Fire Resistant Wallboard

Information

  • Patent Application
  • 20250116110
  • Publication Number
    20250116110
  • Date Filed
    October 04, 2024
    8 months ago
  • Date Published
    April 10, 2025
    2 months ago
  • Inventors
    • Ayambem; Amba
    • Pinon; Angel Ivon Zavala
    • Ovalle; Jorge Armando Domingez
  • Original Assignees
Abstract
A fire resistant wallboard with carbon black and expandable graphite. A carbon black layer is positioned between the conventional cover sheet and a gypsum core with embedded expandable graphite. The carbon black layer may be employed either with one of the cover sheets or with both of the cover sheets.
Description
FIELD OF THE INVENTION

This invention relates to a gypsum wallboard construction that retards thermal transmission from one side of the gypsum wallboard to the other when one side is exposed to flames.


BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

Fire resistance of a wallboard is measured according to ASTM E119, where a series of wallboard panels are exposed to a furnace. A number of thermocouples are affixed to predetermined locations on the opposite side of the wall that is not exposed to direct fire from the furnace. To be certified as having passed this ASTM E119 fire test, none of the thermocouples should exceed readings of 325° F. plus ambient temperature in less than 60 minutes, or the average value of the thermocouples should remain less than 250° F. plus ambient temperature for a minimum of 60 minutes.


When gypsum wallboard is exposed to a high temperature, the gypsum (calcium sulfate dihydrate) that makes up the wallboard's core undergoes a dehydration reaction which first converts gypsum to calcium sulfate hemihydrate and then to calcium sulfate. This series of reactions involve the release of water molecules which help to temporarily insulate the wallboard and slow the transfer of heat from the fire-exposed side to the other, unexposed side. At the same time that these reactions are taking place and water is being evolved, the gypsum wallboard is shrinking to compensate for the loss of water. In turn, this internal shrinkage of the wallboard panels eventually creates gaps at the joints, exposing the mounting studs to direct contact with the furnace fire. These studs, whether wood or metal, burn or significantly accelerate the transmission of heat to the unexposed side of the wallboard panels and eventually result in failure of the test. So, being able to pass the fire test involves mitigating heat transfer across the wallboard and minimizing or eliminating board shrinkage. This shrinkage has conventionally been achieved by incorporating and distributing vermiculite into the gypsum core. Vermiculite is comprised of an insulating surface but more importantly, it expands when heated. After heating for one hour, high expansion vermiculite particles could expand to about 300% or more of their original volume. In any case, the expansion of vermiculite particles that have been distributed within a gypsum wallboard core helps to retain the structural integrity of the wallboard structure when the board is exposed to intense heat. As the gypsum core contracts in response to loss of water molecules, the vermiculite expands to achieve a counterbalance.


Li et al. U.S. Pat. No. 10,604,929 provides an example of the use of vermiculite within the gypsum core to increase fire resistance.


SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

In the present invention, a combination of expandable graphite and carbon black is used in a gypsum wallboard construction to mitigate heat transfer from a fire-exposed side of the wallboard panel to the unexposed side. In the current invention, a small quantity of carbon black is dispersed in the layer of gypsum just below the face paper of the gypsum wallboard. A small quantity of expandable graphite is dispersed in the rest of the gypsum core of the wallboard. When heated, the expandable graphite particles expand as much as 1000-fold. In this inventive construction, the combination of the thermal insulation provided by the carbon black layer and the shrinkage mitigation provided by the expansion of expandable graphite has shown results that are superior to traditional systems containing vermiculite alone.


Shrinkage is determined by cutting a 2″×5″ piece of the wallboard and then measuring the thickness at four locations on the piece of board. The board is then placed in a furnace at 538° C. for a duration of 30 minutes after which thickness measurements of the same four spots on the board are taken again. The difference between the average thickness before placing in the oven and the average thickness after placing in the oven is recorded as the shrinkage. The higher that the number is, the higher the shrinkage. A negative number would indicate a net expansion.


Further objects, features and advantages will become apparent upon consideration of the following detailed description of the invention when taken in conjunction with the appended claims.





BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS


FIG. 1 is a photographic cross-section view of a first embodiment of a fire resistant wallboard in accordance with the present invention.



FIG. 2 is a photographic cross-section view of a second embodiment of a fire resistant wallboard in accordance with the present invention.





DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS


FIG. 1 shows a cross-section of a fire resistant wallboard 10 that exposes the various layers of the fire resistant wallboard 10 of the present invention. Beginning in order from the front of the wallboard 10 to the back of the wallboard 10, the wallboard 10 includes the following layers. A front cover sheet 12, a front carbon black layer 14, a gypsum+expandable graphite core 16, and a back cover sheet 20.


The front cover sheet 12 and the back cover sheet 20 are conventional paper cover sheets used in conventional wallboard construction.


The front carbon black layer 14 is formed of carbon black. The front carbon black layer 14 is between 8 mil (0.008 inch, 0.2032 mm) and 15 mil (0.015 inch, 0.381 mm) thick. The carbon black layer 14 extends over the full length and width of the wallboard 10. The front carbon black layer 14 is Thermax N991, manufactured by CanCarb of Medicine Hat, Alberta, Canada. As shown in Table 1, Thermax in 991 has the following characteristics.













TABLE 1








ASTM Test
Thermax



Parameter
Method
N991 Powder




















Sieve Residue
D1514




325 Mesh % (ppm) max.

0.0250 (250)



Magnetics on 325 Mesh %

0.0005 (5) 



(ppm) max.



Nitrogen Surface Area, m2/g
D6556
7.0-12.0



Oil Absorption Number
D2414
44.0



(OAN) cm3/100 g max.



Ash Content % max.
D1506
0.20



pH
D1512
9.0-11.0



Toluene Extract % max.

0.50



Heat Loss % max.
D1509
0.1










In the process of manufacturing the wallboard of the present invention, the carbon black layer is deposited on the front cover sheet 12 before being married to the gypsum+expandable graphite core 16.


The gypsum+expandable graphite core 16 comprises a mixture of a conventional gypsum core and expandable graphite evenly distributed throughout the core 16. The core 16 comprises approximately 16 pounds per MSF (thousand square feet) of the finished core 16. Two different grades of expandable graphite, 3494 and 3570 manufactured by Asbury Graphite of North Carolina, Inc. of Lumberton North Carolina, can be used for the core 16. Specifications for expandable graphite 3494 and expandable graphite 3570 are shown in Table 2 and Table 3 below.









TABLE 2







Expandable Graphite 3494


General Product Description










Minimum
Maximum















% Moisture
0
3



% ExpCarb
80
100



% +50 Mesh (300 Micron)
0
5



% −200 Total (75 Micron)
0
25



Expansion Ratio X:1
70
130



pH
1
6

















TABLE 3







Expandable Graphite 3570


General Product Description










Minimum
Maximum















% Ash 0 10
0
10



% Moisture 0 2
0
2



% ExpCarb
90
100



% +100 Total (150 Micron)
85
100



Expansion Ratio X:1
215
300



pH
5
10










A control formula for a gypsum core wallboard contains 60 lbs./MSF of vermiculite VCX 204 supplied by Specialty Vermiculite Corp. of Enoree, South Carolina. The specification for the vermiculite is shown in Tables 4, 5, and 6.









TABLE 4







Typical Properties of VCX Vermiculite








Property
Typical Value





Color
Dark greenish brown to golden brown


Shape
Flake


Angle of Repose
27-45°


Solubility
Insoluble in water


Aspect Ratio
20-40


Surface Area (a)
0.5-1.0 (m2/gm)


Mohs Hardness
1.5-2.0 (Nonabrasive)


Specific Gravity
2.4-2.8


Bulk Density
40-65 (lbs/ft3) 640-1,041 (kg/m3)


Refractive Index
α = 1.52-1.57



β, y = 1.54-1.61


Moisture Content
6.5% (heated to 250° F., 110° C.)


Total Ignition Loss
8.0-20.0% (at 2000° F., 1100° C)


pH (in water)
 6-8


Expansion
≈10X (Volume Change)


Expansion Temperature
1100-1800° F. (580-970° C.)


Sintering Temperature
2100-2200° F. (1150-1200° C.)


Fusion Point
2200-2400° F. (1200-1300° C.)


Cation Exchange Capacity
50-100 (m. θ./100 g)





(a) B.E.T. values obtained by nitrogen adsorption technique













TABLE 5







Chemical Formula


(Mg, Ca, K, FeII)3 (Si, AI, FeIII)4 O10 (OH)2•4H2O


Typical Chemical Analysis (b)










Element(b)
% by Weight







SiO2
36-46



MgO
16-24



AI2O3
11-16



Fe2O3
 8-13



K2O
4-6



CaO
1-3



TiO2
1-3



MnO
0.1-0.2



Cr2O3
0.05-0.2 



Na2O
0.1-0.3



Other
0.0-0.5








(b)Elements are expressed as oxide














TABLE 6







Typical VCX ™ Particle Size


% Weight Retained On Each Screen


Vermiculite Grade











U.S. Screens
Mm
VCX 203
VCX 204
VCX 205














8
2.36





12
1.70
 0-10


16
1.18
10-35


20
0.85
25-40


30
0.60
20-40

0-1


40
0.425
 2-14
24-40


50
0.30
0-8
24-38
 0-20


70
0.212
0-7
10-20


100
0.15

 0-15
30-76


−100 pan
<0.15









A small-scale fire test that is reflective of full furnace ASTM E119 tests involves cutting out a 7.5 inch×7.5 inch size of the test wallboard 10, locating the exact center point of the front cover sheet 12 of wallboard 10, and then affixing a thermocouple to the back (unexposed) cover sheet 20 at the center point location. A blowtorch flame is directed to the center point on the front cover sheet 12 (at a predetermined distance from the front cover sheet 12), and the temperature readings of the thermocouple located on the back cover sheet 20 of the side opposite of the flame are monitored.


The control wallboard containing vermiculite experienced a net shrinkage of 5/1000 inch, and when heated by way of the blow torch fire test, the back cover sheet of this control wallboard required about 60 minutes to reach 670° F. Table 7 shows these results, along with results for various levels of expandable graphite being added to the paper/core slurry and separately, to the gypsum core slurry. Table 7 shows that a mixture of 1.3 lbs./MSF of expandable graphite Grade 3538 (supplied by Asbury Graphite) in the paper/core layer and 9.3 lbs./MSF in the core displayed both lower shrinkage and a longer time to get to 670° F. than the control wallboard. The dosage range of expandable graphite in the core is 3.0 to 30.0 lbs/MSF (based on total dosage of gypsum in the wallboard)













TABLE 7






Paper/






Core
Gypsum

Time



Layer
Core

to reach



Dosage
Dosage
Shrinkage
670° F


Raw material
in lb/MSF
in lb/MSF
1/1000 in
(min)



















Vermiculite VCX 204
0
60
5
60


(control)


Asbury EG Grade 3538
1.3
0
42
176


Asbury EG Grade 3538
2.0
0
63
66


Asbury EG Grade 3538
1.3
0
−97
131


Asbury EG Grade 3494
0
12.2


Asbury EG Grade 3538
1.3
0
4
84


Asbury EG Grade 3494
0
9.3









Table 8 shows results of gypsum wallboards which were made by dosing the paper/core slurry and the core with various levels of carbon black and expandable graphite. The dosage range of carbon black in the carbon black layer is 0.5 to 5.0 lbs/MSF (based on total dosage of gypsum in the wallboard).


Table 8 shows that the mixture of 2.6 lbs./MSF of Thermax N991 carbon black in the paper/core slurry along with 16 lbs./MSF of expandable graphite Grade 3494 had superior performance in both shrinkage and thermal transmission than the control vermiculite wallboard.













TABLE 8






Paper/






Core Layer
Gypsum Core

Time to



Dosage in
Dosage in
Shrinkage
reach 670 F.


Raw material
Lb/MSF
Lb/MSF
1/1000 in
(min)



















Carbon Black Thermax N990
2.6
0
41
30


Carbon Black Thermax N991
2.6
0
41
52


Carbon Black Thermax N991UP
2.6
0
41
38


Vermiculite VCX 204
0
30
31
34


Carbon Black Thermax N990
2.6
0


Vermiculite VCX 204
0
30
33
48


Carbon Black Thermax N991
2.6
0


Vermiculite VCX 204
0
30
31
44


Carbon Black Thermax N991UP
2.6
0


Vermiculite VCX 204
0
30
30
38


Carbon Black Thermax N991
2.6
0
−12
120


Asbury EG Grade 3538
0
65


Carbon Black Thermax N991
2.6
0
1
68


Asbury EG Grade 3570
0
10


Carbon Black Thermax N991
2.6
0
−8
90


Asbury EG Grade 3494
0
16


Carbon Black Thermax N991
2.6
0
6
115


Asbury EG Grade 3494
0
16


Vermiculite VCX 204
0
60
5
60









Turning to FIG. 2, the construction of the fire resistant wallboard 110 is in most regards the same as fire resistant wallboard 10 of FIG. 1 in that elements 110, 112, 114, 116, and 120 of FIG. 2 correspond to and are the same as elements 10, 12, 14, 16, and 20 of FIG. 1. The fire resistant wallboard 110, however, has an additional carbon black layer 118 between the back cover sheet 120 and the gypsum+expandable graphite core 116. The additional carbon black layer 118 has the same characteristics as the carbon black layer 14 shown in FIG. 1. The additional carbon black layer 118 provides additional insulation between any flames at the front cover sheet 112 and temperatures experienced at the back cover sheet 120.


While this invention has been described with reference to preferred embodiments thereof, it is to be understood that variations and modifications can be affected within the spirit and scope of the invention as described herein and as described in the appended claims.

Claims
  • 1. A fire resistant wallboard comprising in order: a. a front cover sheet;b. a front carbon black layer;c. a core comprising a mixture of gypsum and expandable graphite; andd. a back cover sheet,wherein the front carbon black layer is positioned between the front cover sheet and the gypsum core.
  • 2. The fire resistant wallboard of claim 1, wherein the front carbon black layer is between 8 mil and 15 mil thick.
  • 3. The fire resistant wallboard of claim 1, wherein front carbon black layer dosage is between 0.5 to 5.0 lbs/MSF.
  • 4. The fire resistant wallboard of claim 1, wherein expandable graphite dosage in the core is between 3.0 to 30.0 lbs/MSF.
  • 5. A fire resistant wallboard comprising in order: a. a front cover sheet;b. a front carbon black layer;c. a core comprising a mixture of gypsum and expandable graphite;d. a back carbon black layer; ande. a back cover sheet,wherein the front carbon black layer is positioned between the front cover sheet and the gypsum core and the back carbon black layer is positioned between the back cover sheet and the gypsum core.
  • 6. The fire resistant wallboard of claim 5, wherein the front carbon black layer and the back carbon black layer are between 8 mil and 15 mil thick.
  • 7. The fire resistant wallboard of claim 5, wherein front carbon black layer dosage and back carbon black layer dosage are between 0.5 to 5.0 lbs/MSF.
  • 8. The fire resistant wallboard of claim 5, wherein expandable graphite dosage in the core is between 3.0 to 30.0 lbs/MSF.
CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED PATENT APPLICATIONS

This invention claims priority from U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 63/588,837, filed Oct. 9, 2023, and U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 63/590,567, filed Oct. 16, 2023, which are hereby incorporated by reference.

Provisional Applications (2)
Number Date Country
63588837 Oct 2023 US
63590567 Oct 2023 US