The invention relates to razors and razor blades.
A razor blade is typically formed of a suitable substrate material such as stainless steel, and a cutting edge is formed with a wedge-shaped configuration with an ultimate tip having a radius less than about 1000 angstroms, e.g., about 200-300 angstroms. Hard coatings such as diamond, amorphous diamond, diamond-like carbon (DLC), nitrides, carbides, oxides or ceramics are often used to improve strength, corrosion resistance and shaving ability, maintaining needed strength while permitting thinner edges with lower cutting forces to be used. Polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) outer layer can be used to provide friction reduction. Interlayers of niobium or chromium containing materials can aid in improving the adhesion between the substrate, typically stainless steel, and hard carbon coatings, such as DLC. Examples of razor blade cutting edge structures and processes of manufacture are described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,295,305; 5,232,568; 4,933,058; 5,032,243; 5,497,550; 5,940,975; 5,669,144; EP 0591334; PCT 92/03330, and PCT 01/64406, which are hereby incorporated by reference.
It is known that an overlayer of chromium can be used between the hard carbon coating and the PTFE outer layer.
Generally, the invention features a razor blade including a cutting edge defined by a sharpened tip and adjacent facets. The cutting edge includes a coating of a carbon-containing material (for example, DLC) including a dopant. The dopant may be silicon or a metal such as chromium, titanium, molybdenum, niobium, or tungsten. The carbon-containing material preferably includes from 1 to 10 atomic percent, and more preferably from 1 to 5 atomic percent, of the dopant.
In one embodiment, the dopant is chromium and the razor blade further includes a coating of PTFE on the coating of carbon-containing material without any intervening layer (for example, a chromium overlayer).
In another embodiment, the dopant again is chromium and the razor blade does not include an interlayer between the cutting edge and the coating of carbon-containing material. The razor blade also may include a coating of PTFE and, optionally, an overlayer between the coating of carbon-containing material and the coating of PTFE.
The invention also features razors including razor blades having the coating of carbon-containing material including a dopant. In some embodiments, the dopant provides the razor blade with improved thermal stability and wear resistance.
The invention also features making razor blades including a carbon-containing material including a dopant. In one embodiment, a razor blade is made by adding a coating of a carbon-containing material including a dopant preferably chromium) to the cutting edge. A coating of PTFE then is added directly to the coating of carbon-containing material by contacting the coating of carbon-containing material with an aqueous dispersion of PTFE.
Other features and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the following description of embodiments and from the claims.
Referring to
Interlayer 14 is used to facilitate bonding of the hard coating layer to the substrate. Examples of suitable interlayer material are niobium and chromium-containing materials. A particular interlayer is made of niobium greater than 100 angstroms and preferably less than 500 angstroms thick. PCT 92/03330 describes use of a niobium interlayer.
Hard carbon layer 16 provides improved strength, corrosion resistance and shaving ability and can be made from carbon-containing materials such as diamond, amphorous diamond, and DLC that have been doped with chromium. The carbon-containing material is doped with chromium by including chromium in the target during application of the carbon layer during sputtering. The chromium may be chromium metal or, for example, an alloy of chromium such as CrPt. The carbon-containing material preferably includes from 0.1 to 10 atomic percent chromium, and more preferably from 0.5 to 7 atomic percent or 1 to 5 atomic percent chromium. The carbon-containing material can also incorporate hydrogen, for example, hydrogenated DLC.
A particular embodiment of a hard carbon layer is DLC doped with 2 atomic percent chromium. The layer preferably is less than 2,000 angstroms thick, and more preferably less than 1,000 angstroms think. DLC coatings and methods of depositions are described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,232,568, which is hereby incorporated by reference. The general procedure described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,232,568 is modified in that a graphite target doped with 2 atomic percent chromium was used in place of a pure graphite:target. The chromium-doped DLC layer can be applied, for example, by using sputtering using a DC bias of about −500 volts and a pressure of about 2 mtorr. As described in the “Handbook of Physical Vapor Deposition (PVD) Processing,” DLC is an amphorous carbon material that exhibits many of the desirable properties but does not have the crystalline structure of diamond.
Outer layer 18 provides reduced friction and includes PTFE and is sometimes referred to as a telomer. A preferred PTFE material is Krytox LW 1200, available from DuPont. This material is a nonflammable and stable dry lubricant that consists of small particles that yield stable dispersions. It is furnished as an aqueous dispersion of about 20% solids by weight and can be applied by dipping, spraying, or brushing, and can thereafter be air-dried or melt coated. The layer is preferably less than 5,000 angstroms and could typically be 1,500 angstroms to 4,000 angstroms, and can be as thin as 100 angstroms, provided that a continuous coating, is maintained. Provided that a continuous coating is achieved, reduced telomer coating thickness can provide improved first shave results. U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,263,256 and 5,985,459, which are hereby incorporated by reference, describe techniques which can be used to reduce the thickness of an applied telomer layer.
The polytetrafluoroethylene layer adheres well to the chromium-doped DLC layer even though the polytetrafluoroethylene was applied directly to the chromium-doped DLC layer as an aqueous dispersion. It is believed that the chromium dopant aids in the adhesion between the layers.
Razor blade 10 is made generally according to the processes described in the above referenced patents. A particular embodiment includes a 200 angstroms thick niobium interlayer 14, a 700 angstroms thick chromium-doped DLC layer 16, and a 200 angstroms thick Krytox LW1200 polytetrafluoroethylene outer coat layer 18. Blade 10 preferably has a tip radius of about 200-400 angstroms, measured by SEM before adding outer layer 18.
Referring to
Referring to
Overcoat layer 24 is discussed in U.S. Ser. No. 09/515,421, which is hereby incorporated by reference. The overcoat layer reduces the tip rounding of the hard coated edge and can facilitate bonding of the outer layer to the hard coating while still maintaining the benefits of both. Overcoat layer 24 is preferably made of chromium containing material, e.g., chromium or chromium alloys, e.g. CrPt, that are compatible with polytetrafluoroethylene. A particular overcoat layer is chromium about 100-200 angstroms thick. Blade 10 has a cutting edge that has less rounding with repeated shaves than it would have without the overcoat layer. Chromium overcoat layer 24 is deposited to a minimum of 100 angstroms and a maximum of 500 angstroms. It is deposited by sputtering using a DC bias (more negative than −50 volts and preferably more negative than −200 volts) and pressure of about 2 millitorr argon. The increased negative bias is believed to promote a compressive stress (as opposed to a tensile stress), in the chromium overcoat layer which is believed to promote improved resistance to tip rounding while maintaining good shaving performance. Blade 10 preferably has a tip radius of about 200-400 angstroms, measured by SEM after application of overcoat layer 24 and before adding outer layer 20.
Hard carbon layer 16, which is doped with chromium, adheres to substrate 12 even though the hard carbon layer is deposited directly on the substrate, without an interlayer. It is believed that the presence of the chromium dopant aids in the adhesion between the hard carbon layer and the cutting edge.
Other embodiments are within the claims. For example, the razor blade optionally may include neither an interlayer 14 nor an overcoat layer 24. In addition, titanium, niobium, tungsten, molybdenum, or silicon may be used in place of, or in addition to chromium, as the dopant in the hard carbon material.
Moreover, the razor blade may include two or more hard carbon layers. Each layer can include a different quantity of dopant and one or more layers may include no dopant. The hard carbon layers may include the same or different carbon-containing material.
For example, a hard carbon-containing layer may include a variable quantity of dopant. For example, the inner surface of the hard carbon layer may include 1 atomic percent dopant, and that quantity may increase among a gradient, with the outer surface of the hard carbon layer including 5 or 10 atomic percent of the dopant.
In addition, a hard carbon-containing layer may include two or more dopants selected, for example, from those mentioned previously.
Other embodiments are within the claims.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10379264 | Mar 2003 | US |
Child | 11375693 | Mar 2006 | US |