Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,815,393 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Dual-cure PUR coatings boost performance of in-mold decorating films.


[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

A new version of in-mold decorating technology, developed initially for exterior auto body components, uses dual-cure coating technology to provide a paint film that is both stretchable for good thermoformability and also provides the high gloss and durability of conventional paints. Developed by Bayer MaterialScience Bayer MaterialScience (BMS) is an independent subgroup within Bayer AG. It was created as part of the restructuring of Bayer AG from the former business group Bayer Polymers, with certain of its activities being spun off to Lanxess AG.  in Germany, this film-insert molding technology (which Bayer abbreviates as IMF IMF

See: International Monetary Fund


IMF

See International Monetary Fund (IMF).
) is said to offer both economical and environmental advantages over traditional paint lines. The focus of this development was to create hard, tough film coatings that can withstand abuse from weather, road grit, and mechanical car washes throughout the car's life.

Bayer coating expert Dr. Jan Weikard, head of the Business Development Waterborne UV Systems sector of Bayer's Coatings, Adhesives, and Sealants Business, says the new IMF technology is in field trials on a roof module at Daimler-Chrysler and has attracted lots of interest from other automakers. Weikard says Bayer will license its IMF dual-cure coating technology to companies that make films for in-mold decorating and market them to processors.

How it's different

IMF processes for exterior body parts require a thermally stable plastic carrier film such as polycarbonate A category of plastic materials used to make a myriad of products, including CDs and CD-ROMs. . The new technology is in the decorative coatings applied to the carrier film. Weikard explains, "For these painted films to have the quality and durability of paint, you need high crosslink density, which is not possible with the thermoplastics usually used in IMF. With our new version of the technology, we apply a two-layer paint to the film, which includes a dual-cure, thermoset A polymer-based liquid or powder that becomes solid when heated, placed under pressure, treated with a chemical or via radiation. The curing process creates a chemical bond that, unlike a thermoplastic, prevents the material from being remelted. See thermoplastic.  polyurethane polyurethane

Any of a class of very versatile polymers that are made into flexible and rigid foams, fibres, elastomers (elastic polymers), surface coatings, and adhesives.
 coating."

In the first step, a standard flexible base coat that has the decorative color and/or metallic effect is applied to the film. This is followed by application of a proprietary uv-curable PUR clear coat, which is highly crosslinkable and affords the film excellent chemical resistance, mechanical strength, and high gloss that can match body paint.

The key here is that the drying and hardening hardening, in metallurgy, treatment of metals to increase their resistance to penetration. A metal is harder when it has small grains, which result when the metal is cooled rapidly.  of the paint systems is performed in two different steps. First, as the base coat and clear coat are applied to the carrier film, each is dried with heat in an ambient-air oven. This partial curing leaves the paint film flexible enough to be stretched through thermoforming without cracking. Says Weikard, "In this drying step, you have a PUR reaction in the top coat that builds long PUR chains that are still thermoformable, but there is no crosslinking yet." This is the form in which the IMF films would usually be supplied to processors.

After thermoforming, the processor would crosslink and harden the clear coat with exposure to standard high-energy uv lamps. "The relatively low-molecular-weight PUR oligomers are dual-functional in that there are additional acrylic double bonds that allow for the needed high crosslinking to take place under uv radiation." Now fully cured, the preformed paint films can then be placed in a mold and backed up by injection molding injection molding
n.
A manufacturing process for forming objects, as of plastic or metal, by heating the molding material to a fluid state and injecting it into a mold.
 with thermoplastics or by RIM polyurethane.

Potential applications

Bayer's Weikard says fenders are a key target application, because many automakers want to get away from using painted SMC SMC Saint Mary's College
SMC Santa Monica College
SMC Solaris Management Console
SMC Smooth Muscle Cell
SMC Small Magellanic Cloud (also see LMC)
SMC Safety Management Certificate (maritime shipping) 
. "The painted film could be used with SMC or RIM urethane urethane (yoor´ithān´),
n ethyl carbamate used as an anesthetic agent for laboratory animals, formerly used as a hypnotic in humans.
," he ventures. Other likely exterior components are rocker panels rocker panel
n.
One of the sections of body paneling in a vehicle, such as an automobile, lying beneath the passenger compartment.
 and, farther down the road, bumpers.

Non-automotive applications that also seem particularly attractive for the IMF technology, are communications devices Typically refers to a terminal used to send voice, video or text. Mobile phones, wireless PDAs and personal computers equipped with microphones, speakers and cameras are all considered communications devices. See modem. , computers, and consumer electronics. Says Weikard, "Insert film molding is already getting use in such applications, but we think we offer a new version that could be more economical for high-end PDAs and cell phones."

LEARN MORE Online

Visit

www.ptonline.com/articles/200708cu2.html for a link to this related article:

* Why All Eyes Are on In-Mold Decorating, Jan. '04

NEED TO KNOW MORE?

For more information on these companies and their products, visit www.ptonline.com/suppliers

Bayer MaterialScience, Pittsburgh

(800) 662-2927 * www.bayerbms.com

Dr. Jan Weikard

+49 214 30 70313 * e-mail: jan.weikard@bayermaterialscience.com
COPYRIGHT 2007 Gardner Publications, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2007, Gale Group. All rights reserved.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Title Annotation:DECORATING: Close-Up
Author:Sherman, Lilli Manolis
Publication:Plastics Technology
Date:Aug 1, 2007
Words:644
Previous Article:New injection machines & processes to debut at K 2007.(INJECTION: Close-Up)
Next Article:PET container stress cracking: myth versus science.(BLOW MOLDING: Troubleshooter)
Topics:



Related Articles
Internal mold release for in-mold RIM coatings.(KEEPING UP WITH RIM/Urethanes)
Double exposure.(FILM)(exhibition of Jean-Luc Godard's movies)
Still lives: James Quandt on the films of Pedro Costa.
Hollywood labor unions setting stage for all-out war: tentative pact covering craft workers appears to be an exception.(STOPPAGE)
Econowatch L.A. County.(INVESTMENTS & FINANCE)
Market diary.(THE LABJ STOCK INDEX: TRACKING 200 SELECTED LOS ANGELES COUNTY-BASED COMPANIES)
Market indexes.(THE LABJ STOCK INDEX: TRACKING 200 SELECTED LOS ANGELES COUNTY-BASED COMPANIES)
Industry analysis.(THE LABJ STOCK INDEX: TRACKING 200 SELECTED LOS ANGELES COUNTY-BASED COMPANIES)
Weekly top losers.(THE LABJ STOCK INDEX: TRACKING 200 SELECTED LOS ANGELES COUNTY-BASED COMPANIES)
Hot storage.(REAL ESTATE)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2010 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles