PROCESS FOR THE PREPARATION OF FILM COATINGS FOR THE FINISHING OF MOULDED ARTICLES
The present invention relates to a process for the preparation of film coatings for the finishing of moulded articles.
More specifically, the present invention relates to a process for the preparation of film coatings, for the finishing of moulded articles, for example made of thermoplas- tic and/or thermosetting material, based on elastomeric polyester resins.
As it is now known from industrial practice, when articles with high-quality surface characteristics are to be produced, a basic structure is first moulded with the con- ventional forming techniques, such as injection moulding, and with traditional materials such as polypropylene, then the article undergoes surface finishing and refining by coating with synthetic skins or film coatings prepared separately and using, on the contrary, particular tech- niques and materials.
For example, in the luxury car industry, the dashboards, or analogous parts made of synthetic material, are prepared by injection moulding a basic structure starting from not particularly sophisticated materials which above all must have suitable physico-mechanical properties for guaranteeing, among other characteristics, the dimensional stability with time of the moulded article. For these purposes both alloys and filled polymers are appropriate.
The basic structure is subsequently coated with a syn- thetic foam, to improve the feel, and is finally refined with a coating or skin, which is glued onto the foam layer, for refining the surface.
The skin is prepared with the slush moulding technique which essentially consists in three phases. In the first phase, a metallic mould, preferably nickel, having the negative shape of the article to be surface finished, is heated to a high temperature. In the second phase, a thin layer of powder of the refining thermoplastic material is distributed on the mould, applying a multi-rotating move- ment to the mould, immediately after the distribution of the powder and closing with a counter-mould. In the third phase, the mould is cooled and the skin is extracted.
As it is evident, the critical phase of the slush moulding is the second phase. As it is distributed onto the mould at a high temperature, the powder melts and, as a result of the multi-rotating movement, it flows homogeneously
and is distributed onto the whole surface of the mould, totally covering it. It is also evident that the fluidity of the refining powder material is a key characteristic for reaching all the critical points of the mould, including the undercuts, without producing holes or localized thickening which would reduce the value of the skin.
At present, the main thermoplastic material with appropriate characteristics for allowing it to be used in slush moulding, is polyvinylchloride (PVC) as, in addition to having an excellent fluidity in the molten state which makes it compatible with this moulding technique, it also has surface softness suitable, for example, for dashboards or other internal parts of luxury cars.
Unfortunately, for environmental and recycling rea- sons, PVC cannot be used as refining material due to the regulations issued by the major European countries which forbid its use.
The Applicant has now found an alternative material, consisting of an elastomeric polyester, which, in the form of micro-pellets, can be an excellent substitute of PVC in the preparation of thin films or skins for the coating of articles which must undergo surface refining.
It is, therefore, an object of the present invention a process for the preparation of film coatings for the fin- ishing of moulded articles which comprises:
a. heating to a temperature higher than 200°C a metallic mould which negatively reproduces the shape of the article to be coated; b. distributing onto the metallic mould a micro-pellet of a (co) polyester thermoplastic resin having a spheroidal physical form and a granulometry, measured with an electronic microscope, of less than 500 micrometres; c. subjecting the mould, immediately after the distribution of the micro-pellet, to a multi-rotating movement according to the slush-moulding technique; d. cooling and extracting the polyester resin coating from the mould.
According to the present invention, the metallic mould is heated to a temperature higher than 200°C, generally from 220 to 270°C, to obtain the immediate melting of the polyester resin powder. In order to have a favourable thermal exchange for the slush moulding technique, the mould consists of a plate made of a metallic material with a high thermal conductivity, such as, for example, nickel, copper or silver. Among these, nickel is preferred.
As a result of the high thermal conductivity of the metal, the thermoplastic micro-pellet melts almost instantaneously, also causing the cooling of the mould and consequently the hardening of the skin. For this reason, the time between the distribution of the micro-pellet on the
mould, the relative closing with the counter-mould, and the start of the multi-rotating movement must be as reduced as possible in order to leave the thermoplastic material in the molten state for a sufficient time for it to be homo- geneously distributed on the metallic surface of the plate. Details on the slush moulding technology can be found in European patent 476,742 or in published international patent applications WO 94/12331 and 96/33060.
At the end of the slush moulding, the mould is further cooled and the skin, which has a homogeneous thickness ranging from 0.5 to 2.5 mm, is extracted.
According to the present invention, the micro-pellet used in the preparation of the film coating has a particle- size preferably ranging from 150 to 300 micrometres and is obtained by the extrusion and cutting, through a cooled die, of the (co) polyester in granular form optionally already mixed with conventional additives such as dyes, pigments, stabilizers, plasticizers, etc., or of the (co) polyester in powder form coming directly from the syn- thesis, to which the optional additives are added during the micro-pelletization phase.
Any (co)polyester resin can be used in the preferred preparation of the film coatings object of the present invention, provided it has a melting point lower than 260- 270°C and an average molecular weight Mw ranging from
20,000 to 100,000. In particular, preferred (co) polyester resins are those obtained by polycondensation between units deriving from at least one dicarboxylic acid and a mixture comprising at least one diol with a low molecular weight, for example lower than 250, and/or at least one poly (alkyleneoxide) glycol, in which the alkyleneoxide group contains from 1 to 10 carbon atoms, with an average molecular weight ranging from 250 to 6000 and a carbon/oxygen ratio ranging from 1.8 to 4.3. The resin which is obtained therefore consists essentially of several recurrent long- chain and short-chain interlinear ester units connected with each other by ester bonds .
Particularly preferred are elastomeric (co) polyester resins obtained from the polycondensation of units deriving from at least one aromatic dicarboxylic acid selected from phthalic, isophthalic and terephthalic acids, or from di- benzoic acid, 1, 5-naphthalenedicarboxylic acid, 2,6-naph- thalenedicarboyxlic acid, 2, 7-naphthalenedicarboyxlic acid, phenanthralenedicarboxylic acid, etc. and their Cχ-C4 alkyl derivatives with C2-Cι0 alkyl diols selected from eth- ylene-, propylene-, tetramethylene- , isobutylene- , pen- tamethylene-glycols in mixture with the poly (alkyleneoxide) -glycol selected from poly (1,2 and 1,3- propylene-oxide) glycol, poly (tetramethyleneoxide) glycol, poly (penta-methyleneoxide) glycol, etc.
Particularly preferred according to the present invention are elastomeric copolyester resins obtained from the condensation of terephthalic acid with a mixture of tet- ramethylene glycol and poly (tetramethyleneoxide) glycol, with an average molecular weight Mw ranging from 500 to 6000, preferably from 1000 to 4000, wherein the unit deriving from poly (tetramethylene) glycol is present in quantities greater than or equal to 60% by weight.
In addition to the segmented (co) polyesters, according to the present invention, all blends comprising the same (co) polyesters with other compatible or compatizable thermoplastic (co) polymers having an elastomeric behaviour or with a shore hardness D < 40 can be included, said other (co) polymers being present in a quantity of less than 30% by weight .
Generally, either the (co) polyesters described above or the relative blends with other thermoplastic resins are generally materials having the following characteristics: Shore Hardness D < 40; MVR 220°C/2.16 kg > lOcc/lO1; Melting point = 150-210°C.
Products with the physico-chemical characteristics described above are commercially available under the trade- name of PIBIFLEX of the Applicant. Some illustrative but non-limiting examples are pro-
vided for a better understanding of the present invention and for its embodiment. EXAMPLE 1
A film coating is produced with the slush moulding technique, having a thickness of 0.8 mm to be glued onto a car dashboard structure having a thickness of 2 mm made of polymer alloy or filled polymer, where an expanded resin
(PU) having a thickness of 6-10 mm, is sandwich inserted between the skin and the structure. A micro-pellet, having an average spheroidal particle- size of 250-400 micrometres (Figure 1) , of an elastomeric copolyester resin having the following characteristics, is distributed on a nickel slush-moulding mould brought to a temperature of about 250°C: Melting point = 175°C;
MVR 220°C/2.16 kg = 40 cc/10 ' ; Shore Hardness D = 25.
At the end of the moulding, a coating is obtained, with a homogeneous thickness of 0.8 mm, which does not have any surface defects visible to the naked eye, and which adheres perfectly through the expanded resin to the dashboard structure. EXAMPLE 2 (Comparative)
The test of Example 1 is repeated except for the use of a powder of the same copolyester resin cryogenically
ground to a particle-size of about 250 micrometres (Figure 2) .
At the end of the moulding, a coating is obtained, which, although it adheres to the dashboard structure, has evident surface defects, for example holes and streaks, and a heterogeneous thickness .