PROTECTIVE BARRIER FOR SAFETY GLAZING
20250230936 ยท 2025-07-17
Inventors
- Bart E. Wilson (Las Vegas, NV, US)
- Stephen S. Wilson (Las Vegas, NV, US)
- Seth Wilson (Las Vegas, NV, US)
Cpc classification
F24F11/86
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B60J1/2094
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B2255/10
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B2605/006
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B2307/40
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B60J1/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F24F11/30
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B32B37/182
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B7/12
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F24F1/0093
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24F2110/12
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F24F1/0093
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24F11/30
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24F11/86
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24F11/52
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B32B7/12
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B37/18
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A protective barrier affixable to a curved substrate comprises a stack of two or more lenses, each of the two or more lenses including a polyethylene terephthalate (PET) film, a hard coat on a first side of the PET film, and an adhesive layer on a second side of the PET film opposite the first side. The stack of two or more lenses may have a modulation transfer function that exhibits a contrast value greater than 75% for a spatial resolution of one line-pair per 0.0003 radians at 65 degrees angle of incidence. Heat and pressure may be applied to conform the stack of two or more lenses to the shape of the curved substrate.
Claims
1-20. (canceled)
21. A protective barrier affixable to a curved substrate, the protective barrier comprising a stack of two or more lenses, each of the two or more lenses including a polyethylene terephthalate (PET) film and a hard coat on a first side of the PET film, the stack of two or more lenses having a modulation transfer function that exhibits a contrast value greater than 90% for a spatial resolution of one line-pair per 0.0003 radians at 45 degrees angle of incidence.
22. The protective barrier of claim 21, wherein each of the two or more lenses further includes an adhesive layer on a second side of the PET film opposite the first side.
23. The protective barrier of claim 22, wherein the adhesive layer of each of the two or more lenses includes UV stabilizers.
24. The protective barrier of claim 21, wherein the modulation transfer function of the stack of two or more lenses exhibits a contrast value greater than 80% for a spatial resolution of one line-pair per 0.0003 radians at 60 degrees angle of incidence.
25. The protective barrier of claim 21, wherein the modulation transfer function of the stack of two or more lenses exhibits a contrast value greater than 85% for a spatial resolution of one line-pair per 0.0003 radians at 55 degrees angle of incidence.
26. The protective barrier of claim 21, wherein the PET film of each of the two or more lenses has a modulation transfer function that exhibits a contrast value greater than 70% for a spatial resolution of one line-pair per 0.0003 radians at 70 degrees angle of incidence.
27. The protective barrier of claim 21, wherein each of the two or more lenses is 2-4 mil thick.
28. The protective barrier of claim 21, wherein the PET film of each of the two or more lenses includes UV stabilizers.
29. The protective barrier of claim 21, wherein the hard coat includes UV stabilizers.
30. The protective barrier of claim 21, wherein the PET film of each of the two or more lenses has a machine direction shrinkage of 0.6%-1.8% and a transverse direction shrinkage of 0.3%-1.1% at 150 C.
31. A method comprising: stacking two or more lenses, each of the two or more lenses including a polyethylene terephthalate (PET) film and a hard coat on a first side of the PET film, the stack of two or more lenses having a modulation transfer function that exhibits a contrast value greater than 90% for a spatial resolution of one line-pair per 0.0003 radians at 45 degrees angle of incidence; placing the stack of two more lenses on a curved substrate to contact with the curved substrate; and applying heat and pressure to conform the stack of two or more lenses to the shape of the curved substrate.
32. The method of claim 31, wherein each of the two or more lenses further includes an adhesive layer on a second side of the PET film opposite the first side.
33. The method of claim 32, wherein the adhesive layer of each of the two or more lenses includes UV stabilizers.
34. The method of claim 32, wherein said applying heat and pressure is performed at least in part prior to the adhesive layer of each of the two or more lenses being fully cured.
35. The method of claim 31, further comprising peeling off an outermost lens of the stack of two or more lenses after said applying heat and pressure.
36. The method of claim 31, wherein the PET film of each of the two or more lenses has a modulation transfer function that exhibits a contrast value greater than 80% for a spatial resolution of one line-pair per 0.0003 radians at 60 degrees angle of incidence.
37. The method of claim 31, wherein each of the two or more lenses is 2-4 mil thick.
38. The method of claim 31, wherein the PET film of each of the two or more lenses includes UV stabilizers.
39. The method of claim 31, wherein the hard coat of each of the two or more lenses includes UV stabilizers.
40. The method of claim 31, wherein the PET film of each of the two or more lenses has a machine direction shrinkage of 0.6%-1.8% and a transverse direction shrinkage of 0.3%-1.1% at 150 C.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0029] These and other features and advantages of the various embodiments disclosed herein will be better understood with respect to the following description and drawings, in which like numbers refer to like parts throughout, and in which:
[0030]
[0031]
[0032]
[0033]
[0034]
[0035]
[0036]
[0037]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0038] The present disclosure encompasses various embodiments of a protective barrier affixable to a curved substrate and methods of manufacture, installation, and use thereof. The detailed description set forth below in connection with the appended drawings is intended as a description of several currently contemplated embodiments and is not intended to represent the only form in which the disclosed invention may be developed or utilized. The description sets forth the functions and features in connection with the illustrated embodiments. It is to be understood, however, that the same or equivalent functions may be accomplished by different embodiments that are also intended to be encompassed within the scope of the present disclosure. It is further understood that relational terms such as first and second and the like are used solely to distinguish one from another entity without necessarily requiring or implying any actual such relationship in order between such entities.
[0039]
[0040] Distortion is a visual acuity error caused by a displaced object in the far field (e.g. 40-1,000 feet). Safety glazing can have localized zones which cause object displacements perceived as distortion, where an object may appear to jump from one position to another when viewed from a slightly different position or angle. Conventionally, distortion is only qualitatively determined, for example, by test 5.15 specified in the ANSI Z26.1-1996 standard. This test uses a shadow graph in a long tunnel with a collimated light source and white screen. The technician places a specimen in the light path at normal angle of incidence, 15 inches from the screen. The technician then looks for dark and light artifacts caused by distortion. The test has no quantitative criteria and does not address distortion at the high angle of incidence used in modern car windshields (e.g. 60-70 degrees).
[0041] Ideally, the distortion should be minimized to the resolution of the human eye with 20/20 vision, which is about one line-pair per 0.0003 radians. If an object is displaced by 0.0006 radians, for example, then the eye will perceive the location change as distortion. Effectively, then, distortion must be reduced such that any object displacement is below the resolution capability of the human eye in order to be considered distortion-free. Meanwhile, when safety glazing is viewed at high angles of incidence (e.g. 60-70 degrees), the optical thickness increases as a function of the cosine of the angle according to Snell's law. This may cause any distortion effects to be amplified, especially for safety film thicker than around 4 mil as may be needed to resist impact damage at automobile speeds.
[0042]
[0043] A test setup such as that of
[0044] For example, at any or all stages of producing the stack of lenses 110 (e.g. during the formation of the PET film 112 by melting a resin, extruding the melted resin through a die to produce a film, and cooling the film, during the applying of the hard coat 114, during the applying of the adhesive layer 116, etc.), one or more images of the test pattern 220 may be captured through the lens 110 or stack of lenses 110 being produced. The image(s) may be captured, for example, by aiming an image capturing device through a roll-to-roll processing web containing the lens 110 or stack of lenses 110 at one or more desired angles of incidence. On the basis of such image(s), a computer may calculate the MTF data and produce an output used for adjusting process parameters that are found to effect the modulation transfer function of the lens 110 or stack of lenses 110, such as a temperature setting of a heater used in melting the resin (e.g. absolute temperature or relative temperatures of a gradient or profile of a plurality of heated regions of an extruder assembly), a rotation speed of an extrusion screw (which may determine melting time as well as degree of mixing of the resin), a rotation speed of one or more rollers (which may determine cooling time and/or a degree of force acting on the polymer film during cooling), a flow speed, deposition speed, or other application speed of the hard coat 114 or adhesive layer 116, and/or a speed at which the lenses 110 are stacked. It is contemplated, for example, that the PET film 112 may in some cases be prefabricated and selected for its known MTF data, whereas the modulation transfer function of the stack of lenses 110 may be actively controlled during the application of the hard coats 114 and/or adhesive layers 116 and the stacking of the lenses 110. In other cases, the PET film 112 may also be manufactured while actively controlling the modulation transfer function thereof. The output of the computer may include, for example, a feedback signal for automatically adjusting the relevant process parameters without user input in either a continuous or batch-to-batch process. As another example, the output may include a visual representation of the data to be interpreted by an operator who will make the necessary adjustments manually.
[0045]
[0046] An example of a prefabricated PET film 112 that may be selected for its known MTF data for use in the stack of lenses 110 is a PET film 112 having a modulation transfer function that itself exhibits a contrast value greater than 80% for a spatial resolution of one line-pair per 0.0003 radians at 65 degrees angle of incidence. One such material is a film sold under the name MELINEX 454 by DuPont Teijin Films, which is represented in
[0047] In contrast, the sample labeled T-8 33, represented in
[0048]
[0049] In general, the increased thickness needed to protect a glass windshield poses several challenges to the production of the protective barrier 100. As described above, for example, the increased thickness may amplify distortion at high angles of incidence (e.g. 60-70 degrees). This challenge may be overcome by controlling the modulation transfer function of the protective barrier 100 as described above, for example, by producing a stack of lenses 110 having a modulation transfer function that exhibits a contrast value greater than 75% for a spatial resolution of one line-pair per 0.0003 radians at 65 degrees angle of incidence. Additional challenges posed by the thickness of the protective barrier 100 include making a product that can be successfully molded to a curved substrate 10 (e.g. an automobile windshield), achieving a high degree of weatherability and abrasion resistance and reduced haze, and maintaining a reasonably long service life. Each of these challenges may be overcome by the disclosed protective battier 100 as described in more detail below.
[0050]
[0051] The windshields of most cars exhibit a compound curvature, such that the protective barrier 100 will not conform to the windshield 10 without shrinking it in the upper and lower corners. Since the protective barrier 100 may be flat (e.g. having been manufactured in a roll-to-roll process), the stack of two or more lenses 110 may not initially conform to the curved shape of the windshield 10, resulting in regions of greater or less adhesion and pockets/bubbles of air between the stack of lenses 110 and the windshield. Therefore, in order to conform the stack of lenses 110 to the shape of the windshield 10, heat and pressure may be applied using a heater 30 such as a hot air source (e.g. a heat gun or blow dryer) or an infrared heater. At the same time, pressure may be applied to the stack of lenses 110 using a card or squeegee. In some cases, the protective barrier 100 may be applied using a sacrificial layer serving as a female mold cavity to sandwich the stack of lenses 110 between the sacrificial layer and the windshield 10 as described in commonly owned U.S. application Ser. No. 16/778,928, filed Jan. 31, 2020 and entitled THERMOFORM WINDSHIELD STACK WITH INTEGRATED FORMABLE MOLD, the entire contents of which is expressly incorporated herein by reference.
[0052] As the installer heats and presses down on the stack of lenses 110, the stack of lenses 110 may shrink and stretch to take on the contour of the curved substrate 10 (the windshield). In the case of commercial films having a thickness of only 2 mil, the necessary shrinking may be easy to achieve. On the other hand, a monolithic film of 8 mil or thicker will crease before the film conforms to the windshield, making it unusable. In light of this challenge, the protective barrier 100 described herein uses multiple thin lenses 110 (e.g. 2-4 mil thick each) that individually shrink well. The adhesive layers 116 between the lenses 110 of the stack, which may be the same acrylic adhesive for example, may be only partially cured to produce an extremely low peel strength (e.g. 15-25 g/in) and high elasticity. As such, each individual lens 110 of the stack may float in relationship to each other, allowing shrinking to occur without creasing any of the lenses 110. Once the protective barrier 100 is installed and exposed to sunlight, for example, the adhesive layers 116 will cure and increase the peel and bonding strength (e.g. by a factor of 3 to 5), promoting a long service life. The peel strength after initial weathering may be 100-150 g/in, for example.
[0053]
[0054]
[0055] In addition to improving moldability as described above, the use of multiple thin lenses 110 (e.g. 2-4 mil thick) rather than a single monolithic film may allow for a sufficiently reduced haze to be usable on automobile windshields. In general, haze in a PET film has two components: scattering of incident light at the surface and dispersion of incident light in the bulk material. The latter bulk component increases with the thickness of the PET film, for example, as shown in the table below:
TABLE-US-00002 Thickness Haze % 2 mil 0.4 4 mil 0.6 7 mil 0.8 10 mil 1.2
[0056] However, the effect is not additive when multiple PET films are stacked, with three layers only adding about 0.1-0.2% haze in total. Meanwhile, the surface component of haze is mitigated by the addition of hard coat or adhesive. By structuring the protective barrier 100 as a stack of lenses 110 containing relatively thin PET films 112 rather than a single large PET film, a reduced haze can be achieved even while the protective barrier 100 may be thick enough to resist impact at automobile speeds (e.g. 8 mil or thicker) as described above. In particular, the protective barrier 100 described herein, comprising a stack of two or more lenses 110 each of which includes a PET film 112 with a hard coat 114 and an adhesive layer 116, may achieve an initial (pre-weathering) haze of below 1% (preferably below 0.6%), making it suitable for use on automobile windshields.
[0057] Weathering may be defined according to a standard such as the ANSI Z26.1-1996 standard at exposure of one year at around 300 MJ/m.sup.2 of ultraviolet radiation (e.g. 301 MJ/m.sup.2 or 306 MJ/m.sup.2 per applicable standards, or 280 MJ/m.sup.2 extrapolated from 70 MJ/m.sup.2 per three month period). In order to simulate exposure for one year in an outdoor Arizona climate (Arizona being selected as a weathering benchmark for its high temperatures and high-intensity sunlight), a natural sunlight concentrator may be used such as one that complies with the American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM) G90 standard, entitled Standard Practice for Performing Accelerated Outdoor Weathering of Materials Using Concentrated Natural Sunlight. The haze and abrasion resistance of the protective barrier 100 may be measured before and at the end of the exposure cycle.
[0058] In the comparative example of the RO 44 product described above, a UV stabilizer such as a UV absorbing compound is mixed into the hard coat and the adhesive of each of the four layers. After only six months of Arizona exposure, the outermost layer becomes unusable because of loss of transmission, increased haze, and loss of hardness. Because there is so much UV inhibitor in the hard coat, the hard coat has reduced hardness and fractures, allowing the underlying PET core of the outermost layer to become yellow and brittle. The resulting haze may exceed 20%.
[0059] In contrast to the RO 44 product, the protective barrier 100 described herein may be produced with the PET film 112 of each of the two or more lenses 110 including UV stabilizers such as hydroxyphenyl-benzotriazole or hydroxyphenyl-triazine UV absorbers. The hard coat 114 and/or the adhesive layer 116 of each lens 110 may also include UV stabilizers. Because the UV stabilizers are mixed into the PET film 112, a reduced amount of UV stabilizers can be used in the hard coat 114 and adhesive layer 116, allowing the hard coat 114 to maintain its hardness without sacrificing UV stability. Spreading the UV stabilizers across all components allows for a highly weatherable assembly, such that the protective barrier 100 may exceed one year of ANSI G90 exposure in Arizona sun and may look very good with low haze and little if any yellowing after weathering. The protective barrier 100 may, for example, have an abrasion resistance at 1,000 Taber cycles of less than 1% haze before weathering and less than 4% (preferably less than 2%) haze after weathering.
[0060] Although the protective barrier 100 may have sufficient weatherability, eventually the outermost lens 110 (e.g. lens 110c in the 3-layer example of
[0061]
[0062] During any or all of steps 810-840, the operational flow may comprise controlling the MTF of the stack of lenses 110 (step 850). The MTF of the stack of lenses 110 may be controlled, for example, so as to exhibit a contrast value greater than 75% for a spatial resolution of one line-pair per 0.0003 radians at 65 degrees angle of incidence. As explained above, such control may be achieved by selecting an appropriate pre-fabricated PET film 112 in step 810. Alternatively, or additionally, the control of the MTF may be achieved by actively monitoring and adjusting process parameters (e.g. roller speed of a roll-to-roll process, etc.) while fabricating a PET film 112 in step 810, depositing the hard coat 114 in step 820, applying the adhesive layer 116 in step 830, and/or stacking the two or more lenses 110 in step 840. It is contemplated that such active monitoring and adjusting of process parameters may include a continuous process including a feedback loop of monitored MTF data and/or a batch-to-batch process with MTF measurements manually or automatically fed back from a preceding batch.
[0063] Once the protective barrier 100 comprising the stack of lenses 110 has been assembled, the operational flow may continue with installing the protective barrier 100 on a curved substrate 10 such as the windshield of the car 20 shown in
[0064] After allowing the protective barrier 100 to cool down, the installation may conclude with performing a final trim as described in relation to
[0065] As explained above, it is contemplated that a protective barrier 100 having more than one lens 110 may allow for the outermost lens 110 to be peeled off and removed to reveal the unused surface of the lens 110 beneath. In this respect, the operational flow of
[0066] The above description is given by way of example, and not limitation. Given the above disclosure, one skilled in the art could devise variations that are within the scope and spirit of the invention disclosed herein. Further, the various features of the embodiments disclosed herein can be used alone, or in varying combinations with each other and are not intended to be limited to the specific combination described herein. Thus, the scope of the claims is not to be limited by the illustrated embodiments.