This invention relates to high performance, high temperature resistant wires and cables, that may also be fire resistant, for use in demanding or extreme conditions such as in drilling or mining, commercial or military aerospace and marine applications and automotive, rail and mass transport. Such cables may be exposed to extremes of temperature as well as to corrosive substances or atmospheres or to fire. High performance wires generally comprise a functional core such as an electrical conductor or optical fibre, and one or more insulating and/or protective coatings. These coatings should be flexible and not too bulky, since wires are required in many cases to be of small diameter. Such small diameter, high performance wires may be formed by wrapping thin single or multilayer tapes, by extrusion or by a combination of these techniques.
Various types of polymer are known for use in wire and cable sheaths, such as polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) and polyetheretherketone (PEEK). PTFE has the advantage of being very tough as well as chemically inert, with a high softening point, low coefficient of friction and good electrical insulating properties. PEEK has found increasing use in wire and cable sheathing since it has good flame resistance, being self-extinguishing with very low smoke. It also has good elongation, good flexibility in thin sections such as films and good mechanical resistance to dynamic cut-through and scrape abrasion. It can however be susceptible to arc tracking and also to attack by acetone and strong acids.
EP-A-572 177 discloses an electrical insulation laminate of porous PTFE and PEEK. The purpose of this is to provide a flexible electrical insulation material for air frame wire insulation which is lightweight with high mechanical strength, thermal resistance and chemical resistance and reduced dielectric constant.
There is a demand for wire and cable insulations that are resistant to fire as well as to very high temperatures. One way of imparting such flame resistance is to apply a coating comprising mica particles, typically platelets, dispersed in a polymer matrix. JP-A-2003100149 for example discloses the use of a dispersion of fine mica powder and glass frit in a silicone resin for coating fire resistant cables.
Mica can however add to the cost and accordingly there is a need to reduce the mica content of cable sheaths. For example, JP-A-2006120456 seeks to avoid the use of mica by combining a glass tape to impart tensile strength and dimensional stability with a silicone tape to impart heat resistance, electrical characteristics and adhesiveness.
JP-A-2000011772 discloses a fire resistant coating made with a cross-linked silicone rubber mixed with aluminium hydroxide and mica powder. There is also a requirement for wires and cables of reduced diameter, which could be achieved by using sheaths of reduced thickness.
GB-A-2460686 discloses a wire having a functional core and a sheath including an inner flameproofing layer comprising mica particles dispensed in a polymer matrix such as silicone, a wrapped film of PEEK and an outer coating of PEEK or another polymer. In this way the required temperature and flame resistance can be obtained with mica confined to one layer of three, with a thickness of preferably not more than 100 μm.
WO8900757 (Penneck) describes a wire having good electrical and mechanical properties with an inorganic arc-control layer surrounding the conductor, an insulating layer comprising an aromatic polymer which surrounds the arc control layer and a secondary tracking control layer surrounding the insulating layer. The wire exhibits good resistance to dry arcing and wet tracking.
There remains however a need for wires and cables which, in addition to good insulation and high temperature resistance, have improved mechanical properties, especially at high temperatures.
According to a first aspect of the present invention there is provided a composite insulating tape comprising a laminate or co-extrusion of at least two layers, including an insulating first layer of a polymer matrix, which is preferably high temperature resistant and may also be flame resistant, in which mica particles are dispersed, and a second, structural layer of a polymer containing aromatic and/or heterocyclic rings and having a melting point of at least 350° C. and a glass transition temperature of at least 150° C.
The insulating mica layer may have a backing layer, for example a supporting layer of glass fibre or a layer of another polymer such as a polyolefin.
In another embodiment the composite tape may have a fluoropolymer coating applied to the surface of the second layer opposite the first layer and/or to the surface of the first layer opposite the second layer. The fluoropolymer layers may for example be based on PTFE, PFA or FEP and can be applied by various means including application as a coating.
Advantages of the inner and/or outer fluoropolymer layers, applied to a wire include:
(i) increased electrical insulation;
(ii) improved stripping of insulation for wire termination; and
(iii) in the case of the fluoropolymer coating on the outside of a wire insulated with a wrapped tape, the possibility of heating the fluoropolymer layer to fuse it and create a homogeneous layer.
According to a further aspect of the present invention, there is provided a wire or cable comprising a core and a polymeric sheath, wherein the sheath includes:
(a) a composite insulating tape as defined above wrapped around the core with the first layer nearer the core; and
(b) a wrapped or extruded outer layer of a fluoropolymer.
The insulating first layer comprises mica dispersed in a polymeric matrix such as a polymeric siloxane.
It may be advantageous to apply an adhesive tie layer prior to application of the extruded outer fluoropolymer layer, particularly in cases where the composite tape includes a fluoropolymer coating and forms an outer coating on the second layer of the wrapped tape. Suitable materials for the tie layer include an epoxy or maleic functionalised fluorinated elastomer or, more preferably, a functionised fluoropolymer such as PFA or PTFE. The adhesive tie layer can be applied by extrusion or by other coating methods such as dip coating.
Additionally, or alternatively, a heating or sintering step may be carried out prior to application of the fluoropolymer outer layer in order to fuse the first and second layer of the wrapped composite tape.
The fluoropolymer outer layer (b) is provided for additional strength, chemical resistance, flexibility and/or flame resistance. This outer layer may for example comprise polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF), polyethylenetetrafluroethylene, (ETFE), polyfluoroalkoxy (PFA) or copolymers or blends or alloys of any of these. This outer layer may be fixed or may be fused or sintered, preferably at a temperature of 350° to 420° C.
The second, structural layer of the tape may for example comprise a polyaryl ether ketone (PAEK) or a blend or alloy thereof. These comprise chains of aromatic rings with some linked by oxygen atoms and others by carbonyl groups. Those suitable for the purposes of the invention have higher melting points and glass transition temperatures than PEEK.
Examples of PAEK's having the required melting point (Tm) and glass transition temperature (Tg) are set out in Table 1 below, in which the polymers are identified by their abbreviated names where E stands for ether and K for ketone and Φ indicates a benzene ring, so that for example PEKK is polyetherketoneketone. The preferred polymers are those in which the ratio of ketone linkages to ether linkages is 1:1 or greater, these compounds having the higher Tg and Tm.
The second layer may have a thickness of 25 to 100 μm, more preferably 25 to 75 μm. In some embodiments, each of the first and second layers of tape (a) and outer fluoropolymer layer (b) has the thickness of 25 to 50 μm.
The second layer may comprise a blend or alloy containing at least 50%, and more preferably 65%, of PAEK. For wires and cables requiring a high degree of flame retardency thicker layers, especially of mica-containing polymer, will be required. The inner and outer fluoropolymer coatings, where used, will preferably have a thickness of 2 to 25 μm.
Polymers that may be blended or alloyed with the PAEK include those made up of heterocyclic units containing a six-membered ring fused to a five-membered ring, for example polyimide, polybenzimidazole, polybenzoxazole and polybenzothiazole and copolymers thereof.
The tapes described above can be applied to numerous different types of core, notably conductive wires or cables, for example copper, which may be nickel- or tin-coated or silver-plated, aluminium, typically copper-clad aluminium, silver or steel. For other purposes, non-metallic cores such as carbon fibre or polymeric or ceramic cores may be used. The cable may be single core or multi-core or may comprise a twisted pair of wires, a multi-strand core or a braid. Any of these cores may be coated with copper, nickel, tin or silver.
Preferred embodiments of the invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings wherein:
Referring first to
The composite tape comprises a first layer 24, for example of silicone with mica platelets distributed in it. Its surface nearest the core 10 has a coating 25 of a fluoropolymer such as PTFE.
On the opposite side of the first layer 24 is laminated a second layer 26, for example of polyaryletherketone.
Finally an outer layer 28 of fluoropolymer is applied, for example by extrusion or tape wrapping. In
The first and second layers are preferably wound spirally around the core with an overlap of 40 to 70%, preferably 48 to 58%
The second layer 26 comprises polyaryletherketone having a thickness of 25 to 100 μm. The PAEK may be used alone or as a blend or alloy with other polymers. The blend or alloy should preferably contain at least 50%, and more preferably at least 65%, of PAEK.
The outer layer 28 can be either extruded or wrapped, suitably as part of a composite tape with the first and second layers. It provides an encapsulation layer to form an additional layer of protection to the cable. Any of the polymers, polymer blends or alloys listed above for this layer can be used. PTFE for example could sintered to provide exceptional chemical resistance as required by the aerospace market.
The synergistic combination of mica-containing polymer and PAEK in this embodiment can provide a high temperature, fire resistant wire with potentially low weight and low overall diameter. The mica can provide insulation and fire resistance up 1000° C., and in combination with the PAEK provides improved mechanical properties including dynamic cut-through resistance, even at high temperatures, non burning characteristics and very low smoke emission. The manufacturing process, which could include high temperature sintering, must support semi-crystallinity in the structural PAEK layer
The two layers 24 and 26 are applied as in
As illustrated in
To render the protective sheath still tougher and more resistant to chemical attack, the sheath around the wire or cable of the invention may be cross-linked by electron beam radiation, preferably at elevated temperature and preferably in an inert atmosphere.
Finally, the sheath may be subjected to an annealing process, suitably at 170 to 300° C., preferably for at least 12 hours and up to 24 hours.
Referring now to
In this embodiment, a fluorocarbon coating 45 is applied to the side of the first layer opposite the second, which will be the inside of the coating to be formed by wrapping the tape around a conductor. A second fluorocarbon coating 47 is applied to the second coating 46, on the side opposite the first coating 44. This will thus constitute an outer layer of the wrapped film, over which a further protective outer layer of a fluoropolymer may be applied, by wrapping or extrusion.
The composite tape for the invention is preferably modular in design. The mica layer can be increased in thickness to impart proportionately increased fire resistant properties in addition to electrical insulation. While the preferred thickness for this layer will not exceed 50 μm for most purposes, in order to keep the overall wire diameter to a minimum, where fire resistance is required the thickness of this layer may be greater than 50 μm, for example in a range from 50 to 100 μm. The thicknesses or other layers may also be adjusted to meet individual requirements.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1008268.3 | May 2010 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/GB2011/050942 | 5/18/2011 | WO | 00 | 11/16/2012 |