HK1000474B - Low reflectance bronze coating - Google Patents
Low reflectance bronze coating Download PDFInfo
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- HK1000474B HK1000474B HK97102008.0A HK97102008A HK1000474B HK 1000474 B HK1000474 B HK 1000474B HK 97102008 A HK97102008 A HK 97102008A HK 1000474 B HK1000474 B HK 1000474B
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Description
The present invention relates generally to the art of transparent coatings and more particularly to multiple layer colored transparent coatings on a glass substrate, especially for use on architectural glass products.
Architectural glass products with metallic and/or metal oxide films are growing in importance as energy demands for heating and cooling become increasingly expensive. Coated glass architectural products generally fall into two categories, solar energy control and high transmittance, low emissivity coated products.
Solar energy control glass products are generally glass substrates, often tinted, coated with a high reflectance, low visible transmittance colored film which reduces solar energy transmittance through the windows into the building interior, thereby reducing air conditioning costs. These products are most effective in warm climates and are most often seen in commercial construction. In areas where heating costs are of greater concern, and particularly in residential construction, high transmittance, low emissivity coatings are desirable in order to allow high transmittance of visible light into the interior while reflecting infrared radiation to retain heat inside the building. High transmittance, low emissivity coatings are typically multiple layer films wherein an infrared reflecting metal such as silver, gold or copper is sandwiched between anti-reflective metal oxide layers such as bismuth, indium and/or tin oxides. Solar energy control films, on the other hand, are typically high reflectance single layer films of one or more of the metals or oxides of metals such as cobalt, iron, chromium, nickel, copper, etc.
Wet chemical methods for producing metallic films for solar energy control are well known from U.S. Patents 3,846,152; 4,091,172; 3,723,158 and 3,457,138. Pyrolytic methods for producing metal oxide films for solar energy control are well known from U.S. Patents 3,660,061; 3,658,568; 3,978,272 and 4,100,330.
Sputtering technologies for producing high transmittance, low emissivity multiple layer coatings are disclosed in U.S. Patent Nos. 4,462,884 and 4,508,789. Sputtering techniques for producing solar control films are disclosed in U.S. Patent Nos. 4,512,863 and 4,594,137.
U.S. Patent No. 4,022,947 to Grubb et al discloses a transparent panel capable of transmitting a desired portion of visible radiation while reflecting a large portion of incident solar radiation, and a method of preparing same, by sputtering an iron, nickel and chromium alloy to obtain a transparent metal film, and reactively sputtering the same or a similar alloy in the presence of oxygen to form an oxide film. In one preferred embodiment, the metal film lies between the substrate and the metal oxide film. In another preferred embodiment, the metal oxide film lies between the substrate and the metal film. Example 11 is the only specific example given for the latter preferred embodiment. In this Example, a stainless steel oxide film is sputtered onto a glass substrate, and a stainless steel metal film is sputtered onto the said oxidic film. From Figur 8 arises that the coated glass exhibits a high reflectance of around 50% from the film side, both in the luminous and infrared wavelength ranges, whereas the reflection from the uncoated glass side is well below 20% in both of the said wavelength ranges. Therefore, when such a transparent panel is used as architectural glass, it has a mirror-like appearance from inside while only moderately reflecting infrared radiation from outside.
EP-A1-185,314 discloses an article of manufacture for the reflectance of solar energy comprising a transparent substrate, a transparent film of a neutral metal oxide providing color by absorption and interference effects and, deposited thereon, a highly reflective transparent metallic film. The Examples show that an article according to this reference exhibits mirror-like properties from the film side, and in some cases from the glass side, too.
The present invention involves a low reflectance, low transmittance, bronze colored solar energy control film deposited on a glass substrate by cathode sputtering, preferably magnetron sputtering. The film comprises a layer of a metal alloy oxide and a layer of a neutral metal alloy. The metal alloy oxide layer provides color and low reflectance while the metal alloy layer provides neutral low transmittance.
It is an object of the the present invention to provide an article of manufacture for the control of solar energy comprising :
- (a) a glass substrate;
- (b) a transparent film of a stainless steel oxide which exhibits color and low reflectance and is deposited on a surface of said substrate (a); and
- (c) a transparent nickel or chromium metal alloy film which exhibits neutral low reflectance and neutral low transmittance and is deposited on said film (b),
It is another object of the present invention to provide a method of making an article of manufacture for the control of solar energy, said method comprising the steps of:
- (b) sputtering onto a surface of a glass substrate (a) a transparent film of a stainless steel oxide which exhibits color and low reflectance; and
- (c) sputtering over said film (b) a transparent nickel or chromium metal alloy film which exhibits neutral low reflectance and neutral low transmittance;
In a preferred embodiment of the present invention, a glass surface is first coated with a layer of stainless steel oxide by sputtering a stainless steel cathode target in an oxidizing reactive atmosphere. The stainless steel oxide coated surface is then further coated with a layer of neutral metal alloy by sputtering a nickel alloy target in a nonreactive atmosphere comprising argon. The relative thicknesses of the coating layers can be varied to yield a variety of visual effects. In particular, the thickness of the neutral metal layer can be varied to increase or decrease the transmittance without substantially altering the color or the reflectance from the glass side.
In a specific embodiment of the present invention, the stainless steel oxide of film (b) comprises iron, chromium nickel, and molybdenum. A preferred nickel metal alloy of film (c) comprises nickel, chromium, and iron. Alternatively, the nickel metal alloy comprises nickel, chromium, iron, and columbium. A suitable nickel metal alloy is known as Inconel. In a most preferred embodiment, stainless steel oxide and Inconel metal alloy layers are combined to produce a bronze colored coating. The present invention will be further understood from the description of a specific example which follows.
A multiple layer coating of stainless steel oxide and nickel metal alloy is deposited on a glass substrate under the following conditions, in one pass under multiple cathodes in sequence. A clean glass substrate is maintained in a vacuum chamber in an atmosphere of 50 percent oxygen and 50 percent argon at a pressure of 3 millitorr. A stainless steel cathode with a target surface area measuring 106 by 15 inches (about 2.74 by 0.4 meters) powered at 98 kilowatts. At a line speed of 93 inches (2.36 meters) per minute, a stainless steel oxide coating is deposited at a thickness which decreases the transmittance from 90 percent for the 1/4 inch (about 6 millimeter) thick clear float glass substrate to 59 percent. The stainless steel composition used in this example is the 316 alloy, which comprises 68 percent iron, 17 percent chromium, 12 percent nickel and 2.25 percent molybdenum. Next, a nickel alloy cathode is sputtered in an inert argon atmosphere at 3 millitorr. With the same line speed and a power of 7 kilowatts, a nickel alloy coating is deposited over the stainless steel oxide coating further decreasing the transmittance to 16.8 percent. The nickel alloy used in this example is Inconel 625 which comprises 62.6 percent nickel, 20 percent chromium, 6.85 percent iron and 3.95 percent columbium, plus tantalum, carbon, manganese, iron, sulfur, silicon, copper, aluminum and titanium in trace amounts (less than one percent). When the coated article is exposed to ambient conditions, the nickel alloy coating surface oxidizes slightly increasing the transmittance. The coated article has a low reflectance, bronze colored appearance from the glass side. The luminous transmittance is about 20 percent and the luminous reflectance of the coated article is about 14 percent from the glass side. The reflected color is bronze, having chromaticity coordinates of x = 0.3401 and y = 0.3518.
The above example is offered only to illustrate the present invention. Various other colored metal alloy oxides may be used, along with other neutral, low reflectance metals such as chromium alloys. The scope of the present invention is defined by the following claims.
Claims (12)
- An article of manufacture for the control of solar energy comprising :(a) a glass substrate;(b) a transparent film of a stainless steel oxide which exhibits color and low reflectance and is deposited on a surface of said substrate (a); and(c) a transparent nickel or chromium metal alloy film which exhibits neutral low reflectance and neutral low transmittance and is deposited on said film (b),said films (b) and (c) in combination with the substrate (a) providing a coated transparent article which exhibits color, low reflectance and neutral low transmittance.
- An article of manufacture as claimed in claim 1, wherein said stainless steel oxide of film (b) comprises iron, chromium, nickel, and molybdenum.
- An article of manufacture as claimed in claim 1 or 2, wherein said nickel metal alloy of film (c) comprises nickel, chromium, and iron.
- An article of manufacture as claimed in claim 1 or 2, wherein said nickel metal alloy of film (c) comprises nickel, chromium, iron, and columbium.
- A method of making an article of manufacture for the control of solar energy, said method comprising the steps of :(b) sputtering onto a surface of a glass substrate (a) a transparent film of a stainless steel oxide which exhibits color and low reflectance; and(c) sputtering over said film (b) a transparent nickel or chromium metal alloy film which exhibits neutral low reflectance and neutral low transmittance;said films (b) and (c) in combination with the substrate (a) providing a coated transparent article which exhibits color, low reflectance and neutral low transmittance.
- The method as claimed in claim 5, wherein the sputtering is magnetically enhanced.
- The method as claimed in claim 5 or 6, wherein said stainless steel is sputtered in an oxidizing reactive atmosphere.
- The method as claimed in any of claims 5 to 7, wherein said stainless steel of film (b) comprises iron, chromium, nickel, and molybdenum.
- The method as claimed in any of claims 5 to 8, wherein said nickel metal alloy is sputtered in a nonreactive atmosphere.
- The method as claimed in claim 9, wherein said inert atmosphere comprises argon.
- The method as claimed in any of claims 5 to 10, wherein said nickel metal alloy of film (c) comprises nickel, chromium, and iron.
- The method as claimed in any of claims 5 to 10, wherein said nickel metal alloy of film (c) comprises nickel, chromium, iron, and columbium.
Applications Claiming Priority (2)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| US50825 | 1987-05-15 | ||
| US07/050,825 US4847158A (en) | 1987-05-15 | 1987-05-15 | Low reflectance bronze coating |
Publications (2)
| Publication Number | Publication Date |
|---|---|
| HK1000474A1 HK1000474A1 (en) | 1998-03-27 |
| HK1000474B true HK1000474B (en) | 1998-03-27 |
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