HYGIENIC TISSUE
20170325649 ยท 2017-11-16
Inventors
- Sara Rani Reddy (Cincinnati, OH, US)
- Trisha Reddy (Cincinnati, OH, US)
- Usha P. Reddy (Cincinnati, OH, US)
Cpc classification
A61F13/01021
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A47K7/08
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A41D13/11
HUMAN NECESSITIES
D21H27/007
TEXTILES; PAPER
B31D1/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
A47K7/03
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
D04H1/54
TEXTILES; PAPER
Abstract
A hygienic tissue includes a front side and a back side. The front side includes an absorbent material and the back side includes an absorbent material. A fluid resistant material is between the front side absorbent material and the back side absorbent material, and a pocket is on the back side for receiving one or more of a user's fingers. The back side defines an aperture for providing access to the pocket. The aperture is surrounded on one or more sides by the back side such that one or more pockets are formed along the back side. Attachments can be used to attach the tissue to a user's hand, wrist or ears. The tissue can be used, for example, when sneezing, coughing, nose blowing or touching contaminated surfaces, as a hygienic tissue, face mask, and wet wipe.
Claims
1. A hygienic tissue, comprising: a front side and a back side, the front side including an absorbent material, the back side including an absorbent material, a fluid resistant material between the front side absorbent material and the back side absorbent material; and a pocket on the back side for receiving one or more of a user's fingers.
2. The hygienic tissue of claim 1 wherein the front side comprises a layer of absorbent material.
3. The hygienic tissue of claim 2 wherein the back side comprises a layer of absorbent material.
4. The hygienic tissue of claim 3 wherein the fluid resistant material comprises a layer of fluid resistant material between the front side layer and the back side layer.
5. The hygienic tissue of claim 3 wherein the back side layer defines an aperture for providing access to the pocket.
6. The hygienic tissue of claim 4 wherein the front side layer, the fluid resistant layer, and the back side layer are separate sheets that are joined.
7. The hygienic tissue of claim 6 wherein the layers are joined along their outer edge regions.
8. The hygienic tissue of claim 4 wherein the front side layer, the fluid resistant layer, and the back side layer comprise a single sheet.
9. The hygienic tissue of claim 5 wherein the aperture is surrounded on four sides by the back side layer such that pockets are formed along an entire circumference of the back side.
10. The hygienic tissue of claim 1 wherein at least one section of the tissue is folded back to form the pocket.
11. The hygienic tissue of claim 10 wherein four sections of the tissue are folded back to form pockets.
12. The hygienic tissue of claim 1 comprising four outer edge regions and wherein at least one edge region includes an open portion.
13. The hygienic tissue of claim 1 wherein at least one of the materials comprises a three dimensional patterned material.
14. The hygienic tissue of claim 1 having a bacterial filtration efficiency performance of at least 95% as measured according to the Bacterial Filtration Efficiency Test Method.
15. The hygienic tissue of claim 1 having a particulate filtration efficiency performance of at least 95% at 0.1 micron as measured according the Particle Filtration Efficiency Test Method.
16. The hygienic tissue of claim 1 having a fluid resistance to penetration of synthetic blood at a velocity of at least 80 mmHg as measured according to the Synthetic Blood PenetrationLiquid Barrier Test Method or Synthetic Blood PenetrationSplash Resistant Test Method.
17. The hygienic tissue of claim 1 being infused with liquid for use as a wet wipe.
18. A hygienic tissue, comprising: a front side and a back side, the front side including an absorbent material, a fluid resistant material behind the absorbent material; and pockets along an entire circumference of the back side for receiving one or more of a user's fingers.
19. The hygienic tissue of claim 18 wherein the front side comprises a layer of absorbent material.
20. The hygienic tissue of claim 18 wherein the back side comprises a layer of absorbent material.
21. The hygienic tissue of claim 18 wherein the fluid resistant material comprises a layer of fluid resistant material.
22. The hygienic tissue of claim 18 wherein the back side layer defines an aperture for providing access to the pockets.
23. The hygienic tissue of claim 18 wherein the front side comprises a layer of absorbent material, the back side comprises a layer of absorbent material, and the fluid resistant material comprises a layer of fluid resistant material, the front side layer, the fluid resistant layer, and the back side layer being separate sheets that are joined or a single sheet.
24. The hygienic tissue of claim 18 wherein four sections of the tissue are folded back to form the pockets.
25. The hygienic tissue of claim 18 being infused with liquid for use as a wet wipe.
26. A method of using a hygienic tissue, comprising: positioning one or more fingers into a pocket on a back side of the tissue, the tissue having a front side and the back side, the front side including an absorbent material, the tissue including a fluid resistant material behind the absorbent material; and placing the tissue over a mouth and/or nose using the fingers positioned in the pocket when sneezing, coughing or nose blowing.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0058] The following detailed description of specific embodiments can be best understood when read in conjunction with the following drawings:
[0059]
[0060]
[0061]
[0062]
[0063]
[0064]
[0065]
[0066]
[0067]
[0068]
[0069]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0070] Referring to
[0071] The front and back sheets 12, 14 are secured along all four of their outside edge regions 16, 18, respectively. The back sheet 14 defines an aperture 20 such that pockets 22 are formed along the entire circumference of the tissue 10. The pockets 22 are defined by the front and back sheets 12, 14 and extend from inner edges 24 of the back sheet 14 to the joined outside edge regions 16, 18. The outside edge regions 16, 18 can be joined along their outer edges, can be joined along regions extending inward from their outer edges, or can be joined along regions spaced from their other edges. The pockets 22 allow a person to tuck at least a portion of her hand and/or fingers 26 inside through the aperture 20 of the back sheet 14 and into the space 28 between the front and back sheets defined by the pockets 22.
[0072] While square-shaped sheets are illustrated, the sheets may be the same shape or differently shaped, and may be other rectangle shapes, circular, polygonal, or other geometric shapes.
[0073] Referring to
[0074] The tissue may have all four edges folded, or 1, 2, or 3 edges folded, as illustrated in
[0075] Referring to
[0076] Rather than joining a back sheet to a multi-layer front sheet, as illustrated in
[0077] Joining and/or securing of front and back sheets is accomplished through various methods known in the art. For example, compiled sheets of nonwoven, woven, paper, cellulose-derived, or cotton-derived material may be joined by sewing, gluing, heating, and/or ultrasonic welding. Methods of bonding may include but are not limited to hot calendaring, belt calendaring, through-air thermal bonding, ultrasonic bonding, and/or radiant-heat bonding.
[0078] Woven materials are materials manufactured by holding fibers and/or yarns together by spinning and/or weaving. The fibers may be derived from a variety of base materials, including cotton, polyester, and/or viscose/Tencel. Weaving includes carding or combing fibers into one direction. The aligned fibers are then twisted or spun together to make a long continuous yarn, which is woven on a loom into a sheet, wherein yarns interlock to create strength.
[0079] Nonwoven materials are produced and held together by a method other than weaving. Fibers can be formed into a sheet using carding technology, wet forming technology, or air forming technology. The fibers are then locked in place to create strength using a variety of methods, including resin or chemical bonding, mechanical entanglement (e.g., hydroentangling with high pressure water jets or needle punching), thermal fusing (melting fibers together), and hydrogen bonding (e.g., ionic bonding between hydrogen and hydrozyl groups on the surface of cellulose). Base materials include, but are not limited to, polyester, viscose, Tencel, polypropylene, polyethylene, cotton, and/or wood pulp.
[0080] Paper materials are produced by mixing wood pulp fibers into a slurry with water. The slurry is poured onto a moving wire and the water is vacuumed off and dried. Hydrogen bonding, mechanical entanglement, and use of wet strength resin hold the web together to give the sheet strength.
[0081] Cellulose-derived materials originate from plant sources. The most common sources include wood pulp (derived from trees), viscose (fiber made by chemically dissolving and re-extruding the cellulose material into long fibers), Tencel, cotton, flax, and bamboo. Cellulose-derived materials have a surface chemistry that allows them to absorb and hold on to water better than synthetic or petroleum-based materials. Cellulosic materials will also biodegrade over time.
[0082] In certain embodiments, the hygienic tissue has one or more sheets that have a three dimensional patterned fusion of material forming a rippled, creped or quilted texture.
[0083]
[0084] Optionally, the tissue according to any of the embodiments described above can be used with one or more fasteners, such as a clip, tie or loop, for attaching the tissue to the body of the user. The ties or loops can be formed from a variety of materials, including woven, nonwoven, paper, cellulose-derived, cotton-derived, elastic, and the like. For example, the fastener can be one or more elastic loops. Referring to
[0085] As illustrated in
[0086] The various embodiments of the hygienic tissue described above can be infused with a liquid composition, for example to form a wet wipe. Liquid composition as used herein means any liquid including, but not limited to a pure liquid such as water, an aqueous composition, a colloid, an emulsion, a suspension, a solution and mixtures thereof. The liquid composition may be added to the hygienic tissue to form a wet wipe prior to and/or after packaging and/or prior to and/or after folding, if any, and/or prior to and/or after any post processing operation, such as embossing, tuft generating, and printing. The liquid composition may comprise water, alcohol, natural fats or oil emulsion, sterol or sterol derivative, fat-soluble vitamins such as vitamin E, emulsifying surfactant or cosurfactants, humectants, chelating agents, buffers, solvents, thickeners, dyes, colorants, lotions, biocides, fragrances, defoamers, pertrolatum, mineral oil, emulsifying wax and mixture thereof. Liquid composition may also comprise hydrophilic polymers selected from the group consisting of polysaccharides, polycarboxylates, polyvinyl alcohols, polyvinylpyrrolidones, polyethylene glycols, methylvinyl ethers, and mixtures thereof.
[0087] Multiple tissues can be stored in a container containing the liquid and can be pulled out individually for use as a wet wipe used in cleansing hard surfaces, food, inanimate objects, toys and body parts including the face. In particular, they may be used on the perianal area after defecation. They may also be used to remove make-up or apply lotion on the body.
[0088] Rather than forming the hygienic tissue of separate sheets that are joined, the hygienic tissue can be formed from a single sheet of fabric having a front side including an absorbent material, a back side including an absorbent material, and a fluid resistant material between the front side and the back side. The single sheet of fabric can include a layer of absorbent material at the front side, a layer of absorbent material at the back side, and a layer of fluid resistant material at the back side in the form of, for example, SMS (spunbond, meltblown, spunbond) or MSM (meltblown, spunbone, meltblown) material.
[0089] Additional manufacturing processes for making the hygienic tissue from separate sheets that have been joined or from a single sheet of fabric are illustrated in
[0090] The tissue can be manufactured in an assembly line. For example, referring to
[0091] Alternatively, tissue can be formed using a fabric tube welding machine. Referring to
[0092] Referring to
[0093] In an alternative method of manufacturing the tissue using the tube welding machine of
[0094] In general, the machine for making the tissue includes, for example, an unwinder for a fabric (material) supply roll, a tension belt to regulate tension of the fabric, a fabric puller, an optional ultrasonic welding unit for embossing, a material folding triangle board, an ultrasonic welding unit, a cutting roller, an optional final product folding unit, an optional final product stacking unit, and a conveyor. For punching openings, the machine includes, for example, an ultrasonic welding unit for shape hole sealing, a shape hole cutting roller, and an optional scrap export unit.
[0095] While particular embodiments of the present invention have been illustrated and described, it would be obvious to one skilled in the art that various other changes and modifications can be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. It is therefore intended to cover in the appended claims all such changes and modifications that are within the scope of this invention.