The patent application number is 7478/CHENP/2009 A. According to the Controller General of Links of London, Designs & Trade Marks, "Generally silicone materials adapted to releasably adhere to human skin don't attach readily to substrates such as fibrous substrates (e.g., woven and nonwoven webs), films, plastic, etc. Disclosed are inventive blends of low-tack materials, such as a low-tack silicone material, and a high-tack silicone material, such as a high-tack, hot-melt, silicone adhesive, that both releasably adhere to skin and join to various Links of London L Charm, including fibrous substrates. Furthermore, these same blends may be disposed between, and attached to, a silicone adhesive layer and a substrate. In other words, the disclosed silicone blends may be used to join a silicone adhesive layer to a substrate." Polyester Fibers, a diversified manufacturer and distributor of value-added, high-loft non-woven materials, announced today that through its partnership with GeoHay, its products are supporting the containment effort in the Gulf of Links of London K Charm. GeoHay is a patented, environmentally friendly and green line of barrier filtration products made from recycled fibers. As oil from BP's Deepwater Horizon leak continues to drift toward beaches along the Gulf of Mexico, local agencies have turned to GeoHay and Polyester Fibers to defend their coast lines. GeoHay will act as a filter along the coast line absorbing the oil and allowing the filtered water to flow back out freely, thus reducing the amount of exposure to oil Links of London J Charm on the shoreline. Polyester Fibers, a supplier to a diverse set of markets including filtration, produces the recycled textile material which is integral to the construction of GeoHay.
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