The present invention relates generally to antimicrobial materials, and more specifically to a foam material having an antimicrobial nanostructure.
Foam material, including sponges, cleaning pads, blades for squeegees, and the like, are used to clean various surface, often in conjunction with one or more cleaning agents applied directly to the foam or surface. The cleaning agents used act either to chemically or mechanically incapacitate or destroy microbial agents.
Cleaning agents applied to the surface to be cleaned are typically required to be left in contact with the surface for a length of time to have the desired effect upon the microbial agents present. Applying a cleaning agent to a foam material, and passing the foam material and agent across the surface transfers the cleaning agent from the foam material to the surface resulting in an uneven distribution of the cleaning agent. Moreover, this approach results in removal of the cleaning agent from the foam material requiring reapplication of the cleaning agent and excessive use of the cleaning agent in order to have the desired antimicrobial effect.
The composition or characteristics of some cleaning agents makes them incompatible for use on some surfaces because they may damage the surfaces. Additionally, some cleaning agents have components that have undesirable side effects that make them undesirable for use in a variety of settings including off-gassing, odors, toxicity, as an irritant, and as an allergen.
A resilient foam material having an active antimicrobial incorporated with, bound to, and projecting from its surface is provided for incapacitating or destroying microbes. The antimicrobial has an atomic structure that is capable of mechanically piercing or lysing a microbe thereby incapacitating or destroying the microbe. The resilient antimicrobial foam material may be manufactured into a resilient antimicrobial foam product for drawing across a surface and mechanically incapacitating or destroying microbes on the surface. The resilient antimicrobial foam material may be manufactured into a membrane for providing a sterile barrier for a surface.
The resilient antimicrobial foam material is manufactured by combining the antimicrobial with a foam polymer material, heating the foam polymer material under pressure to a temperate between about 300 to about 350 degrees Fahrenheit to form a melt, incorporating a blowing agent, cooling the material creating a cool melt or bun that will be manufactured into various foam products having various sizes and dimensions.
The drawings constitute a part of this specification and include exemplary embodiments of the disclosed subject matter and illustrate various objects and features thereof.
As required, detailed aspects of the disclosed subject matter are disclosed herein; however, it is to be understood that the disclosed aspects are merely exemplary of the disclosed subject matter, which may be embodied in various forms. Therefore, specific structural and functional details disclosed herein are not to be interpreted as limiting, but merely as a basis for the claims and as a representative basis for teaching one skilled in the art how to variously employ the disclosed technology in virtually any appropriately detailed structure.
Certain terminology will be used in the following description for convenience in reference only and will not be limiting. For example, up, down, front, back, right and left refer to the invention as orientated in the view being referred to. The words, “inwardly” and “outwardly” refer to directions toward and away from, respectively, the geometric center of the aspect being described and designated parts thereof. Said terminology will include the words specifically mentioned, derivatives thereof, and words of similar meaning.
Resilient foam materials are substances formed from the vaporization of gas within a matrix wherein the gas forms bubbles or cells disposed throughout the substance. The bubbles are typically formed by blowing a gas through a molten mixture. Polymer foams formed from polymer materials, and similar resilient foam materials that have cells formed from bubbles include latex, polyurethane, foam rubber, polyester, polystyrene, silicone rubber, neoprene, nitrite foam, and neoprene/ethylene propylene diene terpolymer blends. Products composed of resilient foams include sponges, cleaning pads, blades for squeegees, and the like.
Polymer foams may be produced by extrusion. In an extrusion process, the starting polymer material is first melted and the resulting molten or hot mixture is pressurized in a primary extruder, followed by the addition and incorporation of a blowing agent or agents that will create the cells. Blowing agents include hydrocarbons, halohydrocarbons, and inert gasses. The resulting melted polymer mixture is then cooled in a secondary extruder forming a cool melt and is delivered through a die. As the polymer mixture exits the die, the blowing agent vaporizes trapping the incorporated blowing agents within the polymer mixture creating a resilient foam material with cells disposed therein.
Polymer foam rubbers, including neoprene foams may be produced by blowing a gas through a neoprene latex mixture both before and during vulcanization forming a resilient foam material having cells disposed throughout.
Various additives may be incorporated in the polymer foams at the outset to give the resulting resilient foam material desirable characteristics. Such additives may include colorants, stabilizers, nucleators, flame retardants, plasticizers, nanoparticles, nanostructure antimicrobials, and the like.
There are nanostructure antimicrobials that have an atomic physical structure that enables them to incapacitate or destroy microbes. A nanostructure antimicrobial includes BioShield® (IndusCo. Ltd.; Greensboro, N.C.). BioShield® includes a quaternary ammonium salt chemically spliced to a silane molecule, resulting in 3-(trimethoxsilyl) propyldimethyl octadecyl ammonium chloride. The aforementioned atomic nanostructure characteristic of the antimicrobial is the physical structure that is capable of piercing or lysing a microbe thereby incapacitating or destroying the microbe. Accordingly, use of an antimicrobial that affects microbes by physical means avoids the need to use antimicrobials that affect microbes using chemical means. Physically, rather than chemically, incapacitating or destroying microbes reduces the development of resistance to incapacitation or destruction from adaptation, evolution, or mutation. By example, such a resistant type of microbe includes a multi-antibiotic resistant bacteria or a superbug, but would not be resistant to physical means of control.
Upon mixing the above nanostructure antimicrobial with the foam polymer during the manufacturing process it was discovered that the nano structure of the antimicrobial was unexpectedly maintained in the resulting resilient foam material thereby creating a polymer foam material having antimicrobial properties. It has been found that if the heating temperature of the manufacturing process, or the curing temperature of the curing process remains between about 300 to about 350 degrees Fahrenheit, the antimicrobial properties of the nanostructure remain unaffected, and the BioShield® antimicrobial becomes dispersed throughout and bound to the resilient foam material. It has been found that the addition of a nanostructure antimicrobial to the foam polymer during the manufacturing process such that the resulting resilient foam material contains one percent antimicrobial by unit volume results in a resilient foam material that presents active antimicrobial properties, and that does not lose antimicrobial potency over time. The resulting resilient antimicrobial foam material has the ability to remove, incapacitate, or destroy microbes on a surface by physical means due to the active antimicrobial nanostructure remaining within the foam structure, as well as the nanostructure antimicrobial being attached to and projecting outwardly from any available surface of the resilient antimicrobial foam material.
Referring to the drawings,
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In use, the resilient antimicrobial foam material may be manufactured into a resilient antimicrobial foam product that may be wiped across a surface having microbes attached to it resulting in a demonstrable reduction of viable microbes on that surface. The antimicrobial nanostructure remains attached to the resilient antimicrobial foam material and is not left behind on the surface. Further, the antimicrobial does not leech out of the resilient foam material so there is no chemical residue left on the surface being cleaned.
The resilient antimicrobial foam material can be used to manufacture various resilient antimicrobial foam products, including sponges, pads, squeegees, cloths, gaskets, seals, coverings, handle grips, wound dressings, or any of a variety of foam products available. Further, membranes may be manufactured from the resilient antimicrobial foam material for use as a sterile barrier for a surface for example, in a medical or scientific environment. The resilient antimicrobial foam membrane becomes an antimicrobial barrier because a microbe coming into contact with the membrane would be incapacitated or destroyed by the antimicrobial nanostructure attached to the surface of the membrane because the nanostructure will pierce or lyse the microbe.
The resilient antimicrobial foam material has an additional benefit of being resistant to structural degradation and color loss due to the presence of the antimicrobial nanostructure and its ability to incapacitate or destroy microbes that are the causative agents of deterioration.
Resilient antimicrobial foam materials may be cleaned of any attached microbes and reused. After use, the resilient antimicrobial foam material may have microbes attached to its surface that were removed from the surface cleaned. The microbes may be removed using a wetting agent such as water or alcohol. Even without cleaning, most of the microbes remaining on the resilient antimicrobial foam material will be non-viable due to the antimicrobial nanostructure incorporated into the resilient foam material, and attached to any surface of the foam material.
Incorporation of nanostructure antimicrobials into resilient foam products according to the disclosed subject matter and use of the resilient antimicrobial foam material to mechanically clean virulent microbes from a surface has shown to create a marked decrease in virulent microbes on the surface because the method of incorporating the nanostructure antimicrobial into the foam polymer unexpectedly yields a resilient foam material whereby the nanostructure of the antimicrobial is maintained.
A resilient antimicrobial foam product was used to mechanically wipe multiple test areas in a child care facility to determine the effect of the product on removing, incapacitating, or destroying the microbes in the test area. The tests were conducted without adding a wetting agent to the surface or foam product. Tests were conducted in six areas, twice a day, for two days. The amount of viable pathogens were measured before and after cleaning the area with a resilient antimicrobial foam product by swabbing the test area, and analyzing the swab in a sampling device to measure the amount of contamination present. Microbes contain adenosine triphosphate, a biological energy molecule. The amount of contamination present on the swab was measured by assessing the adenosine triphosphate present using relative light units (RLU) generated in response to this activity. The RLUs were measured using a System Sure II™ luminometer (Hygiena, Camarillo, Calif.). The results shown in Table 1 represent the change in amount of contamination before and after cleaning a surface with the resilient antimicrobial foam material where a decrease is shown in parenthesis.
In the experiment above, mechanically cleaning a surface with an antimicrobial foam product embodying principles of the disclosed subject matter has shown to markedly decrease the presence of virulent microbes on the surface.
It will be appreciated that the resilient antimicrobial foam material can be used for various other applications. Moreover, the resilient antimicrobial foam material can be fabricated in various sizes and from a wide range of suitable materials, using various fabrication techniques.
This application claims priority in U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/391,775, filed Oct. 11, 2010, which is incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61391775 | Oct 2010 | US |