MULTISPECTRAL CAMOUFLAGE MATERIAL
20210197542 · 2021-07-01
Inventors
Cpc classification
B32B3/266
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B2255/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F41H3/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Y10T428/24298
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
Y10T156/1057
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
F41H3/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Y10T428/24331
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
B32B5/275
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
Abstract
A fabric (30) includes a first flexible fabric layer (32), having fabric emissivity properties in a visible radiation range that are selected so as to mimic ambient emissivity properties of a deployment environment of the fabric, and at least one second flexible fabric layer (34), which is joined to the first flexible fabric layer, and which is configured to scatter long-wave radiation that is incident on the fabric. The first and second flexible fabric layers are perforated by a non-uniform pattern of perforations (44) extending over at least a part of the fabric.
Claims
1. A single-layer camouflage fabric comprising: a metallized component configured to at least partially block a thermal infrared radiation of a subject and to blend a background thermal infrared radiation by partial scattering and partial specular reflecting of the subject thermal infrared radiation; a blurring component designed to scatter and reflect background thermal radiation; and a pattern pigmentation on at least a portion of an external surface, wherein the patterned pigmentation is configured to mimic ambient properties of an environment.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0019]
[0020]
[0021]
[0022]
[0023]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS
[0024] Camouflage fabrics are commonly used in producing military uniforms that reduce the daytime visibility of the wearer, but wearable camouflage against detection by long-wave sensors (thermal infrared or microwave radar) has yet to be widely deployed. Thermal and radar camouflage materials that are known in the art tend to be too heavy for use by ambulatory foot soldiers and do not allow sufficient ventilation or heat exchange to maintain a reasonable level of comfort. They are thus not practical for operational use.
[0025] Embodiments of the present invention that are described hereinbelow address these problems by providing a multilayer fabric that is sufficiently light and ventilated to be used in camouflage suits for ambulatory human subjects. The fabric is also suitable, however, for covering animals, vehicles, boats, aircraft and stationary objects. The fabric comprises one fabric layer having emissivity properties in the visible radiation range that are selected so as to mimic ambient emissivity properties of the deployment environment of the fabric, thus providing visual camouflage. One or more additional flexible fabric layers, joined to the visual camouflage layer, are configured to scatter long-wave radiation that is incident on the fabric and thus provide infrared and/or microwave camouflage.
[0026] The fabric layers are perforated by a non-uniform pattern of perforations extending over part or all of the fabric. These perforations typically have multiple different sizes and shapes, such as different triangular or quadrilateral forms. The inventors have found that such non-uniform perforations serve multiple purposes: They both provide ventilation to the inside of the fabric and reduce its weight, and they also blur the long-wave radiation returned by the fabric to thermal and radar imaging devices. These features are valuable in substantially all camouflage applications, but they are particularly useful when the fabric is cut and sewn to be worn over the human body as a camouflage garment, such as a full-body camouflage suit.
[0027]
[0028]
[0029] Alternatively or additionally, the two outer fabric layers may be configured to camouflage the wearer in different physical deployment environments. For example, one side may be designed to provide camouflage in a vegetated environment (such as a forest), while the other side provides camouflage in desert environments, in which vegetation is sparse or absent entirely.
[0030]
[0031] For visual, daytime camouflage, fabric 30 comprises an outer layer 32 of ripstop cotton, with a suitable pattern (such as that shown in
[0032] An underlying layer 34 containing glass microballoons is laminated to layer 32 using a spun web 40 of polyurethane fibers. The microballoons, whose sizes are in the range of 50-500 μm, scatter radiation, particularly infrared radiation, and thereby blurs the thermal signature of the wearer. Alternatively or additionally, some or all of the microballoons may be coated with metal to improve their microwave-scattering properties and thereby blur the radar signature of the wearer. Although microballoons are typically round, some or all of the microballoons in layer 34 may be prismatic in shape. In alternative embodiments, microballoons may be located between other layers of the fabric or may be coated over the outer fabric surface.
[0033] A reflective layer 36 may be fixed to the underside of layer 34, to provide specular scattering of infrared and/or microwave radiation. Layer 36 may comprise, for example, a polyester weave coated with a metallic film, such as titanium and/or aluminum or aluminum mixed with titanium oxide, gold, nickel and their alloys and/or oxides. The weave may alternatively be made using fibers containing suitable metals, in which case an additional layer of reflective lamination is not needed. The polyester may conveniently be a ripstop, water-repellant material.
[0034] For nighttime camouflage, an alternative outer layer 38 may be printed with a suitable pattern (also in low-emissivity pigment) and laminated to layer 36 by another polyurethane spun web 42. Layer 38, may comprise, for example, a 40-denier ripstop nylon, which is water-repellant and air-permeable, produced and coated using a suitable nano-process, which gives superior results to conventional water-repellant treatments using larger particles.
[0035] Multiple perforations 44 are cut through the layers of fabric 30. Typically, the perforations are in the range of 2-3 mm wide and are spaced 7-25 mm apart. The perforations may be of different shapes and sizes, as illustrated, for example, in
[0036] The overall thickness of fabric 30, based on the above sequence of layers, is approximately 0.20-0.40 mm and the weight is roughly 150-250 grams/m.sup.2. A suit made from this fabric, of the sort shown in
[0037] A variety of other layer structures can be used in alternative embodiments of the present invention. Table 1 below lists typical materials that can be used in these structures, while Tables A-J show examples of layer structures that can be composed from these materials.
TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 LAYER MATERIALS Thickness Label Description (typical) COTTON Printed cotton (see layer 32 above). For example, M3526 0.20 mm PA/CO fabric, produced by DIATEX (St-Genis- Laval, France). MBG Glass microballoons (see layer 34 above). For example, 0.06 mm 3M ™ Glass Bubbles, K Series or S Series, produced by 3M Energy and Advanced Materials Division (St. Paul, Minnesota). METP Metal Powder, such as powders 516H, 510HV, 5900FHV, or 10-20 μm 5906PAF produced by PAC (Loveland, Ohio); or aluminum metallic powder CI 77000, produced by Mallinckrodt Baker, Inc. (Phillipsburg, New Jersey). MBG- Glass microballoons with metal coating, such as the 3M 0.06 mm COATED materials mentioned above. SWPU Spun web-polyurethane (see layers 40 and 42 above). For 0.06 mm example, VILENE, produced by Freudenberg Anlagen-und Werkzeugtechnik KG (Neuenburg, Germany) COMPMET Metal-coated polyester weave (see layer 36 above). Such 0.05 mm materials are available, for example, from Shing Fu Textile Technology Co. (Cingshuei Township, Taiwan). NANO Nano-treated nylon (see layer 38 above), such as kk- 0.06 mm k00mceps40drsn fabric, produced by K&K Advance Textile Solutions (Holon, Israel). MNET Conductive metal net with electro-magnetic shielding 0.09 mm properties, such as PONGE, produced by Soliani EMC (Como, Italy). UVCPA UV-curing printable adhesive, such as 3M ™ Screen 2-5 μm Printable UV-Curing Adhesive 7555, produced by 3M (St. Paul, Minnesota). DES-SA Desert sand NANO- Nano-treated nylon with metal coating, such as the K&K 0.06 mm MET Advance Textile Solutions materials mentioned above.
TABLE-US-00002 TABLE A STRUCTURE SHOWN IN FIG. 2 (This sort of fabric is useful particularly in reversible camouflage suits for forest and desert environments.) COTTON SWPU MBG COMPMET SWPU NANO
TABLE-US-00003 TABLE B (Useful particularly as a reversible covering for stationary objects in forested and desert environments.) MBG METP UVCPA COTTON SWPU NANO
TABLE-US-00004 TABLE C (Useful particularly as a reversible covering for armored vehicles, when stationary or mobile, in forested and desert environments.) DES-SA UVCPA NANO SWPU COMPMET SWPU COTTON
TABLE-US-00005 TABLE D (Useful particularly for as a reversible camouflage cover for infantry posts and as personal camouflage netting in forested and desert environments.) COTTON MBG METP UVCPA NANO
TABLE-US-00006 TABLE E (Useful particularly for as a reversible camouflage cover for infantry posts and as personal camouflage netting in forested and desert environments.) COTTON MBG-COATED UVCPA NANO
TABLE-US-00007 TABLE F (Useful particularly in reversible camouflage suits for forest and desert environments.) COTTON SWPU COMPNET SWPU NANO
TABLE-US-00008 TABLE G (Useful particularly as a reversible covering for mobile armored vehicles in forested and desert environments.) COTTON SWPU COMPNET
TABLE-US-00009 TABLE H (Useful particularly as camouflage in areas of extreme temperatures, including both snowy and very hot environments.) NANO-MET SWPU COTTON
TABLE-US-00010 TABLE I (Useful for multi-spectral camouflage-including radar blocking-particularly for boats, aircraft, and strategic land vehicles, such as missile carriers and mobile command/control systems.) COTTON SWPU MNET SWPU NANO
TABLE-US-00011 TABLE J (Useful for camouflage of strategic objects.) MBG UVCPA COTTON SWPU MNET NANO
[0038] The above embodiments are shown here only by way of example, and alternative layer structures, which will be apparent to those skilled in the art upon reading this specification, are also considered to be within the scope of the present invention.
[0039]
[0040] As noted earlier, perforations 44 are useful in providing ventilation, to prevent overheating inside suit 20, and the non-uniformity of the perforations helps to blur the thermal and/or radar signature of the wearer. For good ventilation in warm weather conditions, the perforations may be supplemented by vents in the sewn fabric. Typically, an air flow rate of 1-3 cubic feet per minute (CFM) at a pressure of 20-30 pascal is desirable.
[0041]
[0042] In addition, suit 50 comprises quick-connect fasteners 58 between a torso 52 and arms 54 and legs 56 of the garment. (The arms and legs of the garment are collectively referred to as “extremity sleeves” in the present description and in the claims.) Quick-connect fasteners 58 may comprise zippers, for example, or any other suitable type of connecting element that permits the extremity sleeves to be attached to and detached from torso 52 without the need to sew or open stitches or otherwise permanently modify the fabric. Fasteners 58 permit arms 54 and legs 56 to be fastened to torso 52 either with the same fabric layer facing outward or turned inside-out relative to the torso. Thus, in the example shown in
[0043]
[0044] It will be appreciated that the embodiments described above are cited by way of example, and that the present invention is not limited to what has been particularly shown and described hereinabove. Rather, the scope of the present invention includes both combinations and subcombinations of the various features described hereinabove, as well as variations and modifications thereof which would occur to persons skilled in the art upon reading the foregoing description and which are not disclosed in the prior art.