[0001] The present relates to the use of a particulate micro-structured carbon material
in thermal insulation applications, preferably as an athermanous filler.
[0002] Thermal insulation for saving energy has attained great prominence in the context
of desire for sustainable development and the increasing cost of energy. Thermal insulation
is gaining ever greater importance in the light of increasing energy prices, increasingly
scarce resources, the desire for reducing CO
2 emissions, the necessity of a sustainable reduction in energy demand and also the
increasingly demanding requirements which protection against heat and cold will have
to meet in the future. These increasingly demanding requirements for optimizing thermal
insulation apply equally in buildings, e.g. new buildings or existing buildings, and
to thermal insulation in the mobile, logistics and stationary sectors.
[0003] Building materials such as steel, concrete, masonry and glass and also natural rock
are relatively good thermal conductors so that the exterior walls of buildings made
thereof very quickly give off heat from the inside to the outside in cold weather.
Development is therefore aimed, firstly, at improving the insulation properties by
increasing the porosity of these building materials as in the case of, for example,
concrete and masonry, and secondly at cladding the outer walls with thermal insulation
materials. The thermal insulation materials which are mostly used at present are materials
having a low thermal conductivity. Materials used include both organic insulation
materials and inorganic insulation materials, e.g. foamed plastics such as polystyrene,
and polyurethane; wood fiber materials such as wood wool and cork; vegetable or animal
fibers such as hemp, flax, wool; mineral and glass wool, foamed glass in plate form;
calcium silicate boards and gypsum plasterboards. Those thermal insulation materials
are mostly used in the form of foamed or pressed boards and moldings, alone or in
combination with others. Another effective way to provide thermal insulation is the
use of vacuum insulated panels (VIPs) which are based on the principle of vacuum insulation.
Those VIPs comprise a porous core material to support the vacuum and surrounded by
a highly gas-tight cover material. Materials that may be employed for the core include
open-cell polymer foams, microfibre materials, fumed silica and perlite.
[0004] The insulating capability of each of the above-mentioned materials and vacuum/material
combinations, respectively, can be further improved by adding an athermanous material
capable of interacting with infrared radiation and thus reducing infrared transmission.
For example, athermanous materials may be used as fillers in thermoinsulating polymeric
foams and in vacuum insulated panels. Expandable thermoplastic polymers and among
these, in particular, expandable polystyrene (EPS), are conventional insulation materials
which have been known and used for a long time for preparing expanded articles which
can be adopted in various applicative areas, among which, one of the most important
is thermal insulation. The flat sheets of expanded polystyrene are normally used with
a density of about 30 g/l as the thermal conductivity of the polymer has a minimum
at these values. It is not advantageous to fall below this limit, even if this is
technically possible, as it causes a drastic increase in the thermal conductivity
of the sheet which must be compensated by an increase in its thickness. In order to
avoid this drawback, the polymer can be filled with athermanous materials such as
graphite (e.g. in Neopor® available from BASF), carbon black or aluminum. A good performance
of the athermanous filler and thus of the overall thermal insulation allows a significant
reduction in the density of the expanded article or thickness of the same without
reducing the overall thermal resistance value.
[0005] EP 0620246 A describes a process for preparing granules of expandable polystyrene containing an
athermanous material, for example carbon black, distributed on the surface or, alternatively,
incorporated inside the particle itself.
[0006] The use of carbon black has long been known as a filler or pigment, or else as a
nucleating agent (see, for example,
Chem. Abstr., 1987, "Carbon Black Containing Polystyrene Beads"). Among the various types of carbon black, the most important are carbon black from
oil combustion ("petroleum black")/ carbon black from gas combustion, carbon black
from acetylene, lamp black, channel black, thermal black and electrically conductive
carbon black.
WO 97/45477 describes compositions based on expandable polystyrene comprising a styrene polymer
and from 0.05 to 25 % of carbon black of the lamp black type.
[0007] Depending on the manufacturing process, these carbon blacks have diameters which
range from 10 nm to 1,000 nm approximately, and have very different specific surfaces
(from 10 to 2,000 m
2/g) . These differences lead to different blockage capacities of the infrared rays.
WO 2006/61571 describes compositions based on expandable polystyrene comprising a styrene polymer
and from 0.05 to less than 1% of carbon black, with a surface area ranging from 550
to 1,600 m
2/g.
[0008] It is known that graphite can also be effectively used as a black body (as described,
for example, in
JP 63-183941,
WO 2004/022636,
WO 96/34039). Its use as attenuating agent of infrared radiation in polymeric foams is, however,
more recent. Patent application
JP 63-183941 is among the first to propose the use of some additives, active in blocking infrared
rays in wavelengths ranging from 6 to 14 µm, and therefore obtaining thermally insulating
thermoplastic resins capable of permanently sustaining a low thermal conductivity.
Among all additives, graphite is preferred.
[0009] DE 9305431 U describes a method for producing expanded molded products having a density of less
than 20 kg/m
3 and a reduced thermal conductivity. This result is reached by incorporating an athermanous
material, such as graphite and also carbon black, in the rigid polystyrene foam. International
patent application
WO 98/51735 describes expandable polystyrene particulates containing 0.05 to 25% by weight of
synthetic or natural graphite particles, homogeneously distributed in the polystyrene
matrix. The graphite preferably has an average diameter ranging from 1 to 50 µm, an
apparent density ranging from 100 to 500 g/l and a surface area ranging from 5 to
20 m
2/g.
[0010] WO 2011/042800 is directed to an expandable thermoplastic nanocomposite polymeric composition, preferably
a polystyrene composition, including an athermanous filler comprising nano-scaled
graphene sheets having a thickness not greater than 150 nm, an average dimension (length,
width, or diameter) not greater than 10 µm and a surface area > 50 m
2/g.
[0011] There is an ongoing need for highly effective insulation materials having low space
requirement and thus allowing manifold fields of use. The problem underlying the present
invention is to find a particulate material having exceptionally low thermal radiative
conductivity that may be used in combination with conventional materials to improve
thermal insulation. More particularly, it is sought for an athermanous filler material
for use in polymeric foams and vacuum insulated panels.
[0012] We have now found that a particulate carbon material comprising carbon particles
in the shape of disks ("carbon disks") and hollow open cones ("carbon cones") can
be used for thermal insulation.
[0013] The terms "carbon cones" and "carbon disks" are used to designate a certain class
of carbon structures in the micro-domain or smaller (nano-domain). These structures
can be grossly described as stacks of graphitic sheets with flat or conical structures.
The open carbon cones are generally hollow cones each made up of an uninterrupted
sheet of graphite, except at their open edges. All cones are closed in the apex and
only exist with five different opening angles. A graphitic sheet composed of solely
hexagons cannot form a continuous cone cap but forms a flat plate or disk. Pentagons
have to be added to form a curved tip. The open carbon cones can be modeled as a wrapped
graphitic sheet. In order to have strain-free, seamless wrapping, a sector has to
be cut out of the sheet and thereafter the edges have to be connected. By considering
the symmetry of a graphite sheet that sector should have an angle ( = total disclination
TD) of TD = N x 60°, where N = 0, 1, 2, 3, 4 or 5 and corresponds to the effective
number of pentagons necessary to produce the particular total disclination (curvature).
Therefore, the opening angles α of the cones only have certain discrete values according
to the equation α = 2 arcsin(1 - N/6). A total disclination of 0° (N = 0) corresponds
to a flat plate, i.e. the carbon disks can be described as flat circular graphite
sheets having pure hexagonal graphite structure. Fig. 1, taken from international
application
WO 98/42621, shows schematically the projected angles (opening or apex angles) of the various
possible carbon cones.
[0014] The concept of disclination and projected angle as applied to the carbon cones and
disks is best understood with reference to the article "
Graphitic Cones and the Nucleation of Curved Carbon Surfaces" appearing in Nature
(1997), July 31 issue. As shown in Fig. 1, the projected angles for each of the possible cones are 19.2°,
38.9°, 60°, 83.6° and 112.9°, which correspond to total disclinations of 300 °(N =
5), 240°(N = 4), 180°(N = 3), 120°(N = 2) and 60°(N = 1), respectively. In addition,
the flat plate graphitic sheet has a projected angle of 180° and a total disclination
of 0°. Electron micrographs of the particulate carbon material confirm the presence
of disks and cones having at least one of the possible opening angles mentioned above.
Carbon cones having opening angles different from those mentioned have not been observed.
[0015] The characteristic size, or longest dimension, of the carbon cones and disks is typically
less than 5 µm, preferably less than 4 µm, more preferably no more than 2 µm such
as 1 to 2 µm or less than 1 µm or less than 800 nm, and the thickness, measured as
the wall thickness of hollow open carbon cones or the thickness of the disks, is typically
less than 100 nm, preferably less than 80 nm, more preferably less than 50 nm such
as 20 to 30 nm. Typical aspect ratios are within the range of from 1 to 50 clearly
distinguishing those micro-domain structures from carbon nanotubes having aspect ratios
in the range of from 100 to 1000.
[0016] The carbon disks and cones are carbon micro-domain structures that are strongly dominant
in the present particulate carbon material. Typically, the particulate carbon material
comprises more than 90 % by weight of carbon micro-domain structures and up to about
10 % by weight of ordinary carbon black. The micro-domain fraction of the particulate
material usually comprises at least 10 % by weight of carbon cones, preferably about
80 % by weight of carbon disks and about 20 % by weight of carbon cones. Further micro-domain
or nano-domain structures such as nanotubes and fullerenes may also be present, but
only in minute amounts.
[0017] The present particulate carbon material is produced by the so-called Kvaerner Carbon
Black & Hydrogen Process, a plasma torch process, which is fully described in
WO 98/42621. The production method can be summarized as a two-stage pyrolysis process where a
hydrocarbon feedstock is first led into a plasma zone and thereby subject to a first
gentle pyrolysis step where the hydrocarbons are only partially cracked or decomposed
to form polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), before entering the PAHs in a second
sufficiently intense plasma zone to complete the decomposition of the hydrocarbons
into elementary carbon and hydrogen.
[0018] US 6,476,154 is directed to the use of the present particulate micro-domain carbon material in
diene-based elastomers to improve the mechanical properties of the rubber compositions.
Applications of the rubber compositions include tires, belts and hoses. The thermal
radiative conductivity of the particulate carbon material is neither mentioned nor
of any relevance for the intended applications referred to in
US 6,476,154.
[0019] WO 2006/052142 concerns an electricity conductive composite material comprising a by nature non-conductive
material which has been made conductive by loading it with an electricity conducting
filler consisting of the present particulate carbon material prepared by the Kvaerner
Carbon Black & Hydrogen Process.
WO 2006/052142 also declares the filler and consequently the composite material thermally conductive
but no evidence is provided.
[0020] In view of the teaching of
WO 2006/052142 to add the particulate carbon material to a non-conductive material to enhance thermal
conductivity, it is quite surprising that the particulate carbon material can be used
for thermal insulation. It is the merit of the present inventors to have found out
that the particulate micro-structured carbon material has an exceptionally high extinction
coefficient for infrared radiation which makes it ideal for thermal insulation applications.
[0021] The spectral effective specific extinction coefficient e*
Λ at a wavelength in the range of Λ = 1.4 µm to 35 µm is a measure for the attenuation
of the thermal radiation transmitting the material. The extinction includes both absorption
and scattering processes within the material. The influence of anisotropic scattering
on radiative transfer can be enclosed by scaling to the so called effective quantities,
marked with a star (s
*Λ, e
*Λ, and ω
*0.Λ). The spectral effective specific extinction coefficient e
*Λ is given by the sum of the spectral effective specific scattering coefficient s
*Λ and spectral absorption coefficient a
Λ.

[0022] The reciprocal of the product of the spectral effective extinction coefficient e
*Λ and the density ρ is the mean free path L
Λ of thermal radiation in the medium, i. e. the path before scattering or absorption
takes place:

[0023] The spectral effective albedo ω
*0,Λ is the quotient of the spectral effective specific scattering coefficient s
*Λ and the spectral effective specific extinction coefficient e
*Λ.

[0024] The values of the albedo ω
*0 can be found between 0 and 1 (0 in the case of only absorption and 1 in the case
of only scattering).
[0025] A complete description of the infrared-optical properties is given by either the
extinction coefficient and the albedo or the scattering and the absorption coefficient.
These four values are connected through Eq. (1) and Eq. (3).
[0026] In order to describe the total radiative thermal transport through the scattering
and absorbing medium the total effective specific extinction coefficient as a function
of temperature e*(T) is obtained by integrating the spectral effective specific extinction
coefficient e
*Λ over all wavelengths Λ in the range of Λ = 1.4 µm to 35 µm using the Rosseland weight
function (f
R(Λ,T):

where the Rosseland function is the partial derivative of the spectral intensity
i
B(Λ,T) emitted by a black body at a given wavelength Λ and temperature T with respect
to the total intensity i
B(T) at the same temperature:

[0027] The radiative conductivity can be calculated in dependence on the sample thickness
if the total effective specific extinction coefficient is known:

where T is the average sample temperature and σ = 5.67.10
-8 W m
-2K
-4 the Stefan-Boltzmann constant.
[0028] For optical thick samples (i. e. e*·ρ·d >> 1) Eq. (6) is reduced to:

λ
rad,∝ does not depend on the sample thickness.
[0029] Generally, the total effective specific extinction coefficient e* for infrared radiation
with Λ = 1.4 µm to 35 µm of the present particulate carbon material at 300 K is within
the range of from 1200 to 1700 m
2/kg, typically within the range of from 1290 to 1640 m
2/kg. The parameters to calculate the total effective extinction coefficient e* of
the particulate carbon material were obtained as described in the example.
[0030] The infrared extinction of the present particulate micro-structured carbon material
is in fact much higher than that of known carbon blacks and graphites used as athermanous
fillers hitherto. It is a further fundamental advantage of the present invention that
the specific particulate carbon material can be produced in industrial scale in approximately
the same magnitudes and production costs as ordinary carbon black.
[0031] Due to its unique IR extinction characteristic the present particulate carbon material
is useful in any application for thermal insulation either alone or preferably in
combination with any other material(s). These materials are typically thermally insulating
and include both organic and inorganic thermally insulation materials. Adding the
present particulate carbon material to an insulating material significantly reduces
the thermal conductivity through the composite and thus improves the insulating effect.
Exemplary insulation materials which can be used in combination with the present particulate
carbon material are polymeric materials either thermoplastic or thermosetting; wood
fiber materials such as wood wool and cork; vegetable or animal fibers such as hemp,
flax, wool; mineral and glass wool, foamed glass in plate form; calcium silicate boards
and gypsum plasterboards; fumed silica, and mixtures of at least two of these materials..
Examples of polymeric materials include vinyl polymers, preferably vinyl aromatic
polymers such as polystyrene, copolymers of styrene with at least one copolymerizable
monomer, and polypropylene; as well as polyurethanes. Blends of various polymers can
also be used. The thermally insulating polymeric materials including those mentioned
above are typically present in the form of a foam either open- or closed-cell. Polymeric
foams to be used together with the present particulate carbon material include for
example expanded polystyrene (EPS), expanded copolymers of styrene and at least one
copolymerizable monomer, expanded polypropylene, extruded polystyrene (XPS), and polyurethane
foam. In some embodiments the polymeric foam comprises 1 to 10 % by weight, preferably
1.5 to 8 % by weight, more preferably 2 to 6 % by weight of the present particulate
carbon material, each based on the weight of the polymeric material.
[0032] Typically, the present particulate carbon material is used as an athermanous filler
which is included/incorporated into a matrix material which is preferably a polymeric
foam as mentioned above. In some embodiments the particulate carbon material is used
as an athermanous filler (e.g. in a matrix material which is preferably a polymeric
foam as mentioned above) together with at least one further filler material which
may be thermally insulating or not. Examples of filler materials for use together
with the present particulate carbon material include fumed silicas such as Aerosil®
R 812 (hydrophobic fumed silica aftertreated with hexamethyldisilazane and available
from Evonik Industries AG, Germany). It is well known to the person skilled in the
art how to incorporate an athermanous filler into a polymeric foam and various methods
are described in the literature, for example in
WO 2011/042800 disclosing several methods for preparing expanded and expanded extruded sheets of
a thermoplastic polymer, preferably polystyrene, loaded with an athermanous filler.
[0033] Moreover, the present particulate carbon material can be used in vacuum insulated
panel (VIPs) to further reduce the thermal conductivity. It can be added to the material
used as the supporting core, preferably it is incorporated into the porous core material.
Materials that may be employed for the core in combination with the present particulate
carbon material include open-cellI polymer foams such as polyurethane foams, microfibre
materials, fumed silica and perlite.
[0034] Another application wherein the present particulate carbon material can be used alone
or in combination with another thermally insulating material is as a fill for the
insulation of high temperature furnaces.
Examples
[0035] Some embodiments of the present invention will now be described in detail in the
following examples.
Materials:
[0036] All carbon black powders are commercially available from Orion Engineered Carbons
GmbH, Hanau, Germany.
| Ex. No. |
Description |
| IE1 |
particulate carbon material comprising disks and cones 1 |
| IE2 |
expanded polystyrene foam comprising 3 wt. % of IE1 2 |
| IE3 |
expanded polystyrene foam comprising 5 wt. % of IE1 2 |
| CE4* |
nature graphite powder 3 |
* comparative example
1 prepared by the Kvaerner Carbon Black & Hydrogen Process as described in WO 98/42621
2 wt. % based on the weight of polystyrene
3 available from Canada Carbon, Canada |
[0037] The powder specimen (inventive example) and the 2 foams (inventive examples 2 and
3) were investigated to obtain the total effective specific extinction coefficient
e
* at ambient temperature (300 K).
Measurements:
[0038] The samples were measured using a Bruker Fourier Transform Infrared (FTIR) spectrometer
Vertex 70v in the wavelength range from 1.4 µm to 35 µm which is decisive for the
radiative thermal transport at ambient temperature. For measuring the spectral directional-hemispherical
transmittance and reflectance, thin films of powder specimen were spread onto supporting
PE layers, which are transparent in the infrared wavelength range. Thin powder layers
are sprayed onto the PE layer using a vacuum gage. The preparation of homogeneous
thin films is performed with the commercial powder disperging system GALAI PD 10.
A strong air inflow into an evacuated chamber transforms the powder into a disagglomerated,
partially electrically charged dust, which slowly settles onto the support foil and
forms a reasonably stable specimen. Fig. 2 depicts the vacuum powder dispersing system
GALAI PD 10; powder grains placed within the well at the top of the evacuated vessel
are sucked into the opening and settle onto the PE foil. Powder layer thickness between
30 µm and 500 µm can be achieved by varying the quantity of powder.
[0039] For measuring the spectral directional-hemispherical transmittance and reflectance
of the foams several layers of each foam specimen were stamped out from the foam board.
The diameter of the layers is 16 mm.
[0040] The samples are then placed in the opening of an integrating sphere which is coupled
to the spectrometer. Fig. 3 shows the configurations of the integrating sphere for
determining the directional-hemispherical transmittance T
dh (on the left side) and reflectance R
dh (on the right side) at ambient temperature normal to the surface. The sample is irradiated
normal to the surface and the radiation reflected into the front side hemisphere or
transmitted into the rear side hemisphere is measured for the transmittance or reflectance
spectra, respectively. Several samples with different thicknesses were measured in
order to consider eventual inhomogenities in the specimen and to guarantee a sufficiently
good average measurement value. For calculating the spectral effective specific extinction
coefficient e
*Λ the mass per area m" of each sample was also determined.
[0041] From the spectral directional-hemispherical transmittance and reflectance the spectral
effective specific extinction coefficient e
*Λ and the spectral effective albedo ω
*Λ of each specimen was calculated using a certain solution of the equation of radiative
transfer, the so called three-flux solution. The three-flux solution allows to quantity
the radiative transfer through scattering and absorbing media as well as to determine
the spectral scattering and absorption coefficients of the investigated specimens.
[0042] Fig. 4 shows the spectral specific absorption coefficient a
Λ of the particulate carbon material comprising disks and cones (IE1) in dependence
on the wavelength Λ from 1.4 to 35 µm.
[0043] Fig. 5 shows the spectral effective specific scattering coefficient s
*Λ of the particulate carbon material comprising disks and cones (IE1) in dependence
on the wavelength Λ from 1.4 to 35 µm.
[0044] Fig. 6 shows the spectral effective specific extinction coefficient e
*Λ of the particulate carbon material comprising disks and cones (IE1) in dependence
on the wavelength Λ from 1.4 to 35 µm.
[0045] Fig. 7 shows the spectral specific absorption coefficient a
Λ of IE2 (expanded polystyrene foam comprising 3 wt. % of IE1) and IE3 (expanded polystyrene
foam comprising 5 wt. % of IE1) in dependence on the wavelength Λ from 1.4 to 35 µm.
[0046] Fig. 8 shows the spectral effective specific scattering coefficient s
*Λ of IE2 (expanded polystyrene foam comprising 3 wt. % of IE1) and IE3 (expanded polystyrene
foam comprising 5 wt. % of IE1) in dependence on the wavelength Λ from 1.4 to 35 µm.
[0047] Fig. 9 shows the spectral effective specific extinction coefficient e
*Λ of IE2 (expanded polystyrene foam comprising 3 wt. % of IE1) and IE3 (expanded polystyrene
foam comprising 5 wt. % of IE1) in dependence on the wavelength Λ from 1.4 to 35 µm.
[0048] From the spectral effective specific extinction coefficient e
*Λ in the wavelength range between 1,4 µm and 35 µm the total effective specific extinction
coefficient at ambient temperature is calculated according to the equations in the
description of the present application.
Results:
[0049] In Table 1 the total effective specific extinction coefficient e
* of the investigated specimens at a temperature of 300 K is reported. The total effective
specific extinction coefficient e
*, calculated from Eq. (4), can be determined with an accuracy of about 10 % to 15
%.
Table 1: Total effective specific extinction coefficient e*
| Example No. |
Short Description |
e* / m2/kg at T = 300 K |
| IE1 |
carbon disks and cones |
1466 ± 176 |
| IE2 |
EPS foam 3 % IE1 |
116 ± 14 |
| IE3 |
EPS foam 5 % IE1 |
152 ± 18 |
| CE4* |
nature graphite powder |
292 ± 35 |
[0050] In Table 2 the total effective specific extinction coefficient e*, the radiative
conductivity λ
rad,∝ calculated according to Eq. (7) and the foam density ρ of the investigated foams
IE2 and IE3 at a temperature T = 300 K are shown.
Table 2: Properties of the Foam Samples
| Ex. No. |
Description |
e*/m2/kg at T = 300 K |
λrad,∝(T) mW/(m·K) at T = 300 K |
ρ/kg/m3 |
| IE2 |
EPS foam 3 % IE1 |
116 ± 14 |
4.4 |
16 |
| IE3 |
EPS foam 5 % IE1 |
152 ± 18 |
3.4 |
16 |
[0051] It is evident from the results shown in Table 1 that the particulate micro-domain
carbon material comprising carbon disks and cones (IE1) has a significantly higher
total effective specific extinction coefficient e* than that of graphite used as athermanous
fillers hitherto. It is further quite interesting to see from Table 2 that the EPS
foams loaded with the present particulate carbon material have exceptionally low thermal
conductivities that are in a range normally reached with vacuum insulated panels.
This is especially remarkable since these low conductivities are attained in EPS foams
with relatively low densities of about 16 kg/m
3. Unloaded EPS foams used for insulation purposes must have densities of at least
30 kg/m
3 because lower densities cause a drastic increase in thermal conductivity.
1. Use of a particulate carbon material comprising carbon particles in the shape of disks
and hollow open cones for thermal insulation.
2. Use of claim 1 wherein the hollow open carbon cones have one or several of the following
opening angles: 19.2°, 38.9°, 60°, 83.6° and 112.9°.
3. Use of claim 1 or 2 wherein the thickness of the carbon disks and the thickness of
the walls of the hollow open carbon cones is less than 100 nm.
4. Use of any one of claims 1 to 3 wherein the longest dimension of the carbon disks
and the hollow open carbon cones is less than 5 µm.
5. Use of any one of claims 1 to 4 wherein the particulate carbon material has a total
effective specific extinction coefficient e* for IR radiation with Λ = 1.4 µm to 35
µm at 300 K, as defined in the description, within the range of from 1200 to 1700
m2/kg.
6. Use of any one of claims 1 to 5 wherein the particulate carbon material is used in
combination with at least one further material, preferably a thermally insulating
material.
7. Use of claim 6 wherein the particulate carbon material is used as an athermanous filler.
8. Use of claim 7 wherein the particulate carbon material is incorporated into a vacuum
insulated panel (VIP).
9. Use of claim 7 wherein the particulate carbon material is incorporated in a matrix
comprising at least one further thermally insulating material, preferably a polymeric
material.
10. Use of claim 9 wherein the thermally insulating material comprises at least one polymer
selected from vinyl polymers, especially vinyl aromatic polymers, and polyurethanes.
11. Use of claim 9 or 10 wherein the thermally insulating material comprises a polymeric
foam.
12. Use of claim 11 wherein the polymeric foam comprises a thermoplastic or thermosetting
polymer.
13. Use of claim 12 wherein the polymeric foam comprises at least one of expanded polystyrene,
an expanded copolymer of styrene and at least one copolymerizable monomer, expanded
polypropylene, extruded polystyrene, and polyurethane foam.
14. Use of any of claims 9 to 13 wherein the particulate carbon material is used together
with at least one further filler material such as fumed silica.
1. Verwendung eines teilchenförmigen Kohlenstoffmaterials, das Kohlenstoffteilchen in
Form von Scheiben und hohlen offenen Kegeln enthält, zur thermischen Isolierung.
2. Verwendung nach Anspruch 1, wobei die hohlen offenen Kohlenstoffkegel einen oder mehrere
der folgenden Öffnungswinkel aufweisen: 19,2°, 38,9°, 60°, 83,6° und 112,9°.
3. Verwendung nach Anspruch 1 oder 2, wobei die Dicke der Kohlenstoffscheiben und die
Dicke der Wände der hohlen offenen Kohlenstoffkegel kleiner als 100 nm ist.
4. Verwendung nach einem der Ansprüche 1 bis 3, wobei die längste Dimension der Kohlenstoffscheiben
und der hohlen offenen Kohlenstoffkegel weniger als 5 µm beträgt.
5. Verwendung nach einem der Ansprüche 1 bis 4, wobei das teilchenförmige Kohlenstoffmaterial
einen gesamten effektiven spezifischen Extinktionskoeffizienten e* für IR-Strahlung mit Λ = 1,4 µm bis 35 µm bei 300 K, wie in der Beschreibung definiert,
innerhalb des Bereichs von 1.200 bis 1.700 m2/kg aufweist.
6. Verwendung nach einem der Ansprüche 1 bis 5, wobei das teilchenförmige Kohlenstoffmaterial
in Verwendung mit mindestens einem anderen Material, vorzugsweise einem thermisch
isolierenden Material, verwendet wird.
7. Verwendung nach Anspruch 6, wobei das teilchenförmige Kohlenstoffmaterial als ein
athermaner Füllstoff verwendet wird.
8. Verwendung nach Anspruch 7, wobei das teilchenförmige Kohlenstoffmaterial in eine
Vakuumdämmplatte (VIP) eingebracht ist.
9. Verwendung nach Anspruch 7, wobei das teilchenförmige Kohlenstoffmaterial in einer
Matrix eingebracht ist, die mindestens ein weiteres thermisch isolierendes Material
umfasst, vorzugsweise ein polymeres Material.
10. Verwendung nach Anspruch 9, wobei das thermisch isolierende Material mindestens ein
Polymer umfasst, das aus Vinylpolymeren, insbesondere aromatischen Vinylpolymeren,
und Polyurethanen ausgewählt ist.
11. Verwendung nach Anspruch 9 oder 10, wobei das thermisch isolierende Material einen
Polymerschaum umfasst.
12. Verwendung nach Anspruch 11, wobei der Polymerschaum ein thermoplastisches oder duroplastisches
Polymer umfasst.
13. Verwendung nach Anspruch 12, wobei der Polymerschaum mindestens eines von expandiertem
Polystyrol, einem expandierten Copolymer von Styrol und mindestens einem copolymerisierbaren
Monomer, expandiertem Polypropylen, extrudiertem Polystyrol und Polyurethanschaum
umfasst.
14. Verwendung nach einem der Ansprüche 9 bis 13, wobei das teilchenförmige Kohlenstoffmaterial
zusammen mit mindestens einem weiteren Füllstoff, wie etwa pyrogener Kieselsäure,
verwendet wird.
1. Utilisation d'un matériau de type carbone particulaire, comprenant des particules
de carbone en forme de disques et de cônes ouverts creux, pour une isolation thermique.
2. Utilisation conforme à la revendication 1, dans laquelle les cônes de carbone ouverts
creux présentent des angles d'ouverture de l'une ou plusieurs des valeurs suivantes
: 19,2°, 38,9°, 60°, 83,6° et 112,9°.
3. Utilisation conforme à la revendication 1 ou 2, dans laquelle l'épaisseur des disques
de carbone et l'épaisseur de paroi des cônes de carbone ouverts creux sont inférieures
à 100 nm.
4. Utilisation conforme à l'une des revendications 1 à 3, dans laquelle la plus grande
des dimensions des disques de carbone et des cônes de carbone ouverts creux est inférieure
à 5 µm.
5. Utilisation conforme à l'une des revendications 1 à 4, dans laquelle le matériau de
type carbone particulaire présente, pour un rayonnement infrarouge de 1,4 à 35 µm
de longueur d'onde et à 300 K, un coefficient d'extinction spécifique effectif total
e*, tel que défini dans la description, situé dans l'intervalle allant de 1200 à 1700
m2/kg.
6. Utilisation conforme à l'une des revendications 1 à 5, dans laquelle le matériau de
type carbone particulaire est employé en combinaison avec au moins un matériau supplémentaire,
qui est de préférence un matériau d'isolation thermique.
7. Utilisation conforme à la revendication 6, dans laquelle le matériau de type carbone
particulaire est employé en tant que charge athermane.
8. Utilisation conforme à la revendication 7, dans laquelle le matériau de type carbone
particulaire est incorporé dans un panneau isolant sous vide (PIV).
9. Utilisation conforme à la revendication 7, dans laquelle le matériau de type carbone
particulaire est incorporé dans une matrice comprenant au moins un matériau d'isolation
thermique supplémentaire, de préférence un matériau polymère.
10. Utilisation conforme à la revendication 9, dans laquelle le matériau d'isolation thermique
comprend au moins un polymère choisi parmi les polymères polyvinyliques, en particulier
les polymères poly-(vinyl-aromatique), et les polyuréthanes.
11. Utilisation conforme à la revendication 9 ou 10, dans laquelle le matériau d'isolation
thermique comprend une mousse de polymère.
12. Utilisation conforme à la revendication 11, dans laquelle la mousse de polymère comprend
un polymère thermoplastique ou un polymère thermodurcissable.
13. Utilisation conforme à la revendication 12, dans laquelle la mousse de polymère comprend
au moins l'un des matériaux suivants : polystyrène expansé, copolymère expansé de
styrène et d'au moins un monomère copolymérisable, polypropylène expansé, polystyrène
extrudé, et mousse de polyuréthane.
14. Utilisation conforme à l'une des revendications 9 à 13, dans laquelle le matériau
de type carbone particulaire est employé conjointement avec au moins un matériau de
charge supplémentaire, comme de la silice de pyrohydrolyse.