专利摘要:
The invention relates to a tire for a heavy vehicle of civil engineering comprising working frames (50), protection (60), hooping (70). The work reinforcement (50) comprises two layers (51, 52), comprising crossed inelastic metal reinforcements and making, with the circumferential direction, angles between 30 ° and 35 °, and having a breaking force greater than 2500 daN. The shrink reinforcement (70) is formed by a circumferential two-layer winding (71, 72) radially positioned between the working layers (51, 52), comprising circumferential elastic metal reinforcements, having a breaking force greater than 800 daN. The metal reinforcements of the protective layers (61, 62) are potentially identical to the reinforcements of the hooping reinforcement, crossed from one layer to the other with angles identical to the working layers. These reinforcements are elastic, have a diameter greater than 3 mm and a breaking force greater than 800 daN.
公开号:FR3044593A1
申请号:FR1561856
申请日:2015-12-04
公开日:2017-06-09
发明作者:Emmanuel Clement;Alain Domingo;Chenadec Elodie Le
申请人:Michelin Recherche et Technique SA Switzerland ;Compagnie Generale des Etablissements Michelin SCA;Michelin Recherche et Technique SA France;
IPC主号:
专利说明:

[001] The present invention relates to a tire for a heavy vehicle type civil engineering and more particularly, the top of such a tire.
Although not limited to this type of application, the invention is more particularly described with reference to a radial tire of large size, intended, for example, to be mounted on a dumper, transport vehicle of materials extracted from quarries or surface mines. The nominal diameter of the rim of such a tire, within the meaning of the European Tire Standard and Rim Technical Organization or ETRTO, is at least equal to 25 inches.
[003] A tire having a geometry of revolution with respect to an axis of rotation, the tire geometry is generally described in a meridian plane containing the axis of rotation of the tire. For a given meridian plane, the radial, axial and circumferential directions respectively designate the directions perpendicular to the axis of rotation of the tire, parallel to the axis of rotation of the tire and perpendicular to the meridian plane. The plane perpendicular to the axis of rotation of the tire and passing through its center of gravity is called equatorial plane.
[004] In the following, the expressions "radially inner to" and "radially outside to" respectively mean "closer to the axis of rotation of the tire, in the radial direction, than" and "further from the axis of rotation of the tire, in the radial direction, that ». The expressions "axially inner to" and "axially outside to" respectively mean "closer to the equatorial plane, in the axial direction, than" and "further from the equatorial plane, in the axial direction, than". A "radial distance" is a distance from the axis of rotation of the tire, and an "axial distance" is a distance from the equatorial plane of the tire. A "radial thickness" is measured in the radial direction, an "axial width" is measured in the axial direction, a "circumferential length" is a circular arc length in the circumferential direction.
[005] A tire comprises a crown comprising a tread intended to come into contact with the ground via a rolling surface, two beads intended to come into contact with a rim and two sidewalls connecting the top to the beads. . A radial tire, as generally used for a civil engineering vehicle, more particularly comprises a radial carcass reinforcement and a crown reinforcement, as described, for example, in the document WO2014-095957.
[007] The carcass reinforcement of a radial tire for a heavy vehicle of the civil engineering type usually comprises at least one carcass layer comprising reinforcements generally made of metal coated with an elastomeric material called a coating mixture. The carcass layer comprises a main portion, connecting the two beads together and wrapping, in each bead, from the inside to the outside of the tire around a generally metallic circumferential reinforcing element called a bead, to form a turnaround. The metal reinforcements of a carcass layer are substantially parallel to each other and form, with the circumferential direction, an angle of between 85 ° and 95 °.
[007] The crown reinforcement of a radial tire for a heavy vehicle of the civil engineering type comprises a superposition of crown layers arranged circumferentially, radially outside the carcass reinforcement. Each crown layer comprises reinforcements generally metallic, parallel to each other and coated with an elastomeric material or coating mixture.
[008] The crown reinforcement comprises at least one working reinforcement comprising at least two working layers, radially external to the carcass reinforcement and radially inner to the tread. These working layers are superimposed and formed of reinforcements or parallel cables in each layer and crossed from one layer to the next in making with the circumferential direction angles between 10 ° and 45 °. Their respective axial widths are at least equal to two thirds of the maximum axial width of the tire. The maximum axial width of the tire is measured at the sidewalls, the tire being mounted on its rim and slightly inflated, that is to say inflated to a pressure equal to 10% of the nominal pressure as recommended, for example, by the Tire and Rim Association or TRA. The working reinforcement, comprising at least two working layers, serves to surround the tire and to give rigidity and grip to the tire. The reinforcement takes up both mechanical loading of the tire, generated by the inflation pressure of the tire and transmitted by the carcass reinforcement, and mechanical stresses of rolling, generated by the rolling of the tire on a ground and transmitted by the rolling band. It must also withstand oxidation, shocks and perforations.
[009] The said working layers, forming the working frame, may be radially inner to a protective reinforcement comprising at least one so-called protective layer and formed of reinforcements generally metal and extensible or elastic. In the case of a tire for a heavy vehicle type of civil engineering for rolling on rough ground, the presence of a protective frame comprising at least one protective layer is advantageous. It essentially protects the working layers from mechanical or physico-chemical aggressions, which can propagate through the tread radially towards the inside of the tire. In the case of multiple protective layers, it is advantageous that the reinforcements are crossed from one layer to the next and that the reinforcements of the most radially inner protective layer are crossed with the inextensible reinforcements of the most effective working layer. radially outside and adjacent to said most radially inner protective layer.
[010] The crown reinforcement may also comprise a layer of inelastic metal reinforcements making with the circumferential direction an angle between 45 ° and 90 °. This so-called triangulation layer is radially external to the carcass reinforcement and radially inner to the radially innermost working layer, comprising reinforcements parallel to each other and forming, with the circumferential direction, an angle at least equal to 45 ° in absolute value. The triangulation layer forms with at least said working layer a triangulated reinforcement, and its essential role is to take up the transverse compression forces to which the reinforcements are subjected in the area of the crown of the tire. This type of vertex architecture comprising triangulation, working and protection layers, implies a flexible top undergoing inflating a significant deformation at the equatorial plane and the shoulders, that is to say at the axial ends of the tread. The flexibility at the equatorial plane allows the top to deform without failure when the vehicle rolls over an obstacle whose size is, for example, the order of magnitude of the deflection of the tire under its nominal load. By arrow means the variation of radius at the mid-point of the tread in the equatorial plane when the tire changes from an unloaded inflated state to a loaded inflated state under its nominal load.
[011] On the other hand, with this aforementioned crown architecture, during rolling, this same flexibility in the shoulder results in a significant rate of deformation of the elastomeric materials present in the top, generating a high temperature of said elastomeric materials. At the temperatures reached, the elastomeric materials of the top lose some of their resistance to cracking, making the top less enduring. This cracking of the elastomeric materials can in extreme cases lead to the separation of the working layers, called top cleavage.
[012] The third parameter of the performance of the top is related to the resistance of the protective layers to tensile failure and shear failure that can occur during shocks with rigid objects.
[013] To solve the problem of crown endurance, it is known, according to document FR 2419182, that tires for a heavy vehicle of the civil engineering type may comprise one or more narrow reinforcing layers radially external to the carcass reinforcement. and radially inner to the working frame, centered around the equatorial plane. These layers are called shrink thin layers and their function is to limit the radial deformation of the tire to inflation. This limitation makes it possible to reduce the deformation of the top during flattening under the effect of the load and thus the decrease of the temperature allowing an improvement in endurance performance at the top cleavage. By narrow shrink layers is meant layers whose axial width is less than 0.6 times the axial width of the most radially inner working layer. These narrow hooping layers comprise generally metal inextensible reinforcements which form with the circumferential direction angles greater than 6 ° and less than 12 °. The respective reinforcements of these narrow hooping layers are crossed from one layer to the next to provide greater rigidity at the top and better endurance resistance at the top cleavage.
[014] However, this solution has three disadvantages. The first disadvantage relates to the manufacture of narrow hooping layers and their laying for tires for heavy vehicles of the large civil engineering type. Indeed, for tires of more than 3 m in diameter and 0.8 m in width, to make a narrow hooping layer whose reinforcements form with the circumferential direction an angle of the order of 8 °, supposes to cut layers narrow shrink on a cutting length of more than 2.5 m, or out of size of commercial industrial machines and to achieve the welding of the narrow layer of hooping on the tire before cooking on the same length, which requires knowledge -make and a precision of almost double that of the laying of the layers of work or protection.
[015] The second disadvantage is a sensitivity of the tire to shocks related to the presence of obstacles on the tracks of a height of the order of magnitude of the deflection of the tire under its nominal load. Indeed, in case of impact, these narrow rigid hooping layers and remote from the neutral fiber of the top undergo a large imposed deformation which causes damage or rupture of the crown reinforcement causing the failure of the tire. It is not possible to bring this type of shrinking layer of the neutral fiber because of the need to be able, at least, to deform the tire during its press. This makes it possible to generate the tread elements of the tread of the tire by pressure of the tire in the mold. It is also not possible to open the angles further to soften the top at the risk of losing the benefit in endurance to the cleavage of the summit, following the stiffening of the summit.
[016] The third disadvantage is related to the too weak resistance of layers of protection at break. In order not to reduce the performance of the top in cleavage, it is not possible to increase the diameter of the reinforcements of the protective layers and therefore their strength. Indeed stronger reinforcements have larger diameter and occupy a larger volume and therefore lead to an increase in operating temperature and a decrease in cleavage performance.
[017] To solve this problem of peak sensitivity sensitivity comprising narrow layers of hooping, the documents WO 2014048897 and WO 2014095957 propose the use of either thin elastic shrink layers or thin non-elastic shrink layers associated with a first working layer whose angle of reinforcement is at least equal to 50 °. But these solutions, even if they improve the impact resistance of the top, do not guarantee its mechanical strength in all circumstances, given the size of certain obstacles encountered in the places of use of the tires and the characteristics of the protective layers.
[018] The object of the invention is to improve both the endurance performance cleavage and impact resistance of the top of a tire for heavy vehicle type civil engineering.
[019] This object is achieved according to the invention by a tire for a heavy civil engineering vehicle comprising: - a tread intended to come into contact with a ground, - a radial carcass reinforcement radially inner to the tread and comprising at least one carcass layer, - a crown reinforcement, radially inner to the tread and radially external to the radial carcass reinforcement, and comprising a working reinforcement, a hooping reinforcement and a protective reinforcement, the working reinforcement comprising at least two working layers, each comprising inelastic metal reinforcements crossed from one working layer to the next and forming, with the circumferential direction, angles at least equal to 30 ° and at most equal to 35 °; The reinforcing reinforcement being formed by a circumferential winding of a sheet comprising circumferential elastic metal reinforcements ant, with the circumferential direction of the angles at most equal to 2.5 °, said circumferential winding of the ply extending from a first circumferential end to a second circumferential end radially external to the first circumferential end, so as to form a stack radial arrangement of at least two shrinking layers, the protective reinforcement comprising at least two protective layers composed of metal reinforcements crossed from one protective layer to the next and forming, with the circumferential direction, angles at least equal to 20 ° and at most equal to 40 °, the metallic reinforcements of the protective layers being elastic, having a diameter of at least 3 mm, and a breaking force of at least 800 daN, the metal reinforcements of the layers of work having a breaking force of not less than 2500 daN, - the hooping reinforcement being radially positive ionized between the working layers - the circumferential metal reinforcements of the hooping reinforcement having a breaking force of at least 800 daN.
[020] Indeed, such an architecture makes it possible, thanks to the use of circumferential reinforcements, located near the neutral fiber of the summit, to limit the deformation of the crown to the shoulders at a level close to a deformation of the crown at the shoulders obtained in the case of an architecture according to the state of the art, including narrow layers of hooping. This therefore makes it possible to obtain both the endurance performance at the expected peak cleavage and the impact resistance performance aimed at thanks to a flexible crown at the center that is able to withstand the deformation due to impacts when the vehicle is traveling on obstacles.
[021] Indeed, when crossing an obstacle, the top of the tire operates as a beam whose neutral fiber is between the working layers according to an imposed deformation mode. The bending neutral fiber of the crown reinforcement is located between the stiffest vertex layers, namely between the inelastic working layers. By positioning the circumferential reinforcements between these working layers, the solution minimizes the stresses and the bending deformations associated with this stress which the circumferential reinforcements must bear.
[022] The use of shrink reinforcements also makes it possible to increase the angles of the working layers and thus to lower the temperature, and / or to use, for the protective layers, reinforcements of larger diameter and hence of greater breaking strength.
[023] According to the invention, the hooping frame is formed by a circumferential winding of a sheet. The circumferential winding of a sheet is advantageous with respect to the circumferential winding of a reinforcement or of a strip consisting of several reinforcements, for example reinforcements, this type of winding being conventionally used for tires for tires. passenger vehicles or heavy goods vehicles. This conventional winding solution would be prohibitively expensive because of the size of tires for heavy vehicles of the civil engineering type. Indeed the perimeter as well as the laying width, and the mass of the tire implies, during the installation of these circumferential reinforcements, a much lower tire rotation speed to avoid deformation of the raw tire, that is to say to say before cuissson, under the effect of the centrifugal force. This solution would result in a prohibitive operation time. Moreover, such a solution would stiffen the top excessively not solving the problem of impact endurance.
[024] As regards the metal reinforcements, a metal reinforcement is mechanically characterized by a curve representing the tensile force (in N), applied to the metal reinforcement, as a function of the relative elongation (in%) of the metal reinforcement, called the force-elongation curve. From this force-elongation curve are deduced tensile mechanical characteristics, such as the structural elongation As (in%), the total elongation at break At (in%), the breaking force Fm (maximum load in N ) and the breaking strength Rm (in MPa), these characteristics being measured according to ISO 6892 of 1984.
[025] The total elongation at break At of the metal reinforcement is, by definition, the sum of its structural, elastic and plastic elongations (At = As + Ae + Ap). The structural elongation As results from the relative positioning of the constituent metal son of the metal reinforcement under a low tensile force. The elastic elongation Ae results from the elasticity of the metal of the metal wires, constituting the metal reinforcement, taken individually (Hooke's law). The plastic elongation Ap results from the plasticity (irreversible deformation beyond the elastic limit) of the metal of these metal wires taken individually. These different elongations and their respective meanings, well known to those skilled in the art, are described, for example, in US 5843583, WO 2005014925 and WO2007090603.
[026] An extension module (in GPa) is also defined at any point of the force-elongation curve, which represents the slope of the straight line tangent to the force-elongation curve at this point. In particular, the so-called elastic modulus in extension or Young's modulus, the module in extension of the elastic linear part of the force-elongation curve.
[027] Among the metal reinforcements, there are usually used elastic metal reinforcements, such as those generally used in the protective layers, and inelastic metal reinforcements, such as those generally used in the working layers.
[028] An elastic metal reinforcement is characterized by a structural elongation As at least equal to 1% and a total elongation at break At at least equal to 4%. In addition, an elastic metal reinforcement has an elastic modulus in extension usually between 40 GPa and 150 GPa.
[029] An inelastic or inelastic metal reinforcement is characterized by a relative elongation, under a tensile force equal to 10% of the breaking force Fm, at most equal to 0.2%. Furthermore, a non-elastic metal reinforcement generally has an elastic modulus in extension usually between 150 GPa and 200 GPa.
[030] The elastic metal reinforcements of the protective layers can withstand the local deformations imposed when driving on obstacles. According to the invention, they have a diameter of at least 3 mm and a breaking force of at least 800 daN. The high value of the diameter makes it possible to absorb the shear deformations of the protective layer over a greater thickness, which generates lower shear stresses. The high value of the breaking force allows the reinforcement to withstand higher breaking stresses thus improving the peak impact endurance performance.
[031] The metal reinforcements of the working layers have a breaking force of at least 2500 daN, which guarantees a satisfactory safety coefficient at break and fatigue resistance. Preferably the reinforcements of the entire crown reinforcement and in particular the protective layers are penetrated by rubbery mixture. This can be done at any time during the manufacture of the tire, for example during the manufacture of the reinforcement, during the laying of the reinforcement on the tire before firing, or during the molding of the tire. This property improves the corrosion resistance of the reinforcements of the working layers and of the entire crown by preventing the propagation in the reinforcement of the corroding elements, as well as the fatigue resistance of the reinforcements by avoiding the friction of the reinforcing components of the reinforcements. on each other.
[032] The circumferential reinforcements of the hooping reinforcement are reinforcements which make, with the circumferential direction, angles in the range [-2.5 °, + 2.5 °]. They are elastic to allow the expansion of laying diameter that involves cooking tires in a mold. Indeed, a tire is generally obtained by laying the various elements that constitute it to specific initial diameters. The tire is then placed in a baking mold with a diameter greater than the maximum diameter of the tire before firing, in which the elastomeric materials are vulcanized by thermal effect. To do this, the tire is pressurized in the mold and all the elements that constitute it take a diameter greater than their initial specific diameter. For all the working layers, carcass layers, protective layers whose reinforcements are non-circumferential, this diameter change is made by deformation of the coating mixture of the various reinforcements. For the circumferential reinforcing layers of the hooping reinforcement, this circumferential extension is permitted by the reinforcements which are elastic with a structural elongation at least equal to the extension due to molding.
[033] In addition, the circumferential reinforcements of the hooping reinforcement have a breaking force at least equal to 800 daN, to be able to withstand the tensile stresses induced by the passage over obstacles encountered by the tire in use.
[034] A preferred solution is that the circumferential metal reinforcements of the hooping frame and the protective layers are of the same kind. Reinforcements by nature means that their constituents, their manufacturing methods, their geometries are identical. Indeed the standardization of the components of the tire is a way to lower the manufacturing costs.
[035] Advantageously, the circumferential metal reinforcements of the shrinking frame or of the protective layers have a modulus of elasticity at 10% elongation at least equal to 70 GPa and at most equal to 130 GPa in order to withstand the imposed deformations. when crossing obstacles for use in civil engineering.
[036] Preferably the metal reinforcements of the protective layers are angles with the circumferential direction whose absolute value is substantially equal to the angle of the metal reinforcements of the working layers with the circumferential direction. By "substantially equal" is meant to equal the manufacturing dispersion, or an angle difference in absolute value less than 2 °. These angles are measured at the equatorial plane on a tire from which the tread has been removed and the plies radially external to the one whose angle is to be measured. In this case, the angle chosen is an optimum for controlling the temperature at the top at the axially outer end of the working layers and the protective layers and therefore the performance in peak cleavage, while having a rigidity of the apex allowing good top impact resistance.
[037] It is advantageous that the circumferential ends of the web constituting the hooping reinforcement make, with the axial direction, angles (A) at least equal to 25 °. Such an angle makes it possible to avoid having the circumferential ends of the hooping reinforcement contained in a meridian plane and thus to desensitize the surrounding elastomeric materials to cracking. Indeed, since each circumferential reinforcing end of the hoop reinforcement is a potential zone of cracking of the surrounding elastomeric materials, these potential areas of cracking must not be concentrated in the same meridian plane in order to avoid the junction of microcracks which may lead to cracking harmful to the endurance of the tire. Moreover, in case of impact, the stress is maximum in the meridian plane corresponding to the maximum deflection. This angle thus makes it possible to prevent all the ends of the reinforcements and the elastomeric materials surrounding them from undergoing maximum stresses and deformations in the same meridian plane. To have a single cutting adjustment of the hoop reinforcement in manufacture, the angles of each of the circumferential ends of the web constituting the hooping frame with the axial direction are equal and of the same sign.
[038] Preferably the circumferential distance between the first and second circumferential ends of the hooping reinforcement is at least equal to 0.6 m and at most equal to 1.2 m. Indeed, the first and second circumferential ends of the hoop reinforcement are not contained in the same meridian plane and overlap on a circumferential portion of the periphery of the tire, to ensure the presence of the hooping reinforcement over the entire periphery of the tires. The circumferential distance between the two circumferential ends of the hooping frame is called the overlap length. Lap length means the minimum circumferential distance between the circumferential ends of the hooping reinforcement, measured in the equatorial plane, circumferential plane passing through the middle of the tread. The fact that the overlap length is greater than 0.6 m makes it possible, firstly, to avoid that no area of the tire, under the effect of the diameter change during firing, has a layer of circumferential reinforcements less between the that the number of layers required for use, and second, that each end of a reinforcement being a potential zone of cracking of the surrounding elastomeric materials, these potential areas of cracking are not concentrated in the same meridian plane. even at different rays. The fact that this length is limited to 1.2 m has the consequence of not increasing the raw material cost of the solution, without bringing gain in endurance.
[039] Preferably, the average surface of the sheet constituting the hooping reinforcement, in the vicinity of the first circumferential end of the hooping reinforcement, makes, with the circumferential direction, an angle, measured in the equatorial plane, at most equal at 45 °. To do this, one solution consists in arranging, along this end of the hooping frame, a transverse band of elastomeric materials of triangular section. This solution has the effect of reducing the bending stresses in the reinforcement of the hooping reinforcement in the vicinity of the first end of the hooping frame, the most radially inner. Indeed at this end, the average surface of the winding of the hoop reinforcement undergoes a variation in diameter equal to the diameter of the reinforcements of the hooping frame. This variation of diameter is done by a bending of the cable that should be limited to preserve the endurance of the top. Furthermore, this solution consisting of the laying of a transverse web of elastomeric materials of triangular section fills a cavity which otherwise fills with air before the firing of the tire can generate holes in the elastomeric materials after firing, decreasing the endurance of the tire.
[040] For similar reasons, the average surface of the working layer, in the vicinity of the second circumferential end of the hooping reinforcement, makes, with the circumferential direction, an angle, measured in the equatorial plane, at most equal at 45 °. At this end of the hooping frame, the working layer undergoes a variation in diameter equal to the diameter of the reinforcements of the hooping reinforcement, involving a bending of the working layer. One solution is to also dispose along this end of a transverse band of elastomeric materials of triangular section to obtain the same technical effects described above, namely the reduction of the bending stresses in the reinforcements of the working layer and the it is impossible to trap air at this point before cooking the tire.
[041] The preferred solution is such that the axial width of the hooping reinforcement is less than half the axial width of the tire, because, beyond this maximum width, the cycle of stress at the wheel turn in the reinforcements of the hooping frame causes significant fatigue reinforcements and a loss of endurance.
[042] Preferably, the two working layers are coupled, in the axial direction, on a coupling portion having an axial width at least equal to 1.5% of the axial width of the tire. Indeed the axial coupling of the working layers, axially outside the axial ends of the reinforcements of the hooping reinforcement, locally allows an increase in the rigidity of the top and therefore a decrease in deformations, hence a decrease in the temperature and an improvement in endurance at the summit cleavage.
[043] It is also preferable that the two working layers are coupled, in the axial direction, on a coupling portion having an axial width at most equal to 5% of the axial width of the tire. Beyond a certain coupling length, the working layers must be decoupled again in order to reduce the shearing of the elastomeric materials in the vicinity of the axial ends of the working layers.
[044] It is said that two reinforcing layers, such as working layers for example, are coupled to the axial ordinate considered if the radial distance between the geometric centers of two adjacent reinforcements of these two layers is less than 3 times the average radius of reinforcements considered. If this same distance is greater than 4 times this average radius, the two layers of reinforcements considered are said decoupled.
Another preferred solution is such that the radial distance between the working layer, radially inner to the hooping reinforcement, and the carcass reinforcement, measured at the center of the coupling portion of the two working layers, is at least twice the radial distance between the working layer, radially inner to the hooping reinforcement, and the carcass reinforcement, measured in the equatorial plane. Indeed, one of the possible solutions for coupling the two working layers is to maintain the most radially inner working layer on a laying radius close to its radius at the equatorial plane, and to fold the working layer radially at the coupling radius. outside the hooping frame. For a civil-type tire, the differences in radius between the working layers are such that folding the radially outer working layer to the hoop reinforcement generates folds within said layer and molding defects in the zone. coupling. In order to limit the difference in radii of the two working layers between their radius at the equatorial plane and their radius in the coupling zone, the distance from the most radially inner working layer to the most radially carcass layer should be increased. outside, in the coupling zone, with respect to this same distance to the equatorial plane.
[046] It is further advantageous that the modulus of elasticity at 10% elongation of a first radially inner elastomeric material and in contact with the coupling portion of the working layers is at least equal to the modulus of elasticity. 10% elongation of a second elastomeric material, axially outside and in contact with the first elastomeric material. The coupling zone of the working layers is an area of greater rigidity than the decoupling zone being axially external to it. According to the use and the shears in the elastomeric material adjacent and radially inside the coupling zone, said first material, it may be preferred to provide a stiffness gradient between the axially outer elastomeric material, said second material, and the material elastomeric coating the adjacent and radially outer working layer, said calender, and in this case, the modulus of elasticity at 10% elongation of the first elastomeric material is greater than or equal to the modulus of elasticity at 10% elongation the second material.
[047] It may also be advantageous for the modulus of elasticity at 10% elongation of a first elastomeric material, radially inward and in contact with the coupling portion of the working layers, to be at least equal to the modulus of elasticity. at 10% elongation of an elastomeric material coating the metal reinforcements of the working layer, radially inner to the hooping frame. This makes it possible to ensure the greatest possible rigidity of the coupling zone, while avoiding a difference in rigidity between the calendering mixture of the adjacent working layer and the first material and therefore the stresses associated with any discontinuity of rigidity. In this case, the modulus of elasticity at 10% elongation of the first material is equal to the modulus of elasticity at 10% elongation of the calendering mixture of the working layer.
[048] Advantageously, at the axial ends of the hooping layers, the average surfaces of the working layers are, with the axial direction, angles at most equal to 45 °. Indeed, it is advantageous that the working layers are not deformed during the manufacture of the tire so as not to induce bending stresses in their reinforcements, the average surfaces of the working layers which make with the axial direction an angle close to 0 ° in the axially inner portion at the end of the circumferential reinforcements, preferentially join the coupling zone with an angle less than 45 °. This geometry can be obtained by laying a strip of an elastomeric material at the axial end of the circumferential reinforcing layers of triangular section.
[049] Still advantageously the modulus of elasticity at 10% elongation of an elastomeric material, axially between each axial end of the shrinking frame and the coupling portion of the working layers is equal to the modulus of elasticity at 10% elongation of the elastomeric material coating the metal reinforcements of the working layers in order to avoid stress discontinuities related to the changes in stiffness of the elastomeric materials.
[050] It is particularly advantageous that the width of a portion of the working layer, radially inner to the shrinking frame and axially between the outer axial end of the coupling portion and the outer axial end of said working layer, at most equal to half the axial width of the hooping frame. Indeed, given the presence of elastomeric materials of different rigidities involving the presence of constraints at their borders, such as among others those of the tread, it is necessary to limit the displacement of the axial ends of the working layers. For this it is interesting to limit the width of their decoupled parts to improve the endurance to the cleavage of the tire.
[051] It is also advantageous that the axial width of the portion of the working layer, radially external to the shrinking frame and axially between the outer axial end of the coupling portion and the outer axial end of said working layer, at most equal to the width of the portion of the working layer, radially inner to the shrinking frame and axially between the outer axial end of the coupling portion and the outer axial end of said working layer; working layer, in order to limit the movements of the axial ends of the working layers to improve the endurance at the cleavage of the tire.
[052] Other details and advantageous features of the invention will emerge below from the description of the exemplary embodiments of the invention with reference to FIGS. 1 to 7.
[053] The figures are not represented to scale for simplicity of understanding. The figures represent only a partial view of a tire which extends substantially symmetrically with respect to the axis XX 'which represents the circumferential median plane, or equatorial plane, of a tire. By substantially symmetrical is meant symmetrical to the variations due to manufacture, that is to say to an accuracy of the order of ± 3%. In this case the top architecture of the invention is compatible with beads or asymmetrical flanks.
[054] Figure 1 shows a cutaway view in perspective of the top of a tire according to the prior art having: a tread 10, sidewalls 20, a carcass reinforcement 30, comprising a carcass layer of which the reinforcements form an angle close to 90 ° with the circumferential direction XX ', a hooping reinforcement 40, comprising two hooping layers 41 and 42 whose reinforcements respectively form angles of 8 ° to 15 ° with the circumferential direction XX' a working armature 50 comprising two working layers 51 and 52, and radially external to the shrinking armature 40, a protective armor 60 comprising two protective layers 61 and 62.
[055] Figure 2 shows a meridian section of the top of a tire according to the invention having: a tread 10, a carcass reinforcement 30, a crown reinforcement 100 comprising a working frame 50 comprising two working layers 51 and 52, a hooping reinforcement 70 comprising a winding of two towers of circumferential reinforcements 71 and 72 having an axial width L1 and a protective reinforcement 60 comprising two protective layers 61 and 62, a coupling zone of working layers 51 and 52, having an axial width L2, a free end portion of the radially inner working layer 51 having an axial width L3, a free end portion of the radially outer working layer 52 having an axial width L4, a first elastomeric mixture Z1, radially internal to the coupling zone of the working layers 51 and 52 and having a maximum radial thickness E1, a second mixture elastomeric Z2, radially inner to the radially inner working layer 51 and axially outside the coupling zone of the working layers 51 and 52, -a third elastomeric mixture Z3, radially between the working layers 51 and 52 and axially between the hooping frame 40 and the coupling area of the working layers 51 and 52.
[056] Figure 3 shows a broken perspective view of the top of a tire according to the invention. It differs essentially from FIG. 1, representing the state of the art, by a hooping reinforcement 70 comprising a winding of two circumferential reinforcing towers 71 and 72, the most radially outermost circumferential end 74 of which is with the axial direction. an angle (A).
[057] FIG. 4 shows a perspective and partial cutaway view of the top of a tire according to the invention, in particular having: the carcass reinforcement 30, the most radially inner working layer 51, the end circumferential 73 of the most radially inner hooping frame 70 forming an angle (A) with the axial direction.
[058] FIG. 5 represents a circumferential cut, in the equatorial plane, of the circumferential covering portion of the hooping reinforcement 70. In the current zone, the hooping reinforcement 70 comprises a radial superposition of two layers 71 and 72 In the lap region having a circumferential length L5, the hooping frame comprises a radial superposition of three layers. At its radially inner first circumferential end 73, the hooping frame 70 makes an angle A2 with the circumferential direction XX '. At the radially outer circumferential second end 74 of the hooping frame 70, the radially outer working layer 52 makes an angle A3 with the circumferential direction XX '.
[059] FIG. 6 represents a section of the summit, in a meridian plane, at the axial ends of the hooping layers 71 and 72, where the radially inner and radially outer working layers 52 respectively make angles A4 and A5 with the axial direction YY '. In particular, it represents the radial thickness E1 of the first elastomeric mixture Z1 radially between the carcass reinforcement 30 and the most radially inner working layer 51 and radially inside the coupling zone of the working layers 51 and 52, and the radial thickness E2 of elastomeric mixture radially between the radially inner working layer and the carcass magnet 30, measured in the equatorial plane.
[060] Figure 7 shows the displacements in mm of the points of the running surface, located in a meridian plane, during inflation of the tire at the pressure recommended by the manufacturer in the following three cases: - a tire A of the prior art comprising two narrow hooping layers having the advantage of limiting the rise to the shoulders and thus the risk of cleavage of the working layers, but having the disadvantage of stiffening the center, thus making it sensitive to shocks, - a tire B of the prior art without hooping reinforcement, so with a soft top in the center and good impact resistance, but flexible also to the shoulders, with a consequence of a high crown use temperature which can lead to cleavage of the working layers, a tire C according to the invention comprising radially from the outside towards the inside: a protective reinforcement formed of protective layers of which the elastic metal reinforcements have a diameter equal to 3.8 mm and a breaking force equal to 950 daN, - a working reinforcement formed of working layers whose inelastic metal reinforcements crossed from one working layer to the next form, with the circumferential direction, angles at least equal to 33 ° and have a breaking force equal to 2500 daN, - a shrink reinforcement formed of two shrinking layers, radially positioned between the working layers, whose circumferential metal reinforcements have a force at break equal to 950 daN.
[061] The invention was carried out on a tire for heavy vehicle civil engineering dimension 53 / 80R63, with a maximum axial width equal to 1345 mm. The reference tire, according to the state of the art, is composed of a carcass layer with metal reinforcements, two narrow strapping layers of width equal to 550 mm, having reinforcements making, with the circumferential direction, an angle equal to 8 °, and crossed from one layer to the next, two working layers of respective widths equal to 900 mm and 1000 mm and having reinforcements forming, with the circumferential direction, respective angles equal to 33 ° and 19 °. °, having a breaking force equal to 1960 daN and two layers of protection having reinforcements of diameter 2 mm, a breaking force of 255 daN and forming, with the circumferential direction, an angle equal to 24 °, and crossed of one layer to the next.
[062] The tire according to the invention differs from the pneumatic tire of the state of the art by the working reinforcement having two working layers whose respective reinforcements form, with the circumferential direction, an angle equal to 33 °, and of which the breaking force is equal to 2530 daN and the hoop reinforcement and the protective reinforcement. Between the working layers is arranged the shrink reinforcement constituted by the circumferential winding of two turns of a sheet having an axial width equal to 520 mm and comprising elastic metal circumferential reinforcements having a breaking strength equal to 950 daN and an elastic modulus equal to 90 GPa, these mechanical characteristics being measured on reinforcements extracted from the tire. The protective layers consist of reinforcements of the same nature as the shrinking layers and which make with the circumferential direction, an angle equal to 33 °. These reinforcements have a diameter of 3.8 mm.
[063] The two working layers are coupled over an axial width of 30 mm. The radial distance between the carcass reinforcement and the most radially inner working layer is equal to 4.6 mm in the equatorial plane, and is equal to 13 mm under the coupling zone of the working layers. The elastomeric materials in the different zones around the coupling zone are identical to the elastomeric material coating the reinforcements of the working layers. The length of the radially inner working layer to the shrink reinforcement, measured from the outer axial end of the coupling zone to the outer axial end of said working layer, is equal to 115 mm and the length of the the working layer radially external to the shrink fitting, measured from the outer axial end of the coupling zone to the outer axial end of said working layer, is equal to 70 mm.
[064] The two architectures of the two tires were modeled by finite elements to evaluate the value of the shear deformations between the axial end of the most radially outer working layer and the most radially inner working layer on a rolling course. The calculation is made by simulating a load of 90t, a drifting force of 18t for a pressure of 7 bar. On the chosen criterion, the solution makes it possible to reduce the amplitude of the wheel-side deformation cycle by nearly 30% compared to the state of the art. This value is directly correlated with the peak cleavage performance. Furthermore, the reinforcements of the working layers in the invention do not undergo, for these same calculations, any compression force unlike the tire according to the state of the art, which is directly related to the endurance performance of the top. The evaluation of the internal temperature of the tire gives, for the invention, a temperature in the crown lowered by approximately 2 ° C. with respect to the tire according to the state of the art, which is a known criterion for improving the performance of the tire. cleavage of tires.
[065] The endurance performance at the summit cleavage is measured on tests vehicle dumper with 90t of load per tire, inflated to 6 bars cold and rolling 640 hours at 17km / h. Following this use, the tires are cut into six sectors, the tread is removed in order to extract the working layers and detect any cracks present between these two layers. The endurance performance at the summit cleavage is estimated in proportion to the widths of the cleavage cracks. The tire according to the invention reveals a cleavage damage size at least 20% lower than for the tire according to the state of the art.
[066] For tires of this size, the peak impact resistance of the different tire versions is tested directly in use by the customers. These in situ experiments have shown that tires with no hoop reinforcement, which are more flexible at the top, have better impact resistance than those with narrow shrinking layers according to the state of the art, while the latter are better in endurance. to the cleavage of the summit. The tire according to the invention has both an impact resistance at least equal to that of a tire without hoop reinforcement and a peak cleavage gain of 30% with respect to a tire comprising a hooping reinforcement according to the invention. state of the art.
权利要求:
Claims (10)
[1" id="c-fr-0001]
A pneumatic tire for a heavy vehicle of the civil engineering type comprising: a tread (10) intended to come into contact with a ground; a radial carcass reinforcement (30) radially inner to the tread (10) and comprising at least one carcass layer, a crown reinforcement (100), radially inner to the tread (10) and radially external to the radial carcass reinforcement (30), and comprising a working reinforcement (50), a frettage reinforcement (70) and a protective reinforcement (60), -the work reinforcement (50) comprising at least two working layers (51, 52), each comprising inelastic metal reinforcements crossed with a layer of working to the next and making, with the circumferential direction angles at least equal to 30 ° and at most equal to 35 °, -the shrinking armature (70) being formed by a circumferential winding of a sheet comprising metal reinforcements elastics with the circumferential direction angles at most equal to 2.5 °, said circumferential winding of the ply extending from a first circumferential end (73) to a second circumferential end (74) radially external to the first circumferential end , so as to form a radial stack of at least two shrinking layers (71, 72), - the protective armor (60) comprising at least two protective layers (61, 62) composed of crossed metal reinforcements a protective layer to the next and making, with the circumferential direction angles at least equal to 20 ° and at most equal to 40 °, characterized in that the metal reinforcements of the protective layers are elastic, have a diameter at least equal at 3 mm, and a breaking force at least equal to 800 daN, in that the metal reinforcements of the working layers (51, 52) have a breaking force. e at least equal to 2500 daN, in that the hooping frame (70) is radially positioned between the working layers (51, 52) and in that the circumferential metal reinforcements of the hooping frame (70) have a breaking force of at least 800 daN.
[2" id="c-fr-0002]
2. A tire according to claim 1, wherein the circumferential metal reinforcements of the hooping frame (70) and the protective layers (61, 62) are of the same kind.
[3" id="c-fr-0003]
3. A tire according to one of claims 1 or 2, wherein the circumferential metal reinforcements of the shrinking frame (70) or protective layers have a modulus of elasticity at 10% elongation at least equal to 70 GPa and at most equal to 130 GPa.
[4" id="c-fr-0004]
4. A tire according to any one of claims 1 to 3, wherein the metal reinforcements of the protective layers are angles with the circumferential direction whose absolute value is substantially equal to the angle of the metal reinforcements of the working layers with the circumferential direction.
[5" id="c-fr-0005]
5. A tire according to any one of claims 1 to 4, wherein the axial width (L1) of the hooping frame (70) is less than half the axial width (LT) of the tire.
[6" id="c-fr-0006]
6. A tire according to any one of claims 1 to 5, wherein the two working layers (51, 52) are coupled, in the axial direction, to a coupling portion having an axial width (L2) at least equal to 1.5% of the axial width of the tire (LT).
[7" id="c-fr-0007]
7. A tire according to any one of claims 1 to 6, wherein the two working layers (51, 52) are coupled, in the axial direction, to a coupling portion having an axial width (L2) at most equal to 5% the axial width of the tire (LT).
[8" id="c-fr-0008]
8. A tire according to any one of claims 6 or 7, wherein the radial distance (El) between the working layer (51), radially inner to the hooping frame (70), and the carcass reinforcement ( 30), measured in the center of the coupling portion of the two working layers (51, 52), is at least twice the radial distance (E2) between the working layer (51) radially inner to the reinforcement hoop (70), and the carcass reinforcement (30) measured in the equatorial plane.
[9" id="c-fr-0009]
9. A tire according to any one of claims 6 to 8, wherein the width (L3) of a portion of the working layer (51), radially inner to the hooping frame (70) and axially between l outer axial end of the coupling portion and the outer axial end of said working layer (51) is at most equal to half the axial width (L1) of the hooping frame (70).
[10" id="c-fr-0010]
10. A tire according to any one of claims 6 to 9, wherein the axial width (L4) of the portion of the working layer (52), radially external to the hooping frame (70) and axially between the outer axial end of the coupling portion and the outer axial end of said working layer (52) is at most equal to the width (L3) of the portion of the working layer (51) radially inner to the shrink reinforcement (70) and axially between the outer axial end of the coupling portion and the outer axial end of said working layer (51).
类似技术:
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同族专利:
公开号 | 公开日
US11007819B2|2021-05-18|
JP2019501062A|2019-01-17|
BR112018011150A2|2019-01-29|
WO2017093637A1|2017-06-08|
EP3383667A1|2018-10-10|
EP3383667B1|2019-11-20|
CN108290447A|2018-07-17|
FR3044593B1|2017-12-08|
CN108290447B|2019-10-25|
US20200247187A1|2020-08-06|
引用文献:
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法律状态:
2016-12-22| PLFP| Fee payment|Year of fee payment: 2 |
2017-06-09| PLSC| Publication of the preliminary search report|Effective date: 20170609 |
2017-12-21| PLFP| Fee payment|Year of fee payment: 3 |
2019-09-27| ST| Notification of lapse|Effective date: 20190906 |
优先权:
申请号 | 申请日 | 专利标题
FR1561856A|FR3044593B1|2015-12-04|2015-12-04|PNEUMATIC TOP REINFORCING FOR HEAVY VEHICLE TYPE GENIE CIVIL|FR1561856A| FR3044593B1|2015-12-04|2015-12-04|PNEUMATIC TOP REINFORCING FOR HEAVY VEHICLE TYPE GENIE CIVIL|
BR112018011150-3A| BR112018011150B1|2015-12-04|2016-11-24|TOP PNEUMATIC ARMOR FOR HEAVY CIVIL ENGINEERING VEHICLE|
PCT/FR2016/053066| WO2017093637A1|2015-12-04|2016-11-24|Crown reinforcement for a tyre for a heavy-goods vehicle used in civil engineering|
EP16813010.2A| EP3383667B1|2015-12-04|2016-11-24|Crown reinforcement for a tyre for a heavy-goods vehicle used in civil engineering|
CN201680069758.8A| CN108290447B|2015-12-04|2016-11-24|The crown reinforcement of tire for heavy goods vehicle used in municipal works|
JP2018528785A| JP2019501062A|2015-12-04|2016-11-24|Crown reinforcement for heavy-duty vehicle tires used in civil engineering|
US15/780,791| US11007819B2|2015-12-04|2016-11-24|Crown reinforcement for a tire for a heavy-goods vehicle used in civil engineering|
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