The present invention relates to a sponge production process and plant; by means of the present invention, sponges of natural type or of other forms can be produced.
Traditional sponges are known to be produced by moulding a plastic material such as polyurethane, cellulose, PVA etc. in metal moulds, or by machining expanded polyurethane, expanded cellulose etc. in blocks.
The sponges are then processed to remove their outer surface either by cutting or milling to give them the desired form.
Traditional sponge production methods evidently present numerous drawbacks and shaping limits, including in particular the large quantity of production waste with consequent costs related both to the discarded material and to the need to suitably dispose of this production waste.
The technical aim of the present invention is therefore to provide a process and plant which enable the stated technical drawbacks of the known art to be eliminated.
Within the scope of this technical aim an object of the invention is to provide a process and plant which enable the production waste to be limited.
Another object of the invention is to provide an ecological and economical process and plant which enable the sponges to be produced in a substantially low-cost manner.
A further object of the invention is to provide a process for producing sponges which, although being formed of plastic material, present an appearance similar to that of a natural sponge.
The technical aim, together with these and further objects, are attained according to the present invention by a process and plant in accordance with the accompanying claims.
Further characteristics and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the description of a preferred but non-exclusive embodiment of the process and plant, illustrated by way of non-limiting example in the accompanying drawings, in which:
With reference to
A mixture comprising a plastic material such as a hydrophilic polyurethane prepolymer and a reagent such as bacteriologically pure water (which have been mixed together dynamically) is fed into the mould and the mixture is allowed to rise for a time less than 30 minutes, preferably for about 20 minutes.
The finished sponge 10 is then extracted from the mould 3; in this manner an absorbent sponge without an impermeable surface skin is obtained and is ready to be packaged and/or marketed.
Preferably just the inner surface of the mould 3 is heated to a temperature of 60° C.-70° C., preferably 65° C.
The mixture can also contain additives (added to the water, to the resin or directly to the mixing head) consisting of one or more of the following substances: surfactants and/or antibacterials and/or thickeners, perfume, antibacterial soap, vitamins, sponge softening and tenderising agents, disinfectant, dye, antioxidants, antimicrobics, creams, oils, detergents, cosmetic and/or pharmacological substances.
The hydrophilic prepolymer consists of the product marketed under the name Hypol by DOW, the hydrophilic prepolymer and the water being contained in the mixture in a weight ratio between 1:1 and 1:1.5, for example for each kg of hydrophilic prepolymer a water quantity of 1-1.5 kg is used.
The mixture is fed into the mould by pouring, the mould being closed after pouring and rising being undertaken with the mould closed and disposed vertically.
Before pouring, a product for facilitating sponge removal from the mould is applied to the mould inner surface.
Preferably, after the sponge has been extracted from the mould at least one further additive is injected into the sponge, this additive comprising at least one of the following: perfume, antibacterial, soap, vitamins, sponge softening and tenderising agents, disinfectant, dye, antioxidants, antimicrobics, creams, oils, detergents, cosmetic and/or pharmacological substances, etc.
The process is implemented by a sponge production plant 1 comprising a conveyor 2, for example a belt conveyer, for conveying a mould 3 to mould heating means 4 consisting of an infrared oven.
The belt 2 then carries the mould 3 to means for feeding the mixture into the mould 3; these feeding means consist in the present example of a pouring head 5 in the form of a three-axis robot.
The plant next comprises rising means 7 arranged to retain the mould 3 for a prefixed time such that the mixture contained in the mould 3 undergoes rising, followed in the plant by sponge discharge means 8 which remove the sponge 10 from the mould 3.
In a preferred embodiment, downstream of the pouring head 5 the plant 1 presents a member 9 for closing the mould 3; in the same manner the discharge means 8 comprise a member for opening the mould 3 in order to discharge the sponge contained therein.
The present invention also relates to a method for forming a silicone mould 3 for a sponge 10 for use in the aforedescribed production process.
The mould 3 formation method consists of positioning within a hollow body 15 (in its open configuration) a pattern 16 of the sponge to be produced.
The hollow body 15 consists for example of two metal half-casings 17, 18 rotatably connected together (enabling them to be opened or closed) by a hinge 19.
After the pattern 16 has been introduced into the hollow body 15, a first mixture 20 consisting of silicone of type 3040A marketed by the company Siliconi Padova and catalyst of type 3040B marketed by the company Siliconi Padova (about one half of the half-casing 17 of the hollow body is filled) and the mixture 20 left to react to solidification at a temperature between 30° C. and 40° C. for 8 hours.
When the mixture 20 has solidified, a layer 21 of detachment product is applied to the free surface of the solidified mixture 20, then a second liquid mixture 22 of silicone and catalyst is introduced into the half-casing 18 of the hollow body (about one half of the half-casing 18 of the hollow body is filled) and reacted to solidification at a temperature between 30° C. and 40° C. for 8 hours.
The hollow body 15 is then opened, the pattern 16 is removed from the mould and the formed mould 3 is extracted from the hollow body.
The mould is preferably formed with a connection element 28 left between the two half moulds to act as a hinge.
The first mixture 20 and the second mixture 22 are identical, they (mixture 20 and 22) comprising silicone in a percentage between 85% and 95% by weight and catalyst in a percentage between 5% and 15%, their rising time after each feed being less than 10 hours, preferably between 7 and 9 hours and more preferably about 8 hours.
The hollow body 15 presents at least one reaction gas vent passage consisting of two chamfers 24 provided in that edge of the hollow body 15 opposite to that at which the hinge 19 is applied.
The pattern 16 consists of a natural sponge made rigid by treatment with urea resin; in particular, the natural sponge is soaked with Protodur urea resin produced by the company Concord and then left to react until the natural sponge is completely rigid.
To form a plurality of moulds all identical and all presenting the same appearance, after the mould has been formed its interior is fed with a quick hardening polyurethane resin of type PU3670A marketed by the company Siliconi Padova, then the mould is closed and the resin left to react for a time between 20 and 40 minutes at ambient temperature, preferably for 30 minutes, to form a plurality of rigid natural sponge patterns usable for making moulds (by the described method) presenting the impression of natural sponges.
Modifications and variants are possible, for example the mould (into which the plastic material is poured to produce the sponge) can be made of Teflon or other material.
The plastic material used to produce the sponge can also consist of an expanded polyurethane such as a polymer obtained by mixing an isocyanate (for example the product Specflex NE 150 marketed by DOW) with a polyol (for example the product Specflex NE 374 marketed by DOW) in the ratio 60:100.
It has been found in practice that the process and plant of the invention are particularly advantageous because besides being economical and ecological, they enable sponges of very good aesthetic characteristics to be produced even when the sponges present the appearance of natural sponges.
The process and plant conceived in this manner are susceptible to numerous modifications and variations, all falling within the scope of the inventive concept; moreover all details can be replaced by technically equivalent elements.
In practice the materials used and the dimensions can be chosen at will in accordance with requirements and the state of the art.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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MI2006A 000140 | Jan 2006 | IT | national |