US3733426A - Method and material for reclaiming waterlogged telephone cable and the like - Google Patents

Method and material for reclaiming waterlogged telephone cable and the like Download PDF

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US3733426A
US3733426A US00208420A US3733426DA US3733426A US 3733426 A US3733426 A US 3733426A US 00208420 A US00208420 A US 00208420A US 3733426D A US3733426D A US 3733426DA US 3733426 A US3733426 A US 3733426A
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hydroxyl
filler
oil
water
solvent oil
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S Kaufman
R Sabia
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AT&T Corp
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Bell Telephone Laboratories Inc
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    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01BCABLES; CONDUCTORS; INSULATORS; SELECTION OF MATERIALS FOR THEIR CONDUCTIVE, INSULATING OR DIELECTRIC PROPERTIES
    • H01B3/00Insulators or insulating bodies characterised by the insulating materials; Selection of materials for their insulating or dielectric properties
    • H01B3/18Insulators or insulating bodies characterised by the insulating materials; Selection of materials for their insulating or dielectric properties mainly consisting of organic substances
    • H01B3/30Insulators or insulating bodies characterised by the insulating materials; Selection of materials for their insulating or dielectric properties mainly consisting of organic substances plastics; resins; waxes
    • H01B3/302Polyurethanes or polythiourethanes; Polyurea or polythiourea
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C08ORGANIC MACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS; THEIR PREPARATION OR CHEMICAL WORKING-UP; COMPOSITIONS BASED THEREON
    • C08GMACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS OBTAINED OTHERWISE THAN BY REACTIONS ONLY INVOLVING UNSATURATED CARBON-TO-CARBON BONDS
    • C08G18/00Polymeric products of isocyanates or isothiocyanates
    • C08G18/06Polymeric products of isocyanates or isothiocyanates with compounds having active hydrogen
    • C08G18/28Polymeric products of isocyanates or isothiocyanates with compounds having active hydrogen characterised by the compounds used containing active hydrogen
    • C08G18/30Low-molecular-weight compounds
    • C08G18/36Hydroxylated esters of higher fatty acids
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C08ORGANIC MACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS; THEIR PREPARATION OR CHEMICAL WORKING-UP; COMPOSITIONS BASED THEREON
    • C08GMACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS OBTAINED OTHERWISE THAN BY REACTIONS ONLY INVOLVING UNSATURATED CARBON-TO-CARBON BONDS
    • C08G18/00Polymeric products of isocyanates or isothiocyanates
    • C08G18/06Polymeric products of isocyanates or isothiocyanates with compounds having active hydrogen
    • C08G18/28Polymeric products of isocyanates or isothiocyanates with compounds having active hydrogen characterised by the compounds used containing active hydrogen
    • C08G18/67Unsaturated compounds having active hydrogen
    • C08G18/69Polymers of conjugated dienes
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01BCABLES; CONDUCTORS; INSULATORS; SELECTION OF MATERIALS FOR THEIR CONDUCTIVE, INSULATING OR DIELECTRIC PROPERTIES
    • H01B7/00Insulated conductors or cables characterised by their form
    • H01B7/17Protection against damage caused by external factors, e.g. sheaths or armouring
    • H01B7/28Protection against damage caused by moisture, corrosion, chemical attack or weather
    • H01B7/282Preventing penetration of fluid, e.g. water or humidity, into conductor or cable
    • H01B7/285Preventing penetration of fluid, e.g. water or humidity, into conductor or cable by completely or partially filling interstices in the cable

Definitions

  • Air core plastic insulated conductor (PIC) telephone cable occasionally becomes water-logged in service. The water creates leakage paths to wires with defective insulation. The signaling and transmission characteristics of telephone pairs with such lowered insulation resistance and high relative permittivity are severely degraded. Restoring insulation resistance to standards, particularly for buried plastic insulated cable, has been costly, temporary, and oftentimes not possible with present reclamation procedures.
  • a principal object of this invention is to remove water already present in a multipair plastic insulated telephone cable, and prevent its reentry through existing cable sheath faults or such faults that may develop in the future by filling the cable interstices.
  • the compound must be compatible with the wire insulation, with the cable jacket, with the shield which is typically aluminum, and with other materials present in buried closures.
  • the compound must maintain the separation of the conductors and the integrity of the sheath including, the polyethylene jacket and aluminum shield.
  • the compound must not corrode the aluminum or copper conductors when contact is made with them through the pinholes normally found in their plastic insulation.
  • the compound must havehigh insulation resistance and volume resistivity, low dielectric constant, and exhibit low dielectric losses, so as to restore the insulation resistance, capacitance and dielectric losses of the cable to acceptable values.
  • the compound To prevent reentry of water into the cable, the compound must be hydrophobic and fairly permanent.
  • the compound must have an initial low viscosity to permit pumping through substantial lengths of cable preferably during a normal workday.
  • the principal object of the invention is to permanently rid telephone cables of water that has seeped in and restore dielectric properties to acceptable levels.
  • a further inventive object is to prevent the reentry of water in a PIC telephone cable with the very compound used to purge.
  • a further inventive object is to devise a water purging compound for telephone PIC cable with acceptably low initial viscosities, but which cures to a soft tacky compound that wets the wire insulation.
  • a still further inventive object is to purge water in telephone plastic cables with a single pumping over as long a cable stretch as possible.
  • this invention contemplates the use of a hydrophobic insulating material that displaces the water in a waterlogged cable as the material is pumped in, and once in place, cures to a high viscosity that precludes its escaping through lightning pinholes or other sheath defects, while at the same time precluding the reentry of water.
  • insulating materials that are initially of sufficiently low viscosity to permit pumping into a telephone cable, and which retain the low viscosity for a long enough time to permit extended pumping, are contemplated within the inventive scope. These are: thixotropic compounds; gelling compounds; cross-linking compounds and combination thereof.
  • a particular embodiment of the invention is a crosslinking material which is basically a solution of a room temperature curing liquid urethane elastomer in a low viscosity oil.
  • the material is pumped into the cable at a very low viscosity and purges the water. Then, after a period dependent on the amount of catalyst used the urethane cross-links, forming a three-dimensional network which gels the oil. The result is a filled cable purged of water and henceforth waterproofed.
  • a viable method has been found for obtaining a sufficiently low viscosity reactive material that achieves all of the inventive objects including the pumpability of the compound and its later setting up into a soft tacky material.
  • a more specific illustration is a solution of a hydroxyl terminated polybutadiene and a castor oil based isocyanate prepolymer in a low viscosity aromatic oil.
  • a prepurgant that is highly miscible with both water and with the main purgant serves to remove an even greater percentage of water than does use of the main gelling purgant alone.
  • initial viscosity of the solution to be introduced in the cable is critical to purging and thereafter filling long cable lengths.
  • the polymer must be chosen for its hydrophobic and low viscosity properties and for its ability to cure within temperature ranges encountered in practice.
  • a particular and presently preferred class of material pursuant to the present invention is a solvent oil gelled by a cross-linked urethane network formed by reacting, on an essentially 1:1 basis, a material having an unblocked (i.e., available) hydroxyl functionality with a material having an unblocked isocyanate functionality.
  • the invention more specifically contemplates systems within this preferred class which have an initial viscosity less than 100 CPS at all temperatures between 35 F. and 90 F. Still more specifically, systems as above are preferred which exhibit when fully gelled a dielectric constant of not more than 3.0, and preferably not more than 2.5.
  • a specific application of the present invention is a multipair sheathed plastic-insulated conductor telephone cable filled by a solvent gelled by a cross-linked urethane polymer composition containing to 20 weight percent polymer.
  • the cross-linked urethane polymer is formed from a polyol and an isocyanate prepolymer wherein the polyol is of the polyether, polyester, castor oil or polybutadiene type.
  • Example 1 The cable water purgant of this example will be described in terms of Part I and Part II because the components are advantageously stored in two such parts until just prior to introduction into the cable where they are mixed preferably in equal proportions of Part l and Part II. All ingredients could as well be combined at such time, however.
  • Part I consists of a castor oil based isocyanate prepolymer in an aromatic solvent oil, in the amounts 50 grams of isocyanate prepolymer per liter of solution.
  • the prepolymer is formed from toluene diisocyanate and castor oil, and has a hydroxyl functionality of 2.8 and an equivalent weight of approximately 288.
  • Castor oil for present purposes is defined as a mixture of about 70 percent pure glyceryl triricinoleate and 30 percent glyceryl diricinoleate-monooleate or monolinoleate. It is seen that from the standpoint of isocyanate utilization the castor oil is approximately 70 percent triand 30 percent difunctional.
  • the triol structure of castor oil produces cross-linking.
  • the aromatic solvent oil is defined as an oil containing a major proportion of aromatic molecules, that is, molecules having at least one aromatic ring.
  • Part II consists of I00 gm/litter of solution (in aromatic solvent oil) of hydroxyl terminated polybutadiene having a hydroxyl functionality between 2.2 and 2.4 and a hydroxyl content between 0.75 and 0.90 equivalents per kilogram and 4 gm/liter dibutyl tin dilaurate catalyst.
  • Example 2 The water purgant of Example 2 is the same as that described in Example 1, except that the castor oil based isocyanate prepolymer is of the diphenylmethane diisocyanate type.
  • Example 3 The purgant of this example is the same as that of Example l, except that the isocyanate prepolymer is one based on hydroxyl-terminated polybutadiene and toluene diisocyanate.
  • Example 4 The purgant of this example is the same as that of Example 1, except that the isocyanate prepolymer is one based on hydroxyl-terminated polybutadiene and diphenylmethane diisocyanate.
  • Example 1 the grams per liter of castor oil based isocyanate prepolymer may be varied within a range of about 25 to 150.
  • Aromatic solvent oil is selected in order to dissolve the polybutadiene and the castor oil prepolymer.
  • the aromatic oil preferably consists of greater than 90 percent by weight of aromatic molecules as above defined, and as measured in accordance with ASTM D-2007.
  • the mixture consisting of Parts I AND II as defined in the three above examples must exhibit and initial viscosity below 100 centipoise at all temperatures between 35 F. and 90 F. More specifically, the mentioned concentrations may be varied but not beyond that which would exceed the initial viscosity of 100 centipoise.
  • the concentrations of the mentioned ingredients of Part Il may be reduced by about 20 percent, and the aromatic solvent oil will still be gelled.
  • a prepurgant selected pursuant to a further aspect of the invention has been found to be highly advantageous.
  • the prepurgant must be miscible with water and with the reclamation compound. It must also wet polyethylene.
  • the reclamation compound is aromatic solvent oil; and as a prepurgant for this-applicants use, for example, polypropylene glycol of molecular weight in the range 425-150.
  • Liquid polyethylene glycol may also be used as a prepurgant.
  • Ketones such as methyl ethyl ketone may be used with necessary safety precautions.
  • the aromatic oil used is available for example from Kenrigh PetroChemicals under the name Kenplast G.
  • the isocyanate used is obtainable under the name Vorite 128 from Baker Castor Oil Company. It is a castor oil based prepolymer. It was chosen because of its low vapor pressure (thus low toxicity by inhalation), and its solubility in aromatic oil. Some of its properties are listed below.
  • materials which have the requisite hydroxyl functionality include: natural rubber into which hydroxyl functionalities have been introduced; ethylene-propylene-rubber copolymers or terpolymers into which hydroxyl functionalities have been introduced; and styrene-butadiene rubber (SBR) modified to contain hydroxyl functionalities.
  • SBR styrene-butadiene rubber
  • Requirement (1) can be fulfilled by using a low viscosity solvent or diluent, by minimizing the amount of gelling agent in the solution, and by also minimizing the viscosity of the gelling agent.
  • Requirement (2) must be considered in two parts.
  • the minimum amount of gelling agent needed to gel the oil was not known a priori to be small enough to concurrently allow fulfillment of requirement (1).
  • Requirement (3) also is in conflict with requirement (1). Since the material must not shrink due to volatilization of the solvent, a very low viscosity solvent (such as toluene) cannot be used. Safety considerations also require a material with low vapor pressure. An oil pursuant to the invention was used to obtain both volatility and viscosity characteristics.
  • an installed multipair sheathed plastic insulated conductor telephone cable with previously waterlogged interior voids filled by an initially liquid filler comprising a solvent oil gelled by in situ catalytic reaction of a hydroxyl terminated polybutadiene and a polyisocyanate prepolymer, the average functionality of the polyisocyanate prepolymer and the hydroxyl-terminated polybutadiene being sufficient to form a cross-linked urethane network that gells said oil, the solvent oil being the major fraction by weight of the filler, the properties of all said filler constituents being such that the viscosity of said filler when initially liquid is less than cps at all temperatures between 35 F. and 90 F., and further being such that the filler when fully gelled has a dielectric constant of not more than 3.0.
  • said solvent oil is an aromatic solvent oil containing a major proportion of aromatic molecules; and wherein said polyisocyanate prepolymer is present in amounts of from 25 to 150 grams per liter and said hydroxylterminated polybutadiene is present in amounts of from 80 to grams per liter of said initially liquid filler.

Abstract

In-service PIC telephone cable that has become water-logged in places is reclaimed dielectrically by pumping in an aromatic solvent oil containing cross-linking agents that will gel the oil in a predetermined period preferably of the order 24 hours. A nongelling prepurgent miscible with both water and aromatic solvent oil may be pumped in before the gelling compound is introduced, to more completely purge the water.

Description

United States Patent 1191 Kaufman et al.
111 3,733,426 1 May 15, 1973 METHOD AND MATERIAL FOR RECLAIMING WATERLOGGED TELEPHONE CABLE AND THE LIKE Inventors: Stanley Kaufman, Flanders; Raffaele Antonio Sabia, Lincroft, both of NJ.
Bell Telephone Laboratories, Incorporated, Murray Hill, NJ.
Filed: Dec. 15, 1971 Appl. No.: 208,420
Assignee:
US. Cl ..174/23 C, 174/25 C, 174/113 R, 174/116 Int. Cl. ..H01b 11/02, HOlb 3/30 Field of Search ..174/23 C, 23 R, 25 C, 174/116, 113 R; 156/48 References Cited UNITED STATES PATENTS 6/1972 Hawkins ..l74/23 C FOREIGN PATENTS OR APPLICATIONS 95,009 3/1939 Sweden ..174/25 c 1,199,997 7/1970 Great Britain ....174/23 c 1,540,564 2/1970 Germany ..174/1 16 OTHER PUBLICATIONS J. B. Masterson, Pressure Dams in Communication Cables, Proceed of 18th Int. Wire & Cable Symposium, December 1969 1 Primary Examiner-Bernard A. Gilheany Assistant Examiner-A. T. Grimley Attorney-W. L. Keefauner [57] ABSTRACT 3 Claims, No Drawings METHOD AND MATERIAL FOR RECLAIMING WATERLOGGED TELEPHONE CABLE AND THE LIKE FIELD OF THE INVENTION This invention relates broadly to the purging of water from in-service conduitlike structures; and more particularly concerns reclaiming the dielectric properties of water-logged plastic insulated multipair telephone cable.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION Air core plastic insulated conductor (PIC) telephone cable occasionally becomes water-logged in service. The water creates leakage paths to wires with defective insulation. The signaling and transmission characteristics of telephone pairs with such lowered insulation resistance and high relative permittivity are severely degraded. Restoring insulation resistance to standards, particularly for buried plastic insulated cable, has been costly, temporary, and oftentimes not possible with present reclamation procedures.
One current method of removing water from plastic cables is to use acetone. This procedure removes the water but does not prevent its reentry. Accordingly, a principal object of this invention is to remove water already present in a multipair plastic insulated telephone cable, and prevent its reentry through existing cable sheath faults or such faults that may develop in the future by filling the cable interstices.
In realizing an effective cable purging and filling compound, however, many further requirements must be met.
For example, the compound must be compatible with the wire insulation, with the cable jacket, with the shield which is typically aluminum, and with other materials present in buried closures.
The compound must maintain the separation of the conductors and the integrity of the sheath including, the polyethylene jacket and aluminum shield.
The compound must not corrode the aluminum or copper conductors when contact is made with them through the pinholes normally found in their plastic insulation.
Further, the compound must havehigh insulation resistance and volume resistivity, low dielectric constant, and exhibit low dielectric losses, so as to restore the insulation resistance, capacitance and dielectric losses of the cable to acceptable values.
To prevent reentry of water into the cable, the compound must be hydrophobic and fairly permanent.
Importantly, the compound must have an initial low viscosity to permit pumping through substantial lengths of cable preferably during a normal workday.
Important further properties are long shelf life, low price, and safety in handling.
Accordingly the principal object of the invention is to permanently rid telephone cables of water that has seeped in and restore dielectric properties to acceptable levels.
A further inventive object is to prevent the reentry of water in a PIC telephone cable with the very compound used to purge.
A further inventive object is to devise a water purging compound for telephone PIC cable with acceptably low initial viscosities, but which cures to a soft tacky compound that wets the wire insulation.
A still further inventive object is to purge water in telephone plastic cables with a single pumping over as long a cable stretch as possible.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION In its broadest aspect, this invention contemplates the use of a hydrophobic insulating material that displaces the water in a waterlogged cable as the material is pumped in, and once in place, cures to a high viscosity that precludes its escaping through lightning pinholes or other sheath defects, while at the same time precluding the reentry of water.
In general, several classes of insulating materials that are initially of sufficiently low viscosity to permit pumping into a telephone cable, and which retain the low viscosity for a long enough time to permit extended pumping, are contemplated within the inventive scope. These are: thixotropic compounds; gelling compounds; cross-linking compounds and combination thereof.
A particular embodiment of the invention is a crosslinking material which is basically a solution of a room temperature curing liquid urethane elastomer in a low viscosity oil. The material is pumped into the cable at a very low viscosity and purges the water. Then, after a period dependent on the amount of catalyst used the urethane cross-links, forming a three-dimensional network which gels the oil. The result is a filled cable purged of water and henceforth waterproofed.
In a specific inventive embodiment a viable method has been found for obtaining a sufficiently low viscosity reactive material that achieves all of the inventive objects including the pumpability of the compound and its later setting up into a soft tacky material. A more specific illustration is a solution of a hydroxyl terminated polybutadiene and a castor oil based isocyanate prepolymer in a low viscosity aromatic oil.
Pursuant to a further aspect of the invention, it has been realized that a prepurgant that is highly miscible with both water and with the main purgant serves to remove an even greater percentage of water than does use of the main gelling purgant alone. For example, prepurging with liquid polypropylene glycol which is completely miscible in water and wets polyethylene removes the water; and purging the polypropylene glycol in turn with the last-stated solution routinely restores a very high percentage of bad pairs to acceptable values of insulation resistance.
Pursuant to the invention, initial viscosity of the solution to be introduced in the cable is critical to purging and thereafter filling long cable lengths.
An empirical equation for the viscosity of a solution of two liquids, as for example, an oil and a liquid polymer, is given by:
log 'n (l-A,,) log 17 A log 17,,
where n is the viscosity of the composite solution; and 1 are the viscosities of the oil and the liquid polymer respectively; A, is the percentage of polymer in the solution.
From the above equation, it is evident that the viscosity of the solvent and the polymer must be minimized; but moreover, the percentage of polymer in the composition must also be minimized.
Additionally, the polymer must be chosen for its hydrophobic and low viscosity properties and for its ability to cure within temperature ranges encountered in practice.
The invention, its further object, features, and advantages will be illustrated in the text and examples to follow which describe illustrative embodiments thereof.
DESCRIPTION OF ILLUSTRATIVE EMBODIMENTS A particular and presently preferred class of material pursuant to the present invention is a solvent oil gelled by a cross-linked urethane network formed by reacting, on an essentially 1:1 basis, a material having an unblocked (i.e., available) hydroxyl functionality with a material having an unblocked isocyanate functionality. The invention more specifically contemplates systems within this preferred class which have an initial viscosity less than 100 CPS at all temperatures between 35 F. and 90 F. Still more specifically, systems as above are preferred which exhibit when fully gelled a dielectric constant of not more than 3.0, and preferably not more than 2.5.
A specific application of the present invention is a multipair sheathed plastic-insulated conductor telephone cable filled by a solvent gelled by a cross-linked urethane polymer composition containing to 20 weight percent polymer. The cross-linked urethane polymer is formed from a polyol and an isocyanate prepolymer wherein the polyol is of the polyether, polyester, castor oil or polybutadiene type.
Example 1 The cable water purgant of this example will be described in terms of Part I and Part II because the components are advantageously stored in two such parts until just prior to introduction into the cable where they are mixed preferably in equal proportions of Part l and Part II. All ingredients could as well be combined at such time, however.
Part I consists of a castor oil based isocyanate prepolymer in an aromatic solvent oil, in the amounts 50 grams of isocyanate prepolymer per liter of solution. The prepolymer is formed from toluene diisocyanate and castor oil, and has a hydroxyl functionality of 2.8 and an equivalent weight of approximately 288. Castor oil for present purposes is defined as a mixture of about 70 percent pure glyceryl triricinoleate and 30 percent glyceryl diricinoleate-monooleate or monolinoleate. It is seen that from the standpoint of isocyanate utilization the castor oil is approximately 70 percent triand 30 percent difunctional. The triol structure of castor oil produces cross-linking. The aromatic solvent oil is defined as an oil containing a major proportion of aromatic molecules, that is, molecules having at least one aromatic ring.
Part II consists of I00 gm/litter of solution (in aromatic solvent oil) of hydroxyl terminated polybutadiene having a hydroxyl functionality between 2.2 and 2.4 and a hydroxyl content between 0.75 and 0.90 equivalents per kilogram and 4 gm/liter dibutyl tin dilaurate catalyst.
Example 2 The water purgant of Example 2 is the same as that described in Example 1, except that the castor oil based isocyanate prepolymer is of the diphenylmethane diisocyanate type.
Example 3 The purgant of this example is the same as that of Example l, except that the isocyanate prepolymer is one based on hydroxyl-terminated polybutadiene and toluene diisocyanate. Example 4 The purgant of this example is the same as that of Example 1, except that the isocyanate prepolymer is one based on hydroxyl-terminated polybutadiene and diphenylmethane diisocyanate.
In Example 1, the grams per liter of castor oil based isocyanate prepolymer may be varied within a range of about 25 to 150. Aromatic solvent oil is selected in order to dissolve the polybutadiene and the castor oil prepolymer. The aromatic oil preferably consists of greater than 90 percent by weight of aromatic molecules as above defined, and as measured in accordance with ASTM D-2007.
The mixture consisting of Parts I AND II as defined in the three above examples must exhibit and initial viscosity below 100 centipoise at all temperatures between 35 F. and 90 F. More specifically, the mentioned concentrations may be varied but not beyond that which would exceed the initial viscosity of 100 centipoise.
The concentrations of the mentioned ingredients of Part Il may be reduced by about 20 percent, and the aromatic solvent oil will still be gelled.
A prepurgant selected pursuant to a further aspect of the invention has been found to be highly advantageous. In general, the prepurgant must be miscible with water and with the reclamation compound. It must also wet polyethylene. In Example 1 above, the reclamation compound is aromatic solvent oil; and as a prepurgant for this-applicants use, for example, polypropylene glycol of molecular weight in the range 425-150.
Liquid polyethylene glycol may also be used as a prepurgant. Ketones such as methyl ethyl ketone may be used with necessary safety precautions.
In the foregoing examples, the aromatic oil used is available for example from Kenrigh PetroChemicals under the name Kenplast G.
Its main properties are:
Specific gravity 1.02 Viscosity at 25 C. l l cps Pour Point F. -40 Mixed analine pt F. 60 Flash point F. 290 Hydrocarbon analysis, wt (Clay-Gel Analysis) Polar resins 4 Aromatics 95 Saturates l The polyol used is a hydroxyl terminated liquid polybutadiene obtainable for example under the trade name Poly-bd from the ARCo Chemical Company; Its properties are:
Polybutadiene isomer content Trans 1, 4 60% Cis l, 4 20% Vinyl 1, 2 20% Viscosity at F. poise Moisture wt 0.05 Iodine Number 398 Hydroxyl Content 0.85 equivalents/kgm The isocyanate used is obtainable under the name Vorite 128 from Baker Castor Oil Company. It is a castor oil based prepolymer. It was chosen because of its low vapor pressure (thus low toxicity by inhalation), and its solubility in aromatic oil. Some of its properties are listed below.
Functionality 2.8
Further examples of materials which have the requisite hydroxyl functionality include: natural rubber into which hydroxyl functionalities have been introduced; ethylene-propylene-rubber copolymers or terpolymers into which hydroxyl functionalities have been introduced; and styrene-butadiene rubber (SBR) modified to contain hydroxyl functionalities.
In the foregoing examples, it was surprising that the gelling compound was found to gel even with water mixed in it despite the very small amount of urethane links. The significance of this observation is elucidated in the summary below.
In the development of cable reclamation material which resulted in the present invention, the reconciliation of several conflicting requirements was necessary: l the material must be pumpable into the cable (2) once in place in the cable, it must gel in a reaction that takes place even in the presence of residual water (3) the gel must be physically and chemically stable, i.e., it must not separate or bleed solvent and the gel structure must be stable to hydrolysis.
Requirement (1) can be fulfilled by using a low viscosity solvent or diluent, by minimizing the amount of gelling agent in the solution, and by also minimizing the viscosity of the gelling agent.
Requirement (2) must be considered in two parts. The minimum amount of gelling agent needed to gel the oil was not known a priori to be small enough to concurrently allow fulfillment of requirement (1). The additional requirement that the compound gel in the presence of water (which interferes with the urethane reaction) required the use of additional gelling agent over the minimal amount that would gel a dry (water free) oil. The compound will gel even with water mixed in it, and will encapsulate the water.
Requirement (3) also is in conflict with requirement (1). Since the material must not shrink due to volatilization of the solvent, a very low viscosity solvent (such as toluene) cannot be used. Safety considerations also require a material with low vapor pressure. An oil pursuant to the invention was used to obtain both volatility and viscosity characteristics.
The spirit of the invention is embraced in the scope of the claims to follow.
What is claimed is:
1. In combination: an installed multipair sheathed plastic insulated conductor telephone cable with previously waterlogged interior voids filled by an initially liquid filler comprising a solvent oil gelled by in situ catalytic reaction of a hydroxyl terminated polybutadiene and a polyisocyanate prepolymer, the average functionality of the polyisocyanate prepolymer and the hydroxyl-terminated polybutadiene being sufficient to form a cross-linked urethane network that gells said oil, the solvent oil being the major fraction by weight of the filler, the properties of all said filler constituents being such that the viscosity of said filler when initially liquid is less than cps at all temperatures between 35 F. and 90 F., and further being such that the filler when fully gelled has a dielectric constant of not more than 3.0.
2. The combination pursuant to claim 1 wherein said solvent oil is an aromatic solvent oil containing a major proportion of aromatic molecules; and wherein said polyisocyanate prepolymer is present in amounts of from 25 to 150 grams per liter and said hydroxylterminated polybutadiene is present in amounts of from 80 to grams per liter of said initially liquid filler.
3. The combination pursuant to claim 2, wherein said isocyanate prepolymer is formed from toluene diisocyanate and castor oil and has a hydroxyl functionality of substantially 2.8 and an equivalent weight of approximately 288; and wherein said hydroxyl-terminated polybutadiene has a hydroxyl functionality between 2.2 and 2.4 and a hydroxyl content between 0.75 and 0.90
equivalents per kilogram.

Claims (3)

1. In combination: an installed multipair sheathed plastic insulated conductor telephone cable with previously waterlogged interior voids filled by an initially liquid filler comprising a solvent oil gelled by in situ catalytic reaction of a hydroxyl terminated polybutadiene and a polyisocyanate prepolymer, the average functionality of the polyisocyanate prepolymer and the hydroxyl-terminated polybutadiene being sufficient to form a cross-linked urethane network that gells said oil, the solvent oil being the major fraction by weight of the filler, the properties of all said filler constituents being such that the viscosity of said filler when initially liquid is less than 100 cps at all temperatures between 35* F. and 90* F., and further being such that the filler when fully gelled has a dielectric constant of not more than 3.0.
2. The combination pursuant to claim 1 wherein said solvent oil is an aromatic solvent oil containing a major proportion of aromatic molecules; and wherein said polyisocyanate prepolymer is present in amounts of from 25 to 150 grams per liter and said hydroxyl-terminated polybutadiene is present in amounts of from 80 to 120 grams per liter of said initially liquid filler.
3. The combination pursuant to claim 2, wherein said isocyanate prepolymer is formed from toluene diisocyanate and castor oil and has a hydroxyl functionality of substantially 2.8 and an equivalent weight of approximately 288; and wherein said hydroxyl-terminated polybutadiene has a hydroxyl functionality between 2.2 and 2.4 and a hydroxyl content between 0.75 and 0.90 equivalents per kilogram.
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DE (1) DE2259411C3 (en)
ES (1) ES409992A1 (en)
FR (1) FR2163632B1 (en)
GB (1) GB1406859A (en)
IT (1) IT976046B (en)
NL (1) NL159220B (en)

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US3903013A (en) * 1972-10-19 1975-09-02 Int Standard Electric Corp Water blocking gel composition
US3996413A (en) * 1972-10-19 1976-12-07 International Standard Electric Corporation Sheathed stranded cable completely filled with water blocking composition
US4168258A (en) * 1978-02-15 1979-09-18 N L Industries, Inc. Grease compatible, mineral oil extended polyurethane
US4171998A (en) * 1974-01-11 1979-10-23 N L Industries, Inc. Method for decontaminating and sealing the interior spaces of an insulated electrical device utilizing mineral oil-extended polyurethanes
US4176239A (en) * 1976-09-30 1979-11-27 N L Industries, Inc. Insulated electrical cable containing an agent for decontaminating and sealing the interior space thereof
EP0010576A1 (en) * 1978-10-30 1980-05-14 Siemens Aktiengesellschaft Polyurethane based filler mass for longitudinally sealing electrical or optical telecommunication cables or cable connections and connecting parts and cables provided with this filler mass
USRE30321E (en) * 1974-01-11 1980-07-01 N L Industries, Inc. Mineral oil extended polyurethane system containing a coupling agent for decontaminating and sealing the interior spaces of an insulated electrical device
US4231986A (en) * 1979-04-06 1980-11-04 Nl Industries, Inc. Grease compatible mineral oil extended polyurethane
US4281210A (en) * 1978-02-15 1981-07-28 Nl Industries, Inc. Electrical devices containing a grease compatible, mineral oil extended polyurethane
US4849579A (en) * 1984-06-15 1989-07-18 American Telephone And Telegraph Company, At&T Bell Laboratories Articles comprising a mineral-oil-free encapsulant
US4876303A (en) * 1984-06-15 1989-10-24 American Telephone And Telegraph Company, At&T Bell Laboratories Mineral-oil-free encapsulant composition
WO1991009894A1 (en) * 1989-12-27 1991-07-11 Henkel Kommanditgesellschaft Auf Aktien Use of reaction mixtures containing polyester polyols in the production of solid polyurethane materials by casting
US20030042913A1 (en) * 2000-02-23 2003-03-06 Socrat Method for measuring the electrical characteristics of a telecommunication cable
US9699917B2 (en) 2013-05-31 2017-07-04 Cytec Industries Inc. Formulated resin compositions for flood coating electronic circuit assemblies
US9808765B2 (en) 2014-03-12 2017-11-07 Elantas Pdg, Inc. Polyurethane adhesives for reverse osmosis modules
US9832902B2 (en) 2013-05-31 2017-11-28 Elantas Pdg, Inc. Formulated resin compositions for flood coating electronic circuit assemblies
US10590318B2 (en) 2014-11-26 2020-03-17 Elantas Pdg, Inc. Multi-part polyurethane compositions, articles thereof, and method of making
US10865333B2 (en) 2015-04-09 2020-12-15 Elantas Pdg, Inc. Polyurethane adhesives for reverse osmosis modules

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DE2728642B2 (en) * 1977-06-24 1981-02-05 Siemens Ag, 1000 Berlin Und 8000 Muenchen Longitudinally watertight fiber optic cable
DE2847387C2 (en) * 1978-10-30 1982-05-27 Siemens AG, 1000 Berlin und 8000 München Filling compound for longitudinal sealing of electrical or optical communication cables with plastic-insulated transmission elements
US4329442A (en) * 1981-02-13 1982-05-11 Minnesota Mining And Manufacturing Company High adhesion plugging and encapsulating polyurethane prepared from a polyol, a tri or tetra functional aliphatic polyol and a monofunctional aliphatic alcohol
US4396053A (en) * 1981-04-17 1983-08-02 The Firestone Tire & Rubber Company Pneumatic tire including a curable, storage-stable and solventless single component sealant composition
JPH0319335Y2 (en) * 1985-02-07 1991-04-24
JPS63315018A (en) * 1987-06-18 1988-12-22 三洋電機株式会社 Electric cleaner
JPH03146020A (en) * 1989-11-01 1991-06-21 Sharp Corp Vacuum cleaner

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US3668298A (en) * 1969-12-10 1972-06-06 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Multiconductor communications cable

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GB1199997A (en) * 1968-03-21 1970-07-22 Monsanto Chemicals Improved Electrical Cables
US3668298A (en) * 1969-12-10 1972-06-06 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Multiconductor communications cable

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Cited By (18)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3996413A (en) * 1972-10-19 1976-12-07 International Standard Electric Corporation Sheathed stranded cable completely filled with water blocking composition
US3903013A (en) * 1972-10-19 1975-09-02 Int Standard Electric Corp Water blocking gel composition
USRE30321E (en) * 1974-01-11 1980-07-01 N L Industries, Inc. Mineral oil extended polyurethane system containing a coupling agent for decontaminating and sealing the interior spaces of an insulated electrical device
US4171998A (en) * 1974-01-11 1979-10-23 N L Industries, Inc. Method for decontaminating and sealing the interior spaces of an insulated electrical device utilizing mineral oil-extended polyurethanes
US4176239A (en) * 1976-09-30 1979-11-27 N L Industries, Inc. Insulated electrical cable containing an agent for decontaminating and sealing the interior space thereof
US4281210A (en) * 1978-02-15 1981-07-28 Nl Industries, Inc. Electrical devices containing a grease compatible, mineral oil extended polyurethane
US4168258A (en) * 1978-02-15 1979-09-18 N L Industries, Inc. Grease compatible, mineral oil extended polyurethane
EP0010576A1 (en) * 1978-10-30 1980-05-14 Siemens Aktiengesellschaft Polyurethane based filler mass for longitudinally sealing electrical or optical telecommunication cables or cable connections and connecting parts and cables provided with this filler mass
US4231986A (en) * 1979-04-06 1980-11-04 Nl Industries, Inc. Grease compatible mineral oil extended polyurethane
US4849579A (en) * 1984-06-15 1989-07-18 American Telephone And Telegraph Company, At&T Bell Laboratories Articles comprising a mineral-oil-free encapsulant
US4876303A (en) * 1984-06-15 1989-10-24 American Telephone And Telegraph Company, At&T Bell Laboratories Mineral-oil-free encapsulant composition
WO1991009894A1 (en) * 1989-12-27 1991-07-11 Henkel Kommanditgesellschaft Auf Aktien Use of reaction mixtures containing polyester polyols in the production of solid polyurethane materials by casting
US20030042913A1 (en) * 2000-02-23 2003-03-06 Socrat Method for measuring the electrical characteristics of a telecommunication cable
US9699917B2 (en) 2013-05-31 2017-07-04 Cytec Industries Inc. Formulated resin compositions for flood coating electronic circuit assemblies
US9832902B2 (en) 2013-05-31 2017-11-28 Elantas Pdg, Inc. Formulated resin compositions for flood coating electronic circuit assemblies
US9808765B2 (en) 2014-03-12 2017-11-07 Elantas Pdg, Inc. Polyurethane adhesives for reverse osmosis modules
US10590318B2 (en) 2014-11-26 2020-03-17 Elantas Pdg, Inc. Multi-part polyurethane compositions, articles thereof, and method of making
US10865333B2 (en) 2015-04-09 2020-12-15 Elantas Pdg, Inc. Polyurethane adhesives for reverse osmosis modules

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
NL159220B (en) 1979-01-15
FR2163632B1 (en) 1975-03-28
JPS5619161B2 (en) 1981-05-06
IT976046B (en) 1974-08-20
DE2259411C3 (en) 1975-10-16
DE2259411A1 (en) 1973-06-20
CA997133A (en) 1976-09-21
CH575002A5 (en) 1976-04-30
FR2163632A1 (en) 1973-07-27
JPS4865481A (en) 1973-09-08
DE2259411B2 (en) 1973-11-22
BE792621A (en) 1973-03-30
ES409992A1 (en) 1976-05-01
NL7216794A (en) 1973-06-19
GB1406859A (en) 1975-09-17

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