COATING FOR ALUMINUM SUBSTRATES
20190176501 ยท 2019-06-13
Inventors
Cpc classification
B41M2205/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41M5/5218
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41M5/42
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41M1/30
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41M5/0058
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C08K2201/005
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
B41M5/0355
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41M5/5254
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C08L75/16
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
B41M2205/38
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B41M5/035
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B05D5/06
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C08L75/16
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
B41M1/30
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A new polymer coating for metal surfaces that allows for the application of disperse dyes in a sublimation process that preserves the luster and metal iridescence naturally occurring in a metal surface, such as occurs on a polished aluminum sheet. The coating includes a combination of natural metal oxide additives having the capability to be prepared in nano-sized particles and combined with an organic polymer coating binder and resin in restricted loading levels to allow for light penetration to and from the polished metal surface. An optimal loading level for the additive that utilizes particles having a size of between 5 nm and 15 nm of metal oxide additives is approximately 20 percent by weight of solids.
Claims
1. A decorated metal article, comprising: a. a metal substrate having a surface capable of accepting an organic polymer coating; b. an organic polymer coating applied to said metal surface having a mixture of urethane polymer and light scattering particles, wherein said light scattering particles comprise a size of between 5 nm and 400 nm and are combined with said urethane at a loading level of between 5% and 40% by weight of solids; c. a human discernable image diffused into said polymer coating using a dye sublimation process, wherein said discernable image is comprised of disperse dye converted from a solid state into a gaseous state prior to diffusion into said coating; and, d. wherein said coated metal article exhibits metal iridescence after the application of said polymer and said image to said metal substrate such that said human discernable image exhibits enhanced luminosity resulting from light reflected from said metal surface.
2. A decorated article as recited in claim 1, wherein said light scattering particles comprise metal oxides selected from the group consisting of aluminum oxide, zinc oxide, titanium dioxide, silver oxide, and zirconium oxide.
3. A decorated article as recited in claim 1, wherein the amount of added light scattering particles to said urethane does not substantially block reflected iridescent luminosity from said metal surface.
4. A decorated article as recited in claim 3, wherein said light scattering particles comprise aluminum oxide.
5. A decorated article as recited in claim 4, wherein said coating is cured in the presence of a polymerizing catalyst such that said coating is polymerized.
6. A decorated article as recited in claim 5, wherein said metal substrate comprises aluminum.
7. A decorated article as recited in claim 1, wherein said dye receptive coating comprises a thickness of at least 0.0015 inches.
8. A decorated article as recited in claim 7, wherein said aluminum substrate is a least 0.023 inches thick.
9. A decorated article as recited in claim 1, wherein the ratio of light scattering particles to loading level by weight comprises a tailored ratio to promote artistic lighting enhancement of said human discernable image.
10. A decorated article as recited in claim 9, wherein said polymer coating is translucent.
11. A decorated article as recited in claim 10, wherein said polymer coating comprises a mixture of urethan and polyester bases.
12. An undecorated metal article capable of receiving a human discernable image through dye sublimation, comprising: a. a metal substrate having a surface capable of accepting an organic polymer coating; b. an organic polymer coating applied to said metal surface having a mixture of urethane polymer and light scattering particles, wherein said light scattering particles comprise a size of between 5 nm and 400 nm and are combined with said urethane at a loading level of between 5% and 40% by weight of solids; c. wherein said coating exhibits metal iridescence after the application of said coating to said metal substrate; and, d. wherein said coating is adapted to receive a human discernable image diffused into said polymer coating using a dye sublimation process, wherein said discernable image is comprised of disperse dye converted from a solid state into a gaseous state prior to diffusion into said coating.
13. An undecorated article as recited in claim 12, wherein said light scattering particles comprise metal oxides selected from the group consisting of aluminum oxide, zinc oxide, titanium dioxide, silver oxide, and zirconium oxide.
14. An undecorated article as recited in claim 13, wherein the amount of added light scattering particles to said urethane does not substantially block reflected iridescent luminosity from said metal surface.
15. An undecorated article as recited in claim 12, wherein said light scattering particles comprise aluminum oxide.
16. An undecorated article as recited in claim 12, wherein said light scattering particles comprise naturally occurring metal oxides.
17. The article as recited in claim 16, wherein said dye receptive coating comprises a thickness of at least 0.0015 inches.
18. A decorated metal article, comprising: a. a human discernable image prepared for sublimation by applying disperse dyes to a transfer media sheet suitable for dye sublimation; b. a polymer coating that scatters light reflected from the surface of said metal article prepared by mixing a base of urethane polymer and light scattering particles, wherein said light scattering particles comprise an average size of between 5 nm to 400 nm and are combined with said urethane at a loading level of between 5% and 40% by weight of solids; c. wherein said metal includes a portion of its surface covered by said polymer coating to a thickness of at least 0.0015 inches and is cured upon said same; and, d. wherein said coated metal surface includes a sublimated, human discernable image by compressing said transfer media sheet against said coated side of said metal surface under at least 5 PSI of pressure and at a temperature of at least 350 degrees Fahrenheit until said human discernable image is sublimated into said coating and cooled.
19. The decorated metal article as recited in claim 18, wherein said human discernable image is formed by applying a temperature of between 360 and 400 degrees Fahrenheit and simultaneously applying a pressure of between 5 and 40 PSI.
20. The decorated metal article as recited in claim 19, wherein said human discernable image comprises a photograph.
21. A method for making a metal surface receptive for applying a dye-sublimated image, comprising the steps of: a. preparing a mixture of urethane polymer and light scattering particles, wherein said light scattering particles comprise an average size of between 5 nm to 400 nm and are combined with said urethane at a loading level of between 5% and 40% by weight of solids; b. coating one side of the surface of said metal article with said polymer mixture to a thickness of at least 0.0015 inches and curing said same; and, c. curing said coating in the presence of a catalyst such that said coating becomes polymerized.
22. The method as recited in claim 21, wherein dye receptive composite coating comprises a clear acrylic urethane coating modified by the addition of a light scattering pigment of titanium dioxide having an average particle size of 100 nm at a loading level of 20% by weight of solids.
23. The method as recited in claim 21, wherein the loading step of said light scattering particles in said polymer mixture and the thickness of said polymer applied to said metal surface are tailored to promote metal surface reflectivity in accordance with the degree of reflectivity exhibited by said metal surface and in accordance with the type of subject matter exhibited by said human discernable image.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0013] An invention incorporating the features of the invention is depicted in the attached drawings which form a portion of the disclosure and wherein:
[0014]
[0015]
[0016]
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
[0017] Referring to the drawings for a better understanding of the function and structure of the invention,
[0018] The organic polymer 12 is a clear urethane coating modified by the addition of light scattering additives 13 that renders it a white translucent, partially opaque coating. A suitable light scattering pigment 13 preferably includes nano-sized particles of metal oxide, such as aluminum oxide, having an average particle size of 100 nm at a maxim loading level of 5-10% by weight of solids, but even more preferably utilizes a particle size of approximately 5 nm maximum width with loading level of 20% by weight of solids. The coating 12 is applied by spraying onto the aluminum 11 resulting in a dry film buildup of approximately 0.10 mm (0.004). In the preferred embodiment, the coating dries at room temperate with a catalyzed reaction to induce polymerization.
[0019] However, the inventor has used various metal oxide additives and can obtain satisfactory results across a range of additive formulations by varying loading levels of oxides in response to the added particle size of the metal oxide. For example, as shown in Table 1 below, as the size of oxide particles increases, the loading levels decrease. However, it is critical that the substantial majority of particle sizes are less than 400 nm in size irrespective of the loading level, as shown in Table 1.
TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Preparation Loading Levels by No. Particle Size weight of solids 1. 5 nm-15 nm 30% to 40% 2. 15 nm-50 nm 20% to 35% 3. 50 nm-100 nm 10% to 30% 4. 100 nm-200 nm 5% to 20% 5. 200 nm-400 nm Approximately 5%
[0020] Coating 12 must be capable of bonding with the aluminum substrate 11, but possess sufficient flexibility to allow the coated article to be flexed by 5-10% as may be encountered during movement with relatively thin sheets of decorated aluminum. Suitable flexible coating bases for aluminum are polyester or urethane, or a hybrid mixture of two of these coating bases. The coating should either be extruded directly onto the product or applied by conventional coating deposition procedures such as spraying, curtain deposition, or flow-over deposition. The coating may be cured either by low temperature thermal activation, or the application of a chemical catalyst, which is preferred. The coating 12 preferably is not cured by photo-initiated or electron-beam initiated reaction because polymers cured in this manner generally do not possess the ability to be heated and flexed after curing without cracking or delamination.
[0021] As described, coating 12 includes light scattering additives 13. For a final decorated aluminum article to exhibit the desired optical characteristics the coating must include particulate that is capable of scattering light, as opposed to reflecting the light, and which can then combine with the natural reflected luminosity of an aluminum surface, sometimes referred to as metallic iridescence, to magnify the total luminosity of a final image diffused onto a decorated article once the dye sublimation image has been applied. Importantly, the light scattering additives must also exhibit their own level of metallic iridescence so that their light scattering effect adds to and magnifies the pre-existing iridescence of the metal surface. Suitable light scattering particulates for the herein described coating include aluminum oxide, zinc oxide, titanium dioxide, silver oxide, zirconium oxide, and other naturally occurring metal oxides capable of being reduced to nano-sized particles having a cross section of less than 400 nm, and being of white appearance when viewed as agglomerated particulate. Each particulate must be predominately less than 400 nm in size so that each is smaller than any visible wavelength of light. This results in the particulate having a higher refractive index than clear coating surrounding and supporting the particles, resulting in suitable light scattering and a suitable degree of light transmission reflected from the metallic surface. As may be understood, these particulate additives may also render the aluminum substrate more scratch resistant, depending upon the nano-pigment selected. As indicated above, the preferred embodiment for a particle additive is nano-particles of aluminum oxide. This would be the case with the integration of aluminum oxide or zirconium oxide for example. The loading level of the aluminum oxide particulate should be sufficient to impart whiteness and a degree of opacity, but not of such concentrations that the coating ceases to be translucent or partially transparent. Therefore, nanoparticles in a range of 5 nm-400 nm at a loading level of between 5% and 40% by weight of solids of the coating are preferred, as indicated in Table 1.
[0022] As suggested in the Table, variations in film thickness, particle loading levels, and mean particle size may be altered to achieve different luminosity characteristics on a metal surface. Further, those individual properties would be tailored in response to the type of reflectivity exhibited by the metal surface onto which an image might be applied, and also in response to the type of lighting effects that might be desired for a particular sublimated image to be deposited on that metal surface. For example, a polished, anodized aluminum surface would require less loading of oxide particle loading to achieve a particular level of luminosity than a standard milled, unbrushed, gray aluminum surface, and a wedding scene image might utilize a higher level of particle loading than say a redwood forest scene. Conversely, a thicker film would allow for less particulate loading the achieve the same level of luminosity for a particular type of surface or image. Hence, the herein described process allows for variations in film thickness, loading, and particle size to suit a particular metal substrate and/or image requirements.
[0023] Coating thickness is also important. The coating 12 must be thick enough to allow the light attenuation caused by the particulate contained within it to render the aluminum article reflective and to allow the dyes, in concert with the particulate, to render a degree of opacity while allowing the above described iridescence to propagate away from the substrate. This generally requires a coating thickness of at least 0.0015, (0.0381 mm), but preferably greater than 0.0025 (0.0635 mm) in thickness. The coating should not however be greater than 0.005 (0.127 mm) because disperse dyes may fail to properly diffuse through the coating. The consequence of this is that the iridescence imparted by the particulate present between the aluminum interface and the threshold of the dye saturated part of the coating film causes a desirable metallic iridescence of the image such that any deposited image is enhanced with additional luminosity.
[0024] Another consideration to accomplish the herein described deposition of disperse dyes 16 onto the substrate 11 is the amount of dyestuff that should be deposited onto the transfer media 17 (see
[0025] Referring now to
[0026] As shown in
[0027] The industrial applicability of the present invention is broad. Products decorated in the manner described can be employed in commercial and residential wall photos, exterior promotional signage, table and desktop photographs contained in self-standing aluminum frames, aluminum window murals and collages, aluminum cutting boards, metal placemats, pre-fabricated POS counter areas, hanging ornaments, aluminum lighting fixtures, candle accessories, and an almost unlimited array of other imprintables. The implication to photography itself is also significant as the invention provides for a completely different iridescent media for photographs that includes a full color spectrum of color including bright solid whites and rich blacks.
[0028] While I have shown my invention in one form, it will be obvious to those skilled in the art that it is not so limited but is susceptible of various changes and modifications without departing from the spirit thereof.