This invention refers to a safety glass and its obtainment procedure. Although it may have diverse application fields, its development arises from the need for safety glasses of high resistance in order to increase the safety of vehicles' occupants.
The current status of the technique involves diverse combinations of materials and procedures to obtain armored glasses. Common materials used are:
a) Polyvinyl butyral films (herein after referred to as “PVB”). Example: PVB films manufactured by Kuraray Arg.
b) PolyEthylene Terephthalate films (hereinafter referred to as “PET”), generally Crystallizable PolyEthylene Terephthalate because of its high transparency (hereinafter referred to as “C-PET”). Example: PET films manufactured by Kuraray Arg.
c) PolyUrethane films (hereinafter referred to as “PU”). Example: PU films manufactured by Dayplas S.A.
d) Safety films with adhesive, such as those manufactured by Llumar, 3M, Madico, Johnson & Johnson, Sunguard, etc.
e) Safety films without adhesive, such as those also manufactured by Llumar, 3M, Sunguard, etc. or safety films with adhesive from which the adhesive is removed.
f) Obviously, special glasses or original glasses are used for this application.
Each of these materials have diverse densities and one or more layers may be used. The point is that the key to obtain positive and practical results for each need is based on the combination of films and especially on the procedure by which these films are combined with glasses. This is where this invention stands out and where one of the pillars which provide the basis for this patent application lies.
Furthermore, there are operating aspects such as a higher efficiency and flexibility of procedures, together with the impact of such procedures on the environment, which could not be solved to date.
In accordance with what has been analysed above, some antecedents for informational purposes follow:
a) European Patent No. EP1322467B1 “INTRUSION RESISTANT GLASS LAMINATE” granted on Nov. 28, 2007. It consists of a laminated glass composed of: a first PVB film+a first PET film+a second PET film+a second PVB film, all of these inserted between two glasses. These films are placed between two glasses as usual.
Aside from the details of the procedure, in this case two PET films are placed between PVB films, all of which is placed between two glasses, that is to say, two glasses are needed.
b) U.S. Pat. No. 5,569,537 “Laminated glass with polyurethane resin layer and silane coupling agent layer” granted on Oct. 29, 1996. This patent protects laminated glass with polyurethane films which requires an adhesive agent. It is based on the chemical aspects of the silane agent.
c) U.S. Pat. No. 5,445,890 “Bullet resistant glass/glass, glass/plastic, and plastic/plastic laminate composites” granted on Aug. 29, 1995. This patent protects a composite of laminated glass which comprises at least 2 glasses bonded by a layer of adhesive polyester. It may or may not include a “plastic” film between the two glasses, bonded by adhesive polyester.
d) U.S. Pat. No. 4,241,140 “Laminated safety glass with polyurethane film”, granted on Dec. 23, 1980. It specifically protects polyurethane film used for safety glasses.
e) U.S. Pat. No. 4,075,386 “Security film for shatterproofing windows” granted on Feb. 21, 1978. This patent refers to a method of applying films with adhesive and watery detergent. It comprises the basic concept of safety films.
f) PCT Patent Application WO2003006240 A1 “Compositor interlayer for laminated glass” published on Jan. 23, 2013. This application claims the joint use of PU and PVB without considering a key aspect of the procedure modified by this application.
i) U.S. Pat. No. 4,594,290 “Impact resistant laminate” granted on Jun. 10, 1986. It refers to a laminate with high ballistic resistance. It uses glass, PU, PMMA and PC.
Although we have seen great progress in safety glasses during the last decades, a correct combination of films without adhesive which only requires a single glass, offering exceptional characteristics regarding resistance to impact, high transparency and low impact on the environment, could not be achieved yet. These are the key aspects of this invention.
One of the purposes of this invention is to obtain a safety glass which offers high resistance to impacts using a single glass.
Another purpose of this invention is to manufacture a safety glass reinforced on its interior as well as its exterior faces.
Another purpose of this invention is to create an innovative method for the obtainment of a reinforced safety glass which reduces substantially the impact on the environment.
Another purpose of this invention is to obtain a safety glass which, once broken, avoids the risk of cuts, lacerations or injuries of any kind.
Additionally, another purpose of this invention is to obtain a safety glass which offers a higher sound isolation inside vehicles.
Finally, another purpose of this invention is to obtain a safety glass which reduces the passage of UV rays to the inside of vehicles, reducing, as a result, the temperature inside them.
The present invention comprising safety glass 1 and the procedure for its obtainment will now be described using
High resistance safety glasses are used to provide higher safety inside the room surrounded at least partially by said glass. This invention has diverse application fields such as apertures for homes, surveillance booths and banks. However, its main application are vehicles of all kinds because it uses their original glasses, therefore eliminating the need for specific glasses. This application stands out from others which require the manufacturing of a new template glass during the manufacturing of the safety glass.
In order to obtain the safety glass of this present invention, films of diverse reinforcing materials are used. Their special features offer higher resistance to the glass. During the manufacturing process, pressure and temperature are applied using autoclave in order to bond the reinforcing films to the original glass and between each other.
From the point of view of its construction, the safety glass is basically composed of the original glass to be reinforced (with adhesive in its inner face), at least one PVB film and at least one C-PET film, in this same order.
An exemplary embodiment of this present invention, comprises at least one PVB film with a thickness of between 0.18 mm and 2 mm and a C-PET film with a thickness of between 0.18 mm and 2 mm.
In addition to the PVB and C-PET films, a safety film without adhesive may be applied on the exterior face of the original glass to be reinforced. Another alternative is to apply a safety film with adhesive, that is to say, a film including adhesive.
The thickness of the safety film (either with or without adhesive) is approximately between 40 μm and 400 μm.
In another exemplary embodiment of the safety glass the exterior face of it is reinforced once the interior face is reinforced. In other words, at least one PVB film and one C-PET film are applied, in this same order, to the exterior face of the glass, without adhesives.
Having described the exemplary embodiments of this invention, the steps for the obtainment of the safety glass are as follows.
For the first exemplary embodiment:
A second exemplary realization, comprises the same steps as the example above, with the addition of step z). That is to say, the complete procedure comprises the following steps:
Finally, a third procedure, which is used for an exemplary realization which comprises the use of PVB and C-PET films in both the interior and exterior faces of the tempered glass, is as follows:
The revolutionary aspect of this last “sandwich-type” procedure, where the laminated glass is bonded to both polymer films, is that it eliminates the risk of cuts, lacerations, or injuries of any kind in the event that the tempered glass is damaged or broken. This is because all fragments of the laminated glass would stay adhered to either the internal or external polymer layers, or both.
As those of skill in this field would understand, this aspect arises from the procedure itself. The fact that the purpose of this description is to enable an ordinary person to put the invention into practice, should not leave aside the broadness of this application. That is to say, minor modifications, for instance in the number of films used (materials), their thickness, the temperatures and/or pressures of the autoclave during the diverse stages of the procedure to obtain the safety glass, etc., are taken into consideration in the present invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20150102890 | Sep 2015 | AR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US2016/051140 | 9/9/2016 | WO | 00 |