Polypropylene battery console features very good crash behavior

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  • Replaces inserts made of glass- and polypropylene fibers
  • Very good crash behavior in both hot and cold conditions
  • High strength, stiffness and toughness at low temperatures

Tepex continuous-fiber-reinforced composites products from Lanxess subsidiary Bond-Laminates are increasingly being used to reinforce components made of fiber-reinforced thermoplastic compression molding compounds in areas subjected to high stress. The latest example is the battery console of a van produced by a German car manufacturer.

PP battery console

Battery console made from glass-fiber reinforced polypropylene (source: Lanxess)

Replaces inserts made of glass- and polypropylene fibers

The battery console is produced in a DLFT (direct long fiber thermoplastic) process from a polypropylene compression molding compound reinforced with long glass fibers and an overlay made of Tepex Dynalite 104-RGUD600. Tepex is used instead of an insert based on a consolidated hybrid yarn fabric made of glass and polypropylene fibers.

“The replacement was made possible because the console reinforced with our material passes the recently tightened crash test for the component. This is thanks to our composite’s high stiffness, strength and toughness across a wide temperature range,” explains Harri Dittmar, applications developer for Tepex.

Crash test passed including at -30 °C and +85 °C

The 320 x 230 millimeter Tepex insert is 0.5 millimeters thick. It comprises a single-layer fabric containing 47 percent by volume continuous glass fiber rovings largely aligned in the same direction that is fully consolidated, impregnated and embedded in a polypropylene matrix. The insert reinforces the front wall of the console, which may be hit by the top of the battery in an accident. The 29-kilogram battery must not break through the wall. An impact at a speed of 50.4 km/h is tested in the crash test, where forces around 45 times that of gravity, and thus more than one metric ton, act on the wall. Consoles reinforced with such inserts meet the test conditions including for the new tests at -30 °C and +85 °C, according to the company. A penetration test to DIN EN ISO 6603-2 is one example that shows how tough the composite material grade is. It is around eight to nine times more impact-resistant at room temperature than a pure DLFT compression molding compound based on polypropylene. The stiffness of the console is six times greater than a DLFT component manufactured solely from polypropylene and three times greater than the replaced design.

Cost-effective DLFT process

The company expects Tepex Dynalite to be used more frequently in the future in automotive engineering for various components relevant in crash scenarios for targeted local reinforcement of DLFT flow molding compounds. Besides battery consoles, other possible applications include battery holders and various vehicle undercarriage components.



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