Polyurethane/polyacrylate dispersion coating for airbag fabrics

Fabric (woven – knitted – or nonwoven textile or cloth – etc.) – Coated or impregnated woven – knit – or nonwoven fabric which... – Two or more non-extruded coatings or impregnations

Utility Patent

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C442S188000, C280S728100, C280S730100, C425S027000, C425S035000, C425S043000, C493S243000, C428S035700, C428S036100, C428S036600, C428S036700

Utility Patent

active

06169043

ABSTRACT:

FIELD OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates to novel airbag coating compositions comprising a mix of polyurethane and polyacrylate constituents which provides a highly effective low permeability treatment on a target fabric surface. This inventive composition also provides a low-cost alternative to other standard airbag coatings and exhibits excellent aging stability as well. An airbag fabric coated with this inventive composition is also contemplated within this invention.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Airbags for motor vehicles are known and have been used for a substantial period of time These devices are installed on the driver and passenger side of automobiles and, in the event of a collision, are rapidly inflated with gas, to act as a barrier between the driver or passenger and the steering wheel or dashboard of the automobile.
Coatings have been applied to fabrics, intended for use in automotive airbags, to resist unwanted permeation of air through the fabric and, to a lesser extent, to protect the fabric from detriment by the hot gases used to inflate the bags. Polychloroprene was the polymer of choice in the early development of this product, but the desire to decrease the folded size of the completed airbag, and the tendency of polychloroprene to degrade, with exposure to heat, to release the components of hydrochloric acid (thereby potentially degrading the fabric component as well as releasing hazardous chemicals), has led to the almost universal acceptance of silicone (polydimethylsiloxane or similar materials) as a more suitable coating. In the quest for the most compact folded size possible, coating levels of polymer have dropped from around 2.5 ounces per square yard of fabric, to levels approaching 0.5 ounces per square yard.
New developments in airbags, particularly newer designs being placed in the sides of the passenger compartment, have introduced the requirement that the bags hold pressure longer under use. This, and the evolution of the lower coating levels of silicone polymer, have begun to highlight the effect that, when a sewn seam is put under stress, a naturally lubricating silicone coating may allow the yarns from which the fabric is constructed to shift. This shifting can lead to leakage of the inflating gas through the new pores formed from the shifting yams, or, in drastic cases, cause the seam to fail. Since the airbag must retain its integrity during a collision event, in order to sufficiently protect the driver or passenger, there is a great need to provide coatings which provide both effective permeability characteristics and sufficient restriction of yarn shifting for the airbag to function properly, if and when necessary. Therefore, a need exist for a cost-effective, one-layer coating which provides low permeability, resistance to yarn shifting and age resistance over long periods of storage.
DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
Polyurethanes usually have very good flexibility and tensile strength in a wide temperature range. Those properties make them good candidates as an air bag coating material. However, after intensive thermal oxidation and humidity aging exposure, polyurethane coatings (especially at relatively low coating weight) may experience significant changes in their physical properties.
Polyacrylates exhibit excellent good aging properties alone; however, such polymers cannot seal a textile substrate particularly along seams at high air pressure (10-30 Psi) as well as polyurethanes.
It has now been realized that a blend of a polyurethane and a polyacrylate provides a highly effective, strong, coating material with simultaneous excellent aging properties. An airbag coated with such a blend also exhibits very low air permeability at high air pressure before and after aging. This synergistic effect is quite surprising considering the performance of these two components alone on the same fabric. Furthermore, it has been found that other benefits are accorded the user of such a coating composition on airbags and airbag fabrics. These benefits include, and not intended as being limited to the following:
(1) Lower costs for the entire composition than with a polyurethane alone since polyacrylates are significantly less expensive and do not reduce the overall strength of the coating composition upon their introduction in relatively high proportions; and
(2) Improvements in flexibility since a similar amount of coating comprising polyurethane alone will produce a relatively stiff fabric. The polyurethane/polyacrylate dispersions, as noted above, retain about the same degree of air permeability and strength as the polyurethane alone while also providing a fabric which is less stiff than the polyurethane coating by itself
Generally, the polyurethane constituent may be selected from any well known polyurethane composition which adheres well to fabrics and which exhibits a tensile strength greater than 2,000 psi (preferably greater than 4,000 psi) on the fabric surface and which is compatible with polyacrylates to effectuate a proper stable dispersion of the two components. Such a polyurethane composition, and one potentially preferred polyurethane is available from Stahl USA, Peabody Mass., under the tradename Ru 40-350 (40% solids).
The polyacrylate may be selected from any such polymer which exhibits some degree of compatibility with the target fabric surface and is also compatible with the polyurethane as noted above. Such selected polyacrylate must also either be self-cross-linking or at least cross-linkable upon addition of a proper cross-linking agent (such as melamine formaldehyde or any other standard polyacrylate cross-linking agent). One such self-cross-linking polyacrylate, and thus one potentially preferred polyacrylate, is available from Rohm & Haas, under the tradename Rhoplex® E-358 (60% solids). The polyurethane to polyacrylate ratio should be in an amount of from about 0.1:1 to about 10:1; preferably from about 1:1 to about 8:1; more preferably from about 2:1 to about 5:1; and most preferably at about 2.5:1.
The substrate across which the cross-linked elastomeric resin coatings are applied to form the airbag base fabric in accordance with the present invention is preferably a plain woven fabric formed from yarns comprising polyamide or polyester fibers. Such yarn preferably has a linear density of about 100 denier to about 630 denier. Such yarns are preferably formed from multiple filaments wherein the filaments have linear densities of about 6 denier per filaments or less and most preferably about 4 denier per filament or less. Such substrate fabrics are preferably woven using jacquard looms or possibly through the utilization of fluid jet weaving machines as disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,503,197 and 5,421,378 to Bower et al. (incorporated herein by reference). The fabric substrate with applied coating will hereinafter be referred to as an airbag base fabric. Other possible components present within the cross-linked elastomeric resin coating composition are thickeners, antioxidants, flame retardants, coalescent agents, adhesion promoters, and colorants.
It has been theorized, without any intention to be limited thereto, that the polyurethane and polyacrylate constituents of the inventive airbag coating composition may, to some degree, for a single polymerized or cross-linked film or coating through the interaction of the free formaldehyde on the polyacrylate with the free carboxyl on the polyurethane. Furthermore, another non-limiting theory has been developed that these polymers actually form a network with a relatively uniform distribution of constituents throughout the coating. However, most likely, and again, without the intent of being bound to such theory, it appears that the two constituents may not actually bond or copolymerize or cross-link together and thus there may exist discrete “patches” of polyurethane surrounded by areas of polyacrylate alone (or vice-versa) on the target fabric surface. In any event, the inventive airbag coating provides unexpected and beneficial strength properties and aging stability all at

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