This invention relates to a mineral fibre product, particularly for hydroponics applications and particularly having a low phenol or phenol free binder.
Industry standard binders used for mineral fibre products, for example of glass wool and rock wool, are based on phenol formaldehyde resins. Such binders are required to hold the mineral fibres together in the form of a mat or block.
The presence of a binder in a hydroponics growing medium may be detrimental to plant growth, particularly due to the presence and/or release of phenol. However, in the water soaked hydroponics growing conditions, the presence of a binder is necessary to keep the mineral fibres bound together.
According to one aspect, the present invention provides a hydroponics growing medium as defined in claim 1. Other aspects are defined in other independent claims. Preferred and/or alternative features are defined in the dependent claims.
The Weathered Interlaminar Strength gives an indication of the ability of the growing medium to remain in tact as a block or mat when in contact with irrigation water in plant growing conditions. The Weathered Interlaminar Strength may be greater than 5 kilopascals; this may allow the growing medium to have sufficient physical integrity to be used for more than one or even more than two growing cycle rather than being discarded after a single use.
The low (preferably zero) phenol content may provide a better plant growing environment, particularly in the seedling or early part of the plant growing cycle. The growing medium may be phenol free or substantially phenol free; preferably the binder is phenol free or substantially phenol free.
As used herein, reference to phenol content is in terms of the presence of free phenol and/or low molecular weight phenol; the term phenol free means that there is substantially no free phenol or low molecular weight phenol present and preferably less than one part per million by weight.
The phenol content may be measured by gas chromatography.
Preferably, the hydroponics growing medium of the present invention provides for improved plant vigour when compared with know mineral fibre growing mediums, particularly those having phenol contents greater than the present invention. Plant vigour may be assessed in a comparative growing test, for example with cucumber plants (cultivar aviance) sown in 10 cm×10 cm×6.5 cm of hydroponics mineral wool blocks and grown in controlled hydroponics conditions. Leaf size 31 days and/or 42 days after sowing may be used as an indication of plant vigour, preferably using statistical analysis. The growing conditions for such a test preferably include:
The nature of the binder may allow increased binder contents, for example of 4% by weight or more, to be used without having an adverse effect upon plant growth. The binder content may be greater than or equal to 4.5%, 5%, 5.5%, 6%, 6.5%, 7%, 7.5%, 8% or 9% by weight. The binder content is expressed as a weight % when cured in the growing medium as ready for use and may be measured and/or expressed as loss on ignition. The loss on ignition is expressed as a percentage calculated from (weight loss on ignition i.e. weight of binder)/total weight before ignition.
The binder may:
The binder may be based on a combination of a polycarboxylic acid, for example citric acid, a sugar, for example dextrose, and a source of ammonia, for example ammonia solution. It may be based on a combination of ammonium citrate and dextrose. Where the binder is based on sugars and/or citric acid and or comprises significant —OH groups, it is particularly surprising that such levels of Weathered Interlaminar Strength can be achieved. It would have been thought that the —OH groups for example in the sugars and/or citric acid would be readily subject to hydrolysis and that the binder would consequently loose significant strength in wet or humid conditions. The properties of the present invention are also surprising as traditionally proposed polyester based binder systems are generally regarded as being susceptible to hydrolysis and so lacking in mechanical performance under wet or humid conditions.
The binder may comprise a silicon containing compound, particularly a silane; this may be an amino-substituted compound; it may be a silyl ether; it may facilitate adherence of the binder to the mineral fibres.
The binder may comprise melanoidins; it may be a thermoset binder; it may be thermally curable.
The binder may be one of those disclosed in International patent application n° PCT/US2006/028929, the contents of which is hereby incorporated by reference.
Deriving the binder from or essentially from natural and/or sustainable raw materials, that is to say for example crops, plants or products derived therefrom as opposed for example to petrochemicals, may reduce the risk of introducing potentially undesirable compounds in to the growing medium; it may also be ecologically desirable.
The mineral fibres are preferably rock wool; they may be glass wool. They are preferably crimped; they may have an average diameter between 2 and 9 microns.
The growing medium may have
A non-limiting example of the invention is described below.
An aqueous binder was prepared by mixing together:
This phenol free binder was used in the manufacture of a growing medium of rock wool on a standard rock wool manufacturing line, the binder being sprayed onto the fibres just after fiberising and the coated fibres being collected, assembled in to a mat, compressed and cured in the usual way.
The phenol free growing medium had:
Desired characteristics and results achieved are set out in Table 1:
The test is carried out on mineral fibre mats which have been subjected to the following accelerated weathering procedure: five samples to be tested are placed in a preheated autoclave and conditioned on a wire mesh shelf away from the bottom of the chamber under wet steam at 35 kN/m2 for one hour. They are then removed, dried in an oven at 100° C. for five minutes and tested immediately for interlaminar strength.
The interlaminar strength is the tensile strength of the mineral fibre material in the direction substantially perpendicular to the principle plane in which the fibres have been deposited or are orientated. It is determined in accordance with European Standard EN 1607 of November 1996 (incorporated herein by reference) with the following details and/or variations:
The Interlaminar strength is calculated as the mean average of the tensile strength of the five samples tested.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 15822754 | Nov 2017 | US |
Child | 15950399 | US | |
Parent | 15625587 | Jun 2017 | US |
Child | 15822754 | US | |
Parent | 15398210 | Jan 2017 | US |
Child | 15625587 | US | |
Parent | 15217556 | Jul 2016 | US |
Child | 15398210 | US | |
Parent | 12524469 | Nov 2009 | US |
Child | 15217556 | US |