The present invention relates to gloves. More particularly, the present invention relates to gloves provided with purpose driven pads and encapsulated within a protective coating as a unified layer for protecting a hand of a person wearing the glove against industrial loading and penetration during use of the work glove.
Gloves with impact and vibration resistance exist in the market today. There are several typical methods for providing the impact resistance for gloves, including sewing of Thermal Plastic Rubber (TPR) strips on the back or front of a textile based glove. These glove products are provided in the marketplace by various suppliers, including MECHANIX WEAR, HEXARMOR, RINGERS, and IRON CLAD. More recently, injection molded foamed neoprene technology was introduced by Atom Corporation in Japan.
While these glove offer some protection for hands of users from industrial loading, there are drawbacks in that these gloves lack chemical protection. One recent technology involves sewing or injection molding TPR onto textile shells, sewing another layer of textile over the TPR, and coating the glove. This creates a sandwich-type glove with TPR in a middle layer.
Typical impact and/or anti-vibration gloves only provide impact and/or vibration resistance with little to no liquid/chemical resistance against oil, grease, or other common liquids encountered in application. Where chemical resistance is also offered, it is usually in multiple layers. An example of a multi-layer format is a textile layer+TPR layer+textile layer+polymer layer. This format however results in a bulky, uncomfortable, less integrated system that may increase injury risk and adds unnecessary cost in assembly. Typically, sewn TPR or other material may create snag dangers when in use.
Accordingly, there is a need in the art for an improved glove for protecting a person's hand from industrial loading and chemical penetration during use of the glove. It is to such that the present invention is directed.
The present invention meets the need in the art for an improved glove for protecting a person's hand from industrial loading and chemical penetration during use of the glove. The present invention provides a work glove, comprising a sheet formed to define a hand-receiving cavity having a palm portion and opposing back portion with an elongated thumb tube and four elongated finger tubes extending therefrom and an opposing cuff portion. At least one resilient pad attaches to the sheet in a portion selected for being resistant to industrial loading. A polymer coating encapsulates at least a portion of an exterior surface of the sheet and the at least one resilient pad within a continuous film to define the work glove, with the resilient pad and the polymer coating defining in situ an interfacial miscible layer comprising portions of the resilient pad bonded with the polymer coating. The continuous film resists chemical penetration therethrough and the resilient pad resists industrial loading during use of the work glove.
In another aspect, the present invention provides a method of making a work glove, comprising the steps of:
(a) forming a hand-receiving cavity with a sheet and having a palm portion and opposing back portion with an elongated thumb tube and four elongated finger tubes extending therefrom and an opposing cuff portion;
(b) attaching at least one resilient pad in a portion selected for being resistant to industrial loading; and
(c) encapsulating at least a portion of an exterior surface of the sheet and the at least one resilient pad within a continuous polymer film, the resilient pad and the polymer coating defining in situ an interfacial miscible layer comprising portions of the resilient pad bonded with the polymer coating,
which film resists chemical penetration therethrough and which resilient pad resists industrial loading during use as a glove during work.
Other features, objects, and advantages of the present invention may become apparent upon a reading of the following detailed description in conjunction with the drawings and the appended claims.
The disclosure uses the following terms and meanings:
Referring now in more detail to the drawings,
The encapsulated polymer pad 12 is processed to become an integral part of the chemical protective coating 16 through chemical bonding at an interfacial surface layer 17 of these miscible materials of the two components. The pads 12 are prepared on the glove textile liner 14 substrate in various patterns and heights on the back or palm of the liner in order to provide optimal protection for a particular purpose-driven industrial application for the gloves 10. The pads 12 are then coated with a continuous layer of a chemical protective polymer, which encapsulates the polymer pad at the interfacial surface layer 17 and integrates the pad and the coating 16 into a continuous protective layer.
Gloves 10 made in accordance with the present invention may be produced in the following four steps: liner 14 preparation, screening of purpose-driven polymer pads 12, encapsulating with the polymer coating 16, and finishing.
The fabric liner 14 supports the encapsulated impact polymer pads 12. The fabric liners 14 may be a knitted glove 14a shown in
The gloves 10 include at least one purpose-driven pad 12 for resisting industrial loading imposed on a glove worn by a person during work. One embodiment for preparation of the polymer pads 12 uses polymers combined with optimal ranges of softeners and blowing agents to provide appropriate required flexion, impact protection, vibration absorption, and texture. The polymer is prepared in a high viscosity paste. High viscosity is required in order to retain the shape of the pad 12 through processing, otherwise, the pad may deform before thermal setting.
Polymer paste is then screened across the hard block 20, or silk screen, onto the seamless knit or cut/sewn liner 14 either on the back of the hand or the palm region 18. The cut/sewn liner 14 may be a fully assembled glove or just one panel. The hard block 20, or silk screen overlay, provides the appropriate dimensional configuration for a proper pattern and thickness required for the position and thickness of the impact and anti-vibration polymer pads 12. Typical required impact and anti-vibration pads are between 2 mm and 10 mm height and various widths of various geometry ranging from small areas of 2 mm size, to complete coverage of one side of the hand.
The screened polymer glove liners 14 are then processed further to cure/harden/dry the polymer and fix it attachingly to the glove liner to form a finished shell ready for encapsulation discussed below. Typical process involves drying/curing in an oven for between 30 seconds to 5 minutes at a suitable temperature for the particular polymer. The cure temperature and dwell time is selected for the particular polymers in the glove application.
Other embodiments for preparation of polymer pads 12 include pre-formed methods such as molding through injection, molding through pour and annealing, extrusion, and other foamed formation methods. The “pre-formed” pads 12 may also be assembled, or attached, to the shell or liner 14 that defines the glove, and subsequently encapsulated as discussed below. The preformed pads may be adhered to the textile liner 14 by methods including direct injection, adhesion, ultrasonic welding, hot welding, sewing, and other methods of attaching the pad 12 to the liner 14.
Embodiments that encapsulate using a water-based coagulant system preferably treat the polymer pad 12 with a bonding agent while still in the paste or liquid state.
Performance driven polymer pads 12 screened/coated on liners 14 or fabric sheets are further assembled as needed. Typical processing includes further assembling unfinished cut/sewn liners and adding multiple panels to make a completed 3D glove. Cuff assembly may include adding a PVC, neoprene, or other fabric wrist and cuff generally 19, attached such as by sewing. This process finalizes the coated, finished shell ready for encapsulation process.
With reference to
The polymer coating 16 is typically between 0.02 mm to 2 mm thickness over the liner 14 and pads 12 to create a continuous film. With reference to
Typical dipping process includes straight dipping of the shell directly into a liquid polymer to continuously coat. Other dipping includes coagulant-based dipping which includes salts to destabilize the polymer and coat the shell. This is then processed through the oven and/or liquid heated process to cure the polymer. The dipping process alone is typically known in the general market. An alternate embodiment thereafter sprays granulates or grit materials onto the coating, such as on the palm portion. The granulates may be a resilient yet stiff material such as PVC granulates. The coated granulate glove may then be re-dipped to further encapsulate the granulates. The granulates cause a rough textured surface that provides slip resistance when gripping equipment and articles.
Gloves are then removed from the hand mold formers 28 and processed further as necessary.
As noted above, preformed pads 12 made from other methods such as injection molding, foam extrusion, and various other methods may also be adhered to the textile liner by methods including direct injection, adhesion, ultrasonic welding, hot welding, sewing, and other potential methods.
Typical finishing processing includes trimming where necessary, logo printing, further sewing to add accessories such as Velcro cuff, and packaging.
The resulting encapsulated polymer pad 12 is typically at a height/thickness layer significantly more thick than that of the polymer coating 16 that may further coveringly coat other parts of the glove liner. The increased height creates an additional protection barrier, while maintaining the continuous polymer layer through the coated portions. The continuous exterior film layer is typically intended to protect the hand of a person using the glove 10 from chemicals and/or mechanical exposure. The encapsulated polymer pads 12 are resilient to various mechanical exposures and may range from soft to hard depending on the required performance.
The polymer pads 12 include formation discussed above for inline manufacturing per the description or pre-formed methods including molding by injection, molding through plate pouring and annealing, extrusion formation, foamed rubber formation, and other. Assembly of these include direct injection/processing, adhesion, ultrasonic welding, heat welding, sewing, and other attachment methods.
The liners 14 include cut and sew liners in both ambidextrous and hand specific (i.e, left and right specific) form, using seamless knitted liners or woven liners. Materials useful for the liners 14 include cotton, polyester, TC, polycotton, nylon, acrylic, aramids, polyethylenes, composite fibers including glass, stainless steel, lycra/spandex, polypropylene. Formats include terry, canvas, wafted, knitted, and 3D monofilament.
The gloves 10 provide cut resistance, with embodiments that include the above liners with materials for purpose of additional cut resistance ranging from level 1 to 5 on EN388 scale and from level 1-5 on ANSI and ISO blade cut resistance test. Further, the gloves 10 feature puncture-resistant formats per above with materials intended to increase puncture resistance such as tightly woven or tightly knitted cotton, aramids, polyethylenes, and other related materials.
The polymers and rubbers useful with the present invention include silicone, polyvinyl chloride, nitrile, latex, polyurethane, acrylics, and neoprene.
Cuff styles are conventional in the trade, and include welded polymer, sewn polymers, textile, neoprene, VELCRO, and elasticized bands.
Placement/orientation of the pads 12 are suitably configured for impact protection, ranging from and including back of hand down to fingertips and palm side of hand, and longitudinally along the finger envelopes.
Styles include colors for basic design per safety requirements, reflective and high visibility colors, etc.
The thickness of the polymer pad 12 range from about 1 mm to 10 mm and the encapsulation layer thickness ranges from about 0.08 mm to about 2 mm.
The resulting glove 10 provides thermal resistance, impact resistance, vibration resistance, grip support, and durability improvement while resisting chemical penetration and sharps penetration.
The pad 12 patterns including palm and back of hand patterns based on the particular use or environment for the glove, and range from small 2 mm pads of various geometric shapes in small regions of the glove up to complete 100% coverage of the specific glove surface.
The following describes illustrative non-limiting embodiments of the encapsulated glove with purpose-drive components according to the present invention.
A knitted cotton liner or shell with interlocked fibers, cut as opposing panels for a palm and fingers and sown together to form an envelope for receiving a hand of a user. The opposing panels are screened using the die and screening process described above in reference to
A jersey-type liner 14 forms a woven shell for the glove. The liner 14 is screened to attach polymer pads 12, and the intermediate assembly is dipped in a PVC polymer bath to apply the encapsulation coating 16. The coated glove dwells in an oven heated appropriately for curing the polymer.
A pre-formed PVC-based pad 12 is perimeter sown with a thread to attach the pad to a liner 14 to form an intermediate assembly. The form 28 receives the intermediate assembly and the assembly then is dipped into a PVC bath. The PVC bath coats the intermediate assembly, and following appropriate dwell time and cure temperature in an oven, provides an encapsulated glove.
A textile liner 14 (either woven or knitted) receives purposed-driven polymer pads 12 to form an intermediate assembly. The intermediate assembly receives a topical application of a plurality of strands of cotton flock 15 while the polymer paste remains viscous and before final curing of the polymer. The strands of flock 15 engage interlockingly with the pads 12 with a portion of the flock extending therefrom. The form 28 receives the flocked intermediate assembly for dipping in a water-based polymer of a coagulant and a nitrile-based material. The extending portions of the flock 15 interlock with the polymer. The coated assembly cures within an oven in an appropriate dwell time and temperature. The flock physically connects the pads 12 and the encapsulation coating 16.
A textile liner 14 (either woven or knitted) receives purposed-driven polymer pads 12 to form an intermediate assembly. In a first embodiment, the polymer pads 12 are screened into attachment to the liner. In a second embodiment, the polymer pads are preformed and attached with an adhesive or sown with threads. The intermediate assembly receives a topical application of a plurality of strands of cotton flock 15 while the polymer paste remains viscous and before final curing of the polymer. The strands of flock 15 engage interlockingly with the pads 12 with a portion of the flock extending therefrom. The form 28 receives the flocked intermediate assembly for dipping in a water-based polymer of a coagulant and a nitrile-based material. The extending portions of the flock 15 interlock with the polymer. The coated assembly cures within an oven in an appropriate dwell time and temperature. The flock physically connects the pads 12 and the encapsulation coating 16.
The purpose-driven glove disclosed herein can be made and executed without undue experimentation in light of the present disclosure. While the apparatus and methods of this invention have been described in terms of illustrative embodiments, it will be apparent to those of skill in the art that variations may be applied to the apparatus and in the method steps or in the sequence of steps thereof described herein without departing from the concept, spirit and scope of the invention. All such similar substitutes and modifications apparent to those skilled in the art are deemed to be within the spirit, scope and concept of the invention as defined by the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61931036 | Jan 2014 | US | |
62020934 | Jul 2014 | US |