1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to marine and other fuel tanks and more particularly to fabricated composite fuel tanks.
2. Description of the Prior Art
Fuel tanks for pleasure boats manufactured in the United States are built in accordance with 33 CFR 183.510 At present manufacturers utilize aluminum, cross-linked polyethylene or vinyl ester fiberglass as viable materials for tank construction. Although not extensively documented, aluminum fuel tanks corrode at an uncomfortable rate. The United States Coast Guard, realizing safety issues associated with fuel leaks, commissioned a study by the Underwriter's Laboratory in 1994 that concurred and identified this as problem. Additionally cross-linked polyethylene and existing vinyl ester fuel tanks have an issue with fuel permeation and subsequent hydrocarbon migration to atmosphere at environmentally unsafe levels.
It would be advantageous to have a fuel containment method and system that prevented migration of hydrocarbons to the atmosphere and was resistant to corrosion.
The present invention relates to a composite structure and process for fuel tank fabrication. The system of the present invention uses assembled, pre-cut closed cell urethane foam sheets with structural urethane adhesive, where the assembled tanks are coated inside and out with a nano sized clay hydrocarbon barrier housed in a vinyl/poly ester matrix. The exterior can be reinforced with fiberglass weaved mat and gel coated for aesthetics. This fabricated tank can be easily reinforced so as to meet or exceed the criteria as specified in H-24 ABYC (American boat and yacht council) and 33 CFR 183.510 standards for fuel systems and our introduction of nano particles of clay will reduce the hydrocarbon migration to the lower levels today being achieved by the automotive industry.
Attention is now directed at several figures to better understand the present invention:
Several illustrations and drawings have been presented to better aid in understanding the present invention. The scope of the present invention is not limited to what is shown in the figures.
The composite tanks of the present invention can be fabricated using a high-density closed cell urethane glass fiber reinforced composite sheet as a primary building block. Incorporating around 5% nanomer or nano sized treated clay particles/platelets into structural urethane adhesive provides a tank with a fuel resistant fastening medium. Introducing around 5% nanomer into a poly vinyl ester resin matrix retards the migration of hydrocarbons through the fuel tank walls and provides the tank interior and exterior coating.
The nanomer platelets are plate shaped particles that are typically 3-4 microns in size. The platelets lie together similar to pages in a book, and with around 5% saturation, the clay provides a treacherous path at a molecular level that retards the migration of hydrocarbon molecules through the compound. Coated urethane sheets also provide individual tank interior components or slosh baffles, when applicable, assembled onto isophthalic, nano treated polyester pultrusion mandrels also held together with the around 5% nano treated urethane adhesive. Once fully assembled, the tank can be coated with fiberglass reinforced around 5% nano treated vinyl/poly ester resin sufficient for H-24 ABYC (American boat and yacht council) and 33 CFR 183.510 standards for fuel systems mechanical strength requirements. A final gel coat finish may be applied for aesthetics. It should be noted that from 2% to 8% of clay can be used to treat the polyester and the urethane adhesive.
It should be noted that while the above example used around 5% by weight of clay nanomer, other percentages by weight are within the scope of the present invention. In particular, from around 2% to around 8% by weight of clay can be used. If too much clay is used, the composite could crack or exhibit other undesirable properties. If too little clay is used, the composite may not perform as desired.
Several descriptions and illustrations have been provided to better aid in understanding the present invention. One with skill in the art will realize that numerous changes and variations are possible within the spirit of the present invention. Each of these changes and variations is within the scope of the present invention.
This application is related to and claims priority from U.S. Provisional Patent application No. 60/860,908 filed Nov. 24, 2006. Application 60/860,908 is hereby incorporated by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60860908 | Nov 2006 | US |