Impregnated Cloth

20210017702 ยท 2021-01-21

Assignee

Inventors

Cpc classification

International classification

Abstract

A knitted spacer fabric has a tightly knitted bottom layer, a more loosely knitted upper layer and linking fibres extending across the space between the lower and upper faces. Settable material, e.g. cement, is introduced into the space between the upper and lower faces and can be caused to set by the addition of a liquid, e.g. water. Until set, the fabric is flexible and can be shaped but after the material in space has set, the fabric is rigid and can be used as a structural element in a wide range of situations. The bottom layer has an extension that extends beyond the upper face and is connected to the upper face by elastic connecting fibres that draw the extension towards the other face, thereby at least partly closing the space at the edge of the cloth and preventing the settable material from spilling out. In addition, the packing of the settable material and maximum space between the faces are such that only a predetermined amount of liquid can be accommodated within the space and that amount is matched to the water required to set the cement.

Claims

1.-15. (canceled)

16. A flexible cloth that can be set to become rigid or semi-rigid, the cloth comprising: a first face; a second face separated from the first face by a space; linking fibres extending between the first and second faces that maintain the first and second face in a spaced-apart arrangement; and a powder material located in the space between the first and second faces, which material is capable of setting to a rigid or semi-rigid solid on the addition of a liquid, and wherein both the first and the second faces are substantially impervious to the powder material but at least one of them is pervious to liquid and wherein the amount and type of reagent in the compacted powder material, and the volume and compaction of the powder material are such that:
MVOV=x*LV where: MV=the maximum volume of the space within the cloth per unit area of the cloth; thus MV includes both the volume of empty space in the cloth before addition of the powder material, and an additional volume resulting from any expansion of the space due to the pressure exerted by the swelling of the powder material during the addition of the liquid or during the setting of material; OV=the volume of the space within the cloth that is occupied by the particles of the powder material, which volume does not include the volume occupied by voids within the powder material per unit area of the cloth; LV=the volume of liquid per unit area of the cloth that results in the maximum long term 28 day compressive strength, of the fill blend when set; and x=a factor between 0.65 and 1.1.

17. A cloth as claimed in claim 16, in which the first face and/or second face is backed by a further layer such as a damp proof layer being impervious to liquids or gases, said further layer preferably being formed from PVC.

18. A cloth as claimed in claim 17, in which the PVC layer is applied as a paste and is cured by the application of heat.

19. A cloth as claimed in claim 16, in which the first face includes an elastomeric yarn.

20. A cloth as claimed in claim 19, in which the first face has pores which are at least partly sealed or have been reduced in size, thereby retaining the settable powder material within the space.

21. A cloth as claimed in claim 20, in which the pores are at least partly sealed by a sealant such as an adhesive, a heat curable material or a layer of material applied to the first face.

22. A cloth as claimed in claim 16, in which the second face includes pores that are sufficiently small as to retain the powdered settable material within the space but allow the passage of the liquid to cause the powder material to set.

23. A cloth as claimed in claim 16, in which the linking fibres are configured to wick water into the interior of the fabric to aid hydration of the powder material.

24. A cloth as claimed in claim 16, in which the linking fibres are made of the same material as the first face and/or the second face.

25. A cloth as claimed in claim 16, in which the first face and/or second face are formed from polypropylene, coated glass fibres, polyethylene; PVC fibres, and a mixture of the above.

26. A cloth as claimed in claim 16, in which the powder material comprises cement, e.g. a cement-based dry concrete mix including plasticisers and other additives.

27. A cloth as claimed in claim 26, in which the cement is Portland cement or high alumina cement or a combination of these cements with each other or with other cements.

28. A cloth as claimed in claim 26, in which the powder material further comprises fillers selected from sand or fine aggregates, fly ash, glass beads, low density or recycled fillers, chopped natural or synthetic fibres, lime flour, mica insulators, surface modified silica, pigments, anti fungal-agents and anti-radiation fillers.

29. A cloth as claimed in claim 28 in which the cement is combined with one or more additives selected from: reaction modifiers such as lithium compounds and sodium compounds; organic compounds such as citric acid and tartaric acid; sulphate sources; plasticisers; accelerants; retarders; super plasticisers; shrinkage reducing agents; water repellent agents and dispersible polymer powders.

30. A cloth as claimed in claim 16, in which the powder material additionally includes additives such as flexiblizers, foaming agents and reinforcement materials.

31. A cloth as claimed in claim 16, in which the two faces of the cloth are constrained by the arrangement, shape and physical properties of the linking fibres.

32. A cloth as claimed in claim 16, wherein the linking fibres are self-supporting linking fibres.

33. A method of making an impregnated flexible cloth as claimed in claim 16, the method comprising: providing the cloth having a first face; a second face separated from the first face by a space; linking fibres extending between the first and second faces that maintain the first and second face in a spaced-apart arrangement, and loading the space within the cloth with a powder material having a void fraction that is capable of setting to a rigid or semi-rigid solid on the addition of a liquid, and wherein both the first and the second faces are substantially impervious to the powder material but at least one of them is pervious to liquid and wherein the amount and type of reagent in the compacted powder material, and the volume and compaction of the powder material are such that:
MVOV=x*LV where: MV=the maximum volume of the space within the cloth per unit area of the cloth; thus MV includes both the volume of empty space in the cloth before addition of the powder material, and an additional volume resulting from any expansion of the space due to the pressure exerted by the swelling of the powder material during the addition of the liquid or during the setting of material; OV=the volume of the space within the cloth that is occupied by the particles of the powder material, which volume does not include the volume occupied by voids within the powder material per unit area of the cloth; LV=the volume of liquid per unit area of the cloth that results in the maximum long term 28 day compressive strength, of the fill blend when set; and x=a factor between 0.65 and 1.1.

34. A method as claimed claim 33, which further comprises loading the powdered material into the space through pores in the first face and reducing the size of the pores or closing the pores once the powdered material has been loaded, by partly or completely sealing the pores.

35. A method as claimed in claim 34, in which the pores are closed by applying a sealant to the first face or by bonding a further layer onto the first face.

36. A method as claimed in claim 35, in which the hydrated cloth has a low liquid to settable power material ratio that is below the optimum amount of liquid to set the powder material fully such that unreacted powder material can impart limited self-healing properties to the set material as cracks can allow water to penetrate the set material and react with the unreacted powder material held within the set material.

37. A method of setting a cloth as claimed in claim 16, which comprises adding a liquid to the cloth to cause the settable powder material to set.

38. A method as claimed in claim 37, which comprises submerging the cloth in a liquid or spraying the cloth with a liquid to cause the settable powder material to set.

39. Use of the flexible cloth of claim 16, to form a cover of a prefabricated shelter as described in WO 2005/124063; to form a track-way for vehicles, pedestrians or animals; to form a shelter by applying the fabric to a framework; to make formwork for casting concrete; to form barriers, e.g. to line tunnels; to repair or reinforce structures, e.g. roofs; to form floors or damp proof structures; to reinforce earth structures, e.g. river banks and unstable slopes; to provide flood defences; to repair existing pipes, including buried water pipes or to construct new pipes; to fireproof elements of new or existing structures e.g. as a fireproof covering or lining for chimneys; to form a hard surface, reduce dust hazards and contain fuel spills for aircraft e.g. helicopter landing sites and runways; to reinforce sandbag structures and protect them from damage from the elements such as wind and ultra violet degradation; to line ground works and prevent the leaching of chemical contaminants e.g. for land fill or secondary fuel containment works; to form a waterproof lining for the containment of water e.g. pond, canal lining and water storage or settling or septic tanks; to form permanent awnings or roof structures; to line drainage ditches; to provide an external weatherproof facing for buildings; to form an integral part of a durable gabion structures; to repair and/or reinforce gabion structures and protect them from damage from the elements such as wind and ultra violet degradation; to form artistic or decorative forms, or to form hulls and superstructure of floating vessels such as boats or pontoons.

Description

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS

[0105] There will now be described, by way of example only, a fabric material in accordance with the present invention, by reference to the accompanying drawings in which:

[0106] FIG. 1 is a diagrammatic illustration of a spacer fabric;

[0107] FIG. 2 is a cross sectional view through the fabric;

[0108] FIG. 3 is a diagrammatic illustration of spacer fabric according to one embodiment of the present invention; and

[0109] FIG. 4 is a needle diagram for knitting the spacer fabric of FIG. 3.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

[0110] Referring to the accompanying drawings, FIG. 1 shows a schematic knitted spacer fabric having a tightly knitted bottom face layer 10, a more loosely knitted upper face layer 12 and linking fibres 14 extending across the space 16 between the lower and upper face layers 10, 12. The spacer fabric is made of knitted polyethylene and is commercially available from Scott & Fyfe as 5 mm spacer fabric.

[0111] Settable material, e.g. cement optionally together with fillers and other additives, is introduced into the fabric through pores 20 in the open-knit upper face layer 12. The pores 20 arise through the knitting process during manufacture of the spacer fabric. The cement can be placed on the spacer fabric and will fall through pores 20 into space 16. The penetration through the pores 20 can be assisted by placing the spacer fabric on a vibrating bed and by brushing the fill into the pores, e.g. using a rotating brush. Vibration also has the advantage of settling the cement within the space 16 to minimise voids or air pockets that are formed.

[0112] The bottom face 10 has a relatively tight knitted structure and the pores in the bottom face are smaller than in the tipper face layer such that the pores are sufficiently small to prevent substantial amounts of the cement from falling out.

[0113] After the material has been introduced into the space 16, the upper face layer 12 is sealed by the application of a thin coat of PVC paste which is then cured by heating the surface.

[0114] Water can penetrate into the fabric through the pores in the bottom face 10; hydration of the cement is aided by the linking fibres 14, which can wick water into the interior of the fabric.

[0115] The cloth including the fabric and the settable fill material within the space 16 is flexible and can be formed to shape prior to the introduction of liquid to set the material within the space.

[0116] The long fibres 18, together with the shorter fibres in the fabric, provide reinforcement to the material, when set and prevent crack propagation.

[0117] FIG. 3 shows a spacer fabric that can be used for making the cloth of the present invention; except as set out below, it is identical to the fabric of FIGS. 1 and 2, and the same reference numbers as are used in connection with FIGS. 1 and 2 have been used in FIG. 3 to shown the same features. However, in the fabric of FIG. 3, the edge of the lower face layer 10 is extended beyond the edge of the upper face layer 12 by an extension 24 formed in exactly the same way as the rest of the lower face layer 10 except that linking fibres 26 connecting the extension to the upper face 12 is made of an elastic material which is stretched during knitting. When the tension is no longer applied to the elastic linking fibres 26, e.g. by removing the fabric from the knitting machine, the extension 24 is drawn up around the edge of the fabric by the linking fibres 26 and so closes off the edge of the fabric. When a settable fill is added through the pores 20 in the upper layer 12, it cannot spill out of the sides of the fabric.

[0118] FIG. 4 shows the pattern of needles used for knitting the edge of the spacer fabric shown in FIG. 3 where the normal yarns used to form the bulk of the spacer fabric, e.g. polypropylene, are shown by the letter N while the elastic used to form the linking fibres 26 are shown by the letter E.

Example 1

[0119] A high alumina cement is loaded into the fabric shown in FIG. 3 using the vibration and brushing techniques described above to form a filled cloth. Water is used to set the cement. The theoretical optimum water:cement ratio in this case is 0.4 by weight. The cloth has a porous face 10 of sufficiently closed construction to prevent the dry cement powder and also the cement powder once soaked in water from passing through it in significant quantities, the other face 12 has an impermeable PVC coated face to close off the pores 20. The two faces are linked by monofilament polyethylene linking fibres. The high alumina cement is compacted to give a total dry density of 1.35 g/cm.sup.3 and an average thickness of 7.3 mm between the outer surfaces of the two faces.

[0120] The linking fibres are spaced, slightly bowed and of sufficient stiffness such that after immersion in water the swelling of the cement powder between the two faces is constrained to a 14% internal volume increase. When this increased volume is entirely filled with water as a result of immersion this represents a 10% increase in the weight of the material. In addition to the increase in volume, the water also displaces air from the void fraction and dissolves a proportion of the cement which results in a further 22% increase in weight.

[0121] Continued immersion does not result in any further increase in weight. Therefore, the cloth construction limits the water to cement ratio to 0.32 being slightly below the 0.4 optimum to provide the maximum 28 day compressive strength. In other words, the factor x in the above formula is 0.32/0.4=0.8.