[0001] The invention relates to protective garments made of wire and fiber strands and an
elastomeric coating.
[0002] Cut-resistant garments have been proposed of steel wire and aramid fiber. A cut-resistant
knitted glove has been made of yarn having a core of two stainless steel strands and
a strand of aramid fiber, overwrapped in opposite directions with aramid fiber strands
or with an aramid strand and a covering strand of nylon (polyamide). Aramid fiber
is strong and cut-resistant, and such a glove is extremely effective and useful in
protecting against injury from sharp products or tools, e.g., in cutting and processing
meat products; yet, the aramid yarn is somewhat abrasive (self abrasive, causing wear,
and also abrasive or harsh to the feel), tends to absorb dirt, fat, blood or other
fluids, and is not as easily cleaned as might be desired. Moreover, detergents, light
and water tend to break down aramid fiber. In
' addition, aramid fiber, which accounts for much of the strength and cut-resistance
of the glove, is relatively expensive. Utilizing a covering nylon strand in forming
the yarn diminishes the above disadvantages, but greater improvement is still desired.
For example, such a glove still is not liquid or moisture proof, slip resistant or
heat resistant. Due to one or a combination of these shortcomings, the market for
the present gloves is limited. The glove industry, in particular, has long sought
a satisfactory liquid-proof cut and heat-resistant glove that is light-weight, comfortable
and reasonably priced.
[0003] The present invention provides a high strength, flexible, relatively light-weight
garment of substantially improved cut-resistance, that is moisture and oil resistant,
nonabsorbent, slip resistant, durable, comfortable to wear and use, and economical
to manufacture.
[0004] A garment embodying the invention is, at least in part, made of wire and fiber strands
associated together and, at least in part, covered by an adhering elastomeric coating.
In the preferred embodiment the coating is cured or solidified in place.
[0005] Advantageously, the wire and fiber strands are associated in a yarn from which the
garment is made. For the greatest comfort and flexibility, the garment is knitted
from the yarn. The yarn is formed of a core of one or more strands of wire, advantageously
stainless steel wire, and a parallel strand of fiber, preferably synthetic fiber and
advantageously polyester fiber, and at least two overwrappings of fiber, preferably
synthetic fiber in the form of a thread or strand, of which polyester is most preferred,
wound one on top of the other, in opposite directions, about the core.
[0006] A garment is knitted from the yarn and coated with a suitable elastomeric material,
as by dipping the garment to coat one surface, e.g., the outside surface of a glove,
and allowing the coating material to cure in situ, i.e., in place. The coating material
must be flexible and have some stretch,' be tough, strong, moisture proof, slip resistant,
and have good wearing characteristics. Nitrile rubber is particularly suitable. Slip
resistance can be improved by incorporating abrasive particles into or onto the coating
material.
[0007] A garment constructed as described has substantially improved cut-resistance by virtue
of the coating. Most suprising is the fact that, while a garment knitted from an aramid
and steel wire yarn, and uncoated, has greater cut-resistance than an uncoated garment
made from a similarly constructed yarn using other synthetic or natural fibers, such
a garment does not maintain that advantage over a garment of yarn using polyester
fibers when the garments are coated. In addition, it is difficult to adhere a suitable
coating on aramid and polyamideyarn.
[0008] Preferably, the garment incorporates a cloth liner that is adhered to the knitted
yarn by the coating, which "strikes through" the knitted yarn when it is applied,
which is typically accomplished by dipping.
[0009] A preferred product and yarn embodying this invention is a protective glove of knitted
yarn covered with a coating of elastomeric material cured in place and having a fabric
liner bonded in place with the coating, said yarn having a core comprised of four
strands of stainless steel wire about 0.003 inch in diameter and a parallel core of
synthetic polymer fiber having a denier of 800 to 1500, the overall diameter of said
core wire being no greater than 0.020 inch, and said yarn having two strands of polyester
fiber having a denier of 210 to 630 wrapped about the core in opposite directions
one on top of the other, the total diameter of the yarn being no greater than about
0.050 inch, said glove being highly cut-resistant, nonabsorbent to dirt, fat, blood
and the like, with high slip resistance and good feel to the wearer, and light in
weight, stretchable and flexible.
[0010] The above and other features and advantages of the invention will become better understood
from the detailed description that follows, when considered in connection with the
accompanying drawings.
[0011]
Figure 1 is a front elevational view of a glove embodying the invention;
Figure 2 is a diagrammatic sectional view through a portion of the glove of Figure
1, showing the construction of the material of which the glove is made; and
Figure 3 is a partial elevational view showing the construction of a strand of yarn
of which the glove of Figure 1 is made.
[0012] A protective garment embodying the present invention is shown in Figure 1 in the
form of a safety or protective glove 10 suitable for a variety of uses in handling
sharp or rough-edged objects, such as cut metal and glass and for protection from
injury from sharp cutting blades and the like. The glove 10 is especially suitable
for operators who process meat, where sharp hand knives are used. The invention can
also be embodied in other garments, such as wrist guards, protective sleeves, gaiters,
and the like.
[0013] The glove 10 is made from yarn 12, shown in Figure 3 knitted into a glove shell l3.
' The preferred glove 10 has a knit cloth liner 14 that is separately made and inserted
into the shell 13. An elastomeric coating 16 covers the entire outer surface of the
shell, at least up to the edge of a cuff portion 18, where the liner is secured to
the knitted glove at the edge of a cuff portion 18 by overcast stitching 20. The coating
16 is preferably applied by dipping the shell 13 and liner together into a suitable
coating material in liquid form; removing them from the material and allowing the
coating to solidify or cure in place. The coating material strikes through the knitted
fabric and secures the liner 14 in place but does not permeate through the liner itself.
This is illustrated diagramatically in Figure 2.
[0014] The yarn 12 is comprised of a core 22 formed of a plurality of parallel wire strands
24 extending the length of the yarn and a parallel fiber strand 26, and 'two fiber
strand overwraps 28, 30, helically wound in opposite directions, the strand 28 being
wound directly about the core and the strand 30 being an outer strand wrapped about
the strand 28 in an opposite helical direction.
[0015] The wire strands 24 are flexible and strong and preferably highly corrosion resistant.
Stainless steel is a particularly suitable wire strand material, preferably annealed
stainless steel wire. While four wire strands are used in the core of the yarn of
the preferred embodiment shown, the number of wire strands can vary from 1 to 20 strands,
but typically from 2 to 6 strands will be used. The wire strands 24 can range in diameter
from 0.001 to 0.010 inch, the preferred range being from 0.002 to 0.006 inch in diameter,
and the most preferred size is 0.003 inch in diameter. The preferred material is No.
304 stainless steel, fully annealed. Wire diameters smaller than 0.002 inch have a
shorter life, are more expensive, and provide no significant advantage over larger
diameters. Wire diameters greater than 0.006 inch have substantially less flexibility.
The total diameter of the single wire strand or the plural wire strands grouped to
form the core 22 should not exceed 0.02 inch, ignoring the fiber strand 26, and preferably
will be less than .01 inch to facilitate a relatively small overall diameter of the
yarn for knitting purposes. While stainless steel is a preferred wire material, especially
for garments used in the food industry, where corrosion and food contamination must
be avoided and frequent washing is required, other materials are useable in various
applications; for example, steel, titanium and other metals may be used that are sufficiently
flexible and strong to permit knitting of the yarn and use of the garment.
[0016] The parallel fiber strand 26 has high tensile strength, is relatively nonabsorbent,
and is a multi-filament synthetic polymer fiber, advantageously of a denier of 800
to 1,500. Suitable core fibers include multi-filament fibers of polyester, aramid
(aromatic polyamides), and polyamide.. The preferred fiber is polyester of about 1000
denier, which avoids the disadvantages of aramid.
[0017] A multi-filament strand 26 in the core is advantageous. Multi-filament is continuous
rather than spun and slides and/or flows with the other parts of the core during fabrication
and subsequent use of an article of apparel produced-with the yarn. The high strength
multi-filament core strand takes a great deal, if not a major part, of the tensile
load to which the yarn is subjected during knitting and use. The filament core strand
also appears to increase the flexibility of the core part of the yarn over an all
metal core and thus facilitates knitting. Also, a fiber core strand improves the basic
quality of the yarn, promoting more even wrapping in the so-called "upwinding" of
the yarn. Upwinding is the wrapping of a cover strand about the core. With a wire
core, the first winding or overwrap 28 tends to slip longitudinally and a fiber core
strand provides much more uniformity in the close'spacing or contact . between the
adjacent turns of a winding about the core. In addition, the presence of a fiber strand
in the core acts as a cushion to help the cut-resistance of the wire.
[0018] The overwraps 28, 30 are preferably of synthetic polymer fiber, each in the form
of a thread or strand made of twisted filaments. Fibers suitable for the overwraps
are multi-filament or spun polyester or polya- mide. Each strand 26, 28 is of a denier
of 210 to 630, and in the preferred embodiment is about 440. The wraps 28, 30 are
preferably polyester. While aramid and polya- mideare advantageous in knitting high
strength, cut-resistant gloves that are used in an uncoated form, those materials
have been found to be disadvantageous when the glove is to be coated, as in the present
invention. Aramid and polyamideare difficult.to coat (i.e., to adhere a coating to)
and, particularly in the case of aramid, are more expensive than polyester.
[0019] While a multi-filament wrap 28, 30 is preferred, it can be a spun filament with a
cotton count of from 1 to 60, preferably from 15 to 35. filament type fibers are preferred
over spun fibers because they are stronger and less abrasive-in knitting, and they
are more resistant to cutting because the tensile strength is greater for any given
denier.
[0020] Both overwraps 28, 30 are wound with successive turns directly adjacent, as shown.
Each is wound in an opposite direction. While two overwraps are preferred, more are
possible. It is, however, desirable to have an even number of overwraps for balanced
tension. To facilitate use of the yarn in conventional knitting machines and to maintain
flexibility in the end product, it is critical that the overall diameter of the yarn
be no greater than 0.050 inch.
[0021] The fabric glove portion 13 is knitted rather than formed in other known manners,
for flexibility, comfort, seamless construction, and efficiency of manufacture. Preferably
it is knitted of a single yarn strand 12. The preferred yarn 12 is comprised of a
core 22 of four strands 24 of 304 stainless steel each 0.003 inch in diameter and
one parallel strand 26 of multi-filament polyester of 1000 denier with two overwraps
28, 30 of polyester multi-filament fiber strands of 440 denier helically wound in
opposite directions. The total diameter of the preferred yarn is about 0.025 inch.
[0022] As an alternative to a single yarn, the shell 13 can be of a double yarn (i.e., knitted
from two yarns 12, but smaller diameter yarn may then be desired to reduce the weight
of the glove). A single yarn knit glove is more desirable in the present invention
because the strength and cut resistance of the garment derives more from the metal
strands in the core and the coating 16 over the fabric, than from the fiber overwraps
28, 30. Thus,'the use of a slightly larger core with four metal strands and, hence,
a larger diameter yarn, to form a single yarn knitted glove is more advantageous than
using a thinner yarn and a double yarn knitting technique to form-the glove. The opposite
is true in the case of an uncoated glove in which the overwrap material is of substantially
high strength and cut resistance, for example, aramid. A single yarn glove of the
present construction is also more flexible and less expensive than a double yarn glove.
[0023] A second advantageous construction of the shell 13 utilizes an aramid fiber 26 of
1500 denier in the core and three rather than four stainless wires, each of 0.004
inch diameter, but otherwise the same as the preferred embodiment.
[0024] The liner 14, which is of cotton or other suitable fabric, such as polyester, provides
increased comfort because of its softness and its ability to absorb perspiration.
In fabricating the glove 10, a liner 14 is placed over a form to which it tightly
conforms. The shell 13 is then placed over the liner and the liner and shell are dipped
on the form into elastomeric coating material in liquid form. The material strikes
through the knitted yarn of the shell l3, but preferably does not strike through the
liner 14. It does however contact the liner 14 and bonds it in place within the shell
13 when the coating material solidifies or cures. The coated shell and adhered liner
are removed from the form after curing and the liner and shell are then sewn together
at the cuff end by the stitching 20.
[0025] Nitrile rubber is the preferred elastomeric coating material, because it is flexible
even at low temperatures, stretchable, durable, oil and moisture resistant, tough
and cut-resistant, and is relatively slip resistant. The term nitrile rubber includes
acrylonitrile rubber, acrylonitrile butadiene rubber, nitrile-silicone rubber, which
combines the characteristic properties of silicones with the oil resistance of nitrile
rubber, acrylonitrile butadiene rubber, and nitrile butadiene rubber. The preferred
nitrile rubber is carboxylated butadiene acrylic nitrile-copolymer latex furnished
by Rycold Chemical Co. and includes zinc sulfur butylzymate, clay filler and pigment.
Although nitrile rubber is preferred, other elastomers can be used, such as other
synthetic polymers (including plastisols and organosols), and-natural rubber (pdlyisoprene).
The coating material is solidified or cured in situ, i.e., in place, after the knitted
glove 13 is dipped and removed from the bath of the material. Techniques for coating
fabric gloves with elastomeric materials are per se known and will be familiar to
those skilled in the art.
[0026] In the preferred embodiment, the glove 13 is dipped in a manner to apply a continuous,
solid (i.e., without exposed yarn) coating over the entire glove surface. Preferably,
the coating thickness will be the minimum to provide complete fabric coverage and
thereby preserve maximum flexibility and to assure a patterned surface, which is caused
by the underlying, coated, shell yarn, which is loosely knitted. The coating thickness
is sufficient to make the glove impermeable to liquid and is adequate to provide good
wear and, further, is sufficiently thick to add substantially to the cut-resistance
of the glove. Where rubber nitrile is used as the coating 16, and the glove is of
the general construction shown in Figure 1, the dry pick-up weight of the coating
material for a medium size glove will typically be about 0.082 pounds. The weight
of the shell is approximately 0.121 pounds and the liner 0.1051 pounds, the entire
glove being quite light in weight for its strength, cut resistance and other attributes.
[0027] After the glove is dipped and removed from the coating material, curing of the nitrile
rubber coating is accomplished by heating the coating on the shell to a curing temperature
for sufficient time.
[0028] Improved slip resistance for gripping can be obtained by increasing the coefficient
of friction of the palm and finger portions of the glove by incorporating into or
adding an abrasive to the surface of the glove before the coating material is cured.
Such a material may include pumice, by way of example. In addition, or alternatively,
natural-rubber or flock can be applied to the surface and/or a pattern can be impressed
upon the glove in the palm and finger portions.
[0029] As compared with known aramid fiber gloves as disclosed in U.S. Patent No. 4,004,295,
U.S. Patent Application Serial No. 99,092 filed November 30, 1979, and U.S. Patent
Application Serial No. 891,611 filed March 30, 1978, the present glove represents
a different approach to cut resistance and provides the many advantages of the coating
material. Aramid, for example, requires a chemical bond to facilitate coating and
agents that provide such a bond are typically dangerous in food and would limit the
uses of the glove. Also, the abrasiveness of aramid within the coating material causes
deterioration of the yarn. Furthermore, use of a greater number of strands of wire
24 is made possible by using polyester rather than aramid in knitted products and
especially knitted products that require flexibility, such as gloves. Because aramid
essentially does not stretch, a yarn that uses four or more strands of wire becomes
much too rigid for knitting and for most uses when aramid is used as a core and wrapping.
With the present construction and the use of more stretchable polyester, additional
wire of significant diameter imparts high cut resistance without unacceptable rigidity.
In terms of strength, the flexibility and stretch of the core fiber, when the yarn
is subjected to strain, allows the tensile strength of the increased quantity of steel
to be utilized in resisting cutting. The flexibility of the yarn also allows use of
an elastomeric coating without exceeding acceptable stiffness in the final product.
[0030] From the above, it will be apparent that a new and improved protective garment is
provided, that is liquid proof and not absorbent to dirt, fats, oil, blood and other
fluids, that is cut resistant, abrasion resistant, light in weight, flexible and comfortable
to wear, and that is neither self-abrasive nor abrasive to other objects or clothing
that it contacts (unless the coating is purposefully modified to increase friction).
It also provides protection from heat. When the garment is in the form of a glove,
it has a good feel and grip. While the glove industry has traditionally used layers
of material to provide cut resistance and protection, the present garment provides
an integral construction that is highly cut-resistant.. Its combined features meet
a wide range of needs.
1. A protective garment at least a part of which is made of yarn comprising a core
having one or more strands of flexible wire and a covering of one or more of fiber
strands, and an elastomeric covering on said part, cured or solidifed in place.
2. A.protective garment as set forth in claim 1 wherein said core includes a fiber
strand extending parallel to the one or more strands of wire and the one or more fiber
strands are helically wrapped about the core.
3. A protective garment as set forth in claim 1 or 2 wherein the core includes two
to twenty strands of annealed stainless steel wire each having a diameter of 0.025
to 0.25 millimeter.
4. A protective garment as set forth in any of the preceding claims wherein the total
diameter of the yarn is no greater than 1.27 millimeter.
5. A protective garment as set forth in any of claims 1-4 that is at least in part
tubular in shape and at least in part made from yarn comprised of a core having 2
to 6 strands of annealed stainless steel wire 0.051 to 0.15 millimeter in diameter
and a parallel synthetic polymer fiber strand having a denier of 800 to 1500, the
overall diameter of the wire strands being no greater than 0.51 millimeter, and at
least two strands of polyester fiber having a denier of 210 to 630 wrapped about the
core in opposite directions one on top of the other.
6. A protective garment as set forth in claim 5 in which the core has 4 strands of
stainless steel wire each 0.076 millimeter in diameter and the garment is a safety
glove.
7. A protective garment as set forth in any of the preceding claims wherein the fiber
strands are either polyamide or polyester fibers.
8. A protective garment as.set forth in any of the preceding claims wherein the elastomeric
covering is nitrile rubber.
9. A protective garment as set forth in any of the preceding claims wherein the garment
is knitted.
10. A protective garment as set forth in any of the preceding claims including a fabric
liner in the garment bonded thereto by the coating material.