US3679614A - Method for making porous fibrous sheets containing polytetrafluoroethylene - Google Patents

Method for making porous fibrous sheets containing polytetrafluoroethylene Download PDF

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US3679614A
US3679614A US3679614DA US3679614A US 3679614 A US3679614 A US 3679614A US 3679614D A US3679614D A US 3679614DA US 3679614 A US3679614 A US 3679614A
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pmma
sheets
plasticizer
sheet
polymethylmethacrylate
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Girish Chandulal Shah
Mahesh Shantilal Shroff
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Wyeth Holdings LLC
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American Cyanamid Co
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Classifications

    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D04BRAIDING; LACE-MAKING; KNITTING; TRIMMINGS; NON-WOVEN FABRICS
    • D04HMAKING TEXTILE FABRICS, e.g. FROM FIBRES OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL; FABRICS MADE BY SUCH PROCESSES OR APPARATUS, e.g. FELTS, NON-WOVEN FABRICS; COTTON-WOOL; WADDING ; NON-WOVEN FABRICS FROM STAPLE FIBRES, FILAMENTS OR YARNS, BONDED WITH AT LEAST ONE WEB-LIKE MATERIAL DURING THEIR CONSOLIDATION
    • D04H13/00Other non-woven fabrics
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B29WORKING OF PLASTICS; WORKING OF SUBSTANCES IN A PLASTIC STATE IN GENERAL
    • B29CSHAPING OR JOINING OF PLASTICS; SHAPING OF MATERIAL IN A PLASTIC STATE, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; AFTER-TREATMENT OF THE SHAPED PRODUCTS, e.g. REPAIRING
    • B29C66/00General aspects of processes or apparatus for joining preformed parts
    • B29C66/70General aspects of processes or apparatus for joining preformed parts characterised by the composition, physical properties or the structure of the material of the parts to be joined; Joining with non-plastics material
    • B29C66/71General aspects of processes or apparatus for joining preformed parts characterised by the composition, physical properties or the structure of the material of the parts to be joined; Joining with non-plastics material characterised by the composition of the plastics material of the parts to be joined
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C08ORGANIC MACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS; THEIR PREPARATION OR CHEMICAL WORKING-UP; COMPOSITIONS BASED THEREON
    • C08JWORKING-UP; GENERAL PROCESSES OF COMPOUNDING; AFTER-TREATMENT NOT COVERED BY SUBCLASSES C08B, C08C, C08F, C08G or C08H
    • C08J9/00Working-up of macromolecular substances to porous or cellular articles or materials; After-treatment thereof
    • C08J9/26Working-up of macromolecular substances to porous or cellular articles or materials; After-treatment thereof by elimination of a solid phase from a macromolecular composition or article, e.g. leaching out
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B29WORKING OF PLASTICS; WORKING OF SUBSTANCES IN A PLASTIC STATE IN GENERAL
    • B29KINDEXING SCHEME ASSOCIATED WITH SUBCLASSES B29B, B29C OR B29D, RELATING TO MOULDING MATERIALS OR TO MATERIALS FOR MOULDS, REINFORCEMENTS, FILLERS OR PREFORMED PARTS, e.g. INSERTS
    • B29K2027/00Use of polyvinylhalogenides or derivatives thereof as moulding material
    • B29K2027/12Use of polyvinylhalogenides or derivatives thereof as moulding material containing fluorine
    • B29K2027/18PTFE, i.e. polytetrafluorethene, e.g. ePTFE, i.e. expanded polytetrafluorethene
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T428/00Stock material or miscellaneous articles
    • Y10T428/31504Composite [nonstructural laminate]
    • Y10T428/3154Of fluorinated addition polymer from unsaturated monomers
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T428/00Stock material or miscellaneous articles
    • Y10T428/31504Composite [nonstructural laminate]
    • Y10T428/31855Of addition polymer from unsaturated monomers
    • Y10T428/31938Polymer of monoethylenically unsaturated hydrocarbon
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T442/00Fabric [woven, knitted, or nonwoven textile or cloth, etc.]
    • Y10T442/20Coated or impregnated woven, knit, or nonwoven fabric which is not [a] associated with another preformed layer or fiber layer or, [b] with respect to woven and knit, characterized, respectively, by a particular or differential weave or knit, wherein the coating or impregnation is neither a foamed material nor a free metal or alloy layer
    • Y10T442/2139Coating or impregnation specified as porous or permeable to a specific substance [e.g., water vapor, air, etc.]

Definitions

  • the invention relates to improvements in the making of porous, self-supporting, fabric sheets that comprise a fibrous web of unsintered polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE).
  • PTFE polytetrafluoroethylene
  • the dispersed polytetrafluoroethylene particles are drawn by shearing forces which are induced in the plastic mass by mechanical working, to form a fibrous web of fine interconnected PTFE fibrils extending throughout the continuous phase of PMMA.
  • Fillers such as various kinds of mineral or carbon particles, catalytic metal particles, particles of other resins, other fiber materials, and the like, when blended in with PTFE during mechanical working become bound in the fibrous web of PTFE.
  • the final mechanical working step consists in forming the plastic mixture into sheets, as by pressing, rolling, or extruding.
  • the product is a pliable porous sheet comprising a web of extensively fibrillated PTFE, and, in cases where insoluble fillers have been incorporated, these fillers remain bound in the porous fabric web of PTFE after the solvent extraction step.
  • a particularly troublesome problem in the processes described above for making such sheets has been a difficulty in handling the intermediate sheets before extraction of the PMMA continuous phase from such sheets.
  • the continuous phase of PMMA is rigid, causing the preextraction sheets to be stiff, somewhat brittle, and fragile.
  • the continuous extruded strip cools rapidly and at room temperature becomes quite rigid so that it cannot be bent, folded or wound into a roll for convenience in handling, transport or temporary storage.
  • An object of the invention is to improve the methods described above, by providing sheets comprising fibrous PTFE dispersed in a continuous phase of PMMA, such sheets being sufliciently flexible at ordinary room temperatures (about 23 C.) to permit bending or winding of the sheets onto rolls without cracking or breaking the sheets.
  • Such flexibility of the sheets considerably facilitates handling of the intermediate sheets before and during extraction of the PMMA phase by solvent extraction.
  • a plasticizer is incorporated in the polymethylmethacrylate in unusually large proportion, sufficient to alter the normally rigid plastic character of the polymethylmethacrylate in the formed sheets so that the sheets at ordinary room temperature will be nonrigid plastic, hence sufliciently flexible to enable flexible bending of the sheets without cracking. These flexible sheets can then be conveniently bent, folded or wound into a roll for storage or transport. In most of the ordinary PMMA sheet formulations no plasticizer is used. The proportions of plasticizer to PMMA that are useful for the present invention are greater by several fold than any ordinary proportions that might be used in regular formulations for making polymethylmethacrylate sheets.
  • the proportion of plasticizer to PMMA necessary for obtaining the desired flexibility of the present sheets would be so high as to render ordinary polymethylmethacrylate sheets physically unsuitable for any of the ordinary uses of PMMA sheeting.
  • the polymethylmethacrylate and the plasticizer are present only temporarily, during an intermediate step of the manufacture, and will be extracted subsequently by solvents, the loss of strength, rigidity and quality of the polymethylmethacrylate for ordinary sheeting uses is not a material disadvantage.
  • Ratios from about /1, part to about 1 /3 parts by weight of the plasticizer per part by weight of PMMA may be found suitable to obtain the desired flexibility. In most preferred embodiments the ratio will be from about /2 part to about 1 part of plasticizer per part by wt. of PMMA.
  • Plasticizers found most useful for use with polymethylmethacrylate in accordance with the invention are butylcyclohexylphthalate and dicyclohexylphthalate. These are selected because both are compatible plasticizers for PMMA and both are soluble in the solvents that ase conventionally used for PMMA extraction, usually either acetone or toluene.
  • Other plasticizers suitable for the improved process of the invention include other dialkyl (including cycloalkyl) phthalates.
  • EXAMPLE 1 A blend is made of (a) 46% polymethylmethacrylate polymer as obtained commercially in bead form, (b) 24.8% butylcyclohexylphthalate, (c) 3.65% polytetrafluoroethylene solids in the form of an aqueous dispersion containing 59%61% polytetrafluoroethylene solids and 5.5%6.5% based on weight of said solids, of an octylphenolpolyoxyethylene dispersant and (d) 25.6% of carbon filler containing 50% of graphite obtained as a byproduct in the manufacture of calcium cyanamide and 50% of activated carbon.
  • the blend is thoroughly mixed at room temperature in a planetary type mixer for 15 to 45 minutes, producing a damp, lumpy mixture. This mixture is then thoroughly dried at C. for 5 hours in a drying oven.
  • the dry homogeneous mixture is granulated in a conventional granulator to make a free-flowing granular material suitable for feed to an extruder.
  • a single screw extruder fitted with a 24-inch wide adjustable opening die the material is mechanically Worked and extruded at temperatures between 160 C. to 180 C. to form a 25-inch wide, .050-inch thick continuous strip which, when cooled is highly flexible and can be wound on a roll.
  • the extruded sheet is continuously wound in a rolled coil with a layer of a metal spacer screen which permits circulation of solvent fluids to the faces of the strip inthe coil.
  • This coil is immersed and agitated in a tank of recirculating acetone at 25 C. for 3 hours, then rinsed with fresh acetone for 2 to 3 hours and finally washed with water and dried at temperatures between 50" C. to 70 C.
  • Essentially all of the PMMA and .plasticizer has been removed leaving a porous fabric sheet of PTFE with the filler incorporated.
  • the coil is unwound and the fabric; sheet falls away from the spacer screen.
  • An electrode is cut from the sheet and used as the air electrode substituted in a fuel cell of the kind described in U.S. Pat. No. 3,407,096, patented Oct. 22, 1968 to H. P. Landi.
  • EXAMPLE 2 I A blend is made of (a) 43.25% by wt. of polymethylfitted with a 4-inch wide, 0.025 inch opening die and extruded at temperatures between 150 C. and 170 C. forming a 4 /a-inch wide, 0.040 inch thick continuous strip. While extruding the strip, a 6-inch wide, strip of woven screen, 20 mesh x 20 mesh of .007 inch diameter nickel-coated steel wire is continuously fed with the extruded strip through the take-off rolls of the extruder where the screen is pressed in contact with the still soft extruded strip material and imbeddedinto it, thus laminating the metal screen to the extruded strip.
  • the laminated strip is cooled in a water quench then continuously threaded on a serpentine path through several tanks containing recirculating acetone followed by fresh acetone, then rinse water, all at room temperature. Polymethylmethacrylate and dicyclohexylphthalate are extracted by the acetone leaving a porous fabric of fibrous PTFE filled with catalytic carbon and laminated to the screen. It is a distinct advantage of this invention that the extruded sheet laminated on the metal screen is nonrigid and quite readily flexible at room temperature and therefore can be threaded through a tortuous path within each tank before and during extraction, thus enabling to provide 3 hours of residence time through the extractor tanks.
  • EXAMPLE 3 This example demonstrates a particular advantage of the invention in making porous catalytic electrodes having incorporated temperature-sensitive catalytic materials.
  • the electrodes are fabricated at reduced temperature to avoid decomposition or deactivation of the catalyst.
  • Incorporation of plasticizer in the extrusion feed, as described in the preceding examples, not only imparts flexibility to the extruded sheet but also makes it possible to mechanically work the materials efiectively at considerably reduced temperatures.
  • a blend consisting of (a) 40% polymethylmethacrylate (b) 40% butyl cyclohexylphthalate, (c) 3% polytetrafluoroethylene and (d) 17% filler consisting of 50% carbon and 50% silver-mercury catalyst as described in US. Pat. No. 3,318,736 is mixed, dried and granulated by the same procedure described in Example 1 and extruded at temperatures ranging from C. to C. Due to this reduced temperature of extrusion, there is no appreciable decomposition or deactivation of the catalyst. The extruded sheet is further processed by extraction as described in Example 1 and used effectively as an air electrode for metal air batteries and fuel cells. Without the presence of cyclohexylphthalate in the extruder feed, the extrusion temperature would have to be increased to about 225 C. with consequent damage to the catalyst by the.
  • Example 2 when laminated by adhesives to the screen side of an air electrode of the kind described in Example 2 provides an excellent gaspermeable, electrolyte-impermeablebacking for the electrode.
  • This laminated electrode with backing is particularly useful as an air electrode, for example, when substituted for the air electrode in the metal air battery described in US. Pat. No. 3,276,909, patented Oct. 4, 1966 to A. M. Moos.
  • Example 5 In the process of Example 4 there is substituted a floc of polypropylene fibers instead of the polytetrafluoroe ethylene floc. Because ofthe reduced working temperature permitted by the use of plasticizers in the polymethacrylate phase, the polypropylene fibers retain their unsintered fibrous form in the finished sheet. At higher temperatures that would be required for working the plastic mass without an incorporated plasticizer, the polypropylene fibers would melt and fuse, losing their unsintered fibrous structure. Thus, the invention permits use of'the less expensive fibers instead of the PTFE floc.
  • plasticizers described herein are the most preferred, but the invention contemplates use of other plasticizers, and particularly other phthalate diesters, which are suitable, in terms of adequate plasticizing effect, solubility, etc., for carrying out the invention.
  • ASTM Standard Nomenclature Relating to Plastics defines a nonrigid humidity when tested in accordance with the Method of Test for Stiffness of Plastics by Means of a cantilever beam (ASTM Designation: D-747), the Method of Test for Tensile Properties of Palstics (ASTM Designation: D-638), or the Methods of Test for Tensile Properties of Thin Plastic Sheeting (ASTM Designation: D- 882).
  • ASTM Standard Nomenclature Relating to Plastics ASTM Designation: D-883-69
  • the flexible plasticized intermediate sheets prior to solvent extraction are within this definition of nonrigid plastics.
  • the sheets would not have been nonrigid plastics, but would have been semirigid plastics (l0,000-100,000 p.s.i. modulus) or n'gid plastics (over 100,000 p.s.i. modulus), as those terms are also defined in ASTM Designation: D-883.
  • plasticizer is butylcyclohexylphthalate and said solvent is selected from toluene and acetone.
  • plasticizer is dicyclohexylphthalate and said solvent is selected from toluene and acetone.
  • plastic mass further comprises incorporated :floc of unsintered polypropylene fibers.

Abstract

IN THE MANUFACTURE OF POLYTETRAFLUOROETHYLENE FIBER SHEETS AN INTERMEDIATE SHEET WAS RIGID UNITIL A CONTINUOUS PHASE OF POLYMETHYLMETHACRYLATE (PMMA) HAS BEEN EXTRACTED WITH SOLVENTS. THE INVENTION EMPLOYS HIGH CONCENTRATION OF PLASTICIZER (E.G. TEREPHTHALATE DIESTERS) IN THE PMMA PHASE TO RENDER THE INTERMEDIATE SHEET NONRIGID HENCE EASIER TO HANDLE. ALSO PLASTICIZER REDUCES WORKING TEMPERATURE FOR MAKING THE INTERMEDIATE SHEET, ENABLING INCORPORATION OF HEAT-SENSITIVE FILLERS E.G. HEAT SENSITIVE CATALYST OR LOW-MELTING POLYPYROPYLENE INCORPORATED FIBERS.

Description

United States Patent Oflice 3,679,614 Patented July 25, 1972 3,679,614 METHOD FOR MAKING POROUS FIBROUS SHEETS CONTAINING POLYTETRAFLUOROETHYLENE Girish Chandulal Shah and Mahesh Shantilal Shroff, Stamford, Conn., assignors to American Cyanamid Company, Stamford, Conn. No Drawing. Filed Nov. 24, 1969, Ser. No. 879,538 Int. Cl. B29d 27/00; C08f 3/24 U.S. Cl. 260-25 M 4 Claims ABSTRACT OF THE DISCLOSURE In the manufacture of polytetrafluoroethylene fiber sheets an intermediate sheet was rigid until a continuous phase of polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA) has been extracted with solvents. The invention employs high concentration of plasticizer (e.g. terephthalate diesters) in the PMMA phase to render the intermediate sheet nonrigid hence easier to handle. Also plasticizer reduces working temperature for making the intermediate sheet, enabling incorporation of heat-sensitive fillers e.g. heat sensitive catalyst or low-melting polypyropylene incorporated fibers.
The invention relates to improvements in the making of porous, self-supporting, fabric sheets that comprise a fibrous web of unsintered polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE).
Such fabric sheets, useful for example as wettable hydrophobic porous matrices for electrolytes and as porous catalytic electrodes for use in fuel cells and the like, have been described in U.S. Patents No. 3,407,096 and No. 3,407,249. These patents describe methods of making porous fabric sheets in which polytetrafluoroethylene has been extensively fibrillated by mechanically working a finely divided dispersion of PTFE particles in a plastic mass having a continuous phase of molten polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA) which is subsequently extracted with solvents. As the plastic dispersion is worked mechanically, as by rolling in a rubber mill or by extrusion in a high-shear mechanical extruder, the dispersed polytetrafluoroethylene particles are drawn by shearing forces which are induced in the plastic mass by mechanical working, to form a fibrous web of fine interconnected PTFE fibrils extending throughout the continuous phase of PMMA. Fillers such as various kinds of mineral or carbon particles, catalytic metal particles, particles of other resins, other fiber materials, and the like, when blended in with PTFE during mechanical working become bound in the fibrous web of PTFE. The final mechanical working step consists in forming the plastic mixture into sheets, as by pressing, rolling, or extruding. Following the mechanical working and forming steps the PMMA is extracted with solvents. The product is a pliable porous sheet comprising a web of extensively fibrillated PTFE, and, in cases where insoluble fillers have been incorporated, these fillers remain bound in the porous fabric web of PTFE after the solvent extraction step.
A particularly troublesome problem in the processes described above for making such sheets has been a difficulty in handling the intermediate sheets before extraction of the PMMA continuous phase from such sheets. At ordinary room temperatures the continuous phase of PMMA is rigid, causing the preextraction sheets to be stiff, somewhat brittle, and fragile. When these sheets are formed by continuous strip extrusion, as is convenient in mass production, the continuous extruded strip cools rapidly and at room temperature becomes quite rigid so that it cannot be bent, folded or wound into a roll for convenience in handling, transport or temporary storage.
An object of the invention is to improve the methods described above, by providing sheets comprising fibrous PTFE dispersed in a continuous phase of PMMA, such sheets being sufliciently flexible at ordinary room temperatures (about 23 C.) to permit bending or winding of the sheets onto rolls without cracking or breaking the sheets. Such flexibility of the sheets considerably facilitates handling of the intermediate sheets before and during extraction of the PMMA phase by solvent extraction.
In the drawings, a diagrammatic flowsheet illustrates a preferred embodiment of the invention which is described in more detail herein.
In accordance with the invention, a plasticizer is incorporated in the polymethylmethacrylate in unusually large proportion, sufficient to alter the normally rigid plastic character of the polymethylmethacrylate in the formed sheets so that the sheets at ordinary room temperature will be nonrigid plastic, hence sufliciently flexible to enable flexible bending of the sheets without cracking. These flexible sheets can then be conveniently bent, folded or wound into a roll for storage or transport. In most of the ordinary PMMA sheet formulations no plasticizer is used. The proportions of plasticizer to PMMA that are useful for the present invention are greater by several fold than any ordinary proportions that might be used in regular formulations for making polymethylmethacrylate sheets. The proportion of plasticizer to PMMA necessary for obtaining the desired flexibility of the present sheets would be so high as to render ordinary polymethylmethacrylate sheets physically unsuitable for any of the ordinary uses of PMMA sheeting. In the present invention, however, since the polymethylmethacrylate and the plasticizer are present only temporarily, during an intermediate step of the manufacture, and will be extracted subsequently by solvents, the loss of strength, rigidity and quality of the polymethylmethacrylate for ordinary sheeting uses is not a material disadvantage. Ratios from about /1, part to about 1 /3 parts by weight of the plasticizer per part by weight of PMMA may be found suitable to obtain the desired flexibility. In most preferred embodiments the ratio will be from about /2 part to about 1 part of plasticizer per part by wt. of PMMA.
Plasticizers found most useful for use with polymethylmethacrylate in accordance with the invention are butylcyclohexylphthalate and dicyclohexylphthalate. These are selected because both are compatible plasticizers for PMMA and both are soluble in the solvents that ase conventionally used for PMMA extraction, usually either acetone or toluene. Other plasticizers suitable for the improved process of the invention include other dialkyl (including cycloalkyl) phthalates.
EXAMPLE 1 A blend is made of (a) 46% polymethylmethacrylate polymer as obtained commercially in bead form, (b) 24.8% butylcyclohexylphthalate, (c) 3.65% polytetrafluoroethylene solids in the form of an aqueous dispersion containing 59%61% polytetrafluoroethylene solids and 5.5%6.5% based on weight of said solids, of an octylphenolpolyoxyethylene dispersant and (d) 25.6% of carbon filler containing 50% of graphite obtained as a byproduct in the manufacture of calcium cyanamide and 50% of activated carbon. The blend is thoroughly mixed at room temperature in a planetary type mixer for 15 to 45 minutes, producing a damp, lumpy mixture. This mixture is then thoroughly dried at C. for 5 hours in a drying oven. The dry homogeneous mixture is granulated in a conventional granulator to make a free-flowing granular material suitable for feed to an extruder. Using a single screw extruder fitted with a 24-inch wide adjustable opening die, the material is mechanically Worked and extruded at temperatures between 160 C. to 180 C. to form a 25-inch wide, .050-inch thick continuous strip which, when cooled is highly flexible and can be wound on a roll. The extruded sheet is continuously wound in a rolled coil with a layer of a metal spacer screen which permits circulation of solvent fluids to the faces of the strip inthe coil. This coil is immersed and agitated in a tank of recirculating acetone at 25 C. for 3 hours, then rinsed with fresh acetone for 2 to 3 hours and finally washed with water and dried at temperatures between 50" C. to 70 C. Essentially all of the PMMA and .plasticizer has been removed leaving a porous fabric sheet of PTFE with the filler incorporated. The coil is unwound and the fabric; sheet falls away from the spacer screen. An electrode is cut from the sheet and used as the air electrode substituted in a fuel cell of the kind described in U.S. Pat. No. 3,407,096, patented Oct. 22, 1968 to H. P. Landi.
EXAMPLE 2 I A blend is made of (a) 43.25% by wt. of polymethylfitted with a 4-inch wide, 0.025 inch opening die and extruded at temperatures between 150 C. and 170 C. forming a 4 /a-inch wide, 0.040 inch thick continuous strip. While extruding the strip, a 6-inch wide, strip of woven screen, 20 mesh x 20 mesh of .007 inch diameter nickel-coated steel wire is continuously fed with the extruded strip through the take-off rolls of the extruder where the screen is pressed in contact with the still soft extruded strip material and imbeddedinto it, thus laminating the metal screen to the extruded strip. The laminated strip is cooled in a water quench then continuously threaded on a serpentine path through several tanks containing recirculating acetone followed by fresh acetone, then rinse water, all at room temperature. Polymethylmethacrylate and dicyclohexylphthalate are extracted by the acetone leaving a porous fabric of fibrous PTFE filled with catalytic carbon and laminated to the screen. It is a distinct advantage of this invention that the extruded sheet laminated on the metal screen is nonrigid and quite readily flexible at room temperature and therefore can be threaded through a tortuous path within each tank before and during extraction, thus enabling to provide 3 hours of residence time through the extractor tanks. By way of contrast, consider the relative inconvenience if the extruded sheet laminated with metal screen were rigid and had to be passed straight through extraction tanks without bending to follow a sinuous path through the tanks. 'Iheextractedlaminate is dried at temperatures between 50 C. and 70 C. The dry laminate is ready for use as a fuel cell electrode, having a current collector metal screen already laminated to it. Without further treatment, this laminate, when cut to size for an electrode gives excellent electrochemical performance as an air electrode in metal air batteries and fuel cells.
EXAMPLE 3 This example demonstrates a particular advantage of the invention in making porous catalytic electrodes having incorporated temperature-sensitive catalytic materials. The electrodes are fabricated at reduced temperature to avoid decomposition or deactivation of the catalyst. Incorporation of plasticizer in the extrusion feed, as described in the preceding examples, not only imparts flexibility to the extruded sheet but also makes it possible to mechanically work the materials efiectively at considerably reduced temperatures.
A blend consisting of (a) 40% polymethylmethacrylate (b) 40% butyl cyclohexylphthalate, (c) 3% polytetrafluoroethylene and (d) 17% filler consisting of 50% carbon and 50% silver-mercury catalyst as described in US. Pat. No. 3,318,736 is mixed, dried and granulated by the same procedure described in Example 1 and extruded at temperatures ranging from C. to C. Due to this reduced temperature of extrusion, there is no appreciable decomposition or deactivation of the catalyst. The extruded sheet is further processed by extraction as described in Example 1 and used effectively as an air electrode for metal air batteries and fuel cells. Without the presence of cyclohexylphthalate in the extruder feed, the extrusion temperature would have to be increased to about 225 C. with consequent damage to the catalyst by the.
excessive heat.
EXAMPLE 4 This example illustrates advantages of the invention in the making of a porous, extensively fibrillated, unsintered,
self-supporting polytetrafluoroethylene structure filled with electrically non-conductive material for use as a hydrophobic, porous air-permeable backing for an air electrode useful in metal-air batteries or in free-electrolyte fuel cells.
A blend of (a) 55% polymethylmethacrylate, (b)
temperature, dried at C. for 8 hours, granulated and fed to an extruder fitted with 4 inch wide, 0.025 inch opening die and continuously extruded into a sheet of 4 /2 inch width, 0.040 inch thickness. The continuous ly extruded sheet is extracted with solvents as described in Example 1 rinsed with acetone, washed with water, and dried. The dry, extracted sheet, when laminated by adhesives to the screen side of an air electrode of the kind described in Example 2 provides an excellent gaspermeable, electrolyte-impermeablebacking for the electrode. This laminated electrode with backing is particularly useful as an air electrode, for example, when substituted for the air electrode in the metal air battery described in US. Pat. No. 3,276,909, patented Oct. 4, 1966 to A. M. Moos.
EXAMPLE 5 In the process of Example 4 there is substituted a floc of polypropylene fibers instead of the polytetrafluoroe ethylene floc. Because ofthe reduced working temperature permitted by the use of plasticizers in the polymethacrylate phase, the polypropylene fibers retain their unsintered fibrous form in the finished sheet. At higher temperatures that would be required for working the plastic mass without an incorporated plasticizer, the polypropylene fibers would melt and fuse, losing their unsintered fibrous structure. Thus, the invention permits use of'the less expensive fibers instead of the PTFE floc.
The specific plasticizers described herein are the most preferred, but the invention contemplates use of other plasticizers, and particularly other phthalate diesters, which are suitable, in terms of adequate plasticizing effect, solubility, etc., for carrying out the invention.
ASTM Standard Nomenclature Relating to Plastics (ASTM Designation: D-883-69) defines a nonrigid humidity when tested in accordance with the Method of Test for Stiffness of Plastics by Means of a cantilever beam (ASTM Designation: D-747), the Method of Test for Tensile Properties of Palstics (ASTM Designation: D-638), or the Methods of Test for Tensile Properties of Thin Plastic Sheeting (ASTM Designation: D- 882). This definition of nonrigid plastic is adopted for the purposes of this specification.
In the examples above, the flexible plasticized intermediate sheets prior to solvent extraction are within this definition of nonrigid plastics. By way of comparison, without plasticizer or with an inadequate amount of plasticizer in the continuous PMMA phase of those sheets, the sheets would not have been nonrigid plastics, but would have been semirigid plastics (l0,000-100,000 p.s.i. modulus) or n'gid plastics (over 100,000 p.s.i. modulus), as those terms are also defined in ASTM Designation: D-883.
We claim:
1.1n a process of making a porous fabric sheet, comprising the steps of:
(a) mechanically Working a plastic mass comprising fine particulate polytetrafiuoroethylene in a continuous phase of polymethylrnethacrylate whereby said polytetra-fiuoroethylene is drawn to form a fibrous web extending throughout said plastic mass;
(b) forming said plastic mass into an intermediate sheet which comprises said fibrous web extending throughout the sheet within a continuous phase comprising polymethylmethacrylate; and
(c) extracting said continuous phase from said intermediate sheet by means of a selective solvent, leaving a porous fabric sheet comprising said web of polytetrafluoroethylene;
the improvement wherein from A to 1 /3 parts by wt. of a dialkyl phthalate plasticizer per part of polymethyl- 6 methacrylate is incorporated in said continuous phase sufiicient to render the defined intermediate sheet a nonrigid plastic.
2. An improved process defined by claim 1 wherein said plasticizer is butylcyclohexylphthalate and said solvent is selected from toluene and acetone.
3. An improved process defined by claim 1 wherein said plasticizer is dicyclohexylphthalate and said solvent is selected from toluene and acetone.
4. An improved process defined by claim 1 wherein said plastic mass further comprises incorporated :floc of unsintered polypropylene fibers.
References Cited Landi 26449 OTHER REFERENCES Modern Plastics Encyclopedia 1967, September 1966, vol. 44, No. 1A, New York, McGraw Hill, pp. 431 and 433.
PHILIP E. ANDERSON, Primary Examiner US. Cl. X.R.
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US3984044A (en) * 1973-10-01 1976-10-05 Composite Sciences, Inc. Retention means for mechanical separation and process of making same
US4110519A (en) * 1975-12-29 1978-08-29 Aktiebolaget Tudor Method for the production of electrodes for lead storage batteries
US4133927A (en) * 1975-10-23 1979-01-09 Kaikin Kogyo Co., Ltd. Composite material made of rubber elastomer and polytetrafluoroethylene resin
US4385019A (en) * 1981-01-19 1983-05-24 Mpd Technology Corporation Production of a polymeric active composition
US4721732A (en) * 1984-05-18 1988-01-26 Raychem Corporation Polymeric articles and methods of manufacture thereof
WO1990015422A1 (en) * 1989-06-09 1990-12-13 Rogers Corporation Coaxial cable insulation and coaxial cable made therefrom
US4997603A (en) * 1988-08-05 1991-03-05 Hoechst Celanese Corp. Process for formation of halogenated polymeric microporous membranes having improved strength properties
US5009971A (en) * 1987-03-13 1991-04-23 Ppg Industries, Inc. Gas recombinant separator
US5043113A (en) * 1988-08-05 1991-08-27 Hoechst Celanese Corp. Process for formation of halogenated polymeric microporous membranes having improved strength properties
US5081188A (en) * 1990-03-23 1992-01-14 E. I. Du Pont De Nemours And Company Processing additives for tetrafluoroethylene polymers
US5110858A (en) * 1990-03-23 1992-05-05 E. I. Du Pont De Nemours And Company Tetrafluoroethylene polymer compositions containing particulate carbon
US5198162A (en) * 1984-12-19 1993-03-30 Scimat Limited Microporous films
US5312576A (en) * 1991-05-24 1994-05-17 Rogers Corporation Method for making particulate filled composite film
US5374453A (en) * 1991-05-24 1994-12-20 Rogers Corporation Particulate filled composite film and method of making same
US5506049A (en) * 1991-05-24 1996-04-09 Rogers Corporation Particulate filled composite film and method of making same
US6436135B1 (en) 1974-10-24 2002-08-20 David Goldfarb Prosthetic vascular graft
US20040131533A1 (en) * 2001-05-03 2004-07-08 Spacie Christopher John Extrusion of graphite bodies
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* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
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US3984044A (en) * 1973-10-01 1976-10-05 Composite Sciences, Inc. Retention means for mechanical separation and process of making same
US6436135B1 (en) 1974-10-24 2002-08-20 David Goldfarb Prosthetic vascular graft
US4133927A (en) * 1975-10-23 1979-01-09 Kaikin Kogyo Co., Ltd. Composite material made of rubber elastomer and polytetrafluoroethylene resin
US4110519A (en) * 1975-12-29 1978-08-29 Aktiebolaget Tudor Method for the production of electrodes for lead storage batteries
US4385019A (en) * 1981-01-19 1983-05-24 Mpd Technology Corporation Production of a polymeric active composition
US4721732A (en) * 1984-05-18 1988-01-26 Raychem Corporation Polymeric articles and methods of manufacture thereof
US5198162A (en) * 1984-12-19 1993-03-30 Scimat Limited Microporous films
US5009971A (en) * 1987-03-13 1991-04-23 Ppg Industries, Inc. Gas recombinant separator
US4997603A (en) * 1988-08-05 1991-03-05 Hoechst Celanese Corp. Process for formation of halogenated polymeric microporous membranes having improved strength properties
US5043113A (en) * 1988-08-05 1991-08-27 Hoechst Celanese Corp. Process for formation of halogenated polymeric microporous membranes having improved strength properties
WO1990015422A1 (en) * 1989-06-09 1990-12-13 Rogers Corporation Coaxial cable insulation and coaxial cable made therefrom
US4987274A (en) * 1989-06-09 1991-01-22 Rogers Corporation Coaxial cable insulation and coaxial cable made therewith
US5081188A (en) * 1990-03-23 1992-01-14 E. I. Du Pont De Nemours And Company Processing additives for tetrafluoroethylene polymers
US5110858A (en) * 1990-03-23 1992-05-05 E. I. Du Pont De Nemours And Company Tetrafluoroethylene polymer compositions containing particulate carbon
US5312576A (en) * 1991-05-24 1994-05-17 Rogers Corporation Method for making particulate filled composite film
US5374453A (en) * 1991-05-24 1994-12-20 Rogers Corporation Particulate filled composite film and method of making same
US5506049A (en) * 1991-05-24 1996-04-09 Rogers Corporation Particulate filled composite film and method of making same
US6172139B1 (en) * 1991-05-24 2001-01-09 World Properties, Inc. Particulate filled composition
US20040131533A1 (en) * 2001-05-03 2004-07-08 Spacie Christopher John Extrusion of graphite bodies
FR2870248A1 (en) * 2004-05-13 2005-11-18 Batscap Sa PROCESS FOR PROCESSING SUPERCAPACITY ELECTRODE FILM TO CREATE POROSITY AND ASSOCIATED MACHINE
WO2005116122A1 (en) * 2004-05-13 2005-12-08 Batscap Method for treating a super capacity electrode film in order to create porosity and associated machine
US20080050570A1 (en) * 2004-05-13 2008-02-28 Batscap Method for Treating a Super Capacity Electrode Film in Order to Create Porosity and Associated Machine

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