This patent application incorporates by reference the disclosures of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/705,843 filed 15 Feb. 2010 and published as US 2011/020126 A1 on 18 Aug. 2011; U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/052,592 filed 21 Mar. 2011 and published as US 2011/0229542 A1 on 22 Sep. 2011; and U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/112,252 filed 20 May 2011 and published as US 2011/0236448 A1 on 29 Sep. 2011.
25% cotton, 75% polyester fabrics in several variations optimize antimicrobial property activity retention. These fabrics are treated with aqueous solutions including glyxol (as a bonding agent for an active natural bicidal), eugenol (as an active natural bicidal), and in most cases polyvinyl alcohol (as a second bonding agent for the active natural bicidal). Typical amounts of these reagents have been from 10 to 100 grams of glyxol, 1-10 grams of polyvinyl alcohol and 1 to 15 grams of eungenol, all per liter of water.
It has now been determined that of the two bonding agents initially used, namely polyvinyl alcohol and glyxol, the polyvinyl alcohol has little or no measurable effect on retention of bioactivity by the fabric. The remaining bonding component, namely glyxol, has the desirable characteristic that it can be heated and still result in a biocidally active fabric being created.
Some of the water component of the fabric treatment solution can be replaced with other liquids, namely either 10% ethanol or 10% ethyl acetate (both measured as parts by weight of the solution), and still retain a 4-7 log reduction in growth of S. aureus (MRSA), B. cereus (model for anthrax) and M smegmatis (model for TB).
Three fabrics, namely fabric treated with a 10:10:100 ratio of polyvinyl alcohol, glyxol and water by volume, fabric treated with the same ratio of polyvinyl alcohol, glyxol and water by volume with the glyxol being heated, and fabric treated with a 10:100 ratio of glyxol to water and having no polyvinyl alcohol, were also assayed for launderability, namely whether the fabrics retained their antimicrobial properties after being laundered.
All three fabrics were laundered between three (3) and six (6) times without loss of antimicrobial viability.
50% cotton 50% polyester fabrics were also treated using with a 10:10:100 ratio of polyvinyl alcohol, glyxol and water by volume, with some variations of the bonding components, namely polyvinyl alcohol and glyxol, including deletion (separately) of each of these components and heating of the polyvinyl alcohol prior to addition to the treatment mixture.
Optimization of the amount of biocide, namely eugenol, that is added to the solution applied to the fabric revealed that one gram of eugenol per liter of solution may be used without loss of antibacterial activity.
Based on feedback from the above bactericidal evaluations, one aspect of this treats the 25:75% cotton:polyester fabrics, while another aspect optimizes the treatment. The treatment to impart antimicrobial properties can be applied to the fabric with common textile wet processing equipment, whereas earlier treatments (as disclosed in the patent applications noted above that have been incorporated by reference) while effective utilized a 100:1 liquid mix to fabric ratio. (As used herein a “100:1 liquid mix to fabric ratio” means one (1) gram of fabric to ninety-nine (99) milliliters of treatment solution.)
In one of its embodiments the invention decreases that to a 10:1 ratio, with no loss of bicidal efficacy. Additionally, it is within the scope of the invention to remove one component, namely polyvinyl alcohol, from the treatment, with minimal adverse effect on the bactericidal properties of the fabric. This is beneficial, as the polyvinyl alcohol has the tendency to alter the hand and stiffness of the treated fabric. In a further aspect of the invention, the use of a single bonding agent, namely glyxol, may be reduced by 25%, namely 25 grams, (from an earlier 100% or 100 grams), with the treated fabric still retaining bicidal activity that persists over at least 25 washes using either a cold wash and cold dry cycle, or a hot wash and hot dry cycle.
Further, the inventive treatment has been found to kill nine separate and common hospital-acquired human pathogens namely S. aureus (MRSA), B. cereus (model for anthrax), M. smegmatis (model for TB), vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus faecalis (VRE), Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Streptococcus pneumoniae, S. agalacticae, S. pyogenes and S. epidermidis.
The method of the invention has been proven effective in the treatment of bioactively-coated white coats made of a 65%:35% polyester-cotton blend fabric. The treatment is retained by the coats through at least 10 washes in hot water with high heat drying. Cost of the antibacterial treatment in accordance with the invention is 50% lower than costs cited in the literature, including those treatments disclosed in the three published United States patent applications incorporated by reference above, due to the optimization of the bonding agent(s) and bioactive agent(s).
Antimicrobial textiles comprising cotton-polyester blends of 25-75% synthetic-cotton blend have been successful. In creating the successful 75:25 antibacterial fabric, several methods may be employed in accordance with the invention including altering the concentrations of polyvinyl alcohol and replacing the water component of the treatment with either ethanol or ethyl acetate. The invention also embraces heating the polyvinyl alcohol component prior to application to the fabric. Fabrics were also treated and tested without glyxol. As can be seen from
S. aureus
B. cereus
M. smegmatis
The effective concentration of the eugenol biocide was tested at concentrations ranging from 1 gram of eugenol per liter of treatment solution up to 10 grams of eugenol per liter of treatment solution using the remaining bonding agent and a 50%:50% cotton-polyester fabric. As can be seen from
The bonding agent was tested at concentrations varying from 5% (10:0:5) to 100% (10:0:100 fabric) using the 25:75% cotton-polyester fabric and a 10 grams per liter of solution of biocide. As can be seen from
Durability of 25:75% cotton-polyester textiles post laundering lead to use of the previously noted use of a solution with the 10:10:100 ratio of polyvinyl alcohol, glyxol and water by volume but without the apparently unnecessary bonding component (as previously explained). Although lower concentrations of the bonding agent may be utilized, in one preferred embodiment the invention retains the maximum concentration but decreases the biocide to a 10:1 dilution. As can be seen from Table 2, the created fabrics were laundered 10 times in hot water and high heat dried without loss of antibacterial killing efficacy against S. aureus (MRSA), B. cereus or M smegmatis.
M.
S.
B. cer.
smeg.
P. aer.
S. epi.
S. agal.
pneum.
S. pyo.
In accordance with the invention the number of washed may be increased to 25, without loss of activity against the normal growth (shown as control (0) point on graph) of S. aureus (MRSA), as can be seen in
Visually the
Evaluation of narrow spectrum antimicrobial efficiency (AATCC-100 for quantitative analysis using MRSA, B. cereus and M. smegmatis) using six replicates, achieved a reduction in microbial growth of ≧99.99%.
Unwashed samples of three of the treated effective fabrics as identified above have each been tested on 6 separate occasions in duplicate against S. aureus (MRSA), B. cereus and M. smegmatis. Variations in the assay are small, with all effective fabrics exhibiting a range of 4-7 log inhibition of bacterial growth after a 24 hour culture, i.e. achieving bactericidal ability. Data are shown in Table 3 below as percentage as well as log reduction in bacterial growth.
S. aureus
B. cereus
M. smegmatis
Evaluation of the spectrum of antimicrobial efficiency (AATCC-100 for quantitative analysis using MRSA, B. cereus, M. smegmatis, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus faecalis (VRE), Streptococcus epidermidis, S. agalacticae, S. pneumoniae, S. pyogenes and Clostridium difficile) showed that all nine bacterial species investigated displayed a 4-7 log reduction in growth after 24 hours of exposure to the biocide-treated fabric, as per the data presented in Table 4.
S. aureus
B. cereus
M. smegmatis
Referring to
The invention further embraces treatment and use of 50% cotton-50% polyester fabrics. The scope of the invention includes varying two bonding components of the mixture and, as can be seen similarly to the 25% cotton 75% polyester fabric, the polyvinyl alcohol component is not always necessary for effective binding of the eugenol biocide.
Visually, these appear as shown in
Durability data has been obtained using treatment 1 and on 50:50 fabric created with treatment 1 and without component 1. As can be seen in Tables 5 and 6, these fabrics can be laundered in cold water and low temperature air dried up to 6 times and up to 10 times in hot water with high heat drying, respectively, without loss of activity against S. aureus (MRSA), B, cereus and M. smegmatis.
S. aureus
B. cereus
M. smegmatis
S. aureus
B. cereus
M. smegmatis
Lab coats containing 65% polyester were treated. Several tests have been performed as to the antibacterial stability of the coats. The first was to examine whether abrasion affected the durability of the biocide binding to the fabric. Abrasion was performed after the coat material was treated using the now standard method i.e. with only one bonding agent and using the standard ASTM-D966 abrasion treatment with 2,500, 5,000, 7,500 or 10,000 cycles. Additional fabric was also treated and not abraded. Thereafter all material samples were washed up to 10 times using a warm wash and medium heat dry, according to manufacturer's instructions. The ability of the coats to remain antibacterial has been validated in full using the S. aureus MRSA strain, to date and in part (namely with a single wash) with B. cereus and M. smegmatis. The antimicrobial property producing treatment, in the absence of abrasion, is stable to up to 10 washes, but higher numbers of abrasion cycles (>5,000 cycles) are deleterious to the fabric, changing it from bactericidal to bacteriostatic (4 logs to 3 logs in terms of growth of the bacterium). The data from this are shown in Table 7.
S. aureus
B. cereus
M. smegmatis
This patent application claims the benefit of the priority under 35 USC 119 and 35 USC 120 of provisional U.S. patent application Ser. No. 61/792,261 filed 15 Mar. 2013 and entitled “Antimicrobial Textiles and Methods for Production of the Same” and the priority of provisional U.S. patent application Ser. No. 61/789,849 filed 15 Mar. 2013 and entitled “Textiles Having Antimicrobial Properties and Methods for Producing the Same”. This patent application is a 35 USC 120 continuation-in-part of pending U.S. utility patent application Ser. No. 12/705,843 entitled “Methods and Apparatus for Combating Sick Building Syndrome”, filed 15 Feb. 2010, and a 35 USC 120 continuation-in-part of pending U.S. utility patent application Ser. No. 13/052,592, entitled “Methods for Imparting Anti-Microbial, Microbiocidal Properties to Fabrics, Yarns and Filaments, and Fabrics, Yarns and Filaments Embodying Such Properties”, filed 21 Mar. 2011, and a 35 USC 120 continuation-in-part of pending U.S. utility patent application Ser. No. 13/112,252, entitled “Methods and Apparatus for Passive Reduction of Nosocomial Infections in Clinical Settings, and Fabrics, Yarns, and Filaments for use in Connection Therewith”, filed 20 May 2011.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61792261 | Mar 2013 | US |