ELECTRICAL DEVICES AND COMPONENTS USED IN ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS MADE WITH SELF-HEALING MATERIALS
20180002544 · 2018-01-04
Inventors
- Yan Gao (Memphis, TN)
- Mark Drane (Collierville, TN)
- Cong Thanh Dinh (Collierville, TN)
- Ronald White (Germantown, TN)
- Ian Rubin de la Borbolla (Memphis, TN)
Cpc classification
C09D177/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C09D5/4419
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C08G2190/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
International classification
Abstract
Self-healing polymers used to fabricate electrical devices or to coat electrical devices that have a metal or polymer substrate. The self-healing polymers can be made from modified polymers including polyurethanes, polyureas, polyamides and polyesters and, optionally, cross-linking agents and one or more catalysts. The self-healing polymers can be used to make cable ties, tape, conduit fittings and explosion-proof sealant materials.
Claims
1. An electrical device made from or a metal or non-metal substrate having an outer layer or coating comprising a self-healing polymer.
2. The electrical device according to claim 1, wherein the self-healing polymer is modified polyurethanes, polyureas, polyamides or polyesters.
3. The electrical device according to claim 2, wherein the self-healing polymer is modified polyurea material comprising a first monomer that has isocyanate function groups and a second monomer that has amine function groups.
4. The electrical device according to claim 2, wherein the modified polyurea material further comprises cross-linking agents and a catalyst.
5. The electrical device according to claim 4, wherein the cross-linking agents are triethyolamine (TEA) and tetra ethylene glycol (TEG) and the catalyst is dibutyl tin diacetate.
6. The electrical device according to claim 5, wherein the molar ratio of TEA to the first monomer to TEG to the second monomer is 1:12:6.8:4.
7. A cable fastener having an elongated body, a tail and a head with a locking mechanism, wherein the cable fastener is made from a material comprising a self-healing polymer.
8. The cable fastener according to claim 7, wherein the tail and head are made from or coated with the self-healing polymer.
9. The cable fastener according to claim 7, wherein the self-healing polymer comprises polyurethanes, polyureas, polyamides or polyesters.
10. The cable fastener according to claim 7, wherein a geometric feature is provided to initiate and maintain physical surface contact before the two parts of the self-healing polymers join by chemical bond.
11. A self-bonding tape comprising a self-healing polymer.
12. The self-bonding tape according to claim 11, wherein the tape has at least two layers, wherein one layer is an outer, adhesive layer comprising the self-healing polymer.
13. The self-bonding tape according to claim 11, wherein the tape has at last two outer layers comprising the self-healing polymer.
14. The self-bonding tape according to claim 11, wherein the self-healing polymer comprises polyurethanes, polyureas, polyamides or polyesters.
15. A conduit system comprising a conduit having an exterior surface and an interior surface and a fitting having an outer surface and an inner surface, wherein the fitting receives the conduit so that the inner surface of the fitting contacts the outer surface of the conduit, and wherein the conduit and the fitting comprise a self-healing polymer.
16. The conduit system according to claim 15, wherein a component will provide and maintain initial physical surface contact of the two self-healing materials to allow the self-healing materials to join into one with chemical bond.
17. The conduit system according to claim 15, wherein the inner surface of the fitting and the outer surface of the conduit are coated with the self-healing polymer.
18. The conduit system according to claim 15, wherein the self-healing polymer comprises polyurethanes, polyureas, polyamides or polyesters.
19. An explosion-proof sealant material that is installed inside a connector housing, wherein the explosion-proof sealant material comprises a self-healing polymer and is a powder.
20. The explosion-proof sealant material according to claim 19, wherein the self-healing polymer comprises polyurethanes, polyureas, polyamides or polyesters.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
[0015] The preferred embodiments of the devices of the present invention made from or coated with a self-healing polymer, as well as other objects, features and advantages of this invention, will be apparent from the accompanying drawings wherein:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0029] The present invention is a self-healing polymer material used to make or coat electrical devices. The self-healable or self-bondable polymer material can be modified polyurethanes, polyureas, polyamides or polyesters. Preferably, the material is a permanently cross-linked poly(urea-urethane) elastomeric network that completely mends itself after being damaged or severed. In a preferred embodiment, a metathesis reaction of aromatic disulphides, which naturally exchange at room temperature, causes the regeneration. The modified polyurea material can be obtained through reaction of a first monomer that has isocyanate function groups and a second monomer that has amine function groups in the presence of cross-linking agents and a catalyst. The modified polyurea material is then used in for bonding. sealing or as a coating or processed into a device, e.g., a cable fastener (i.e., cable tie) or conduit connector. Different material compositions and/or processes may be used for different applications.
[0030] As used herein, the terms “self-healing” and “self-repairing” are defined as the ability of a material, preferably a polymer, to heal (i.e., recover/repair) damages automatically and autonomously, that is, without any external intervention. The terms are also used to describe polymers that bond together at temperatures above 40° F. when the surfaces are in contact and a minimal amount of pressure is applied—at least 1 psig.
[0031] The self-bonding action is based on the capability of the resulting polyurea polymer to reverse reaction back into the monomer forms. The forward reaction and the reverse reaction take place at the same time at the location of the small crack, thus re-structuring the material into a state that seals the crack. The dynamic balance of the forward reaction (polymerization) and the reverse reaction (disassociation) is designed in such a way that it provides the required self-bonding capability. The cable tie head is designed to maximize surface contact between the paw and the strap inside of the head when the cable tie is secured (used). The cable tie is held in place by the mechanical geometry of the paw-head configuration while the self-healing material on the contacting surfaces bond together. The cable tie becomes stronger and the structure of the cable tie becomes unified. This eliminates the small parts (e.g. the paw) when the cable tie breaks Eliminating the small parts provides advantages for many applications, e.g. cable ties used in the airplane industry.
[0032] In one embodiment, the first monomer is heamethylene diisocyanate and the second monomer is N,N′-di-tert-butylethylenediamine and the cross-link agents are triethyolamine (TEA) and tetra ethylene glycol (TEG). The molar ratio of TEA to the first monomer to TEG to the second monomer is 1:12:6.8:4. As one skilled in the art would understand, the ratio of components may change to provide self-healable polymers with different properties, such as bonding reaction time and the strength of the bond. The catalyst is preferably dibutyl tin diacetate. The resulting modified polyurea has at least a 1 MPa Young's modulus of elasticity. The modified polyurea material is then molded into a cable tie or used in a coating material. In a preferred embodiment, the modified polyurea material is mechanically ground into powders.
[0033] In another embodiment, a self-healing polyurethane elastomer is formed by synthesizing and reacting alkoxyamine-based diol with tri-functional homopolymer of hexamethylene diisocyanate (tri-HDI) and polyethylene glycol (PEG). The alkoxyamines act as crosslinkers of the resultant polyurethane so that the thermally reversible fission/recombination of C—ON bonds in alkoxyamine moieties enable repeated crosslinking and de-crosslinking of polyurethane chains at certain temperature. As a consequence, the polyurethane elastomer is self-healing. Testing of the polyurethane elastomer confirmed that the reversibly crosslinked polyurethane was capable of re-bonding ruptured parts and restoring mechanical strength. The self-healing characteristic of the polyurethane elastomer is a function of the molecular structures and compositions of the components, which can be adjusted as needed for different applications.
[0034] When the self-bondable material is used in a cable fastener it provides several advantages over prior art cable fasteners. The bonding of the locking mechanism eliminates the main weakness of cable ties, which typically fail when the locking mechanism fails. The self-bondable material also provides a more reliable cable fastener so that it is unnecessary to use multiple cable fasteners to assure a safety factor. In addition, cable fasteners made from the self-bondable material do not have loose ends that can be hazardous if they interfere with operating machinery.
[0035] The preferred self-healing polymers is a polyurea formulation that meets target performance needs in self-heal capability and other requirements in mechanical performance, thermal performance, flame resistance and process capability. Other self-healing polymer compositions can also be used, including those described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,527,849 to Dry, issued on Mar. 4, 2003; U.S. Pat. No. 6,548,763 to Kaltenborn et al., issued on Apr. 15, 2003; U.S. Pat. No. 7,041,331 to Lamola et al., issued on May 9, 2006; U.S. Pat. No. 7,108,914 to Skipor et al., issued on Sep. 19, 2006; U.S. Pat. No. 7,192,993 to Sarangapani et al., issued on Mar. 20, 2007; U.S. Pat. No. 7,285,306 to Parrish, issued on Oct. 23, 2007; U.S. Pat. No. 8,063,307 to Bukshpun et al., issued on Nov. 22, 2011; U.S. Patent Application Pub. No. US 2008/0152815 to Stephenson et al., published on Jun. 26, 2008, all of which are incorporated by reference in their entirety.
[0036] Alternate self-heal materials that can be used as coatings include micro-encapsulate self-heal material and pH value guided self-heal material. One micro-encapsulate self-heal material is based on epoxy resin and the healing agent and the catalyst are stored in micro capsules inside the material. When there is a crack that opens the micro encapsulate, the healing agent and the catalyst are released and react to polymerize into a solid that seals the crack. The pH value guided self-heal material is based on hydrogel material. The hydrogel is cross-linked through a chemical bond that can be reversed when the surrounding pH changes. When there is a crack, changing the environment pH value will allow the material to re-organize its polymer structure to seal the crack.
[0037] A preferred embodiment of the invention is directed to a polymeric cable fastener device (also referred to herein as a “cable tie”) that, after it is wrapped and fastened together around a bundle of cables/wires with a locking mechanism, the locking mechanism fuses (or self-bonds) together. The invention includes the self-bonding polymeric material, the structure of the cable fastener devices and locking mechanism, and the manufacturing process that produces such products. The self-bonding polymer material allows two parts made of the same polymer to bind together, after the two parts are in surface contact for a period of time. The cable fastener devices are designed to include interlocking and/or interference fit locking mechanisms. These interlocking or interfering surfaces come into contact for a necessary length of time which initiates the self-bonding.
[0038] The self-healable polymeric material or polymeric coating is used to provide a reliable, permanent connection between cable fastener devices. It is intended to be permanent and non-removable. In the case of cable fastener devices, the entire device can be molded from the self-healable polymer or the device can be coated with the polymeric material.
[0039] The following concepts show distinctly different embodiments of self-bondable fastener devices that are made from a self-bondable polymer. The self-bondable polymer allows two parts made of, coated with or with an outer layer containing the polymer to bond together when held in surface to surface contact for a period of time at temperatures of at least 40° F., preferably at least 50° F. and most preferably at least 60° F.
[0040] Concept #1
[0041] Polymeric Coating Application—In this embodiment as illustrated in
[0042] Concept #2
[0043] Self-Bondable Wiring Harness Tape—In this embodiment, rolls of tape 110 are made from the self-healable polymeric material 112. These rolls of tape 110 have a non-stick separator layer of material 114 inter-rolled (as shown in
[0044] Concept #3
[0045] Cable Ties with Interference Fit Heads—In this embodiment, cable tie fastening devices 210 are manufactured from the self-healable polymeric material 212 using standard molding processes.
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[0047] Concept #4
[0048] Cable Ties with Interlocking Strap having irregular surface geometries—In this embodiment, cable tie fastening devices 310 having irregular (or complex) surface geometries 312 a-c are made from self-healable polymeric material using standard molding practices.
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[0050] Alternate constructions include straight fit, taper fit and snap-fit connections. It is also possible to use the coating on threads as well as to create a permanent bond (see
[0051] The intended concept includes electrical conduits and fittings that have self-healable surface coatings and the corresponding coating method. The electrical devices include metallic conduits and fittings that are coated with polymeric material on their interior and exterior surfaces. The polymeric coating materials are able to independently repair small surface cracks caused by transportation, installation, and operation of the conduit or fitting device. The coating materials also provide protection for the metallic conduit or fitting against corrosion and impact.
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[0053] The invention is directed to electrical devices made from or coated with polymeric coating materials that automatically repair small cracks and cuts and the methods of making and coating these devices. The coating materials provide several advantages. The self-heal or self-repair capability of the polymers can self-repair small cracks and cuts multiple times over a period of several years. The modified polyurea thermoset coating material is recyclable and, therefore, more environmentally friendly. The polymers also reduce the maintenance cost for the conduit and/or fittings. The self-healable coating materials are corrosion resistant, thermally stable, flame retardant, provide electrical insulation, mechanically strengthen the conduits and fittings and are easy to process.
[0054] In another embodiment, the self-healable polymers are used as a sealant material that can be applied at a low temperature to a fitting, such as an electrical fitting. The polymeric sealant material is in a powder form with the powder particles mixed with polymers to form a bulk material. The bulk material is installed in a fitting and acts as a sealant to prevent hazardous liquid or gaseous leaks through the fitting in an explosion hazardous location. The formed sealant material can also self-heal micro cracks. The sealant material can form a functional sealant at temperatures as low as 0° C. or below with proper mechanical compression for a fitting such as an electrical fitting.
[0055] The low temperature polymeric sealant material can be a modified polyurea material that is formed by reacting a monomer with isocyanate function groups and a monomer with amine function groups in the presence of cross-linking agents and a catalyst. The modified polyurea material is then reduced to a powder form. The powder material is applied to a fitting that is connected to a cable or conduit. The powder residing in the fitting space receives is activated by the mechanical compression when the fitting is fastened. The compressed modified polyurea powder particles form a bulk material that forms a seal. The integrated sealant material can self-heal micro crack experienced during its life.
[0056] The self-healable polymer powder 712 is applied to a connection 710 as illustrated in
[0057] The self-healing material can be formed from a modified polyurea and used as a sealant material in a fitting. After the sealant is used to fill the space inside a fitting, a nut is screwed against the fitting assembly to fasten the connection and squeeze the polyurea powder. The compressed polyurea powders are then integrated into a block of material that seals the connection. The integrated sealant can also self-heal micro cracks that can occur during operation of the device. The advantages of such low temperature sealant material include: (1) lower temperature formation of sealant material; (2) self-healing of the sealant material from micro cracks; and (3) lower installation cost.
[0058] The low temperature integration ability of the powder particles and the self-heal ability of the bulk material 810 are based on the capability of the modified polyurea polymer to reverse reaction back into its monomer forms after cut or separated into two portions 812, 813, as illustrated in
[0059] Thus, while there have been described the preferred embodiments of the present invention, those skilled in the art will realize that other embodiments can be made without departing from the spirit of the invention, and it is intended to include all such further modifications and changes as come within the true scope of the claims set forth herein.