The invention relates to a planishing roll comprising a surface structure, a method for planishing a flat product consisting of a metal material, in particular consisting of a steel material, with a planishing roll, and relates to a flat product which is produced according to this method and consists of a metal material, in particular a steel material.
It is generally known that the automotive industry sets high requirements on the visual appearance of a vehicle lacquering, in particular lacquering on externally visible surfaces of a car. It is desired that the lacquering has a uniform appearance. In this case, a lowest possible proportion of wavelike reflections is to occur at a small viewing angle. These wavelike reflections are also defined as orange peel. In addition to the uniform appearance of the lacquering, cost-effective production of the lacquering is also required. Labour-intensive steps, such as polishing work and/or raw material-intensive spray lacquerings with filler layers are to be avoided.
In order to be able to meet these requirements, the fine steel sheets which are used as bodywork sheets are skin pass-rolled prior to the lacquering procedure. This skin pass rolling is also defined as planishing. The mechanical characteristic values, such as e.g. yield strength, tensile strength and expansion, as well as the surface topography e.g. characterised by roughness, number of peaks and a waviness of the fine steel sheet are set to a desired state by the skin pass rolling procedure. Fine steel sheets which are planished in this manner and have a defined surface topography simplify the subsequent lacquering procedure by avoiding or reducing the application of filler layers. These filler layers serve in particular to compensate for any unevenness present on the surface of the fine steel sheet to be lacquered, and thus to prevent this unevenness from becoming apparent in the lacquered surface. Planishing rolls which have a profiled surface are used for the skin pass rolling procedure. The profiling of the surface starting from a roll comprising a smoothly polished surface is effected by various texturing methods. Then, the surface of the fine steel sheet is textured by the skin pass rolling procedure using corresponding planishing rolls. The same also applies in general to fine steel sheets outside the field of bodywork sheets.
In general, the following methods are known as erosive texturing methods for planishing rolls: SBT (Shot Blast)—shooting angular blasting material onto the surface of the planishing rolls, EDT (Electro Discharge Texturing)—spark erosion, EBT (Electro Beam Texturing)—electron beam in a vacuum shoots defined craters into the surface of the planishing rolls, Lasertex—laser beam shoots defined craters into the surface of the planishing rolls.
Furthermore, the Salzgitter AG company literature entitled “PRETEX®”—September 2002—discloses a textured fine sheet for the most stringent requirements in bodywork construction. This fine sheet can be uncoated or surface-coated and is used in the automotive industry in bodywork construction for inner and outer skin parts with the most stringent demands on deformability behaviour and lacquering capability. The surface topography of the fine sheet significantly influences the deformability behaviour and the adhesion and the visual properties of the lacquering of the car. A defined customised surface topography of the fine sheet is produced during skin pass rolling. In contrast to the above-described, erosive texturing methods, the planishing rolls used for this purpose are produced in a positive method by applying a texture to a smooth roll. In particular, a so-called TOPOCROM® method, by which the surface of a smooth roll is electrolytically structure-chromium plated and hard-chromium plated, is suitable for this purpose. To this end, the planishing roll is coated in a reactor which is equipped with an anode cage and filled with a chromium electrolyte. The chromium ions of the electrolyte are reduced during the coating procedure and metallically deposited on the surface of the planishing roll. This coating method provides an absolutely uniform, stochastic distribution of the differently sized hard-chromium hemispheres which are deposited on the roll surface and can be adjusted in terms of their size and number per unit area in a targeted and reproducible manner by means of the process computer-controlled coating parameters to suit customer requirements. The hard-chromium hemispheres of the planishing rolls are transferred to the fine sheet during planishing in the form of corresponding spherical caps. The surface topography of the fine sheet is adapted to absorb the lubricant and to assist hydrostatic or hydrodynamic lubrication in order to reduce friction. A relatively high mean roughness index and mutually isolated lubricating pockets which serve as a lubricant reservoir improve the friction and lubrication ratios considerably. An improvement in lacquering capability with a reduction in the lacquer system layer thicknesses at the same time is achieved by high peak numbers and low long-wave and short-wave structure proportions. Long-wave structure proportions can cause the orange peel in the topcoat of lacqured car sheets.
German laid-open document DE 10 2012 017 703 A1 already discloses a flat product consisting of a metal material, in particular consisting of a steel material, a use of such a flat product and a roll and a method for producing such flat products. This flat product is said to be characterised by very good tribological properties and, after being lacquered in a manner typical of cars, the appearance of the lacquer is said to be improved. However, the lacquering is said to be achievable with curtailed, filler-free lacquering processes—and a considerably reduced layer structure. A corresponding roll for producing such a flat product is said to have a surface structure which is characterised by a peak number RPc in the range of 80 to 180 1/cm, an arithmetic mean roughness Ra in the range of 2.5 to 3.5 μm and an arithmetic mean waviness Wsa in the range of 0.08 to 1.0 μm. In one embodiment, the smooth proportion of the roll in terms of a non-textured surface is approximately 25%. The profiling of the surface starting from a roll comprising a smoothly polished surface is effected by removal of material by means of a pulsed laser.
European patent application EP 0 606 473 A1 describes a roll comprising a laser-textured surface structure for planishing steel sheets. The surface structure of the roll has a multiplicity of protruding hemispheres consisting of chromium, of which 40 to 100% are transferred to the steel sheet during planishing. This produces in the steel sheet impressions having a diameter d of 50 to 500 μm and a height h of 2 to 40 μm. The mutual spacing between the individual impressions is between 1.0 d and 4.0 d.
The translation of European patent document DE 694 23 784 T2 also mentions a method for structuring the surface of a working roll by means of an electron beam. The structured surface consists of a two-dimensional, determined pattern of dots. Each dot is in the form of a crater comprising a predetermined edge. After structuring, the roll surface has a roughness Ra between 0.4 to 8.0 μm.
The patent U.S. Pat. No. 5,532,051 already discloses chromium plating of a surface-structured roll for the cold-rolling of steel materials. The chromium plating is said to considerably prolong the service life of the roll treated in this manner.
The object of the invention is to provide an improved planishing roll comprising a surface structure, an improved method for planishing a flat product consisting of a metal material, in particular consisting of a steel material, with a planishing roll and to an improved flat product which is produced according to this method and consists of a metal material, in particular a steel material.
In accordance with the invention, an improved planishing roll, in particular for producing flat products consisting of a metal material, in particular consisting of a steel material, comprising a surface structure is achieved by virtue of the fact that the surface structure has a material proportion of 2% at a depth of 0.2 μm to 9 μm, preferably at a depth of 0.8 μm to 5.5 μm, the depth is measured starting from a zero line in the direction of an axis of rotation of the planishing roll, the zero line extends in parallel with the axis of rotation of the planishing roll and the zero line is displaced starting from the surface of the planishing roll in the direction of the axis of rotation of the planishing roll to the extent until its material proportion is 0.1%. In qualitative terms, the surface structure of the planishing roll thus has a low material proportion so that, during planishing, the largest possible ratio is achieved between the change in topography of a flat product to be planished and the lengthening of the flat product.
The low material proportion can also be determined by virtue of the fact that the surface structure has a material proportion of 5% at a depth of 0.7 μm to 12 μm, preferably at a depth of 1.1 μm to 6.5 μm.
The material proportion is further determined by virtue of the fact that the surface structure has a material proportion of 10% at a depth of 1.0 μm to 15 μm, preferably at a depth of 1.4 μm to 7.4 μm.
In an advantageous manner, provision is made that the surface structure of the planishing roll is electrolytically structure-chromium plated and hard-chromium plated.
In a particularly advantageous manner, provision is made that the surface structure thereof has a roughness Ra=0.3-5 μm and a peak number RPc=50-300 1/cm.
In accordance with the invention, a method for planishing a flat product consisting of a metal material, in particular consisting of a steel material, is improved by virtue of the fact that the flat product is rolled with the planishing roll in accordance with the invention.
In an advantageous manner, the flat product is rolled with a degree of planishing in the range of 0.1 to 2.0%.
In accordance with the invention, an improved flat product consisting of a metal material, in particular consisting of a steel material, produced according to the method in accordance with the invention, is characterised in that the flat product has a planished surface topography with a roughness Ra=0.9-1.4 μm, preferably 0.9-1.2 μm, a peak number RPc>90 1/cm, preferably RPc>95/cm and a waviness of the surface described by the parameter Wsa (1-5) according to VDEh SEP1941 of less than 0.28 μm, preferably less than 0.25 μm, particularly preferably less than 0.22 μm.
In an advantageous manner, provision is made that the thickness of the flat product is in the range of 0.35-2.0 mm.
Preferably, the flat product can be provided with coats consisting of zinc or a zinc-aluminium alloy or a zinc-iron alloy or zinc-aluminium-magnesium alloy.
The flat products, in particular fine steel sheets, which are produced in conjunction with the invention, are used preferably in motor vehicles, domestic appliances—so-called white goods—and steel sheet furniture. In this case, the flat products can be electrolytically galvanised or hot-dip galvanised. The flat products can also be formed into components by e.g. deep-drawing and stretch-drawing. Preferably, the flat products are intended for subsequent lacquering and are used as lacquered visible parts. The flat products are particularly suitable for forming processes, in particular deep-drawing.
In conjunction with the present invention, flat products are understood to be sheets, in particular fine sheets, which are produced from metal, metal alloys, in particular steel.
The resistance provided by the flat product against the change in topography must be compensated for in the planishing process. The surface structure of the planishing rolls is more deeply impressed than the impression remaining in the surface of the flat product after the pressure is removed. By reason of this material-dependent resilience, surface structures of planishing rolls comprising a lower material proportion have a particularly positive effect during processing of flat products comprising a high deformation resistance.
Flat products comprising soft metallic coats also permit an improved transfer of the surface structure of the planishing roll than stronger uncoated flat products e.g. consisting of steel.
Flat products which are planished by means of a planishing roll in accordance with the invention are characterised by the following advantages:
The invention will be explained in greater detail hereinafter with the aid of an exemplified embodiment and associated drawings. In the figures:
The material proportion in % describes the presence of material of the planishing roll within a surface which is representative of the entire upper peripheral surface of the planishing roll. Therefore, a proportion of roughness valleys can be considered to be the opposite of the material proportion in %. The proportion of material in the surface is ascertained for this purpose by means of a 3D measurement starting from the surface in the direction of a central axis of rotation of the roll. The 3D measurement relates to a representative surface of approximately 2.5 mm2. The material proportions in % ascertained by the 3D measurement then relate to a depth given in μm starting from the surface of the planishing roll. The material proportions can be determined using the roughness profile of the roll. The material proportions illustrated in
Surface structures of planishing rolls which have a specific progression in the depth direction in the region of the material proportions of 2% to 10% are particularly favourable. This progression can be described as a sequence' of selected percentage material proportions of the roll. A sequence of material porportions of 2%, 5% and 10% is selected hereinafter. Rolls, of which the material proportions and depths are in the following ranges enable production of an advantageous flat product topography:
These ranges relating to the depths and material proportions are indicated in
A metallic flat product, in particular a steel strip, comprising an advantageous flat product topography, can be produced with such planishing rolls with, an arbitrarily produced surface structure and the progression of material proportions described in relation to
The ideal surface structure of a planishing roll for producing a topography of the flat product in accordance with specifications is configured in such a way that it can be depicted in the surface of the flat product before the maximum permissible strip lengthening is achieved.
A planishing roll comprising a surface structure as shown in
A material proportion, which is low in accordance with the invention, on the planishing roll results in the contact force—i.e. high local pressures—being distributed over a small area—and thus results primarily in a change in topography instead of the lengthening of the flat product. By reason of the change in topography, a locally defined, lateral volume redistribution is effected on the surface of the flat product. The low material proportion of the planishing roll in accordance with the invention has a positive effect such that it hinders the volume redistribution to a lesser extent than planishing rolls comprising a higher material proportion. Accumulations of redistributed volumes at points on the surface of the flat product are avoided. The accumulations at points result in an undesirably high waviness Wsa (1-5) according to SEP1941.
The surface structures of planishing rolls comprising a low material proportion and the surface structure which are produced by methods which allow a surface structure with a high flank steepness are preferred. Such surface structures on planishing rolls can be achieved preferably by the hard-chromium plating method known as Topocrom®.
The surface structures shown in
By using an inventive planishing roll comprising a low material proportion, it is possible to achieve a sheet surface which with a low roughness (0.9 μm<Ra<1.2 μm) and high peak number (RPc>95/cm) has a low waviness Wsa (1-5) of less than 0.22 μm. The material proportion of the sheet surface ascertained via a 3D roughness measurement is 2% at a depth of 1.5 μm, 5% at a depth of 2.3 μm and 10% at a depth of 2.8 μm.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10 2016 102 723.5 | Feb 2016 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2017/053110 | 2/13/2017 | WO | 00 |