The invention relates to the production of a clay-impregnated substrate.
It therefore relates in particular in this case to the production of a part intended to cover an external area of a living organism, a human or an animal body, or a plant.
The use of clay for medical or cosmetic purposes has long been known, and the therapeutic or cosmetic properties of some clays have already been studied.
In this regard, in particular in EP-A-116 240, a strip with an active filler capable of being used in particular for human and animal treatment purposes has already been proposed. This strip includes a substrate with an aerated structure with a clay filler, in particular green clay, adhering to it.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,610,781, US 2007 0276308 and FR 2096036 refer to methods for impregnating clay in a substrate. U.S. Pat. No. 6,610,781 and US 2007 0276308 suggest a spray.
It is thus known to:
None of these documents, however, provides truly convincing details for impregnating by spraying.
Moreover, both U.S. Pat. No. 6,610,781 and US 2007 0276308 cite various other modes of filling the substrate.
US 2007 0276308 indicates that, before being dried, the impregnated substrate must be rolled between compression rollers or scraped to further compress the mixture into the substrate.
And U.S. Pat. No. 6,610,781 requires the mixture that is to be placed in contact with the substrate to include a polymerization agent suitable for inducing polymerization in the mixture or in the presence of a substrate provided with the mixture.
This creates complex process conditions and proves that the impregnation solely by spraying is not mastered under conditions comparable to what is proposed here.
A problem solved here is therefore related to the conditions for performing, simply by spraying, the impregnation with a clay base filler (at least essentially) of a suitable substrate, so that the filler with which the dried substrate is provided does not become significantly separated from said substrate when it is then immersed in distilled water at ambient temperature.
To achieve this objective:
Thus, a high-quality finished product will be obtained (preferably without edge irregularities), optionally with a multi-component filler, which adheres well, and without aggregation (good dispersion). The finished product can easily exist in various forms, without any notable changes. It is possible, if necessary, to vary the amount of filler, and to quickly go from a rolled strip production to a series of masks, patches, dressings, body towels and the like.
As other features, to be considered alone or in partial combinations, it is also recommended:
Concerning the product itself, in the same sense, it is possible to propose a flexible, rolled, dry product therefore including a porous airlaid substrate with natural or synthetic fibers and filled (at least) with clay, which filler is free of any chemically integrated network between the clay and a polymer and impregnates the substrate heterogeneously throughout the thickness thereof, in and between the fibers at least locally, with at least one non-saturation of one of the faces, and empty spaces existing between the fibers.
If the product is obtained by implementing the aforementioned method, the fibers of the filled substrate will be, at least locally, less entangled than those of the dry substrate, not yet filled, toward which the mixture will have been sprayed.
In general, the product in question may also be characterized advantageously in that:
Other features and advantages will become clearer from the following non-limiting description with reference to the appended figures, in which:
What is presented below must enable the filler 30 not to separate significantly from the dried substrate 10 when it is then immersed in distilled water, at ambient temperature, as if it were being used by a customer.
To this end, and as shown in
To produce this pasty product, the clay is supplied dry, and in the form of particles.
To impregnate the core of the substrate 1, the pasty product to be sprayed is a paste in this case containing, by weight of the mixture, between 30 and 60% clay and between 40 and 70% liquid, in particular water, or even alcohol, or a combination thereof. The clay 30a used will be phyllitic and non-swelling.
A particularly effective result has been observed with a clay having a particle size of between 10 microns and 100 microns, and preferably between 20 microns and 30 microns. It is recommended that the clay to be sprayed be illite.
Additives for reinforcing the properties of the clay may be added to said pasty mixture, such as plant extracts, aromas, etc. The clay may remain largely predominant, and even constitute 90%.
To promote the spraying, it is recommended that the pasty product 3 contain a mass fill ratio of clay of less than 42%. In addition, in the tank 17, it will have been held in suspension favorably by agitation (preferably with dispersants, such as “darvan”™); a rotating-arm agitator, which stirs the muddy paste at low speed.
It should be noted that the mixture to be sprayed, and therefore the filled substrate obtained, may conveniently be free of diatomaceous earth, contrary to the recommendations of US 2007 0276308.
In addition, the mixture will be free of any polymerization agent capable of causing polymerization in the mixture or in the presence of the substrate provided with the sprayed mixture. Due to the features disclosed here, it is indeed unnecessary to produce a clay-polymer network composite as in U.S. Pat. No. 6,610,781 in order for the filler to hold to the substrate under the expected conditions.
To promote the quality of the products in the context of use in the food, hygiene or care product industry, as well as the recycling of the products after use, it is recommended:
For the spraying, it is also recommended:
The combination of the two features ensures the quality of the result.
Concerning the feeding means,
An air inlet pressure in the/each nozzle on the order of 1.8 to 2.5×105 Pa is favorable. “Devilbiss”™ nozzles operating under 3×105 Pa of air pressure with a muddy mixture and 1.4-mm nozzles are suitable.
The manual version, shown in
The spraying is directed toward a substrate kept substantially stretched out.
Favorably, the spraying is performed by additionally filling, at 30, a single one of the faces (in this case identical) 10a of the substrate, and without saturating said substrate throughout the entire thickness thereof.
For this, the spraying will take place only on one side of the substrate.
As shown in the tests presented below, it is thus recommended to spray the mixture only toward one face of the substrate 10, until it is filled, in principle, to at least 60 g/m2 of clay, without of course saturating the opposite face 10b, or said substrate throughout the entire thickness thereof, by impregnating instead the filler 30 in and between the fibers at least locally, in at least a portion of said thickness.
To obtain an effective product (good impregnation and hold of the filler, surface homogeneity, quality of cut-outs of the filled product if there are any), a clean absorbent substrate 1 is used, which is stretched out and dry, and is a nonwoven material made of natural or synthetic fibers, obtained by an aerodynamic and airlaid process.
As described in detail, for example, on the website: “http://cerig.efpg.inpg.fr/tutoriel/non-tisse/page03.htm”, the airlaid process is a dry process consisting of transporting and dispersing fibers of the type mentioned above in an air flow. Typically, the fibers are supplied and passed through perforated rotary cylinders or distribution systems in order to form a porous, aerated web on a conveyor belt (distribution chamber located above a belt with a vacuum system incorporated below the belt).
To achieve, under the best conditions, the desired impregnation, and in particular the results indicated below, it is recommended that the substrate 1 have:
For the desired impregnation quality, including in the test of the filled substrate, dried, then immersed in distilled water, at ambient temperature, it is recommended that the impregnated product be dried on a bearing support 19 (substantially horizontal) that supports it on the side of its face 10b opposite the side toward which the mixture is sprayed.
The losses of a portion of the filler during drying, and therefore of the finished product, will be limited on the unsprayed side 10b (in this case, therefore, the lower side).
The drying may include drying means, in particular a chamber, where the filled substrate, in this case the flattened strip, will be dried at around 80 to 200° C. for 5 to 15 minutes.
Thus, the filled strip rolled in 9b will be dry.
To check the quality of the results, tests were conducted, as described in detail below, with examinations of cross-sections of materials, on segments:
It is noted that the dry sample (impregnated, then dried naturally by resting on a support on the unsprayed side) has lost a small but insignificant amount of the clay filler (see
Observations with Preparations (Inclusion in a Polished Resin Block)
Total impregnation of the substrate, but no saturation aside from the sprayed face and over around 80 to 120 μm.
The drawings of
It is seen that the clay-based filler impregnates the substrate heterogeneously throughout the entire thickness thereof, in and between the fibers at least locally, with saturation on the side of one of the two faces of the substrate and in a first portion of the thickness, and non-saturation of the opposite face, where there are empty spaces between the fibers.
Observations without Preparation (as above), under said Optical Microscope (
The decrease in the thickness appears to be due to better cohesion of the fibers with one another owing to the clay impregnation and the pressure induced by the spraying action, which enables the fibers to be rearranged more neatly.
After drying, the fibers on the side opposite the sprayed side are (almost) no longer coated with clay particles.
It is also observed that, on the side opposite the saturated side, the fibers appear to be neater.
Observations with Preparation/Inclusion in a Polished Resin Block (as above), with said Optical Microscope; see
Coated with clay, the airlaid fibers appear to be in order over around 370 μm of the impregnated side: these are the fibers best coated with clay. In this portion, the contact between the clay and the fibers is close: no porosity has been observed. On the unsprayed side, separations between clay-impregnated fibers are distinguished: they appear to be disordered.
When the clay is sprayed on the cellulosic fiber tissue, it is observed that:
When the clay-coated tissue is wetted, the fibers least impregnated with clay lose some of their clay particles. However, the fibers keep a certain cohesion and the thickness of the tissue remains generally identical.
Observations under the Electronic Microscope (see
Procedure:
1) Carbon metallization of a polished cross-section as above;
2) Observations under scanning electron microscopy.
The observation of a cross-section of an impregnated sample, with a thickness of 500 μm, enables three zones to be distinguished:
Each fiber observed in a cross-section is completely impregnated with clay. However, the thickness of the clay layer varies: it is greater on the side where the clay has been sprayed. The clay appears to have penetrated to the core of the fibers, resulting in close contact between the two products.
This microscopy makes it possible to specify that the clay is first deposited in the airlaid substrate, has saturated it and then is stacked on the direct spraying face. This deposition is not homogeneous throughout the thickness: first, there is a fiber-free compact layer of around 100 μm, then, over 300 μm, is a fiber/clay mixture in which the fibers are totally embedded in the clay (little material is missing). Finally, a zone corresponding to the face opposite the spraying has more material missing and is not saturated with filler.
The clay embeds all of the fibers and seals the surface exposed to the spraying, thus causing a quasi-pure filler layer to form.
The penetration of the filler into the fibers causes a close attachment between the fibers and the filler.
Thus, the clay filler remains trapped in the dried airlaid (penetration into and between the fibers) and is deposited in a fine layer on the substrate during the wetting of the sample (clay between the fibers driven by the spray liquid).
Under conditions similar to those described above, it has also been verified that comparable results can still be obtained by spraying only on a face of the airlaid substrate, and filling this sprayed face with 60 g/m2, then 180 g/m2 of clay, therefore without saturating it.
A lower filled substrate thickness of −5% to more than −20% with respect to the dry, clean airlaid substrate is noted overall.
In every case, the filler does not significantly separate from the dried filled substrate when it is then immersed in distilled water, for between 3 s and 120 s, at ambient temperature (between 20° C. and 30° C., typically 25° C.). These tests conducted, samples impregnated then dried under lamps, resting on the unsprayed side, then with a time of complete immersion in distilled water for 3 s, 5 s, 7 s, 15 s and 30 s, successively, did not show notable (significant) separation between the airlaid substrate and the filler, therefore the clay, in particular by deposition in water.
To best take advantage of the qualities of the clay in particular in terms of preservation of agri-food products or action by skin or even subcutaneous contact (wounds, hemostatic performance, etc.), care/beauty/hygiene (including sexual hygiene), it is clearly recommended, after the tests performed, that the clay impregnating the nonwoven airlaid substrate 1 be an illite (phyllitic structure), comprised of 60 to 75% illite, 20 to 30% smectite, 5 to 10% kaolinite and various trace mineral elements (in particular magnesium, potassium, zinc, copper and manganese).
This will in principle be completed with:
Thus, with this illite (in this case, natural hydrous aluminum silicate, commonly called green clay) having a porosity of 0.11 to 0.13 cc/g, the specific surface will enable optimal adsorption.
For the uses specified, it will also be noted that the following clays are suitable: green, pink, yellow and red clays.
The field of products for phytosanitary use (plants, gardening, etc.) and applications in the preservation of agri-food products are also covered and beneficial.
Concerning cut-outs of the dried, finished product, they are possible without heating the cutting means, and without fraying. The product can even be torn easily, while remaining strong enough for the envisaged uses, in particular in the wet state.
The visible layer of deposited clay does not become worn during the reeling and cutting operations or other (dry) transformation operations, even if the filled substrate, which remains flexible, is folded.
| Number | Date | Country | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0954696 | Jul 2009 | FR | national |
| Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PCT/FR2010/051441 | 7/7/2010 | WO | 00 | 3/6/2012 |