This invention relates to a protective garment suitable for use with a separate full-face mask or full-face respirator. The garment has a hood having a gasketed face opening for engaging and demountably sealing a respirator to the hood. Further, the protective garment can be removed while the wearer is still wearing the full-face mask or full-face respirator. As used herein, the phrases “gasketed face opening”, “face area provided with an elastomeric gasket”, “rubber-type cuff in the face area of the hood”, and “face gasket” are all understood to be used interchangeably and refer to an “elastomeric interface” for the hood of the garment as designated by NFPA 1994.
In the field of chemical and/or biological protective clothing, garments having an integral clear face shield or lens; that is, a face shield of lens that is actually built and sealed into hood of the garment, are known. The design of these garments assures the wearer that the face area of the hood will be sealed during use. However, there are many different chemical and/or biological threats and situations, including those that require special masks and/or respirators. Therefore, hooded chemical and/or biological protective clothing has been developed that includes a with a rubber-type cuff in the face area of the hood that is designed to engage with a full-face mask or full-face respirator and provide some sealing. For example, a protective garment having a circular or oval opening for engaging a facemask such as DuPont Tychem® Styles BR611 and TF611T are known. Likewise, protective garments sold under the trademarks of DuPont Tychem® style TF611, TB-Safety Case One® B, and Microchem® 4000 151 have a face elastomeric interface having a tri-oval opening for engaging a facemask.
However, it has been found that improved hood sealing is desired when using certain full-face mask or full-face respirators. Specifically, it has been found that maintaining a good seal between the rubber hood gasket, that is, elastomeric interface, and the full-face mask or full-face respirators can be difficult in the forehead area and the chin area during use. In particular, there is a concern that in some instances the rubber hood gasket can slip off the full-face mask or full-face respirator if the wearer aggressively moves the head up or down, or after repetitive up-and-down head motions. What is needed is an improved hood sealing elastomeric interface that better interacts with the contours of a full-face mask or full-face respirator.
This invention relates to a protective garment comprising a hood with a face area for covering the face of the wearer of the hood, the face area provided with an elastomeric interface, the elastomeric interface having an opening for engaging and demountably sealing a full-face mask or full-face respirator to the hood, the opening having a forehead edge, a chin edge, and first and second cheek edges, the forehead edge and the chin edge being incurvate edges with respect to the center of the opening, and the two cheek edges being excurvate edges with respect to the center of the opening; the opening further having a centerline horizontal dimension between the first and second cheek edges and a centerline vertical dimension between the forehead edge and the chin edge, the centerline horizontal dimension being longer than the centerline vertical dimension; the centerline horizontal dimension to centerline vertical dimension aspect ratio being 1.5 or greater.
The protective garment comprises a hood having a face area provided with an elastomeric interface having an opening for engaging and demountably sealing a full-face mask or full-face respirator to the hood.
The protective garment with hood preferably comprises a protective apparel fabric. The term “protective apparel fabric” is meant to include a wide variety of protective garment fabrics, barrier fabrics, laminates, and films. The term “protective apparel fabric” also includes nonwoven and/or woven fabrics and laminates of such materials with films or multilayer films. In some embodiments, the outer hood protective fabric comprises a chemically-resistant outer layer. In some preferred embodiments the protective apparel fabric, and therefore the apparel material, is a multilayer-film-and-nonwoven laminate. In some embodiments, the garment material is a nonwoven that resists penetration by liquids and/or particulates, such as a nonwoven like Tyvek® spunbonded polyethylene. Other useful protective apparel fabrics protect against a wide variety of threats and include but are not limited to those disclosed in, for example, U.S. Pat. No. 5,626,947 (Hauer et al.); U.S. Pat. No. 4,855,178 (Langley); U.S. Pat. No. 4,272,851 (Goldstein); U.S. Pat. No. 4,772,510 (McClure); U.S. Pat. No. 5,035,941 (Blackburn); U.S. Pat. No. 4,214,321 (Nuwayser); U.S. Pat. No. 4,920,575 (Bartasis); U.S. Pat. No. 5,162,148 (Boye); U.S. Pat. No. 4,833,010 (Langley).
In some embodiments, the protective garment is a hood. In some embodiments, the protective garment is a hooded coverall or a jacket with a hood. In some other embodiments, the protective garment is an encapsulating full-body chemical-resistant suit. In some preferred embodiments, the protective garment is a Level A, B, C or D protective garment. Level A garments are used in situations that require the highest level of skin, respiratory, and eye protection, and are generally totally encapsulating vapor protective garments. Level B garments are used in situations that require the highest level of respiratory protection but a lesser level of skin protection is needed. Level C garments are used in situations where atmospheric contaminants, liquid splashes, and other direct contact will not adversely affect or be absorbed by any exposed skin. Level D garments are used in situations where contamination is only a nuisance. There may be some instances where combinations of protective apparel rated for A, B, C, or D level may be used together.
The elastomeric interface is made from an elastomeric material, and as used herein, “elastomeric material” is meant to include any material that has stretch and recovery. In some preferred embodiments, such materials include artificial or natural rubber. In some embodiments useful elastomeric materials include those having the following nomenclature from ASTM Standard D1418-06 “Standard Practice for Rubber and Rubber Latices” of: EPDM (terpolymer of ethylene, propylene, and a diene with the residual unsaturated portion of the diene in the side chain); IR (synthetic isoprene); BIIR (bromo-isobutene-isoprene); BR (butadiene); CIIR (chloro-isobutene-isoprene); CR (chloroprene); CSM (chloro-sulfonyl-polyethylene); ECO (ethylene oxide (oxirane) and chloromethyl oxirane (epichlorohydrin copolymer)); EPM (copolymers of ethylene and propylene), FKM (fluoro rubber of the polymethylene type that utilizes vinylidene fluoride as a comonomer and has substituent fluoro, alkyl, perfluoroalkyl or perfluoroalkoxy groups on the polymer chain, with or without a cure site monomer (having a reactive pendant group)); FVMQ (silicone rubber having fluorine, vinyl, and methyl substituent groups on the polymer chain); HNBR (hydrogenated acrylonitrile-butadiene); IIR (isobutene-isoprene), VMQ (silicone rubber having both methyl and vinyl substituent groups on the polymer chain); NBR (acrylonitrile-butadiene); PU (polyurethane), SBR (styrene-butadiene); SEBS (poly[styrene-(block)-ethene-co-butane-(block)-styrene]), SIR (styrene-isoprene rubbers); XNBR (carboxylic-acrylonitrile-butadiene). Other useful materials have the common names of neoprene rubber, butyl rubber, tree rubber, and gum rubber. Other useful materials are known under the trademarks of Viton®, Buna S®, Hypalon®, Silastic®, Kalrez®, Chemraz®, Technoflon®, and others. In some embodiments, the elastomeric material has a useful shelf life that at least equals and preferably exceeds the shelf life of the protective apparel fabric used in the garment, which is typically at least 10 years based on current ASTM standards.
As shown in
As further shown on
By definition, both the centerline horizontal dimension 30 and the centerline vertical dimension 31 meet at the center of the opening 15. As shown in
As used herein, a full-face mask or full-face respirator is meant to include a mask worn on the head having a full-face lens or shield, or a mask worn on the head having a full-face lens or shield that additionally supports the respiration of the wearer, either from an internal or external source of air, with our without additional filtration.
Typically, a full-face mask or full-face respirator has a number of parts, including a clear, molded, full-face lens mounted in a housing that is further connected to a facepiece, and various clamps and straps for positioning the full-face mask or respirator on the head. The facepiece is the interface with the head and is generally made from tough polymeric material and has its own elastomeric material around the periphery to form a seal between the full-face mask or respirator and the front of the head of the wearer, typically the face of the wearer.
The protective garment is believed suitable for use with any full-face mask or respirator mask having a contact region around the periphery of the facepiece on which the elastomeric interface can conform to and can rest on to engage with the full-face mask or full-face respirator, when the opening in the elastomeric interface is stretched around the housing of the full-face mask or full-face respirator. Generally, the head straps of such full-face mask or full-face respirators are attached to the facepiece and not to the outer surface of the housing in which the full-face lens is mounted. Suitable commercially available full-face mask or full-face respirators that are useful with the protective garment include full-face mask models from Koken, Ltd; Scott models AV3000 and AV3000 Sure Seal; Draegar Models PPS 7000, FPS 7000, Futura, and P Nova; MSA models G1 Facepiece, Ultra Elite Facepiece, and Advantage 1000; Avon Deltair™ Compatible masks; and 3M 6800 series and FF400 series models.
By “engaging and demountably sealing a respirator to the hood”, it is meant that when a wearer of a full-face respirator dons the garment, the elastomeric interface is stretched around the face-piece and seals the hood to the respirator by surface friction between the elastomeric interface and the contact region around the periphery of the facepiece, preferably overlapping the periphery of the face-piece in the contact region by 1 to 2 centimeters, thereby “engaging” the respirator. Further, the elastomeric interface is not permanently sealed to the respirator; the hood can be removed or “demounted” from the respirator without removing the respirator.
It is believed the elastomeric interface opening having a forehead edge, a chin edge, and two cheek edges as previously described and having the centerline horizontal dimension to centerline vertical dimension aspect ratio of 1.5 or greater provides a hooded garment that provides better sealing to a full-face mask or full-face respirator, allowing the wearer a larger range of motion with the head, while maintaining an adequate seal between the garment and the full-face mask or full-face respirator.
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Entry |
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PCT International Search Report, dated Feb. 18, 2020, for international application PCT/US2019/062155, filed Nov. 19, 2019; Adam Koszewski, authorized officer. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20200179732 A1 | Jun 2020 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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62776192 | Dec 2018 | US |