Despite plastic production cars being more than
50 years old, car body manufacture is still dominated by metals – steel and, to
a lesser extent, aluminium. However, plastic body components have the potential
to reduce vehicle mass considerably. Oddly enough, one of the problems in the
widespread introduction of plastic panels is painting them... This article,
sourced from Daimler, describes some of that company’s research into
plastic body shell panels.
It’s bitterly cold by the time Erich Lehner and
his colleagues from Production and Materials Technology (PWT) at the
Damler plant in Sindelfingen, Germany, are ready to start the pendulum
impact test. Indeed, the thermometer in the test chamber - which engineers
use to investigate the material properties of fenders and other parts -
shows a temperature of minus 25 degrees Celsius. In preparation for the test, a
number of fenders have initially been refrigerated in a special climatic chamber
to minus 40 degrees Celsius, before being mounted on a jig. A heavy pendulum is
then allowed to crash into the body part. The objective is to discover how the
components behave at different impact speeds.
The maltreated fenders are in fact special
parts - test components that have been fabricated not from sheet steel, as
is still customary in automobile manufacture, but rather from thermoplastic
polymers. As a result, they are substantially lighter.
“The use of lightweight engineering,” says Lehner,
“provides a good opportunity to halt the spiralling weight of vehicles that has
resulted from the ever-increasing demands on safety, comfort and performance.”
The rigorous use of lightweight materials is
therefore also one of the approaches that Daimler engineers have been
using to reduce fuel consumption and CO2 emissions. In fact, the company has
been investing a lot of time and money to achieve this objective for many years
now.
Body Shells
Thermoplastics - in other words, meltable
plastics - display a number of advantages over metals.
For a start, they are lighter on account of their
low density, and therefore help reduce fuel consumption. Secondly, they have
superb design properties and can be processed into almost any shape by means of
injection moulding. They are therefore ideal for making vehicle bodyshell parts.
In fact, thermoplastics are already used in today’s series-produced vehicles to
cover bumpers and sills or to make the rubbing strips fitted to doors. As a
rule, they consist of a polypropylene mixture (PP) and, given their low density,
boast a relatively high stiffness-to-weight ratio. Often, such parts are
so-called attachments, which are manufactured by automotive suppliers and then
painted in the right vehicle colour.
Although this practice brings all kinds of
advantages in terms of supplier flexibility, the painting process also makes the
parts considerably more expensive. After all, each supplier must have its own
paint shop. The use of different processes and different materials also makes it
difficult to guarantee that all parts have exactly the right colour.
Jens Humpenöder, a colleague of Lehner’s from
Daimler Research in Ulm, explains the implications in more detail:
“Using different painting processes can result in differences in hue, gloss and
surface finish,” he says. “Even the tiniest difference can cause real headaches
when it comes to integrating the attachments with the rest of the
bodyshell.”
One easy way of getting around this problem would
be to paint everything at the same time - a method that also saves costs.
Known as “online painting,” this process involves subjecting all the
thermoplastic parts and the steel bodyshell to the complete painting
process - including cathodic dip painting (CDP), which provides both
protection against corrosion and an undercoat for the paint and transparent
lacquer above.
However, the use of cathodic dip painting
involves, if only briefly, temperatures of more than 200 degrees Celsius -
temperatures that are too high for conventional thermoplastics. Composite
plastic bodyshell parts made of polyamide and polyphenylene ether (PA/PPE) that
are suitable for online painting do exist. However, these parts are by no means
completely satisfactory. Daimler engineers are therefore busy
cooperating with external partners from research and industry to further enhance
thermoplastics components so that they will be capable of withstanding the
temperatures involved in cathodic dip painting.
[It would seem that other car manufacturers
currently using plastic body panels colour them separately – Ed]
Researchers are planning ways of increasing
thermoplastics’ resistance to thermal deformation. Other goals are to reduce
thermoplastics’ thermal expansion and enhance the electrical and mechanical
properties.
Conventional thermoplastics already contain filler
materials such as glass fibres or graphite, which affect characteristics such as
expansion or electrical conductivity. As well as enhancing the quality of the
thermoplastics, however, such fillers also make them heavier. In other words,
they cancel out the advantages the thermoplastics would otherwise have due to
their light weight.
“The big difference here is that we use so-called
nanoscale fillers such as ‘nanoclays’ or ‘nanotubes,’” says Lehner referring to
his Lightweight Engineering with Thermoplastic Nanocomposites project.
“These fillers significantly enhance the properties of thermoplastics.”
Nanoclays are layer silicates - clay
minerals, only a few nanometers thick. And nanotubes are either carbon nanotubes
(CNTs) or carbon nanofibers (CNFs) - macromolecules made of carbon atoms
arranged in a hexagonal framework to form tiny but long cylinders.
Bigger weight reductions with nanoparticles
To date, research and development results show
that when nanoclays are added to a thermoplastic, its rigidity and strength
increase, while its density and ductility remain practically the same.
“Even with small additions of just a few percent
of total weight, it’s possible to create mechanical properties that can only
otherwise be achieved with the addition of over 30 percent by weight of
conventional fillers,” says Humpenöder.
This means that thermoplastics containing
nanoparticles are lighter than not only metals but also conventional plastic
composites. The addition of nanoclays also improves the surface quality and
fabrication properties of thermoplastics. As a result, the wall thicknesses of
the components can be significantly reduced, which saves further weight, or the
flow distances used for injection moulding can be lengthened, which in turn
lowers the costs for complex tools.
If CNTs or CNFs are used instead of nanoclays,
even better material properties are achieved in some areas. These tiny particles
of carbon are exceptionally strong and elastic, which makes them ideal as a
reinforcement for plastics. They can also be used to achieve good electrical
conductivity - an essential feature when it comes to cathodic dip painting
(CDP).
Today, CDP-compatible thermoplastics are already
expected to meet a vast range of requirements. In addition to displaying good
mechanical properties, electrical conductivity and very high heat resistance,
they must also exhibit low linear thermal expansion. And the trend toward using
lightweight materials for body parts - for example, plastics for fenders
and door panels - has raised standards even higher. Indeed, further
enhancements in material quality are now essential, especially for such
large-surface parts. In particular, it will be necessary to improve the
mechanical properties and thermal expansion.
Following a fundamental investigation of various
nanothermoplastics and their suitability for different parts, engineers in
Sindelfingen have now constructed a test vehicle based on the S-Class that
features lightweight fenders made of thermoplastics containing nanoparticles.
Lehner summarizes the advantages: “One of the
major benefits of nanothermoplastics compared to conventional plastic mixtures
is that they only need to contain a small proportion of fillers in order to
develop the required properties. As a result, these materials offer
exceptionally large potential for weight savings.”