The invention relates to a vacuum insulation panel with the features of the preamble of claim 1 and to an enclosure film for vacuum insulation panels with the features of the preamble of claim 11.
Vacuum insulation panels serve for the effective insulation of refrigerating and freezing equipment, the insulation of transport containers for temperature-sensitive products, for retrofitted insulation when refurbishing buildings, etc.
The main component parts of a vacuum insulation panel are a sheet-like core of open-pore material and an enclosure enclosing the core in a close-fitting, complete and gas-tight manner on all sides. This makes it possible to evacuate the space within the enclosure, and thereby bring the thermal conductivity of the vacuum insulation panel down to very low values.
There is a known vacuum insulation panel (DE 10 2010 019 074 A1) in which the enclosure has at least one gas-tight barrier layer and on the inner side of the barrier layer a sealing layer. This vacuum insulation panel has a sheet-like core of an open-pore material, a first barrier film, lying against a first main surface of the core over a large surface area, with at least one sealing layer facing the core, a second barrier film, surrounding the core on its other main surface and likewise with a sealing layer, and also a peripheral sealing seam, along which the two barrier films are sealed to one another with the aid of the sealing layers by thermal welding.
In the prior art, it is explained that compression-resistant materials in the form of powder sheets, powder fills, open-cell foams or glass-fiber materials are suitable for the core. In particular, insulating cores comprising powder sheets or loose powder are usually also enclosed in an air-permeable polyester nonwoven to reduce the formation of dust, as disclosed for example by DE 100 585 66 A1. This prevents dust from escaping during the evacuation operation in the vacuum chamber and prevents both the sealing seams and the vacuum chamber from becoming contaminated.
Core panels of microporous silica powder have a very fine pore structure and allow relatively high gas pressures without the thermal conductivity of the residual gas playing a part. Thus, in the case of these microporous materials, only a vacuum of 1 to 10 mbar is necessary to bring the thermal conductivity to 0.004 to 0.005 W/mK. Enclosures comprising special barrier films, which have only a wafer-thin, vapor-deposited coating of aluminum, ensure that the gas pressure in the core material only rises by about 1 mbar a year.
In the previously extensively explained prior art, various measures for producing vacuum insulation panels of the type in question are described. In particular, it is also explained that the sheet-like core may be not only of a one-part structure but also of a multi-part structure.
Comprehensive proposals are made for the configuration of the enclosure with the barrier films. Typically achievable gas permeabilities and water vapour permeabilities are described and proposals for the selection of materials for the barrier layers and the sealing layers are made.
All of the statements made in these respects in the prior art are also intended to apply correspondingly to the present invention, as long as they are not expressly contradictory to the statements made hereinafter. Consequently, for the relevant statements, reference is made to the full disclosure content of DE 10 2010 019 074 A1.
Vacuum insulation panels of the type in question have outstanding insulating properties. On account of the small thickness of the enclosure, however, vacuum insulation panels of the type in question are sensitive during handling. It must be ensured that the enclosure of the vacuum insulation panel is not damaged.
A detailed example of the structure of a vacuum insulation panel and the enclosure enclosing the core of such a panel is disclosed by U.S. Pat. No. 4,662,521 A. There, first a paper wrapper surrounding the core on all sides is provided. It is only on top of that that there is the enclosure enclosing the core. In the case of the example, it consists there of an inner sealing layer of polyethylene with a thickness of 50 μm, a gas-tight barrier layer of aluminum in a thickness of 9 μm and a top layer of polyester, located on the outside of the barrier layer, in a layer thickness of 12 μm. The enclosure consists of two sheet-like enclosure parts, which are placed with their sealing layers running around peripherally and are connected to one another in a gas-tight manner by sealing under pressure and temperature.
In the case of the known vacuum insulation panel on which the invention is based (DE 20 2014 002 192 U1), an additional protective measure for the barrier layer of the enclosure is taken by a layer of paper also being arranged on the outer side of the barrier layer or of an intermediate layer located on the outside of the barrier layer. The enclosure of that vacuum insulation panel has a greater stiffness than previously known enclosures at the place where the barrier layer or the intermediate layer located on the outside of the barrier layer, is combined with a layer of paper. This results in a lower sensitivity to mechanical damage and a smooth surface.
As far as the present invention is concerned, reference is made to the full disclosure of DE 20 2014 002 192 U1, in particular with regard to the structure of the enclosure and the possible variants for the form of the core.
For certain applications, for example in the construction industry or in vehicle construction, certain fire safety requirements have to be satisfied. Vacuum insulation panels according to the prior art explained above cannot meet high fire safety requirements of the relevant areas of use.
The teaching therefore addresses the problem of providing a vacuum insulation panel of the type in question that satisfies higher fire safety requirements than the previously described known vacuum insulation panels, in particular much higher fire safety requirements than there are for example in the automobile industry.
The object set out above is achieved in the case of a vacuum insulation panel with the features of the preamble of claim 1 by the features of the characterizing part of claim 1. Preferred configurations and developments are the subject of dependent claims 2 to 13.
According to the invention, a heat-resistant configuration of the enclosure of the vacuum insulation panel is not realized by a mixture of the material of an outer layer with heat-resistant and/or flame-retardant additives. Rather, an independent protective layer of a heat-resistant material is applied to the barrier layer or the intermediate layer located on the outside of the barrier layer. This is a special protective layer, which is optimized in terms of its fire preventing effect.
Apart from the heat-resistant protective layer to be additionally provided according to the invention, the variants that have specified in the previously extensively discussed prior art otherwise apply to the enclosure, so that reference can be made to the prior art as a whole.
Vacuum insulation panels of the type in question may have different forms. The standard form is a flat/panel-like design. Vacuum insulation panels are however also known in other forms, for example curved or angled or with different thicknesses in different portions. The present invention applies to all forms of vacuum insulation panels.
According to the invention, the heat-resistant protective layer is applied on the outside in at least one region of the outer surface of the vacuum insulation panel. Application of the protective layer on one side is sufficient in the case of a vacuum insulation panel that is fitted in a particular orientation. However, it is preferred that the complete enclosure is provided with the heat-resistant protective layer, so that it does not matter in which orientation the vacuum insulation panel according to the invention is fitted.
The heat-resistant protective layer may be applied to the barrier layer or the intermediate layer located on the outside of the barrier layer, by the material of the heat-resistant protective layer being applied in situ. However, because it results in better handling, it is preferred that the heat-resistant protective layer takes the form of a film that can be handled independently and is otherwise permanently connected to the enclosure by adhesive bonding.
Adhesive bonding in the context of the teaching of the present invention includes the use of additional adhesives, but also comprises the use of fusion adhesives, in particular hot-melt adhesives, or welding obtained by initial melting of the material of the heat-resistant protective layer and/or the barrier layer and/or the intermediate layer itself for the purpose of connecting them to one another. The use of a double-sided adhesive tape or an adhesive coating is also covered by this definition.
In a first particularly preferred embodiment, it is thus provided that the heat-resistant protective layer consists substantially of mica particles, in particular on the basis of phlogopite or muscovite, fixed with a binder. This is also referred to as “synthetic mica” (see for example Schröcke, Weiner “Mineralogie” [mineralogy], Walter de Gruyter, 1981, and German Wikipedia, under “Kunstglimmer” [synthetic mica]). In English-speaking countries, such mica-based materials are also referred to as “mica material” or “mica sheet” (English VVikipedia, under “mica” and also “phlogopite” and “muscovite”).
Layers substantially of mica particles fixed with a binder are already used in the prior art, for example as carrier material for heating wires or surface heating elements. In the present case they act differently, to be specific for protecting the material covered by them, for protecting the vacuum insulation panel as a whole.
In the context of optimized handling, to this extent a preferred embodiment is characterized in that the mica particles of the heat-resistant protective layer are applied and fixed on a sheet-like carrier material, in particular on a glass-fiber woven or knitted fabric or on a film of plastic, in particular a PET film. A glass-fiber woven or knitted fabric comes into consideration in particular as a carrier material for phlogopite, a PET film in particular for muscovite. In this way, the platelet-like mica particles with their binder can be handled well.
Synthetic resins of various provenance or synthetic rubber, which are known from the prior art (for example contact adhesives based on SBR styrene-butadiene rubber; for example the trade name “GLUKON”), primarily come into consideration as the binder.
In a preferred embodiment, the sheet-like carrier material is formed by the intermediate layer located on the barrier layer, in the case of a multi-ply configuration by the intermediate layer located on the outermost barrier layer. Consequently, the protective layer itself becomes an integral part of the enclosure itself.
In principle, the mica particles may be loosely laid on the sheet-like carrier material. Even in this phase of production of the vacuum insulation panel or an enclosure for a vacuum insulation panel, it may however be preferred already to pre-fix the mica particles by a binder, as previously described.
It is also recommendable in the end state that the mica particles on the sheet-like carrier material are covered and fixed by an outer protective layer, in particular of PET. The previously explained variants apply for the application of this protective layer.
In spite of the mica particles being used in the direct vicinity of a barrier layer, there are no problems with the stability of the vacuum insulation panels according to the invention, which is an entirely surprising result of this new development.
For the heat-resistant protective layer substantially of mica particles fixed with a binder, a thickness of the order of magnitude of 20 μm to 300 μm, preferably 50 μm to 150 μm, is recommendable. That is sufficient for the typical fire safety regulations of the present kind.
In an alternative, it may also be provided that the heat-resistant protective layer consists substantially of a material that expands when exposed to heat. A heat-insulating protective layer of this kind is also known from the prior art as a fireproof sheet (thermoplastic polyolefins, filled with inorganic flame retardant, for example alkali silicate, for example trade name “Cello HL Firestop R”).
In the case of the previously explained exemplary embodiment, greater thicknesses are required to achieve a corresponding fireproof effect, to be specific a thickness of about 0.5 mm to 5 mm, preferably of 2 mm to 3 mm.
The subject matter of the invention is also an enclosure film for vacuum insulation panels as such with the previously described properties, for which reference may be made to claims 14 to 17.
The invention is explained in more detail below on the basis of a drawing that merely represents exemplary embodiments. In the course of the explanation of the exemplary embodiments, particularly preferred variants and modifications of the teaching of the invention are also described.
In the figures, the dimensions are not to scale, but greatly exaggerated, to allow the structure to be explained well.
The first exemplary embodiment, represented in
As has already been explained in relation to the prior art, the sealing layer 5 either abuts on the core 1 or between the sealing layer 5 and the core there is also a further intermediate layer, preferably of a plastics woven or knitted fabric or of paper, as has been mentioned above in relation to the prior art.
As far as the barrier layer 3 is concerned, reference is made to DE 20 2014 002 192 U1, which gives many examples of various structures of the barrier layer 3, which can also be used within the scope of the teaching of the invention. The same applies correspondingly to the structure described there of the enclosure 2 as a whole and also to the composition of the core 1, all of which can also be used within the scope of the teaching of the present invention.
In
In the case of the exemplary embodiment from
It can be verified well from
In the case of the exemplary embodiments of
In principle, it would be conceivable that the heat-insulating protective layer 6 of mica particles is produced for example by the mica particles being scattered evenly onto the surface of the enclosure 1 provided with adhesive binder. That would be an application of the protective layer 6 as it were in situ.
The previously mentioned variant uses the intermediate layer 4 located on the barrier layer 3 or, in the case of a multi-ply configuration, the intermediate layer 4 located on the outermost barrier layer 3 as a sheet-like carrier material for the mica particles evenly distributed on it. These may be pre-fixed on the sheet-like carrier material as previously explained.
According to the preferred teaching, the mica particles located on the sheet-like carrier material are covered and fixed by an outer top layer 6′, this outer top layer 6′ preferably consisting of PET.
The variant already described in the general part of the description, with a sheet that can be independently handled, is also expedient. To this extent, it is provided with preference in the exemplary embodiments of
As far as the preferred thickness of the protective layer 6 in the exemplary embodiments of
The exemplary embodiment represented in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
20 2016 006 810.6 | Nov 2016 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2017/025275 | 9/29/2017 | WO | 00 |