Embodiments herein relate generally to electrostatically-driven solvent ejection or particle formation. In particular, apparatus, methods, and reduced conductivity fluid compositions are disclosed herein for electrostatically-driven (ESD) solvent ejection (e.g., spraying or atomization) or particle formation (e.g., formation of particles or fibers, including nanoparticles or nanofibers).
“Electrospinning” and “electrospraying” conventionally refer to the production of, respectively, fibers or droplets, which may be “spun” as fibers or “sprayed” as droplets by applying high electrostatic fields to one or more fluid-filled spraying or spinning tips (i.e., emitters or spinnerets). Under suitable conditions and with suitable fluids, so-called nanofibers or nanodroplets can be formed from a Taylor cone that forms at each tip (although the terms are also applied to production of larger droplets or fibers). The high electrostatic field typically (at least when using a conventional, relatively conductive fluid) produces the Taylor cone at each tip opening from which fibers or droplets are emitted, the cone having a characteristic full angle of about 98.6°. The sprayed droplets or spun fibers are typically collected on a target substrate typically positioned several tens of centimeters away; solvent evaporation from the droplets or fibers during transit to the target typically plays a significant role in the formation of the droplets or fibers by conventional electrospinning and electrospraying. A high voltage supply provides an electrostatic potential difference (and hence the electrostatic field) between the spinning tip (usually at high voltage, either positive or negative) and the target substrate (usually grounded). A number of reviews of electrospinning have been published, including (i) Huang et al, “A review on polymer nanofibers by electrospinning and their applications in nanocomposites,” Composites Science and Technology, Vol. 63, pp. 2223-2253 (2003), (ii) Li et al, “Electrospinning of nanofibers: reinventing the wheel?”, Advanced Materials, Vol. 16, pp. 1151-1170 (2004), (iii) Subbiath et al, “Electrospinning of nanofibers,” Journal of Applied Polymer Science, Vol. 96, pp. 557-569 (2005), and (iv) Bailey, Electrostatic Spraying of Liquids (John Wiley & Sons, New York, 1988). Details of conventional electrospinning materials and methods can be found in the preceding references and various other works cited therein, and need not be repeated here.
Conventional fluids for electrospinning (melts, solutions, colloids, suspensions, or mixtures, including many listed in the preceding references) typically possess significant fluid conductivity (e.g., ionic conductivity in a polar solvent, or a conducting polymer). Fluids conventionally deemed suitable for electrospinning have conductivity typically between 100 μS/cm and about 1 S/cm (Filatov et al; Electrospinning of Microand Nanofibers; Begell House, Inc; New York; 2007; p 6). It has been observed that electrospinning of nanometer-scale fibers using conventional fluids typically requires conductivity of about 1 mS/cm or more; lower conductivity typically yields micron-scale fibers. In addition, conventional methods of electrospinning typically include a syringe pump or other driver/controller of the flow of fluid to the spinning tip or emitter, and a conduction path between one pole of the high voltage supply (typically the high voltage pole) and the fluid to be spun. Such arrangements are shown, for example, in U.S. Pat. Pub. No. 2005/0224998 (hereafter, the '998 publication), which is incorporated by reference as if fully set forth herein. In FIG. 1 of the '998 publication is shown an electrospinning arrangement in which high voltage is applied directly to a conductive emitter (e.g., a spinning tip or nozzle), thereby establishing a conduction path between the high voltage supply and the fluid being spun. In FIGS. 2, 5, 6A, and 6B of the '998 publication are shown various electrospinning arrangements in which an electrode is placed within a chamber containing the fluid to be spun, thereby establishing a conduction path between one pole of the high voltage supply and the fluid. The chamber communicates with a plurality of spinning tips. In any of those arrangements, significant current (typically greater than 0.3 μA per spinning tip, often greater than 1 μA/tip) flows along with the spun polymer material. Conventional electrospinning fluids are deposited on metal target substrates so that current carried by the deposited material can flow out of the substrate (either to a common ground or back to the other pole of the high voltage supply), thereby “completing the circuit” and avoiding charge buildup on the target substrate. Even so, flow rates for electrospinning of conventional fluids are typically limited to a few μL/min/nozzle, particularly if nanofibers are desired (increasing the flow rate tends to increase the average diameter of fibers spun from conventional electrospinning fluids). Electrospinning onto nonconductive or insulating substrates has proven problematic due to charge buildup on the insulating substrate that eventually suppresses the electrospinning process. Application of electric fields greater than a few kV/cm to conventional fluids or to metal spinning tips often leads to arcing between the tip and the target substrate, typically precluding useful electrospinning.
The embodiments shown in the Figures are exemplary, and should not be construed as limiting the scope of the present disclosure or appended claims.
Conventional electrospinning of polymer-containing fibers or nanofibers, or electrospraying of small droplets, can be employed to produce a variety of useful materials. However, scaling up (beyond the laboratory or prototype level) an electrospinning process that employs conventional, relatively conductive fluid compositions has proven to be problematic. To achieve production-type quantities, multiple electrospinning tips are often employed, usually in an arrayed arrangement. However, the conductive fluids used and the significant current (often greater than 1 μA per tip) carried by fibers emerging from each tip lead to impractically large overall current and to undesirable electrostatic interactions among the electrospinning tips and fibers; these limit the number and density of electrospinning tips that can be successfully employed. Similar difficulties are typically encountered when electrospinning from a porous membrane emitter. Electrospinning onto non-conductive target surfaces is also problematic, as noted above.
Apparatus, methods, and fluid compositions are disclosed herein for electrostatically-driven (ESD) solvent ejection (e.g., spraying or atomization) or particle formation (e.g., formation of particles or fibers, including nanoparticles or nanofibers) by physical mechanism(s) distinct from conventional, evaporative electrospraying or electrospinning of conductive fluids from a single Taylor cone formed at an emitter orifice. The methods disclosed or claimed herein can be readily scaled up to production-scale quantities of material produced. The fluid compositions are emitted from electrically-insulating emitters (e.g., nozzles, capillaries, or tips) toward a target surface that is nonconductive or electrically isolated, and which need not be connected to a ground or voltage supply or positioned near any electrical ground (although the presence of an electrical ground plane behind or beneath an insulating target can help to direct particles toward the target once they form). Voltage can be, but need not be, applied directly to the fluid. Some of the fluid compositions disclosed herein exhibit substantially reduced conductivity (less than about 1 mS/cm, preferably less than about 100 μS/cm; some compositions less than about 50 μS/cm, less than about 30 μS/cm, or less than about 20 μS/cm) relative to conventional electrospinning fluid compositions (greater than about 100 μS/cm; typically greater than about 1 mS/cm for producing polymer nanofibers).
Some of the disclosed compositions comprise a first material having a dielectric constant greater than about 25 mixed into a liquid solvent having a dielectric constant less than about 15; in some disclosed examples the dielectric constant of the liquid solvent is less than about 10, or less than about 5. Some of the disclosed compositions include a salt, a surfactant (ionic or nonionic), or a dissolved ionic liquid. The nonconductive emitters, nonconductive or isolated target surface, and/or the reduced conductivity of some of the fluid compositions disclosed herein can at least partly mitigate the undesirable electrostatic interactions described above, can enable flow rates greater than about 100 μL/min/emitter, can enable use of multiple emitters spaced within, e.g., one centimeter or less of one another, can enable deposition of particles or fibers onto an electrically insulating or electrically isolated collection surface, or can enable formation and deposition of particles in the absence of a counter-electrode near the collection surface that is grounded or connected to the voltage supply driving the deposition.
Those reduced conductivity fluid compositions, and use of electrically insulating emitters and collection surface, can also enable use of higher voltages and/or smaller emitter-to-target distances (e.g., from just a few centimeters down to about 5 millimeters), which typically would result in arcing in a conventional electrospinning arrangement using conventional fluids. Emitter-to-target distances of about 5-20 cm are typically required in conventional electrospinning arrangements: close enough to enable application of sufficiently large electric fields without applying voltage high enough to cause arcing, but far enough to enable adequate evaporation of solvent from the spun fibers before they reach the target. Seemingly paradoxically, the compositions disclosed herein can also be employed in an arrangement wherein the target or collection surface is more than about 30 cm, or even 40 or 50 cm or more, from the emitter. Emission of the fluid composition into such a large, unimpeded volume appears to enhance the flow rate of the fluid and production rate of spun fibers (described further below).
Under conditions disclosed herein, and using fluid formulations disclosed herein, conventional Taylor cone formation, and conventional electrospinning or electrospraying from that Taylor cone, appear to be suppressed in favor of a different, non-evaporative mechanism for solvent ejection and particle formation from the fluid composition after it exits the emitter (fibers and nanofibers being considered elongated particles). Therefore, the term “electrostatically-driven (ESD) solvent ejection and particle formation,” or simply “ESD solvent ejection,” shall be employed to describe the observed phenomena disclosed herein and shall be considered distinct from conventional electrospinning or electrospraying.
Exemplary apparatus are illustrated schematically in the drawings, each comprising a nozzle 102 (the emitter) with an orifice 104 at its distal end, into which is introduced a fluid composition (described further below). Although nozzles 102 are shown and described in the exemplary embodiments, any suitable emitter can be equivalently employed. The nozzle 102 is supported by an insulating stand 106 or other suitable structure that electrically isolates the nozzle from its surroundings, and the nozzle 102 itself comprises one or more electrically insulating materials such as glass, plastic, polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), nylon, or other suitable insulating material that is also chemically compatible with the fluid composition. The nozzle 102 can act as a reservoir for the fluid composition (e.g., as in
A wide range of fluid compositions can be employed. A first group of suitable fluid compositions include compositions comprising a first material having a dielectric constant greater than about 25 mixed into a liquid solvent having a dielectric constant less than about 15. Many examples of suitable fluid compositions are described below that exhibit at least that degree of dielectric contrast. Most of the disclosed examples of high dielectric contrast fluid compositions also include a polymer dissolved, emulsified, or otherwise dispersed in the liquid solvent. In some exemplary fluid compositions of the first group, the first material has a dielectric constant greater than about 30, or the liquid solvent has a dielectric constant less than about 10 or less than about 5; other exemplary fluid compositions having still greater dielectric contrast are disclosed and can be employed. One or more additional materials can be included in the composition, each having a dielectric constant between those of the low-dielectric liquid solvent and the high-dielectric material, forming a so-called “dielectric ladder.” A second group of exemplary fluid compositions comprise a salt, a surfactant (ionic or nonionic), or an ionic liquid dissolved or mixed into a liquid solvent, along with a dissolved, emulsified, or dispersed polymer. There can be some overlap between those first two groups of suitable fluid compositions, e.g., a salt, surfactant, or ionic liquid can act as a high dielectric material in a high contrast fluid composition, often as the “top rung” in a dielectric ladder. A third group of examples of suitable fluid compositions can comprise a polymer dissolved, emulsified, or dispersed in a liquid solvent, wherein the liquid solvent has a dielectric constant greater than about 8 and the primary dielectric contrast is between the solvent and the polymer, which has a dielectric constant less than about 4. In the third group of exemplary fluid compositions, there appears to be a positive correlation between solvent dielectric constant and maximum viscosity that permits ESD solvent ejection. Specific examples from all three groups of fluid composition types are described below. Exemplary compositions in all three groups exhibit conductivity less than about 1 mS/cm, preferably less than about 100 μS/cm. Conductivity less than about 50 μS/cm, less than about 30 μS/cm, or less than about 20 μS/cm can be advantageously employed.
A power supply 110 applies a voltage to the fluid composition, in the examples of
As illustrated schematically in
The jet behavior depicted schematically in
If the fluid composition includes a polymer, ESD ejection of the solvent causes formation of polymer particles or fibers 348 and separation of those particles or fibers 348 from the ejected solvent. Fibers can be considered as elongated particles, and the terms “particle” and “fiber” may be used somewhat interchangeably in the subsequent discussion to encompass both fibers as well as non-elongated particles. The methods and fluid compositions disclosed herein for ESD solvent ejection and particle formation can be advantageously employed for forming polymer fibers (including polymer nanofibers, e.g., fibers having an average diameter less than about 500 nm) in larger quantities at faster rates than conventional electrospinning. In conventional electrospinning (
In contrast, in ESD solvent ejection (
In the example of
In the arrangement of
In another exemplary arrangement for ESD solvent ejection, illustrated schematically in
The exemplary arrangement illustrated schematically in
At such substantially larger nozzle-surface separations (e.g., up to 30 cm, 40 cm, 50 cm, or more), the behavior of the arrangement of
It has been observed that emitting the fluid jets 342 and fibers 348 into a larger, unimpeded volume of space appears to enhance the flow rate of the fluid composition through the emitter. A collection surface 130 positioned 30 cm, 40 cm, or 50 cm from the nozzle 102, or even farther, appears to result in increased flow rates of the fluid composition through the nozzle orifice 104 (in the arrangements of
The exemplary arrangements of
Any suitable external electrode 116 can be employed.
Sufficiently large voltage (positive or negative) must be applied to the fluid composition via the electrode 114 or 116 to form polymer fibers by ESD solvent ejection from the emitted fluid composition. The precise voltage threshold can vary somewhat depending on the particular fluid composition being employed and the arrangement of the emitter 102 and collecting surface 130.
In the arrangements of
For the arrangements of
In the arrangement of
Another characteristic that distinguishes the methods and fluid compositions disclosed herein from conventional electrospinning with conventional fluids becomes apparent when the applied voltage is turned off. Conventional Taylor cone electrospinning ceases almost immediately upon turning off the voltage supply. In contrast, when using a low conductivity, high dielectric contrast fluid in any of the arrangements of
The continuation of fluid jets exiting the nozzle orifice 104 after the applied voltage is turned off is indicative of at least one characteristic relaxation time of the system, and that characteristic relaxation time can be exploited to enhance the ESD solvent ejection process and formation of polymer fibers (and to reduce any parallel Taylor cone electrospinning by the duty cycle of the voltage cycling). By cycling the applied voltage on and off at a frequency on the order of the reciprocal of the relevant relaxation time, enhancement of non-evaporative, ESD solvent ejection can be achieved. Rather than attempting to measure or characterize the relevant relaxation time, it can be more expedient to vary the frequency at which the applied voltage is cycled and note which frequency (or range of frequencies) appear to enhance the desired ESD solvent ejection process. For non-evaporative, ESD solvent ejection, suitable frequencies for enhancement have been observed between about 0.1 Hz and about 100 Hz.
Polymer fibers formed by the methods disclosed herein using fluid compositions having high dielectric contrast and low conductivity can be advantageously employed for a wide variety of purposes, particularly when the fibers formed are nanofibers, i.e., have diameters less than about 1 μm, or typically less than about 500 nm. Such purposes can include but are not limited to filtration, protective gear, biomedical applications, or materials engineering. For example, a mesh of polymer nanofibers can form at least a portion of a filtration medium that transmits only particles smaller than about 1 μm. In another example, a matrix of polymer nanofibers can be employed to retain small particles (e.g., less than 0.1 μm) of other materials (e.g., super absorbent polymers, zeolites, activated charcoal, or carbon black) to yield a material having various desired properties. A full discussion of the many uses of the fibers thus formed is beyond the scope of this disclosure. A wide array of polymers, liquid solvents, low-dielectric liquid solvents (e.g., dielectric constant less than about 15), high-dielectric materials (e.g., dielectric constant greater than about 25), salts, surfactants, and/or ionic liquids can be employed, depending on the desired properties of the nanofibers produced, and many examples are given below. For a given polymer to be deposited on a given collection surface, some optimization of parameters typically will be required to produce suitable or optimal fibers or nanofibers. Those parameters can include: identity, dielectric constant, and weight percent of the low-dielectric solvent; presence, identity, and weight percent of the high-dielectric material, salt, surfactant, or ionic liquid; presence, identity, and weight percent of any additional high dielectric material(s); conductivity and viscosity of the fluid composition; nature of the emitter (e.g., nozzle(s), channel(s), or permeable membrane), emitter orifice diameter; emitter hydrodynamic resistance; applied voltage; presence of a grounded surface and its distance from the emitter orifice; distance between the emitter orifice and the collection surface. The principles and examples disclosed herein will enable those skilled in the art to identify and optimize many other combinations of polymer, low-dielectric solvent, and high-dielectric material that are not explicitly disclosed herein that yield desirable polymer fibers or nanofibers; those other combinations, and the fiber or nanofibers thus produced, shall fall within the scope of the present disclosure or the appended claims.
Any combination of chemically compatible and sufficiently soluble polymers, high-dielectric materials, salts, surfactants, or ionic liquids can be employed with a given solvent to produce a fluid composition that exhibits ESD solvent ejection. Table 1 is a list of examples of fluid compositions that exhibit ESD solvent ejection; those that include a polymer have been employed according to the methods disclosed herein to produce polymer fibers or nanofibers by ESD solvent ejection. These are exemplary only, are intended to illustrate general principles guiding selection of fluid components, and is not intended to limit the scope of the present disclosure or appended claims.
In some exemplary compositions, ESD solvent ejection and formation of polymer fibers or nanofibers has been demonstrated with fluid compositions based on polystyrene dissolved in d-limonene, in combination with a variety of high-dielectric materials and/or other materials. Other aromatic polymers and/or other terpene, terpenoid, or aromatic solvents have been observed to exhibit similar behavior. D-limonene is attractive for use as the liquid solvent because it is “green” (e.g., it is available from natural, renewable sources, lacks significant toxicity, and does not raise significant environmental or disposal issues). In one group of exemplary fluid compositions, polystyrene typically comprises between about 10% and about 25% of the composition by weight, preferably between about 15% and about 20%. D-limonene typically comprises between about 30% and about 70% of the composition by weight, preferably between about 35% and about 45%. A variety of high-dielectric materials can be employed with polystyrene/d-limonene that result in ESD ejection of the d-limonene solvent and production of polystyrene fibers or nanofibers. Propylene carbonate (PC), dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO), and dimethyl formamide (DMF) have been employed as a high-dielectric material, alone or in combination with methyl ethyl ketone (MEK) or acetone used as an intermediate dielectric material. Intermediate dielectric materials can often be employed to increase the solubility of the high-dielectric material in the polystyrene/limonene (or other polymer/low-dielectric) solution, forming a so-called “dielectric ladder.” In another exemplary fluid composition, water is employed as the high dielectric material in a polystyrene/d-limonene solution, with DeMULS DLN-532CE surfactant (DeForest Enterprises, Inc) acting as an emulsifier to enable mixing of the water into the d-limonene solution. Polyvinyl alcohol, a soap, a detergent, or other emulsifying agent can be employed.
Ionic liquids (e.g., trihexyltetradecylphosphonium bis(2,4,4-trimethylpentyl) phosphinate aka [P66614][R2PO2], trihexyltetradecylphosphonium decanoate aka [P66614][Dec], or 1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium hexafluorophosphate aka [bmim][PF6]) have been employed as high-dielectric components, with various combinations of PC, DMSO, MEK, and acetone employed as intermediate steps in the dielectric ladder. Various inorganic salts (e.g., LiCl, AgNO3, CuCl2, or FeCl3) have been employed, in combination with DMF, MEK, or N-methyl-2-pyrrolidone (NMP), as disclosed in App No. 12/728,070, already incorporated by reference. It has been observed that as the dielectric ladder is ascended, progressively lower material concentrations are required for the fluid to exhibit ESD solvent ejection. Note for example the relative concentrations of the various materials in the exemplary compositions listed in Table 1. Solid particles suspended in the fluid can act as the high-dielectric material in a high dielectric contrast composition, with or without intermediate “dielectric ladder” components. Barium titanate (BaTiO3) and titanium oxide (TiO2) have been employed and can give rise to ESD solvent ejection, alone in a polystyrene/d-limonene solution, or in combination with other fluid components mentioned here or listed in Table 1.
Low conductivity polymer solutions (less than about 100 μS/cm), without substantial material components in addition to the polymer and solvent, have also been demonstrated to exhibit ESD solvent ejection and polymer fiber formation. Examples include solutions of polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP) and polyvinylacetate (PVAc) dissolved in ethanol (EtOH), methanol (MeOH), or dichloromethane (DCM) and observed to exhibit ESD solvent ejection. For high dielectric solvents, such solutions can be regarded as exhibiting high dielectric contrast, between polymer (typically having a dielectric constant less than about 5) and solvent. This is the case for the MeOH and EtOH formulations. However, the DCM formulations do not exhibit a similar degree of dielectric contrast with the polymers, but nevertheless exhibit ESD solvent ejection under certain conditions. For PVP and PVAc solutions in DCM, ESD solvent ejection is appears to be inhibited by the viscosity of the polymer solution. For example, for PVP in DCM, a 25% PVP solution (viscosity about 67 cps) was observed not to exhibit ESD solvent ejection, while a 15% PVP solution in DCM (viscosity about 20 cps) did exhibit ESD solvent ejection. A similar trend was noted for solutions of PVAc in DCM. The apparent quenching of ESD solvent ejection by high viscosity is more readily apparent in solvents having a dielectric constant less than about 10 than in higher dielectric solvents. Other polymer/solvent combinations can be employed, but a minimum threshold dielectric constant of the solvent between about 6 and about 8 seems to be required for the solvent to exhibit ESD solvent ejection.
In addition to forming polymer fibers or nanofibers, additional particles can be deposited on the collection surface during collection of the polymer fibers, thereby retaining the additional particles in a matrix formed by the collected polymer fibers. Any suitable deposition method can be employed for depositing the additional particles that is compatible with formation of the polymer fibers. In one example, if air flow (e.g., from a vacuum belt) is employed to propel the polymer fibers to the collection surface as they are formed, that air flow can also entrain the additional particles and propel them to the collection surface as well. Whatever means are employed, simultaneous collection of the polymer fibers and deposition of the additional particles results in the additional particles being incorporated into a matrix formed by the collected fibers. If polymer nanofibers are formed, they can readily enable retention and immobilizations of additional particles that are as small as about 0.1 μm. The additional particles can comprise any suitable, desired material. In one example, super absorbent polymer particles (e.g., sodium polyacrylate) can be incorporated into a polymer nanofibers matrix in an absorbent product such as a diaper. In another example, zeolite or activated charcoal particles can be incorporated into a polymer nanofiber matrix in a filtration medium, resulting in both particulate and vapor interception capabilities. Additional examples abound.
In addition to producing polymer particles or fibers, methods disclosed herein can be employed for atomizing a low-dielectric solvent using a fluid composition comprising the low-dielectric liquid solvent and a high-dielectric constant additive, but no polymer. As illustrated schematically in
Turning now to
Generally one or more of the ESD solvent ejection techniques as described herein may be used to co-form fibers (particularly nanofibers) and absorbent particles (particularly super-absorbent polymer particles, such as sodium polyacrylate), which are then deposited on a base layer. At least some of the fibers serve as a matrix for supporting the absorbent material, and the fibers and absorbent material generally cooperate so as to form an absorbent “core” of the absorbent product.
For example, as shown in
In some embodiments, to form the absorbent product 200 a layer of hydrophobic material 208 is deposited on at least a portion of the base layer 202, such as by using an ESD solvent ejection apparatus as described above. For example, as shown, hydrophobic material 208 may be deposited on the central region B of the base layer 202. Generally, the layer of hydrophobic material 208 is operable to serve as a waterproof backsheet for the absorbent product 200 to secure waste products therein, as will be described below.
In some embodiments, the hydrophobic material 208 could include a plurality of super-hydrophobic polystyrene nanofibers. In some embodiments, the hydrophobic material 208 could include a plurality of poly(vinyldifloride) (PVDF) nanofibers.
In some embodiments, once the layer of hydrophobic material 208 has been deposited onto the base layer 202, another layer of fibers co-formed with an absorbent material are deposited thereon. In particular, a plurality of fibers 210 (e.g. nanofibers) may be co-formed with a plurality of super absorbent polymer (SAP) particles 212 and deposited onto the base layer 202 and the layer of hydrophobic material 208 (as shown in
In particular, pre-formed SAP particles 212 may be introduced as the fibers 210 are being formed (or have been formed) by an ESD ejection apparatus before the fibers 210 are deposited on the base layer 202. For example, SAP particles 212 may be dispersed as a cloud of particles adjacent the nozzle of an ESD polymer ejection apparatus. The SAP particles 212 will then tend to become entrained in the fibers 210 and deposited onto the base layer 202.
In some embodiments, co-forming may be enhanced by inducing a negative charge on the SAP particles 212 (or using SAP particles 212 that are naturally negatively charged), while the nozzles of the ESD solvent ejection apparatus are positively charged. This electrostatic attraction tends to promote the SAP particles 212 being integrated with the fibers 210 during nanofiber formation. In some cases, the same effect may be accomplished by using opposite charges (i.e., using positively charged SAP particles 212 and negatively charged nozzles).
In some other embodiments a first ESD apparatus may be configured to form the fibers 210 while an adjacent second ESD apparatus is operable to form the SAP particles 212. The fibers 210 and SAP particles 212 may then mix before being deposited on the base layer 202.
Generally, the fibers 210 serve as a matrix for the SAP particles 212, allowing the SAP particles 212 to be suspended and dispersed therein (as shown, for example, in
In some embodiments the fibers 210 are hydrophilic nanofibers, which may have an average diameter less than about 500 nm. In other embodiments, smaller or larger fibers 210 may be used. In some embodiments, the fibers 210 may include polyvinyl alcohol fibers, and which may have an average fiber diameter of around 150 nm. Generally, as the diameter of fibers 210 decreases, a smaller mass of fibers 210 may be used to secure the same or a similar mass of SAP particles 212.
Once the hydrophobic layer 208, fibers 210 and SAP particles 212 have been deposited onto the base layer 202, the three regions A, B, C of the base layer 202 can then be folded to give the absorbent product 200 its desired shape. For example, as shown in
In some embodiments, this folding may be done automatically by a folding-machine, which may be downstream from the ESD solvent ejection apparatus.
As shown in
The base layer 202 also includes bottom portion 202b generally disposed away from the person skin. As shown, the bottom portion 202b is adjacent and underneath the layer of hydrophobic material 208. The bottom portion 202b and hydrophobic material 208 generally cooperate so as to serve as a waterproof barrier that inhibits waste products from leaking out of the absorbent product 200.
As shown the base layer 202 also includes a middle portion 202c. In some embodiments, the middle portion 202c may serve as an acquisition-distribution layer, which may assist with the acquisition and distribution of liquid waste products through the “core” of the absorbent product 200, which may increase comfort and provide healthier and drier skin to the wearer of the absorbent product 200.
In some embodiments, the absorbent product 200 may be secured together using a tab 214 (which may be a portion of the base layer 202 provided between the first edge 204 of the base layer 202 and an edge 216 of the region where the fibers 210 and SAP particles 212 are deposited). In some embodiments, the tab 214 may be secured to a lower portion of the absorbent product 200, for example using an adhesive, hot melt techniques, and so on. The tab 214 may help to retain the fibers 210 and SAP particles within the absorbent product 200 when assembled (as shown in
Generally, the embodiments as described herein may provide an absorbent product 200 with a highly absorbent “core”, wherein very little mass is devoted to the matrix used for supporting the absorbent material. For example, prior absorbent products often have at least 8% (by weight) of material used to support absorbent material, and in some case even 20-30% by weight. By contrast, the embodiments as described herein may provide an effective absorbent product 200 wherein the weight of the fibers 210 is approximately 1% (or less) of the weight of the SAP particles 212. In particular, this may be due to the fibers 210 being very small nanofibers that are operable to immobilize the SAP particles 212 therein.
In some embodiments the SAP particles 212 may have a basis weight of approximately 300 grams per square meter in the absorbent product 200, while the fibers 210 have a corresponding weight of approximately 3 grams per square meter (e.g. around 1% of the weight of the SAP particles 212).
Furthermore, since the fibers 210 and SAP particles 212 are co-formed, the SAP particles 212 may be homogenously distributed through the fiber 210 matrix.
In some embodiments, the absorbent product 200 can be formed on a single machine that is operable to receive the base layer 202, deposit the hydrophobic layer 208 thereon, then co-form and deposit fibers 210 (e.g. nanofibers) and SAP particles 212, then fold the regions A, B, C, of the base layer 202 to form the finished absorbent product 200 (as shown in
In some other embodiments, one or more of the ESD solvent ejection apparatus and/or techniques as described herein may be used for co-forming of various other materials for various other purposes. For example, various adsorbent materials (e.g. carbon, zeolites, silicates, aluminates) and absorbents (e.g. super absorbent polymers) may be co-formed as particles or fibers produced by an ESD solvent ejection apparatus.
For example, in some embodiments one or more ESD solvent ejection apparatus may be used to co-form one or more fibers and/or particles with other particles including carbon (including activated carbon), zeolites, adsorbents, absorbents, silicates, aluminas, minerals, ceramics, glass, beads, and virtually any other known particulates or particles.
It is intended that equivalents of the disclosed exemplary embodiments and methods shall fall within the scope of the present disclosure or appended claims. It is intended that the disclosed exemplary embodiments and methods, and equivalents thereof, may be modified while remaining within the scope of the present disclosure or appended claims.
In the foregoing Detailed Description, various features may be grouped together in several exemplary embodiments for the purpose of streamlining the disclosure. This method of disclosure is not to be interpreted as reflecting an intention that any claimed embodiment requires more features than are expressly recited in the corresponding claim. Rather, as the appended claims reflect, inventive subject matter may lie in less than all features of a single disclosed exemplary embodiment. Thus, the appended claims are hereby incorporated into the Detailed Description, with each claim standing on its own as a separate disclosed embodiment. However, the present disclosure shall also be construed as implicitly disclosing any embodiment having any suitable combination of disclosed or claimed features (i.e., combinations of features that are not incompatible or mutually exclusive) that appear in the present disclosure or the appended claims, including those combinations of features that are not explicitly disclosed herein. It should be further noted that the scope of the appended claims do not necessarily encompass the whole of the subject matter disclosed herein.
For purposes of the present disclosure and appended claims, the conjunction “or” is to be construed inclusively (e.g., “a dog or a cat” would be interpreted as “a dog, or a cat, or both”; e.g., “a dog, a cat, or a mouse” would be interpreted as “a dog, or a cat, or a mouse, or any two, or all three”), unless: (i) it is explicitly stated otherwise, e.g., by use of “either . . . or”, “only one of . . . ”, or similar language; or (ii) two or more of the listed alternatives are mutually exclusive within the particular context, in which case “or” would encompass only those combinations involving non-mutually-exclusive alternatives. For purposes of the present disclosure or appended claims, the words “comprising,” “including,” “having,” and variants thereof shall be construed as open ended terminology, with the same meaning as if the phrase “at least” were appended after each instance thereof.
In the appended claims, if the provisions of 35 USC §112 ¶ 6 are desired to be invoked in an apparatus claim, then the word “means” will appear in that apparatus claim. If those provisions are desired to be invoked in a method claim, the words “a step for” will appear in that method claim. Conversely, if the words “means” or “a step for” do not appear in a claim, then the provisions of 35 USC §112 ¶6 are not intended to be invoked for that claim.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 61/413,769 filed Nov. 15, 2010 and entitled “APPARATUS, METHODS AND FLUID COMPOSITIONS FOR ELECTROSTATICALLY-DRIVEN SOLVENT EJECTION OR PARTICLE FORMATION, AND ABSORBANT PRODUCTS MADE USING SAME”, the entire contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference herein for all purposes. The subject matter disclosed herein may be related to subject matter disclosed in: (i) U.S. non-provisional application Ser. No. 11/634,012 entitled “Electrospraying/electrospinning array utilizing a replacement array of individual tip flow restriction” filed Dec. 5, 2006 (now U.S. Pat. No. 7,629,030); (ii) U.S. provisional App. No. 61/161,498 entitled “Electrospinning Cationic Polymers and Method” filed Mar. 19, 2009; (iii) U.S. provisional App. No. 61/256,873 entitled “Electrospinning with reduced current or using fluid of reduced conductivity” filed Oct. 30, 2009; (iv) U.S. non-provisional application Ser. No. 12/728,070 entitled “Fluid formulations for electric-field-driven spinning of fibers” filed Mar. 19, 2010; and (v) U.S. provisional App. No. 61/349,832 entitled “Apparatus, Methods and Fluid Compositions for Electrostatically-Driven Solvent Ejection or Particle Formation” filed May 29, 2010. Each of said provisional and non-provisional applications are hereby incorporated by reference as if fully set forth herein.
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61413769 | Nov 2010 | US |