This replacement chassis structure for a Porsche 356 Speedster uses lightweight Inrekor sandwich panels.
Designers of today’s electric  vehicles (EVs) know that every kilogram that they can shave from a  vehicle’s overall mass gets them about 3 km (1.8 mi) in additional  driving range per charge. Given that no one expects that battery  technology will lighten up anytime soon, it’s little wonder that EV  makers are searching for new lightweighting technologies.
One promising weight-savings  approach uses as its fundamental structure polymer foam-core/metal-skin  sandwich members developed by a Dorset, U.K.-based product-design firm, Inrekor, in collaboration with JSP Corp., the Tokyo-based global supplier of impact-absorbing car bumper  materials. The cores of the high-strength, low-mass composite panels are  made of JSP’s Arpro expanded polypropylene (EPP) foam.
The Inrekor sandwich components comprise the lightweight chassis of the QBEAK, an award-winning concept EV that was produced by EcoMove,  a Danish design group. Without batteries, the prototype’s structure  weighs only about 400 kg (880 lb), which is almost a third less mass  than a conventional unit. If fitted with standard batteries, the boxy,  minivan-like QBEAK would have a range of about 300 km (185 mi), almost  double that of other EVs. The design also makes wide use of Arpro foam  elsewhere in the vehicle, both inside and out.
Even though the small but  roomy urban passenger car/delivery vehicle is only 3 m (10 ft) long, it  can accommodate up to six passengers in certain configurations. The  Horsens, Denmark-based firm, which aims to bring the QBEAK into  mid-series production in early 2013, is considering several potential  powertrains, including a hybrid battery/bio-methanol fuel-cell power  plant.
EcoMove approached Inrekor to  create a low-cost lightweighting solution for the QBEAK design several  years ago, according to Stewart Morley, Technical Director for Inrekor.  “Despite some negative associations with sandwich technologies that had  crippled its usage in the past,” he said, “I was familiar with the  successful use of high-performance honeycomb paneling in military  applications, which led me to think a bit differently about how to apply  it to an electric vehicle.”
The most obvious  configuration, Morley continued, was “a metal skin over a polymer core,  but we had to investigate a variety of different material combinations  and different manufacturing methods before selecting one.” Inrekor’s  engineering team eventually focused on JSP’s well-established Arpro EPP  technology as the most effective choice for the core. Expanded  polypropylene, he said, has several specific characteristics that are  important to the performance of the sandwich technology, citing Arpro’s  isotropic—omnidirectional—crush behavior as well as its easy,  low-toxicity processing (molding), recyclability, and affordability as  key.
“Arpro is a closed-cell EPP  material that is resistant to chemicals, insulates both thermally and  acoustically, and has a wide operational temperature range [+130 to  -40°C],” said Bert Suffis, Development and Applications Sales Manager at  JSP. In addition, it absorbs impact energy extremely well and can  withstand multiple impacts. “You can compress Arpro to 4% of its  original volume and it will recover to 98% of initial size,” he noted.
“For the QBEAK sandwich  application, using tensile skins of aluminum hit the sweet spot in terms  of weight and cost,” Morley said. “In this case, aluminum was the most  achievable and deliverable choice.” He added that Inrekor can use other  sheet materials as the outer panels, including other metals such as  steel, fiber-reinforced polymers, and natural-fiber fabric panels  including flax or hemp. 
“We can also vary the panel  thickness depending on the application,” he continued. “For example, we  can make the bottom of the floor panel thicker to better resist external  strike or even swap it out for a low-gauge stainless-steel skin.”
The Inrekor components used in  the QBEAK’s chassis feature tensile skins of 1.0- to 1.2-mm (0.039- to  0.047-in) 5251A aluminum alloy sheet book-ending 20- to 30-mm (0.79- to  1.18-in) core thicknesses of 90-g/L Arpro. The panels are heat- and  pressure-bonded to the thermoplastic foam cores and then welded or  bolted together at interlocking tongue-and-groove joints. The skins and  cores can also be glued together with epoxy-based adhesives. The strong  joint configurations are designed to resist peeling and tearing. 
Sample chassis built from Inrekor components have passed independent structural tests conducted by the Warwick Manufacturing Group at the University of Warwick as well as crash-testing at MIRA, an automotive consultancy company that is headquartered in Warwickshire.
As with other sandwich panels  on the market, the Inrekor components can rather easily incorporate  internal channels of air ducts, wires, and cables within the insulating  foam cores. The thermal insulation capabilities of Inrekor are useful  for helping to maintain the temperature of the sensitive battery packs  as well.
Morley noted that Inrekor  panels could also find widespread use in recreational vehicles to help  meet European Union RV size/weight regulations and integral thermal  insulation needs.
 
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