Thermal and acoustical insulating shield

6123172
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Inventors

Byrd, Timothy L.
Hiers, John J.

Application #

358841

Filed

Jul-22-1999

Published

Sep-26-2000

Current US Class

181/286
181/290
428/220

International Classes

E04B 001/82

Field of Search

181/290 181/293 181/286 181/287 181/294 181/295 428/95-97 428/201 428/215 428/218 428/219 428/220

Assignee

Lydall, Inc. (Manchester, CT)

Examiners

Dang; Khanh

Attorney, Agent or Firm

Birch, Stewart, Kolasch & Birch, LLP

US Patent References

3975565   Fibrous structure
4237180   Insulation material...
4522876   Integral textile com...
4847140   Nonwoven fibrous i...
4851274   Moldable fibrous c...
4996095   Composite material...
5547731   Needled carpet an...

Referenced by:

View Backward References

Citation

Cite This Patent

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Abstract
A flexible, adhesively attachable, self-sealing, thermal and acoustical insulating shield has a needled, flexible, fibrous batt having an insulating layer of insulating fibers disposed between opposite binding layers of binding fibers. Binding fibers of each binding layer are needledly disposed through the insulating layer and an opposite binding layer to provide tufts of binding fibers protruding from the opposite binding layer so a to form a tufted upper surface and a tufted lower surface of the batt. A flexible adhesive is disposed and adhered substantially over the upper surface and, preferably, over lower surface of the batt such that the tufts on the upper and lower surfaces are secured to the surfaces by the adhesive. A flexible, protective foil is adjacent to, and preferably permanently adhered by the adhesive to, the lower surface of the batt. The protective foil has edge portions which extend beyond edges of the fibrous batt and the edge portions have a flexible adhesive disposed and adhered substantially over upper edge surfaces of the edge portions. The shield may be flexed and pressed to configure and permanently attach the tufted upper surface to an object to be shielded and the edge portions may be pressed to permanently attach the edge upper surfaces of the edge portions to the object so as to self-seal the edge portions to the object.
 
Claims
What is claimed is:

1. A flexible, adhesively attachable, self-sealing, thermal and acoustical insulating shield, comprising:

(1) a needled, flexible, fibrous batt (40) having an insulating layer (43) of insulating fibers (44) disposed between opposite binding layers (41, 42) of binding fibers (45) with binding fibers (45) of each binding layer (41, 42) being needledly disposed through the insulating layer (43) and an opposite binding layer (41, 42) to provide tufts (46) of binding fibers (45) protruding from the opposite binding layer (41, 42) so as to form a tufted upper surface (47) and a tufted lower surface (48) of the batt (40);

(2) a flexible adhesive (50), disposed and adhered substantially over the tufted upper surface (47) such that the tufts (46) on the tufted upper surface (47) are secured to that surface by the adhesive (50); and



Description
The present invention relates to an improved thermal and acoustical insulating shield and more particularly to such shield which is adhesively attached to an object to be protected. The present invention, more specifically, is an improvement of the invention disclosed in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/033,852, filed on Mar. 3, 1998, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

Thermal and acoustical insulating shields, to which the present invention is an improvement, have long been known in the art. Such shields are used in a wide variety of applications, among which are shielding in space crafts, automobiles, home appliances, electronic components, industrial engines, boiler plants and the like. Some of such shields have proportionally smaller thermal insulating value and proportionally higher acoustical insulating value, and vice versa. There are, of course, shields which lie therebetween.

In connection with the thermal insulating value, shields are known which provide thermal insulation, primarily, by virtue of being a radiation thermal shield, while others provide thermal insulation by being, primarily, a conduction thermal shield, and, again, there are shields that lie therebetween. For example, pressed and formed sheet metal has long since been mounted by bolts, nuts, screws, welding, etc. between an object to be protected, i.e. shielded, for example, the floor pan of an automobile, and a heat source, for example, a portion of the exhaust system of the automobile. Such a formed sheet metal provides thermal insulation, primarily, by re-radiation of heat from the portion of the exhaust system back into the ambient and/or other cooler parts of the undercarriage of an automobile to thermally insulate the floor pan from that portion of the exhaust. Such sheet metal shields, however, have low acoustical insulating value, and a large portion of noise produced in an adjacent portion of an exhaust system can be transmitted through the floor pan of the automobile and into the passenger compartment. Additional noise can be produced by loose shields which vibrate and/or rattle. Such sheet metal shields, also, provides thermal insulation value in connection with conductive heat, since such sheet metal shields will be spaced between the floor pan and the portion of the exhaust, and that spacing provides an air gap between the shield and the floor pan which reduces conductive, and to some extent, convective heat transfer.