrix (644),
the balls having a diameter of 3 mm,
the balls being randomly distributed over an area of 5 cm×5 cm
Area concentration: 0.6 ball/cm2
Weight concentration: 5 wt %
Result: a wild visual impression.
While the invention has been illustrated and described in detail in the drawings and in the foregoing description, both the illustrations and the description are to be considered illustrative or exemplary and not restrictive. The invention is not limited to the disclosed embodiments. Variations to the disclosed embodiments can be understood and effected by those skilled in practicing the claimed invention, from a study of the drawings, the description and the claims. The word “comprising” does not exclude other elements, and the indefinite article “a” or “an” does not exclude a plurality. Any reference sign in the Claims should not be construed as limiting the scope.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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06123008.2 | Oct 2006 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB07/54345 | 10/25/2007 | WO | 00 | 4/20/2009 |