The invention is based on a method for mechanically cleaning textiles or solid objects such as crockery using water-soluble detergents and/or cleaning agents and enzymes.
Up to now, commonly used methods of the kind described above (DE 43 24 202 A1) have used enzymes to boost the cleaning effect of e.g. alkaline cleaning agents for the duration of the impact. In modern washing systems for instance, enzymes are added to the washing process in the form of a powder. Depending upon the type of staining different enzymes are required which means that adequate stock provisions are necessary and that the selection and metering operation is costly. Not only are carbohydrates and proteins dissolved or decomposed during the washing process, but due to the presence of alkaline cleaning agents the enzymes themselves are also attacked and either decomposed or, at the very least, rendered ineffective. Finally enzymes not destroyed are washed away with the washing liquid after each washing cycle and must therefore be continuously added again.
The invention is based on the requirement to prevent the enzymes from dissolving or becoming ineffective and to ensure that still usable enzymes are not washed away.
According to the invention the requirement is met in that catalytically active enzymes are added to the washing or cleaning process for removing typical stains, but only for as long as their catalytic effect is desired. Since the catalytic effect of the enzymes is of good use only in the low-temperature range and, if possible, without alkaline cleaning agents being present, the enzymes, once they have been put to use, may be removed again from the washing process and reused in a later washing process.
The method according to the invention may be employed in a particularly advantageous manner with a detergent or cleaning agent where the enzymes are macroscopically encapsulated by means of a polymer membrane which is permeable to washing liquids but insoluble in water. As a result the catalytic effect may be effected through the membrane without the enzymes dispersing in the washing or cleaning-liquid.
If, according to a further advantageous development of the invention the capsules consist of several hollow bodies linked to one another, then this is the easiest way of keeping the enzyme-loaded membrane bodies separate from the circulating washing liquid, e.g. while this is being pumped out. The hollow bodies can thus be linked to form cartridges and/or bars and/or tubular bodies. In this way they become a larger unit which is easy to mechanically retain in the circulating washing liquid.
Furthermore, since with the application of the method according to the invention the enzymes become gradually exhausted, for which alkaline residues and temperature-dependent decomposition processes are responsible, the capsules or linked hollow bodies, according to a particularly advantageous development, may be stationarily but replaceably arranged at a location in a machine for cleaning textiles or solid objects (e.g. crockery), which is accessible to the washing or cleaning liquid.
In such a case, the location is best protected by a filter against insoluble impurities in the washing or cleaning liquid.
In order to cover all kinds of protein-based or carbohydrate-based stains in the enzyme-phase of the washing or cleaning process, the capsules or hollow bodies are preferably filled with enzymes suited to different kinds of stains. It is best to provide a specific enzyme for each kind of stain occurring in mechanically applied washing or cleaning processes.
With reference to an embodiment illustrated in the drawing both the method according to invention and a washing machine controllable by the method are schematically drawn. In the drawing
The ordinate O of the diagram in
The washing process illustrated in the diagram in
The inflow of water which bypasses a detergent container 2 for the first phase of the water inflow in
After the enzyme phase is finished, detergent 8 is washed out of detergent container 2 due to water being admitted from water main 10 during opening of valve 9, and fed to washing liquid container 1 via pipe 11. Then, possibly while more water is being admitted to make up a desired quantity of washing liquid L, and while the washing liquid is being heated by means of a heater not shown up to a desired temperature T, the detergent W may act upon the split-up proteins and carbohydrates and upon the other stains in the batch of washing and remove them from the washing. Later on, they will be pumped out of the washing liquid container 1 together with the spent washing liquid into a waste water main in a manner not shown.
Innovations in process technology (Microsystems) may be utilised to cover enzymes 7 with a thin, porous polymer membrane which retains the enzymes in a capsule, but allows for an exchange of substances with the surroundings (required for the decomposition process of the proteins and carbohydrates during washing). Appropriate quantities of such macroscopic capsules may be combined in containers 12 (sieve-like cartridges or individual capsules linked together to form larger structures such as bars, tubular bodies etc.) to form bundles for the respective process and thus be retained as part of the machine in the hydraulic cycle 3 to 6. In order to protect the surface of the capsules against staining which would reduce or prevent an exchange of substances, suitable filters 13 might be arranged in front of the entry and 14 in front of the outlet of enzyme container 6, or a suitable design for the washing process might be found.
The method according to the invention and the associated detergent or cleaning agent thus include the possibility for completely avoiding regular additions of detergent by the customer. Neither conventional environment-polluting tenside detergents nor enzymatic detergents in the form of powder are required when using the method and the detergent or cleaning agent according to the invention. The still required detergent, e.g. in the form of cartridges, will continue to be used for supplying the machine with a treatment agent—perhaps not for the duration of the life of a washing machine or dishwasher, but certainly for a sustained period of time. Manual or automatic single-metering of detergents or cleaning agents according to the invention for each washing operation is no longer necessary, which means less work for the customer and more protection for the environment.
In order to meet the various requirements for enzymes depending upon the type of staining, each type of enzyme may be housed in its own structure or its own cartridge, or mixtures of different enzymes may be housed in one structure or one cartridge.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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100 53 416 | Oct 2000 | DE | national |
This application is a Divisional, under 35 U.S.C. §121, of U.S. application Ser. No. 10/422,210, filed Apr. 24 2003, which is a continuation, under 35 U.S.C. §120of International Application No. PCT/EP01/12365, filed Oct. 25, 2001, which designated the United States; this application also claims the priority, under 35 U.S.C. §119, of German patent application No. 100 53 416.3, filed Oct. 27, 2000; the prior applications are herewith incorporated by reference in their entirety.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20070155643 A1 | Jul 2007 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10422210 | Apr 2003 | US |
Child | 11713339 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/EP01/12365 | Oct 2001 | US |
Child | 10422210 | US |