Glass-fibre reinforced absorbent separator

Chemistry: electrical current producing apparatus – product – and – Current producing cell – elements – subcombinations and... – Separator – retainer or spacer insulating structure

Reexamination Certificate

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C429S225000, C429S129000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06319629

ABSTRACT:

The present invention relates to absorbent separators, reinforced with fibres, for batteries, including lead-acid accumulators regulated by a valve.
Electrical lead-acid accumulators are used to store electric energy in chemical form.
This type of accumulator may be charged and discharged several times, some accumulators being capable of undergoing several hundred or even several thousand charge-discharge cycles before the quantity of electric energy supplied during discharge becomes too low. Normally, this threshold of electrical performance occurs at 80 per cent of the nominal capacity of the accumulator.
The maintenance of a traditional electrical lead-acid accumulator involves replacing the water lost by electrolysis or evaporation, particularly during the recharging cycle.
To eliminate this maintenance, an accumulator regulated by a valve has been developed, also known as a gas-recombination accumulator. This type of accumulator succeeds in reducing the losses of water considerably, thanks to the recombination of the oxygen which occurs in the accumulator towards the end of the recharging cycle.
Oxygen is formed on the positive plates towards the end of the recharging through the electrolysis of the water contained in the electrolyte. This gas fills the accumulator and migrates towards the negative plates. The oxygen is reduced on the surface of the said plates and is then incorporated in the electrolyte by a series of electrochemical reactions.
The reduction of the oxygen is possible because the accumulator is provided with a valve which prevents the oxygen escaping from the accumulator and which maintains a pressure slightly above atmospheric pressure inside the accumulator. This excess pressure inside the accumulator prevents atmospheric gases from entering the accumulator.
Establishing this internal recycling of the oxygen is possible only if the electrolyte is immobilised and if the gases find empty spaces through which they can circulate. The two methods of immobilising the electrolyte are:
gelation of the electrolyte with silica,
using absorbent separators which retain the electrolyte.
Accumulators regulated by a valve incorporate flexible porous separators which are placed between the plates of opposite polarity. The separators absorb and retain the acid liquid electrolyte so that substantially all the electrolyte is absorbed into the pores of the separators and so that only a very thin film of electrolyte is present on the plates of the accumulators. The separators hold the electrolyte near the plates irrespective of the position of the accumulator.
The degree of saturation of the pores in the absorbent separator by the electrolyte should not exceed 95 per cent since free spaces are necessary so that the oxygen can pass through the separator, going from the positive plates where it is formed to the negative plates where it is consumed by reduction and reincorporated in the electrolyte by a series of electrochemical reactions.
The absorbent separators play a very important role in the recycling of the oxygen since, by immobilising the electrolyte in their pores, they allow access by the oxygen to the surfaces of the negative plates, where this gas is reduced by electrochemical reactions.
Traditionally, the construction of the absorbent separator is based on glass microfibres having a high resistance to oxidation. The glass microfibres are rapidly and completely saturated by the electrolyte (sulphuric acid) when the battery is filled.
Various mixtures of fibres have been used in the past, for example mixtures of coarse glass fibres and fine glass fibres with or without organic fibres. The fibres are used in such proportions that they hold a sufficient quantity of electrolytes. Thus, the U.S. Pat. No. 4,465,748 describes glass fibre separators comprising between 5 and 35 per cent by weight of glass fibres with a diameter of less than 1 micron, the remaining fibres having greater diameters.
The physical and mechanical properties of absorbent fibrous separators with glass microfibres depend largely on the fine microfibre content and also on the method of depositing these fibres.
One of the desirable properties in this type of separator is the possibility of welding it and of allowing the formation of pockets enveloping the plates. Welding of the separators is possible thanks to the use of synthetic fibres mixed with glass microfibres. In general, between 5 per cent and 40 per cent of such fibres are used, these synthetic fibres being capable of being melted so as to bind the separators together. Another technique for binding together two separators consists in compressing them at certain places until they are bound to each other. These separators contain between 5 per cent and 40 per cent by weight of synthetic fibres which can be melted by the application of heat or which may be deformed during the compression.
This technique is known through the French patent FR 2677672.
The aim of the present invention is to propose a glass microfibre separator for batteries having better mechanical properties than traditional glass microfibre separators for batteries.
For this purpose, the invention proposes an absorbent separator for lead-acid accumulators regulated by a valve, characterised in that it comprises a first layer, a second layer and a band of synthetic resin intercalated between the first and the second layer.
Thanks to the band of synthetic resin which covers either the whole or part of a surface of the first layer, the stability of the separator is increased. Such an absorbent separator has a greater tensile strength than that of traditional single-layer glass fibre separators with the same composition of fibres. It has been observed that the tensile strength is considerably increased. For identical microfibre compositions, measurements have shown that the tensile strength may be tripled and change from 0.5 kN/m to 1.5 kN/m. Moreover, the band of synthetic resin makes it possible to obtain an elongation of 4 per cent instead of 1 per cent for similar separators not containing this band. It is therefore possible to use separators manufactured from a relatively fragile material for applications in which some tensile strength is required, such as in automated machines enveloping the electrodes of accumulators.
The synthetic resin is advantageously a thermosetting resin. After drying the separator at a temperature of approximately 100° C., the resin loses water and forms a very strong plastic film capable of welding together the layers of the separator. In addition, this resin makes it possible to weld together two distinct separators, placed over each other to form pockets in which electrodes may be inserted. The welding may be achieved for example by mechanical means, by heating, etc.
According to an advantageous embodiment, the band of resin comprises an acrylic resin, preferably butyl acrylate.
The band of synthetic resin preferably comprises fibres consisting of glass microfibres saturated with resin.
The thickness of this band of resin may vary between 0.01 mm and 1 mm. It lies preferably between 0.05 mm and 0.15 mm.
The bands of synthetic resin have a width which is chosen as a function of the width of the separator. In general, the band has a width that is relatively small compared with the total width of the separator. Normally, it lies between 1 and 20 mm and preferably between 3 mm and 10 mm.
The band may either be a single piece or be subdivided in length to form two or more bands. In general, the width of the band of resin lies between 1 mm and 20 mm, and preferably between 3 mm and 10 mm.
The glass microfibre layers may be identical or different. The layers of the separator comprise glass fibres with a mean diameter of between 0.2 &mgr;m and 13 &mgr;m. A typical composition for each layer is as follows: 0 per cent to 60 per cent glass fibres with a mean diameter smaller than 1 &mgr;m (0.2 &mgr;m to 0.8 &mgr;m). 0 per cent to 70 per cent glass fibres with a mean diameter lying between 1 &mgr;m and 10 &mgr;m (2 &mgr;m to 4 &mgr;m), and 5 per cent to 10 per

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