CARRIER MATERIAL FOR VINYL FLOOR COVERING

20170043551 ยท 2017-02-16

Assignee

Inventors

Cpc classification

International classification

Abstract

A carrier material for vinyl floor covering, wherein the carrier material includes a nonwoven layer containing at least 50 wt. % of thermoplastic fibers and a scrim for eliminating wrinkles in the vinyl floor covering. The scrim includes weft yarns having a linear density of 28 tex or less. The carrier material prevents the formation of surface irregularities and printing errors in the vinyl floor covering.

Claims

1. A carrier material for manufacturing a composite product comprising said carrier material and an impregnated matrix, the carrier material comprising one or more nonwoven layer(s) of fibers, wherein each nonwoven layer of fibers is composed of thermoplastic fibers for at least 50 wt. % of the total weight of fibers in the respective nonwoven layer of fibers, and a scrim comprising weft yarns of glass fibers or high modulus polyester fibers, the glass weft yarns having a linear density of 28 tex or less, the high modulus polyester weft yarns having a linear density of 50 tex or less.

2. The carrier material according to claim 1 wherein the scrim comprises warp yarns of glass fibers or high modulus polyester fibers, the warp yarns having a linear density of 100 tex or less.

3. The carrier material according to claim 1 wherein the scrim comprises weft yarns and/or warp yarns having a modulus of at least 25 GPa.

4. The carrier material according to claim 1 wherein the weft yarns of the scrim are multifilament glass yarns and wherein the individual glass filaments of the multifilament glass yarns have a diameter in the range of 3 .Math. to 18 .Math..

5. The carrier material according to claim 1 wherein the weft yarns and/or the warp yarns of the scrim are made from E-glass or AR-glass.

6. The carrier material according to claim 1, wherein the scrim comprises a binder, the binder comprising any thermoplastic or thermoset organic polymers, copolymers or any mixture thereof.

7. The carrier material according to claim 1 wherein at least one of the nonwoven layer of fibers is composed of thermoplastic fibers for at least 75 wt. % of the total weight of fibers in the respective nonwoven layer of fibers.

8. The carrier material according to claim 1 wherein the nonwoven layer of fibers comprises mono-component fibers or comprises bicomponent fibers.

9. The carrier material according to claim 7 wherein the one or more nonwoven layer(s) of fibers is/are thermally bonded.

10. The carrier material according to claim 1 wherein the one or more nonwoven layer(s) of fibers and the scrim are connected to each other to form an integrated carrier.

11. The carrier material according to claim 1 wherein the scrim is embedded between two nonwoven layers of fibers.

12. A composite product comprising the carrier material according to claim 1 and an impregnated matrix.

13. The composite product according to claim 12, wherein the composite product is a vinyl floor covering.

Description

EXAMPLES

Example 1

[0070] A cushioned vinyl floor covering was produced based on a carrier comprising a nonwoven layer of fibers and a scrim. The carrier material was composed of a scrim embedded between two nonwoven layers of fibers. The two nonwoven layers of fibers were thermally bonded to each other through the openings in the scrim by though air bonding, thus integrating the warp and weft yarns of the scrim into the carrier material by encapsulation by the fibers of the two nonwoven layers of fibers bonded to each other.

[0071] The two nonwoven layers of fibers were composed of core-sheath bicomponent filaments having a linear density of 7 dtex, the core of the filaments being composed of polyethylene terephthalate and the sheath being composed of polyamide-6 in a ratio of 74/26 vol. %/vol. % and the two nonwoven layer of fibers had a combined weight 100 g/m.sup.2. The scrim was composed of 1.3 glass yarns per cm width extending in machine direction and 0.8 glass yarns per cm extending in cross machine direction. The glass yarns extending in machine direction and the glass yarn extending in cross machine direction both had a linear density of 11 tex.

[0072] The cushioned vinyl exhibited no wrinkles extending in machine direction and printing errors in the cushioned vinyl were not observed.

COMPARATIVE EXAMPLES

[0073] Six types of cushioned vinyl floor covering were produced based on carrier materials comprising a nonwoven layer of fibers and a scrim. The carrier material in each comparable example was composed of a scrim embedded between two nonwoven layers of fibers. The two nonwoven layers of fibers were thermally bonded to each other through the openings in the scrim by though air bonding, thus integrating the warp and weft yarns of the scrim into the carrier material by encapsulation by the fibers of the two nonwoven layers of fibers bonded to each other.

[0074] The two nonwoven layers of fibers were composed of core-sheath bicomponent filaments either having a linear density of 7 dtex or a linear density of 10 dtex, the core of the filaments being composed of polyethylene terephthalate and the sheath being composed of polyamide-6 in a ratio of 74/26 vol. %/vol. % and the two nonwoven layer of fibers had a combined weight 75 g/m.sup.2. The scrim was composed of either 1.3 glass yarns per cm width extending in machine direction and 0.8 glass yarns per cm extending in cross machine direction, or of 0.65 glass yarns per cm width extending in machine direction and 0.8 glass yarns per cm extending in cross machine direction, or of 0.65 glass yarns per cm width extending in machine direction and 0.4 glass yarns per cm extending in cross machine direction. The glass yarns extending in machine direction and the glass yarn extending in cross machine direction both had a linear density of 34 tex in all three scrims.

[0075] Although all six types of cushioned vinyl exhibited no wrinkles extending in machine direction, printing errors were observed in close proximity of those locations where the glass yarns extending in cross machine direction were positioned.