The present invention generally relates to nonwoven webs and, more particularly, to nonwoven webs formed from a majority of meltblown nanofibers, and to apparatus and methods for forming these nonwoven webs.
Melt spun nonwoven webs may be made by a number of processes. The most popular processes are meltblowing and spunbonding, both of which involve melt spinning of thermoplastic material. Meltblowing is a manufacturing process for nonwoven webs in which a molten thermoplastic material is extruded from a row of outlets in a die tip. The streams of thermoplastic material exiting the die tip are immediately contacted with sheets or jets of hot air to attenuate the fibers. The fibers are then deposited onto a collector in a random manner and form a nonwoven web used in such products as diapers, surgical gowns, carpet backings, filters and many other consumer and industrial products.
Generally, meltblown fibers are formed by extruding a low viscosity (i.e., high melt flow rate) thermoplastic material through an array of holes in a meltblown die and impinging the extruded material with high velocity heated air. The resulting fibers have an averaging diameter of between two and five microns. Meltblown fibers are commonly formed from multiple components in which each component may include a unique thermoplastic material having a different chemical composition.
Nonwoven webs of meltblown nanofibers may be made by a process known as electro-spinning that generally involves spinning a solvent-diluted low viscosity polymer in the presence of a directional electric field. Such nonwoven webs, which are characterized by nanofibers of a sub-micron fiber diameter, are known to have utility in a number of applications, such as filtering of particles from fluid streams, for example from air streams and liquid (e.g. non-aqueous and aqueous) streams. In such filtration applications, the interstitial spaces between the nanofibers define small pores that increase the filtration efficiency of the nonwoven. Nonwovens formed from nanofibers also permit the use of lower basis weight, which reduces the cost of products constructed from those nonwovens.
Electro-spinning processes suffer from multiple disadvantages, including the need to remove the solvent from the deposited fibers and an inherently low production rate. Moreover, electro-spinning is not practical on a commercial scale for thermoplastic material since commercially used thermoplastic materials cannot be diluted with a solvent without detrimental consequences to the nonwoven web. The high electric fields required to electro-spin undiluted thermoplastic materials are susceptible to breakdown in air and result in unwanted electrical discharges.
For these reasons, it is desirable to provide apparatus and methods for forming nonwoven webs comprising a majority of meltblown nanofibers that overcome the various problems associated with conventional meltblowing methods for forming such nonwoven webs.
In accordance with an embodiment of the present invention, a method of forming a nonwoven web includes establishing a first and second flow of liquid material and changing the rheology of the liquid material in the first and second flows. The changed rheology of the second flow differs from the changed rheology of the first flow by an amount sufficient to produce a phase separation between the liquid material in the first and second flows when combined. The method further includes combining the first flow of the liquid material with the changed rheology and the second flow of the liquid material with the changed rheology to form a plurality of meltblown fibers. Each of the meltblown fibers has a length, a first cross-sectional region formed of the liquid material from the first flow, and a second cross-sectional region formed of the liquid material from the second flow. The first and second cross-sectional regions extend along the length of each fiber. The first cross-sectional region is separated from the second cross-sectional region along the length of at least a majority of the meltblown fibers to form a plurality of nanofibers and the nanofibers are then collected to form the nonwoven web. Any un-separated meltblown fibers are collected in the nonwoven web along with the nanofibers.
In yet another aspect of the present invention, a melt spinning apparatus includes a first extruder providing the first flow of a liquid material and a second extruder providing a second flow of the liquid material. The first extruder is configured to change the rheology of the liquid material in the first flow and the second extruder is configured to change the rheology of the second flow to differ from the rheology of the first flow sufficient to produce a phase separation between the liquid material in the first and second flows when combined. The melt spinning apparatus further includes a spinpack coupled with the first and second extruders for receiving the first flow of the liquid material with the changed rheology and the second flow of the liquid material with the changed rheology. The spinpack combines the first flow and the second flow to form a plurality of meltblown fibers each having a length, a first cross-sectional region formed of the liquid material from the first flow, and a second cross-sectional region formed of the liquid material from the second flow. The first and second cross-sectional regions extend along the length of the fiber. The spinpack directs air toward the meltblown fibers with a velocity effective to attenuate and split at least a majority of the meltblown fibers into nanofibers. A substrate collects nanofibers and any unsplit meltblown fibers to form a nonwoven web.
The nanofibers of the nonwoven webs of the present invention have a significantly reduced average diameter as compared with conventional meltblown fibers. Such sub-micron diameters are unachievable with conventional meltblowing processes. For example, the discharge outlet diameter in the die tip of conventional melt spinning apparatus cannot be simply scaled downward without limitation for reducing the fiber diameter. The nanofibers of the present invention provide an enhanced surface area to mass ratio as compared with larger diameter conventional meltblown fibers.
These and other advantages of the present invention shall become more apparent from the accompanying drawings and description thereof.
The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated in and constitute a part of this specification, illustrate embodiments of the invention and, together with a general description of the invention given above, and the detailed description given below, serve to explain the principles of the invention.
For purposes of this description, words such as “vertical”, “horizontal”, “bottom”, “right”, “left” and the like are applied in conjunction with the drawings for purposes of clarity and for purposes of defining a frame of reference. As is well-known, melt spinning devices may be oriented in substantially any orientation, so these directional words should not be used to imply any particular absolute directions for a melt spinning assembly or apparatus.
With reference to
Supply inlet 25 communicates with a coat-hanger shaped recess (not shown) defined between outer manifold element 20 and intermediate manifold element 24. The recess provides a first manifold liquid passage to provide liquid material to at least a portion of the longitudinal length of liquid input 14 of the spinpack 18. Similarly, supply inlet 26 communicates with another coat-hanger shaped recess (not shown) defined between outer manifold element 22 and intermediate manifold element 24 that provides a second manifold liquid passage to provide liquid material to at least a portion of the longitudinal length of liquid input 16 of the spinpack 18. The manifold assembly 12 may include a plurality of supply inlets 25, 26 and corresponding first and second manifold liquid passages defined by coat-hanger shaped recesses along its longitudinal length depending on the length of the spinpack 18.
Holes 28 and 30 located along the length of each outer manifold element 20, 22 each receive a heating device, such as an electrical heater rod 32, for independently heating the liquid material in the first and second manifold liquid passages and the process air to an appropriate application temperature. Temperature sensing devices (not shown), such as resistance temperature detectors (RTD's) or thermocouples are also placed in outer manifold elements 20, 22 to independently control the temperature of each flow of liquid material. It should be appreciated by those skilled in the art that various heating systems consistent with aspects of the invention may be appropriately used in different applications.
Outer manifold elements 20, 22 further include a plurality of air supply passages 34, 36 for supplying pressurized air (i.e., process air) to air passage inputs 38, 40 of the spinpack 18. Fibers 42 are extruded along the longitudinal length of the spinpack 18 from a row of discharge outlets 44 (see
With reference to
With reference to
In particular, the liquid material supplied from the manifold assembly 12 enters the first liquid input 14 in the transfer block 52 of the spinpack 18 to form the first flow 80. Liquid material in the first flow 80 encounters a first filter 82 disposed within a first filter recess 84 for entrapping contaminants. The first flow 80 continues through a first liquid transfer passage 86, which may be a single longitudinal slot or a series of passages each longitudinally aligned with one of the first outlets 76. The die tip block 58 has a longitudinally aligned row of first die tip liquid passages 88 communicating between the first liquid transfer passage 86 in the transfer block 52 and with a respective one of the first outlets 76 in the die tip block 58.
Similarly, another supply of the liquid material from the manifold assembly 12 enters the second liquid input 16 in the transfer block 52 of the spinpack 18 to form the second flow 90. Liquid material in the second flow 90 encounters a second filter 92 disposed within a second filter recess 94 for entrapping contaminants. The second flow 90 continues through a second liquid transfer passage 96, which may be a single longitudinal slot or a series of passages each longitudinally aligned with one of the second outlets 78. The die tip block 58 has a longitudinally aligned row of second die tip liquid passages 98 communicating between the second liquid transfer passage 96 in the transfer block 52 and with a respective one of the second outlets 78 in the die tip block 58.
The transfer block 52 includes a first air transfer passage 99 that communicates with the first air passage input 38 and a second air transfer passage 100 that communicates with the second air passage input 40. The die tip block 58 includes a first die tip air passage 102 that communicates between the first air transfer passage 99 and a converging air channel 104 formed between the air knife plate 68 and the die tip block 58. Similarly, the die tip block 58 includes a second die tip air passage 106 that communicates between the second air transfer passage 100 and a converging air channel 108 formed between the air knife plate 70 and the die tip block 58. The air channels 104, 108 may be mutually aligned symmetrically relative to the first and second outlets 76, 78 and with an included angle of, for example, between about 60° and about 90°.
With particular reference to
With particular reference to
A first air jet 114 exits air channel 104 at a first spin slot 116 and is directed at each fiber 42. A converging, second air jet 118 exits air channel 108 at a second spin slot 120 and is directed at the fiber 42. Generally, the air temperature of the air flow from air jets 114, 118 is approximately equal to the temperature of the material constituting the fibers 42. The high velocity air flow from the air jets 114, 118 impinges and attenuates the fibers 42.
Spinpack 18 provides two flows 80, 90 of liquid material ultimately forming individual streams 110, 112 at discharge outlets 44 that are combined post-extrusion into fiber 42. There is substantially no physical interaction or contact between the two flows 80, 90 of liquid material before extrusion. The two individual streams 110, 112 are urged together by the momentum of extrusion to define fibers 42. However, the invention contemplates that the spinpack 18 may have a different configuration in which the flows 80, 90 of liquid material are combined before fibers 42 are extruded from discharge outlets 44. Specifically, any spinpack 18 capable of forming multicomponent fibers in a meltspinning apparatus may be used in the present invention. Melt spinning assembly 10 is further described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,565,344, the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
With reference to
Flanking the discharge outlets 124 are spin slots 116, 120 that emerge from respective air channels 104, 108 of the spinpack 18a. The air jets 114, 118 of pressurized process air, typically heated, emitted from these spin slots 116, 120 impinge the fiber 42, which attenuates and splits the fiber 42 consistent with the principles of the present invention. The air channels 104, 108 of
With reference to
Melt spinning apparatus 200 further includes a pair of gear pumps 150, 151 each of which receives liquid material from one of the feed lines 204, 208 and pumps the received liquid material to one of the first and second liquid supply inlets 25, 26 (
With reference to
With reference to
The invention contemplates that the first and second hoppers 214, 234 may constitute a single hopper (not shown) into which the chemically-identical solid source material is added and initially melted for subsequent extrusion from the first and second extruders 202, 206. This sharing is possible because the same liquid material is provided in the streams 80, 90 but with different shear histories.
The first and second extruders 202, 206 differ in a manner that causes the liquid material delivered to the spinpack 18 by the first extruder 202 to experience a different shear history (i.e., rheology) than the chemically-identical liquid material delivered to the spinpack 18 by the second extruder 206. The different shear histories in the extruders 202, 206 differentially changes a rheological property of the liquid material, such as viscosity, in each of the two flows 80, 90 in liquid transfer passage 86, 96, respectively. The liquid material in flows 80, 90, which are subjected to different shear histories in the extruders 202, 206, are also subjected to different thermal histories while inside the extruders 202, 206. Shear history is related to thermal history by shear heating, which inherently results from friction caused by fluid flow through passages. As used herein, the differentially change in rheology between the two flows 80, 90 may be provided by mechanical approaches that provide different shear histories and by thermal approaches that use differential heating.
With regard to the specific embodiment of the present invention depicted in
The shear history of each flow 80, 90 of liquid material is a function of the shear rate experienced by the liquid material in each flow over its individual flow path. The shear rate is the overall velocity across the cross section of the barrels 210, 230 with which the individual liquid material layers constituting each of the flows 80, 90 are gliding along each other or along the wall of the barrels 210, 230 in laminar flow. Among other variables, the difference in shear history may depend upon the different surface area of the barrels 210, 230, different residence times in the respective one of the extruders 202, 206, and different pressure drops during the extrusion process. The stream of liquid material advanced in the smaller-diameter barrel 210 of the first extruder 202 has a different shear history than the stream of liquid material advancing in the larger-diameter barrel 230 of the second extruder 206. The differences in shear history will also inherently result in different thermal histories for the two flows 80, 90 of liquid material due to differences in shear heating inside the extruders 202, 206.
The liquid material forming fibers 42 may be any thixotropic liquid material exhibiting non-Newtonian rheological flow behavior where viscosity depends on the shear history. An amount of solid source material is added to hopper 214, melted, and supplied in molten form to first extruder 202. Another amount of a chemically-identical solid source is added to hopper 234, melted, and supplied in molten form to the second extruder 206. As mentioned above, the chemically-identical solid source materials added to hoppers 214, 234 have the same composition and identical physical characteristics, such as intrinsic viscosity, melt flow rate, melt viscosity, die swell, density, crystallinity, and melting point or softening point.
The solid source material may be any melt-processable thermoplastic polymer selected from among any commercially available meltspun grade of a wide range of thermoplastic polymer resins, copolymers, and blends of thermoplastic polymer resins including, but not limited to, polyolefins, such as polyethylene and polypropylene, polyesters, nylons, polyamides, polyurethanes, ethylene vinyl acetate, polyvinyl chloride, polyvinyl alcohol, and other melt processable polymers. The constituent thermoplastic polymer resin may also be blended with additives such as surfactants, colorants, anti-static agents, lubricants, flame retardants, antibacterial agents, softeners, ultraviolet absorbers, polymer stabilizers, and the like.
As shown in
As best shown in
After the larger parent fibers 42 are split, the properties (e.g., orientation, crystallinity) of the constituent liquid material of the individual split daughter fibers 42a, 42b are not significantly altered. After splitting, the resulting daughter fibers 42a, 42b are smaller in diameter than the parent fiber 42 but retain some of the same mechanical properties. Constructing the extruders 202, 206 so that the liquid material forming each of the regions 41a, 41b has a differential rheology causes relatively weak bonding along the interface 43. Because of this phase separation between the regions 41a, 41b, the fibers 42 are more susceptible to splitting longitudinally along the length of the interface 43 when exposed to the high-velocity flow of process air. Small diameter fibers 42a, 42b may be produced with greater attenuation than fibers of the same liquid material extruded directly to equivalent diameters due to the larger effective surface area before splitting. A majority of the parent fibers 42 are split into daughter fibers 42a, 42b, which are nanofibers having a submicron diameter. Fibers 42a, 42b and any of the unsplit parent fibers 42 are subsequently deposited as nonwoven web 46 (
Each fiber 42 is illustrated in
As another example and with reference to
Because of mutual phase separation between regions 140a and 140b, regions 140b and 140c, and regions 140c and 140d, weakly bonded interfaces 141a, 141b, 141c are defined between adjacent pairs of regions 140a-d. As a result, the larger parent fiber 42 will split along each of these interfaces 141a-c to define four smaller diameter daughter fibers (not shown) that deposit on substrate 48 to form nonwoven web 46. A majority of the parent fibers 42 subsequently deposited as the nonwoven web 46 (
In alternative embodiments of the invention and with renewed reference to
The nonwoven webs 46 of the invention may be further processed after collection to enhance the degree of fiber splitting for any fibers 42 not split by the impinging process air from the air jets 114, 118. The nonwoven webs 46 of the invention may have a wide variety of uses where high surface area is important including, but not limited to, filtration media and filtration devices, medical fabrics, sanitary products, apparel fabrics, and thermal or acoustical insulation.
Further details and embodiments of the invention will be described in the following example.
Thermoplastic fibers of the configuration shown in
The nonwoven web 46 had an average basis weight of 4.6 gsm, an average air permeability of 92.5 cfm at 125 PA, and an average hydrohead of 17.6 mbar at 60 mbar/min, but samples with layer of screen protection exhibited 30 mbar at 60 mbar/min. Due to the difference in the diameter of the barrels 210, 230 of the extruders 202, 206, the polypropylene in the two regions 41a, 41b are subjected to different shear histories. When exposed to the high velocity process air of air jets 114, 118, the polypropylene fibers 42 are attenuated and also tend to split along the interface 43 between the cross-sectional regions 41a, 41b. As a result, a majority of the polypropylene fibers 42 splits or divides into smaller daughter fibers 42a, 42b before collection on substrate 48 so that the nonwoven web 46 is formed primarily from the daughter fibers 42a, 42b of polypropylene.
While the present invention has been illustrated by a description of various preferred embodiments and while these embodiments have been described in considerable detail in order to describe the best mode of practicing the invention, it is not the intention of applicants to restrict or in any way limit the scope of the appended claims to such detail. Additional advantages and modifications within the spirit and scope of the invention will readily appear to those skilled in the art. The invention itself should only be defined by the appended claims, wherein we claim:
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3672802 | Matsui et al. | Jun 1972 | A |
3681189 | Matsui et al. | Aug 1972 | A |
4988560 | Meyer et al. | Jan 1991 | A |
5141699 | Meyer et al. | Aug 1992 | A |
5207970 | Joseph et al. | May 1993 | A |
5803106 | Cohen et al. | Sep 1998 | A |
5814404 | Rutherford et al. | Sep 1998 | A |
5895710 | Sasse et al. | Apr 1999 | A |
5993943 | Bodaghi et al. | Nov 1999 | A |
6182732 | Allen | Feb 2001 | B1 |
6269513 | Torobin | Aug 2001 | B1 |
6308509 | Scardino et al. | Oct 2001 | B1 |
6465095 | Dugan | Oct 2002 | B1 |
6491507 | Allen | Dec 2002 | B1 |
6554881 | Healey | Apr 2003 | B1 |
6565344 | Bentley et al. | May 2003 | B2 |
6686303 | Haynes et al. | Feb 2004 | B1 |
6695992 | Reneker | Feb 2004 | B2 |
6753454 | Smith et al. | Jun 2004 | B1 |
6776858 | Bansal et al. | Aug 2004 | B2 |
6780357 | Dugan et al. | Aug 2004 | B2 |
20020034909 | Bansal et al. | Mar 2002 | A1 |
20030180407 | Bentley et al. | Sep 2003 | A1 |
20030203695 | Polanco et al. | Oct 2003 | A1 |
20040161994 | Arora et al. | Aug 2004 | A1 |
20050032450 | Haggard et al. | Feb 2005 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
199 29 709 | Dec 2000 | DE |
0138556 | Apr 1985 | EP |
1239065 | Sep 2002 | EP |
WO 9721862 | Jun 1997 | WO |
WO 0146507 | Jun 2001 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20060084341 A1 | Apr 2006 | US |