This application is the U.S. National Phase of PCT/FR01/03250 filed Oct. 19, 2001 and claims priority to French Patent Application No. 01/00526 filed Jan. 16, 2001, which is hereby incorporated by reference herein.
1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to an improvement to installations for producing nonwoven fibrous webs, the cohesion of which is obtained by intermingling of fibres in the thickness of the said web by the action of small-diameter high-speed fluid jets, more particularly water jets.
2. Description of the Related Art
U.S. Pat. No. 3,906,130 relates to a perforated nonwoven. Moreover, in that document, oscillations are intended to promote the transverse deposition of the filaments and the formation of filament loops.
Finally, no mention is made of the marks of the jets disappearing, which goes without saying since the members delivering the water jets for the purpose of consolidating the filaments by hydraulic entanglement are installed on a non-oscillating conveyor.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,252,590 relates to a process for forming a web of continuous filaments, the transverse properties of which are improved by a transverse movement of the support 3.
The above document explains that an increase in the transverse strength of the web is obtained if the support itself undergoes a transverse movement.
Nowhere in that document is it mentioned that water jets are used to produce hydraulic entanglement of the filaments, nor is any disappearance of the lines left by the water jets in the filament web.
U.S. Pat. No. 3,833,438 discloses a particular spinning system called “wet” spinning in which the extruded and coagulated filaments are received on a conveyor undergoing a transverse oscillatory movement.
It is clearly specified that, in
That document does not mention the use of water jets for producing hydraulic entanglement of the filaments, nor any disappearance of the lines left by the water jets in the web of filaments.
It was proposed long ago, as is apparent from U.S. Pat. No. 3,214,819 and U.S. Pat. No. 3,508,308, to produce nonwoven fabric webs in which the cohesion is provided by the interlacing of the elementary fibres, the interlacing being obtained by the action of pressurized water jets that act on the fibrous structure and allow some of the constituent fibres of the web to be reoriented in the direction of the thickness.
The water jets used to interlace the fibres leave visible impressions on the surface of the nonwovens.
It has already been envisaged, as is apparent from U.S. Pat. No. 3,493,462, to impress oscillations on the water jets in order to obtain nonwovens without marks and without visible features.
The vibrations transmitted to the hydraulic equipment induce premature ageing of the equipment and introduce hazards for the operators.
The aim of the present invention is to provide an installation for producing nonwoven fibrous webs allowing the fibres of a nonwoven web to be entangled by means of water jets without having visible marks or impressions of the water jets in and on the surface of the nonwoven webs and without, however, requiring the hydraulic equipment to undergo movement.
The subject of the invention is an installation for producing nonwoven fibrous webs that includes a conveyor along the top side of which a nonwoven fibrous web passes beneath an injector which blasts the web with fluid jets, and preferably above a box communicating with a vacuum source. The invention provides a means intended to give the conveyor an oscillatory movement at least partly transverse with respect to the direction in which the top side runs.
Although the conveyor is already moving and it is more difficult to impart an additional oscillatory movement on it than on the injector, the invention ignores this preconception however, by nevertheless making the conveyor oscillate, because it is now understood that an injector has hydraulic component can age prematurely and be likely to crack when subjected to vibrations, and, because of the high pressures involved, its repeated displacement is liable to cause dangerous leaks of fluid.
Injector oscillation techniques, like conveyor oscillation techniques, have the drawback of making very large masses move. The injector weighs between 1000 and 1500 kg. Devices allowing such large masses to move are extremely expensive.
This is why, according to a much preferred embodiment, the installation is such that the fibrous web passes between the injector and a box communicating with a vacuum source and the above means is designed so as to impart the oscillatory movement on the box.
Owing to the effect of the vacuum created in the box, the conveyor is applied thereto and follows the movement thereof. Thus, a very simple means has been found to give the conveyor, and therefore the fibrous web that is pressed against it by the effect of the vacuum, an oscillatory movement while leaving the injector stationary. It is very much easier to impart an oscillatory movement on an essentially empty box which therefore does not weigh much than on the injector or even directly on the conveyor.
The oscillatory movement may be purely perpendicular to the direction in which the top side runs, but it may also be inclined with respect to this direction, the essential point being that there is a component of the oscillatory movement that is perpendicular to the direction in which the top side runs and to the direction of the jets, which is usually vertical.
Good results have been obtained for an oscillation amplitude of between 0.2 and 5 mm and for a number of oscillations of from 5 to 100 per second.
Preferably, the frequency in Hz represents from 2 to 20 times the speed of the web expressed in m/min, this speed of the web being preferably between 5 and 50 m/min.
Preferably, the number of jets is between 12 and 77 jets/cm on that part of the web receiving the jets.
Preferably, the fluid expelled by the injector is a liquid, and especially water. The jets expel fluids at a pressure of preferably between 20 and 600 bar. The jets are cylindrical and emanate from nozzles from 80 to 170 microns in diameter in order to give jets of the same shape and diameter.
According to one embodiment, the box is mounted so as to be suspended on elastic means, especially on springs or flexible mountings.
The conveyor is usually a metal or plastic endless conveyor and the fluid can pass through the conveyor.
According to one embodiment, several injectors are associated with one and the same box. The fact that there is only a single oscillating box beneath several injectors, especially two or three injectors, avoids having two boxes undergoing their own movement, which could create undesirable harmonics.
In the appended drawings, given solely by way of example:
The installation according to the invention, allowing nonwoven fibrous webs to be produced without leaving a mark, by jumbling of the lines, comprises an endless conveyor 1 passing over rolls 2 and having a top side 3 along which a nonwoven fibrous web (not shown) whose fibres have to be better entangled, passes. For this purpose, two banks of injectors 4 delivering 120 μm diameter water jets at 300 bar are provided. These jets are directed vertically onto the web 3 and, in that part plumb with the injectors 4, there are fifty jets per centimetre of web. Mounted on springs 5 beneath the top side 3 of the conveyor, and facing the injector 4, is a box 6 communicating with a vacuum source 7. The box is given, by means shown in
The oscillatory movement is obtained by a device comprising a connecting rod 8 and a crank 9 driven in rotation by a motor (not shown).
Of course, other means could be used to impart an oscillatory movement on the box, for example a rotary vibrator, a piston-type linear vibrator or a cam mechanism.
In
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
01 00526 | Jan 2001 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/FR01/03250 | 10/19/2001 | WO | 00 | 1/16/2004 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO02/055777 | 7/18/2002 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20040111847 A1 | Jun 2004 | US |