The present invention relates to the use of specific oligo(β-amino ester)s as dye-transfer-inhibiting active ingredients when washing textiles and to detergents which contain such active ingredients.
In addition to the ingredients such as surfactants and builder materials that are essential to the washing process, detergents generally contain further constituents which can be referred to collectively by the term, washing auxiliaries, and comprise the very different active ingredient groups such as foam regulators, graying inhibitors, bleaching agents, bleach activators, and enzymes. Such auxiliaries also include substances which are intended to prevent colored textiles from causing a changed color impression after washing. This change in color impression of washed, i.e., cleaner, textiles can be based upon the fact that dye proportions are removed from the textile by the washing process (“fading”), but it is also possible that dyes separated from textiles of other colors can be deposited on the textile (“discoloration”). The discoloration aspect can also play a role in uncolored items of laundry if they are washed together with colored items of laundry. In order to avoid these undesired side effects of removing dirt from textiles by treatment with usually surfactant-containing aqueous systems, detergents contain—particularly if they are provided as “colored detergents” for washing colored textiles—active ingredients which prevent the separation of dyes from the textile or which are at least intended to prevent separated dyes located in the washing liquor from being deposited on textiles. Many of the polymers commonly used have such a high affinity for dyes that they increasingly draw them from the dyed fiber, which results in increased color loss.
Known dye transfer inhibitors are, for example, polymers of vinylpyrrolidone, vinylimidazole, vinylpyridine N-oxide, and copolymers thereof. The dye-transfer-inhibiting properties of specific triazine derivatives are known from international patent applications WO 2008/110469 A1 and WO 2007/019981 A1.
Surprisingly, it has been found that aza-Michael addition products of amines to diesters of monoethylenically unsaturated monocarboxylic acids in the washing process have a positive effect on the color transfer and prevent coloration of uncolored textiles.
D. M. Lynn, R. Langer, J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2000, 122, 10761-10768; D. M. Lynn, D. G. Anderson, D. Putnam, R. Langer, J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2001, 123, 8155-8156; J. Shen, S.-W. Huang, M. Liu, R.-X. Zhou, Polymer 48 (2007) 675-681; V. V. Filipovic, B. D. Nedeljcovic, M. Vuomananivic, S. Lj. Tomic, Polymer Testing 68 (2018) 270-278; and specification U.S. Pat. No. 9,458,299 B1 disclose the corresponding aza-Michael addition.
The invention relates to the use of oligo(β-amino ester)s, obtainable by aza-Michael addition of primary monoamines or primary or secondary diamines to diesters from monoethylenically unsaturated monocarboxylic acids and diols, in order to prevent the transfer of textile dyes from colored textiles to uncolored textiles or textiles of other colors when washed together, in particular, in surfactant-containing aqueous solutions.
As primary monoamines, in particular those of the general formula R—NH2 are selected, as primary diamines, in particular those of the formula H2N—CH2—B—CH2—NH2 are selected, and as secondary diamines, in particular those of the formula
are selected, in which R represents —CR1R2R3 or —(CR1R2—CR1R2—O)n—R3 and B represents an aromatic or cycloaliphatic linker or (CR1R2)m—, —(CR1R2—O—CR1R2)n—, or —(CR1R2—NR4—CR1R2)o—, in which, independently of one another, R1, R2, and R3 represent H, a methyl functional group, or a C2-C12 alkyl functional group which can be functionalized with hydroxyl, sulfanyl, carboxyl, sulfonyl, carboxylate, sulfonate, ether, imine, ester, amide, or amine groups and/or can have heterocyclic substituents, R4 represents R3 or R, m represents a number from 0 to 10, n represents a number from 0 to 40, and o represents a number from 0 to 30, wherein m, n, and o can also have non-integer values when amine mixtures are used, and wherein R3 is not H if it is bonded to an N-atom. Preferred aromatic linkers are selected from diphenylmethane, xylylene, and mixtures thereof. Preferred cycloaliphatic linkers are selected from cyclohexane, 4,4′-methylene-bis-cyclohexane, and mixtures thereof. R1 is preferably H or an alkyl functional group having 1 to 3 C atoms, including in particular the methyl functional group, and/or R2 is preferably H or an alkyl functional group having 1 to 3 C atoms, including in particular the methyl functional group, and/or R3 is preferably a C3-C10 alkyl functional group which is furthermore preferably functionalized or heterocyclically substituted with one of the groups mentioned. Preferred heterocyclic substituents are imidazole and pyrrolidone and mixtures thereof. Preferably, m is a number in the range of 1 to 4 and/or n is a number in the range of 2 to 4 and/or o is a number in the range of 2 to 4.
Preferred monoethylenically unsaturated monocarboxylic acids are acrylic acid and methacrylic acid and mixtures thereof.
Preferred diols are selected from those of the general formula HO—CHR′-A-CHR′—OH, in which A represents an aromatic or cycloaliphatic linker or —(CR1R2)m— or —((CR5R6)p—O—(CR5R6)q)n—, in which, independently of one another, R1 and R2 represent H or a C1-C12 alkyl functional group, R5 and R6 represent H or a C1-C3 alkyl functional group, R′ represents H or a methyl functional group, m represents a number from 0 to 10, n represents a number from 0 to 30, and independently of one another p and q represent numbers from 1 to 3, wherein R1 or R2 and/or R5 or R6 can also be an OH functional group if the C atom carrying it is bonded to no further O-atom and wherein m, n, p, and q can also have non-integer values when diol mixtures are used. Preferred aromatic linkers are selected from 4,4′-isopropylidenediphenol, dihydroxybenzene, and mixtures thereof. Preferred cycloaliphatic linkers are selected from cyclohexanediol, cyclohex-1,4-ylene dimethanol, and mixtures thereof. R1 and/or R2 and/or R5 and/or R6 is preferably H or an alkyl functional group having 1 to 3 C atoms, including in particular the methyl functional group. R′ is preferably H. Preferably, m is a number in the range of 1 to 4, and/or n is a number in the range of 2 to 4.
The mentioned monocarboxylic acids and the mentioned diols can be esterified with one another by known processes.
The above-mentioned amines can be added to the esters, according to the above-cited regulations known from literature or on the basis thereof. As a result, oligo(β-amino ester)s are obtained with the units
wherein A, B, R, and R′ have the meanings indicated above, and wherein linear oligo(β-amino ester) s with the units (I) are formed from the reaction of primary monoamines, linear oligo(β-amino ester)s with the units (II) are formed from the reaction of secondary diamines, and branched oligo(β-amino ester)s with the units (III) are formed from the reaction of primary diamines with the diesters of the monoethylenically unsaturated monocarboxylic acids. By using binary or ternary mixtures of primary monoamines, secondary diamines, and primary diamines, oligomers can be obtained which have two or three of the different units. With simultaneous use of differently substituted amines, e.g., aminoalkylpyrrolidone and aminoalkylimidazole compounds, the 1,4 addition can be used to obtain target compounds in which the substitution units, e.g., the aminoalkyl pyrrolidone and the aminoalkyl imidazole groups, are present in statistical distribution. The aza-Michael addition is preferably conducted such that degrees of oligomerization are obtained in the range of 1 to 30, and in particular 2 to 4.
In both aspects addressed above, the active ingredients that can thus be obtained make a contribution to the color consistency, i.e., they reduce both the discoloration and the fading, although the effect of preventing coloration—particularly when washing white textiles—is most marked. The invention therefore also relates to the use of active ingredients that can be obtained in this way to prevent the color impression of colored textiles changing-preferably those consisting of or containing cotton—when washed in—in particular, surfactant-containing—aqueous solutions. The change in color impression is not to be understood as meaning the difference between the soiled and clean textile, but the difference between each clean textile before and after the washing process. The invention therefore further relates to a detergent containing surfactant and other conventional ingredients of detergents and an oligo(β-amino ester) as defined above in the dye-transfer-inhibiting amount. A dye-transfer-inhibiting amount should be understood to mean an amount which significantly reduces the transfer of dyes from colored textiles to uncolored textiles or textiles of other colors when washed together, in comparison with otherwise identical conditions in the absence of the active ingredient. The aforementioned dye-transfer-inhibiting active ingredients are preferably used in detergents in amounts of 0.01 wt % to 5 wt %, and in particular of 0.05 wt % to 0.5 wt %.
The invention further relates to a method for washing white or colored textiles in surfactant-containing aqueous solutions in the presence of textiles of other colors, the method being characterized in that a surfactant-containing aqueous liquor is used which contains an oligo(β-amino ester) as defined above. In such a method, it is possible to wash white or uncolored textiles together with the colored textile without the white or uncolored textile becoming colored. Preferably, 0.0003 g/L to 0.16 g/L, and in particular 0.0015 g/L to 0.015 g/L, of the oligo(β-amino ester) defined above is used in the aqueous liquor.
In addition to the aforementioned dye transfer inhibitor, a detergent can contain conventional ingredients compatible with this constituent. For instance, the detergent can additionally contain another dye transfer inhibitor-preferably in amounts of 0.1 wt % to 2 wt %, and in particular 0.2 wt % to 1 wt %-which, in a preferred embodiment, is selected from the polymers of vinylpyrrolidone, vinylimidazole, vinylpyridine-N-oxide, or the copolymers thereof. It is possible to use polyvinylpyrrolidones having molecular weights of 15,000 to 50,000 as well as polyvinylpyrrolidones having higher molecular weights of, for example, up to more than 1,000,000, and in particular of 1,500,000 to 4,000,000, N-vinylimidazole/N-vinylpyrrolidone copolymers, polyvinyloxazolidones, copolymers based upon vinyl monomers and carboxylic acid amides, pyrrolidone-group-containing polyesters and polyamides, grafted polyamidoamines and polyethyleneimines, polyamine-N-oxide polymers, polyvinyl alcohols, and copolymers based upon acrylamido alkenyl sulfonic acids. However, it is also possible to use enzymatic systems comprising a peroxidase and hydrogen peroxide or a substance which produces hydrogen peroxide in water. The addition of a mediator compound for the peroxidase, e.g., an acetosyringone, a phenol derivative, or a phenotiazine or phenoxazine, is preferred in this case, it also being possible to additionally use above-mentioned polymeric dye transfer inhibitor active ingredients. Polyvinylpyrrolidone preferably has an average (weight average) molar mass in the range of 10,000 to 60,000, and in particular in the range of 25,000 to 50,000, for use in agents according to the invention. Of the copolymers, those consisting of vinylpyrrolidone and vinylimidazole in a molar ratio of 5:1 to 1:1 with an average (weight average) molar mass in the range of 5,000 to 50,000, and in particular 10,000 to 20,000, are preferred.
Detergents which may be in the form of in particular powdered solids, in further-compacted particulate form, homogeneous solutions, or suspensions, may in principle contain, in addition to the active ingredient used according to the invention, any known ingredients that are conventional in agents of this kind. The agents according to the invention can, in particular, comprise builder substances, surface-active surfactants, bleaching agents based upon organic and/or inorganic peroxygen compounds, bleach activators, water-miscible organic solvents, enzymes, sequestering agents, electrolytes, pH regulators, and further auxiliaries, such as optical brighteners, graying inhibitors, and foam regulators, as well as dyes and fragrances.
The agents can contain one or more surfactants, with anionic surfactants, non-ionic surfactants, and mixtures thereof being particularly suitable, but cationic, zwitterionic, and/or amphoteric surfactants also being suitable.
Suitable non-ionic surfactants are in particular alkyl glycosides and ethoxylation and/or propoxylation products of alkyl glycosides or linear or branched alcohols each having 12 to 18 C atoms in the alkyl portion and 3 to 20, and preferably 4 to 10, alkyl ether groups. Corresponding ethoxylation and/or propoxylation products of N-alkyl amines, vicinal diols, fatty acid esters, and fatty acid amides which, with regard to the alkyl portion, correspond to the long-chain alcohol derivatives mentioned, and of alkyl phenols having 5 to 12 C atoms in the alkyl functional group can also be used.
Nonionic surfactants that are preferably used are alkoxylated, advantageously ethoxylated, and in particular primary alcohols having preferably 8 to 18 C atoms and, on average, 1 to 12 mol ethylene oxide (EO) per mol of alcohol, in which the alcohol functional group can be linear or preferably methyl-branched in the 2nd position, or can contain linear and methyl-branched functional groups in admixture, as are usually present in oxo alcohol functional groups. However, alcohol ethoxylates having linear functional groups of alcohols of native origin having 12 to 18 C atoms, e.g., of coconut, palm, tallow fatty or oleyl alcohol, and an average of 2 to 8 EO per mol of alcohol, are particularly preferred. Preferred ethoxylated alcohols include, for example, C12-C14 alcohols having 3 EO or 4 EO, C9-C11 alcohols having 7 EO, C13-C15 alcohols having 3 EO, 5 EO, 7 EO, or 8 EO, C12-C18 alcohols having 3 EO, 5 EO, or 7 EO and mixtures thereof, such as mixtures of C12-C14 alcohol having 3 EO and C12-C18 alcohol having 7 EO. The degrees of ethoxylation specified represent statistical averages that can correspond to an integer or a fractional number for a specific product. Preferred alcohol ethoxylates have a narrowed homolog distribution (narrow range ethoxylates, NRE). In addition to these non-ionic surfactants, fatty alcohols having more than 12 EO can also be used. Examples of these are (tallow) fatty alcohols having 14 EO, 16 EO, 20 EO, 25 EO, 30 EO, and 40 EO. It is conventional to use extremely low-foaming compounds in particular in agents for use in machine processes. These preferably include C12-C18 alkyl polyethylene glycol polypropylene glycol ethers each having up to 8 mol of ethylene oxide and propylene oxide units in the molecule. However, other known low-foam non-ionic surfactants can also be used, such as C12-C18 alkyl polyethylene glycol-polybutylene glycol ethers each having up to 8 mol of ethylene oxide and butylene oxide units in the molecule and end-capped alkylpolyalkylene glycol mixed ethers. The hydroxyl-group-containing alkoxylated alcohols, known as hydroxy mixed ethers, are also particularly preferred. Non-ionic surfactants also include alkyl glycosides of general formula RO(G)x be used, in which R means a primary straight-chain or methyl-branched, aliphatic functional group, and in particular an aliphatic functional group that is methyl-branched in the 2nd position, having 8 to 22, and preferably 12 to 18, C atoms, and G represents a glycose unit having 5 or 6 C atoms—preferably glucose. The degree of oligomerization x, which indicates the distribution of monoglycosides and oligoglycosides, is any number-which can also assume fractional values as a variable to be analytically determined-between 1 and 10; x is preferably between 1.2 and 1.4. Likewise suitable are polyhydroxy fatty acid amides of formula IV, in which R1CO represents an aliphatic acyl group having 6 to 22 carbon atoms, R2 represents hydrogen, an alkyl or hydroxy alkyl group having 1 to 4 carbon atoms, and [Z] represents a linear or branched polyhydroxy alkyl group having 3 to 10 carbon atoms and 3 to 10 hydroxyl groups:
Polyhydroxy fatty acid amides are preferably derived from reducing sugars, and in particular glucose, having 5 or 6 carbon atoms. The group of polyhydroxy fatty acid amides also includes compounds of formula (IV),
in which R3 represents a linear or branched alkyl or alkenyl functional group having 7 to 12 carbon atoms, R4 represents a linear, branched or cyclic alkyl functional group or an aryl functional group having 2 to 8 carbon atoms, and R5 represents a linear, branched or cyclic alkyl functional group or an aryl functional group or an oxy alkyl functional group having 1 to 8 carbon atoms, wherein C1-C4 alkyl or phenyl functional groups are preferred, and [Z] represents a linear polyhydroxy alkyl functional group, the alkyl chain of which is substituted with at least two hydroxyl groups, or alkoxylated, and preferably ethoxylated or propoxylated derivatives of this functional group. [Z] is also preferably obtained by reductive amination of a sugar—for example, glucose, fructose, maltose, lactose, galactose, mannose, or xylose. The N-alkoxy- or N-aryloxy-substituted compounds can be converted into the desired polyhydroxy fatty acid amides by reaction with fatty acid methyl esters in the presence of an alkoxide as a catalyst. Another class of non-ionic surfactants that are preferably used, which are used either as the sole non-ionic surfactant or in combination with other non-ionic surfactants, and in particular together with alkoxylated fatty alcohols and/or alkyl glycosides, is alkoxylated, and preferably ethoxylated or ethoxylated and propoxylated fatty acid alkyl esters—preferably having 1 to 4 carbon atoms in the alkyl chain—in particular, fatty acid methyl esters. Non-ionic surfactants of the aminoxide type, e.g., N-cocoalkyl-N, N-dimethylamine oxide and N-tallow-alkyl-N, N-dihydroxyethylamine oxide, and of the fatty acid alkanolamides may also be suitable. The quantity of these non-ionic surfactants is preferably no more than that of the ethoxylated fatty alcohols, and in particular no more than half thereof. Surfactants known as gemini surfactants can also be considered. These are generally understood to mean those compounds which have two hydrophilic groups per molecule. These groups are generally separated from one another by a “spacer.” This spacer is generally a carbon chain that should be long enough that the hydrophilic groups are sufficiently spaced apart so that they can act independently of one another. Such surfactants are generally characterized by an unusually low critical micelle concentration and the ability to greatly reduce the surface tension of the water. In exceptional cases, the expression, gemini surfactants, is understood to mean not only “dimeric” but also “trimeric” surfactants. Suitable gemini surfactants are, for example, sulfated hydroxy mixed ethers or dimer alcohol bis- and trimer alcohol tris sulfates and ether sulfates. End-capped dimeric and trimeric mixed ethers are characterized in particular by their bi- and multifunctionality. The aforementioned end-capped surfactants thus have good wetting properties and are low-foaming, which means that they are particularly suitable for use in machine washing or cleaning processes. However, gemini polyhydroxy fatty acid amides or poly-polyhydroxy fatty acid amides can also be used.
Suitable anionic surfactants are, in particular, soaps and those which contain sulfate or sulfonate groups. Preferably, C9-C13 alkylbenzene sulfonates, olefin sulfonates, i.e., mixtures of alkene and hydroxyalkane sulfonates, and disulfonates, as obtained, for example, from C12-C18 monoolefins having a terminal or internal double bond by means of sulfonation with gaseous sulfur trioxide and subsequent alkaline or acid hydrolysis of the sulfonation products, are possible as surfactants of the sulfonate type. Alkane sulfonates obtained from C12-C18 alkanes, e.g., by means of sulfochlorination or sulfoxidation with subsequent hydrolysis or neutralization, are also suitable. The esters of α-sulfo fatty acids (ester sulfonates), e.g., the α-sulfonated methyl esters of hydrogenated coconut, palm kernel, or tallow fatty acids, which are produced by a sulfonation of the methyl esters of fatty acids of vegetable and/or animal origin having 8 to 20 C atoms in the fatty acid molecule and subsequent neutralization so as to produce water-soluble mono-salts, are also considered to be suitable. Preferably, these are the α-sulfonated esters of hydrogenated coconut, palm, palm kernel, or tallow fatty acids, it also being possible for sulfonation products of unsaturated fatty acids, e.g., oleic acid, to be present in small amounts, and preferably in amounts of no more than approximately 2 to 3 wt %. Particularly preferred are α-sulfo fatty acid alkyl esters which have an alkyl chain having no more than 4 C atoms in the ester group—for example, methyl ester, ethyl ester, propyl ester, and butyl ester. Particularly advantageously, the methyl esters of α-sulfo fatty acids (MES), but also the saponified di-salts thereof, are used. Other suitable anionic surfactants are sulfonated fatty acid glycerol esters, which constitute monoesters, diesters, and triesters and the mixtures thereof, as they are obtained during production by means of esterification by a monoglycerol with 1 to 3 mol of fatty acid or during the transesterification of triglycerides with 0.3 to 2 mol of glycerol. The alkali salts and in particular the sodium salts of the sulfuric acid half-esters of C12-C18 fatty alcohols, e.g., from coconut fatty alcohol, tallow fatty alcohol, lauryl alcohol, myristyl alcohol, cetyl alcohol, or stearyl alcohol, or of C10-C20 oxo alcohols and the half-esters of secondary alcohols having this chain length, are preferred as alk(en)yl sulfates. Further preferred are alk(en)yl sulfates of the chain length mentioned, which contain a synthetic straight-chain alkyl residue produced on a petrochemical basis and which have a degradation behavior analogous to that of the adequate compounds based upon fat chemical raw materials. From a washing perspective, C12-C16 alkyl sulfates, C12-C15 alkyl sulfates, and C14-C15 alkyl sulfates are particularly preferred. The sulfuric acid monoesters of straight-chain or branched C7-C21 alcohols ethoxylated with 1 to 6 of mol ethylene oxide, such as 2-methyl-branched C9-C11 alcohols having, on average, 3.5 mol ethylene oxide (EO) or C12-C18 fatty alcohols having 1 to 4 EO, are also suitable. Preferred anionic surfactants also include the salts of alkyl sulfosuccinic acid, which are also referred to as sulfosuccinates or as sulfosuccinic acid esters and which represent monoesters and/or diesters of sulfosuccinic acid with alcohols-preferably fatty alcohols, and in particular ethoxylated fatty alcohols. Preferred sulfosuccinates contain C8 to C18 fatty alcohol functional groups or mixtures thereof. Particularly preferred sulfosuccinates contain a fatty alcohol functional group which is derived from ethoxylated fatty alcohols, which in themselves represent nonionic surfactants. Among these, in turn, sulfosuccinates, including their fatty alcohol functional groups that derive from ethoxylated fatty alcohols exhibiting a restricted distribution of homologs, are particularly preferred. Likewise, it is also possible to use alk(en)yl succinic acid having preferably 8 to 18 carbon atoms in the alk(en)yl chain, or the salts thereof. Fatty acid derivatives of amino acids, e.g., of N-methyltaurine (taurides) and/or of N-methylglycine (sarcosides), are also considered as further anionic surfactants. The sarcosides or sarcosinates, and in this case especially sarcosinates of higher and optionally mono- or polyunsaturated fatty acids such as oleyl sarcosinate, are particularly preferred. Further anionic surfactants that can also be used are in particular soaps. In particular, saturated fatty acid soaps are suitable, such as the salts of lauric acid, myristic acid, palmitic acid, stearic acid, hydrogenated erucic acid, and behenic acid, and in particular soap mixtures derived from natural fatty acids, such as coconut fatty acids, palm kernel fatty acids, or tallow fatty acids. The known alkenylsuccinic acid salts can also be used together with these soaps or as substitutes for soaps.
The anionic surfactants, including the soaps, can be present in the form of the sodium, potassium, or ammonium salts thereof, or as soluble salts of organic bases, such as mono-, di-, or triethanolamine. The anionic surfactants are preferably present in the form of the sodium or potassium salts thereof, and in particular in the form of the sodium salts. Surfactants are contained in detergents in proportions of normally 1 wt % to 50 wt %, and in particular of 5 wt % to 30 wt %.
A detergent preferably contains at least one water-soluble and/or water-insoluble, organic and/or inorganic builder. The water-soluble organic builder substances include polycarboxylic acids—in particular, citric acid and saccharic acids; monomer and polymer aminopolycarboxylic acids—in particular, methylglycinediacetic acid, nitrilotriacetic acid, ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid, and polyaspartic acid; polyphosphonic acids—in particular, aminotris(methylene phosphonic acid), ethylenediaminetetrakis(methylenephosphonic acid), and 1-hydroxyethane-1,1-diphosphonic acid; polymer hydroxy compounds such as dextrin; and polymer (poly)carboxylic acids—in particular, the polycarboxylates which can be obtained by oxidation of polysaccharides or dextrins; polymer acrylic acids, methacrylic acids, maleic acids, and mixed polymers from these, which may also contain small proportions of polymerizable substances without carboxylic acid functionality in polymerized form. The relative molecular mass of the homopolymers of unsaturated carboxylic acids is generally between 3,000 g/mol and 200,000 g/mol, and that of the copolymers between 2,000 g/mol and 200,000 g/mol, and preferably 30,000 g/mol to 120,000 g/mol, in each case relative to free acid. A particularly preferred acrylic acid-maleic acid copolymer has a relative molecular mass of 30,000 g/mol to 100,000 g/mol. Commercial products are, for example, Sokalan® CP 5, CP 10, and PA 30 from BASF. Suitable, albeit less preferred, compounds of this class are copolymers of acrylic acid or methacrylic acid with vinyl ethers, such as vinyl methyl ethers, vinyl esters, ethylene, propylene, and styrene, in which the proportion of the acid is at least 50 wt %. It is also possible to use, as water-soluble organic builder substances, terpolymers which contain two unsaturated acids and/or the salts thereof as monomers and vinyl alcohol and/or an esterified vinyl alcohol or a carbohydrate as the third monomer. The first acid monomer or the salt thereof is derived from a monoethylenically unsaturated C3-C8 carboxylic acid and preferably from a C3-C4 monocarboxylic acid—in particular, from (meth)acrylic acid. The second acidic monomer or the salt thereof can be a derivative of a C4-C8 dicarboxylic acid, with maleic acid being particularly preferred, and/or a derivative of an allylsulfonic acid which is substituted in the 2nd position with an alkyl or aryl functional group. Such polymers generally have a relative molecular mass between 1,000 g/mol and 200,000 g/mol. Further preferred copolymers are those which have acrolein and acrylic acid/acrylic acid salts or vinyl acetate as monomers. The organic builder substances may—particularly for the preparation of liquid agents—be used in the form of aqueous solutions—preferably in the form of 30 to 50 wt % aqueous solutions. All of said acids are generally used in the form of their water-soluble salts, and in particular their alkali salts.
Organic builder substances of this kind can, if desired, be contained in amounts of up to 40 wt %, in particular up to 25 wt %, and preferably of 1 wt % to 8 wt %. Amounts close to the stated upper limit are preferably used in pasty or liquid, and in particular water-containing, agents according to the invention.
In particular, alkali silicates, alkali carbonates and alkali phosphates, which can be present in the form of their alkaline, neutral, or acidic sodium or potassium salts, can be used as water-soluble inorganic builder materials. Examples thereof are trisodium phosphate, tetrasodium diphosphate, disodium dihydrogen diphosphate, pentasodium triphosphate, sodium hexametaphosphate, oligomeric trisodium phosphate with degrees of oligomerization of 5 to 1,000, and in particular 5 to 50, and the corresponding potassium salts or mixtures of sodium and potassium salts. In particular crystalline or amorphous alkali aluminosilicates are used as water-insoluble, water-dispersible inorganic builder materials in amounts of up to 50 wt %, and preferably no greater than 40 wt %, and in liquid agents in particular in amounts of 1 wt % to 5 wt %. Among these, the crystalline sodium aluminosilicates in washing agent quality, and in particular zeolite A, P, and optionally X, either alone or in mixtures, e.g., in the form of a co-crystallizate of the zeolites A and X (Vegobond® AX, a commercial product of Condea Augusta S.p.A.), are preferred. Amounts close to the stated upper limit are preferably used in solid, particulate agents. Suitable aluminosilicates have in particular no particles having a particle size greater than 30 μm and preferably consist of at least 80 wt % of particles having a size smaller than 10 μm. The calcium binding capacity of said aluminosilicates is generally in the range of 100 to 200 mg CaO per gram.
Suitable substitutes or partial substitutes for the above-mentioned aluminosilicate are crystalline alkali silicates, which can be present alone or in a mixture with amorphous silicates. The alkali silicates that can be used in the agents according to the invention as builders preferably have a molar ratio of alkali oxide to SiO2 of less than 0.95, and in particular of 1:1.1 to 1:12, and may be present in amorphous or crystalline form. Preferred alkali silicates are sodium silicates, and in particular amorphous sodium silicates, having a molar ratio of Na2O:SiO2 of 1:2 to 1:2.8. Crystalline phyllosilicates of the general formula Na2SixO2x+1·yH2O, in which x, known as the module, is a number from 1.9 to 22, and in particular 1.9 to 4, and y is a number from 0 to 33 and preferred values for x are 2, 3, or 4, are preferably used as crystalline silicates, which can be present alone or in a mixture with amorphous silicates. Preferred crystalline phyllosilicates are those in which x assumes the values 2 or 3 in the mentioned general formula. Both β- and δ-sodium disilicates (Na2Si2O5·yH2O) are particularly preferred. Practically water-free, crystalline alkali silicates of the above general formula, in which x is a number from 1.9 to 2.1, and which are prepared from amorphous alkali silicates, may also be used in agents according to the invention. In another preferred embodiment of agents according to the invention, a crystalline sodium phyllosilicate having a module of 2 to 3 is used. Crystalline sodium silicates having a module in the range of from 1.9 to 3.5 are used in a further preferred embodiment of agents according to the invention. Crystalline phyllosilicates are commercially available, e.g., Na-SKS-1 (Na2Si22O45·xH2O, kenyaite), Na-SKS-2 (Na2Si14O29·xH2O, magadiite), Na-SKS-3 (Na2Si8O17·x H2O), or Na-SKS-4 (Na2Si4O9·xH2O, macatite). Of these, Na-SKS-5 Na-SKS-7 (β-Na2Si2O5, natrosilite), Na-SKS-9 (NaHSi2O5:3H2O), Na-SKS-10 (NaHSi2O5:3H2O, kanemite), Na-SKS-11 (t-Na2Si2O5), and Na-SKS-13 (NaHSi2O5), but in particular Na-SKS-6 (0-Na2Si2O5), are particularly suitable. In a preferred embodiment of agents according to the invention, a granular compound made of crystalline phyllosilicate and citrate, crystalline phyllosilicate and the above-described (co) polymeric polycarboxylic acid, or alkali silicate and alkali carbonate is used, as it is commercially available under the name Nabion® 15, for example. Builder substances are normally present in amounts of up to 75 wt %, and in particular of 5 wt % to 50 wt %.
Suitable peroxygen compounds suitable for use in detergents include, in particular, organic peroxy acids or peracid salts of organic acids, such as phthalimidopercaproic acid, perbenzoic acid, or salts of diperdodecanoic diacid, hydrogen peroxide, and inorganic salts giving off hydrogen peroxide under the washing conditions, which include perborate, percarbonate, persilicate, and/or persulfates such as caroate. If solid peroxygen compounds are intended to be used, these may be used in the form of powders or granules, which may also be coated in a manner known in principle. If an agent according to the invention contains peroxygen compounds, these are present in amounts of preferably up to 50 wt %, and in particular of 5 wt % to 30 wt %. The addition of small amounts of known bleaching agent stabilizers such as phosphonates, borates or metaborates, metasilicates, and magnesium salts such as magnesium sulfate may be expedient.
Compounds which, under perhydrolysis conditions, result in aliphatic peroxocarboxylic acids having preferably 1 to 10 C atoms, and in particular 2 to 4 C atoms, and/or optionally substituted perbenzoic acid, may be used as bleach activators. Substances that have O acyl and/or N acyl groups of the stated number of C atoms and/or optionally substituted benzoyl groups are suitable. Preferred are polyacylated alkylene diamines, and in particular tetraacetylethylenediamine (TAED), acylated triazine derivatives, and in particular 1,5-diacetyl-2,4-dioxohexahydro-1,3,5-triazine (DADHT), acylated glycolurils, and in particular tetraacetylglycoluril (TAGU), N-acylimides, and in particular N-nonanoyl succinimide (NOSI), acylated phenolsulfonates, and in particular n-nonanoyl- or isononanoyloxybenzenesulfonate (n- or iso-NOBS), carboxylic acid anhydrides, and in particular phthalic acid anhydride, acylated polyhydric alcohols, and in particular triacetin, ethylene glycol diacetate, 2,5-diacetoxy-2,5-dihydrofuran and enol ester, and acetylated sorbitol and mannitol or the mixtures thereof (SORMAN), acylated sugar derivatives, and in particular pentaacetyl glucose (PAG), pentaacetyl fructose, tetraacetyl xylose, and octaacetyl lactose, and acetylated, optionally N-alkylated glucamine and gluconolactone, and/or N-acylated lactams—for example, N-benzoylcaprolactam. The hydrophilically substituted acyl acetals and the acyl lactams are likewise preferably used. Combinations of conventional bleach activators can also be used. Such bleach activators can—particularly in the presence of the above-mentioned hydrogen peroxide-yielding bleaching agents—be present in the customary quantity range—preferably in amounts of 0.5 wt % to 10 wt %, and in particular 1 wt % to 8 wt %-relative to the total agent, but are preferably entirely absent when percarboxylic acid is used as the sole bleaching agent.
In addition to or instead of the conventional bleach activators, sulfonimines and/or bleach-enhancing transition metal salts or transition metal complexes may also be contained as what are referred to as bleach catalysts.
Enzymes from the class of amylases, proteases, lipases, cutinases, pullulanases, hemicellulases, cellulases, oxidases, laccases and peroxidases, and mixtures thereof are suitable as enzymes that can be used in the agents. Enzymatic active ingredients obtained from fungi or bacteria, such as Bacillus subtilis, Bacillus licheniformis, Bacillus lentus, Streptomyces griseus, Humicola lanuginosa, Humicola insolens, Pseudomonas pseudoalcaligenes, Pseudomonas cepacia, or Coprinus cinereus are particularly suitable. The enzymes can be adsorbed on carrier substances and/or embedded in coating substances to protect the enzymes from premature inactivation. They are contained in the washing or cleaning agents according to the invention preferably in amounts of up to 5 wt %, and in particular of 0.2 wt % to 4 wt %. If the agent according to the invention contains protease, it preferably has a proteolytic activity in the range of approximately 100 PE/g to approximately 10,000 PE/g, and in particular 300 PE/g to 8,000 PE/g. If several enzymes are to be used in the agent according to the invention, this can be carried out by incorporation of the two or more separate enzymes or enzymes that have been separately manufactured in a known manner, or by two or more enzymes manufactured together in a granulate.
The organic solvents that can be used in the detergents-particularly when the agents are present in liquid or pasty form-include alcohols having 1 to 4 C atoms, and in particular methanol, ethanol, isopropanol, and tert-butanol, diols having 2 to 4 C atoms—in particular, ethylene glycol and propylene glycol—and mixtures thereof, and the ethers that can be derived from the mentioned compound classes. Water-miscible solvents of this kind are present in the agents according to the invention preferably in amounts of no greater than 30 wt %, and in particular of 6 wt % to 20 wt %.
In order to set a desired pH that does not result automatically from mixing the other components, the agents according to the invention can contain acids that are compatible with the system and environment, and in particular citric acid, acetic acid, tartaric acid, malic acid, lactic acid, glycolic acid, succinic acid, glutaric acid, and/or adipic acid, but also mineral acids—in particular, sulfuric acid—or bases—in particular, ammonium or alkali hydroxides. pH regulators of this kind are contained in the agents according to the invention preferably in amounts of no greater than 20 wt %, and in particular of 1.2 wt % to 17 wt %.
The function of graying inhibitors is to keep the dirt that is removed from the textile fibers suspended in the liquor. Water-soluble colloids, which are usually organic, are suitable for this purpose—for example, starch, sizing material, gelatin, salts of ethercarboxylic acids or ethersulfonic acids of starch or of cellulose, or salts of acidic sulfuric acid esters of cellulose or of starch. Water-soluble polyamides containing acid groups are also suitable for this purpose. Starch derivatives other than those mentioned above may also be used—for example, aldehyde starches. Cellulose ethers, such as carboxymethylcellulose (Na salt), methylcellulose, hydroxyalkylcellulose, and mixed ethers, such as methylhydroxyethylcellulose, methylhydroxypropylcellulose, methylcarboxymethylcellulose and mixtures thereof, are used, for example, in amounts of 0.1 to 5 wt %, relative to the agents.
Washing agents may contain, for example, derivatives of diaminostilbene disulfonic acid or the alkali metal salts thereof as optical brighteners, although they are preferably free of optical brighteners when used as color washing agents. Salts of 4,4′-bis(2-anilino-4-morpholino-1,3,5-triazinyl-6-amino) stilbene-2,2′-disulfonic acid or compounds having a similar structure which, instead of the morpholino group, have a diethanolamino group, a methylamino group, an anilino group, or a 2-methoxyethylamino group are suitable, for example. Furthermore, brighteners of the substituted diphenylstyryl type may be present—for example, the alkali salts of 4,4′-bis(2-sulfostyryl)diphenyl, 4,4′-bis(4-chloro-3-sulfostyryl)diphenyl, or 4-(4-chlorostyryl)-4′-(2-sulfostyryl)diphenyl. Mixtures of the aforementioned optical brighteners may also be used.
It may be advantageous to add conventional suds suppressors to the agents-particularly in use in mechanical processes. Soaps of natural or synthetic origin having a high proportion of C18-C24 fatty acids are suitable as suds suppressors, for example. Suitable non-surfactant suds suppressors are, for example, organopolysiloxanes and mixtures thereof with microfine, optionally silanated silicic acid and paraffins, waxes, microcrystalline waxes, and mixtures thereof with silanated silicic acid or bis fatty acid alkylenediamides. Mixtures of various suds suppressors are also advantageously used—for example, those consisting of silicones, paraffins, or waxes. The suds suppressors, and in particular silicone—and/or paraffin-containing suds suppressors, are preferably bound to a granular carrier substance that is soluble or dispersible in water. Mixtures of paraffins and bistearylethylenediamide are particularly preferred.
The preparation of solid agents presents no difficulties and can be carried out in a known manner, e.g., by spray-drying or granulation, in which enzymes and possibly other thermally sensitive ingredients, such as bleaching agents, are optionally added separately later. For the preparation of agents having an increased bulk density—in particular, in the range of 650 g/L to 950 g/L—a method having an extrusion step is preferred.
To prepare agents in tablet form, which can be single-phase or multiphase, single-color or multi-color, and in particular can be composed of one layer or of multiple, and in particular of two, layers, the procedure is preferably such that all components-optionally one layer each—are mixed with one another in a mixer, and the mixture is compressed using conventional tablet presses, such as eccentric presses or rotary presses, using pressures in the range of approximately 50 to 100 kN, and preferably 60 to 70 kN. In the case of multilayer tablets in particular, it can be advantageous if at least one layer is pre-pressed. This is preferably carried out at pressures of between 5 and 20 kN, and in particular at 10 to 15 kN. This readily yields break-resistant tablets that nonetheless dissolve sufficiently quickly under usage conditions, and normally with breaking and flexural strengths of 100 to 200 N, but preferably above 150 N. A tablet thus produced preferably has a weight of 10 g to 50 g, and in particular of 15 g to 40 g. The tablets can have any physical shape, and can be round, oval, or angular, wherein intermediate shapes are also possible. Corners and edges are advantageously rounded. Round tablets preferably have a diameter of 30 mm to 40 mm. In particular, the size of angular or cuboid tablets, which are predominantly introduced via the dosing device of the washing machine, is dependent upon the geometry and the volume of this dosing device. By way of example, preferred embodiments have a base area of (20 to 30 mm)×(34 to 40 mm), and in particular of 26×36 mm or of 24×38 mm.
Liquid or pasty agents in the form of solutions containing conventional solvents are usually prepared by simple mixing of the ingredients, which can be put into an automatic mixer in bulk or as a solution.
At room temperature, 1.58 g of N-(3-aminopropyl)-2-pyrrolidone and 1.28 g of 1-(3-aminopropyl) imidazole were added to a solution of 4.9 g of diethylene glycol diacrylate in 30 mL of tetrahydrofuran (THF). The reaction solution was heated to 75° C. and left at this temperature for 7 days. Subsequently, 0.4 g of N-(3-aminopropyl)-2-pyrrolidone and 0.32 g of 1-(3-aminopropyl) imidazole were added, and the reaction mixture was stirred at 75° C. for a further 24 hours. After cooling to room temperature, the solid formed in the reaction mixture was filtered off, and the filtrate was admixed with 400 mL of hexane. The brown-orange oil that separated out was freed from the solvent by decanting and dried in a vacuum drying cabinet at 40° C. 7.4 g (87% of theoretical value) of P1 was obtained.
GPC in water: Mw 600 g/mol and Mn 300 g/mol
At room temperature, 1.58 g of N-(3-aminopropyl)-2-pyrrolidone and 1.28 g of 1-(3-aminopropyl) imidazole were added to a solution of 7.0 g of triglycerol diacrylate in 30 mL of THF. The reaction solution was heated to 75° C. for 48 hours. The solvent was then decanted off, and the remaining material was dissolved in 30 ml of water and precipitated by pouring in THF; the solvent was decanted off, and the oily product was dried in the vacuum drying cabinet. 4.3 g (55% of theoretical value) of P2 was obtained.
GPC in water: Mw 500 g/mol and Mn 200 g/mol
The color releaser (colored textile which easily releases dye) given in the following table was washed in the presence of white cotton acceptor fabric (6 cm×16 cm; WFK 11 A) for 30 minutes at 60° C. Thereafter, the coloration of the cotton textile was determined by spectrophotometry and evaluated according to ISO 105 A04 (SSR notes on a scale of 1 to 5; 1=strong coloration, 5=no coloration). Washing liquors were used with a color-transfer-inhibitor-free, water-containing liquid detergent (F; concentration 3.5 g/L) or with the same amount of an otherwise identical composition to which one of the polymers P1 or P2 had been added while reducing the amount of water. The following SSR notes were obtained (mean value from 2-fold determination in each case):
It can be seen that, in comparison with the detergent without addition of the oligo(β-amino ester) essential to the invention, the white textiles became less strongly colored when washed with oligo(β-amino ester) additive.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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102022200093.5 | Jan 2022 | DE | national |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/EP2022/084890 | Dec 2022 | WO |
Child | 18761772 | US |