Fast-fibrillating lyocell fibers, and use thereof

10570565 · 2020-02-25

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Inventors

Cpc classification

International classification

Abstract

The present invention relates to fibrillated lyocell fibers which have a fibrillation quotient Q of 20 or more and whose content of microfibers with a fineness of less than 14 mesh and a diameter of less than 2 m is at least 50%, as well as the use thereof for producing a wipe, which contains pulp and 5 to 20 wt. % of fibrillated lyocell fibers.

Claims

1. A wipe comprising pulp and 5 to 20 wt. % of fibrillated lyocell fibers wherein the fibrillated lyocell fibers have a fibrillation quotient Q of 20 or more.

2. The wipe according to claim 1, wherein the pulp is paper pulp.

3. Fibrillated lyocell fibers having a fibrillation quotient Q of 20 or more, wherein said fibers comprise at least 50% microfibers, with-a fineness of less than 14 mesh and a diameter of less than 2 m.

4. A wipe comprising the fibers of claim 3, wherein the wipe comprises pulp and 5 to 20 wt. % of fibrillated lyocell fibers.

5. The wipe according to claim 4, wherein the pulp is paper pulp.

6. A wet-laying process for producing a wipe, wherein said process comprises providing 5 to 20 wt. % of the fibrillated lyocell fibers according to claim 3 and pulp, and obtaining the wipe.

7. The process according to claim 6, wherein the pulp is a paper pulp.

Description

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

(1) FIG. 1 is a graph depicting the CSF values for exemplary fibers in accordance with the present invention with increasing comminution time.

(2) FIG. 2 is an SEM photograph of a sheet made from a suspension of exemplary fibers made in accordance with the present invention.

DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

(3) The above-described object has been achieved by fibrillated lyocell fibers which are characterized in that they have a fibrillation quotient Q of 20 or more and whose content of microfibers with a fineness of less than 14 mesh and a diameter of less than 2 m is at least 50%. In order to avoid misunderstandings, it is understood that the term fibrillated lyocell fibers in the context of the present invention does not mean a total quantity of completely identical fibers, but a mixture of fibers of basically the same nature, in the mixture fibers of different fineness (measured in mesh) and different diameter.

(4) The fibrillation quotient Q is defined as
Q=200/t.sub.CSF200

(5) In this case, t.sub.CSF200 is the time (in min) required in CSF testing to reach a CSF value of 200. The larger Q is, the less time is required at constant fibrillation conditions to reach the same degree of fibrillation. Depending on the type of the starting fibers and the acid treatment according to the invention, a Q value of up to 400 can be achieved.

(6) Another subject of the present invention is a wipe that contains pulp and 5 to 20 wt. % of fibrillated lyocell fibers and wherein the fibrillated lyocell fibers have a fibrillation quotient Q of 20 or more. In a preferred embodiment, the pulp is paper pulp.

(7) The fast fibrillating lyocell fibers could surprisingly be produced by an acid treatment of conventional lyocell fibers. According to the invention this acid treatment can be carried out by impregnating a fiber tow extruded from spinnerets in a known manner according to the lyocell process and having an individual fiber titer of, for example, between 1.0 and 6.0 dtex with dilute mineral acid, for example hydrochloric, sulfuric or nitric acid, with a concentration of for example between 0.5 and 5% at room temperature in a container at a liquor ratio of, for example, 1:10, and then pressed to a certain residual moisture content of, for example, 200%. The impregnated fiber tow is then subjected to water vapor at an overpressure in a suitable device, then washed until free of acid and dried.

(8) To determine the fibrillation tendency, the fiber tow is cut to a staple length of 5 mm and subjected to CSF testing (Canadian Standard Freeness according to TAPPI standard T227 om-94).

(9) The fiber tow is cut into staple fibers of suitable cutting length, for example 4 to 6 mm, for the manufacture of the wipes according to the invention. The fibrillation can then take place in a comminuting unit commonly used in the paper industry, for example, a milling unit, a refiner, a disintegrator or a hydrapulping unit. It is carried out there until the desired degree of fibrillation is reached.

(10) The effect of the acid treatment and the resulting reduction in CSF can be influenced by varying the treatment parameters. At a longer treatment time in the overpressure steam, the same effect can be achieved with lower acid concentrations and vice versa. Likewise, the CSF value can be influenced with lower or higher temperatures of the steam treatment.

(11) Apparently in doing so the fiber structure is specifically weakened, thereby increasing the fibrillation tendency.

(12) In subsequent CSF testing, it should be noted that the millingtime required to achieve a CSF of 200 ml for untreated lyocell fibers is in the range of 12-16 minutes depending on the pulp type and production parameters (see FIG. 1). This procedure is comparable with that described in U.S. Pat. No. 8,187,422. The acid-treated lyocell fibers need only about 3-4 minutes to reach a CSF of 200 ml (FIG. 1) with the same milling method. In addition, it was found that the proportion of microfibers with <14 mesh and <2 m diameter formed during grinding was significantly increased to more than 50% as a result of the acid pretreatment. As a result, it is possible to reduce the content of Lyocell fibers in a cleaning cloth to significantly <25 wt. %, according to the invention even below 20 wt. %, and nevertheless to obtain the required property profiles described, for example, in U.S. Pat. No. 8,187,422.

(13) The fast fibrillating lyocell fibers according to the invention can be used according to the invention for the production of various products such as wipes, in particular disposable wipes, papers, in particular filter papers and papers for technical applications such as batteries, etc. These and other products as well as the production processes which are suitable for this purpose are described, inter alia, in WO 95/35399, which is hereby incorporated by reference, and the entire disclosure of which is incorporated by reference into the present patent application. In particular, wipes according to the invention can be produced from the fibers according to the invention and pulp according to known methods. In a preferred embodiment, the solidification is effected by hydroentanglement.

(14) Subject of the present invention is also the use of the above-described fibers according to the invention for producing a wipe, said wipe containing pulp and 5 to 20 wt. % of fibrillated lyocell fibers. Preferably, the pulp is paper pulp.

(15) In the following, the invention is described by means of examples. However, the invention expressly is not limited to these examples but includes all other embodiments based on the same inventive concept.

EXAMPLES

Example 1: Acid Treatment

(16) Fast fibrillating lyocell fibers according to the invention are produced as follows: a lyocell fiber tow having a single fiber titer of 1.7 dtex is impregnated with dilute sulfuric acid at room temperature and at a liquor ratio of 1:10 and pressed to about 200% moisture. The impregnated fiber tow is pressurized with water vapor in a laboratory damper for approx. 10 min, then washed free of acid with water and dried. The dry fiber tow is cut to 5 mm staple length and subjected to CSF testing.

Example 2: Comparison of Fibrillation Dynamics

(17) The fibrillation tendency is measured by means of CSF (Canadian Standard of Freeness) testing according to TAPPI Standard T227 om-94 and the fibrillation quotient Q is determined. The following were compared:

(18) A. commercially available untreated 1.7 dtex/6 mm lyocell fibers, commercially available as Tencel from Lenzing AG (Tencel Standard)

(19) B. fibers acid-treated according to Example 1 (Tencel fast fibrillating)

(20) FIG. 1 shows the decrease in CSF value with increasing comminution time in the measuring device. It can be seen clearly that the acid-treated fibers fibrillate much faster than the untreated fibers. For the practice of commercial manufacture of fibrillated lyocell fibers, this means a considerably lower time and energy expenditure than when using untreated lyocell fibers.

(21) Table 1 shows the t.sub.CSF200 values determined for the different samples and the Q values calculated therefrom.

(22) TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Sample t.sub.CSF200 [min] Q [min.sup.1] A 15.5 12.9 B 3.5 57.1

Example 3: Comparison of Suitability for Wet Laying Methods

(23) The same fiber samples as in example 1 were compared:

(24) 1% Aqueous fiber suspensions of both fiber samples A and B were refined in a laboratory refiner of the Andritz R1L type at a power of 500 W, wherein both The energy consumption in kWh/to and the duration for reaching a freeness of CSF 200 (Canadian Standard of Freeness Testing according to TAPPI Standard T227 om-94) were determined. The fibrillating Lyocell fiber could be processed with less than 80% of the energy consumption compared to the standard Lyocell fiber in only 50% of the refining time (see Table 2).

(25) TABLE-US-00002 TABLE 2 Energy consumption Sample Refining time [min] [kWh/to] A 5 400 B 2.5 65

(26) 2000 ml were used to prepare test sheets in a sheet former of the Rapith Kthen type and SEM pictures of these test sheets were. FIG. 2 shows an SEM photograph of the sheet from the suspension of sample B.