Fire barrier materials

Compositions – Fire retarding – Intumescent

Reexamination Certificate

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Details

C524S430000, C524S431000, C524S432000, C524S433000, C524S492000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06616866

ABSTRACT:

This invention concerns fire barrier materials.
Fire barrier materials are known from GB2234754A in the form of compositions comprising two or more frits capable of melting progressively as the temperature rises in a fire situation; one of the frits being a relatively high melting devitrfying frit. The composition can be added to a variety of materials such as phenolic and polyester resins and sodium silicate, to provide or enhance fire resistance.
A preferred composition contains a relatively low melting frit that starts to melt at about 450° C. and a devitrifying frit that starts to melt at about 700° C. The devitrifying frit specifically solidifies or vitrifies to provide strength to the char forming a fused protective layer, thus starving the fire of oxygen and reducing smoke and toxic fume emissions as well as reducing the risk of flashover.
It is also known to add to such frit compositions intumescent substances, such as hydrated magnesium hydrated carbonate, calcium carbonate and alumina trihydrate. These intumescent substances give off water vapour and carbon dioxide in a fire situation and together with the frit composition help to stop flaming of the host material. Melamine phosphate as one intumescent additive and a combination of ammonium polyphosphate, melamine and pentaerythritol (trade name “Budit 3077”) as another have been included in frit compositions to give an intumescent char in fire situations. Melamine phosphate mixed with a frit composition and a phosphate flame retardant in powder form has proved effective in both epoxy and polyester resins.
Frit compositions of the type described above are sold under the trade mark CEEPREE and have been used in coatings, paints, sealants, caulks, adhesives, polyester and phenolic dough and sheet compounds, vinyl flooring, EPDM sheet and other materials to provide fire barrier properties.
However, these frit compositions are not entirely suitable for use in certain materials, such as thermoplastics used in injection and extrusion moulding processes for forming end products, such as communications and electric power cables, electrical components, automobile, aircraft, domestic and industrial buildings and marine craft parts, and thermosetting materials and composites, such as glass reinforced resin laminates used for moulding storage tanks and the like.
In particular it has been found that the prior art frit compositions have an alkaline pH of the order of 10 which has precluded their use in some paints and sealants having an acid pH, such as those based on acrylic resins.
It has also been found that the softening temperature of 450° C. of a lower melting frit is too high for its use in some host materials, such as thermoplastics, because they degrade at much lower temperatures. The host material could be protected to over 450° C. by including alumina trihydrate, hydrated magnesium calcium carbonate or magnesium oxide but the volumes of these materials needed to be effective affects processing and properties of the end product.
An alternative is to use halogenated systems based on chlorinated paraffins or brominated materials with antimony trioxide or pentoxide. However, the use of these systems is being curtailed because of their carcinogenic properties and the increase in smoke production in a fire situation.
An object of this invention is to provide frit compositions having a wider range of uses than hitherto.
According to this invention there is provided afire barrier material comprising a combination of substances capable of melting progressively as the temperature rises under fire conditions including a relatively high melting devitrifying frit and powdered zinc and/or tin to reduce melt and flow temperature of the frit.
The material according to the invention may also include a pH buffer and an intumescent substance. Preferably, the material also comprises a relatively low melting frit the frits being capable of melting progressively as the temperature rises under fire conditions.
The powder blends may further include one or more of the following substances selected from ammonium molybdenate, sodium pyrophosphate, ammonium monophosphate, ammonium polyphosphate, zinc borate, melamine, pentaerythritol and melamine phosphate.
The preferred substance pH buffer is one that reduces the pH of the frit compositions to a low alkalinity or neutral pH. A pH reduction to 8.5 or even 7 is desirable and would render the frit compositions of the invention capable of being used in aqueous acrylic resin based materials.
Compositions of the invention may be used in acid and ester cured thermosetting resins used in glass fibre reinforced structures. They may also be used in catalyst cured thermosetting resins, such as phenolic, epoxy and polyester resins, which would otherwise have the catalyst neutralised by the high pH of the blends.
Suitable pH buffers include phosphates, such as, for example, sodium pyrophosphate, ammonium monophosphate and ammonium polyphdsphate.
Another advantage of some of these buffer substances is their ability to generate gases under heat, such as when in combination with zinc borate, the gases cause foaming of the frit composition so that carbonaceous char from the hot material can fill the foam cavities to form a protective skin in a fire situation.
The substances to bring down malt and flow temperatures may be used singly or in combinations. A preferred combination produces a first melt zone in the range of 220 to 270° C., a second melt zone in the range 270 to 420° C. and a third melt zone in the range of 420° C. upwards.
One substance to bring down the melt and flow temperature of the frit compositions of the invention may be zinc borate. The inclusion of zinc borate which starts to function at 350° C. has proved effective in bringing the melt and flow temperature of the frit mix down. Magnesium carbonate and/or zinc spar may be added to the zinc borate to reduce melt temperature further. When used in conjunction with sodium pyrophosphate and the frit mix, the blend is inert until heated beyond 350° C. At that point the materials begin to fuse and the gas generated by the action of heat causes an intumescent action in the molten glass compound. A fine celled glass foam is produced without the inclusion of melamine as a blowing agent and pentaerythrytol as a carbonific which would be the normal specification to obtain this effect. It will be appreciated that the decreased trigger temperature of 350° C. may still not be low enough for the inclusion of frit compositions of the invention in some host materials.
It has been found that the inclusion of some powdered metals in the glass frit mix can bring the melt temperature of the blend down to a viable level, i.e. a temperature which will allow heat operated processes, such as injection moulding and extrusion, to be carried out without triggering the melt and flow characteristics within the equipment, whilst forming a protective char on the surface of the host material in a fire situation.
Powdered tin with a melt temperature of 228° C. may be used in a small quantity, as a catalyst, to promote a cascade effect. Powdered zinc with a melting temperature of 420° C. may be added as the second metal. Zinc borate may also be included as a third component. Tin, zinc and zinc borate can be mixed in any proportions for use in compositions of the invention. A mix of tin and zinc is the preferred blend for use in compositions of the invention.
There are possible electrical disadvantages when the frit mix fuses in a fire situation, particularly in electrical cable covering material. A covalent bond is the linkage of two atoms by the sharing of two electrons, one contributed by each of the atoms. The electrons are only shared equally when the atoms are identical and in most covalent bonds the electrons are held to a greater extent by one atom than the other, leading to electronegativity. Negative ions can be produced. The inclusion of materials with free positive ions can be of considerable benefit.
Tin is largely covalent in the +2 state. Zinc and zinc borate

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