WO1991016197A1 - Lead-free mirrors and environmentally safe manufacture thereof - Google Patents

Lead-free mirrors and environmentally safe manufacture thereof Download PDF

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Publication number
WO1991016197A1
WO1991016197A1 PCT/US1991/002811 US9102811W WO9116197A1 WO 1991016197 A1 WO1991016197 A1 WO 1991016197A1 US 9102811 W US9102811 W US 9102811W WO 9116197 A1 WO9116197 A1 WO 9116197A1
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WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
layer
reflective
mirror
barrier layer
transparent substrate
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/US1991/002811
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Marion M. Jeskey
Zephuren James Hughes
Original Assignee
Cardinal Ig Company
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Cardinal Ig Company filed Critical Cardinal Ig Company
Priority to CA002081341A priority Critical patent/CA2081341C/en
Publication of WO1991016197A1 publication Critical patent/WO1991016197A1/en
Priority to US07/958,593 priority patent/US5215832A/en

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Classifications

    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C03GLASS; MINERAL OR SLAG WOOL
    • C03CCHEMICAL COMPOSITION OF GLASSES, GLAZES OR VITREOUS ENAMELS; SURFACE TREATMENT OF GLASS; SURFACE TREATMENT OF FIBRES OR FILAMENTS MADE FROM GLASS, MINERALS OR SLAGS; JOINING GLASS TO GLASS OR OTHER MATERIALS
    • C03C17/00Surface treatment of glass, not in the form of fibres or filaments, by coating
    • C03C17/34Surface treatment of glass, not in the form of fibres or filaments, by coating with at least two coatings having different compositions
    • C03C17/36Surface treatment of glass, not in the form of fibres or filaments, by coating with at least two coatings having different compositions at least one coating being a metal
    • C03C17/38Surface treatment of glass, not in the form of fibres or filaments, by coating with at least two coatings having different compositions at least one coating being a metal at least one coating being a coating of an organic material
    • GPHYSICS
    • G02OPTICS
    • G02BOPTICAL ELEMENTS, SYSTEMS OR APPARATUS
    • G02B1/00Optical elements characterised by the material of which they are made; Optical coatings for optical elements
    • G02B1/10Optical coatings produced by application to, or surface treatment of, optical elements
    • G02B1/14Protective coatings, e.g. hard coatings
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C23COATING METALLIC MATERIAL; COATING MATERIAL WITH METALLIC MATERIAL; CHEMICAL SURFACE TREATMENT; DIFFUSION TREATMENT OF METALLIC MATERIAL; COATING BY VACUUM EVAPORATION, BY SPUTTERING, BY ION IMPLANTATION OR BY CHEMICAL VAPOUR DEPOSITION, IN GENERAL; INHIBITING CORROSION OF METALLIC MATERIAL OR INCRUSTATION IN GENERAL
    • C23CCOATING METALLIC MATERIAL; COATING MATERIAL WITH METALLIC MATERIAL; SURFACE TREATMENT OF METALLIC MATERIAL BY DIFFUSION INTO THE SURFACE, BY CHEMICAL CONVERSION OR SUBSTITUTION; COATING BY VACUUM EVAPORATION, BY SPUTTERING, BY ION IMPLANTATION OR BY CHEMICAL VAPOUR DEPOSITION, IN GENERAL
    • C23C14/00Coating by vacuum evaporation, by sputtering or by ion implantation of the coating forming material
    • C23C14/06Coating by vacuum evaporation, by sputtering or by ion implantation of the coating forming material characterised by the coating material
    • C23C14/10Glass or silica
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C23COATING METALLIC MATERIAL; COATING MATERIAL WITH METALLIC MATERIAL; CHEMICAL SURFACE TREATMENT; DIFFUSION TREATMENT OF METALLIC MATERIAL; COATING BY VACUUM EVAPORATION, BY SPUTTERING, BY ION IMPLANTATION OR BY CHEMICAL VAPOUR DEPOSITION, IN GENERAL; INHIBITING CORROSION OF METALLIC MATERIAL OR INCRUSTATION IN GENERAL
    • C23CCOATING METALLIC MATERIAL; COATING MATERIAL WITH METALLIC MATERIAL; SURFACE TREATMENT OF METALLIC MATERIAL BY DIFFUSION INTO THE SURFACE, BY CHEMICAL CONVERSION OR SUBSTITUTION; COATING BY VACUUM EVAPORATION, BY SPUTTERING, BY ION IMPLANTATION OR BY CHEMICAL VAPOUR DEPOSITION, IN GENERAL
    • C23C14/00Coating by vacuum evaporation, by sputtering or by ion implantation of the coating forming material
    • C23C14/06Coating by vacuum evaporation, by sputtering or by ion implantation of the coating forming material characterised by the coating material
    • C23C14/14Metallic material, boron or silicon
    • C23C14/18Metallic material, boron or silicon on other inorganic substrates
    • G02B1/105
    • GPHYSICS
    • G02OPTICS
    • G02BOPTICAL ELEMENTS, SYSTEMS OR APPARATUS
    • G02B5/00Optical elements other than lenses
    • G02B5/08Mirrors
    • G02B5/0816Multilayer mirrors, i.e. having two or more reflecting layers
    • G02B5/085Multilayer mirrors, i.e. having two or more reflecting layers at least one of the reflecting layers comprising metal
    • G02B5/0875Multilayer mirrors, i.e. having two or more reflecting layers at least one of the reflecting layers comprising metal the reflecting layers comprising two or more metallic layers

Definitions

  • Plate glass mirrors have long been made by wet chemistry processes involving polluting chemicals.
  • One well known process involves forming, by means of wet chemistry methods, a thin layer of tin oxide upon a glass sheet, providing next a layer of metallic silver to a thickness sufficient to render the layer substantially opaque (and highly reflective when viewed through the glass), overcoating the silver layer with a layer of copper, and overcoating the copper layer with a lead-based paint.
  • the silver layer is not completely opaque, the copper layer may impart a very slight copper tint to the mirrored surface viewed through the glass.
  • the copper layer serves also as a sacrificial layer inasmuch as it will react with oxygen and other contaminants with which it may come into contact and thus protect the silver layer from becoming sulfided or oxidized.
  • the lead-based paint not only protects the back of the mirror from being physically abraded by scratches or the like, but the lead oxide pigment further contributes to the sacrificial protection afforded the silver layer and copper layer.
  • the wet chemistry methods employed for making mirrors as described above nave many drawbacks, not the least of which is pollution.
  • the wet chemistry methods involve the use of aqueous coating compositions which may contain various highly contaminating substances. Once a coating solution has been largely exhausted, disposal of the solution poses a substantial environmental problem.
  • the paint that is employed being of necessity lead-based to provide corrosion protection to the silver layer, may also lead to toxic results if the paint becomes accidentally ingested or if lead or lead compounds from discarded or rejected mirrors or wasted paint leaches into landfills to contaminate water supplies.
  • mirrors of excellent quality and high resistance to corrosion can be manufactured through the use of substantially non-polluting sputtering techniques and lead-free paints to avoid the substantial environmental problems associated with the wet chemistry mirror manufacturing methods of the past.
  • a mirror is provided with sputtered-on coatings and with an exterior polymeric protective coating that is free of lead or lead compounds and that exhibits tenacious adhesion to the underlying sputtered-on layer to provide substantial protection not only from chemical attack but from scratching and other physical damage as well.
  • the mirrors of the invention comprise a transparent substrate such as float glass, and a sputtere ⁇ , transparent primer layer which is carried on the glass surface and which may constitute a metal salt, particularly an oxide or nitride such as an oxide of tin, titanium or zinc or nitrides of zinc or titanium.
  • a metal salt particularly an oxide or nitride such as an oxide of tin, titanium or zinc or nitrides of zinc or titanium.
  • a sputtered reflective metal layer of a bright reflective metal such as silver, aluminum, palladium, platinum or chromium in sufficient amount as to provide the mirror with a transmittance in the range of about 0-30%.
  • a barrier layer comprising one or more metal compounds different from the metal of the reflective layer and sufficient to protect the reflective layer from contact with contaminants such as water, oxygen, sulfiding gases and the like.
  • the barrier layer includes a layer of a bright metal such as stainless steel, aluminum, or chromium, that is different from the metal of the reflective layer and which cooperates with the silver or other reflective metal in the reflective layer to render the mirror totally opaque.
  • the barrier layer may in fact comprise two contiguous strata, one stratum (nearer the glass surface) comprising aluminum, stainless steel, chromium or other bright metal to supplement the opacity of the reflective layer, and the second stratum comprising a different metal compound that provides good barrier properties, such stratum being formed by sputtering of stainless steel, titanium nitride, silicon nitride, silicon dioxide or titanium dioxide.
  • the barrier layer include the second stratum to provide physical and chemical protection to the reflective layer of the mirror.
  • the outer layer of the mirror is an opaque protective polymer layer such as a paint, this layer preferably being free of lead contamination and being applied from a water-based coating composition.
  • the polymer layer preferably is a pigment comprising one or more zinc compounds such as zinc oxide, zinc phosphate and such other zinc-derived compounds as may be needed to improve the resistance of the mirror to sulfide formation by restraining sulfide ions from coming into contact with the silver or other reflective metal of the reflective layer.
  • the outer, sputtered-on layer of, eg., zinc or zinc oxide and the adherrent polymer layer providing the mirror with substantial resistance to sulfiding and other corrosion.
  • Figure 1 is a schematic, cross-sectional view showing the layers involved in a mirror of the prior art
  • Figure 2 is a schematic representation of a mirror of the invention utilizing a homogeneous barrier layer
  • Figure 3 is a schematic, cross-sectional representation of a mirror of the invention in which the barrier layer is a composite layer:
  • Figure 4 is a schematic, cross-sectional representation of another modification of a mirror of the invention.
  • the metals and metal compositions employed in the present invention are applied by a sputtering technique such as that described in U.S. patent 4,166,018 (Chapin), the teachings of which are incorporated herein by reference.
  • This technique sometimes referred to as a magnetron sputtering technique, involves the formation of a plasma which is concentrated in a magnetic field and which serves to eject metal atoms from an adjacent metal target, the metal atoms being deposited upon an adjacent surface such as the surface of a glass pane.
  • the metal When sputtering is done in an inert atmosphere, the metal alone is deposited whereas if sputtering is done in the presence of oxygen or nitrogen, then the metal is deposited as an oxide or, if the metal readily forms a nitride, as a nitride, respectively.
  • Magnetron sputtering techniques and apparatuses are well known in the field and need not be described further.
  • Figure 1 refers to a prior art mirror which contains a glass sheet as shown bearing sequential tin oxide, silver, copper and paint layers.
  • paints employed in mirrors of the prior art of this type generally were lead-based, and the tin oxide, copper and silver layers were applied using wet chemistry procedures.
  • the transparent substrate 10 such as glass and particularly plate glass is first subjected to sputtering in an oxygen/argon or nitrogen/argon atmosphere using a "target" of a metal such as tin, titanium or zinc to provide a tin oxide, titanium dioxide, zinc oxide or zinc nitride primer layer 12.
  • a tin oxide primer layer having a thickness in the range of 5 - 75 Angstroms would be appropriate.
  • the primer layer is sputtere ⁇ the layer 14 of a bright, reflective metal such as silver, aluminum, palladium, platinum or chromium in sufficient amount as to provide that layer with a transmittance in the range of 0-30%.
  • the bright, reflective metal preferably is silver.
  • Figure 2 illustrates the mirror in which the silver or other bright metal layer 12 provides a transmittance of approximately 0%; that is, in which the bright layer is essentially opaque.
  • Sputtered silver layers having thicknesses above about 525 Angstroms and preferably in the range of 525 to 625 Angstroms provide appropriate substantially opaque layers.
  • the silver or other bright metal layer 14 is not opaque, but rather has a transmittance in the range of approximately 1-30%, preferably 1-10%.
  • Sputtered silver layers having thicknesses less than about 525 Angstroms and preferably in the range of 450 - 525 Angstroms generally exhibit some transmittance.
  • the transmittance of a sputtered silver layer decreases to about 10% or below as its thickness exceeds about 400 - 450 Angstroms, and decreases to substantially zero as the thickness reaches the 500 - 550 Angstrom range.
  • a relatively large amount of silver is required to reduce the transmissivity of the reflective layer from several percent to zero.
  • the silver or other bright metal is sputtered from a metal target in an atmosphere of argon or other inert gas.
  • the bright, reflective layer 14 has substantially zero transmittance
  • that layer is overcoated with a protective barrier layer 16, this layer comprising one or more metals or metal alloys that are different from the metal of the reflective layer, the barrier layer being sufficient in thickness and properties to protect the underlying bright metallic layer 14 from contact with contaminants such as water, oxygen, sulfiding gases and the like.
  • the barrier layer desirably contains one or more of the following sputtered materials: stainless steel, aluminum, copper, chromium, titanium nitride, zinc oxide, silicon nitride, titanium dioxide and silicon dioxide.
  • the barrier layer 16 preferably ranges in thickness from about 100 to about 500 /Angstroms; when made of successive layers of stainless steel and titanium nitride, a stainless steel thickness of 310 to 410 Angstroms and a titanium nitride thickness of 150 - 250 Angstroms provides acceptable results.
  • the protective layer 16 may be a composite layer made of several strata of which one, designated 18 in Figure 3, is deposited directly upon the bright reflective layer 14 and comprises a bright, reflective metal different from the metal employed in layer 14.
  • Strata 18 thus may be aluminum, stainless steel, copper or chromium, or for that matter, silver if the reflective layer metal is not silver, and the stratum 18 is applied to a thickness sufficient to render the layers 14 and 18 together substantially completely opaque, that is, with approximately zero transmissivity.
  • the layer 14, if made of silver metal, may have a thickness of approximately 500 plus or minus about 50 Angstroms to provide a transmissivity of about 1-10%; upon this surface then may be coated the stratum 18 of e.g., stainless steel to a thickness of about 300 plus or minus about 50 Angstroms to render the combined layers 14 and 18 substantially opaque.
  • the remaining portion of the barrier layer 16, represented as stratum 20, may in this example be titanium nitride sputtered to a thickness on the order of about 200 plus or minus 50 Angstroms and functions, together with the layer 18, as a barrier layer 16 as described above.
  • a protective polymeric film 22 Applied over the barrier layer 16 in the embodiments of Figures 2 and 3 is a protective polymeric film 22.
  • the protective film desirably is free of lead, and may be any of several known types of coatings including epoxy resins, urethanes, alkyds, and the like.
  • a powdered epoxy resin that is capable of melting and fusing when heated is applied to the outer surface of the mirror, for example, over barrier layer 16.
  • the glass sheet may then be passed under heat lamps to heat the epoxy resin to its fusing point, whereupon the epoxy resin melts and fuses into a hard solid coating.
  • a paint or other resinous coating may be applied to the outer surface of the mirror by spraying, roller coating or other means as may be desired.
  • the polymeric layer 22 desirably has a dry thickness in the range of 0.5-4.0 mils, and preferably in the range of 1.5-1.8 mils.
  • the paint includes a curable polymer system desirably comprising a crosslinkable polymer such an acrylic resin and a suitable curing agent therefor such an an aminoplast (eg. , a melamine resin) or phenoplast resin, the polymer system being supplied as an aqueous solution or suspension.
  • a curable polymer system desirably comprising a crosslinkable polymer such an acrylic resin and a suitable curing agent therefor such an an aminoplast (eg. , a melamine resin) or phenoplast resin, the polymer system being supplied as an aqueous solution or suspension.
  • Acrylic resins are preferred, and are capable of cross-linking at moderate temperatures to form extremely hard, protective films.
  • Epoxy polymer systems and acrylic systems, and particularly the latter are preferred because of the hard, scratch-resistent films that are produced. Moreover, these films are highly resistent to hydrolysis and resist degradation even in warm, humid environments.
  • the polymer coating systems desirably are provided as aqueous coating compositions, that is, as solutions or suspension in water, the composition being desirably free or nearly free of organic solvents.
  • the polymer coatings desirably are free of lead or lead compounds.
  • the coating When the coating is cured, (ie., when it has been crosslinked by application of heat, curing agents, catalysts or the like), an exceedingly strong physical or mechanical bond is formed between the polymeric coating and the underlying sputtered film.
  • the final sputtered-on layer desirably has a surface that is readily wetted by the aqueous paint composition and with which the polymer can form a strong mechanical bond.
  • the cured paint films derived from the aqueous paint compositions employed as described above are characterized as being highly resistant to hydrolysis and resistant to softening in most household cleaning chemicals such as dilute ammonium hydroxide, vinegar and the like. As noted above, the films also have quite hard surfaces, and preferably are rated 2H or greater in pencil hardness.
  • Heat-curable polymeric systems employing acrylic polymers that is, polymers resulting from the copolymerization of acrylic and/or methacrylic acid and other acrylic monomers, are known in the field of paint chemistry and need not be described further.
  • Adhesion of the protective polymeric layer to the sputtered-on film stack can be measured, at least on a comparative basis, by a test in which the cured polymeric film is scored using a diamond or other hard, sharp object, sets of parallel score lines crossing one another to define a diamond shaped pattern in the polymeric layer.
  • a length of adhesive tape (3M Company's Scotch brand Magic Mending tape is appropriate) is then pressed into intimate adhesive contact with the scored surface. A free end of the tape is then stripped away rapidly from the polymeric surface at right angles to the coated glass sheet.
  • an epoxy-based paint is coated upon a protective titanium nitride layer (eg., layer 20 in figure 3), small “diamonds" of paint can be lifted from the titanium nitride surface.
  • the aqueous polymer coatings of the invention also desirably contain pigment, and it has been found that the choice of pigment is important in providing mirrors of the invention with further and better resistance to sulfiding.
  • Pigments comprising one or more zinc compounds give particularly good anti-sulfiding properties.
  • the zinc compounds employed in the pigment may include zinc oxide and other water-insoluble zinc compounds, particularly the various water-insoluble zinc salts such as zinc phosphate, the latter being particularly preferred.
  • the zinc compounds desirably provide at least about 5% and preferably at least about 8% by weight (as elemental zinc) based on the solids of the paint compositions.
  • the anti-sulfiding properties conferred by the zinc-based pigments thus mentioned appear to be particularly beneficial when the underlying final sputtered-on layer is zinc or a zinc-based compound such as zinc oxide.
  • This coating can be sputtered from a zinc cathode in an atmosphere containing oxygen to form the oxide directly, or metallic zinc can be sputtered on in a nitrogen atmosphere or an atmosphere of a relatively non-reactive or inert gas such as argon, the zinc oxidizing readily upon exposure to air.
  • Water-based polymeric coating compositions such as the acrylic composition referred to above, can be coated, dried and cured quickly.
  • the acrylic-based coating compositions of the invention utilizing zinc-based pigments, are slightly more viscous than water, and may be coated upon upwardly facing, sputter-coated faces of horizontally moving glass sheets using curtain coating procedures that are known in the coating art.
  • Curtain coating involves the formation of a downwardly moving liquid curtain of an appropriate coating composition, the curtain being of substantially uniform thickness throughout its width and the curtain itself being deposited downwardly upon the horizontally moving surface of the coated glass panes.
  • the wet coating thus applied may first be subjected to a high volume flow of warm, dry air to flash off a large portion of the water and to render the coating self-supporting and substantially dry to the touch, following which the coated pane may be cured in, eg., a forced air oven at about 350° F for typically a period of 3-5 minutes, the polymer undergoing substantially complete curing.
  • Heat curing may be accomplished in one or more elongated forced air ovens through which the panes pass horizontally.
  • the resulting panes may be cooled down rapidly by means of ambient air flow and, if desired, a warm water quench. Cured polymer film thicknesses of up to 4.0 mils or above can be employed.
  • the thickness of the cured paint film desirably is not greater than about 1.8 mils and preferably is in the range of about 1.5-1.8 mils, the reduced thickness enabling the aqueous polymeric composition to be applied and cured more rapidly on the sputter coated surface of the glass pane, and this thickness further provides substantial protection to the underlying film.
  • the polymeric overcoating is applied in the form of two layers, the first comprising a pigmented layer as described above and the second being a clear coat, that is, a pigment-free layer.
  • the pigmented and pigmented-free polymeric layers may be applied one over the other using the curtain coating techniques described above, and the second layer may be placed upon the first layer when the first layer is yet wet.
  • Typical coating thicknesses of the cured pigmented layer may be in the range of 1.0 mils and the clear coat may be in the range of about 0.5 mils in thickness.
  • the transparent glass substrate 10 contains a primer layer 12 of eg., tin oxide, a reflective layer 14 of eg., silver, and a barrier layer 16, the barrier layer containing a first film or stratum 18 of stainless steel or the like to supplement the opacity provided by the silver layer 14, if needed.
  • the second barrier layer stratum 20, of titanium nitride or the like is then provided.
  • the outer sputtered on layer, designated 24 in Figure 4 may be zinc or a zinc compound such as the oxide, and the thickness of this layer may vary widely. Thicknesses in the range of about 50 Angstroms to 1000 Angstroms or more can be used, and thicknesses of about 100 Angstroms to about 900 Angstroms are preferred.
  • Glass panes suitably cleaned, were subjected to magnetron sputtering procedures from a series of target cathodes.
  • the amount ot each material that was thus sputter coated was controlled by varying the number of cathodes beneath which the glass panes were passed during the coating operation.
  • Directly upon the glass surface was deposited a layer of tin oxide from a tin cathode operating in an oxygen-argon environment, the tin oxide layer being deposited to an estimated approximate thickness of about 50 Angstroms.
  • the glass panes were then overcoated with silver metal from a silver cathode operating in an argon atmosphere, the silver layer being deposited to a measured thickness of approximately 500 Angstroms to provide a reflective layer having a transmittance of approximately 2%.
  • Sputtered on top of the silver layer was a stainless steel (316) layer to a measured thickness of approximately 310 Angstroms, the transmissivity of the silver and stainless steel layers being essentially zero.
  • Over the stainless steel layer was sputter coated a layer of titanium nitride from a titanium metal electrode operating in a nitrogen environment. The titanium nitride protective layer was applied to a measured thickness of approximately 210 Angstroms.
  • a commercial lead-free, pigmented alkyd-based paint to a coating weight of 8 grams per square foot, that is, to a thickness of 1-2 mils.
  • Example II Glass panes, cleaned and coated with a primer layer of tin oxide as in Example I, were then overcoated with silver metal sputtered from a silver cathode in an argon atmosphere to a measured thickness of approximately 570 Angstroms. The silver layer exhibited a transmissivity of zero percent. Sputtered on top ot ⁇ _he silver layer were sequential layers of stainless steel and titanium nitride, as in Example I, to measured thicknesses of approximately 360 Angstroms and 210 Angstroms, respectively. Finally, the mirror was overcoated with a lead-free, pigmented, alkyd-based paint as in Example I .
  • the mirrors resulting from Examples I and II each exhibited excellent reflectivity. Each mirror was tested by subjecting a freshly cut edge of the mirror to a 20% salt spray for 2000 hours to determine the weathering resistance of the mirror. Neither mirror showed any evidence of "black edge", that is, silver corrosion from the edges. Black edge is a common problem in the mirror industry. There also was no evidence of massive pin holes or oxidation of the metal coating due to improper mirror backing. The occasional small pin holes were well within mirror specifications. Ammonia tests were also performed. A freshly cut edge of each mirror was subjected to a 15% ammonia vapor solution for 24 hours without failure, indicating excellent resistance, failure being judged the same as with the above salt spray. Finally, a bevel was ground into a freshly cut edge of each mirror, and the bevelled edge was subjected to the salt spray and ammonia tests described above. Similarly excellent results were obtained.
  • Example II Glass panes, cleaned and coated with a sputter coated primer layer of tin oxide as in Example I, are then provided with a silver metal coating, a stainless steel coating and a titanium nitride coating, all as described in Example II.
  • a silver metal coating, a stainless steel coating and a titanium nitride coating are then provided with a silver metal coating, a stainless steel coating and a titanium nitride coating, all as described in Example II.
  • the titanium nitride coating may be sputtered coated a film of zinc from a zinc metal electrode operating in a nitrogen atmosphere, this coating being applied to a thickness of approximately 900 Angstroms. After exposure of the film to ambient air, the film was found in one such run to have an outer surface that was approximately stoichiometric zinc oxide, the atomic ratio of oxygen to zinc decreasing below the stoichiometric amount at depths of several hundred Angstroms into the film surface.
  • the panes travel on a conveyor beneath a coating apparatus which applies to the upper, sputter coated surfaces of the panes a predetermined layer of uniform thickness of an aqueous, lead-free, pigmented, acrylic paint composition.
  • the paint may be applied via several coating methods, it is preferred that the paint be caused to flow downwardly in the form of a "curtain" upon the upper surface of the moving glass panes.
  • the paint at approximately 50% solids, is deposited at a wet thickness of approximately 2 mils.
  • the film is subjected to a high volumetric flow rate of dry, warm air to quickly remove water from the film and to provide the film with a semi-hard surface; at this point, the film may yet be soft enough to retain fingerprints.
  • the continuously moving glass panes are subjected to the high volume flow of warm air for approximate one minute, following which the panes pass through one or more ovens capable of heating the panes and the paint to a temperature in which the polymeric component of the paint rapidly cross-links and becomes extremely hard and scratch re ⁇ istent.
  • the panes may be exposed to hot air at 350° F for a period of 3-5 minutes, during which the temperature of the glass is raised to 280° F.
  • the temperature of the panes emerging from the curing ovens may be rapidly re ⁇ uced by treating the panes, particularly the glass side thereof, with warm water and a gentle flow of tempered air, the temperature of the glass rapidly being reduced to 80° F or below.
  • the final pane thickness may be on the order of 1 mil.
  • the aqueous pigmented paint composition thus described may have the following composition:
  • the pigmented base coat thus described may be provided with a non-pigmented overcoat desirably utilizing the same or similar acrylic resin capable of cross linking to form a hard, scratch-resistant surface.
  • the non-pigmented paint may have the following composition:

Abstract

Mirrors are formed in an environmentally compatible and substantially pollution-free manner by a sputtering process in which a transparent substrate (10) such as glass has first sputtered upon it a primer layer (12) and then a reflective layer (14) of silver or other bright reflective metal. A barrier layer (16) is provided over the reflective layer (14) to protect the latter from corrosive environments. If the transmittance of the reflective layer (14) is greater than zero percent, the barrier layer (16) includes a different bright reflective metal sufficient to reduce the transmittance of the combined reflective and barrier layers to zero percent. The mirror includes a lead-free polymeric protective layer (22) spaced further from the transparent substrate than the barrier layer. The inclusion of zinc pigment in the polymeric coating (26) provides sulfiding protection, and the use of an outer sputtered on film of zinc (24) or zinc oxide (24) provides substantial adhesion thereto of the polymeric coating (26).

Description

EAD-FREE MIRRORS AND ENVIRONMENTALLY SAFE MANUFACTURE THEREOF
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Plate glass mirrors have long been made by wet chemistry processes involving polluting chemicals. One well known process involves forming, by means of wet chemistry methods, a thin layer of tin oxide upon a glass sheet, providing next a layer of metallic silver to a thickness sufficient to render the layer substantially opaque (and highly reflective when viewed through the glass), overcoating the silver layer with a layer of copper, and overcoating the copper layer with a lead-based paint. When the silver layer is not completely opaque, the copper layer may impart a very slight copper tint to the mirrored surface viewed through the glass. The copper layer serves also as a sacrificial layer inasmuch as it will react with oxygen and other contaminants with which it may come into contact and thus protect the silver layer from becoming sulfided or oxidized. The lead-based paint not only protects the back of the mirror from being physically abraded by scratches or the like, but the lead oxide pigment further contributes to the sacrificial protection afforded the silver layer and copper layer.
The wet chemistry methods employed for making mirrors as described above nave many drawbacks, not the least of which is pollution. The wet chemistry methods involve the use of aqueous coating compositions which may contain various highly contaminating substances. Once a coating solution has been largely exhausted, disposal of the solution poses a substantial environmental problem. Further, the paint that is employed, being of necessity lead-based to provide corrosion protection to the silver layer, may also lead to toxic results if the paint becomes accidentally ingested or if lead or lead compounds from discarded or rejected mirrors or wasted paint leaches into landfills to contaminate water supplies. SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
We have found that mirrors of excellent quality and high resistance to corrosion can be manufactured through the use of substantially non-polluting sputtering techniques and lead-free paints to avoid the substantial environmental problems associated with the wet chemistry mirror manufacturing methods of the past.
In a preferred embodiment, we have found that the amount of silver that is employed to manufacture a mirror can be vastly reduced while maintaining the desired reflectivity and mirror color. In another preferred embodiment, a mirror is provided with sputtered-on coatings and with an exterior polymeric protective coating that is free of lead or lead compounds and that exhibits tenacious adhesion to the underlying sputtered-on layer to provide substantial protection not only from chemical attack but from scratching and other physical damage as well.
In general, the mirrors of the invention comprise a transparent substrate such as float glass, and a sputtereα, transparent primer layer which is carried on the glass surface and which may constitute a metal salt, particularly an oxide or nitride such as an oxide of tin, titanium or zinc or nitrides of zinc or titanium. Upon the primer layer is carried a sputtered reflective metal layer of a bright reflective metal such as silver, aluminum, palladium, platinum or chromium in sufficient amount as to provide the mirror with a transmittance in the range of about 0-30%. In a layer spaced further from the glass surface than the reflective layer is a barrier layer comprising one or more metal compounds different from the metal of the reflective layer and sufficient to protect the reflective layer from contact with contaminants such as water, oxygen, sulfiding gases and the like.
To the extent that the reflective layer is not entirely opaque, the barrier layer includes a layer of a bright metal such as stainless steel, aluminum, or chromium, that is different from the metal of the reflective layer and which cooperates with the silver or other reflective metal in the reflective layer to render the mirror totally opaque. The barrier layer may in fact comprise two contiguous strata, one stratum (nearer the glass surface) comprising aluminum, stainless steel, chromium or other bright metal to supplement the opacity of the reflective layer, and the second stratum comprising a different metal compound that provides good barrier properties, such stratum being formed by sputtering of stainless steel, titanium nitride, silicon nitride, silicon dioxide or titanium dioxide. If a soft metal such as aluminum or copper is employed in the barrier layer to supplement the opacity of the reflective layer, then it is desired that the barrier layer include the second stratum to provide physical and chemical protection to the reflective layer of the mirror. The outer layer of the mirror is an opaque protective polymer layer such as a paint, this layer preferably being free of lead contamination and being applied from a water-based coating composition. In a preferred embodiment, there is provided immediately below the protective polymer layer a sputtered-on metallic layer of a material such as zinc or zinc oxide, and the polymer layer includes a polymer that is tightly cross-linked and tenaciously adherred to the porous layer. Included in the polymer layer preferably is a pigment comprising one or more zinc compounds such as zinc oxide, zinc phosphate and such other zinc-derived compounds as may be needed to improve the resistance of the mirror to sulfide formation by restraining sulfide ions from coming into contact with the silver or other reflective metal of the reflective layer. The outer, sputtered-on layer of, eg., zinc or zinc oxide and the adherrent polymer layer providing the mirror with substantial resistance to sulfiding and other corrosion. DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING
Figure 1 is a schematic, cross-sectional view showing the layers involved in a mirror of the prior art;
Figure 2 is a schematic representation of a mirror of the invention utilizing a homogeneous barrier layer;
Figure 3 is a schematic, cross-sectional representation of a mirror of the invention in which the barrier layer is a composite layer: and
Figure 4 is a schematic, cross-sectional representation of another modification of a mirror of the invention.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
The metals and metal compositions employed in the present invention are applied by a sputtering technique such as that described in U.S. patent 4,166,018 (Chapin), the teachings of which are incorporated herein by reference. This technique, sometimes referred to as a magnetron sputtering technique, involves the formation of a plasma which is concentrated in a magnetic field and which serves to eject metal atoms from an adjacent metal target, the metal atoms being deposited upon an adjacent surface such as the surface of a glass pane. When sputtering is done in an inert atmosphere, the metal alone is deposited whereas if sputtering is done in the presence of oxygen or nitrogen, then the metal is deposited as an oxide or, if the metal readily forms a nitride, as a nitride, respectively. Magnetron sputtering techniques and apparatuses are well known in the field and need not be described further.
Figure 1 refers to a prior art mirror which contains a glass sheet as shown bearing sequential tin oxide, silver, copper and paint layers. As noted, paints employed in mirrors of the prior art of this type generally were lead-based, and the tin oxide, copper and silver layers were applied using wet chemistry procedures.
Referring now to Figure 2, the transparent substrate 10 such as glass and particularly plate glass is first subjected to sputtering in an oxygen/argon or nitrogen/argon atmosphere using a "target" of a metal such as tin, titanium or zinc to provide a tin oxide, titanium dioxide, zinc oxide or zinc nitride primer layer 12. A tin oxide primer layer having a thickness in the range of 5 - 75 Angstroms would be appropriate. Upon the primer layer is sputtereα the layer 14 of a bright, reflective metal such as silver, aluminum, palladium, platinum or chromium in sufficient amount as to provide that layer with a transmittance in the range of 0-30%. The bright, reflective metal preferably is silver. Figure 2 illustrates the mirror in which the silver or other bright metal layer 12 provides a transmittance of approximately 0%; that is, in which the bright layer is essentially opaque. Sputtered silver layers having thicknesses above about 525 Angstroms and preferably in the range of 525 to 625 Angstroms provide appropriate substantially opaque layers. Preferably, as shown in Figure 3, the silver or other bright metal layer 14 is not opaque, but rather has a transmittance in the range of approximately 1-30%, preferably 1-10%. Sputtered silver layers having thicknesses less than about 525 Angstroms and preferably in the range of 450 - 525 Angstroms generally exhibit some transmittance. In general, the transmittance of a sputtered silver layer decreases to about 10% or below as its thickness exceeds about 400 - 450 Angstroms, and decreases to substantially zero as the thickness reaches the 500 - 550 Angstrom range. A relatively large amount of silver is required to reduce the transmissivity of the reflective layer from several percent to zero. The silver or other bright metal is sputtered from a metal target in an atmosphere of argon or other inert gas.
In the embodiment of Figure 2, in which the bright, reflective layer 14 has substantially zero transmittance, that layer is overcoated with a protective barrier layer 16, this layer comprising one or more metals or metal alloys that are different from the metal of the reflective layer, the barrier layer being sufficient in thickness and properties to protect the underlying bright metallic layer 14 from contact with contaminants such as water, oxygen, sulfiding gases and the like. The barrier layer desirably contains one or more of the following sputtered materials: stainless steel, aluminum, copper, chromium, titanium nitride, zinc oxide, silicon nitride, titanium dioxide and silicon dioxide.
The barrier layer 16 preferably ranges in thickness from about 100 to about 500 /Angstroms; when made of successive layers of stainless steel and titanium nitride, a stainless steel thickness of 310 to 410 Angstroms and a titanium nitride thickness of 150 - 250 Angstroms provides acceptable results.
Referring to Figure 3, in which the bright reflective layer 14 is not completely opaque but has a light transmittance in the range of about 1-30% and preferably 1-10%, the protective layer 16 may be a composite layer made of several strata of which one, designated 18 in Figure 3, is deposited directly upon the bright reflective layer 14 and comprises a bright, reflective metal different from the metal employed in layer 14. Strata 18 thus may be aluminum, stainless steel, copper or chromium, or for that matter, silver if the reflective layer metal is not silver, and the stratum 18 is applied to a thickness sufficient to render the layers 14 and 18 together substantially completely opaque, that is, with approximately zero transmissivity. For example, the layer 14, if made of silver metal, may have a thickness of approximately 500 plus or minus about 50 Angstroms to provide a transmissivity of about 1-10%; upon this surface then may be coated the stratum 18 of e.g., stainless steel to a thickness of about 300 plus or minus about 50 Angstroms to render the combined layers 14 and 18 substantially opaque. The remaining portion of the barrier layer 16, represented as stratum 20, may in this example be titanium nitride sputtered to a thickness on the order of about 200 plus or minus 50 Angstroms and functions, together with the layer 18, as a barrier layer 16 as described above.
Applied over the barrier layer 16 in the embodiments of Figures 2 and 3 is a protective polymeric film 22. The protective film desirably is free of lead, and may be any of several known types of coatings including epoxy resins, urethanes, alkyds, and the like. In one embodiment, a powdered epoxy resin that is capable of melting and fusing when heated is applied to the outer surface of the mirror, for example, over barrier layer 16. The glass sheet may then be passed under heat lamps to heat the epoxy resin to its fusing point, whereupon the epoxy resin melts and fuses into a hard solid coating. A paint or other resinous coating may be applied to the outer surface of the mirror by spraying, roller coating or other means as may be desired. The polymeric layer 22 desirably has a dry thickness in the range of 0.5-4.0 mils, and preferably in the range of 1.5-1.8 mils.
In the most preferred embodiment, the paint includes a curable polymer system desirably comprising a crosslinkable polymer such an acrylic resin and a suitable curing agent therefor such an an aminoplast (eg. , a melamine resin) or phenoplast resin, the polymer system being supplied as an aqueous solution or suspension. Acrylic resins are preferred, and are capable of cross-linking at moderate temperatures to form extremely hard, protective films. Epoxy polymer systems and acrylic systems, and particularly the latter, are preferred because of the hard, scratch-resistent films that are produced. Moreover, these films are highly resistent to hydrolysis and resist degradation even in warm, humid environments.
The polymer coating systems desirably are provided as aqueous coating compositions, that is, as solutions or suspension in water, the composition being desirably free or nearly free of organic solvents. As mentioned earlier, the polymer coatings desirably are free of lead or lead compounds.
It has been further found that great adhesion between the outer sputtered on coating and the paint can be obtained by over-coating the sputtered-on film with the paint from an aqueous coating composition. Increased adhesion of the polymer layer (as measured by a "tape" test described below) is particularly evident when the outer sputtered on layer is zinc or particularly a zinc compound such as zinc oxide, and the polymer ingredient of the paint is an acrylic that is heat-curable to form an extremely hard surface, the acrylic being applied from an aqueous solution or dispersion. Without being bound by the following explanation, it appears that the coating composition is carried into intimate contact with the metal or metal oxide (eg., zinc or zinc oxide) surface, and appears to actually penetrate that surface. When the coating is cured, (ie., when it has been crosslinked by application of heat, curing agents, catalysts or the like), an exceedingly strong physical or mechanical bond is formed between the polymeric coating and the underlying sputtered film. Thus, the final sputtered-on layer desirably has a surface that is readily wetted by the aqueous paint composition and with which the polymer can form a strong mechanical bond.
The cured paint films derived from the aqueous paint compositions employed as described above are characterized as being highly resistant to hydrolysis and resistant to softening in most household cleaning chemicals such as dilute ammonium hydroxide, vinegar and the like. As noted above, the films also have quite hard surfaces, and preferably are rated 2H or greater in pencil hardness. Heat-curable polymeric systems employing acrylic polymers, that is, polymers resulting from the copolymerization of acrylic and/or methacrylic acid and other acrylic monomers, are known in the field of paint chemistry and need not be described further.
Adhesion of the protective polymeric layer to the sputtered-on film stack can be measured, at least on a comparative basis, by a test in which the cured polymeric film is scored using a diamond or other hard, sharp object, sets of parallel score lines crossing one another to define a diamond shaped pattern in the polymeric layer. A length of adhesive tape (3M Company's Scotch brand Magic Mending tape is appropriate) is then pressed into intimate adhesive contact with the scored surface. A free end of the tape is then stripped away rapidly from the polymeric surface at right angles to the coated glass sheet. When an epoxy-based paint is coated upon a protective titanium nitride layer (eg., layer 20 in figure 3), small "diamonds" of paint can be lifted from the titanium nitride surface. When a sputtered coating having a zinc or zinc oxide outer surface is employed and is overcoated with an aqueous acrylic resin coating, the adhesion between the polymer coating and the sputtered on film is so great that the tape strips away none of the polymer coating in the tape adhesion test, and in fact the adhesive of the tape is transferred to the polymer coating.
The aqueous polymer coatings of the invention also desirably contain pigment, and it has been found that the choice of pigment is important in providing mirrors of the invention with further and better resistance to sulfiding. Pigments comprising one or more zinc compounds give particularly good anti-sulfiding properties. The zinc compounds employed in the pigment may include zinc oxide and other water-insoluble zinc compounds, particularly the various water-insoluble zinc salts such as zinc phosphate, the latter being particularly preferred. The zinc compounds desirably provide at least about 5% and preferably at least about 8% by weight (as elemental zinc) based on the solids of the paint compositions.
The anti-sulfiding properties conferred by the zinc-based pigments thus mentioned appear to be particularly beneficial when the underlying final sputtered-on layer is zinc or a zinc-based compound such as zinc oxide. This coating can be sputtered from a zinc cathode in an atmosphere containing oxygen to form the oxide directly, or metallic zinc can be sputtered on in a nitrogen atmosphere or an atmosphere of a relatively non-reactive or inert gas such as argon, the zinc oxidizing readily upon exposure to air.
Water-based polymeric coating compositions, such as the acrylic composition referred to above, can be coated, dried and cured quickly. The acrylic-based coating compositions of the invention, utilizing zinc-based pigments, are slightly more viscous than water, and may be coated upon upwardly facing, sputter-coated faces of horizontally moving glass sheets using curtain coating procedures that are known in the coating art. Curtain coating involves the formation of a downwardly moving liquid curtain of an appropriate coating composition, the curtain being of substantially uniform thickness throughout its width and the curtain itself being deposited downwardly upon the horizontally moving surface of the coated glass panes. The wet coating thus applied may first be subjected to a high volume flow of warm, dry air to flash off a large portion of the water and to render the coating self-supporting and substantially dry to the touch, following which the coated pane may be cured in, eg., a forced air oven at about 350° F for typically a period of 3-5 minutes, the polymer undergoing substantially complete curing. Heat curing may be accomplished in one or more elongated forced air ovens through which the panes pass horizontally. The resulting panes may be cooled down rapidly by means of ambient air flow and, if desired, a warm water quench. Cured polymer film thicknesses of up to 4.0 mils or above can be employed. The thickness of the cured paint film desirably is not greater than about 1.8 mils and preferably is in the range of about 1.5-1.8 mils, the reduced thickness enabling the aqueous polymeric composition to be applied and cured more rapidly on the sputter coated surface of the glass pane, and this thickness further provides substantial protection to the underlying film. In a preferred enbodiment, the polymeric overcoating is applied in the form of two layers, the first comprising a pigmented layer as described above and the second being a clear coat, that is, a pigment-free layer. The pigmented and pigmented-free polymeric layers may be applied one over the other using the curtain coating techniques described above, and the second layer may be placed upon the first layer when the first layer is yet wet. Some physical intermixing occurs between the wet layers to improve adhesion therebetween, and the outer clear coat provides substantial protection against inadvertent scratching of the resulting product. Typical coating thicknesses of the cured pigmented layer may be in the range of 1.0 mils and the clear coat may be in the range of about 0.5 mils in thickness.
Referring now to Figure 4, the transparent glass substrate 10 contains a primer layer 12 of eg., tin oxide, a reflective layer 14 of eg., silver, and a barrier layer 16, the barrier layer containing a first film or stratum 18 of stainless steel or the like to supplement the opacity provided by the silver layer 14, if needed. The second barrier layer stratum 20, of titanium nitride or the like, is then provided. The outer sputtered on layer, designated 24 in Figure 4, may be zinc or a zinc compound such as the oxide, and the thickness of this layer may vary widely. Thicknesses in the range of about 50 Angstroms to 1000 Angstroms or more can be used, and thicknesses of about 100 Angstroms to about 900 Angstroms are preferred. If zinc is deposited as the metal in a sputtering operation, and the metallic surface is then exposed to the air, oxidation of the metallic film occurs to form an approximately stoichiometric ZnO surface, the atomic ratio of oxygen to zinc decreasing beneath the surface. Upon this layer is deposited a first pigmented polymeric coating 26, followed by a second, unpigmented "clear coat" 28.
The following illustrative examples will serve to explain the invention in greater detail. The "measured thicknesses" reported in the examples were measured by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy ("XPS") using a Perkin-Elmer Model 5500 XPS spectrophotometer.
Example I :
Glass panes, suitably cleaned, were subjected to magnetron sputtering procedures from a series of target cathodes. The amount ot each material that was thus sputter coated was controlled by varying the number of cathodes beneath which the glass panes were passed during the coating operation. Directly upon the glass surface was deposited a layer of tin oxide from a tin cathode operating in an oxygen-argon environment, the tin oxide layer being deposited to an estimated approximate thickness of about 50 Angstroms.
The glass panes were then overcoated with silver metal from a silver cathode operating in an argon atmosphere, the silver layer being deposited to a measured thickness of approximately 500 Angstroms to provide a reflective layer having a transmittance of approximately 2%. Sputtered on top of the silver layer was a stainless steel (316) layer to a measured thickness of approximately 310 Angstroms, the transmissivity of the silver and stainless steel layers being essentially zero. Over the stainless steel layer was sputter coated a layer of titanium nitride from a titanium metal electrode operating in a nitrogen environment. The titanium nitride protective layer was applied to a measured thickness of approximately 210 Angstroms. Finally, over the titanium nitride layer was coated a commercial lead-free, pigmented alkyd-based paint to a coating weight of 8 grams per square foot, that is, to a thickness of 1-2 mils.
Example II: Glass panes, cleaned and coated with a primer layer of tin oxide as in Example I, were then overcoated with silver metal sputtered from a silver cathode in an argon atmosphere to a measured thickness of approximately 570 Angstroms. The silver layer exhibited a transmissivity of zero percent. Sputtered on top ot τ_he silver layer were sequential layers of stainless steel and titanium nitride, as in Example I, to measured thicknesses of approximately 360 Angstroms and 210 Angstroms, respectively. Finally, the mirror was overcoated with a lead-free, pigmented, alkyd-based paint as in Example I .
The mirrors resulting from Examples I and II each exhibited excellent reflectivity. Each mirror was tested by subjecting a freshly cut edge of the mirror to a 20% salt spray for 2000 hours to determine the weathering resistance of the mirror. Neither mirror showed any evidence of "black edge", that is, silver corrosion from the edges. Black edge is a common problem in the mirror industry. There also was no evidence of massive pin holes or oxidation of the metal coating due to improper mirror backing. The occasional small pin holes were well within mirror specifications. Ammonia tests were also performed. A freshly cut edge of each mirror was subjected to a 15% ammonia vapor solution for 24 hours without failure, indicating excellent resistance, failure being judged the same as with the above salt spray. Finally, a bevel was ground into a freshly cut edge of each mirror, and the bevelled edge was subjected to the salt spray and ammonia tests described above. Similarly excellent results were obtained.
Example III
Glass panes, cleaned and coated with a sputter coated primer layer of tin oxide as in Example I, are then provided with a silver metal coating, a stainless steel coating and a titanium nitride coating, all as described in Example II. Upon the titanium nitride coating may be sputtered coated a film of zinc from a zinc metal electrode operating in a nitrogen atmosphere, this coating being applied to a thickness of approximately 900 Angstroms. After exposure of the film to ambient air, the film was found in one such run to have an outer surface that was approximately stoichiometric zinc oxide, the atomic ratio of oxygen to zinc decreasing below the stoichiometric amount at depths of several hundred Angstroms into the film surface.
Once the panes have emerged from the magnetron sputter coating apparatus, the panes travel on a conveyor beneath a coating apparatus which applies to the upper, sputter coated surfaces of the panes a predetermined layer of uniform thickness of an aqueous, lead-free, pigmented, acrylic paint composition. Although the paint may be applied via several coating methods, it is preferred that the paint be caused to flow downwardly in the form of a "curtain" upon the upper surface of the moving glass panes. The paint, at approximately 50% solids, is deposited at a wet thickness of approximately 2 mils. To quickly dry the wet paint film, the film is subjected to a high volumetric flow rate of dry, warm air to quickly remove water from the film and to provide the film with a semi-hard surface; at this point, the film may yet be soft enough to retain fingerprints. The continuously moving glass panes are subjected to the high volume flow of warm air for approximate one minute, following which the panes pass through one or more ovens capable of heating the panes and the paint to a temperature in which the polymeric component of the paint rapidly cross-links and becomes extremely hard and scratch reεistent. For example, the panes may be exposed to hot air at 350° F for a period of 3-5 minutes, during which the temperature of the glass is raised to 280° F.
The temperature of the panes emerging from the curing ovens may be rapidly reαuced by treating the panes, particularly the glass side thereof, with warm water and a gentle flow of tempered air, the temperature of the glass rapidly being reduced to 80° F or below. The final pane thickness may be on the order of 1 mil.
The aqueous pigmented paint composition thus described may have the following composition:
Ingredient water reduced acrylic thermosetting resin 71% solids (Rhone-Poulenc resin CMD-9012) triethy1amine water butyl cellosolve EB (Union Carbide) isopropyl alcohol, 91% amorphous precipitated silica (Degussa, OK-412) titanium dioxide silicone defoamer (Patcote 520)
Figure imgf000019_0001
hydrophobic amorphous fumed silica
(Degussa, Aerosil R-972) 1.043 organo nitrogen zinc salt
(Henkel, Alcophor 827) 8.69 zinc phosphate (Heubach, Heucophos ZPO) 86.90 carbon black 4.345 barium sulfate 173.80 methylated melamine
(Monsanto, Resimene 717, 84%) 99.066
TOTAL 1000 parts
If dccircd, the pigmented base coat thus described may be provided with a non-pigmented overcoat desirably utilizing the same or similar acrylic resin capable of cross linking to form a hard, scratch-resistant surface. The non-pigmented paint may have the following composition:
Quantity
Ingredient Parts by Weight water reduced acrylic thermosetting resin (Rhone-Poulenc CMD-9012, 71%) 368.01 triethylamine 34.632 water 432.90 diethylene glycol monobutyl ether 30.303 methylalkyl polysiloxane (Byk-Chemie, Byk-325) 1.039 silicone defoamer (Patcote 520) .649 methylated melamine (Monsanto, Resimene 717, 84%) 129.870 polyethylene wax (Micro Powders, MPP-620VF wax) 2.597
TOTAL moo parts
While a preferred embodiment of the present invention has been described, it should be understood that various changes, adaptations and modifications may be made therein without departing from the spirit of the invention and the scope of the appended claims ,

Claims

WHAT IS CLAIMED IS:
1. A mirror comprising a transparent substrate, a sputtered primer layer carried on the transparent substrate, a reflective layer comprising a bright, reflective metal sputtered onto the primer layer, the reflective layer having a transmittance not greater than about 30%, and a barrier layer spaced further from the transparent substrate than the reflective layer and comprising one or more metal compounds different from the metal of the reflective layer, the barrier layer being of sufficient thickness to protect the reflective layer from corrosive environments, the barrier layer including a sufficient amount of a bright, reflective metal different from the reflective metal of the reflective layer to reduce the transmittance of the combined reflective layer and barrier layer to zero percent if the transmittance of the reflective layer is greater than zero percent, the mirror including a polymeric protective layer spaced further from the transparent substrate than the barrier layer.
2. The mirror of claim 1 wherein the polymeric protective layer is free of lead.
3. The mirror of claim 1 wherein the transmissivity of the reflective layer is 1 - 10 percent.
4. The mirror of claim l wherein the transmissivity of the reflective layer is zero percent.
5. A mirror comprising a transparent substrate, a sputtered primer layer carried on the transparent substrate, a reflective layer comprising a bright, reflective metal sputtered onto the primer layer, the reflective layer having a transmittance of 1 - 30%, and a barrier layer spaced further from the transparent substrate than the reflective layer and comprising one or more metal compounds different from the metal of the reflective layer, the barrier layer being of sufficient thickness to protect the reflective layer from corrosive environments, the barrier layer including a sufficient amount of a bright, reflective metal different from the reflective metal of the reflective layer to reduce the transmittance of the combined reflective layer and barrier layer to zero percent, the mirror including a lead-free polymeric protective layer spaced further from the transparent substrate than the barrier layer.
6. The mirror of claim 5 wherein the reflective layer is silver and has a measured thickness of not greater than 550 Angstroms.
7. The mirror of claim 6 wherein the barrier layer includes stainless steel deposited to a thickness in the range of 250 - 350 Angstroms.
8. The mirror of claim 6 wherein the barrier layer includes sufficient stainless steel to reduce the transmissivity of the combined reflective layer and the barrier layer to zero and wherein the barrier layer also includes titanium nitride at a measured thickness of 150 - 250 Angstroms.
9. Tne mirror of claim 5 wherein the barrier layer comprises one or more compositions selected from the group consisting of stainless steel, aluminum, copper, chromium, titanium nitride, zinc oxide, silicon nitride, titanium nitride and silicon dioxide.
10. The mirror of claim 9 wherein the barrier layer includes two of said compositions in separate, contiguous strata.
11. The mirror of claim 10 wherein the stratum nearest the reflective layer is stainless steel.
12. A mirror comprising a transparent substrate, a sputtered primer layer carried on the transparent substrate, a reflective silver metal layer having a transmittance of 1 - 30% sputtered upon the primer layer, and a barrier layer spaced further from the transparent substrate than the reflective silver layer and comprising a first stratum of stainless steel of sufficient thickness to provide the silver and stainless steel layers together with a transmittance of zero percent and a second stratum of titanium nitride, the barrier layer being of sufficient thickness to protect the silver layer from corrosive environments, the mirror including a lead-free polymeric protective layer spaced further from the transparent substrate than the barrier layer.
13. A mirror comprising a transparent substrate, a sputtered primer layer carried on the transparent substrate, a reflective layer comprising a bright, reflective metal sputtered onto the primer layer, the reflective layer having a transmittance of zero percent, and a barrier layer spaced further from the transparent substrate than the reflective layer and comprising one or more metal compounds different from the metal of the reflective layer, the barrier layer being of sufficient thickness to protect the reflective layer from corrosive environments, the mirror including a lead-free polymeric protective layer spaced further from the transparent substrate than the barrier layer.
14. The mirror of claim 13 wherein the barrier layer comprises one or more compositions selected from the group consisting of stainless steel, aluminum, copper, chromium, titanium nitride, zinc oxide, silicon nitride, titanium nitride and silicon dioxide.
15. The mirror of claim 13 wherein the barrier layer includes two separate but contiguous strata of which one is a metal stratum.
16. The mirror of claim 15 wherein another of said strata is titanium nitride.
17. A mirror comprising a transparent substrate, a sputtered primer layer carried on the transparent substrate, a silver metal reflective layer sputtered onto the primer layer, the reflective layer having a transmittance of zero percent, and a barrier layer spaced further from the transparent substrate than the reflective layer and comprising a stratum of stainless steel and a stratum comprising titanium nitride, the barrier layer being of sufficient thickness to protect the reflective layer from corrosive environments, the mirror including a lead-free polymeric protective layer spaced further from the transparent substrate than the barrier layer.
18. A mirror comprising a transparent substrate, a sputtered primer layer carried on the transparent substrate, a reflective layer comprising a bright, reflective metal sputtered onto the primer layer, and a barrier layer spaced further from the transparent substrate than the reflective layer and comprising one or more metal compounds different from the metal of the reflective layer, the barrier layer being of sufficient thickness to protect the reflective layer from corrosive environments, the barrier layer including a sufficient amount of a bright, reflective metal different from the reflective metal of the reflective layer to reduce the transmittance of the combined reflective layer and barrier layer to zero percent if the transmittance of the reflective layer is greater than zero percent, and the barrier layer including an outer sputtered-on zinc-containing layer, the mirror including, over the zinc-containing layer and tightly adherent thereto, a hydrolysis and solvent-resistant, hard, pigmented polymeric protective layer applied from an aqueous composition.
19. The mirror of claim 18 wherein the sputtered-on, zinc-containing layer comprises an outer surface of zinc oxide in contact with the polymeric protective layer..
20. The mirror of claim 19 wherein the pigmented polymeric protective layer includes one or more zinc-containing pigments sufficient to improve the resistance of the mirror to sulfiding.
21. The mirror of claim 20 wherein the zinc pigment includes zinc phosphate.
22. The mirror of any one of claims 18-21 including a separate outer coating of a non-pigmented polymeric coating.
23. The mirror of any of claims 18-21 wherein the outer polymeric protective layer is a crosslinked acrylic resin.
24. A mirror comprising a transparent substrate, a sputtered primer layer carried on the transparent substrate, a reflective layer comprising a bright, reflective metal sputtered onto the primer layer, and a barrier layer spaced further from the transparent substrate than the reflective layer and comprising one or more metal compounds different from the metal of the reflective layer, the barrier layer being of sufficient thickness to protect the reflective layer from corrosive environments, the barrier layer including a sufficient amount of a bright, reflective metal different from the reflective metal of the reflective layer to reduce the transmittance of the combined reflective layer and barrier layer to zero percent if the transmittance of the reflective layer is greater than zero percent, and the barrier layer including an outer sputtered-on zinc-containing layer having a zinc oxide outer surface, the mirror including, over the zinc-containing layer and tightly adherent thereto, a hydrolysis and solvent-resistant, hard, cross-linked acrylic protective layer including zinc-containing pigment sufficient to improve the resistance of the mirror to sulfiding.
25. Method of manufacturing mirrors in a substantially pollution-free manner, comprising the steps of a. sputtering onto a transparent substrate a primer layer, a bright, reflective metallic layer, and a barrier layer spaced further from the transparent substrate than the reflective layer, the barrier layer including a sufficient amount of a bright, reflective metal different from the reflective metal of the reflective layer to reduce the transmittance of the combined reflective layer and barrier layer to zero percent if the transmittance of the reflective layer is greater than zero percent, the barrier layer containing a final layer having a zinc oxide outer surface, b. applying to the zinc oxide outer surface an aqueous coating composition comprising a heat-curable polymer system, the coating composition thoroughly wetting the zinc oxide surface, and c. evaporating water from the coating and curing the coating onto the zinc oxide surface to provide the latter with a hard, tenaceously adherent, protective polymeric overcoat.
26. The substantially pollution-free method of claim 25 including the step of providing over said polymeric layer a second polymeric coating composition, and heat curing the latter coating.
27. The substantially pollution-free method of claim 26 wherein said second polymeric coating composition is applied over the first coating while the first coating is wet, and the coatings are cured together in a single curing step.
28. The substantially pollution-free method of claim 25 including the step of providing in the coating composition sufficient zinc pigments to increase the resistance of the mirror to sulfiding.
29. Method of manufacturing mirrors in a substantially pollution-free manner, comprising the steps of a. sputtering onto a transparent substrate a bright, reflective metallic layer, and a barrier layer spaced further from the transparent substrate than the reflective layer, the barrier layer containing a final layer having a zinc oxide outer surface, b. applying to the zinc oxide outer surface an aqueous coating composition comprising a heat-curable polymer system comprising an acrylic resin and a curing agent therefor, the coating composition thoroughly wetting the zinc oxide surface and including sufficient zinc pigments to increase the resistance of the mirror to sulfiding, and c. evaporating water from the coating and heat-curing the coating onto the zinc oxide surface to provide the latter with a hard, tenaceously adherent, protective polymeric overcoat.
30. The substantially pollution-free method of claim 29 including the step of providing over the pigment-containing polymeric layer a coating of an aqueous, pigment-free, heat-curable polymeric coating composition, ana heat curing the latter coating.
31. The substantially pollution-free method of claim 30 in which the pigment-free coating composition is applied as a wet film over the pigmented coating while the latter is in a wet film stage.
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Cited By (24)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
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EP0562660A1 (en) * 1992-03-23 1993-09-29 FENZI S.p.A. Vernici ED ACCESSORI VETRARI Formulation to protect from the corrosion metal-coating mirrors and procedure for the production thereof
WO1994017431A1 (en) * 1993-01-21 1994-08-04 Midwest Research Institute Durable metallized polymer mirror
EP0662458A1 (en) * 1994-01-10 1995-07-12 Pilkington Glass Limited Coatings on glass
EP0662459A1 (en) * 1994-01-10 1995-07-12 Pilkington Glass Limited Coatings on glass
FR2718733A1 (en) * 1994-04-18 1995-10-20 Saint Gobain Vitrage Protective coating for glazed element with layers.
US5505989A (en) * 1992-07-11 1996-04-09 Pilkington Glass Limited Method for coating a hot glass ribbon
US5576885A (en) * 1994-01-10 1996-11-19 Pilington Glass Limited Heatable mirror including a non-metallic reflecting coating on a glass substate
WO1997000335A1 (en) * 1995-06-19 1997-01-03 The University Of Sydney Solar selective surface coating
WO1997001775A1 (en) * 1995-06-29 1997-01-16 Cardinal Ig Company Bendable mirrors and method of manufacture
FR2755126A1 (en) * 1996-10-29 1998-04-30 Saint Gobain Vitrage LAYERED GLASS ELEMENT (S)
US5764415A (en) * 1994-01-10 1998-06-09 Pilkington Glass Limited Coatings on glass
ES2141005A1 (en) * 1995-11-20 2000-03-01 Glaverbel Method of forming a protective layer on a copper-free reflective metal layer
US6086210A (en) * 1995-06-29 2000-07-11 Cardinal Ig Company Bendable mirrors and method of manufacture
EP1154289A1 (en) * 2000-05-09 2001-11-14 Alcan Technology & Management AG Reflector
US6530668B2 (en) 1997-10-31 2003-03-11 Cardinal Cg Company Heat-bendable mirrors
WO2004042107A2 (en) * 2002-11-08 2004-05-21 Applied Films Gmbh & Co. Kg Coating for a plastic substrate
CN1995864B (en) * 2006-12-13 2010-05-19 周晓欣 Solar heat-collecting sheet and its manufacturing method and heat absorbing plate of solar heat collector
US20100261036A1 (en) * 2009-04-10 2010-10-14 Vtec Technologies, Llc Light-Reflective Articles
WO2012113464A1 (en) * 2011-02-22 2012-08-30 Von Ardenne Anlagentechnik Gmbh Reflection layer system and method for producing said system
WO2013101762A1 (en) * 2011-12-28 2013-07-04 Guardian Industries Corp. Mirror with permanent protective film, and/or methods of making the same
CN101560064B (en) * 2009-05-25 2014-11-05 林嘉宏 Silver mirror and production method thereof
CN104386921A (en) * 2014-10-10 2015-03-04 咸宁南玻节能玻璃有限公司 Gold double-silver low-emissivity coated glass and preparation method thereof
WO2016042243A1 (en) * 2014-09-15 2016-03-24 Saint-Gobain Glass France Mirror having an improved durability
US9341748B2 (en) 2011-12-28 2016-05-17 Guardian Industries Corp. Mirror for use in humid environments, and/or method of making the same

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Cited By (41)

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US5389301A (en) * 1992-03-23 1995-02-14 Fenzi S.P.A. Vernici Ed Accessori Vetrari Formulation to protect from the corrosion metal-coating mirrors and similar and procedure for the production thereof
EP0562660A1 (en) * 1992-03-23 1993-09-29 FENZI S.p.A. Vernici ED ACCESSORI VETRARI Formulation to protect from the corrosion metal-coating mirrors and procedure for the production thereof
US5505989A (en) * 1992-07-11 1996-04-09 Pilkington Glass Limited Method for coating a hot glass ribbon
US5745291A (en) * 1992-07-11 1998-04-28 Pilkington Glass Limited Mirror including a glass substrate and a pyrolytic silicon reflecting layer
WO1994017431A1 (en) * 1993-01-21 1994-08-04 Midwest Research Institute Durable metallized polymer mirror
US5361172A (en) * 1993-01-21 1994-11-01 Midwest Research Institute Durable metallized polymer mirror
US5700305A (en) * 1994-01-10 1997-12-23 Pilkington Glass Limited Method of producing heatable mirrors by depositing coatings on glass
EP0662459A1 (en) * 1994-01-10 1995-07-12 Pilkington Glass Limited Coatings on glass
US5764415A (en) * 1994-01-10 1998-06-09 Pilkington Glass Limited Coatings on glass
US5757564A (en) * 1994-01-10 1998-05-26 Pilkington Glass Limited Coatings on glass
GB2290491A (en) * 1994-01-10 1996-01-03 Pilkington Glass Ltd Coatings on glass
GB2290555A (en) * 1994-01-10 1996-01-03 Pilkington Glass Ltd Coatings on glass
EP0662458A1 (en) * 1994-01-10 1995-07-12 Pilkington Glass Limited Coatings on glass
WO1995018774A1 (en) * 1994-01-10 1995-07-13 Pilkington Glass Limited Coatings on glass
US5576885A (en) * 1994-01-10 1996-11-19 Pilington Glass Limited Heatable mirror including a non-metallic reflecting coating on a glass substate
WO1995018773A1 (en) * 1994-01-10 1995-07-13 Pilkington Glass Limited Coatings on glass
GB2290555B (en) * 1994-01-10 1997-11-05 Pilkington Glass Ltd Coatings on glass
EP0678485A3 (en) * 1994-04-18 1996-02-28 Saint Gobain Vitrage Protective coating for layered glazing element.
EP0678485A2 (en) * 1994-04-18 1995-10-25 Saint-Gobain Vitrage Protective coating for layered glazing element
FR2718733A1 (en) * 1994-04-18 1995-10-20 Saint Gobain Vitrage Protective coating for glazed element with layers.
WO1997000335A1 (en) * 1995-06-19 1997-01-03 The University Of Sydney Solar selective surface coating
WO1997001775A1 (en) * 1995-06-29 1997-01-16 Cardinal Ig Company Bendable mirrors and method of manufacture
US6086210A (en) * 1995-06-29 2000-07-11 Cardinal Ig Company Bendable mirrors and method of manufacture
US6142642A (en) * 1995-06-29 2000-11-07 Cardinal Ig Company Bendable mirrors and method of manufacture
ES2141005A1 (en) * 1995-11-20 2000-03-01 Glaverbel Method of forming a protective layer on a copper-free reflective metal layer
FR2755126A1 (en) * 1996-10-29 1998-04-30 Saint Gobain Vitrage LAYERED GLASS ELEMENT (S)
EP0839771A1 (en) * 1996-10-29 1998-05-06 Saint-Gobain Vitrage Layered glass element
US6530668B2 (en) 1997-10-31 2003-03-11 Cardinal Cg Company Heat-bendable mirrors
US7182475B2 (en) 2000-05-09 2007-02-27 Alcan Technology & Management Ltd Reflector
WO2001086327A1 (en) * 2000-05-09 2001-11-15 Alcan Technology & Management Ltd. Reflector
EP1154289A1 (en) * 2000-05-09 2001-11-14 Alcan Technology & Management AG Reflector
WO2004042107A2 (en) * 2002-11-08 2004-05-21 Applied Films Gmbh & Co. Kg Coating for a plastic substrate
WO2004042107A3 (en) * 2002-11-08 2005-09-01 Applied Films Gmbh & Co Kg Coating for a plastic substrate
CN1995864B (en) * 2006-12-13 2010-05-19 周晓欣 Solar heat-collecting sheet and its manufacturing method and heat absorbing plate of solar heat collector
US20100261036A1 (en) * 2009-04-10 2010-10-14 Vtec Technologies, Llc Light-Reflective Articles
CN101560064B (en) * 2009-05-25 2014-11-05 林嘉宏 Silver mirror and production method thereof
WO2012113464A1 (en) * 2011-02-22 2012-08-30 Von Ardenne Anlagentechnik Gmbh Reflection layer system and method for producing said system
WO2013101762A1 (en) * 2011-12-28 2013-07-04 Guardian Industries Corp. Mirror with permanent protective film, and/or methods of making the same
US9341748B2 (en) 2011-12-28 2016-05-17 Guardian Industries Corp. Mirror for use in humid environments, and/or method of making the same
WO2016042243A1 (en) * 2014-09-15 2016-03-24 Saint-Gobain Glass France Mirror having an improved durability
CN104386921A (en) * 2014-10-10 2015-03-04 咸宁南玻节能玻璃有限公司 Gold double-silver low-emissivity coated glass and preparation method thereof

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