The present invention relates to nonwoven materials and their methods and units of production.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,321,425 describes a method of fabricating a nonwoven material which consists in sending a material, originating from a spunbond tower which normally comprises successively from top to bottom a generator of a curtain of filaments, in particular plastic filaments, a slotted attenuator device for drawing the filaments of the curtain, a diffuser and a conveyor for receiving the filaments, to a calender which consolidates the formed material preform, then to a water jet tangling drum. This method has the disadvantage of adversely affecting the uniformity of the formation of the material and of orienting the filaments preferentially in the machine direction by the drawing which is applied thereto.
The invention remedies this disadvantage by making it possible to obtain a nonwoven material whose properties are substantially isotropic, that is to say substantially identical whether it be in the machine direction or in the cross direction.
This is achieved with a drum comprising a fixed cylindrical body with perforated lateral surface surrounded by a holed sleeve driven in rotation relative to the axis of the cylindrical body, and means intended to create a partial vacuum inside the body. According to the invention, a water-impermeable partition subdivides the interior of the body into two compartments delimited by the partition and respectively by a first and a second portion of the lateral surface and both placed under partial vacuum by the means intended to create same.
The first compartment of the drum according to the invention is used to bring onto the drum a material preform that lies on an associated conveyor, substantially tangential to the drum at a so-called contact point (this is the point at which the conveyor and the drum are closest to one another without actually touching), even if this material preform is still slightly consolidated, as is the case when it is a material coming from a spunbond tower, without previously needing to calender the material preform or other operations subject it to involving a drawing operation which definitively damage the isotropy of the properties of the nonwoven material finally obtained.
Preferably, the first compartment begins opposite the point of contact of the conveyor tangential to the drum and ends opposite a point of the lateral surface downstream, in the direction of rotation of the sleeve, of the point of contact. As soon as the material preform has thus been applied to the drum by the partial vacuum existing in the first compartment, it is subject to the water jet tangling.
According to one embodiment, the first compartment extends over a cylindrical sector of the body defined, in the transverse sectional view of the cylindrical body, substantially by two radii perpendicular to one another, the first compartment thus substantially occupying a quarter of the interior of the body. Preferably, the cylindrical sector occupied by the first compartment is disposed in the second quadrant between 3 and 6 o'clock.
The means intended to create a partial vacuum may be common to the two compartments but, according to a preferred embodiment, each compartment has its own means of creating a partial vacuum and, preferably, the partial vacuum is more intense in the first compartment than in the second. In particular, a partial vacuum lying between 30 and 400 mbar can in particular be created in the first compartment and a partial vacuum lying between 30 and 300 mbar in the second compartment.
So that the drum can properly take hold of the material preform, it is best that the ratio of the total area of the perforations, per unit of surface, to the area of the lateral surface on which they lie is greater for the first compartment than for the second. This ratio may be between 5% and 30% for the first compartment whereas it is between 2% and 15% for the second compartment.
The perforations of the lateral surface opposite the second compartment are in particular slots which lie opposite pressurized water injectors on the portion of the sleeve that passes just opposite the portion of the lateral surface of the second compartment. The pressure of the jets is usually between 30 and 400 bar and the diameter of each jet between 75 and 200 microns. A rigid rotating perforated roll is mounted on the exterior of the fixed cylindrical body and its interior diameter is adjusted to the exterior diameter of the cylindrical body so that the minimum clearance thus preserved allows rotation while minimizing air leaks. According to the technical solution used for the fabrication of this rotating roll, it is envisaged that plastic battens mounted on springs are used to improve the separation seal of the two compartments. This rotating roll may be a simple perforated metal sheet, a roll made of bronze or of stainless steel pierced with holes helically disposed, a honeycomb roll. This may be a tube made of rolled perforated sheet metal covered by a drainage sleeve made of coarse metal material which provides a good uniformity of water extraction. This rotating roll supports a thinner perforated sleeve which effectively supports the filaments and the fibers of the nonwoven during the hydraulic tangling. The holes in the sleeve may be randomly distributed. The holes may also be arranged in lines or in staggered fashion. The sleeve holes may also be distributed in small areas of arranged perforations distributed randomly on the surface of the sleeve. The sleeve may consist of a metal material or of a synthetic material or of a mixture of metal material and synthetic material. Preferably the diameter of the sleeve holes should be between 50 and 500 microns. To obtain patterns on the material, provision can also be made to slip an open-work sheath over the sleeve, the openings of which having at least one dimension greater than 2 mm.
A further object of the invention is a unit for production of a nonwoven material comprising a spunbond tower with conveyor leading to a drum according to the invention. Preferably, the tower conveyor and the conveyor tangential to the drum are one and the same conveyor, but it is also possible to provide two distinct conveyors.
According to a particularly preferred embodiment, the drum is mounted directly downstream of the tower. In this specification, directly downstream means without the interposition of a device provoking the drawing of the material. There is therefore no calender, but there may be a compactor cylinder.
A further object of the invention is a method for production of a nonwoven material, which consists in using a unit according to the invention and in adjusting the speed of the tower conveyor or of the tangential conveyor to a value greater than the linear speed of the drum (calculated on the circumference of the drum). This produces a nonwoven material whose ratio of the tensile strength in the machine direction to that in the cross direction may be less than 1 due to the difference in speed. When the speeds are substantially the same, a ratio of less than 1.2 and of particularly approximately 1 of the tensile strength in the machine direction to that in the cross direction of the nonwoven material according to the invention can be obtained such that the nonwoven material according to the invention is particularly well isotropic.
In the appended drawings, given as an example:
The drum represented schematically in
The embodiment represented in
The unit represented in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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02 04604 | Apr 2002 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/FR03/01101 | 4/8/2003 | WO | 00 | 10/5/2004 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO03/087455 | 10/23/2003 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20050115036 A1 | Jun 2005 | US |