[0001] Extended chain polyethylene and extended chain polypropylene fibers of extremely
high tenacity and modulus values are known materials, having been described by various
publications of Professor Pennings and co-workers, Smith and Lemstra, and in certain
copending commonly assigned patent applications of Kavesh et al These mechanical properties
are due, at least in part, to the high degree of crystallinity and orientation imparted
to the fiber by the production processes, which include either drawing an ultrahigh
molecular weight polyolefin from a supersaturated solution or spinning a hot solution
of the ultrahigh molecular weight polyolefin through a dye to form a gel fiber. Subsequent
processing, including especially a stretching step, impart a high crystallinity and
orientation to the polylolefin.
[0002] Unfortunately, such extended chain polyolefin fibers have two disadvantageous properties
that result directly from a high crystallinity and orientation. First, the high orientation
in the longitudinal direction gives the fibers extremely low transverse strengths,
with a corresponding tendency of the fibers to fibrillate especially when subjected
to abrasion or self-abrasion, particularly when twisted or processed into a fabric.
This fibrillation is an undesirable feature in many applications, such as rope, sutures
or fabrics.
[0003] Asecond disadvantageous property of the extended chain polyolefin fibers is that
their crystallinity causes these fibers to have poor adhesion to most matrix materials.
This tends to limit the usefulness of these fibers in composite structures.
Brief description of the invention
[0004] Polyolefin fibers coated with polymers are known. See, e.g., DE-A-2,029,754.
[0005] It has been discovered that coating extended chain polyethylene or polypropylene
fibers with a polyethylene, polypropylene, ethylene copolymer or propylene copolymer
material substantially reduces the tendency of the fibers to fibrillate, increases
their transverse strength, enables the fibers to be used in composite structures alone
or with a variety of matrix materials and achieves these results without any significant
loss of the tenacity and modulus values for the fiber alone, and in some instances
with some improvement in these properties which may be attributable to annealing of
fiber defects. The coated fibers may be used alone under appropriate conditions of
temperature and pressures to produce simple composite structures, which single composite
structures are the subject of an application "Composite containing polyolefin fiber
and polymer matrix" (EP-A-89,502, published September 28, 1983) commonly assigned.
[0006] Accordingly, the present invention includes a polyolefin fiber coated with a polymer
characterized in that the polyolefin fiber comprises:
(a) a monofilament or multifilament fiber of polyethylene or polypropylene of weight
average molecular weight at least 500,000 having, in the case of polyethylene a tenacity
of at least 14.5 g/den (13.1 g/dtex) and a tensile modulus of at least 300 g/den (270
g/dtex) and, in the case of polypropylene, a tenacity of at least 8 g/den (7.2 g/dtex)
and a tensile modulus of at least 160 g/den (144 g/dtex); and
(b) a coating on the monofilament and on at least a portion of the filaments of the
multifilament containing a polymer having at least 10 volume percent ethylene or propylene
crystallinity, said coating being present in an amount between 0.1% and 200%, by weight
of fiber.
[0007] The present invention further includes a composite structure comprising a network
of the above-described coated fibers in a matrix which is not a material with ethylene
or propylene crystallinity.
Detailed description of the invention
[0008] The coated fiber of the present invention (which forms a part of the composite structure
of the present invention) includes an extended chain polyolefin fiber, which may be
ultrahigh molecular weight polyethylene or ultrahigh molecular weight polypropylene.
Suitable polyethylene fibers are made of polyethylene having a weight average molecular
weight at least 500,000, preferably at least 1 million and more preferably between
about 2 million and about 5 million. The fiber may be grown by solution techniques,
is described in more detail in U.S. Application Serial No. 225,288, filed January
15, 1981, now US-A-4,356,138, commonly assigned, or by other solution processes in
which the polyolefin is drawn from a supersaturated solution, including those described
in various publications of Pennings, et al and in US-A-4,137,394 to Meihuisen, et
al. The polyolefin fiber may also be produced by processes involving the spinning
of polyolefin solutions to form a gel structure upon cooling, and especially in such
a process as described in EP-A-64,167 (corresponding to U.S. Application Serial No.
259,266, of Kavesh, et al, filed April 30, 1981, a continuation-in-part, thereof,
U.S.S.N. 359,020, and a continuation thereof, U.S.S.N. 572,607, all commonly assigned).
Other solution spinning (gel) processes may also be used, such as those described
in various other works of Pennings and co-workers, in various publications and applications
of Smith and Lemstra including GB-A-2,051,667 and DE-A-3004699 or by similar techniques.
Polyethylene fibers formed by melt spinning under controlled conditions, such as described
in US-A-4,228,118 or GB-A-1,469,526 may also be used, but are generally less preferred
than fibers produced either by drawing from supersaturated solutions or by spinning
solutions via a gel.
[0009] The polyethylene fibers used have tenacity values of at least 14.5 g/den (13.1 g/dtex),
preferably at least about 20 g/den (18 g/dtex), more preferably at least about 25
or 30 g/den (22.5 or 27 g/dtex) and most preferably at least about 40 g/den (36 g/dtex).
Correspondingly, the preferred tensile modulus values for the polyethylene fibers
are at least 300 g/den (270 g/dtex), preferably at least about 500 g/den (450 g/dtex),
more preferably at least 750 or 1,000 g/den (675.1 or 900.1 g/dtex) and most preferably
at least about 1,500 g/den (1350 g/dtex). In general, the tenacity and modulus values
are directly related and rise together in a relatively linear fashion for most of
the processes used, but it is contemplated that for certain applications fibers selected
for particularly high tenacities, without regard to modulus, or with particularly
high modulus, without regard to tenacity, such as are produced by melt spinning, may
be used. Thus, for example, in the application of coated fibers for sutures, the elongation
value is particularly important. For coated fibers and composites used in ballistic
applications, as described in greater detail in an application of the same inventors
as the present application, entitled "Ballistic Article Containing Polyolefin Fiber",
now US-A-4,403,012 and commonly assigned, both tenacity and modulus values are extremely
important.
[0010] The melting point of the polyolefin fiber is not a particularly critical value in
the present invention, but the melting point is generally above about 138°C (e.g.
145-155°C) for polyethylene fibers and above about 168°C (e.g. 170-173°C) for polypropylene
fibers. Other properties, which are not critical but may have importance for particular
applications, include work to break values (as measured by ANSI/ASTM D-2256), creep
values (as measured, for example, under 10% of breaking load for 50 days at room temperature),
elongation to break, elongation at yield, UV stability, oxidative stability, thermal
stability and hydrolytic stability. It is expected that most, if not all, of these
other properties obtained by the polyolefin fiber will correspond to similar, linearly
dependent or enhanced values for the coated polyolefin fiber.
[0011] The polyethylene fiber used in the present invention may be either a monofilament
or a multifilament, with multifilaments of from 2-500 or more strands being contemplated,
and with arrangements varying from totally parallel filaments, to wound filaments,
to braided and twisted strands also being contemplated. In the case of multifilaments
of other than parallel arrangement, it is contemplated that the winding or other rearrangement
of the filament may occur before, during or after application of the coating. Furthermore,
it is contemplated that the coated fibers of the present invention may either be extremely
long fibers (referred to sometimes as being of substantially indefinite length), of
relatively short pieces, or even of extremely short pieces as, for example, in resins
reinforced by short fibers (e.g., bulk molding compounds or sheet molding compounds).
[0012] Similarly, extended chain polypropylene fibers may be used with generally the same
geometries, molecular weights, fiber-forming processes and filament structure as the
extended chain polyethylene fibers. The major difference resides in the properties
of the fiber, with polypropylene fibers of tenacity at least 8 g/den (7.2 g/dtex),
and preferably at least about 15 g/den (13.5 g/dtex), and of tensile modulus at least
about .160 g/den (144 g/dtex), preferably at least about 200 g/den (180 g/dtex), being
suitable. In addition, the extended chain polypropylene fibers will have a main melting
point significantly higher than the corresponding polyethylene fibers, although the
melting point is not a critical feature of the polypropylene fiber. Representative
main melting points for extended chain polypropylene fibers are from about 168 to
about 180°C, or typically between about 168 and about 173°C, preferably at least about
170°C.
[0013] Suitable coating materials for the coated fibers of the present invention include
polyethylene of various forms, polypropylene of various forms, ethylene copolymers
of various forms having at least 10% ethylene crystallinity, propylene copolymers
of various forms having at least 10% propylene crystallinity and various ethylene-propylene
copolymers. Polyethylene coatings may be either low density (having, for example,
about 0.90-0.94 specific gravity), high density (having, for example, about 0.94-0.98
specific gravity), with various amounts of branching, linearity, relatively minor
comonomers as found in materials generally labeled as "polyethylene", molecular weights,
melt viscosities, and other values. For certain applications high density polyethylene
is preferred, while for other applications low density is preferred. Suitable polypropylene
coatings include isotactic, atactic and syndiotactic polypropylene. The atactic or
amorphous polypropylene is generally less preferred, however, compared to the two
crystalline forms.
[0014] Suitable ethylene copolymer coatings include copolymers of ethylene with one or more
other olefinically unsaturated monomers from several broad classes. Similarly suitable
propylene copolymers include copolymers of propylene with one or more olefinically
unsaturated monomers from several broad classes: 1-monoolefins, olefins containing
one terminal polymerizable double bond and one or more internal double bond or bonds.
[0015] For many applications, the ethylene or propylene content of the copolymers is preferably
higher than that minimum necessary to achieve about 10 volume percent ethylene or
propylene crystallinity. Especially when strong adherence of the coating to the fiber
is desired, it is preferred that the ethylene or propylene crystallinity be at least
about 25 volume percent, more preferably at least about 50 volume percent, and most
preferably at least about 70 volume percent. These values are achieved, for example,
in the ethylene-butene-1 copolymers indicated on page 355 of the Encyclopedia of Polymer
Technology as 3, 9, and 18 branches/1000 carbon atoms, corresponding to 90%, 80% and
70% ethylene crystallinity. Ethylene-vinyl acetate copolymers of 5, 10 and 15 mol
% vinyl acetate correspond to approximately 55%, 40% and 25% crystallinity.
[0016] The proportion of coating compared to fiber may vary over a wide range depending
upon the application for which the coated fibers are to be used. A general broad range
is from 0.1 to 200% coating, by weight of fiber. For coated fibers to be used in purely
fiber applications, as in rope, sutures and the like, a preferred coating amount is
between about 10 and about 50%, by weight of fiber. The same or lower proportion of
coating may be used when the coated fiber is to be used to form a simple composite
in which the coating is fused into a continuous matrix. Higher amounts of coating
may be preferred for other applications such as composites containing other fibers
(e.g glass fibers) and/or fillers, in which coating amounts of 50-200%, 75-150% and
75-100% are preferred, more preferred and most preferred.
[0017] The coating may be applied to the fiber in a variety of ways. One method is to apply
the neat resin of the coating material to the stretched high modulus fibers either
as a liquid, a sticky solid or particles in suspension or as a fluidized bed. Alternatively,
the coating may be applied as a solution or emulsion in a suitable solvent which does
not adversely affect the properties of the fiber at the temperature of application.
While any solvent capable of dissolving or dispersing the coating polymer may be used,
preferred groups of solvents include paraffin oils, aromatic solvents or hydrocarbon
solvents, with illustrative specific solvents including paraffin oil, xylene, toluene
and octane. The techniques used to dissolve or disperse the coating polymers in the
solvents will be those conventionally used for the coating of similar polymeric materials
on a variety of substrates.
[0018] Other techniques for applying the coating to the fibers may be used including coating
of the high modulus precursor before the high temperature stretching operation, either
before or after removal of the solvent from the fiber. The fiber may then be stretched
at elevated temperatures to produce the coated fibers. The extruded gel fiber may
be passed through a solution of the appropriate coating polymer (solvent may be paraffin
oil, aromatic or aliphatic solvent) under conditions to attain the desired coating.
Crystallization of the high molecularweight polyethylene in the gel fiber may or may
not have taken place before the fiber passes into the cooling solution. Alternatively,
the fiber may be extruded into a fluidized bed of the appropriate polymeric powder.
[0019] In addition to polymeric coatings, fillers such as carbon black, calcium carbonate,
silica or barium ferrite may also be incorporated to attain desired physical properties,
e.g. incorporation of carbon black to obtain UV, protection and/or enhanced electrical
conductivity.
[0020] Furthermore, if the polyolefin fiber achieves its final properties only after a stretching
operation or other manipulative process, e.g. solvent exchanging, drying or the like,
it is contemplated that the coating may be applied to a precursor material of the
final fiber. In such cases, the desired and preferred tenacity, modulus and other
properties of the fiber should be judged by continuing the manipulative process on
the fiber precursor in a manner corresponding to that employed in the coated fiber
precursor. Thus, for example, if the coating is applied to the xerogel fiber described
in EP-A-64,167 and the corresponding U.S. Applications of Kavesh et al, and the coated
xerogel fiber is then stretched under defined temperature and stretch ratio conditions,
then the fiber tenacity and fiber modulus values would be measured on uncoated xerogel
fiberwhich is similarly stretched.
[0021] The coated fibers of the present invention may be further processed for use in a
variety of applications such as preparation of composites using coated fibers alone,
weaving, felts, fabrics and non-woven and knitted articles.
[0022] In addition, the coated fibers of the present invention may be used to form the complex
composite structures of the present invention. Such complex composites contain the
coated fibers (either monofilament or multifilament) described above, formed into
a network of conventional type, such as completely parallel fibers, layers of parallel
fibers located between layers in a variety of ways, randomly oriented lengths of fibers
(including felts) and other arrangements. In addition to such coated fiber network
the complex composites include a matrix different from the coating material which
may be a thermosetting polymeric material, a thermoplastic polymeric material, an
elastomeric polymeric material or even various non-polymeric materials. Suitable matrices
include thermoset polymers such as epoxies, unsaturated polyesters, polyurethanes,
polyfunctional allyl polymers (e.g. diallyl phthalate), urea-formaldehyde polymers,
phenol-formaldehyde polymers and vinyl ester resins; thermoplastic matrices such as
poly-1-butene, polystyrene, styrene copolymers, polyvinyl chloride and ABS resin (it
will be appreciated that polyethylene, polypropylene, ethylene copolymers and propylene
copolymers, as matrices, are covered in EP-A-89,502; elastomers matrices such as polybutadiene,
butadiene copolymers, thermoplastic elastomers (e.g. polystyrene-polyisoprene-polystyrene,
polystyrene-polybutadiene- polystyrene and polystyrene-hydrogenated diene-polystyrene),
sulfonated ethylene-propylene-diene terepo- lymer and metal salts of this terpolymer
and silicone elastomers, and non-polymeric substrates such as concrete. Such complex
composite structures have special utility in ballistic applications, boat hulls, motorcycle
helmets, road surfacing, building constructions, films, hoses and belts. Composite
structures may be prepared using chopped coated fiber of this invention alone (simple
composites) or together with other thermoplastics and thermoset matrices (called complex
composites and described more fully herein).
[0023] In addition to the coated fiber and the matrix, other materials may be present in
the complex composite, including lubricants, fillers, adhesion agents, other fiber
materials (e.g. aramids, boron fibers, glass fibers, glass microballoons, graphite
fibers and mineral fibers such as mica, woolastonite and asbestos) in various regular
or irregular geometric arrangements. For those composite structures in which strong
adherence between the coated polyolefin fiber and matrix is desired, the coating should
be selected for good adhesion with the matrix material. In general, adhesion can be
improved by using ethylene copolymers of propylene copolymers having comonomers with
similar ionic character, aromatic character or other properties of the matrix. For
example, in the case of epoxy matrices, relatively ionic monomers such acrylic acid,
vinyl acetate or methacrylic acid will, in general, improve the adhesion of the coated
fiber to the epoxy matrix compared to the adhesion of the corresponding uncoated fiber
with the same epoxy matrix. In the case of polyester matrices, some preferred comonomers
in the coating include acrylic acid, 1,4-hexadiene, vinyl alcohol and unreacted free
radically polymerizable monomers (e.g. acrylates). Also suitable are block and graft
copolymers of polyethylene with polybutadiene and the reaction product of ethylene-acrylic
acid copolymer with glycidol methacrylate. In the case of matrices composed of polyurethanes,
preferred coatings include hydroxyl-containing polyethylene copolymers such as ethylene-vinyl
alcohol copolymers. Various suitable thermoplastic matrices and corresponding representative
preferred comonomers for the coating material are indicated in Table 1 below.

[0024] The properties of these complex composites will generally include various advantageous
properties derived from the coated fiber, and especially for the extended chain polyolefin
fiber component of the coated fiber, including especially tenacity and modulus, but
in some instances also including dimensional stability, low water absorption and chemical
stability. The complex composites may also have advantageous properties derived from
the matrix material including, for example, high heat distortion temperature, appropriate
flexibility or stiffness and abrasion resistance. The coating component generally
does not contribute substantially to the mechanical or other properties of the composite
except insofar as it improves the inherent properties of the extended chain polyolefin
as described above in connection with the novel coated fiber, e.g. by improving the
transverse strength of a multifilament fiber.
[0025] Furthermore, the proportion of coated fiber(orforthat matter, extended chain polyolefin
fiber) in the composite is not critical, but may have preferred values for various
applications.
[0026] The coated fibers and complex composite structures of the present invention may be
formed into a variety of articles. For example, vests may be made containing either
knitted or woven or non-woven fabric of the present coated fiber, relatively rigid
portions of the composite of the present invention, or a combination of these. Helmets
may be fabricated employing the complex composites of the present invention using
a thermosetting matrix. Shielding for helicopters, tanks and other articles where
ballistic-resistance articles are desired may also be formed out of either the coated
fiber or complex composite of the present invention, with the matrix material especially
being selected based upon the desired physical properties of the shielding material.
Such articles are described in more detail in US-A-4,403,012 entitled "Ballistic Article
Containing Polyolefin Fiber", of the present inventors, commonly assigned.
[0027] For other applications, complex composites of the present invention may be formed
into a variety of conventional geometric arrangements.
[0028] The polyethylene/ethylene copolymer coatings may be crosslinked by crosslinking techniques
known in the art such as the use of. peroxides, sulfur or radiation cure systems,
or may be reacted with polyfunctional acid chlorides or isocyanates in order to obtain
a crosslinked coating on the high modulus fibers.
Examples
[0029] An ultrahigh molecularweight polyethylene (intrinsic viscosity of 17 di/g) in decalin
at 135°C) was dissolved as a 7 weight % solution in paraffin oil at 220°C. The solution
was extruded through a 16 hole die (with 1 mm diameter holes) to produce a gel fiber
at the rate of 1.8 m/min. The fiber was extracted with trichlorotrifluoroethane and
dried. The filaments were stretched in a one meter long tube at 145°C at a feed roll
speed of 25 cm/min to a stretch ratio of 19:1 to produce a 625 den (562.6 dtex) yarn
having a tenacity of 19 g/den (17.1 g/dtex), a modulus of 732 g/den (659 g/dtex) and
an elongation to break of 4.4%. These fibers were used in Example 2.
[0030] A similar fiber preparation (but as a monofilament) involved dissolving the same
polymer to a 5 weight % solution at 200°C and extruding through a single two millimeter
diameter die to produce a gel fiber at 598 cm/min. The extracted and dried fiber was
stretched in the one meter long tube at 130°C at a stretch ratio of 19:1 to produce
a 65 den (58.5 dtex) fiber having a tenacity of 14.5 g/den (13.1 g/dtex), a modulus
of 366 g/den (329 g/dtex) and an ultimate elongation of 6%. This monofilament fiber
was used in Example 3.
[0031] A similar multifilament fiber employed an 181V polyethylene dissolved to 6 weight
% in paraffin oil at 220°C. Extruding the solution through a 16 hole die (with 0.76
mm hole diameters) produced gel fiber at 3.08 m/min. The wet gel fiber was stretched
at 100°C to a stretch ratio of 11: 1, extracted and dried. The 198 den (178.2 dtex)
yarn produced had a tenacity of 25 g/den (22.5 g/dtex), a modulus of 971 g/den (874
g/dtex) and an elongation of 4.5% and was used in Example 4.
Example 1
Preparation of gel fiber
[0032] A high molecular weight linear polyethylene (intrinsic viscosity of 17.5 in decalin
at 135°C) was dissolved in paraffin oil at 220°C to produce a 6 weight % solution.
This solution was extruded through a sixteen-hole die (hole diameter 1 mm) at the
rate of 3.2 m/min. The oil was extracted from the fiber with trichlorotrifluoroethane
and then the fiber was subsequently dried.
Coating of gel fiber
[0033] The multifilament fibers was passed through a solution of low density polyethylene
(Union Carbide DPDA 6169 WT; Density 0.93; M)
2=6), 35 g dissolved in 500 ml of toluene at 75°C at the rate of 1.5 m/min and then
twice through a bath of trichlorotrifluoroethane and finally dried. The fiber increased
in weight by 19.5%.
Stretching of fiber
[0034] The coated fiber was stretched to a stretch ratio of 20:1 in a 100 cm long tube heated
to 140°C, using a feed roll speed of 25 cm/min to produce a single filament of 208
den (187.2 dtex). Tensile testing of the coated fiber showed a tensile strength of
19.9 g/den (17.9 g/dtex) and a modulus of 728 g/den (655.3 g/dtex).
[0035] Uncoated fiber was stretched in an identical manner to produce a multifilament yarn.
Tensile testing of this uncoated fiber showed a tensile strength (tenacity) of 18.9
g/den (17 g/dtex) and a modulus of 637 g/den (573.4 g/dtex).
[0036] As can be seen from the data, the coated fiber has a higher tensile strength and
modulus in spite of the fact that 20% of the fiber weight consists of low density
polyethylene coating.
[0037] By contrast, the Rule of Mixing would suggest (ignoring second order effects) that
the coated fiber modulus would be 0.8x638=509 g/den (458.1 g/dtex) and that the coated
fiber tensile strength would be 0.8x18.9=15.1 g/den (13.6 g/dtex). The actual values
are 143% and 132% of theory.
[0038] The coated fiber was then tied around a small post, making five knots (each knot
drawn down on the previous knot). Examination under an optical microscope indicated
that no fibrillation occurred, a result particularly significance for suture applications.
Example 2
[0039] Single 13 den (11.7 dtex) ECPE filaments having a modulus of 732 g/den (658.9 g/dtex)
and a tensile strength of 19 g/den (17.1 g/dtex) were dipped into a solution of ethylene-acrylic
acid copolymer (Dow EAA-455, containing 0.932 milliequivalents acrylic acid/g polymer)
in toluene under conditions shown in Table 1. The fiber was removed, allowed to dry
in air and then subsequently embedded in an epoxy resin, Devkon 5 minute epoxy manufactured
by Devkon Corporation, to a depth of 5 mm. The resin was cured at room temperature
for one hour, and then heated in an air-circulating oven for 30 minutes at 100°C.
[0040] The fibers were pulled on an Instron tensile tester at 1 inch/minute (2.54 cm/min).
Results given in Table 2 (each the average of two runs) indicate that, under all conditions
of dipping evaluated, improvement of adhesion over that of the unmodified fiber occurred.
Under best conditions (one run of Sample C), the fiber broke rather than being pulled
out of the resin.

Example 3
[0041] An extended chain polyethylene fiber of 14.5 g/den ( 13.1 g/dtex) tenacity and 366
g/den (329.4 g/dtex) modulus prepared by stretching a xerogel at a 19:1 stretch ratio
at 130°C was cut into approximately 40 cm pieces. Some of the pieces were tied into
knots and thereupon fibrillated extensively, with examination under an optical microscope
at 50x magnification showing microfibrillae approximately 8-9 µm in diameter.
[0042] Other pieces of the fiber were dipped one, two or three times (two each for six total
coated fibers) in a 8 weight % solution of Paxon@ EA-55-180 polyethylene (an ethylene
hexene-1 copolymer having density of 0.955 and a M)
2=18) in xylene at 100°C.
[0043] Five knots were then tied in each fiber (around a small post) each knot drawn down
on the previous knot. The coating on the once-dipped fibers appeared about 1 µm thick.
One fibril was seen on one once-dipped fiber, no fibrils on the other. The coatings
on the twice-dipped fibers appeared about 3 µm thick. No fibrillation was observed,
but the coating on one section of one fiber detached and ended about 3 µm from the
fiber. The coating on the thrice-dipped fibers varied in thickness (6 µm in the thickest
portion) and showed no fibrillation after five knots.
Example 4
[0044] An extended claim polyethylene fiber of 25 g/den (22.5 g/dtex) tenacity and 971 g/den
(874 g/dtex) modulus was coated in one of two treatment regimes with various polymers
in xylene solution (at 60 or 120 g/I concentration). The first regime was to dip the
fiber in the solution for two minutes and then dry. The second regime was to dip for
30 seconds, dry in air for three minutes and then (for four repetitions) dip for two
seconds and dry for three minutes. All of the coated fibers were then placed in a
rectangular parallelopiped mold of an epoxy resin (the same resin as Example 2) which
was then cured at 25°C for 24 hours.
[0045] A force was then applied to the fiber end sticking out of the cured epoxy resin at
a rate of 2 inches/minute (5.1 cm/min). Aforce at pull-out ("Fpo") was measured and
a Shear Stress at Break ("S
B") calculated. The results are displayed in Table 2.

Example 5
[0046] Continuous coating of polyethylene fibers with ethylene acrylic acid copolymer Preparation
of gel fiber
[0047] An ultrahigh molecular weight polyethylene (intrinsic viscosity of 17.5 di/g in decalin
at 135°C) was dissolved as a 6 weight % solution in paraffin oil at 220°C. The solution
was extruded through a 16 hole die (with 1.0 mm diameter holes) to produce a gel fiber
at the rate of 3.2 m/min. The fiber was extracted with trichlorotrifluoroethane and
dried.
Coating fiber
[0048] The dry undrawn fiber (7.0 g) was passed through a 600 ml of toluene containing 24
g of a dissolved ethylene-acrylic acid copolymer (Dow EAA-455 copolymer having Acid
No.=52.3, i.e. requires 52.3 mg of potassium hydroxide to neutralize 1 g of sample)
at 105°C at the rate of 1.5 m/min. After passing through the solution, the fiber passed
through a trichlorotrifluoroethane and then dried, giving a fiber weight of 8.06 g.
This fiber was then stretched in a 100°C tube at 140°C, using a feedroll speed of
25 cm/min. The resultant fiber had a denier of 234 (210.6 g/dtex), tenacity of 20.2
g/den (18.2 g/dtex), modulus of 696 g/den (626.5 g/dtex) and ultimate elongation of
3.9%.
Adhesion to epoxy resin
[0049] Adhesion to epoxy matrix was determined in the same manner as in Example 4. Force
required to pull fiber out of the matrix was 1.33 N (0.30 Ib) and shear stress was
2340 kPa (340 ib/in).
1. Polymerüberzogene Polyolefinfaser, dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß die überzogene Polyolefinfaser
umfaßt:
(a) eine ein- oder mehrfädige Faser, die aus Polyethylen oder Polypropylen mit einem
gewichtsdurchschnittlichen molekulargewicht von mindestens 500 000 besteht und die
bei Polyethylen eine Reißfestigkeit von mindestens 13,1 g/dtex und einen Elastizitätsmodul
von mindestens 270 g/dtex und bei Polypropylen eine Reißfestigkeit von mindestens
7,2 g/dtex und einen Elastizitätsmodul von mindestens 144 g/dtex besitzt, ferner
(b) einen auf der einfädigen Faser und auf mindestens einem Teil der Fäden der mehrfädigen
Faser vorgesehenen Überzug, der ein Polymer mit mindestens 10 Vol.-% kristallinem
Ethylen oder Propylen enthält und in einer Menge von 0,1% bis 200% des Gewichts der
Faser vorhanden ist.
2. Überzogene Polyolefinfaser nach Anspruch 1, dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß sie eine
mehrfädige Polyethylenfaser ist.
3. Überzogene Polyolefinfaser nach Anspruch 1 oder 2, dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß
das Polyethylen ein gewichtsdurchschnittliches Molekulargewicht von mindestens 1 000
000 hat.
4. Überzogene Polyolefinfaser nach Anspruch 1, 2 oder 3, dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß
das Polyethylen eine Reißfestigkeit von mindestens 27 g/dtex und einen Elastizitätsmodul
von mindestens 900,1 g/dtex hat.
5. Überzogene Polyolefinfaser nach Anspruch 1, 2, 3 oder 4, dadurch gekennzeichnet,
daß der Überzug aus Polyethylen besteht.
6. Überzogene Faser nach Anspruch 1, 2, 3 oder 4, dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß der
Überzug aus einem Ethylencopolymer besteht.
7. Überzogene Polyolefinfaser nach Anspruch 6, dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß das Ethylencopolymer
mindestens 25 Vol.-% kristallines Ethylen enthält.
8. Verbundkörper mit einem Netzwerk aus überzogenen Polyolefinfasern nach einem der
vorhergehenden Ansprüche und einer Einbettungsmasse aus einem anderen Material als
der Überzug.
9. Verbundkörper nach Anspruch 8, dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß die Einbettungsmasse
aus einem duroplastischen Polymer besteht.
10. Verbundkörper mit einem Netzwerk aus überzogenen Fasern nach einem der Ansprüche
1 bis 7 und einer Epoxid-Einbettungsmasse.