Claims
- 1. A fiber manufacture of individual, organic polymer fibers, at least some of the fibers being branched, with each individual fibers in said manufacture being non-isotropic, of non-uniform morphology and comprising an organic fluorine-containing polymer and having very finely-divided, non-organic, refractory particulates bound firmly with said polymer at least substantially within the surface thereof, so as to be resistant to physical separation from the fiber without fiber destruction, said non-organic particulates being bound during mechanically-induced fiber formation, with said fiber formation being performed at elevated temperature directly on precursor particles of organic polymer.
- 2. The fiber manufacture of claim 1, wherein said non-organic particulates are bound firmly in said organic polymer fibers in a continuum of binding arrangements ranging from at least substantial particle encapsulation in said polymer fiber to particles embedded into the surface of said polymer fibers.
- 3. The fiber manufacture of claim 1, wherein said non-organic particulates bound firmly within the surface of said polymer fibers comprise particles impacted into said fibers at their surface.
- 4. The fiber manufacture of claim 1, wherein said precursor particles for the polymer fibers are selected from the group consisting of powders, granules, polymer aggregates and agglomerates, chunky-bodied particulates, fragments, chunky fibers and mixtures thereof.
- 5. The fiber manufacture of claim 1, wherein said organic polymer fibers have diameters within the range of from about 1 micron to about 1,000 microns.
- 6. The fiber manufacture of claim 1, wherein said non-organic particulates have a major weight portion more finely-divided than about 150 microns.
- 7. The fiber manufacture of claim 6, wherein only a very minor portion of said non-organic particulates become encapsulated in said organic polymer fibers by impacting into said fibers at their surface.
- 8. The fiber manufacture of claim 1, wherein said organic polymer fibers are prepared from untreated organic polymer.
- 9. The fiber manufacture of claim 1, wherein said non-organic particulates comprise very finely-divided particles selected from the group consisting of metal oxides, metal carbides, metal borides, metal silicides, metal sulfides, metal nitrides, silicates, aluminates, ceramics, cermets, carbon, metals, alloys or mixtures thereof.
- 10. The fiber manufacture of claim 9, wherein said non-organic particulates are selected from valve metal oxides and their mixtures.
- 11. The fiber manufacture of claim 1, wherein the length of the main trunk of branched fibers are within the range of from 1 micron to about 30,000 microns and the length/diameter ratio for said fibers is greater than 2/1.
- 12. The fiber manufacture of claim 1, wherein there is in admixture with said composite fibers a fiber-inducing substrate.
- 13. The fiber manufacture of claim 12, wherein the fiber-inducing substrate is a solid, pulverulent, inert material.
- 14. The fiber manufacture of claim 13, wherein the fiber-inducing substrate is selected from the group consisting of NaCl, CaZrO.sub.3, alumina, limestone, sand, graphite, or mixtures thereof.
- 15. The fiber manufacture of claim 1, wherein said fibers are an off-white, free-flowing and fluffy dry particulate of soft texture comprised of very finely-divided zirconia bound firmly within the surface of said fluorine-containing polymer.
- 16. The fiber manufacture of claim 1, wherein said fibers are a free flowing and dry particulate comprised of titania bound firmly within the surface of said fluorine-containing polymer.
- 17. The fiber manufacture of claim 1, wherein said fibers comprise free-flowing, branched fibers of alumina bound firmly within the surface of said fluorine-containing polymer.
- 18. The fiber manufacture of claim 1, wherein said individual, fibers are of different lengths.
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION
This is a continuation of application Ser. No. 093,469, filed Sept. 8, 1987, now abandoned, which in turn is a continuation of application Ser. No. 768,941, filed Aug. 27, 1985, now abandoned, which in turn is a continuation-in-part of application Ser. No. 651,248, filed Sept. 17, 1984, now abandoned.
US Referenced Citations (4)
Continuations (2)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
| Parent |
93469 |
Sep 1987 |
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| Parent |
768941 |
Aug 1985 |
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Continuation in Parts (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
| Parent |
651248 |
Sep 1984 |
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