An embodiment of the invention relates to a fiber-oriented material and a method for manufacturing the fiber-oriented material.
There is a deposited body that is made by forming a fine fiber by electrospinning (also called electric field spinning, charge-induced spinning, etc.) and by depositing the fiber that is formed.
For a deposited body that is formed using electrospinning, the fibers are deposited randomly; therefore, the tensile strength is low in all directions; and the fluctuation of the tensile strength is large. In such a case, the direction in which the fibers of the deposited body extend can be aligned by mechanically pulling the fibers in one direction when depositing the fibers. If the direction in which the fibers extend can be aligned, the tensile strength of the deposited body can be increased in the direction in which the fibers extend. However, by merely pulling the fibers mechanically in one direction when depositing the fibers, only the tensile strength in that direction can be increased.
Therefore, it has been desirable to develop a fiber-oriented material and a method for manufacturing the fiber-oriented material in which the tensile strength can be increased in multiple directions.
For a fiber-oriented material according to an embodiment, a fiber that is included in the fiber-oriented material is in a closely-adhered state, and a tensile strength has maxima in two or more tensile directions at angles in a range not less than 0° but less than 180° between the tensile directions and a line passing through a center of the fiber-oriented material.
Embodiments will now be illustrated with reference to the drawings. Similar components in the drawings are marked with the same reference numerals; and a detailed description is omitted as appropriate.
(Fiber-Oriented Material)
Arrows X, Y, and Z in the drawings illustrate three directions orthogonal to each other. For example, the thickness direction of the fiber-oriented material 100 (a direction perpendicular to a major surface of the fiber-oriented material 100) is taken as the Z-direction. Also, one direction perpendicular to the thickness direction is taken as a Y-direction; and a direction perpendicular to the Z-direction and the Y-direction is taken as an X-direction.
The fiber-oriented material 100 includes a fiber 6.
For example, the fiber 6 can be formed using electrospinning.
The fiber 6 includes a polymeric substance. The polymeric substance can be, for example, an industrial material, a bio-affinity material, etc. The industrial material can be, for example, polypropylene, polyethylene, polystyrene, polyethylene terephthalate, polyvinyl chloride, polycarbonate, nylon, aramid, polyacrylate, polymethacrylate, polyimide, polyimide-imide, polyvinylidene fluoride, polyethersulfone, etc. The bio-affinity material can be, for example, collagen, laminin, gelatin, polyacrylonitrile, chitin, polyglycolic acid, polylactic acid, etc. However, the polymeric substance is not limited to those illustrated.
Also, the fibers 6 are closely adhered to each other. According to the solvent used in a “close-adhesion process” described below, there are cases where one portion of the fibers 6 melts; and the fibers 6 are fused to each other at the melted portions. Therefore, in the specification, the state in which the fibers 6 are closely adhered to each other and the state in which the fibers 6 are closely adhered and a portion of the fibers 6 is further fused are called the “closely-adhered state.”
It is difficult to measure the diametrical dimension of the fiber 6 in the fiber-oriented material 100 because the fibers 6 included in the fiber-oriented material 100 are in the closely-adhered state (referring to
However, it can be proved that fibers 6 exist in the closely-adhered state from the anisotropy of the tensile strength, the direction in which the long axes of the molecules extend, etc., described below.
Also, the fibers 6 are caused not to melt as much as possible in the close-adhesion process described below;
therefore, the diametrical dimension of the fiber 6 included in the fiber-oriented material 100 can be taken to be the diametrical dimension of the fiber 6 included in the deposited body 7.
In such a case, the average diameter of the fibers 6 included in the deposited body 7 can be taken to be not less than 0.05 μm and not more than 5 μm.
For example, the average diameter of the fibers 6 included in the deposited body 7 can be determined by imaging an electron micrograph of the surface of the deposited body 7 (referring to
If the fibers 6 that are included are in a closely-adhered state, the tensile strength of the fiber-oriented material 100 can be increased.
The tensile strength can be measured using a constant-rate-of-extension type tensile testing machine, etc. In such a case, for example, the tensile strength can be measured as the tensile strength (the maximum tensile load until fracture) conforming to JIS P8113.
Also, in the fiber-oriented material 100, the direction in which the fibers 6 extend is substantially aligned in a prescribed Z-direction region (thickness direction region). In other words, in the fiber-oriented material 100, the fibers 6 extend in about the same direction in a prescribed Z-direction region. In the specification, the fibers 6 extending in about the same direction is called the fibers 6 being “oriented.”
Also, in the Z-direction (the thickness direction), the fiber-oriented material 100 includes a region where the fibers 6 are oriented in a first direction, and a region where the fibers 6 are oriented in a second direction crossing the first direction.
For example, in the case of the fiber-oriented material 100 illustrated in
Here, if the fibers 6 are oriented, the tensile strength of the fiber-oriented material 100 in the orientation direction of the fibers 6 is high. On the other hand, the tensile strength of the fiber-oriented material 100 in directions orthogonal to the direction in which the fibers 6 extend is low.
However, because the fiber-oriented material 100 includes the region where the orientation direction of the fibers 6 is in the first direction and the region where the orientation direction of the fibers 6 is in the second direction crossing the first direction, the tensile strength can be high in the first direction and the second direction. In other words, according to the fiber-oriented material 100, the tensile strength can be increased in multiple directions.
Also, the directions in which the tensile strength is high can be changed by changing the angle between the first direction and the second direction. In other words, for directions orthogonal to the Z-direction, the direction in which the tensile strength is high can be set arbitrarily.
For example, the fiber-oriented material 100 illustrated in
Also, if the fiber-oriented material 100 further includes a region where the fibers 6 are oriented to be tilted 45° with respect to the X-direction, the tensile strength can be high also in the direction tilted 45° with respect to the X-direction. Therefore, the tensile strength can be high in three directions. That is, the orientation direction of the fibers 6 is the direction in which the tensile strength is high; therefore, if the number of regions having mutually-different orientation directions of the fibers 6 is high, the tensile strength becomes more isotropic.
The number and the combination of regions having mutually-different orientation directions of the fibers 6 and the orientation direction of the fibers 6 in each region are not limited to those illustrated in
The X-direction is taken as the directions of 0° and 180°; and the Y-direction is taken as the directions of 90° and 270°.
Also,
In the deposited body 7 as shown in
In the fiber-oriented sheet 70 as shown in
As shown in
In other words, the tensile strength has maxima in two tensile directions (the direction of 0° and the direction of 90°) at angles in a range not less than 0° but less than 180° between the tensile directions and a line passing through the center of the fiber-oriented material 100. In such a case, the tensile directions in which the tensile strength has maxima are the orientation directions of the fibers 6. In the fiber-oriented material 100 illustrated in
In such a case, if the number of regions having mutually-different orientation directions of the fibers 6 is high, the number of tensile directions in which the tensile strength has maxima also is high. In other words, the tensile strength has maxima in two or more tensile directions at angles in a range not less than 0° but less than 180° between the tensile directions and the line passing through the center of the fiber-oriented material 100.
For example, in the case where the material of the fiber 6 is collagen, F1 and F2 can be set to be 30 MPa or more, where F1 is the tensile strength in the X-direction, and F2 is the tensile strength in a direction perpendicular to the Z-direction and different from the X-direction. For example, F1 and F2 could be set to 70 MPa or more in the case where the direction that is perpendicular to the Z-direction and different from the X-direction is the Y-direction (referring to
In the case where the material of the fiber 6 is collagen, the tensile strength F1 in the X-direction of the deposited body 7 is about 3.1 MPa to 5.5 MPa; and the tensile strength F2 in the Y-direction is about 0.5 MPa to 0.6 MPa (referring to
Also, in the case where the material of the fiber 6 is collagen, the tensile strength F1 in the X-direction of the fiber-oriented sheet 70 is about 60 MPa; and the tensile strength F2 in the Y-direction is about 27 MPa (referring to
In such a case, F2/F1 for the deposited body 7 is about 0.09 to 0.19; and F2/F1 for the fiber-oriented sheet 70 is about 0.45.
Conversely, F2/F1 for the fiber-oriented material 100 ideally is 1. However, actually, there is fluctuation of the number of the fibers 6 and/or the directions in which the fibers 6 extend between the regions; therefore, F2/F1 is as in the following formula.
0.7≤F2/F2≤1.5
Also, the regions of the fiber-oriented material 100 each are closely adhered in the thickness direction. Therefore, the tensile strength is 0.18 MPa or more in the thickness direction of the fiber-oriented material 100.
The tensile strength is about 0.00052 MPa in the thickness direction of the deposited body 7.
Also, in an elongated polymeric substance, there is a tendency for the direction in which the long axes of the molecules extend (the molecular axis) to be the direction in which the polymeric substance (the fiber 6) extends. Therefore, by verifying the direction in which the long axes of the molecules extend at the surface of the fiber-oriented material 100, the direction in which the fibers 6 extend can be known; and it can be known also whether or not the fibers 6 are oriented.
The direction in which the long axes of the molecules extend can be known by using a structure determination method corresponding to the type of the polymeric substance.
For example, Raman spectroscopy can be used in the case of polystyrene, etc.; and polarized absorption spectroscopy can be used in the case of polyimide, etc.
Here, the case is described as an example where the polymeric substance is an organic compound including an amide group such as collagen, etc. For example, in the case of an organic compound including an amide group, by using a polarized FT-IR-ATR method (a polarized Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy) which is one type of infrared spectroscopy, the direction in which the long axes of the molecules extend can be known; and it can be known also whether or not the fibers 6 are oriented.
In such a case, the direction in which the long axes of the molecules extend can be determined by analyzing the surface of the fiber-oriented material 100 using the polarized FT-IR-ATR method as follows.
The absorption intensity for a wave number of 1640 cm−1 is taken as T1; and the absorption intensity for a wave number of 1540 cm−1 is taken as T2.
In such a case, the absorption intensity T1 is the absorption intensity in a direction orthogonal to the direction in which the long axes of the molecules extend. The absorption intensity T2 is the absorption intensity in the direction in which the long axes of the molecules extend.
Therefore, if the absorbance ratio R1 (T1/T2) is small in a prescribed polarization direction, it can be known that many molecules extend in the polarization direction.
Also, R1/R2 can be used as an orientation degree parameter by determining the maximum absorbance ratio R1 and the minimum absorbance ratio R2 by measuring the absorbance ratio by changing the angle between the prescribed polarization direction and the fiber-oriented material 100.
R1/R2 is large for the fiber-oriented material 100 according to the embodiment. For example, as described below, R1/R2 is 1.05 or more.
R1/R2 being large means that the directions in which the long axes of the molecules extend are aligned.
Also, as described above, there is a tendency for the direction in which the long axes of the molecules extend to be the direction in which the fibers 6 extend in an elongated polymeric substance. Therefore, R1/R2 being large means that the fibers 6 are oriented (the directions in which the fibers 6 extend are aligned).
As described above, the tensile strength can be increased in multiple directions for the fiber-oriented material 100 according to the embodiment. Therefore, it is possible to be used in technical fields (e.g., general industrial fields, medical fields such as surgical treatment, etc.) in which mechanical strength is necessary.
Further, for example, in designated technical fields such as the three-dimensional culture of biological tissue, etc., there are cases where it is important for the directions in which the long axes of the molecules of the polymeric substance included in the fiber 6 extend to be aligned (R1/R2 being large).
The directions in which the long axes of the molecules of the polymeric substance included in the fiber 6 extend are aligned (R1/R2 is large) for the fiber-oriented material 100 according to the embodiment; therefore, it is possible to be used also in designated technical fields such as the three-dimensional culture of biological tissue, etc.
(Method for Manufacturing Fiber-Oriented Material 100)
A method for manufacturing the fiber-oriented material 100 according to the embodiment will now be described.
First, by using the electrospinning apparatus 1, the deposited body 7 is formed by forming the fine fiber 6 and by depositing the fiber 6 that is formed. Also, the directions in which the fibers 6 extend in the deposited body 7 are aligned as much as possible by pulling the fiber 6 mechanically in one direction when depositing the fiber 6 that is formed.
As shown in
A hole for discharging a source material liquid 5 is provided in the nozzle 2.
The power supply 3 applies a voltage having a prescribed polarity to the nozzle 2. For example, the power supply 3 applies the voltage to the nozzle 2 so that the potential difference between the nozzle 2 and the collector 4 is 10 kV or more. The polarity of the voltage applied to the nozzle 2 may be positive or may be negative. The power supply 3 illustrated in
The collector 4 is provided on the side of the nozzle 2 where the source material liquid 5 is discharged. The collector 4 is grounded. A voltage that has the reverse polarity of the voltage applied to the nozzle 2 may be applied to the collector 4. Also, the collector 4 has a circular columnar configuration and can rotate.
The source material liquid 5 is a liquid in which a polymeric substance is melted in a solvent.
The polymeric substance is not particularly limited and can be modified appropriately according to the material properties of the fiber 6 to be formed. For example, the polymeric substance can be similar to those described above.
It is sufficient for the solvent to be able to melt the polymeric substance. The solvent can be modified appropriately according to the polymeric substance to be melted. The solvent can be, for example, water, an alcohol (methanol, ethanol, isopropyl alcohol, trifluoroethanol, hexafluoro-2-propanol, etc.), acetone, benzene, toluene, cyclohexanone, N,N-dimethylacetamide, N,N-dimethylformamide, N-methyl-2-pyrrolidone, dimethylsulfoxide, etc.
Also, an additive such as an inorganic electrolyte, an organic electrolyte, a surfactant, a defoamer, etc., may be used.
The polymeric substance and the solvent are not limited to those illustrated.
The source material liquid 5 collects at the vicinity of the outlet of the nozzle 2 due to surface tension.
The power supply 3 applies the voltage to the nozzle 2. Then, the source material liquid 5 that is at the vicinity of the outlet is charged with the prescribed polarity. In the case of the illustration in
Because the collector 4 is grounded, an electric field is generated between the nozzle 2 and the collector 4. Then, when the electrostatic force that acts along the lines of electric force becomes larger than the surface tension, the source material liquid 5 that is at the vicinity of the outlet is drawn out toward the collector 4 by an electrostatic force. The source material liquid that is drawn out is elongated; and the fiber 6 is formed by the volatilization of the solvent included in the source material liquid. The deposited body 7 is formed by the fiber 6 that is formed being deposited on the rotating collector 4. Also, the fiber 6 is pulled in the rotation direction when depositing the fiber 6 on the rotating collector 4. The directions in which the fibers 6 extend in the deposited body 7 are aligned by pulling the fiber 6 mechanically in one direction when depositing the fiber 6 that is formed.
The method for pulling the fiber 6 mechanically in one direction is not limited to those illustrated. For example, a gas can be caused to flow in the direction in which the fiber 6 is drawn out; and the fiber 6 can be pulled mechanically in one direction by the gas flow.
It can be seen from
However, a disturbance due to wind and/or electric fields occurs when mechanically pulling the fiber 6 in the one direction by the gas flow and/or the rotating collector 4. Therefore, the alignment of the directions in which the fibers 6 extend is limited when pulling the fiber 6 only mechanically in the one direction.
Also, even if the directions in which the fibers 6 extend can be aligned, the alignment is limited to the one direction.
Also, the fibers 6 cannot be closely adhered to each other.
Therefore, in the method for manufacturing the fiber-oriented material 100 according to the embodiment, the fibers 6 are closely adhered to each other and the fibers 6 are oriented by performing the close-adhesion process described below.
First, a deposited body sheet 7a (corresponding to an example of a first deposited body sheet), a deposited body sheet 7b (corresponding to an example of a second deposited body sheet), and a deposited body sheet 7c are cut out from the deposited body 7 so that the fibers 6 that extend in the desired directions are included.
As shown in
For example, the deposited body sheet 7a can be taken as a sheet in which the fibers 6 extend in the X-direction. The deposited body sheet 7b can be taken as a sheet in which the fibers 6 extend in the Y-direction. The deposited body sheet 7c can be taken as a sheet in which the fibers 6 extend to be tilted 45° with respect to the X-direction.
The number and/or the configurations of the deposited body sheets and the direction in which the fibers 6 extend in each deposited body sheet are not limited to those illustrated.
A case will now be described as an example where the fiber-oriented material 100 is manufactured using the deposited body sheets 7a and 7b.
Then, by performing the close-adhesion process, the fibers 6 are closely adhered to each other and the fibers 6 are oriented for the fibers 6 included in the deposited body sheets 7a and 7b.
First, as shown in
Then, as shown in
Although the volatile liquid 201 is not particularly limited, it is favorable for the volatile liquid 201 not to melt the fibers 6 as much as possible. The volatile liquid 201 can be, for example, an alcohol (methanol, ethanol, isopropyl alcohol, etc.), an alcohol aqueous solution, acetone, acetonitrile, ethylene glycol, etc.
As shown in
Then, as shown in
The drying method is not particularly limited. For example, natural drying of the deposited body sheets 7a and 7b including the volatile liquid 201 can be performed inside a sealed container. Thus, it is easy to control the evaporation rate of the volatile liquid 201.
In such a case, if the deposited body sheets 7a and 7b that include the volatile liquid 201 are dried, the deposited body sheets 7a and 7b contract in the X, Y, and Z-directions as shown in
Conversely, if the adhesion force between the base and the deposited body sheets 7a and 7b is utilized, the contraction amount in the X and Y-directions can be smaller than the contraction amount in the Z-direction for the deposited body sheets 7a and 7b as shown in
Here, a capillary force acts in the volatile liquid 201 between the fiber 6 and the fiber 6. In other words, the force is applied in directions causing the fiber 6 and the fiber 6 to closely adhere. Therefore, as the drying progresses (the volatile liquid 201 is removed), the distance between the fiber 6 and the fiber 6 is reduced; and the state of the fibers 6 becomes a closely-adhered state as shown in
Therefore, the fiber-oriented material 100 that includes two of each of the region where the fibers 6 are closely adhered to each other and the fibers 6 are oriented in the X-direction and the region where the fibers 6 are closely adhered to each other and the fibers 6 are oriented in the Y-direction is formed.
Thus, the fiber-oriented material 100 according to the embodiment can be manufactured.
The fiber-oriented sheet 70 can be manufactured by using only the deposited body sheet 7a.
It can be seen from
If the state becomes the state in which the fibers 6 are closely adhered to each other, the directions in which the fibers 6 extend can be aligned further. In other words, the fibers 6 are oriented in the fiber-oriented material 100.
The fibers 6 being oriented and the state in which the fibers 6 are closely adhered to each other can be confirmed for the fiber-oriented material 100 by using the anisotropy of the tensile strength, the direction in which the long axes of the molecules extend, etc., described above.
Further, the direction of the orientation originating in the fibers 6 can be confirmed by using an optical microscope.
It can be seen from
It is considered that such a stripe structure is formed because bundles of the multiple fibers 6 become collections and contract at a constant spacing as the volatile liquid 201 is removed and the fibers 6 become closely adhered to each other.
The fiber-oriented material 100 based on examples will now be described in further detail. However, the invention is not limited to the following examples.
First, the deposited body 7 was formed as follows. The polymeric substance was collagen which is a bio-affinity material.
The solvent was a mixed solvent of trifluoroethanol and purified water.
The source material liquid 5 was a mixed liquid of 2 wt % to 10 wt % of collagen, 80 wt % to 97 wt % of trifluoroethanol, and 1 wt % to 15 wt % of purified water.
The electrospinning apparatus 1 included the rotating collector 4 illustrated in
The fibers 6 that were formed by the electrospinning apparatus 1 included 10 wt % of collagen or more.
Also, the diametrical dimension of the fiber 6 was about 70 nm to 180 nm.
Also, the directions in which the fibers 6 extend in the deposited body 7 were somewhat aligned by mechanically pulling the fibers 6 in one direction using the rotating collector 4. In this case, the state of the fibers 6 in the deposited body 7 was as shown in
By acquiring the phase image using the atomic force microscope, the elastic modulus change of the surface of the fibers 6 can be analyzed. In other words, by the phase image, contrast having line configurations originating in the hardness (elastic modulus) difference in the surface of the fibers 6 can be confirmed.
It can be seen from
It is considered that a high degree of molecular orientation can be obtained by orienting the fibers 6 having such a configuration.
Then, the deposited body sheets 7a and 7b were cut out from the deposited body 7; and the deposited body sheets 7a and 7b were stacked.
Then, ethanol was supplied to the stacked deposited body sheets 7a and 7b. The concentration of the ethanol was 40 wt % to substantially 100 wt %. The supply of the ethanol was performed in ambient air. The temperature of the ethanol was room temperature.
Then, the deposited body sheets 7a and 7b that included the ethanol were dried.
The drying was performed inside a sealed container. The pressure inside the container was set to atmospheric pressure. The temperature inside the container was set to room temperature. In other words, natural drying of the deposited body sheets 7a and 7b including the ethanol was performed inside the sealed container.
In such a case, by drying the deposited body sheets 7a and 7b including the ethanol as described above, the deposited body sheets 7a and 7b that are contracted in the X, Y, and Z-directions can be obtained; or the deposited body sheets 7a and 7b in which the contraction amount in the X and Y-directions is smaller than the contraction amount in the Z-direction can be obtained by utilizing the adhesion force between the base and the deposited body sheets 7a and 7b. In the case where the adhesion force between the base and the deposited body sheets 7a and 7b is utilized, it is sufficient to use a base including polystyrene.
Thus, the fiber-oriented material 100 that includes collagen was manufactured. In such a case, the state of the fibers 6 in the fiber-oriented material 100 was as shown in
The gaps that were included in the fiber-oriented material 100 were slight enough not to be confirmable in
As shown in
The thicknesses of the test pieces C and D including collagen were set to about 90 μm; the widths were set to 2 mm; and the lengths were set to 12 mm. Also, the elongation speed was set to 1 mm/min.
It can be seen from
The tensile strength is taken to be the maximum stress per cross-sectional area.
Test pieces C1 and D1 are test pieces formed from the deposited body 7; test pieces C2 and D2 are test pieces formed from the fiber-oriented sheet 70 (the deposited body 7 for which the close-adhesion process described above is performed); and test pieces C3, D3, and E3 are test pieces formed from the fiber-oriented material 100.
The thicknesses of the test pieces C1, C2, C3, D1, D2, D3, and E3 including collagen were set to about 30 μm to 150 μm; the widths were set to 2 mm; and the lengths were set to 12 mm. Also, the elongation speed was set to 1 mm/min.
Here, a hard surface where the fibers 6 are closely adhered more finely due to the ethanol treatment is formed on the base side of the fiber-oriented sheet 70 in the case where the base is used to form the fiber-oriented sheet 70.
Therefore, for the test piece D2, it is considered that a peak of the tensile stress such as that shown in
F1 was 85 MPa, and F2 was 79 MPa, where F1 is the tensile strength of the test piece C3 and F2 is the tensile strength of the test piece D3.
It is apparent from
Also, the direction in which the long axes of the molecules extend was determined by analyzing the surface of the fiber-oriented material 100 by using a polarized FT-IR-ATR method. The polarized FT-IR-ATR method is a method in which an optical prism having a high refractive index is closely adhered to the sample surface; infrared light is irradiated on the sample surface from the optical prism side; and the region to a depth of about 1 μm from the sample surface is measured by utilizing the condition for total internal reflection at the sample surface.
In this case, the measuring device, the measurement conditions, etc., were as follows.
Measuring device: FTS-55A (FT-IR made by Bio-Rad Digilab)
Measuring mode: Attenuated total reflection (Attenuated Total Reflection, ATR)
Measurement conditions:
The absorption intensity T1 for a wave number of 1640 cm−1 was 0.075; and the absorption intensity T2 for a wave number of 1540 cm−1 was 0.043.
The absorbance ratio R1 (T1/T2) in a prescribed polarization direction was 1.748; and the absorbance ratio R2 was 1.575 when the orientation of the fiber-oriented material 100 was rotated 90°.
Therefore, the orientation degree parameter (R1/R2) of the fiber-oriented material 100 was 1.13.
According to knowledge obtained by the inventors, the orientation degree parameter (R1/R2) of the fiber-oriented material 100 can be 1.05 or more.
The orientation degree parameter (R1/R2) was 1.04 when similarly analyzing the surface of the deposited body 7.
Therefore, it was proved that the directions in which the long axes of the molecules extend are aligned for the fiber-oriented material 100 because the orientation degree parameter (R1/R2) is large. Also, it was proved that the fibers 6 are oriented (the fibers 6 extend in about the same direction) in the fiber-oriented material 100.
Table 1 is a table for illustrating the effects of the “close-adhesion process.”
“0°” inside Table 1 illustrates a direction parallel to the orientation direction of the fibers 6. “90°” illustrates a direction perpendicular to the orientation direction of the fibers 6. “45°” illustrates a direction having an angle of 45° from the orientation direction of the fibers 6.
It can be seen from Table 1 that the invention is applicable not only to a bio-affinity material such as collagen, etc., but also to an industrial material such as polyimide, etc.
In other words, by performing the “close-adhesion process” described above, the improvement of the degree of molecular orientation, the increase of the tensile strength, etc., can be realized even for a fiber-oriented material 100 made of an industrial material.
While certain embodiments have been described, these embodiments have been presented by way of example only, and are not intended to limit the scope of the inventions. Indeed, the novel embodiments described herein may be embodied in a variety of other forms; furthermore, various omissions, substitutions and changes in the form of the embodiments described herein may be made without departing from the spirit of the inventions. The accompanying claims and their equivalents are intended to cover such forms or modifications as would fall within the scope and spirit of the invention. Moreover, above-mentioned embodiments can be combined mutually and can be carried out.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2017-020421 | Feb 2017 | JP | national |
This application is based upon and claims the benefit of priority from the Japanese Patent Application No.2017-020421, filed on Feb. 7, 2017, and the PCT Patent Application PCT/JP2017/033694, filed on Sep. 19, 2017; the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/JP2017/033694 | Sep 2017 | US |
Child | 15918025 | US |