The present invention relates to a female part of a hook and loop fastener, to a hook and loop fastener having the female part, and to an absorbent article having the hook and loop fastener.
A hook and loop fastener is widely used for fastening flooring material, in open/close application for clothes, etc., and also for engagement of absorbent articles such as diapers because of the simplicity of the attaching/detaching operation. A hook and loop fastener is composed of a male part and a female part for engaging with it. Specifically, it is locked by engagement of loops in the female part with hooks of the male part. In the prior art, an attempt has been made to develop female material providing loops of sufficient engaging force with the hooks of male part.
In Japanese Patent Publication No. S55-107561, there is disclosed a manufacturing method of warp knitted fabric having a pattern formed by raised fabrics of different length, especially having raised fabric ribs, in which yarns forming raised fabric are engaged with nodes of the base knitting texture and then cut between the engaged nodes.
In Japanese Patent Publication No. 2000-303330, there is disclosed a woven fabric with knitted loops comprising substrate woven fabric that comprises warp wales for forming the meshes of mutually parallel wales with stitches and wefts being bound to the warp wales to form the substrate fabric, and two legs knitted with the substrate fabric, wherein the portions of wefts bound to wales are disposed between the first wale and the third wale on the mesh of the second wale and the fourth wale, and two legs of a loop are knitted with the second and the fourth stitches.
In Japanese Patent Publication No. 2004-236960, there is disclosed a female material piece for a hook-and-loop type fastener, having the structure in which it is joined to the substrate surface via a warp knitted fabric which has loops formed to receive hooks, wherein the warp knitted fabric is knitted with a loop pile knitting texture engaged with a swing knitting texture by yarns threaded through a middle guide bar and with a swing knitting texture by yarns threaded through a rear guide bar such that the directions of the loop piles adjacent in the knitting direction are alternately different to the right and left, and with a base knitting texture engaged by yarns threaded through a front guide bar with a swing knitting texture or a loop pile forming knitting texture, respectively.
It is required to provide a female part of a hook and loop fastener, which has an excellent engaging force for engaging with a male part, and in which the left-right difference of the engaging force is small, and which can be simply produced.
The present invention provides a female part of a hook and loop fastener comprising a substrate and a knitted fabric composed of warps, wefts, and loop yarns, wherein a structure of the warps is a chain stitch on which open and close nodes are alternately arranged, loop yarns are fixed to the close nodes of the warp yarns only with open nodes of the loop yarn, and the loop yarns projects in right and left direction alternately relative to a direction of the warps from only one surface of the knitted fabric.
A female part of a hook and loop fastener according to the present invention has excellent engaging force for engaging with a male part, and left-right difference of the engaging force is small. The female part of a hook and loop fastener according to the present invention can be simply produced, and can be advantageously used as a female part of a hook and loop fastener in an absorbent article such as a paper diaper.
The present invention will be described in detail below with reference to drawings showing an embodiment thereof. A female part of a hook and loop fastener according to the present invention is not limited to the embodiment that follows.
Female part 10 of a hook and loop fastener of the present invention has a knitted fabric composed of warps 21 (not shown), wefts 22 (not shown) and loop yarns 23, and substrate 30. In knitted fabric 20, loop yarns 23 form a pile of knitted fabric 20, and warps 21 and wefts 22 form base knitting texture 24, with loop yarns 23 projecting only from one surface of knitted fabric 20 alternately in the left and right direction relative to warps 21.
The knitting texture of knitted fabric 20 will be described below with reference to
Warps 21 are formed by a chain stitch on which the pattern 1-0/0-1/0-1/1-0 is repeated. As described above, with a repetition of this pattern, open node 21a and close node 21b are alternately repeated to form a chain stitch. Warps 21 become base knitting texture (middle reed) 24 of knitted fabric 20.
Loop yarns 23 are sent out to the left and to the right relative to warps 21 to form a pile (front reed) of knitted fabric 20. Thus, loop yarn 23 is first wrapped at a predetermined needle position of knitted fabric 20 from left to right by the close node or open node (close node in
Here, the expression “the loop yarns project from only one surface of the knitted fabric alternately to the left and to the right relative to the warp yarns” means that in knitted fabric 20, when the cross sections perpendicular to a direction of warps 21 are viewed, loop yarns 23 are formed alternately to the left and to the right while maintaining a constant angle relative to the surface of base knitting texture 24 with the engaging point with the warp as the origin. Therefore, loop yarns which are formed approximately parallel to the surface of the base knitting texture (that is, the loop yarns which lie on the surface) are not included even if the loop yarns are formed to the left and to the right relative to the warps.
The pattern of loop yarns 23 may be represented as the repetition of, for example, 1-0/3-4/6-7/4-3 (the pattern shown in
Wefts 22 coupled with warps 21 form base knitting texture 24 (rear reed) of knitted fabric 20. Wefts 22 are inserted into the chain stitch of warps 21, for example, as the stitch in the pattern 0-0/3-3 (the pattern shown in
In female part 10 of hook and loop fastener, loop yarns 23 project, as described above, only from one surface of the knitted fabric 20 alternately to the left and to the right relative to warps 21. In view of reducing the engaging force and the left-right difference of the engaging force, the angle of projecting loop yarns 23 relative to knitted fabric 20 is preferably 30° or more relative to the surface of knitted fabric 20, and may be 45° or more in one aspect. The upper-bound of the projecting angle has no special limitation, and the angle of projecting loop yarns 23 relative to the surface of knitted fabric 20 may be 80° or may be even 90°. The angle of projecting loop yarns 23 may be different between left and right, but in view of reducing the left-right difference of engaging force, it is preferable that the angle of projecting loop yarns 23 relative to the surface of knitted fabric 20 is nearly equal for left and right.
Measurement of the projecting angle of the loop yarns relative to the surface of the knitted fabric is carried out by the following method. “Projecting angle θ of the loop yarns relative to the surface of the knitted fabric” is defined, as shown in
The knitting machine used for knitting knitted fabric 20 is not particularly limited, and any knitting machine with three reeds or four reeds widely used conventionally can be used as it is. Thus, the female part of hook and loop fastener of the present invention can be simply produced at low cost.
Material of warps 21, wefts 22, and loop yarns 23 constituting knitted fabric 20 is not particularly limited, and may include polypropylene, polyester, polyethylene, polyamide, polyurethane, rayon, copolymers or mixtures thereof, and natural fiber, etc. In an aspect, in view of preventing damage of a female part due to engagement with a male part, polyamide exhibiting high strength may be used. In view of material cost and environmental stability, polyester may be used. As loop yarns, multi-filament yarns are preferred to mono-filament yarns in order to obtain higher probability for engaging with a male part. In this case, since a loop yarn of thin filament may sometimes be broken during engagement with the male part, a loop yarn of suitable diameter should be selected based on the shape, etc., of the hook and loop fastener. As regards warps and wefts, both mono-filament and multi-filament yarns may be used. In general, fineness of monofilament yarns may be in a range of 20-220 dtex, and preferably in a range of 20-100 dtex.
In one aspect, knitted fabric 20 may have basis weight of 10-100 g/m2. If the basis weight is 10 g/m2 or less, a shape of the knitted fabric may be difficult to be maintained when knitting, and if the basis weight is 100 g/m2 or more, rigidity is increased so that, when attached to an absorbent article, flexibility may be impaired in that portion. The knitted fabric may become too dense, and when the substrate is designed aesthetically, visibility may be impaired. Since female part 10 of a hook and loop fastener of the present invention has excellent engaging force for engaging with a male part and left-right difference of the engaging force is small, the basis weight can be reduce as compared to conventional products. Therefore, a female part of a hook and loop fastener having excellent visibility can be produced at low cost.
Additional processing such as raising, embossing, printing, dyeing, coloring, and the like may be performed on female part 10 of a hook and loop fastener. Knitted fabric 20 may be dyed in all or in part. Especially when used as a member of an absorbent article such as a diaper, gloss such as luster, shining, etc., can be diminished and aesthetically excellent appearance can be obtained.
The material for substrate 30 is not particularly limited, and resin film, non-woven fabric, paper, or laminate thereof may be used. Examples of resin films include synthetic resin films such as polyester resins, for example, polypropylene, polyethylene, polystyrene, polyethylene terephthalate; polyamide resins, polyurethane resins, or laminate of these synthetic resin films. In one aspect, position indicator for engaging surface to engage with a male part, or various symbols or designs may be provided on the surface of the substrate.
Substrate 30 is joined to knitted fabric 20 on the surface opposite to the surface from which loop yarn 23 projects alternately to the left and the right. Method of joining substrate 30 to knitted fabric 20 is not particularly limited. Any method known conventionally such as dry lamination, extrusion lamination, wet lamination, thermal lamination, ultrasonic method, may be used. Among them, dry lamination method is preferable in view of productivity, flexibility, visibility of position indicator or the like provided on the substrate layer. As an adhesive for dry lamination, urethane based adhesive, EVA based adhesive, acrylic adhesive, vinyl acetate based adhesive or the like may be used. As an adhesive for wet lamination, an adhesive based on starch, casein, vinyl acetate, polyacrylic ester, or the like may be used. For extrusion lamination, resins such as polyethylene, polypropylene, or modified polyolefin may be suitably used. An adhesive or resin is not limited to those mentioned above.
In the case of dry lamination, the adhesive layer may be provided on one surface of the substrate all over the entire surface, or may be provided partially. When the adhesive layer is provided partially, there is no special restriction on the method of application. In general, an adhesive is applied in patterns, with no particular restriction on the pattern, shape, size, etc., of application. Any pattern, shape and size, for example, circle, ellipse, rectangle, polygon, etc., may be employed. When an adhesive is applied partially on the surface of the substrate, number of loop yarns caused to fall and be adhered to the surface due to seepage of adhesive through the knitted fabric can be reduced, so that decrease of engaging force for engaging with hooks of a male part can be avoided. By suitably selecting the shape of the application pattern and the amount of adhesive, the engaging force can be varied.
Female part 10 of hook and loop fastener of the present invention can be used as hook and loop fastener 50 by combining it with male part 40, as shown in
Here, the left-right difference of engaging force can be evaluated by causing a female part of a hook and loop fastener to engage with a male part, measuring the engaging force when the two are peeled off from right to left (right engaging force) with respect to the width direction (that is, CD direction, the direction perpendicular to the warp direction), and the engaging force when the two are peeled off from left to right (left engaging force) for a plurality of points, and obtaining the absolute value of the calculated result calculated by: {(mean of the measured right engaging force)−(mean of the measured left engaging force)}/(mean of all the measured values of right engaging force and left engaging force). The nearer the value thus obtained is to zero, the smaller the left-right difference of the engaging force.
A male part may be of any type as long as satisfactory engaging force can be obtained. For example, a male part having mushroom-shaped hook, key-shaped hook, or J-shaped hook can be used. Pin density in a male part is not particularly specified, but is generally in a range of 500-5000 pins per square inch, and in one aspect, a male part having pin density of 1600 pins per square inch may be used. Material of the male part may be selected, as in the case of yarns constituting the female part, from polypropylene, polyester, polyethylene, polyamide, copolymers or mixtures thereof. Thickness of the substrate portion of the male part can be suitably set. Specifically, the hook tape commercially available from Sumitomo 3M (CS-600) etc., can be used.
The hook and loop fastener of the present invention can be used as a fastener of floor material or wall material, a fastener of clothes, a fastener for cleaning members, a fastener for car interior materials. It can also be used as a fastener of absorbent articles such as paper diapers, sanitary napkins, breastfeeding pad, etc. When the hook and loop fastener is used for an absorbent article, especially paper diaper, engaging characteristics of the female part and male part, in particular performance of the female part should be considered. In ordinary paper diapers, a pair of male parts is provided on both sides of the wearer's back, and a pair of female parts is provided on the left and right of front body for abdomen. Thus, the paper diaper has the male parts and female parts to be engaged respectively on the left and the right locations. If the left-right difference of engaging force, that is, the difference between the forces required to peel-off to the left direction and the right direction, is large, the wearer may feel anxiety in the reliable fastening function of the paper diaper provided by the hook and loop fastener. The female part of the present invention has the structure in which the loop yarns project alternately to the left and the right relative to the warps, so that the left-right difference of the engaging force for engaging with the male part is small, and therefore, is particularly suited to such application.
When the female part of hook and loop fastener of the present invention is used in a hook and loop fastener for an absorbent article, means for fastening to such absorbent article may include adhesion by means of, for example, gluing, thermal fusion, ultrasonic bonding, integral molding, mechanical fastening such as sewing, stapler, etc. For fastening by means of gluing, known adhesives such as rubber based adhesive, acryl based adhesive, silicone based adhesive, EVA based adhesive, for example, SIS, SBS, etc., may be suitably selected as required, but adhesives are not limited to those resins.
Examples of the present invention will be described in further detail below. It is to be understood that the present invention is not limited to these Examples.
A knitting machine with three reeds (manufactured by Karl Mayer Co.) was used to knit a knitted fabric having knitting texture of loop yarns 1-0/3-4/6-7/4-3, warps 1-0/0-1/0-1/1-0, and wefts 0-0/3-3 in tricot pile knitting. As material for loop yarns, warps and wefts, polyamide (78 Dtex, 24 threads (manufactured by TORAY Co.)) was used for loop yarns and polyester (22 Dtex, one thread (manufactured by TEIJIN Co.) was used for warps and wefts. Knitting conditions were: 1 in 1 out (2 needle position corresponding to Wales), Course 9.6/cm, Wales 5.5/cm, basis weight was 21.8 g/cm2.
The knitted fabric thus obtained was dry-laminated to a biaxial oriented polypropylene substrate (Trade name: FOR2, manufactured by Futamura Chemical Co., (corona processing on both faces)) of 12 μm in thickness, using a polyurethane adhesive to obtain a female part of a hook and loop fastener. The knitting texture of the knitted fabric of the hook and loop fastener thus obtained is schematically shown in
As in Example 1, a knitting machine with three reeds (manufactured by Karl Mayer Co.) was used to knit a knitted fabric having knitting texture of loop yarns 1-0/3-4/6-7/4-3, warps 1-0/0-1/0-1/1-0, and wefts 0-0/3-3 in tricot pile knitting. As material for loop yarns, warps and wefts, polyester (84 Dtex, 36 threads (manufactured by TORAY Co.)) was used for loop yarns and polyester (22 Dtex, one thread (manufactured by TEIJIN Co.) was used for warps and wefts. Knitting conditions were: 1 in 1 out (2 needle position corresponding to Wales), Course 10.4/cm, Wales 5.5/cm, basis weight was 24.2 g/cm2. As in Example 1, a female part of a hook and loop fastener was obtained. The knitting texture of the knitted fabric of the hook and loop fastener thus obtained, and the state of the loop yarns formed into knitted fabric was the same as in Example 1.
A knitting machine with three reeds (manufactured by Karl Mayer Co.) was used to knit a knitted fabric having knitting texture of loop yarns 1-0/4-5/8-9/5-4, warps 1-0/0-1/0-1/1-0, and wefts 0-0/4-4 in tricot pile knitting. As material for loop yarns, warps and wefts, polyester (84 Dtex, 36 threads (manufactured by TORAY Co.)) was used for loop yarns and polyester (22 Dtex, one thread (manufactured by TEIJIN Co.) was used for warps and wefts. Knitting conditions were: 1 in 2 out (3 needle position corresponding to Wales), Course 10.4/cm, Wales 3.7/cm, basis weight was 17.9 g/cm2. As in Example 1, a female part of a hook and loop fastener was obtained. The knitting texture of the knitted fabric of the hook and loop fastener thus obtained, is schematically shown in
Knitted fabric made from polyamide having a basis weight of 22 g/m2 was used to obtain a female part of a hook and loop fastener, as in Example 1.
Knitted fabric made from polyester having a basis weight of 26.5 g/m2 was used to obtain a female part of a hook and loop fastener, as in Example 1.
On the female part of the hook and loop fastener obtained in the Examples and Comparative examples described above, a male part (CS-600, manufactured by Sumitomo 3M Co.) of 25 mm in width, was placed and press bonded with 2 kg roller. Then, the female part and the male part were pulled in horizontal direction with a force of 1 kg to cause both to engage with each other. The female part and the male part of the engaged hook and loop fastener were stretched in vertical direction at stretching rate of 300 mm/min, and the peeling force at the time of peeling-off was measured to obtain the engaging force (N/25 mm). The engaging force was measured by peeling off the engaged female part of the hook and loop fastener from the male part either from right to left (right engaging force) or left to right (left engaging force) relative to the width direction (that is, CD direction, perpendicular to the warp direction), each six times. The engaging force was obtained by averaging 12 measured values. The results obtained are shown in Table 1.
Directionality of engaging force was obtained from six measured values each of the right engaging force and the left engaging force measured as described above, using the equation: {(mean of six measured right engaging force)−(mean of six measured left engaging force)}/(mean of all (twelve) measured right engaging force and left engaging force) and expressing the result in an absolute value. The closer the value is to zero, the smaller is the left-right difference of the engaging force. Results are shown in Table 1.
Projecting angle of Loop Yarns
As shown in
The knitted fabric of the female part of the hook and loop fastener and the substrate bonded thereto with an adhesive was set at 25 mm inter-chuck, was stretched in vertical direction at stretching rate of 300 mm/min, and the force at the time of separation of the knitted fabric and the substrate was measured by using a Tensilon tensile tester to obtain delamination force (N/25 mm). Results are shown in Table 1.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2008 232543 | Sep 2008 | JP | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US09/55817 | 9/3/2009 | WO | 00 | 2/28/2011 |