Wood preservatives

Drug – bio-affecting and body treating compositions – Designated organic active ingredient containing – Heavy metal containing doai

Reexamination Certificate

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C514S064000, C514S499000, C514S500000, C514S557000, C514S558000, C514S560000, C424S078080, C424S630000, C424S632000, C424S633000, C424S634000, C424S635000, C424S637000, C424S638000, C424S641000, C424S657000, C424S658000, C424S659000, C424S660000, C428S540000, C428S541000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06506795

ABSTRACT:

DE-C 34 47 027 describes wood preservatives which are comprised of copper and boron compounds and contain for each gram-atom of copper, 0.5 to 2.5 gram atoms of boron and 2 to 10 moles of an alkanol amine. According to DE-A 35 20 394, a copper salt solution is adjusted with an alkanol amine and potentially an alkali metal base to a pH-value of at least 8. Such agents can additionally contain a boron salt and another water-soluble fungicide, particularly up to 25 percent by weight of the finished agent, of quaternary ammonium salts. The copper salts are fixed through neutralization with wood constituents or CO
2
from the atmosphere. In spite of the additional use of the quaternary ammonium salts, the effect of these agents, particularly the long-term effect, is not sufficient to achieve the protective effect desired by the consumer.
The addition, obvious per se, of further fungicidal agents also does not yield significant improvement, particularly the problem with the ubiquitous copper-resistant fungus of the genus porea is unsolved. In wood impregnated with the copper-alkanol amine system, these fungi convert the copper into a water soluble form which is subsequently washed out.
Only the agent known from DE-A 42 28 352 comprising copper salts, alkanol amines and polymer quaternary ammonium borates solves this problem, but this agent also has disadvantages. On the one hand, this disadvantage is one common to all wood preservatives based on copper and boron, namely that boron salts are washed out in time and thus their effect is lost. For another, the disadvantage involves the particularity of the polymer quaternary ammonium borate that in an impregnation installation, it causes the resins to be leached out of the wood whereby the wood protection effect due to the resins is lost and the leached out resins contaminate the installations and impair their ability to function.
OBJECTS OF THE INVENTION
It is an object of the invention to provide a chromium-free wood preservative without the prior art defects.
It is another object of the invention to provide an improved method of impregnating wood and the wood products produced thereby.
These and other objects and advantages of the invention will become obvious from the following detailed description.
THE INVENTION
The novel chromium-free wood preservatives of the invention consist essentially of 1 to 35% by weight of a mixture of 25 to 75 parts by weight of a fatty amine ethoxylate and 75 to 25 parts by weight of at least one member of the group consisting of an unsaturated fatty acid of 3 to 25 carbon atoms and their copper and zinc salts and water.
The wood preservatives of the invention have the advantage that the copper salts do not have their long-term effect diminished by the action of copper resistant-fungi. If the wood preservative contains both copper and boron salts, the problem of washing out of the boron salts is significantly reduced. Moreover, the agents of DE-A 42 28 352 are improved so that the resins are not leached out.
It was found that the effect of wood preservatives based on copper salts is no longer reduced through copper-resistant fungi if these wood preservatives comprise 2-35 per by weight of a product comprising 25-75 parts by weight of fatty amine ethoxylate and 75-25 parts by weight of unsaturated fatty acid with 3-25, preferably with 9-15 C atoms. Due to this addition, copper salts penetrate deeply into the wood and experience a type of fixing in the wood whereby they are not decomposed or metabolized by the fungi. The degree to which boron salts are washed out is significantly reduced so that long-term protection of the wood is given.
It was found, in addition, that products comprising 25-75 parts by weight of fatty amine ethoxylate parts and 75-25 parts by weight of unsaturated fatty acids with 3-25, preferably with 9-15 C atoms are suitable as wood preservatives with fixing, fungicidal and insecticidal effects. The fungicidal effect of some unsaturated carboxylic acids, such as acrylic acid or undecylenic acid is known, but it is surprising that the addition products of these acids with fatty amine ethoxylate have fungicidal as well as also insecticidal effects and that they are fixed in wood. It was furthermore found that the products of fatty amine ethoxylate and unsaturated fatty acids show improved fungicidal action not only with copper salts but also with zinc salts.
In the simplest case, the wood preservatives of the invention comprise a 1 to 35% by weight of an aqueous solution of a mixture of 25-75 parts by weight of fatty amine ethoxylate and 75-25 parts by weight of unsaturated fatty acids of 3-25, preferably with 9-15 carbon atoms. In an improved form, the wood preservatives of the invention comprise a 1 to 35% by weight of an aqueous solution of a water soluble copper and/or zinc salt and 2 to 35% by weight of the product of fatty amine ethoxylate and unsaturated fatty acid. The same effect profile is attained if, instead of the unsaturated fatty acids, their copper and/or zinc salts are used.
The penetration by the copper and by the zinc is improved if they are complexed with ammonia, amines, or alkanol amines. This effect is especially strong if the wood preservatives also contain boron salts as additional fungicidal substances. For the complexing, monoethanol amine is preferably used in these agents.
In general, the wood preservatives of the invention can also contain additional fungicidal and/or insecticidal agents known per se. An undesirable interaction between such agents and the employed products of fatty amine ethoxylate and unsaturated fatty acids has not been observed so far, either with inorganic or organic fungicidal or bactericidal agents.
For environmental reasons, boron compounds, particularly boron salts, are preferred as fungicidally acting components. Thus, the preferred wood preservatives comprise at least one copper and/or zinc salt, at least one boron compound, optionally additional insecticidal and/or fungicidal agents, monoethanol amine, all compounds in quantities known per se, as well as 2 to 35 percent by weight of a mixture of fatty amine ethoxylate and unsaturated fatty acid as defined above.
The preferred boron compound is a polymer quaternary ammonium borate, such as is known from EP-A 0 355 316 and DE-A 42 28 352. The especially preferred wood preservatives are accordingly stable aqueous emulsions with the following composition:
Copper salt
10-25
percent by weight
Ethanol amine
30-40
percent by weight
Boric acid, Na borate
0-8 
percent by weight
Polymer quaternary ammonium borate
5-40
percent by weight
Product of fatty amine ethoxylate
2-35
percent by weight
and unsaturated fatty acid
Water
10-50
percent by weight
These agents are available in the form of concentrates which before use are diluted with water to a concentration of 1 to 20 percent of the aqueous concentrate, preferably 1 to 4 percent, when used in vacuum pressure processes and of 3 to 15 percent when used in processes at ambient pressure.
These agents have further unexpected properties since in machine impregnation processes, no resins are extracted from the wood or the extracted resins detached from the surface are so well emulsified that they are again transported into the wood with the penetrating wood preservative. The impregnation installations are thereby kept free of any loading by resins.
The addition of the products of fatty amine ethoxylate and unsaturated fatty acids surprisingly improves the ability of the wood preservative to be stained. In particular, agents with quaternary ammonium salts could previously only be poorly stained and staining them brown was previously virtually impossible since such mixtures separate into several phases. By adding approximately 2 to 35 percent of the listed products, stable homogeneously stained emulsions result which also yield uniform staining of the impregnated wood when applied.
The fatty amine ethoxylate/fatty acid products used in the wood preservatives of the invention are produced by mixing fatty amine ethoxylates with ethylenic unsatu

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