Acoustical sound proofing material with improved fracture characteristics and methods for manufacturing same
10132076 ยท 2018-11-20
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
E04B2/7409
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
Y10T156/10
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
International classification
E04B2/74
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
Abstract
A material for use in building construction (partition, wall, ceiling, floor or door) that exhibits improved acoustical sound proofing and fracture characteristics optimized for efficient installation. The material comprises a laminated structure having as an integral part thereof one or more layers of viscoelastic material which also functions both as a glue and as an energy dissipating layer; and one or more constraining layers, such as gypsum or cement-based panel products modified for easy fracture. In one embodiment, standard paper-faced wallboard, typically gypsum, comprises the external surfaces of the laminated structure with the inner surface of said wallboard being bare with no paper or other material being placed thereon. The resulting structure improves the attenuation of sound transmitted through the structure while also allowing installation of the sound proofing material as efficiently as the installation of standard material when the sound proofing material is used alone or incorporated into a partition assembly.
Claims
1. A method of foil ling a laminated, sound-attenuating structure, comprising: forming a first gypsum board having two surfaces, said two surfaces including a first outer clad surface and a first inner unclad surface, wherein the entire inner surface of the first gypsum board is unclad; placing a first layer of viscoelastic glue directly on the first inner unclad surface; and placing a second gypsum board proximate to said first layer of viscoelastic glue, said second gypsum board having two surfaces, said two surfaces including a second outer clad surface and a second inner unclad surface, wherein the entire inner surface of the second gypsum board is unclad.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein said second gypsum board directly contacts said first layer of viscoelastic glue.
3. The method of claim 1, wherein said structure is appropriate for use in walls, ceilings, floors or other building partitions to attenuate sound.
4. The method of claim 1, wherein said first outer clad surface is paper.
5. The method of claim 1, wherein said first outer clad surface is nonwoven fiberglass.
6. The method of claim 1, further including the steps of: placing a constraining layer comprising a low tensile strength material on said first layer of viscoelastic glue, said constraining layer having a first constraining layer surface in direct contact with said first layer of viscoelastic glue and a second constraining layer surface; and placing a second layer of viscoelastic glue on the second constraining layer surface, wherein said second gypsum board directly contacts said second layer of viscoelastic glue.
7. The method of claim 1, wherein said finished laminated, sound-attenuating structure has a scored flexural strength of less than about 50 pounds force when one of the first or second outer clad surfaces has been scored.
8. The method of claim 7, wherein said finished laminated, sound-attenuating structure has a scored flexural strength of about 22 pounds force when one of the first or second outer clad surfaces has been scored.
9. The method of claim 1, wherein said finished laminated, sound-attenuating structure has a Sound Transmission Class (STC) value of greater than about 34.
10. The method of claim 9, wherein said finished laminated, sound-attenuating structure has an STC of about 49.
11. The method of claim 1 wherein the viscoelastic glue is a fire enhanced glue comprising up to 25% of a zinc borate compound by weight.
12. A method of forming a laminated, sound-attenuating structure, comprising: forming a gypsum board having two surfaces, said two surfaces including an outer paper-clad surface and an inner unclad surface, wherein the entire inner surface of the gypsum board is unclad; placing a layer of viscoelastic glue directly on the inner unclad surface; and placing a cement-based board over said layer of viscoelastic glue, said cement-based board having two surfaces, said two surfaces including an outer cement surface and an inner cement surface.
13. The method of claim 12, wherein the cement-based board includes calcium silicate.
14. The method of claim 12, wherein the cement-based board includes magnesium oxide.
15. The method of claim 12, wherein the cement-based board includes a phosphate.
16. The method of claim 12 wherein the viscoelastic glue is a fire enhanced glue comprising up to 25% of a zinc borate compound by weight.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) This invention will be more fully understood in light of the following drawings taken together with the following detailed description.
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DESCRIPTION OF SOME EMBODIMENTS
(8) The following detailed description is meant to be exemplary only and not limiting. Other embodiments of this invention, such as the number, type, thickness, dimensions, area, shape, and placement order of both external and internal layer materials, will be obvious to those skilled in the art in view of this description.
(9) The process for creating laminar panels in accordance with the present invention takes into account many factors: exact chemical composition of the glue; glue application process; pressing process; and drying and dehumidification process.
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(11) The gypsum board in top layer 101 typically is fabricated using standard well-known techniques and thus the method for fabricating the gypsum board will not be described. Next, the bottom face of gypsum layer 101 is an unfaced (without paper or fiberglass liner) interior surface 104. In other embodiments, surface 104 may be faced with a thin film or veil with a very low tensile strength. In one embodiment this thin film or veil can be a single use healthcare fabric as described more completely below in paragraph 21. Applied to surface 104 is a layer of glue 102 called QuietGlue? Glue 102, made of a viscoelastic polymer, has the property that the kinetic energy in the sound which interacts with the glue, when constrained by surrounding layers, will be significantly dissipated by the glue thereby reducing the sound's total energy across a broad frequency spectrum, and thus the sound energy which will transmit through the resulting laminar structure. Typically, this glue 102 is made of the materials as set forth in TABLE 1, although other glues having similar characteristics to those set forth directly below TABLE 1 can also be used in this invention.
(12) TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Fire-Enhanced (FE) Quiet Glue? Chemical Makeup WEIGHT % COMPONENTS Min Max Preferred acrylate polymer 30 70 41 ethyl acrylate, 0 3.0 0.3 methacrylic acid, polymer with ethyl-2- propenoate hydrophobic silica 0 1.0 0.2 paraffin oil 0 3.0 1.5 silicon dioxide 0 1.0 0.1 sodium carbonate 0 3.0 0.6 stearic acid, aluminum 0 1.0 0.1 salt surfactant 0 2.0 0.6 rosin ester 0 20 7 Zinc Borate 0 25 12 Melamine Phosphate 0 10 6 Ammonium 0 10 6 Polyphosphate Hexahydroxy methyl 0 5.0 1.5 ethane CI Pigment Red 0 1.0 0.02 Dispersion water 10 40 23 2-Pyridinethiol, 1- 0 3.0 1 oxide, sodium salt
The preferred formulation is but one example of a viscoelastic glue. Other formulations may be used to achieve similar results and the range given is an example of successful formulations investigated here.
(13) The physical solid-state characteristics of QuietGlue? include: 1) a broad glass transition temperature below room temperature; 2) mechanical response typical of a rubber (i.e., elongation at break, low elastic modulus); 3) strong peel strength at room temperature; 4) weak shear strength at room temperature; 6) does not dissolve in water (swells poorly); and 7) peels off the substrate easily at temperature of dry ice.
QuietGlue may be obtained from Serious Materials, 1259 Elko Drive, Sunnyvale, Calif. 94089.
(14) Gypsum board layer 103 is placed on the bottom of the structure and carefully pressed in a controlled manner with respect to uniform pressure (pounds per square inch), temperature and time. The top face of gypsum layer 103 is an unfaced (without paper or fiberglass liner) interior surface 105. In other embodiments, surface 105 may be faced with a thin film or veil with a very low tensile strength. The maximum very low tensile strength for the thin film or veil is approximately six (6) psi but the preferred very low tensile strength for this material is as low as approximately one (1) psi. In one embodiment this thin film can be a fabric such as a single use healthcare fabric as described more completely in paragraph 21. Such fabrics are typically used for surgical drapes and gowns.
(15) Finally, the assembly is subjected to dehumidification and drying to allow the panels to dry, typically for forty-eight (48) hours.
(16) In one embodiment of this invention, the glue 102, when spread over the bottom of top layer 101, is subject to a gas flow for about forty-five seconds to partially dry the glue. The gas can be heated, in which case the flow time may be reduced. The glue 102, when originally spread out over any material to which it is being applied, is liquid. By partially drying out the glue 102, either by air drying for a selected time or by providing a gas flow over the surface of the glue, the glue 102 becomes a pressure sensitive adhesive, much like the glue on a tape. The second panel, for example the bottom layer 103, is then placed over the glue 102 and pressed against the material beneath the glue 102 (as in the example of
(17) In
(18) Examples of materials for the constraining layer 202 include polyester non-wovens, fiberglass non-woven sheets, cellulosic nonwovens, or similar products. The tensile strength of these materials varies with the length of the constituent fibers and the strength of the fiber/binder bond. Those with shorter fibers and weaker bond strengths have lower tensile strengths. A good example of such materials are the plastic-coated cellulosic nonwoven materials commonly used as single use healthcare fabrics, known for their poor tensile strengths. Single use healthcare fabrics are available from the 3M Corporation of St. Paul, Minn., DuPont of Wilmington, Del. and Ahlstrom of Helsinki, Finland. The preferred maximum very low tensile strength for these materials is approximately six (6) psi but the preferred very low tensile strength for these materials is approximately one (1) psi. The weight of these materials can vary from a high of approximately four (4) ounces per square yard down to a preferred weight of approximately eight tenths (0.8) of an ounce per square yard. Alternate materials can be of any type and any appropriate thickness with the condition that they have acceptably low tensile strength properties. In the example of
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(20) The flexural strength value of the finished laminate 100 significantly decreases with the elimination of the paper facings at surfaces 104 and 105.
(21) In comparison, scored typical prior art gypsum sheets (F1 to F4 and E1 to E4) with interior paper faced surfaces, have an average flexural strength of 15 pounds force for ? inch thick and 46 pounds force for ? inch thick respectively. These prior art laminated panels can be scored and fractured in the standard manner used in construction but lack the acoustic properties of the structures described herein. The other prior art structures shown in
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(23) In fabricating the structure of
(24) In fabricating the structure of
(25) Accordingly, the laminated structures of this invention provide a significant improvement in the sound transmission class number associated with the structures and thus reduce significantly the sound transmitted from one room to adjacent rooms while simultaneously providing for traditional scoring and hand fracture during installation.
(26) The dimensions given for each material in the laminated structures of this invention can be varied as desired to control cost, overall thickness, weight, anticipated moisture and temperature control requirements, and STC results. The described embodiments and their dimensions are illustrative only and not limiting. Other materials than gypsum can be used for one or both of the external layers of the laminated structures shown in
(27) Other embodiments of this invention will be obvious in view of the above description.