Structures, vehicles, garments, packaging, and other substrates are often vulnerable to integrity-compromising conditions. These conditions can be caused by, for example, unexpected impact, internal or external pressure, deliberate tampering, unacceptable temperature, stress, strain, dislocation, deformation, and/or distortion.
A fault-responsive bead is provided which contains a material that is dormant in pre-fault condition and functional in a post-fault condition. The material can be an indicator signifying that a fault has occurred and/or the material can be a remedy helping to mitigate the consequences of the fault.
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In the illustrated embodiments, the bead 10, the shell 11, and the core 12 are all substantially spherical in shape. The shell's diameter D11 defines the bead's diameter D10, and the shell's thickness T11 is defined by the difference between its diameter D11 and that core's diameter D12.
The beads 10, the shells 11, and/or the cores 12 can be any suitable size to optimize performance and fault-indicating purposes. Larger diameters (e.g., 1 to 8 mm) may be best suited when the beads 10 are incorporated into the substrate body 30. Smaller bead sizes (e.g., 1 to 100 microns) may be best suited when the beads 10 reside in a thin film coating layer 40. And intermediate bead sizes (e.g., 100 microns to 3 mm) might be the best candidates when the beads 10 are occupants of a thick adhesive or paste coating.
The shell's thickness T11 (i.e., the difference between its diameter D11 and the core diameter D12) and/or the shell material composition can be tailored to provide the appropriate rupture trigger, fracture mechanism, and/or fracture strength.
The beads' shells 11 can also be adapted to be essentially unnoticeable in the pre-fault condition. Specifically, for example, the shells 40 can be an opaque color blending with the color of the substrate body 30 (if incorporated therein) or the coating layer 40 if incorporated therein. Thermoplastic and/or thermoset resins (e.g., poly oxy methylene urea (pmu), urea formaldehyde, phenolic, epoxy, polyester, polyethylene, polypropylene, polyamide, etc.) can be considered suitable candidates for shell materials.
The core 12 can comprise an indicating material such as a pigment mixture adapted to be incompatible (e.g., insoluble) with the surrounding medium so as to flow in a fault-indicating manner. The pigment color can be contrasting with that of the substrate body 30 and/or the coating fluid 41. Additionally or alternatively, the indicator 12 can be activated and/or detected by heat, light, radiation, infrared, electrical fields, orientation, oxidation or other effect mechanisms.
The indicator core 12 could instead comprise a substance such as reactive chemicals, charged or conductive particles, metallic particles, charge-inhibiting particles, thermochromic pigments, or other marker materials.
The indicator core 12 can additionally or alternatively include a remedial substance (e.g., a self-sealing resin, disinfectant, neutralizing agent, chemical additive, etc.).
Although the beads 10, the substrate 20, the substrate body 30, and/or the coating layer 40, have been have been shown and described as having certain forms and fabrications, such portrayals are not quintessential and represent only some of the possible adaptations of the claimed characteristics. Other obvious, equivalent, and/or otherwise akin embodiments could instead be created using the same or analogous attributes.
This application claims priority under 35 USC §119(e) to U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/591,256 filed on Jan. 26, 2012. The entire disclosure of this provisional patent application is hereby incorporated by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61591256 | Jan 2012 | US |