Title of Invention

"A RAZOR BLADE AND A SHAVING UNIT HAVING SAID BLADE"

Abstract A process for forming a ra/.or hladc consisting of mechanically abrading a substrate (50) to form a wedge-shaped sharpened edge thereon having a tip (52) with a radius of less than twelve hundred angstroms, and forming a layer of diamond or diamond-like carbon material (60) on said sharpened edge of said substrate by positioning said substrate and a solid target member (98) in a chamber (74), and sputtering said solid target member to generate carbon atoms for forming said layer of diamond or diamond-like carbon material (60) on said sharpened edge of said substrate from said carbon atoms while applying an RF bias to said substrate, said layer of diamond or diamond-like carbon material (60) forming an ultimate tip (70) having an aspect ratio of 1:1-3:1, said layer of diamond or diamond-like carbon material having a thickness of at least 1200 A (angstroms) from the sharpened tip of the substrate to a distance of forty micrometers from the sharpened tip, said wedge-shaped sharpened edge being formed with a sharpened tip having an included angle of less than 17° at a distance of 4()um (micrometers) from a tip of said sharpened edge, characterized in that said ultimate tip (70) has a radius of less than 400 A (angstroms) and is bounded by two facets (62, 64) each having a length of at least about 0.1 micrometer and providing an included angle of at least sixty degrees.
Full Text The present invention relates to a razor blade and a shaving unit
This application is a divisional of Indian patent application number 530/DEL/92 (185557) dated June 17, 1992.
A razor blade typically is formed of a
suitable substrate material such as metal or ceramic and an edge is formed with wedge-shape configuration with an ultimate edge or tip that has a radius of less than about 1,000 angstroms. During use, a razor blade is held in the razor at an angle of approximately 25°, and with the wedge-shaped edge in contact with the skin, it is moved over the face so that when the edge encounters a beard hair, it enters and severs it by progressive penetration, aided by a wedging action. It is believed that the cut portion of the hair (which on average is about 100 micrometers in diameter) remains pressed in contact with the blade facets remote from the facial skin surface for a penetration up to only about half the hair diameter. Beyond this, the hair can bend and contract away from the blade to relieve the wedging forces. The resistance to penetration through reaction between hair and blade facets therefore occurs only over about the first sixty micrometers of the blade tip back from the edge and the geometry of the blade tip in this region is regarded as being the most important from the cutting point of view.
It is believed that a reduction in the included angle of the facets would correspondingly.reduce the resistance to continued penetration of the blade tip into the hair. However, when the included angle is reduced too much, the strength of the blade tip is inadequate to withstand the resultant bending forces on the edge during the cutting process and the tip deforms plastically (or fractures in a brittle fashion, dependent on the mechanical properties of the material from which it is made) and so sustains permanent damage, which impairs its

subsequent cutting performance, i.e. the edge becomes "blunt" or "dull". As shaving action is severe and blade edge damage frequently results, and to enhance shavability, the use of one or more layers of supplemental coating material has been proposed for shave facilitation, and/or to increase the hardness, strength and/or corrosion resistance of the shaving edge. A number of such coating materials have been proposed, such as polymeric materials, metals and alloys, as well as other materials including diamond and diamond-like carbon (DLC) material. Diamond and diamond-like carbon (DLC) materials may be characterized as having substantial sp3 carbon bonding; a mass density greater than 1.5 grams/cm3; and a Raman peak at about 1331 cnT1 (diamond) or about 1550 cm"1 (DLC). Each such layer or layers of supplemental material desirably provides characteristics such as improved shavability, improved hardness, edge strength and/or corrosion resistance while not adversely affecting the geometry and cutting effectiveness of the shaving edge.
In accordance with one aspect of the invention, there is provided a razor blade comprising a substrate with a wedge-shaped edge with a sharpened tip and an included facet angle in the range of 10°-17° in the region from forty to one hundred micrometers from the substrate tip, and a layer of strengthening material on the wedge-shaped edge that is preferably at least twice as hard as the underlying substrate, and has a thickness of at least about twelve hundred angstroms from the tip of the substrate to a distance of forty micrometers from the substrate tip, defines a tip of radius of less than about 400 angstroms and that is defined by tip facets with an included angle of at least 60°, and has an aspect ratio in the range of 1:1-3:1. The blade exhibits excellent shaving properties and long shaving life.
In particular embodiments, the razor blade substrate is steel; the wedge-shaped edge is formed by a sequence of mechanical abrading steps; a layer of diamond-like carbon material is formed by sputtering material from a target of high purity graphite concurrently with the application of an RF bias to the steel substrate, the DLC layer has a hardness of at least thirteen gigapascals; and the blade edge has excellent edge strength as evidenced by .an L5 wet wool felt cutter force of less than 0.8 kilogram, and negligible dry wool felt cutter edge damage (less than fifty small damage regions (each such small damage region being of less than twenty micrometer dimension and less than ten micrometer depth) and no damage regions of larger dimension or depth) as microscopically assessed.
In accordance with another aspect of the invention, there is provided a process for forming a razor blade that includes the steps of providing a substrate, forming on an edge of the substrate a wedge-shaped sharpened edge that has an included angle of less than thirty degrees and a tip radius (i.e. the estimated radius of the larger circle that may be positioned within the ultimate tip of the edge when such ultimate tip is viewed under a scanning electron microscope at magnifications of at least 25,000) of less than twelve hundred angstroms/ and depositing a layer of strengthening material on the wedge-shaped edge of the substrate while an RF bias is applied to the substrate to provide an aspect ratio in the range of 1:1 - 3:1, and a radius at the ultimate tip of the strengthening material of less than about five hundred angstroms.
In a particular process, the substrate is mechanically abraded in a sequence of honing steps to form the sharpened edge; layers of an interlayer material and diamond or diamond-like material are successively
deposited by sputtering/ the layer of interlayer material having a thickness of less than about five hundred angstroms, and the diamond or DLC coating having a thickness of at least about twelve hundred angstroms with an ultimate tip that is defined by tip facets with an included angle of at least 60°; the layer of diamond having a Raman peak at about 1331 cm'1 and the layer of diamond-like carbon (DLC) material having a Raman peak at about 1550 cm"1; substantial sp3 carbon bonding; and a mass density greater than 1.5 grams/cm3; and an adherent polymer coating is applied on the diamond or DLC coated cutting edge.
In accordance with another aspect of the invention, there is provided a shaving unit that comprises blade support structure that has external surfaces for engaging user skin ahead and rearwardly of the blade edge or edges and at least one blade member secured to the support structure. The razor blade structure secured to the support structure includes a substrate with a wedge-shaped cutting edge defined by facets that have an included angle of less than seventeen degrees at a distance of forty micrometers from the sharpened tip, and a layer of strengthening material on the wedge-shaped cutting edge that has a thickness of at least twelve hundred angstroms from the sharpened tip of the substrate to a distance of forty micrometers from the sharpened tip, and an ultimate tip defined by facets that have lengths of at least about 0.1 micrometer and define an included angle of at least sixty degrees, a radius at the ultimate tip of the strengthening material of less than 400 angstroms and an aspect ratio in the range of 1:1-3:1.
In a particular shaving unit, the razor blade structure includes two steel substrates, the wedge-shaped edges are disposed parallel to one another between the
skin-engaging surfaces; a layer of interlayer material is between the steel substrate and the edge strengthening layer and is of diamond or DLC material; each layer of interlayer material has a thickness of less than about five hundred angstroms; each diamond or DLC coating has a thickness of at least about twelve hundred angstroms; substantial sp3 carbon bonding; a mass density greater than 1.5 grams/cm3; and a Raman peak at about 1331 cm""1 (diamond) or about 1550 cm"1 (DLC); and an adherent polymer coating is on each layer of diamond or diamond-like carbon material.
The shaving unit may be of the disposable cartridge type adapted for coupling to and uncoupling from a razor handle or may be integral with a handle so that the complete razor is discarded as a unit when the blade or blades become dull. The front and rear skin-engaging surfaces cooperate with the blade edge (or edges) to define the shaving geometry. Particularly preferred shaving units are of the types shown in U.S. Patent 3,876,563 and in U.S. Patent 4,586,255.
Parent application number 530/DEL/92 (185557) relates to a process for forming a razor blade'comprising the steps
of
forming a wedge-shaped sharpened edge on a substrate that has an included angle of less than thirty degrees and a tip with a radius of curvature of less than twelve hundred angstroms;
disposing said substrate and a solid target member in a chamber; and
sputtering said solid target member to generate carbon atoms for forming a layer of diamond or diamond -like carbon material on said sharpened edge of said substrate from said carbon atoms from said solid target member while an RF bias is applied to said substrate; said layer of diamond or diamond-like carbon material having an ultimate tip of said diamond or diamond-like carbon material with a radius of curvature of less than 500 angstroms and an aspect ratio, defined as the ratio of (a) the distance from the ultimate tip to the tip of the wedge-shaped sharpened edge and (b) the width of the diamond or diamond-like carbon material at the tip of the wedge-shaped sharpened edge, in the range of 1: 1-3: 1
The present invention relates to a process for forming a razor blade consisting of mechanically abrading a substrate to form a wedge-shaped sharpened edge thereon having a tip with a radius of less than twelve hundred angstroms, and forming a layer of diamond or diamond-like carbon material on said sharpened edge of said substrate by positioning said substrate and a solid target member in a chamber, and sputtering said solid target member to generate carbon atoms for forming said layer of diamond or diamond-like carbon material on said sharpened edge of said substrate from said carbon atoms while applying an RF bias to said substrate, said layer of diamond or
diamond-like carbon material forming an ultimate tip having an aspect ratio of 1:1-3:1, said layer of diamond or diamond-like carbon material having a thickness of at least 1200 A (angstroms) from the sharpened tip of the substrate to a distance of forty micrometers from the sharpened tip, said wedge-shaped sharpened edge being formed with a sharpened tip having an included angle of less than 17° at a distance of 40um (micrometers) from a tip of said sharpened edge, characterized in that said ultimate tip has a radius of less than 400 A (angstroms) and is bounded by two facets each having a length of at least about 0.1 micrometer and providing an included angle of at least sixty degrees.
The present invention also relates to a shaving unit having a support structure providing spaced-apart, skin-engaging surfaces, one or more razor blade structures mounted to said support structure and being disposed between said skin-engaging surfaces, each said one or more razor blade structure having a razor blade as defined above.
Other features and advantages of the invention will be seen as the following description of particular embodiments progresses, in conjunction with the drawings", in which:
Fig. 1 is a perspective view of a shaving unit in accordance with the invention;
Fig. 2 is a perspective view of another shaving unit in accordance with- the invention;
Fig. 3 is a diagrammatic view illustrating one example of razor blade edge geometry in accordance with the invention;
Fig. 4 is a diagrammatic view of apparatus for the practice of the invention; and
Figs. 5 and 6 are Raman spectra of DLG material deposited with the apparatus of Fig. 4.
Description of Particular Embodiments With reference to Fig. i, shaving unit 10 includes structure for attachment to a razor handle, and a platform member 12 molded of high-impact polystyrene that includes structure defining forward, transversely-extending skin engaging surface 14. Mounted on platform member 12 are leading blade 16 having sharpened edge 18 and following blade 20 having sharpened edge 22. Cap member 24 of molded high-impact polystyrene has structure defining skin-engaging surface 26 that is disposed rearwardly of blade edge 22, and affixed to cap member 24 is shaving aid composite 28.
The shaving unit 30 shown in Fig. 2 is of the type shown in Jacobson U.S. Patent 4,586,255 and includes molded body 32 with front portion 34 and rear portion 36. Resiliently secured in body 32 are guard member 38, leading blade unit 40 and trailing blade unit 42. Each blade unit 40, 42 includes a blade member 44 that has a sharpened edge 46. A shaving aid composite 48 is frictionally secured in a recess in rear portion 36. A diagrammatic view of the edge region of the blades 16, 20 and 44 is shown in Fig. 3. The blade includes stainless steel body portion 50 with a wedge-shaped sharpened edge formed in a sequence of edge forming honing operations that forms a tip portion 52 that has a radius typically less than 500 angstroms with facets 54 and 56 that diverge at an angle of about 13°. Deposited on tip 52 and facets 54, 56 is interlayer 58 of molybdenum that has a thickness of about 300 angstroms. Deposited on molybdenum interlayer 58 is outer layer 60 of diamond-like carbon (DLC) that has a thickness of about 2,000 angstroms, with facets 62, 64 that have lengths of about one-quarter micrometer each and define an included angle- of about 80°, facets 62, 64 merging with main facet surfaces 66, 68 that are disposed at an
included angle of about 13° and an aspect ratio (the ratio of the distance (a) from DLC tip 70 to stainless steel tip 52 and the width (b) of the DLC coating 60 at tip 52) of about 1.7. Deposited on layer 60 is an adherent telomer layer 72 that has a substantial as deposited thickness but is reduced to monolayer thickness during initial shaving.
Apparatus for processing blades of the type shown in Fig. 3 is diagrammatically .illustrated in Fig. 4. That apparatus includes a DC planar magnetron sputtering system manufactured by Vac Tec Systems of Boulder, Colorado that has stainless steel chamber 74 with wall structure 80, door 82 and base structure 84 in which is formed port 86 coupled to a suitable vacuum system (not shown). Mounted in chamber 74 is carousel support 88 with upstanding support member 90 on which is disposed a stack of razor blades 92 with their sharpened edges 94 in alignment and facing outwardly from support 90. Also disposed in chamber 74 are support structure 76 for target member 96 of molybdenum (99.99% pure) and support structure 78 for target member 98 of graphite (99.999% pure). Targets 96 and 98 are vertically disposed plates, each about twelve centimeters wide and about thirty-seven centimeters long. Support structures 76, 78 and 88 are electrically isolated from chamber 74 and electrical connections are provided to connect blade stack 92 to RF power supply 100 through switch 102 and to DC power supply 104 through switch 106; and targets 96 and 98 are connected through switches 108, 110, respectively, to DC magnetron power supply 112. Shutter structures 114 and 116 are disposed adjacent targets 96, 98, respectively, for movement between an open position and a position obscuring its adjacent target.
Carousel 88 supports the blade stack 92 with the blade edges 94 spaced about seven centimeters from the
opposed target plate 96, 98 and is rotatable about a vertical axis between a first position in which blade stack 92 is in opposed alignment with molybdenum target 96 (Fig. 4) and a second position in which blade stack 92 is in opposed alignment with graphite target 98.
In a particular processing sequence, a stack of blades 92 (thirty centimeters high) is secured on support 90 (together with three polished stainless steel blade bodies disposed parallel to the target); chamber 74 is evacuated; the targets 96, 98 are cleaned by DC sputtering for five minutes; switch 102 is then closed and the blades 92 are RF cleaned in an argon environment for three minutes at a pressure of ten millitorr, an argon flow of 200 seem and a power of 1.5 kilowatts; the argon flow is then reduced to 150 seem at a pressure of 4.5 millitorr in chamber 74; switch 106 is closed to apply a DC bias of -50 volts on blades 92; switch 108 is closed to sputter target 96 at one kilowatt power; and shutter 114 in front of molybdenum target 96 is opened; for twenty-eight seconds to deposit a molybdenum layer 58 of about 300 angstroms thickness on the blade edges 94. Shutter 114 is then closed, switches 106 and 108 are opened, and carousel 88 is rotated 90° to juxtapose blade stack 92 with graphite target 98. Pressure in chamber 74 is reduced to two millitorr with an argon flow of 150 seem; switch 110 is closed to sputter graphite target 98 at 500 watts; switch 102 is closed to apply a 13.56 MHz RF bias of one thousand watts (-440 volts DC self bias voltage) on blades 92, and concurrently shutter 116 is opened for twenty minutes to deposit a DLC layer 60 of about two thousand angstroms thickness on molybdenum layer 58. The DLC coating 60 had a radius at tip 70 of about 250 Angstroms that is defined by facets 62, 64 that have an included angle of about 80°, an aspect ratio of about 1.7:1, and a hardness (as measured on the planar
surface of an adjacent stainless steel blade body with a Nanoindenter x instrument to a depth of five hundred angstroms) of about seventeen gigapascals (the stainless steel blade body having a hardness of about eight gigapascals). As illustrated in Fig. 5, Raman spectroscopy of the coating material 60 deposited in this process shows a broad Raman peak 120 at about 1400-1500 cm"1 wave number, a spectrum typical of DLC structure.
A coating 72 of polytetrafluoroethylene telomer is then applied to the DLC-coated edges of the blades. The process involves heating the blades in a neutral atmosphere of argon and providing on the cutting edges of the blades an adherent and friction-reducing polymer coating of solid PTFE. Coatings 58 and 60 were firmly adherent to the blade body 50 and provided low wet wool felt cutter force (the lowest of the first five cuts with wet wool felt (L5) being about 0.45 kilogram), and withstood repeated applications of wet wool felt cutter forces (the lowest cutter force of the 496-500 cuts being about 0.65 kilogram), indicating that the DLC coating 60 is substantially unaffected by exposure to the severe conditions of this felt cutter test and remains firmly adhered to the blade body 50. Edge damage and delamination after ten cuts with dry wool felt as determined by microscopic assessment was substantially less than commercial chrome-platinum coated blades, there being less than four small edge damage regions (each such small damage region being of less than twenty micrometer dimension and less than ten micrometer depth) and no damage regions of larger dimension or depth. Resulting blade elements 44 were assembled in cartridge units 30 of the type shown in Fig. 2 and shaved with excellent shaving results.
In another particular processing sequence, a stack of blades 92 (thirty centimeters high) is secured on
support 90 (together with three polished stainless steel blade bodies disposed parallel to the target); chamber 74 is evacuated; the targets 96, 98 are cleaned by DC sputtering for five minutes; switch 102 is then closed and the blades 92 are RF cleaned in an argon environment for two and a quarter minutes at a pressure of ten millitorr, an argon flow of 200 seem and a power of 1.5 kilowatts; the argon flow is then reduced to 150 seem at a pressure of six millitorr in chamber 74; switch 106 is closed to apply a DC bias of -50 volts on blades 92; shutter 114 in front of molybdenum target 96 is opened; and switch 108 is closed to sputter target 96 at one kilowatt power for thirty-two seconds to deposit a molybdenum layer 58 of about 300 angstroms thickness on the blade edges 94. Shutter 114 is then closed, switches 106 and 108 are opened, and carousel 88 is rotated 90° to juxtapose blade stack 92 with graphite target 98. Pressure in chamber 74 is reduced to two millitorr with an argon flow of 150 seem; switch 110 is closed to sputter graphite target 98 at 500 watts; switch 102 is closed to apply a 13.56 MHz RF bias of 320 watts (-220 volts DC self bias voltage) on blades 92, and concurrently shutter 116 is opened for seven minutes to deposit a DLC layer 60 of about 900 angstroms thickness on molybdenum layer 58. The DLC coating 60 had a tip radius of about 300 Angstroms, an aspect ratio of 1.6:1, and a hardness (as measured on the planar surface of an adjacent stainless steel blade body as measured with a Nanoindenter X instrument) of about thirteen gigapascals.
A coating 72 of polytetrafluoroethylene telomer is then applied to the DLC-coated edges of the blades in accordance with the teaching of U.S. Patent No. 3,518,110. The process involved heating the -blades in a neutral atmosphere of argon and providing on the cutting

edges of the blades an adherent and friction-reducing polymer coating of solid PTFE. Coatings 58 and 60 were firmly adherent to the blade body 50, provided low wet wool felt cutter force (the lowest of the first five cuts with wet wool felt (L5) being about 0.6 kilogram), and withstood repeated applications of wet wool felt cutter forces (the lowest cutter force of the 496-500 cuts being about 0.76 kilogram), indicating that the DLC coating 60 is substantially unaffected by exposure to the severe conditions of this felt cutter test and remains firmly adhered to the blade body 50. Edge damage and delamination after ten cuts with dry wool felt as determined by microscopic assessment was substantially less than commercial chrome-platinum coated blades, there being less than four small edge damage regions (each such small damage region being of less than twenty micrometer dimension and less than ten micrometer depth) and no damage regions of larger dimension or depth. Resulting blade elements 44 were assembled in cartridge units 30 of the type shown in Fig. 2 and shaved with excellent shaving results.
In another processing sequence, chamber 74 is evacuated; the targets 96, 98 are cleaned by DC sputtering for five minutes; switch 102 is then closed and the blades 92 are RF cleaned in an argon environment for two and a quarter minutes at a pressure of ten millitorr, an argon flow of 200 seem and a power of 1.5 kilowatts; the argon flow is then reduced to 150 seem at a pressure of six millitorr in chamber 74; switch 106 is closed to apply a DC bias of -50 volts on blades 92; shutter 114 in front of molybdenum target 96 is opened; and switch 108 is closed to sputter target 96 at one kilowatt power for thirty-two seconds to deposit a molybdenum layer 58 of about 300 angstroms thickness on the blade edges 94. Shutter 114 is then closed, switches
support 90 (together with three polished stainless steel blade bodies disposed parallel to the target); chamber 74 is evacuated; the targets 96, 98 are cleaned by DC sputtering for five minutes; switch 102 is then closed and the blades 92 are RF cleaned in an argon environment for two and a quarter minutes at a pressure of ten millitorr, an argon flow of 200 seem and a power of 1.5 kilowatts; the argon flow is then reduced to 150 seem at a pressure of six millitorr in chamber 74; switch 106 is closed to apply a DC bias of -50 volts on blades 92; shutter 114 in front of molybdenum target 96 is opened; and switch 108 is closed to sputter target 96 at one kilowatt power for thirty-two seconds to deposit a molybdenum layer 58 of about 300 angstroms thickness on the blade edges 94. Shutter 114 is then closed, switches 106 and 108 are opened, and carousel 88 is rotated 90° to juxtapose blade stack 92 with graphite target 98. Pressure in chamber 74 is reduced to two millitorr with an argon flow of 150 seem; switch 110 is closed to sputter graphite target 98 at 500 watts; switch 102 is closed to apply a 13.56 MHz RF bias of 320 watts (-220 volts DC self bias voltage) on blades 92, and concurrently shutter 116 is opened for seven minutes to deposit a DLC layer 60 of about 900 angstroms thickness on molybdenum layer 58. The DLC coating 60 had a tip radius of about 300 Angstroms, an aspect ratio of 1.6:1, and a hardness (as measured on the planar surface of an adjacent stainless steel blade body as measured with a Nanoindenter X instrument) of about thirteen gigapascals.
A coating 72 of polytetrafluoroethylene telomer is then applied to the DLC-coated edges of the blades in accordance with the teaching of U.S. Patent No. 3,518,110. The process involved heating the -blades in a neutral atmosphere of argon and providing on the cutting
106 and 108 are opened, and carousel 88 is rotated 90° to juxtapose blade stack 92 with graphite target 98. Pressure in chamber 74 is reduced to two millitorr with an argon flow of 150 seem; switch 110 is closed to sputter graphite target 98 at 500 watts; switch 102 is closed to apply a 13.56 MHz RF bias of 320 watts (-220 volts DC self bias voltage) on blades 92, and concurrently shutter 116 is opened for five minutes to deposit a DLC layer 60 of about 600 angstroms thickness on molybdenum layer 58. The DLC coating 60 had a tip radius of about 400 Angstroms, an aspect ratio of 1.7:1, and a hardness (as measured on the planar surface of an adjacent stainless steel blade body as measured with a Nanoindenter X instrument) of about thirteen gigapascals. As illustrated in Fig. 6, Raman spectroscopy of the coating material 60 deposited in this process shows a broad Raman peak 122 at about 1543 cm"1 wave number, a spectrum typical of DLC structure.
A telomer coating 72 was applied to the blade edges with a nitrogen atmosphere. The resulting coatings 58 and 60 were firmly adherent to the blade body 50, provided low wet wool felt cutter force (the lowest of the first five cuts with wet wool felt (L5) being about 0.6 kilogram), and withstood repeated applications of wet wool felt cutter forces (the lowest cutter force of the 496-500 cuts being about 0.76 kilogram), indicating that the DLC coating 60 is substantially unaffected by exposure to the severe conditions of this felt cutter test and remains firmly adhered to the blade body 50. Edge damage and delamination after ten cuts with dry wool felt as determined by microscopic assessment was substantially less than commercial chrome-platinum coated blades, there being less than five small edge damage regions (each such small damage region being of less than twenty micrometer dimension and less than ten micrometer
depth) and no damage regions of larger dimension or depth. Resulting blade elements 44 were assembled in cartridge units 30 of the type shown in Fig. 2 and shaved with excellent shaving results.
While particular embodiments of the invention has been shown and described, various modifications will be apparent to those skilled in the art, and therefore, it is not intended that the invention be limited to the disclosed embodiments, or to details thereof, and departures may be made therefrom within the spirit and scope of the invention.



WE CLAIM :
1. A razor blade having a substrate (50) with a wedge-shaped sharpened edge formed thereon, said wedge-shaped sharpened edge provided with a sharpened tip (52) and a layer of diamond or diamond-like carbon material (60) formed on said sharpened edge of said substrate characterized in that said layer of diamond or diamond-like carbon material (60) has a thickness of at least twelve hundred angstroms from the sharpened tip (52) to a distance of forty micrometers from the sharpened tip (52), said layer of diamond or diamond-like carbon material (60) has an ultimate tip (70) having an aspect ratio ranging from about 1:1-3:1 said sharpened tip (52) having an included angle of less than seventeen degrees at a distance of forty micrometers from the sharpened tip (52), said sharpened tip (52) has an L5 wet wool felt cutter force of less than 0.8 kilogram, dry wool felt (ten cuts) edge damage of less than fifty small edge damage regions and no damage regions of larger dimension or depth, and a radius at the ultimate tip of less than 4*00 A (angstroms), said ultimate tip (70) being defined by facets (62, 64) having a length of at least about 0.1 micrometer and an included angle of at least 60°.
2. A razor blade as claimed in claim 1, wherein an interlayer of
molybdenum (58) is deposited on said wedge-shaped sharpened
edge, said interlayer of molybdenum deposited to a thickness of
300 A (angstroms) or less, said layer of diamond or diamond-
like carbon material (60) being deposited on said molybdenum
interlayer (58).
3. A razor blade as claimed in claim 1 or claim 6 wherein a layer of
adherent polymer (72) is on said layer of diamond or diamond-
like carbon material.

4. A shaving unit having a support structure (12, 32) providing spaced-apart, skin-engaging surfaces (14, 26, 34, 36), one or more razor blade structures (40, 42) mounted to said support structure and being disposed between said skin-engaging surfaces, each said one or more razor blade structure (40, 42) having a razor blade (16, 20, 44) as claimed in any one of claims 1 to 3.

Documents:

36-del-1999-abstract.pdf

36-del-1999-claims.pdf

36-DEL-1999-Correspodence Others-(29-06-2011)..pdf

36-DEL-1999-Correspodence Others-(29-06-2011).pdf

36-del-1999-correspondence-others.pdf

36-del-1999-correspondence-po.pdf

36-del-1999-description (complete).pdf

36-del-1999-drawings.pdf

36-del-1999-form-1.pdf

36-del-1999-form-13.pdf

36-del-1999-form-19.pdf

36-del-1999-form-2.pdf

36-DEL-1999-Form-27-(29-06-2011).pdf

36-del-1999-form-4.pdf

36-del-1999-form-60.pdf

36-del-1999-gpa.pdf

36-DEL-1999-Petition-137-(29-06-2011).pdf

abstract.jpg


Patent Number 215842
Indian Patent Application Number 36/DEL/1999
PG Journal Number 12/2008
Publication Date 21-Mar-2008
Grant Date 04-Mar-2008
Date of Filing 08-Jan-1999
Name of Patentee THE GILLETE COMPANY
Applicant Address PRUDENTIAL TOWER BUILDING, BOSTON, STATE OF MASSACHUSETTS, UNITED STATE OF AMERICA.
Inventors:
# Inventor's Name Inventor's Address
1 STEVEN SYNG-HI HAHN 7, TRINITY COURT, WELLESLEY HILLS, MASSACHUSETTS, USA.
2 CHONG-PING PETER CHOU 8 CAROL LANE, LEXINGTON, MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A.
3 LAMAR EUGENE BROOKS 57, TEMPLE ROAD, WELLESLEY HILLS, MASSACHUSETTS,U.S.A.
4 C. ROBERT PARENT 69 HAWTHORNE STREET, WESTWOOD. MASSACHUSETTS, USA
5 JOHN MADEIRA 5, AMANDA ROAD, ASSONET, MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A.
PCT International Classification Number B26B 21/00
PCT International Application Number N/A
PCT International Filing date
PCT Conventions:
# PCT Application Number Date of Convention Priority Country
1 NA