This application is an application under 35 U.S.C. Section 371 of International Application No. PCT/FR01/04217 filed on Dec. 27, 2001.
The field of the invention is that of the water repellency of porous building materials (especially mineral or [ligno]cellulosic materials), which are thus moisture-sensitive. In general, the water repellency is achieved on the building material components once they have been assembled to form parts of buildings. More specifically, the water-repellency treatments that are of interest in the context of the invention are those performed using liquid silicone compositions, comprising silicic compounds of the organosilane or polyorganosiloxane type. The porous building materials under consideration may be, for example, stones based on calcium carbonate and/or silica and/or aluminosilicates, concretes, mortars, terracottas (bricks, tiles, etc.), woods, etc.
In particular, the invention relates to water-repellant liquid silicone compositions intended for impregnating porous building materials, for example mineral, or (ligno)cellulosic materials.
More specifically, a subject of the invention is the use of a particular class of functionalized polyorganosiloxanes as main active material in these water-repellant liquid silicone compositions.
A process for making porous building materials, preferably mineral or (ligno)cellulosic materials, water-repellant with the aid of the above said liquid silicone composition, and a process for preparing this composition are also targeted by the invention.
It is known that organosilanes (especially alkoxylated, hydroxylated or aminated organosilanes) and, to a lesser extent, polyorganosiloxanes (POS) have been used for many years to impregnate porous building materials (for example mineral or (ligno)cellulosic materials) so as to protect them against water penetration, the harmful effects of which with respect to constructions are numerous: bursts caused by frost, appearance of moss and lichen, loss of heat insulation, etc.
Water-repellant liquid silicone compositions exist either in the form of solutions in organic solvents such as white spirit or heptane, or in the form of aqueous emulsions that have appeared more recently on the market. Conventionally, after impregnation, the organic solvent phase or the aqueous phase of these compositions evaporates and the silicone active material remains in the bulk and at the periphery of the porous building material, so as to form a barrier to moisture.
For reasons of cost, hygiene, safety and environmental protection, it is sought to replace solvent-phase water-repellant liquid silicone compositions with aqueous silicone emulsions. However, a certain number of major difficulties have arisen in the development of these aqueous silicone water-repellant systems. In this regard, the major problem is that of ensuring the stability on storage of the aqueous silicone emulsion, while at the same time maintaining a water-repellency efficiency for the constituents of the silicic active material that is at least as good as that obtained with the solvent-phase systems. This efficacy is especially dependent on the reactivity of the silicic active material toward the porous support to be made water-repellent. Specifically, it is common to find that a gain in reactivity is obtained only at the expense of the stability of the emulsion.
In order for water repellency using a liquid silicone composition to be successful, it is necessary:
Two other major difficulties encountered in the formulation of water-repellent aqueous silicone systems are the following:
It is thus a matter of finding a compromise between stability and reactivity.
To satisfy these technical specifications, it has been proposed in the prior art to use liquid silicone compositions comprising alkoxysilanes and/or hydroxysilanes and/or aminosilanes, which have the advantage of having a molecular mass that is low enough to allow good penetration into porous building materials, and which are capable of condensing in situ to produce crosslinked silicone resins.
Aqueous emulsions of alkoxysilanes and/or hydroxysilanes and/or aminosilanes pose stability problems that were solved hitherto by using high concentrations of emulsifiers, these emulsifiers having a harmful effect on the water repellency.
Documents EP-A-0 442 098, EP-A-0 358 652 and U.S. Pat. No. 4,620,878 disclose such water-repellent aqueous systems formed by aqueous silicone emulsions with a high concentration of emulsifiers.
Document U.S. Pat. No. 5,073,195 describes water-repellent liquid silicone compositions comprising water-insoluble alkyltrialkoxysilanes and water-soluble aminoalkylalkoxysilanes. The drawback of these compositions is that they produce alkoxy and alcohol functions during hydrolysis, which are harmful to the water repellency.
European patent application EP-A-0 675 128 describes water-repellent liquid silicone compositions in the form of aqueous emulsions based on water-soluble organosilanes (aminoalkylalkoxysilanes) and small amounts of water-insoluble organosilanes (methyltrimethoxysilane or vinyltrimethoxysilane). It is clear that the presence of large amounts of hydrophilic silanes does not lend itself toward improving the water repellency.
EP-A-0 716 127 and EP-A-0 716 128 disclose alcohol-free aqueous emulsions for water repellency, based on water-soluble aminosilanes and alkylsilanes, and water-insoluble vinylsilanes or ureidosilanes. The water-repellent silicic material according to these compositions offers relatively unsatisfactory adhesion properties on porous building materials.
To overcome the deficiencies of functionalized silanes in water-repellent liquid silicone compositions, it has been proposed to use water-repellent aqueous emulsions containing, as silicone active materials, resins comprising units M, T and/or Q, it being recalled that in the terminology of silicone chemistry, the siloxane units M, D, T and Q are defined as follows:
Mixed aqueous systems based on aminosilanes and/or alkoxysilanes and alkoxylated DT(OR) resins and/or MQ resins are also known.
All these known aqueous systems can be improved upon.
Moreover, U.S. Pat. No. 5,885,341 describes solvent-free aqueous formulations containing POSs:
Water-repellent liquid silicone compositions of this type suffer from unacceptable drawbacks relating to the complexity of the process for preparing the functionalized POS, since this preparation specifically necessitates the use of two, three or even four different functionalized silanes with relatively labor-intensive heating and distillation steps.
In addition, the results obtained in terms of stability on storage of the aqueous emulsion and in terms of water repellency are not optimal.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,876,152 describes water-repellent silicone compositions for masonry work, comprising the product of reaction of a linear polyorganosiloxane bearing SiH units with an alkenylated (C7–C30) succinic anhydride. This is a platinum-catalyzed hydrosilylation reaction which leads to a linear POS consisting of dimethylsiloxy units (D) and siloxy units (D′) substituted with a methyl and a succinic anhydride function, which are linked to the silicon via a C7–C30 coupling unit. This linear POS bears trimethylsiloxy units (M) at the end of the chain. This POS functionalized with succinic anhydride is dissolved in mineral spirits or is emulsified in an aqueous phase. The silicone formulation thus obtained is applied to masonry substrates, for example cement. There is no mention of crosslinking the anhydride-functionalized POS on the support to be made water-repellent. The water-repellency performance quality remains to be assessed, as does the quality of the attachment to the support. There is every reason to think that this silicone formulation is not entirely satisfactory in this respect.
Patent application FR-A-2 784 115 concerns a paint containing:
The epoxy-functionalized POS emulsion is described in said document as being a water-repellent additive for producing a paint binder. It is clear that the epoxy-functionalized POS according to said document is not the predominant water-repellent constituent of the paint disclosed. It is merely an additive present in very small proportions in the active material. Thus, in the examples D, the epoxy-functionalized POS represents only 0.96% by dry weight of the active material essentially consisting of the styrene/acrylic latex A. Moreover, FR-A-2 784 115 does not make allusion to any ability of the epoxy-functionalized POS B to crosslink and to react by itself with the building substrate. In point of fact, FR-A-2 784 115 discloses nothing other than a paint comprising epoxy-functionalized POS as water-repellent additive and binder.
Finally, patent U.S. Pat. No. 5,196,054 describes a preparation for the water-repellent impregnation of mineral and porous building materials. This preparation is in the form of aqueous emulsions comprising, as silicone active material:
In accordance with example 3, the water-repellent aqueous emulsion obtained comprises a POS bearing from 30 to 80 units D, the ends of which are functionalized with a 3-(glycidyloxypropyl)trialkoxysilane residue [1.2 silane/chain]. The emulsifier used is a mixture of ethoxylated fatty alcohols and of alkyl arylsulfonate. The silicone active material also comprises n-propyltriethoxysilane. The emulsion comprises (in parts by weight=pw):
The presence of alkyltrialkoxysilane in the silicone active material of this water-repellent liquid composition is a factor with regard to instability and limitation of the water-repellency performance qualities. The presence of this alkyltrialkoxysilane is necessary according to this prior reference in order to bring about a crosslinking reaction and a reaction of the silicone active material with the substrate to be made water-repellent. In brief, this aqueous emulsion combining alkoxysilanes and α,ω-aminated or epoxidized POSs can be improved upon.
One of the essential objectives of the present invention is, precisely, to improve upon this prior art by remedying the deficiencies of the other prior technical approaches discussed above.
Another essential objective of the invention is to provide a water-repellent liquid silicone composition that offers the best possible technical compromise as regards the cost, the ease of use, the stability on storage and the attachment to the materials to be made water-repellent, and also in terms of the intensity and duration of the water-repellency efficacy.
Another essential objective of the invention is to provide a water-repellent liquid silicone composition in the form of a stable aqueous emulsion that is very reactive on the support to be impregnated.
Another essential objective of the invention is to provide a water-repellent liquid composition that is stable on storage and that is capable of reacting/crosslinking with the building material to be made water-repellent, as soon as said composition is placed in contact with said material.
Another essential objective of the invention is to provide a water-repellent liquid silicone composition that is free of silanes, and especially of silanes bearing condensable units of the alkoxy and/or hydroxyl type.
Another essential objective of the invention is to propose the use of known functionalized silicone compounds in a novel functionality, i.e. the water repellency of porous building materials [mineral and/or (ligno)cellulosic materials].
Another essential objective of the invention is to provide a process for making porous building materials [mineral and/or (ligno)cellulosic materials] water-repellent, which is easy to perform, safe and efficient.
Another essential objective of the invention is to provide a process for preparing a water-repellent silicone composition of the type mentioned in the abovementioned objectives.
These objectives, among others, are achieved by the invention, which relates firstly to the use of at least one linear or cyclic polyorganosiloxane (POS) bearing units:
this POS preferably being linear, of formula (I):
in which:
According to one variant, b is other than 0 in formula (I) of the POS used in the context of the use according to the invention. In this variant, the POS (I) necessarily comprises at least one function Y in the chain.
It is thus seen that the present invention proceeds from the selection of a particular class of POSs functionalized with epoxy units, these selected POSs moreover having a limited number of siloxane units.
After long and laborious research, the inventors have thus demonstrated, entirely surprisingly and unexpectedly, that the functionalized silicones belonging to the selected class according to the invention react and crosslink on contact with building materials, in particular porous building materials such as:
In accordance with the use according to the invention, the water-repellent aqueous emulsions are relatively unreactive and thus stable on storage (several months) since they have a reduced tendency to polycondensate in the droplets of silicone phase. On the other hand, these systems react on contact with “reactive” supports, which are often alkaline, such as mortar, concrete or terracotta.
For the purposes of the present invention, the term “active material” advantageously denotes everything that constitutes the liquid silicone composition with the exclusion of the liquid vehicle (support), which may be the solvent in the case where the composition is a solution, or alternatively the continuous phase (for example aqueous) in the case where the composition is an emulsion or a dispersion. The “active material” corresponds to all of the constituents of the composition that are active in terms of water repellency. This includes, inter alia, silicones.
In accordance with the use according to the invention, it is preferable to use linear functionalized POSs, bearing in mind that cyclic functionalized POSs Y (for example POSs of D4 type) may be suitable.
The selection according to the invention makes it possible to achieve a compromise between, on the one hand, the crosslinking density and the density of creation of bonds with the porous building material, and, on the other hand, the optimization of the final hydrophobicity of the silicone active material.
For the purposes of the invention, one of the criteria for evaluating the water-repellency performance qualities is given by the measurement of the drop angle. It is considered that the surface of a building material is sufficiently hydrophobic once this drop angle is greater than or equal to 90°.
Another, stricter criterion is that of the water uptake of a water-repellent-treated material immersed into an aqueous medium. Thus, the water-repellency performance qualities will be excellent if the sample is capable of remaining in water for 28 days without any uptake taking place.
In point of fact, stone or other porous building materials can make it possible to initiate the crosslinking of the epoxidized POSs according to the invention, this crosslinking being necessary for the water repellency.
Identical or different POSs may be used within the same water-repellent liquid silicone composition.
The functional units Y may be present in the polyorganosiloxane chain on the units D and/or on a: least one of the two ends of the chain.
In the preferred embodiment of the invention, the POS(s) (I) is(are,) functionalized with at least one radical Y bearing at least one epoxy unit and the radicals R2 represent, independently:
Again according to a preferred embodiment of the invention, the end radicals R1 correspond to the same definition as the preferred definition given above for R2.
It is also desirable for the functional units Y to correspond independently to an epoxy-functional group, linked to the silicon of the POS via a divalent radical containing from 2 to 20 carbon atoms that may contain at least one hetero atom, preferably oxygen.
Even more preferably, Y is selected from the following radicals:
According to one variant, the radicals R1, R2, R3 and Y may be substituted especially with halogens.
In practice, the radicals R3, provided that they are different than Y, correspond independently to the same definition as that given above for R2 and R1.
In this preferred embodiment, the epoxidized functions Y are preferably in the chain and optionally on at least one of the end Si atoms of formula (I).
According to one variant, some of the functional radicals Y may be radicals Y′ bearing at least one carboxylic acid and/or carboxylic acid salt and/or carboxylic anhydride unit.
These units Y′ may be, for example:
(CH2)xCOOH
(CH2)y (succinic acid or anhydride)
(CH2)y (malic acid or anhydride)
with x=2 to 30 and y=0 to 30.
Advantageously, the functions Y′ are in the chain and/or at the end of the chain of the POS (I), for example at the two ends only.
The linear POSs (I) may be oils with a dynamic viscosity at 25° C. of about from 10 to 100 000 mPa.s, generally of about from 50 to 5 000 mPa.s and even more preferably from 100 to 600 mPa.s, or gums with a molecular mass of about 1×106 g.
When they are cyclic POSs, the latter consist of units D advantageously bearing a functional radical Y and a radical R3 as defined above.
These cyclic polyorganosiloxanes may have a viscosity of about from 1 to 5 000 mPa.s at 25° C.
The dynamic viscosity at 25° C. of all the silicones under consideration in the present specification may be measured using a Brookfield viscometer, according to AFNOR standard NFT 76 102 of February 1972.
It is entirely within the capacity of a person skilled in the art of silicone chemistry to obtain such functionalized POSs.
According to one advantageous arrangement of the invention, in the context of the use, the water-repellent liquid silicone composition is an aqueous emulsion containing:
The surfactant(s) used is(are) nonionic, ionic or zwitterionic surfactants.
In practice, it may be, for example, a nonionic surfactant of the ethoxylated fatty alcohol type containing 13 carbon atoms and 8 ethoxy units.
In quantitative terms, it may be advantageous to point out that the weight proportions of the constituents of the water-repellent liquid silicone composition are such as to give, per 100 parts by weight (pw) of water:
The present invention is not exclusive of other liquid forms of water-repellent silicone compositions, than aqueous emulsions. Thus, said water-repellent liquid silicone composition may be a solution of the POS(s) (I) in an organic solvent.
Examples of organic solvents that may be mentioned include white spirit and heptane.
According to one advantageous mode of the invention, the porous building material [preferably a mineral or (ligno)cellulosic material] is selected from the group comprising:
The use according to the invention is also advantageous in that the active material of the water-repellent liquid silicone composition is free of functionalized or non-functionalized silane(s).
Besides the main constituents described above, the water-repellent liquid silicone composition in accordance with the use according to the invention may also comprise additives chosen from the group comprising:
Examples of suitable Lewis acids that may be mentioned include aluminum, iron, calcium, nickel, etc. sulfates.
Examples of suitable aminoalkylsilanes that may be mentioned include hydroxylated aminosilanes such as aminopropyltrihydroxysilane.
The aminated additives may act as stabilizers for the water-repellent liquid silicone composition, before crosslinking and/or polymerization. These stabilizers bearing amine functions may be, for example, hindered amines such as the amines of HALS type. PCT patent application WO-98/07798 discloses amines that may be used as stabilizers in the water-repellent liquid silicone composition, in accordance with the use according to the invention.
The concentrations of all these additives are, for example, from about 0.1 to 10 parts by dry weight. Among these additives that may be distinguished are the additives that are combined with the aqueous phase in the case of an emulsion, i.e. silicas and salts, and additives that are compatible with the oily silicone phase (POS I), i.e. silicone resins containing MQ and/or T and optionally D units.
Moreover, conventionally, antifoam adjuvants, biocides, rheology modifiers, coalescers, dispersants, neutralizers and/or thickeners may also be used.
The concentrations of such adjuvants are known to those skilled in the art.
Preferably, the composition according to the invention is free of organic copolymer(s). In practice, and more specifically, it is the active material of the composition that does not comprise any organic copolymer(s).
According to another of its aspects, the present invention relates to a process for making a porous building material water-repellent, this process consisting in impregnating said material with a liquid composition comprising at least one polyorganosiloxane (POS),
characterized in that:
As regards the preparation of the water-repellent liquid silicone compositions, the invention also proposes the use of at least one linear or cyclic POS bearing units
this POS preferably being linear, of formula (I):
in which:
This water-repellent liquid silicone composition is advantageously an aqueous emulsion comprising at least one POS (I), at least one surfactant and water.
Finally, the invention relates to a process for preparing a water-repellent liquid silicone composition for a porous mineral building material, characterized in that it consists essentially:
The invention will be understood more clearly with the aid of the examples that follow, which describe the preparation of water-repellent liquid silicone compositions in the form of aqueous emulsions and in the form of organic solutions, the application of said compositions to building materials consisting of stones and concrete and the evaluation of the water-repellent properties obtained by implementing the use according to the invention.
1.1/ The POSs Used in this Example are Epoxidized POSs of Formula (I.1):
2.1/ The POS(II) and POS(IV) are Used in this Example.
The surfactant used is an ethoxylated (8 ethoxy units) fatty alcohol (chain of 13 carbons) sold under the name ROX by the company Rhodia Chimie.
2.2/ Procedure:
3.1/ Emulsion E Contains:
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
00 17309 | Dec 2000 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/FR01/04217 | 12/27/2001 | WO | 00 | 1/21/2004 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO02/053515 | 7/11/2002 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4810748 | Spells | Mar 1989 | A |
4876152 | Kang | Oct 1989 | A |
5080824 | Bindl et al. | Jan 1992 | A |
6120849 | Smith et al. | Sep 2000 | A |
6590026 | Dorget et al. | Jul 2003 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
2 784 115 | Apr 2000 | FR |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20040132952 A1 | Jul 2004 | US |