The present disclosure relates to a floor covering, such as a mat, having a textile upper surface and a flexible backing surface, in which the textile upper surface is patterned to produce a texture differential in the patterned areas. This differential texture produces a harsh hand in the finished product, which provides scraping functionality to mats used in building entryways. The textile upper surface is patterned by the selective and patternwise application of heat to the subject yarns, such as by directed streams of hot air or by heated rolls, and the pattern is durable to use and laundering due to the thermal modification of the treated yarns. The backing may be rubber, rubber crumb, polyvinyl chloride (PVC), latex, a flat textile material, or other similar flexible materials that are durable to industrial laundering.
Floor coverings, and particularly mats, have long been utilized to facilitate the cleaning of the bottom of people's shoes, particularly in areas of high pedestrian traffic, such as doorways. Moisture, dirt, sand, and debris from outdoor areas easily adhere to footwear, particularly in inclement weather and particularly in areas of grass, mud, snow, or the like. Such unwanted and potentially floor-staining contaminants need to be removed from footwear before being carried to interior areas of a building.
As will be appreciated, floor mats by their nature must undergo frequent washings and dryings to remove the dirt deposited thereon during use. These mats may be rented from service entities that retrieve the soiled mats on a regular basis and that provide clean mats as replacements. The soiled mats are thereafter cleaned and dried in an industrial laundering process and then sent back into circulation.
Floor and/or dust mats, in particular those having a tufted carpet pile partially comprised of coarse monofilament fibers, have been developed to provide an easy manner of cleaning the soles of users' footwear simply by scraping the footwear against such a stiff article. Examples of such floor mats using coarse monofilament fibers are exemplified in U.S. Pat. No. 1,008,618 to Skowronski et al.; U.S. Pat. No. 4,045,605 to Breens et al.; U.S. Pat. No. 4,353,944 to Tarui; and U.S. Pat. No. 6,468,622 to Combs et al.; and U.S. Pat. No. 4,820,566 to Heine et al.
The problem with using monofilaments to provide the scraping functionality to the mat is three-fold. First, such large fibers are fairly expensive, as compared with traditional multi-filament carpet yarns. In addition, such filaments are difficult to dye, leading to the use of solution dyeing techniques to color these filaments. While advantageous in some instances, this property limits the aesthetic properties of the resulting mats and further causes the manufacturer to maintain a larger-than-desired inventory to quickly fulfill customer needs. Finally, a significant problem with monofilaments is that they generally have poor tuft bind, meaning that they are readily removed from the backing substrate. To combat this problem, manufacturers have “locked” the monofilament tufts in place by coating the backing substrate with latex, which adds further material and manufacturing costs to the finished product.
The present mat product overcomes the shortcomings of monofilament-containing mats by providing a mat with a textile upper surface that has been thermally modified to obtain a scraping texture in the treated areas. This scraping texture is due to the shrinkage and/or melting of the mat fibers in the treated areas, which leads to areas of reoriented polymer (that is, the fibers become molten and reoriented into an unrecognizable form). Unlike other carving methods which employ potentially hazardous chemicals, the present process is environmentally friendly and uses only heated air streams to produce the desired results. Further, the treated areas form an aesthetically pleasing pattern on the textile surface.
The present mat comprises (i) a textile upper surface that has been thermally modified to produce an aesthetically pleasing pattern and a harsh hand and (ii) a backing surface of a durable, flexible material. The patterned areas of the textile upper surface have an abrasive hand (due to the thermal modification of the yarns, such as by melting, shrinking, and/or fusing), making this mat ideal for scraping dirt from the footwear of the mat's users. The patterned mat is able to withstand industrial laundering without any adverse effects on the patterned areas or the backing.
As shown in
Textile upper surface 10 is one of a woven fabric, a knit fabric, a nonwoven fabric, a flocked substrate, or a tufted fabric in the form of a loop pile, a multi-level loop pile, a cut pile, or a combination of loop and cut pile. As illustrated in
It has been found that the patterning effects created by the thermal treatment that will be described herein are most apparent when textile upper surface 10 has a raised pile. Accordingly, textile upper surface 10 is preferably a tufted fabric, in which tufts of yarn 8 are secured in a tufting substrate 12 to create a pile. Tufting substrate 12 may be made of any construction or material known in the art, although a nonwoven polypropylene substrate coated with nylon is preferred. One important aspect of using a nylon-coated polypropylene nonwoven substrate is its dimensional stability, particularly during dyeing or printing (if desired), during the backing process, and during laundering. Alternately, a woven polypropylene tufting substrate, with either a nylon cap or a polypropylene cap, may also be used.
Yarns 8 used to create the textile upper surface may be made of any suitable material, including, polyamides (such as nylon 6 and nylon 6,6); polyesters (such as polyethylene terephthalate and polybutylene tererphthalate); polypropylene; acrylic; wool; and combinations thereof. Nylon is the preferred fiber type because of its durability, pile resistance, and colorfastness when dyed. A potentially preferred combination of yarns is a blend of nylon and wool, perhaps in a combination where 80% of the yarns are wool and 20% of the yarns are nylon.
Alternately, solution-dyed synthetic yarns may be used, which provide high degrees of colorfastness and lightfastness (that is, they resist fading due to laundering or exposure to sunlight). In another embodiment, for all yarn types, yarns 8 may be dyed after being incorporated into textile upper surface 10, either before or after being thermally treated. When wool yarns are used, it is preferable to dye the textile upper surface after thermal treatment.
The yarns have a preferred denier size in the range of 600 denier to 1600 denier, and, more preferably, a denier between 1000 denier and 1400 denier. Multi-filament yarns are preferred, because it has been found that the patterns produced using these yarns are durable to laundering and to use (that is, they will neither wash out nor “walk-out” over time). Surprisingly, to the contrary, the patterned areas 14 in these mats 2 are actually enhanced, and become more pronounced, with repeated wash cycles, especially when the mats are dyed before being thermally patterned.
In one embodiment, yarns 8 of a single material and color are used to produce textile upper surface 10 (for example, solution-dyed nylon yarns of a single color). In this embodiment, when textile upper surface 10 is thermally treated to produce patterned areas 14, yarns 8 in the patterned areas 14 are modified, causing a subtle color change between the treated and untreated areas due to the change in fiber morphology that results from the thermal treatment of the yarns. Such color change enhances the pattern that has been applied to textile upper surface 10. It has also been found that an aesthetically pleasing product is produced by using yarns of the same fiber type but of different colors, which are twisted together before being tufted into the tufting substrate.
In an alternate embodiment, textile upper surface 10 is thermally treated before yarns 8 are dyed (that is, undyed yarns are used to produce textile upper surface 10). In this instance, the thermal shrinkage of yarns 8 that occurs during treatment causes a change in the crystallinity of the yarns, such that there is a resulting dye uptake differential. Accordingly, when thermally treated textile upper surface 10 is dyed, there is a color difference between the patterned areas 14 and the remaining yarns 8, which further accentuates the pattern.
Yet another embodiment is described in commonly assigned U.S. Pat. No. 5,865,933 to Morin et al., the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference. In this approach, yarns 8 of two different materials and colors are used (for example, a first, higher melt fiber of a first color and a second, lower melt fiber of a second color), where the thermal treatment is of a sufficient temperature to melt the second fibers, while leaving the first fibers substantially unchanged. Thermal treatment of these different yarn colors and materials produces a textile upper surface having a carved portion in registry with a color change. When patterned with a selective application of heat at a temperature that exceeds the melting point of the second fibers but is less than that of the first fibers, the second fibers melt away leaving the first fibers with the first color dominating. In the uncarved areas, the resulting color is a blend of the first color and the second color.
Polyester is a typical, but non-limiting, example of first, higher melt fibers, but nylon 6, nylon 6-6, rayon, and cellulose (such as cotton, acetate, and LYOSINE®) would suffice. There is also a higher melt polyethylene that could function as the first, higher melt fiber. As an example, polyester has a melting point of between 250° F. and 265° F. (between about 121° C. and 129° C.).
Typical, but non-limiting, examples of second, lower melt fibers include polypropylene and a lower melt polyethylene. However, if a rayon or cellulose fiber is utilized as the first, higher melt fiber, then polyester or nylon can be utilized as the second, lower melt fiber. As an example, polypropylene has a melting point of about 170° F. (about 77° C.).
The percentage of first, higher melt fibers to second, lower melt fibers is in a range of ten (10) to ninety (90) percent. However, a more practical range of the percentage of first, higher melt fibers to second, lower melt fibers is between thirty (30) and seventy (70) percent, and the preferred range of the percentage of first, higher melt fibers to second, lower melt fibers is between forty (40) and sixty (60) percent.
Preferably, the backing layer (indicated with reference numbers 6 or 16) is made of any wash-durable, flexible material, including rubber, rubber crumb, polyvinyl chloride (PVC), latex, or other similar materials. Woven or nonwoven textile materials may also be used as backing layer 16, as will be described herein, where such textile materials are secured to textile upper surface 10 by means of adhesive or fusing.
In a first embodiment, the backing layer is a solid sheet material 6 made of rubber or PVC (see
A second embodiment useful as the backing of the present mat is an elastomer crumb backing described in GB Patent 2,389,526 to Brazier (illustrated in
In this embodiment, backing layer 16 includes rubber crumbs and a binder, characterized in that the rubber backing includes voids between the rubber crumbs. The term “crumb” has the normal meaning in the rubber industry of any “broken down” rubber: thus, a crumb of rubber can encompass rubber pieces of any size in a range that includes powder, granules, and chips. The term “powder” refers to crumb that will pass through a 2 mm mesh or, said another way, crumb with a maximum dimension of 2 mm as the context requires. The term “granule” refers to crumb that will pass through a 6 mm mesh or crumb with a maximum dimension of 6 mm, as the context requires. “Granules” may include some powder but are generally larger than powder. The term “chips” means crumbs that are larger than granules.
The crumb size preferably may be within the range of about 0.8 mm to about 6 mm, with crumb sizes less than about 5 mm diameter being generally preferred. More specifically, crumb sizes within the range of about 2 mm to about 4 mm, and preferably sizes of about 3 mm or less, have been found to be particularly advantageous for use.
The choice of crumb size to be used, and the relative percentage of powder used, if any, depends somewhat upon the desired performance aspects of the mat and the desired manufacturing cost. Because use of small crumb (say, for example, powder less than about 1 mm) tends to require increased use of binder and thereby increased manufacturing cost, limiting use of crumb to small granules and large powder (e.g., crumb within the range of about 1 mm to about 4 mm, or, preferably, predominantly crumb within the range of about 2 mm to about 3 mm) may be preferred if minimizing manufacturing cost is important.
The use of powdered crumb increases the strength of the resulting backing and generates a smoother appearance, but increases the cost of production, both in the need for additional grinding and in the need for the use of additional binder. Accordingly, the amount of powdered crumb can be adjusted to suit the needs of the product; typically, including powder of at least 10% by weight has been used.
The binder, which is used to secure the rubber crumb into a cohesive and durable backing layer 16, may be comprised of any of several different materials. For example, the binder may be a polyurethane MDI binder. Preferably, it is selected from the group consisting of 4,4-methylene di-p-phenylene isocyanate (MDI) polyurethane one- and two-component adhesives.
Advantageously, the binder is a solvent-free, one component (moisture curing) polyurethane adhesive. Such binder may be present at a level of from 4 to 12% of the weight of the crumb. Alternatively, the binder may be a hot melt binder and is desirably present at a level of from 3 to 10% of the weight of the crumb.
When powdered elastomer crumb is included in the backing 16 and the binder is a one-component polyurethane adhesive, the binder level preferably lies in the range 9 to 20% of the weight of the crumb, as may be determined by experimentation. The backing 16 may include powdered or liquid additives selected from the group consisting of antimicrobial additives, anti-flammability additives, pigments (such as iron oxide), and antistatic additives (such as carbon fibers). This provides added functionality to the mat 2.
In making an acceptable—and sometimes superior—mat backing 16 using only rubber crumb and a binder, it is important to control the pressure used in the production process to allow voids to exist between the individual rubber crumbs of the backing. The presence of voids between the crumbs increases the flexibility of backing layer 16, thereby compensating for the stiffening effect of the binder and providing a deformability that is comparable to that of a conventional rubber backing made of a sheet material (e.g., 6).
Advantageously, the elastomer backing has a bulk density in the range 45 to 70%, preferably 55 to 70%, of the elastomer from which the crumbs are made. Advantageously, the crumb backing layer has a density of less than 1 g/cm3. The backing preferably has a density in the range 0.5 to 0.9 g/cm3, more preferably 0.7 to 0.9 g/cm3. The crumb rubber mat backing preferably has a thickness of a least 1 mm.
The tear strength of the backing is adequate for most mat backings, even in unsupported border regions of the mat. The backing is also extremely stable when the crumb-backed mat is placed on top of carpet, probably because the pile of the carpet is gripped by the numerous small gaps between the crumbs of the backing. Crumb-backed mats are also relatively light and have good fire resistance. Advantageously, the backing exhibits tear resistance strength of at least 0.8 N/mm2. Preferably, the tear resistance strength is about 1.5 N/mm2 or higher.
Advantageously, whether a sheet-like backing 6 or a crumb backing layer 16 is used, a border extending beyond the periphery of the textile surface 10 is provided on at least two opposite edges of mat 2. The borders may be provided around the entire periphery of mat 2.
In yet another embodiment, described in U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 2004-0043184 to Kobayashi et al., which is incorporated by reference herein, an adhesive layer is positioned between the textile upper surface and a textile backing layer, which is then secured with a coated mesh fabric. These layers are secured to one another by subjecting the layers to heat and pressure (for example, in a vulcanization chamber), which cause the adhesive layer and the coated mesh fabric to melt and fuse to adjacent layers. An exploded view of this backing system is shown in
Once the textile upper surface 10 has been produced, the textile may optionally be dyed, using such techniques as known in the art, such as jet dyeing, vat dyeing, continuous dyeing, pad dyeing, and the like. Alternately, or in addition to dyeing, textile upper surface 10 may optionally be printed, for example, using a jet dyeing apparatus and control systems, such as those described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,084,615 to Klein et al.; U.S. Pat. No. 4,116,626 to Varner; U.S. Pat. No. 4,984,169 to Johnson, Jr.; U.S. Pat. No. 5,136,520 to Cox; U.S. Pat. No. 5,142,481 to Cox; U.S. Pat. No. 5,208,592 to Johnson, Jr.; U.S. Patent Application Publication 2005-0106355 to Kohiman et al.; and U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 2005-0206935 to Cox et al.
Other acceptable, but perhaps less preferred printing methods, include the Chromojet® printing apparatus by Zimmer, any screen printing apparatus, and any other printing apparatus, which are capable of dyeing or printing textile substrates. Textile upper surface 10 may be dyed a solid color or may be printed in a pattern that is complementary or identical to the thermal treatment pattern. Of course, when solution dyed yarns are used, no further printing or dyeing may be necessary. In fact, various colors of solution dyed yarns may be used in a graphics tufting process to produce a mat 2 with a textile upper surface 10 having multiple yarn colors.
Often, the width of textile upper surface 10, when in roll form, is too large for processing on the thermal treatment apparatus. In this instance, it may be desirable to slit textile upper surface 10 to accommodate the equipment used in further processing or to facilitate handling thereof. Such step is not required, unless dictated by processing specifications.
The next step in the production of mat 2 is the thermal treatment, or modification, of textile upper surface 10. This process, and the equipment used therein, will be described in detail below. In summary, pressurized streams of hot fluid (e.g., air) are directed toward a textile substrate to carve the substrate in a patterned arrangement. As has been mentioned previously, the carving may be done in register with printed images on the substrate or may be done in a pattern complementary to such printing. This “carving” process causes the yarns in to which the heated air has been applied to be thermally modified, causing the yarns to become stiff and abrasive due to the localized melting and fusion of yarn fibers and/or the repositioning of individual yarn fibers when molten (such that the individual fiber ends become clubbed, that the fiber ends have droplets or balls of polymer attached thereto, or that the fiber structure becomes reoriented to the point of being unrecognizable).
If textile upper surface 10 was not dyed or printed before being subjected to thermal treatment, such dyeing or printing may occur after thermal treatment, as shown in the flowchart. When the textile upper surface 10 is patterned, the yams 8 in the patterned areas 14 undergo a modification of their surface crystallinity. As a result, a differential dye uptake is observed between the patterned areas 14 and the untreated areas of textile upper surface 10, as the patterned areas 14 absorb more dye. This dye differential further emphasizes the pattern that has been applied to textile upper surface 10.
Once textile upper surface 10 has been colored (either by dyeing, printing, or the use of solution-dyed yarns) and carved (by the thermal treatment process), textile upper surface 10 is cut to desired dimensions for assembly into a finished product. Textile upper surface 10 may be cut using any techniques known in the industry, including die cutting, hot knife cutting, laser cutting, ultrasonic cutting, and the like.
At this point, backing layer 6 or 16 is applied to the pre-cut textile for production of mat 2. Several different backing systems may be used, as have been mentioned previously. The following paragraphs will provide a description of each backing system: (a) a backing comprised of a flexible sheet material; (b) a backing comprised of rubber crumb; and (c) a backing comprised of a textile backing material, which is secured to the textile upper surface with an adhesive.
When a sheet material is used, backing layer 6 is typically applied by placing textile upper surface 10 over a correspondingly shaped piece of rubber. The stacked mat components are then conveyed into a vulcanization oven, or chamber, over a heated platen. An inflatable diaphragm produces pressure to forcibly connect textile upper surface 10 to backing layer 6, which is slightly molten from being exposed to the heat from the platen. Typical pressures used in such a device range from 20 p.s.i. to 60 p.s.i., with temperatures being in the range of about 275° F. to about 400° F. (about 135° C. to about 204° C.).
When backing layer 16 (made of rubber crumb) is used, a slightly different process occurs. First, a mixture of rubber crumb, binder, and any other desired additives is made up and spread evenly onto a conveyor belt, forming a loose crumb layer having a thickness, width, and length that are slightly greater than the required dimensions for backing layer 16. The binder may, for example, be a hot melt powder, in which case the amount of binder typically varies between 3% and 10% by weight, depending on the size of the crumbs and the amount and type of any optional additives.
The die-cut textile upper surface 10, preferably having a length and width that is slightly less than the equivalent dimensions of the loose crumb rubber layer, is placed on top of the loose crumb layer. Preferably, in this instance, the textile upper surface 10 has been thermally modified in a patternwise arrangement before being combined into a mat 2. The mat components are then covered with a release sheet of PTFE-coated woven glass fabric to prevent the rubber backing sheet sticking to the diaphragm.
The press is heated to a temperature of about 257° F. (about 125° C.). The conveyer belt is advanced to position the mat components between the platen and the diaphragm, and the diaphragm is then inflated, for example, to a pressure of about 4 p.s.i., pressing the mat components against the heated platen, typically for a cycle time of 10 minutes. The heat from the platen activates the binder, thereby binding the rubber crumbs together and forming the backing layer. At the same time, the pressure of the diaphragm slightly compresses the backing layer to ensure a good bond between the granules, and presses textile upper surface 10 against the backing layer, allowing the binder to bond the two layers together.
After completion of the pressing process, the diaphragm is deflated and the rubber-backed mat 2 is removed from the press and allowed to cool. The release sheet is then removed and, if necessary, the edges of rubber backing layer 16 are trimmed, for example, using any suitable knife or other cutting means.
The flexibility and strength of the backing 16 can be controlled by adjusting the pressure applied to the backing in the press. By increasing the pressure, the tensile strength of the backing 16 can be increased. By reducing the pressure, the flexibility of the backing 16 can be increased. The desired performance characteristics of the backing 16 can thus be achieved by careful control of the diaphragm pressure.
When using the third potential backing system described herein, as shown in
Adhesive layer 26 may be comprised of any number of materials, including, but not limited to, natural rubbers, synthetic polyisoprene rubbers, styrene-butadiene rubbers, acrylonitrile-butadiene-sytrene rubbers, ethylene propylene rubbers, urethanes, polypropylene, polyethylene, nylon, polyester, acrylonitrile-butadiene-styrene, polyvinyl chloride, thermoplastic elastomers, thermoset plastics, low-melt thin films, or any combinations thereof. The use of thermoplastic elastomer is preferred because of its adhesion properties and its ease of use in manufacturing.
The backing textile material 28 is useful in providing a soft backing for mat 2 and in providing dimensional stability to mat 2. The backing textile material 28 also decreases the likelihood of the adhesive layer 26 cracking or breaking with use of mat 2. In addition, the backing textile material 28 provides a uniform appearance on the reverse side of the mat 2. Cotton, polyester, polypropylene, nylon, acrylic, or any combinations thereof may be used to create the backing textile material 28, which may be a woven, nonwoven, or knit material. The use of a cotton or polyester woven material is preferred for softness.
The final component of the third backing system is a mesh fabric 36 that has a fusible coating 32 surrounding the mesh 30. The coated mesh fabric 36 adds dimensional stability to mat 2 and prevents mat 2 from sliding during use. The coated mesh fabric 36 may comprise any woven, nonwoven, or knit material, having a substantially open configuration; woven fabrics are preferred for the uniformity of the mesh. The openings in the mesh fabric 30 should preferably be from about 0.125 inches to about 1.5 inches (about 0.3175 cm to about 3.81 cm), and more preferably should be about 0.5 inches (about 1.27 cm). The fabric 30 itself may be comprised of cotton, polyester, polypropylene, nylon, acrylic, or any combination thereof, although cotton or polyester is more preferred. When using cotton or polyester, it may be desirable to pre-shrink the fabric 30 before coating with a fusible material 32.
The fabric 30 is coated with, by way of example, natural rubbers, synthetic polyisoprene rubbers, styrene-butadiene rubbers, acrylonitrile-butadiene-sytrene rubbers, ethylene propylene rubbers, urethanes, polypropylene, polyethylene, nylon, polyester, acrylonitrile-butadiene-styrene, polyvinyl chloride, thermoplastic elastomers, thermoset plastics, or any combinations thereof. The preferred mesh fabric 30 is a woven fabric with a latex coating, in which the fabric component is made from cotton or polyester. It has been found that production of mat 2 is most successful when the melting points of the coating 32 and the adhesive layer 26 are comparable.
Mat 2 is produced by placing the component pieces on top of one another as in a continuous vulcanization press or shuttle vulcanization press. The process may be run continuously or in batch mode. The layers are positioned as follows: coated mesh fabric 36, backing textile material 28, adhesive layer 26, and textile upper surface 10, which preferably comprises tufting substrate 12 and yarns 8 that have been subjected to the thermal treatment process described below. It should be noted that the coated mesh fabric 36 should be positioned toward the heating platen of the vulcanization chamber (that is, if the heating platen is at the top of the chamber, then the order described above should be reversed).
The mat components are then subjected to heat and pressure, as would be found in a vulcanization chamber. The heat and pressure of the vulcanization environment cause the adhesive layer 26 and the coating 32 of mesh fabric 30 to melt and fuse the component layers together. Temperatures in the range of about 356° F. to about 428° F. (about 180° C. to about 220° C.) are preferred, while temperatures in the range of about 383° F. to about 392° F. (about 195° C. to about 200° C.) are more preferred. Pressures ranging from about 15 pounds per square inch (gauge) (p.s.i.g.) to about 50 p.s.i.g. are preferred, while a pressure of about 30 p.s.i.g. is more preferred.
Mat 2 thereby has a backing that is soft, skid-resistant, and durable. The coating 32 around the mesh fabric 30, when fused, becomes flattened due to the pressure of the inflatable diaphragm, resulting in a backing that lies flat when in use. The softness of backing textile fabric 28 and the fused coating 32 prevents damage to flooring surfaces on which mat 2 is placed, while simultaneously preventing mat 2 from sliding during use.
Although not strictly reflected by the steps in the flowchart of
Referring now to the thermal treatment of textile upper surface 10, which is responsible for providing the desired scraping functionality to mat 2,
As shown, textile upper surface 10 from supply roll 118 passes over an idler roll 136 and is fed by a pair of driven rolls 132, 134 to a main driven textile fabric support roll 126 with the textile upper surface 10 between drive roll 132 and textile fabric support roll 126 being overfed and slack with a negative tension in a range of between two and twenty percent, with a preferred range of between two and twelve percent. The amount of negative tension, or overfeed, depends on the construction, fiber type, and other factors related to the textile fabric 10. The overfeed, or negative tension, must stop before the point at which puckering of the textile upper surface 10 occurs. The surface of textile upper surface 10 passes closely adjacent to the heated fluid discharge outlet of an elongate fluid distributing manifold assembly 130 of treating unit 116. The treated textile fabric 4 thereafter passes over a series of driven guide rolls 122, 124 and an idler roll 120 to a take-up roll 114 for collection.
As illustrated in
Typically, for patterning textile fabrics, such as pile fabrics containing thermoplastic yarns, the heaters are employed to heat air exiting the heaters and entering the manifold assembly to a uniform temperature. The preferred operating temperature for any given textile fabric depends upon: the components of the textile fabric, the desired amount of carving effect, the speed of transport of the textile fabric, the pressure of the heated pressurized gas, the tension of the textile fabric, the proximity of the textile fabric to the treating manifold, and others. Generally, the temperature can range between about 300° F. to about 1,200° F. (about 149° C. to about 649° C.) with a more practical operating range of about 375° F. to about 1,000° F. (about 190° C. to about 538° C.) and a preferred optimal range of 450° F. to 850° F. (about 232° C. to about 454° C.). When two different fiber types (such as polyester and polypropylene) are used, this preferred optimal range will maximize the contrast between the color of the first, higher melting point fibers (polyester) and the blend of higher and lower melting point fibers (polyester and polypropylene).
The heated fluid distributing manifold assembly 130 is disposed across the full width of the path of movement of the textile fabric and closely adjacent the surface thereof to be treated. Although the length of the manifold assembly 130 may vary, typically in the treatment of textile fabric materials, the length of the manifold assembly may be 76 inches (193 cm) or more to accommodate textile fabrics of up to about 72 inches (183 cm) in width.
Details of the heated fluid distributing manifold assembly 130 may be best described by reference to
As best seen in
The manifold housings 154, 156 are constructed and arranged so that the flow path of gas through the first housing 154 is generally at a right angle to the discharge axes of the gas stream outlets of the second manifold housing 156.
As best seen in
Baffle plate 192 serves to define a gas receiving chamber in the compartment 181 having side openings or slots 194 to direct the incoming heated air from the bank of heaters in a generally reversing path of flow through compartment 181. Disposed above channel-shaped baffle plate 192 is compartment 181 between the fluid inlet openings 183 and fluid outlet passageways 186 is an elongate filter member 200 which is a generally J-shaped plate with a filter screen disposed thereabout.
As seen in
A continuous slit directs heated pressurized air from the third gas receiving compartment 212 in a continuous sheet across the width of the fabric at a substantially right angle onto the surface of the moving textile fabric 10. Typically, in the treatment of textile fabrics such as pile fabrics containing. thermoplastic fiber components, the continuous slit 215 of manifold 156 may be about 0.015 to about 0.030 of an inch (about 0.381 to about 0.762 mm) in thickness. For precise control of the heated air streams striking the textile fabric 10, the continuous slit is preferably maintained between about 0.070 to about 0.080 of an inch (about 1.778 mm to about 2.032 mm) from the textile fabric surface being treated. However, this distance from the face of the textile fabric can be as much as 0.100 of an inch (about 2.54 mm) and still produce good pattern definition. The deflecting air tubes 226 are spaced twenty (20) to the inch over the seventy-two (72) inch air distributing manifold, although the apparatus has been constructed as coarse as ten (10) to the inch and as fine as forty-four (44) to the inch.
Second manifold housing 156 is provided with a plurality of spaced gas inlet openings 218 (
The continuous slit 215 of the second manifold housing 156 which directs a stream of air into the surface of textile upper surface 10 is provided with tubes 226 which communicate at a right angle to the discharge axis of continuous slit 215 to introduce pressurized cool air, i.e., air having a temperature substantially below that of the heated air in third gas receiving compartment 212, at the heated gas discharge outlet 216 to deflect selectively the flow of heated air through the continuous slit 215 in accordance with pattern control information. Air passing through the tubes 226 may be cooled by a water jacket which is provided with cooling water from a suitable source, not shown, although such cooling is not required.
As seen in
Each cool air fluid tube 226 is positioned at approximately a right angle to the plane defined by slit 215 to deflect heated pressurized air away from the surface of the moving textile upper surface 10 (
This configuration of tubes 226 provides sufficient volume of air in combination with that from the continuous slit 215 to preheat the textile upper surface 10 to a temperature preferably short of permanent thermal modification.
It should be noted that, due to the insulation 108 generally surrounding manifold 154, preheating is not believed to be the result of heat radiation from the manifold, but is rather the result of the exposure of textile upper surface 10 to the heated air issuing from continuous slit 215, as that air is diverted by the relatively cool air issuing from tubes 226. The heated air used for this purpose is air that has been diverted, in accordance with patterning instructions, after issuing from continuous slit 215, i.e., this air would be diverted whether or not preheating was desired.
Therefore, preheating of the textile fabric is achieved as an integral part of, and is inseparable from, the patterning process, and requires no additional or separate heated air source. By so doing, not only is a separate preheating step and its attendant complexity unnecessary, but it is believed a separate preheating step would be incapable of imparting heat of sufficient intensity and directivity to maintain the textile upper surface 10 at an effective preheated temperature at the instant the heated patterning air issuing from continuous slit 215 contacts the textile fabric, as shown in
This preheating may cause additional thermal modification during the patterning step. As can be seen in connection with
Additional information relating to the operation of such a pressurized, heated gas apparatus, including more detailed description of patterning and control functions, can be found in commonly assigned U.S. Pat. No. 4,364,156 to Greenway et al.; U.S. Pat. No. 4,393,562 to Stokes; U.S. Pat. No. 4,418,451 to Crenshaw; U.S. Pat. No. 5,035,031 to Elliott; and U.S. Pat. No. 5,148,583 to Greenway, each of which is incorporated by reference as if fully set forth herein.
In the alternative, another non-preferred means of carving textile fabric is to subject textile fabric to the heat of a laser. Referring now to
Laser unit 320 is preferable a 10.6 micron wavelength, eighty watt, carbon dioxide laser, although any of a wide variety of lasers will suffice. One typical laser of this type is manufactured by Laser Machining, Inc. that is located at 500 Laser Drive, MS 628, Industrial Park, Somerset, Wis. Although not specifically limited thereto, the preferred range of moving the textile upper surface 10 is a speed of one hundred to two hundred inches per minute.
In another non-preferred means of carving textile fabric, the textile upper surface 10 is subjected to a heated embossed roll, which presses a pattern down onto the pile surface. Other non-preferred methods of selectively applying heat for carving include an infrared heater tube, microwave, and so forth, including all means of selectively applying heat by means of either convection or radiation.
Mat 2—which is made with a thermally treated textile upper surface 10 and a durable, flexible backing layer 6 (or, alternately, 16)—provides an aesthetically pleasing appearance, due to the pattern and/or printing on the textile upper surface. Moreover, the users thereof benefit from the abrasive quality of the patterned areas 14, which is due to the shrinkage and/or melting of the thermally treated yarns 8. Such a combination of appearance and functionality has heretofore been unattainable in a floor covering article. For this reason, the present mat represents an advancement over the prior art.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 11368760 | Mar 2006 | US |
Child | 12291205 | US |