Wood-like coating method for substrate
11396172 · 2022-07-26
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B05D7/576
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B33/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B05D7/546
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B3/30
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B05D5/06
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B33/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B05D7/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B3/30
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A protective coating method of a material such as aromatic polyurethane substrates is effected through a process that promotes coating adhesion to the substrate while providing a wood-like aesthetic. Closed cells on the surface of the aromatic polyurethane are opened via sanding techniques to promote adhesion. Once a sufficient surface is achieved, the substrate is coated using spray techniques to protect the aromatic polyurethane from ultra-violet light exposure. The wood-like appearance is achieved through embossing a wood-grain on the deformable surface and subsequently filling the grain with a contrasting agent to highlight its appearance through a reverse-roll-coating technique. Abrasion properties are achieved through a final clear top coat that allows both the contrast agent and the top coat to fully cure.
Claims
1. A method for coating a substrate, the method comprising: pressure embossing a pattern into the substrate to form a patterned substrate having an embossed pattern; coating the patterned substrate with a base coating to form a coated substrate; applying an under-indexed contrasting agent to the embossed pattern of the coated substrate and removing excess under-indexed contrasting agent to form a contrasting agent coated substrate with a portion of the under-indexed contrasting agent remaining in the embossed pattern, the under-indexed contrasting agent comprising a plural component paint that does not contain a catalyst, a cross-linker, or a hardening agent; and coating the contrasting agent coated substrate with an over-indexed coating, the over-indexed coating comprising a plural component paint comprising an excess of a catalyst, a cross-linker, or a hardening agent.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein the substrate is mechanically embossed after coating the patterned substrate with the base coating.
3. The method of claim 1, wherein the substrate comprises an aromatic polyurethane.
4. The method of claim 3, further comprising a step of sanding the substrate prior to coating the patterned substrate with the base coating to create porosity to promote mechanical adhesion.
5. The method of claim 1, wherein the substrate is mechanically embossed prior to coating the patterned substrate with the base coating.
6. The method of claim 1 wherein the excess under-indexed contrasting agent is removed by reverse roll-coating.
7. The method of claim 1, wherein the embossed pattern comprises a wood grain pattern.
8. The method of claim 1, wherein the over-indexed coating comprises an abrasion-resistant clear coating.
9. The method of claim 1, wherein the under-indexed contrasting agent is partially dried before coating the contrasting agent coated substrate with the over-indexed coating.
10. The method of claim 1, wherein the base coating comprises a fully pigmented, plural component coating.
11. The method of claim 1, wherein the base coating comprises a thermal cure two-component polyurethane based system.
12. A method for coating a substrate comprising an aromatic polyurethane, the method comprising: pressure embossing a pattern into the substrate comprising the aromatic polyurethane to form a patterned substrate having an embossed pattern; coating the patterned substrate with a base coating comprising a thermal cure two-component polyurethane based system to form a coated substrate; applying an under-indexed contrasting agent to the embossed pattern of the coated substrate and removing excess under-indexed contrasting agent to form a contrasting agent coated substrate with a portion of the under-indexed contrasting agent remaining in the embossed pattern, the under-indexed contrasting agent comprising a plural component paint that does not contain a catalyst, a cross-linker, or a hardening agent; and coating the contrasting agent coated substrate with an over-indexed coating, the over-indexed coating comprising a plural component paint comprising an excess of a catalyst, a cross-linker, or a hardening agent.
13. The method of claim 12, wherein the excess under-indexed contrasting agent is removed by reverse roll-coating.
14. The method of claim 13, wherein the under-indexed contrasting agent is partially dried before coating the contrasting agent coated substrate with the over-indexed coating.
15. The method of claim 12, wherein the over-indexed coating comprises an abrasion-resistant clear coating.
16. The method of claim 12, wherein the embossed pattern comprises a wood grain pattern.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
(42) The following definitions describe some of the technical terms used throughout the description, but are not intended to be limiting.
(43) Base coat—a base coat on the substrate; in a preferred embodiment, a fully hiding, fully pigmented, plural component coating.
(44) Contrast agent—a coating contrasting with the base coat on the substrate; in a preferred embodiment, a translucent un-catalyzed coating used to enhance the look of the embossed wood grain.
(45) Clear-Coat—a coating covering the contrast agent and the base coat on the substrate; in a preferred embodiment, an abrasion-resistant, non-pigmented, over-indexed plural component coating.
(46) Denibbing—a process in which nibs are removed from the finished surface of the substrate; for example, this can be thought of as light sanding with a flap wheel on all surfaces, excluding the bottom portion of the substrate that is on the conveyor.
(47) Emboss—to mold, deform, or carve in relief; as applicable to this method, a pre-molded embossing wheel is used to indent the negative image of wood-grain on the surface of the deformable substrate.
(48) Flash—heating the substrate just enough to remove some of the volatile components of a coating, thereby partially drying the coating.
(49) Over-indexed coating—for example, a plural component paint that has an excess of catalyst, cross-linker, or hardening agent incorporated therein
(50) Post-base-coat—anything occurring to the substrate after the substrate has had the base coat applied.
(51) Pre-base-coat—anything occurring to the substrate before the substrate has had the base coat applied.
(52) Substrate—a base material; in a preferred example, materials comprised of more than 50% closed-cell aromatic polyurethane.
(53) Under-indexed coating—for example, a plural component paint that does not have any catalyst, cross-linker, or hardening agent incorporated therein.
(54) Wet on wet application—application of the coating in which a first base coat is not cured, and a second base coat is applied directly on top of the wet first base coat.
(55) Wet on dry application—application of the coating in which the first base coat is fully cured, and the second base coat is applied directly on top of the fully cured first base coat, which is then cured as well.
(56) A method has been devised, through experimentation and testing, for coating a substrate 10, such as a substrate formed of aromatic polyurethane, which allows for the use of the substrate in exterior applications. The various steps are shown in
(57) Step S1 of the method described herein is to sand the substrate in order to remove any smooth portions of the substrate, particularly when formed of aromatic polyurethane. In a preferred embodiment, the substrate is in the shape of lumber of any desired size, and can be shaped by any known process for a particular material. The sanding process opens up the closed cells located at the surface of the substrate creating a rough surface. This rough surface is used to promote the mechanical adhesion of the coating to the substrate. The sanding should be sufficient enough to promote adhesion, but not so aggressive as to affect any type of filler that may be used for the production of the substrate. General sanding methods as well as known mechanical sanding machines can be employed in this step of the process.
(58) Step S2 of the method described herein is to clean the sanded substrate 10. As is apparent to those of ordinary skill in the area of coatings, all dust must be removed before coating. This is accomplished through forced air and/or vacuuming the excess dust from the substrate using known methods and apparatuses.
(59) Step S3 of the method described herein is to coat the substrate 10 with a fully hiding layer of base coat. The coating system can utilize a thermal cure two-component polyurethane based system. Preferably, the similarities between the chemistries of the substrate and that of the base coating promote excellent adhesion to the sanded substrate. The base coating can contain three components: paint, hardener and thinner. These three components can be combined in specific mix ratios in the following ranges 3-6/1/1-3 (paint/hardener/thinner). All coatings utilized are based on the same chemistries and therefore have excellent inter-coat adhesion. The base coat contains inorganic pigments that allow the coating to be fully hiding; therefore, the base coat provides the main UV-protection as it blocks excess UV radiation from reaching the substrate beneath. In addition, the materials used in the invention are not limited to those disclosed herein. Furthermore, the coating materials are not limited as long as they can achieve desired results, such as abrasion resistance, UV and weather resistance, and a wood-like appearance. The base coat is applied to the substrate using air-assisted airless spray equipment on a flat line conveyor system. The coating of the substrate may be accomplished in two ways.
(60) The first coating method will be defined as wet on dry application of first and second base coats. The first base coat is applied via air assisted airless spray methods. The spray booth 20 used to perform this step is shown in
(61) The second coating method will be defined as a wet on wet application of the two base coats. The first base coat is applied via air assisted airless spray methods in a first spray booth 20. The substrate rides along the flat-line conveyor through another typical spray booth 20′, and the second base coat is then applied the same way as the first base coat. The substrate then travels through the curing oven 30 described above to be fully cured. This coating method only requires one curing phase, whereas the first coating method described above requires two curing phases. This second coating method leads to a very similar appearance as the previously described method; however, the second base coat does not remain as close to the surface as it does in the first coating method, leading to a slightly less uniform appearance than that obtained in the first coating method.
(62) The first coating method tends to give the substrate a slightly more uniform and even coating because the second base coat can more readily reside closer to the surface of the substrate when applied to a previously cured first base coat. The second coating method is described as a more economical alternative to the first coating method as a curing step is removed from the process, and as a potential method to add diversity to the substrate, leading to a more wood-like appearance.
(63) Step S4 of the method described herein is to create a wood grain appearance on the surface of the substrate. Due to the deformability of the substrate, particularly when aromatic urethane is used, a pressure embossing wheel is used to indent the surface of the substrate, leaving a wood grain emboss. This is depicted in
(64) If the substrate is base-coated prior to embossing, the embossed pattern will be minimally deeper upon starting the next process, thereby making the contrast agent pool more within the grain pattern, leading to a slightly darker wood grain appearance. If the substrate is embossed prior to base-coating the base coat can fill in a small portion of the grain pattern, thereby making the contrast agent pool less within the grain pattern, leading to a slightly lighter wood grain appearance.
(65) Step SS of the method described herein is to promote inter-coat adhesion and flow of a contrast agent into the emboss pattern. The base-coated substrate is preferably sent through a commercially available denibbing system 60 that utilizes 100-220 grit flap sanders 62 to denib all surfaces of the substrate to be coated, as shown in
(66) Step S6 of the method described herein is to apply a darker translucent coating, known as the contrast agent, to the embossed pattern of the substrate shown in
(67) In Step S7, the excess contrast agent is removed via a self-cleaning commercially available reverse roll-coater 80 outfitted with a 50 durometer rubber roll 82 as shown in
(68) In the foregoing description, the denibber 60, spray booth 70 and reverse roll-coater 80 can be positioned at a single station 50.
(69) The substrate, in Step S8, then travels on the flat line conveyor system (not shown) through a natural gas fired contrast flash oven 90 fabricated to fit over the conveyor system. The substrate spends approximately 5-10 seconds at 165-180° F. underneath the flash oven; this allows enough time for the contrast to be partially dried in preparation for clear coating. The flash-off of excess solvents within the contrast agent allows the coating to remain within the grain pattern during clear-coating (described later). A fully wet contrast agent can easily be washed out of the grain pattern by the clear-coat, leading to a muddled surface appearance, which does not highlight the wood grain embossed pattern.
(70) Step S9 of the method described herein is to apply an over-indexed clear coat to the substrate. The clear coat is based on the same chemistries as both the base coats and contrast agent; it, however, does not contain pigment and is completely transparent and therefore minimally contributes to the UV protection of the underlying substrate. The clear coat provides abrasion resistance as well as luster to the substrate. The application of the clear-coat goes directly on top of the partially-dried contrast agent. The clear coat is applied via air assisted airless spray equipment 100 on a flat line conveyor system. The coating is then thermally cured in oven 110. The over-indexed clear coat allows the un-catalyzed contrast agent to fully cure as well.
(71) While the foregoing description describes performing the various steps in a particular order, that order is not limiting. Several possible configurations are shown in
(72) 1) Pre-emboss, wet on dry application of coating, shown in
(73) 1) Pre-emboss, wet on dry application of coating, shown in
(74) 3) Pre-emboss, wet on wet application of coating, shown in
(75) 4) Post-emboss, wet on wet application of coating, shown in
(76) In each of the foregoing configurations, the conveying system is not shown. The conveying system can be comprised of a single conveying system including belts and rollers, for example, for moving the base material through the various stations; individual conveyance systems modified for each station; or two or more conveyance systems, each for moving the substrate material through one or more stations comprising the whole system. In the event that one or more conveying mechanisms are used, a controller, such as a suitably programmed microprocessor, can be used to control the various speeds of conveyance. Differences in required conveying speeds between the various stations can be controlled by the controller. Alternatively, the substrate materials can be moved manually or by other means from station to station.
(77) Control of the various stations can be coordinated with the conveyance control using the controller described above or one or more additional controllers or sub-controllers.
(78) Thus, there has been shown and described a new and useful method and system for creating wood-like substrates. Although this invention has been exemplified for purposes of illustration and description by reference to certain specific embodiments, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that various modifications, alterations, and equivalents of the illustrated examples are possible.