Chase Corporation offers several styles of fiberglass-based tapes that can effectively serve as flame barriers in various types of cable applications. One of the primary physical characteristics of these tapes is their flexibility, which allows for tightly wrapping a cable without the tape cracking or inhibiting the flexibility of the cable. The other, of course, is their resistance to burn, as measured by the tapes’ Limiting Oxygen Index (LOI).
Simply put, LOI is the minimum concentration of oxygen that will support combustion of a polymer. It is measured by passing a mixture of oxygen and nitrogen over a burning specimen and reducing the oxygen level until a critical level is reached. Plastics and cable materials are tested for their LOI values at both ambient temperature and elevated temperature to understand their oxygen requirements under actual fire conditions. Reference ASTM 2863-19 and ISO 4589-2.
Materials with LOIs above 21% are considered to be fire retardant materials, as they are unlikely to support combustion in air. As a reference point, PET film has an LOI of only 18%, which means it burns very easily in air, while polyimide film has an LOI of 37%.
Chase Cable Materials offers three types of flame-retardant tapes, all with superior LOI performance:
For additional information or samples of Chase products please contact your Chase sales representative.