METHOD FOR PRODUCING NON-WOVEN ELEMENTS CONTAINING GRAPHENE AND/OR GRAPHENE OXIDE
20220049388 ยท 2022-02-17
Inventors
- Diego GUALTIERI (San Giovanni Teatino (Chieti), IT)
- Gabriele Biagio ANTONELLI (San Giovanni Teatino (Chieti), IT)
Cpc classification
D06M11/74
TEXTILES; PAPER
D04H1/413
TEXTILES; PAPER
D04H1/64
TEXTILES; PAPER
D04H1/736
TEXTILES; PAPER
D01G23/00
TEXTILES; PAPER
D04H3/16
TEXTILES; PAPER
D04H1/407
TEXTILES; PAPER
International classification
D04H1/413
TEXTILES; PAPER
D01G23/00
TEXTILES; PAPER
D04H1/407
TEXTILES; PAPER
Abstract
A method and apparatus for producing non-woven elements, including a body of bonded fibers in which graphene and/or graphene oxide is incorporated.
Claims
1. A method for producing non-woven elements, comprising: depositing loose unbound fibers on a movable surface and providing graphene and/or graphene oxide, and binding together said loose unbound fibers so as to form a structure of bound fibers in which at least the graphene and/or graphene oxide is incorporated.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein loose unbound fibers and granular superabsorbent polymer are deposited onto said movable surface, wherein the graphene and/or graphene oxide is incorporated into said granular superabsorbent polymer.
3. The method of claim 1, wherein the graphene and/or graphene oxide is mixed with said loose unbound fibers before depositing the loose unbound fibers onto said movable surface.
4. The method of claim 1, wherein the graphene and/or graphene oxide is deposited on said loose unbound fibers after depositing the loose unbound fibers onto said movable surface.
5. The method of claim 1, comprising mixing said loose unbound fibers and the graphene and/or graphene oxide by a mixing unit before binding together the loose unbound fibers.
6. The method of claim 1 wherein the graphene and/or graphene oxide is coupled to said loose unbound fibers by electromagnetic fields.
7. The method of claim 1, wherein the loose unbound fibers are deposited by projecting the loose unbound fibers by pressurized air jets onto the movable surface or another surface fluidically connected to a suction source.
8. The method of claim 1, wherein the loose unbound fibers are deposited onto said movable surface so as to form an array of blanks of discrete elements.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0027] The invention will now be described in detail with reference to the attached drawings, given purely by way of non-limiting example, wherein:
[0028]
[0029]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0030] With reference to
[0031] The apparatus 10 is arranged in line with respect to an assembly machine 12 configured for producing absorbent sanitary articles. The assembly machine 12 is represented only schematically in the figures, and it is understood that it can be made according to any one of the known architectures in the field of producing absorbent sanitary articles. The assembly machine 12 may be configured to operate according to the Machine Direction production technique, in which the absorbent sanitary articles being formed advance with their prevailing development direction aligned with the machine direction, or according to the Cross Machine Direction production technique, in which the absorbent sanitary articles being formed advance with their prevailing direction of development transversal with respect to the machine direction. The machine 12 is formed by a set of apparatuses and devices which carry out the assembly of the different components of the absorbent sanitary articles. In particular, the machine 12 may be configured to assemble together: absorbent cores, topsheet and backsheet layers, elasticated waist bands, elastic elements for the legs (leg cuffs), side panels, closure formations, and any other component necessary for producing absorbent sanitary articles, as is well known in the field.
[0032] For the purposes of the present invention, the constructional details of the assembly machine 12 are not relevant. What is relevant for the purposes of the present invention is that the apparatus 10 for producing absorbent cores is arranged in line with the assembly machine 12, which carries out the assembly of the absorbent cores with the other components of the absorbent sanitary articles.
[0033] The apparatus 10 comprises a fiber deposition unit 14 configured to deposit loose unbound fibers coming from a fiber stock 16 onto a movable surface. In a possible embodiment, the deposition of the loose fibers may be carried out with a 3D lofting process developed by the Dilogroup company. The deposition process of fibers called 3D lofting involves generating high pressure air flows that transport the loose fibers and orient them. The high-pressure air flows project the loose fibers onto a movable suction surface. The combination of high-pressure air jets and the suction to which the target movable surface is subjected allow obtainment of three-dimensional formations of the loose fibers with high precision.
[0034] The construction details of a fiber deposition unit 14 operating according to the 3D lofting process are described in detail in documents EP-A-3450603 and EP-A-3450604.
[0035] The fibers used in the method according to the present invention are fibers normally used for producing non-woven materials and may be: [0036] synthetic fibers such as polyester, polyethylene, polypropylene, polyurethane, polyamide, acrylate, cellulose acetate, cupro, lyocell, modal, viscose or rayon, or their mixtures, or [0037] natural fibers such as cotton, linen, hemp, jute, ramie, coconut, pineapple, gorse, hibiscus, straw, bamboo, soy, kapok, eucalyptus, or their mixtures.
[0038] The fibers used in the method according to the present invention may be fibers without cellulose fluff (defibrated cellulose). In possible embodiments, the loose unbound fibers may be mixed with cellulose fluff.
[0039] The deposition of the loose unbound fibers may be carried out on a movable surface fluidically connected to a suction source. In a possible embodiment, the deposition of the loose unbound fibers may be carried out on a porous conveyor belt 18 having an upper branch 20 facing a suction chamber 22 connected to a source of sub-atmospheric pressure. In possible embodiments, the fiber deposition unit may deposit the fluff-free loose unbound fibers on the outer surface of a forming wheel as in standard processes for forming absorbent cores based on cellulose fluff, as described, for example, in EP-B1-2775975.
[0040] The conveyor belt or the forming wheel may be provided with pockets in which the fibers are deposited. These pockets may be shaped to form one or more substantially fiber-free channels in the absorbent core.
[0041] The loose unbound fibers may be deposited on a porous substrate, formed for example by a non-woven web, which advances on a conveyor belt or on the outer surface of a forming wheel, as in traditional processes for producing absorbent cores based on cellulose fluff. Therefore, the process step of the present invention that involves depositing loose, unbound fibers on a movable surface includes both the case wherein the movable surface is the surface of a conveyor belt or of a forming wheel and the case wherein the movable surface is the surface of a movable substrate.
[0042] The fiber deposition unit 14 may be configured to deposit the loose unbound fibers onto a movable surface to form a continuous array of blanks B advancing in the machine direction indicated by the arrow A. The blanks B may be oriented with their prevailing direction of development parallel or transverse to the machine direction A.
[0043] The blanks B may have a rectangular shape or may be shaped according to profiles of various types. The blanks B may be provided with longitudinal or transverse channels, and may also have a three-dimensional conformation in the Z direction. The blanks B may be made of fibers of different types (layered, mixed or different colors). The blanks B may be formed with a variable density layering both in the Z direction and in the direction transverse to the machine direction A.
[0044] The apparatus 10 comprises a dispensing device 24 configured to deliver metered quantities of graphene or graphene oxide.
[0045] In possible embodiments, graphene or graphene oxide may be in the form of a powdered material. In other embodiments, graphene or graphene oxide may be in the form of a liquid solution that can be sprayed onto the loose, unbound fibers.
[0046] The graphene and/or graphene oxide may be incorporated within polymeric materials, which may be dispensed into the fibers by means of dispensers of the type commonly used in machines for producing absorbent sanitary articles.
[0047] In a possible embodiment, the graphene and/or graphene oxide may be chemically bonded with superabsorbent polymers. Superabsorbent polymers and graphene and/or graphene oxide bond well with each other. Tests carried out by the Applicant have shown that there is the possibility of making polymer particles with graphene and/or graphene oxide incorporated within them, (for example, with a percentage of 10%).
[0048] Another possibility for depositing particles of graphene and/or graphene oxide on the fibers is to press the particles of graphene and/or graphene oxide against the fibers, according to a prior art known as printing. The pressing of the graphene and/or graphene oxide particles against the fibers can be carried out in a press. The press may be heated and have jets of air coming out of the press surface to push the graphene or graphene oxide particles into the volume of the fibers.
[0049] In the embodiment illustrated in
[0050] The loose unbound fibers to which graphene or graphene oxide has been added undergo a binding process in which the fibers are bound together by incorporating the graphene or graphene oxide between the bonded fibers.
[0051] The process of binding the fibers, following the process of depositing the fibers and applying graphene or graphene oxide in powder form, is carried out by passing the blanks B through a fixing unit 27. The fixing of the fibers may be carried out by means of thermal or mechanical processes of the type used for fixing the fibers of the non-woven webs. For example, the fixing of the fibers may be carried out by means of flows of hot air that weld the fibers together, according to a process known as air fixing (Air Through Bonding or ATB) or by passing loose unbound fibers added to powdered graphene or graphene oxide between heated calender rollers. The fixing of the fibers may also be carried out by means of needle punching or similar cold mechanical fixing processes, which carry out mechanical binding and anchoring of the fibers. By controlling the degree of attachment of the fibers, it is possible to define areas of the cores with variable integrity both in the Z direction and in the transverse direction.
[0052] At the outlet of the fixing unit 27, a continuous array of non-woven elements C is obtained, having a body formed by bonded fibers and powdered graphene or graphene oxide distributed between the bonded fibers, wherein the graphene or graphene oxide powder is dispersed between the fibers before fixing of the fibers.
[0053] The non-woven elements C are supplied in line to the assembly machine 12. For example, the finished elements C at the outlet of the fixing unit 27 may be enclosed between a backsheet layer 28 and a topsheet layer 30, as is customary in the production of absorbent sanitary articles.
[0054]
[0055] In the embodiment illustrated in
[0056] The blanks B on which graphene or graphene oxide powder has been deposited may be subjected to a mixing step carried out in a mixing unit 26 configured to mix the graphene or graphene oxide powder with the loose unbound fibers. The mixing unit 26 may comprise: rotating brushes, gears, electrostatic devices, air jets, water jets, etc. The mixing unit may also be provided in the embodiment of
[0057] In the embodiment illustrated in
[0058] In the embodiment illustrated in
[0059] The main technical advantage connected to the production of discrete elements C with the methods described above is the possibility of better incorporating the particles of graphene or graphene oxide powder between the fibers, because the particles of graphene or graphene oxide powder are incorporated in the loose unbound fibers before the fibers are fixed together.
[0060] The discrete non-woven elements C thus produced are more intact than a traditional non-woven product containing powdered material, both in dry and wet conditions.
[0061] These methods make it possible to reduce the amount of glue, and make it possible to produce glue-free elements, defined as elements containing an amount of glue less than 20% of the total amount of glue applied to the absorbent sanitary article. Under certain conditions, the glue can be completely eliminated.
[0062] Although producing discrete non-woven elements in line is particularly advantageous, the present invention may also be used for producing continuous non-woven webs away from the assembly line, which are collected in reels for their subsequent use in a production line.
[0063] Of course, without prejudice to the principle of the invention, the details of construction and the embodiments may be varied, with respect to that described, purely by way of non-limiting example, without thereby departing from the scope of the invention as defined by the following claims.