The present disclosure relates to expandable sheets and, in particular, to expandable sheets with shifted arrangements of slits.
Tension-activated, expandable sheets are sheets, for example of paper or plastic, that are cut with a slit pattern enabling them to be expanded when tension is applied along a tensioning axis of the sheet. An exemplary tension-activated, expandable sheet is SCOTCH™ CUSHION LOCK™ protective wrap available from 3M Company (St. Paul, Minnesota, USA), a paper-based, tension-activated, expandable sheet. Upon application of tension to expand such a sheet, portions of the sheet rotate to create an interlocking folded-wall structure that absorbs energy and can be used, for example, to cushion and protect objects during shipping.
In one aspect, an expandable sheet defines an expansion axis and a cross axis along a major surface. The expandable sheet includes a substrate of sheet material defining the major surface. The expandable sheet also includes a plurality of slits formed in the substrate in a slit pattern defining a width along the cross axis and a length along the expansion axis including at least a first region and a second region. Each region extends across the width. Each region includes at least two staggered rows of the slits defining an arrangement of pattern features, where the first region defines a first arrangement of pattern features and the second region defines a second arrangement of pattern features different than the first arrangement. The slits are configured to expand in response to a minimum tension applied to the substrate in the expansion axis to provide an expanded configuration.
In one aspect, a roll includes the expandable sheet.
In one aspect, a rotary die includes cutting surfaces configured to form the expandable sheet.
To easily identify the discussion of any particular element or act, the most significant digit or digits in a reference number refer to the figure number in which that element is first introduced.
The present disclosure relates to an expandable sheet having slits in a slit pattern having a first region and a second region defining an arrangement of pattern features different than the first arrangement. In general, shifting of the slit pattern allows for a visually consistent product with a pattern that rarely, if ever, matches the adjacent pattern when is the sheet is wound onto a roll, which may facilitate smooth winding into and unwinding from a roll form of the expandable sheet. In some embodiments, the expandable sheet may be a phase-shifted, tension-activated, expandable sheet. In some embodiments, slit patterns include regions that have oscillations that are phase shifted so that they cannot grip as easily with adjacent layers.
The loftiness and interlocking nature of tension-activated, expandable sheets may be enhanced by the presence of “fingers” or oscillations on the cross-web portion of the pattern. As the expandable sheet is being wound onto a roll, the diameter of the roll increases slowly. When the arrangement of slits used for expandable sheets is a slit pattern, a portion of the sheet may overlap with one or more adjacent layers having the same pattern frequently when the roll circumference increases by the period of the repeat. When the same part of the pattern overlaps in adjacent layers, those layers tend to grip onto each other and form a block of material instead of smoothly winding onto the roll.
This sticking of multiple adjacent layers is particularly problematic at smaller diameters and when the winding is looser, but is also present even on large tightly wound rolls. On larger rolls, it appears more as a “picking” effect where the material does not come off the roll as easily. This can lead to the material tearing while being deployed from a dispenser for example.
Briefly, a solution to this and other problems can lie in using a slit pattern with different arrangements of slits. For example, a slit pattern that changes and is therefore out of phase with adjacent patterns when the paper is wound on a roll could mitigate such problems.
The slit pattern 202 defines a width 222 along the cross axis 220 and a length 228 along the expansion axis 218. The slit pattern 202 may be a repeating slit pattern 202, for example, when the expandable sheet 200 has a length greater than the length 228 of the slit pattern 202. As illustrated, only a portion of the slit pattern 202 of the expandable sheet 200 is shown for illustrative purposes. In general, the slit pattern 202 extends to the edges of the expandable sheet 200 (e.g., across its entire width and along its entire length, or repeated to extend along its entire length) to facilitate deployment and expansion of the expandable sheet 200 into an expandable configuration.
The slits 206 are configured to expand in response to a minimum tension applied to the substrate 204 in the expansion axis 218 to provide an expanded configuration, which may form folded walls. A folded wall may be formed of portion 236 of sheet material between nearby slits 206 in adjacent rows 232. Between adjacent slits 206 in the same row is a beam 234 of material, which may not rotate when expanded. In particular, when the expandable sheet 200 is initially in an unexpanded configuration (a substantially flat sheet) then tension-activated (pulled along the expansion axis 218), portions of the substrate 204 may move upward and downward from the substantially two-dimensional (2D) major surface and become a three-dimensional (3D) article as described herein in more detail (see
The slit pattern 202 is defined to include multiple regions 208, in particular at least a first region 210 and a second region 212. In the illustrated embodiment, the slit pattern 202 also includes a third region 224 and a fourth region 226. Each of the regions 208 are defined to extend across the width 222 of the slit pattern 202.
Each of the regions 208 includes at least two staggered rows 232 of the slits 206. Each of the rows 232 of slits 206 is substantially parallel to one another, and each of the rows 232 includes multiple slits 206. Each of the rows 232 may be substantially parallel to the cross axis 220. One of more of the regions 208 may include additional rows 232, which may also be staggered. Each region may have two, three, four, or more rows of staggered slits 206. In some embodiments, at least one region comprises three or more staggered rows 232 of slits 206. In the illustrated embodiment, each region includes four rows 232 of staggered slits 206.
As used herein, the term “staggered row” refers to the locations of substantially all the slits in a given row being out of phase, or phase offset, by a set amount or a minimum distance along the cross axis 220 when compared to corresponding slits in a directly adjacent row. In the illustrated embodiment, the adjacent rows 232 are out of phase by one half of the horizontal pitch (for example, as measured by the geometric center-to-center distance) between the slits 206.
Each of the arrangements of a region may be described as defining the location and orientation of various pattern features. In general, the slit pattern 202 includes at least one arrangement that is different than at least one other arrangement. In the illustrated embodiment, the first region 210 defines a first arrangement of pattern features and the second region 212 defines a second arrangement of pattern features different than the first arrangement. Further, the slit pattern 202 may include additional regions with the same or different arrangement. In the illustrated embodiment, the slit pattern 202 includes a third region 224 and a fourth region 226. Each of these additional regions another arrangement different than the first arrangement, the second arrangement, or both.
As used herein, the term “pattern features” refers to a slit or of a slit feature along the major surface. As used herein, the term “slit feature” refers to a segment, a segment intersection, or an end point of a slit. The term “shifted pattern feature” of an arrangement refers to a shifted location or orientation of a slit or a slit feature compared to a corresponding slit or slit feature in another arrangement. The term “shifted slit” refers to a shift in the location or orientation of an entire slit. The term “shifted slit feature” refers to a shift in the location or orientation of a slit feature in a slit. Different arrangements may be compared by overlaying one region on top of another region and identifying how one or more slits or slit features have shifted.
In the illustrated embodiment, the slit pattern 202 defines at least a second arrangement of the second region 212 has one or more shifted pattern features compared to a first arrangement of the first region 210. The other arrangements may have one or more shifted pattern features compared to the first arrangement, the second arrangement, or both. In the illustrated embodiment, the third region 224 has a third arrangement different than the first and second arrangements, and the fourth region 226 has a fourth arrangement different than the first, second, and third arrangements.
The shifted pattern features may be implemented in various ways in a slit pattern. Each slit in at least one row of an arrangement may have at least one of the shifted pattern features compared to another arrangement. In particular, in the illustrated embodiment, each slit 206 in at least one row of the second arrangement has at least one of the shifted pattern features compared to the first arrangement. Such shifted pattern features may also be applied to other arrangements, such as the third arrangement and the fourth arrangement. In some embodiments, each slit 206 of the second arrangement may have at least one of the shifted pattern features. In the illustrated embodiment, each slit 206 of the second, third, and fourth arrangements has at least one of the shifted pattern features compared to the first arrangement, and also compared to one another.
A shift in the location of the pattern features may be embodied in various ways. In some embodiments, a shifted pattern feature corresponds to a phase shift, in particular, in the location of a slit or slit feature compared to a corresponding slit or slit feature in another arrangement. A phase shift of a shifted pattern feature may be measured relative to a width of each slit or the horizontal pitch between each slit. In some embodiments, the phase shift may be greater than or equal to 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 10, 15, 20, or 25 percent of the width of the slit corresponding to the shifted pattern feature. In some embodiments, the phase shift may be less than or equal to 33, 25, 20, 15, 10, 5, 4, 3, 2, or 1 percent of the width of the slit corresponding to the shifted pattern feature.
In some embodiments, the phase shift is along the cross axis 220 (e.g., in a horizontal direction). A phase shift along the cross axis 220 may be used, for example, when at least one slit 206 in each region includes a segment extending at least partially along the expansion axis 218. In the illustrated embodiment, the second arrangement includes slit features in its slits 206 that are phase shifted along the cross axis 220 compared to corresponding slit features in the first arrangement while the location and orientation of the slits 206 are not shifted. The phase shift of slit features without shifting slits themselves is also shown in
A shift in the orientation of the pattern features may be embodied in various ways. In some embodiments, a shifted pattern feature corresponds to an inversion in a slit or slit feature (see
As used herein, the term “slit” refers to a narrow cut through the article forming at least one line or segment, which may be straight or curved, or described as linear or non-linear, having at least two terminal ends. Slits described herein are discrete, meaning that individual slits do not intersect other slits. A slit is generally not a cut-out, where a “cut-out” is defined as a surface area of the sheet that is removed from the sheet when a slit intersects itself. However, in practice, many forming techniques result in the removal of some surface area of the sheet that is not considered a “cut-out” for the purposes of the present application. In particular, many cutting technologies produce a “kerf”, or a cut having some physical width. For example, a laser cutter will ablate some surface area of the sheet to create the slit, a router will cut away some surface area of the material to create the slit, and even crush cutting creates some deformation on the edges of the material that forms a physical gap across the surface area of the material. Furthermore, molding techniques require material between opposing faces of the slit, creating a gap or kerf at the slit. In various embodiments, the gap or kerf of the slit will be less than or equal to the thickness of the material. For example, a slit pattern cut into paper that is 0.007″ (approximately 18 mm) thick might have slits with a gap that is approximately 0.007″ or less. However, it is understood that the width of the slit could be increased to a factor that is many times larger than the thickness of the material and be consistent with the technology disclosed herein.
Slits can be characterized as “simple slits” or “compound slits,” where a “simple slit” is defined as having exactly two terminal ends and a “compound slit” has more than two terminal ends.
Slit patterns can also be characterized as single slit patterns or multi slit patterns. The term “single slit pattern” refers to a pattern of individual slits that form individual rows each extending across the sheet transversely along the cross axis, where the rows form a slit pattern of individual rows along the axial length of the sheet, and the pattern of slits in each row is different than the pattern of slits in the directly adjacent rows. For example, the slits in one row may be staggered, or axially offset or out of phase, with the slits in the directly adjacent rows. A “multi slit pattern” refers to a pattern of individual slits that form a first set of transversely adjacent rows, where the individual slits within the first set of adjacent rows are transversely aligned. A second set of adjacent rows may be staggered, or axially offset or out of phase, with the first set of rows. Multi slit patterns may include double slit patterns, triple slit patterns, quadruple slit patterns, etc.
In the illustrated embodiment, the slit pattern 202 includes multiple separate regions of slits 206. Each region includes multiple staggered rows 232 of slits 206. In
The substrate 204 of sheet material may be formed of various suitable materials. Some exemplary materials into which the slit patterns described herein can be formed include, for example, paper (including cardboard, corrugated paper, coated or uncoated paper, kraft paper, cotton bond, recycled paper, virgin paper, extensible paper); plastic; woven and non-woven materials and/or fabrics; elastic materials (including rubber such as natural rubber, synthetic rubber, nitrile rubber, silicone rubber, urethane rubbers, chloroprene rubber, Ethylene Vinyl Acetate or EVA rubber); inelastic materials (including polyethylene and polycarbonate); polyesters; acrylics; and polysulfones. The article can be, for example, a material, sheet, film, or any similar construction. As used herein, the term “extensible” refers to materials that are able to elongate (e.g., 20% or less) under tension without slits.
Examples of thermoplastic materials that can be used include one or more of polyolefins (e.g., polyethylene (high density polyethylene (HDPE), medium density polyethylene (MDPE), low density polyethylene (LDPE), linear low density polyethylene (LLDPE)), metallocene polyethylene, and the like, and combinations thereof), polypropylene (e.g., atactic and syndiotactic polypropylene)), polyamides (e.g. nylon), polyurethane, polyacetal (such as Delrin), polyacrylates, and polyesters (such as polyethylene terephthalate (PET), polyethylene terephthalate glycol (PETG), and aliphatic polyesters such as polylactic acid), fluoroplastics (such as THV from 3M company, St. Paul, MN, US), and combinations thereof. Examples of thermoset materials can include one or more of polyurethanes, silicones, epoxies, melamine, phenol-formaldehyde resin, and combinations thereof. Examples of biodegradable polymers can include one or more of polylactic acid (PLA), polyglycolic acid (PGA), poly(caprolactone), copolymers of lactide and glycolide, polyethylene succinate), polyhydroxybutyrate, and combinations thereof.
“Paper” as used herein refers to woven or non-woven sheet-shaped products or fabrics (which may be folded, and may be of various thicknesses) made from cellulose (particularly fibers of cellulose, (whether naturally or artificially derived)) or otherwise derivable from the pulp of plant sources such as wood, corn, grass, rice, and the like. Paper includes products made from both traditional and non-traditional paper making processes, as well as materials of the type described above that have other types of fibers embedded in the sheet, for example, reinforcement fibers. Paper also includes extensible papers made through various processes including creping, double-roll compaction, CLUPAK compaction, the EXPANDA double-roll process or any other process or additive to increase the extensibility of the paper. Paper may have coatings on the sheet or on the fibers themselves. Examples of non-traditional products that are “paper” within the context of this disclosure include the material available under the trade designation TRINGA from PAPTIC (Espoo, Finland), and sheet forms of the material available under the trade designation SULAPAC from SULAPAC (Helsinki, Finland).
The material in which the single slit pattern is formed can be of any desired thickness. In some embodiments, the material has a thickness between about 0.001 inch (0.025 mm) and about 5 inches (127 mm). In some embodiments, the material has a thickness between about 0.01 inch (0.25 mm) and about 2 inches (51 mm). In some embodiments, the material has a thickness between about 0.1 inch (2.5 mm) and about 1 inch (25.4 mm). In some embodiments, the thickness is greater than 0.001 inch (0.025 mm), or 0.01 inch (0.25 mm), or 0.05 inch (1.3 mm), or 0.1 inch (2.5 mm), or 0.5 inch (13 mm), or 1 inch (25 mm), or 1.5 inches (38 mm), or 2 inches (51 mm), or 2.5 inches (64 mm), or 3 inches (76 mm). In some embodiments, the thickness is less than 5 inches (127 mm) or 4 inches (101 mm), or 3 inches (76 mm), or 2 inches (51 mm), or 1 inch (25 mm), or 0.5 inch (13 mm), or 0.25 inch (6.3 mm), or 0.1 inch (2.5 mm).
In some embodiments, where the material is paper, the thickness is between about 0.003 inch (0.076 mm) and about 0.010 inch (0.25 mm). In some embodiments where the material is plastic, the thickness is between about 0.005 inch (0.13 mm) and about 0.125 inch (3.2 mm).
In some embodiments, the slit or cut pattern extends substantially to one or more of the edges of the sheet, film, or material. In some embodiments, this allows the material to be of unlimited length and also to be deployed by tension, particularly when made with non-extensible or less-extensible materials. The amount of edge material is the area of material surrounding and not including the single slit pattern. In some embodiments, the amount of edge material, or down-web border, can be defined as the width of the rectangle whose long axis is parallel to the expansion axis and can be drawn on the substrate without overlapping or touching any slits. In some embodiments, the amount of edge material is less than 0.010 inch (0.25 mm) or less than 0.001 inch (0.025 mm). In some embodiments, the width of the down-web border is less than 0.010 inch (0.25 mm) or less than 0.001 inch (0.025 mm). In some embodiments, the amount of edge material is less than 5 times the thickness of the substrate. In some embodiments, the width of the down-web border is less than 5 times the thickness of the substrate.
In some embodiments, at least one of the shifted pattern features in a slit pattern 202 corresponds to a shifted slit feature in one of the slits without shifting at least one other slit feature in the same slit. In both the slit pattern 202 and the slit pattern 502, the first (sinusoidal) segment of each slit is shifted, while the other (linear) segments are not shifted.
In some embodiments, each of the slits may be described as having a same shape, except at least one of the shifted pattern features corresponds to a shifted slit feature compared to a corresponding slit feature in the first arrangement. For example, the segments of the slits may have the same segment shapes but one of the segments may be shifted. In both the slit pattern 202 and the slit pattern 502, the first (sinusoidal) segment of each slit is shifted, while the other (linear) segments are not shifted.
This is further illustrated in
When a sheet containing the slit pattern 202 or the slit pattern 502 is subjected to a tension force in an axial direction, the material expands to form a three-dimensional pattern.
As can be seen in
Various slit patterns of the present disclosure, such as compound slit patterns, provide folded walls in the expanded configuration of the expandable sheet. Other slit patterns of the present disclosure, such as simple slit patterns, provide open 3D structures other than folded walls in the expanded configuration of the expandable sheet, such as shown in
In some embodiments (not shown), the shifted pattern features may include varying heights in cross-web slabs between rows of slits, which phase shift the location of slits along the expansion axis. Cross-web slabs can be defined as rectangular regions with a rectangle whose long axis is perpendicular to the expansion axis and whose width is some finite number and can be drawn on the substrate without overlapping or touching any slits. In some embodiments, cross-web slabs of any width may already exist within the article as an integral part of the pattern. In some embodiments, cross-web slabs of any width may be added to the ends of a finite length article to make the article easier to deploy. In some embodiments, cross-web slabs of any width may be added intermittently to a continuously patterned article.
In some embodiments, the distance between the farthest spaced terminal ends of a single slit (also referred to as the slit length) is between about 0.25 inch (6.35 mm) long and about 3 inches (76 mm) long, or between about 0.5 inch (13 mm) and about 2 inches (51 mm), or between about 1 inch (25 mm) and about 1.5 inches (38 mm). In some embodiments, the farthest distance between terminal ends of a single slit (also referred to as slit length) is between 50 times the substrate thickness and 1000 times the substrate thickness, or between 100 and 500 times the substrate thickness. In some embodiments, the slit length is less than 1000 times the substrate thickness, or less than 900 times, or less than 800 times, or less than 700 times, or less than 600 times, or less than 500 times, or less than 400 times, or less than 500 times, or less than 200 times, or less than 100 times the substrate thickness. In some embodiments, the slit length is greater than 50 times the substrate thickness, or greater than 100 times, or greater than 200 times, or greater than 500 times, or greater than 400 times, or greater than 500 times, or greater than 600 times, or greater than 700 times, or greater than 800 times, or greater than 900 times the substrate thickness.
The articles and materials described herein can be used in various ways. In one embodiment, the two-dimensional sheet, material, or article has tension applied along the expansion axis, which causes the slits to form the openings and/or flaps and/or motions described herein. In some embodiments, the tension is applied by hand or with a machine.
The present disclosure describes articles that begin as a flat sheet but deploy into a three-dimensional construction upon the application of force/tension. In some embodiments, such constructions form energy absorbing structures. The patterns, articles, and constructions described herein have a large number of potential uses, at least some of which are described herein.
One exemplary use is to protect objects for shipping or storage. As stated above, existing shipping materials have a variety of drawbacks including, for example, they occupy too much space when stored before use (e.g., bubble wrap, packing peanuts) and thus increase the cost of shipping; they require special equipment to manufacture (e.g., inflatable air bags); they are not always effective (e.g., crumpled paper); and/or they are not widely recyclable (e.g., bubble wrap, packing peanuts, inflatable airbags). The tension-activated, expanding films, sheets, and articles described herein can be used to protect items during shipping without any of the above drawbacks. When made of sustainable materials, the articles described herein are effective and sustainable. Because the articles described herein are flat when manufactured, shipped, sold, and stored and only become three-dimensional when activated with tension/force by the user, these articles are more effective and efficient at making the best use of storage space and minimizing shipping/transit/packaging costs. Retailers and users can use relatively little space to house a product that will expand to 10 or 20 or 30 or 40 or more times its original size. Further, the articles described herein are simple and highly intuitive for use. The user merely pulls the product off the roll or takes flat sheets of product, applies tension across the article along the expansion axis (which can be done by hand or with a machine), and then wraps the product around an item to be shipped. In many embodiments, no tape is needed because the interlocking features enable the product to interlock with another layer of itself.
In some embodiments, the slit patterns described herein create packaging materials and/or cushioning films that provide advantages over the existing offerings. For example, in some embodiments, the packaging materials and/or cushioning films of the present disclosure provide enhanced cushioning or product protection. In some embodiments, the packaging materials and/or cushioning films of the present disclosure provide similar or enhanced cushioning or product protection when compared to the existing offerings but are recyclable and/or more sustainable or environmentally friendly than existing offerings. In some embodiments, the packaging materials and/or cushioning films of the present disclosure provide similar or enhanced cushioning or product protection when compared to the existing offerings but can be expanded and wrapped around an item to be shipped. Constructions that hold their shape once tension is applied can be preferred because they may eliminate the need for tape to hold the material in place for many applications.
Thus, various embodiments of an expandable sheet with shifted arrangements of slits are disclosed. Other features and combinations of features within the scope of this disclosure may be readily apparent to one skilled in the art having the benefit of the figures, descriptions, and claims.
Terms related to orientation, such as “vertical,” “horizontal,” “axial,” “longitudinal,” “transverse,” and “end,” are used to describe relative positions of features and are not meant to limit the absolute orientation of the embodiments contemplated.
As used herein, the term “configured to” may be used interchangeably with the terms “adapted to” or “structured to” unless the content of this disclosure clearly dictates otherwise.
Unless otherwise indicated, all numbers expressing feature distances, sizes, amounts, and physical properties used in the specification and claims may be understood as being modified either by the term “exactly” or “about.”
The singular forms “a,” “an,” and “the” encompass embodiments having plural referents unless its context clearly dictates otherwise.
The term “or” is generally employed in its inclusive sense, for example, to mean “and/or” unless the context clearly dictates otherwise. The term “and/or” means one or all of the listed elements or a combination of at least two of the listed elements.
The phrases “at least one of,” “comprises at least one of,” and “one or more of” followed by a list refers to any one of the items in the list and any combination of two or more items in the list.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/IB2023/057418 | 7/20/2023 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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63391230 | Jul 2022 | US | |
63432863 | Dec 2022 | US |