AU2003254762A1 - Smoking article and smoking material therefor - Google Patents

Smoking article and smoking material therefor Download PDF

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Publication number
AU2003254762A1
AU2003254762A1 AU2003254762A AU2003254762A AU2003254762A1 AU 2003254762 A1 AU2003254762 A1 AU 2003254762A1 AU 2003254762 A AU2003254762 A AU 2003254762A AU 2003254762 A AU2003254762 A AU 2003254762A AU 2003254762 A1 AU2003254762 A1 AU 2003254762A1
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AU
Australia
Prior art keywords
smoking
smoking material
weight
aerosol generator
tobacco
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
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Application number
AU2003254762A
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AU2003254762B2 (en
Inventor
Philip John Biggs
Richard Thomas Gilbert
Kevin Gerard Mcadam
Bhasker Natarajan
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
British American Tobacco Investments Ltd
Original Assignee
British American Tobacco Investments Ltd
British American Tobacco Co Ltd
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Priority claimed from AU76680/98A external-priority patent/AU756450B2/en
Priority claimed from AU89352/01A external-priority patent/AU763222C/en
Application filed by British American Tobacco Investments Ltd, British American Tobacco Co Ltd filed Critical British American Tobacco Investments Ltd
Publication of AU2003254762A1 publication Critical patent/AU2003254762A1/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of AU2003254762B2 publication Critical patent/AU2003254762B2/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Ceased legal-status Critical Current

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Description

-1-
AUSTRALIA
PATENTS ACT 1990 COMPLETE SPECIFICATION FOR A STANDARD PATENT
ORIGINAL
Name of Applicant/s: British American Tobacco (Investments) Limited Actual Inventor/s: Philip, John Biggs and Kevin Gerard McAdam and Richard Thomas Gilbert and Bhasker Natarajan Address for Service: Baldwin Shelston Waters MARGARET STREET SYDNEY NSW 2000 CCN: 3710000352 Invention Title: SMOKING ARTICLE AND SMOKING MATERIAL THEREFOR Details of Original Application No. 89352/01 dated 09 Nov 2001 The following statement is a full description of this invention, including the best method of performing it known to me/us:- File: 26194AUP02 500245087_1.DOC/5844 -la- Smoking Article and Smoking Material therefor The subject invention relates to smoking articles, cigarettes for example, and smoking material therefor.
The patents literature contains many proposals for smoking materials for use in place of conventional cut tobacco cigarette filler.
It is an object of the subject invention to provide new smoking materials which provide for mainstream smoke which although containing low levels of tobacco derived components, is fully acceptable to the consumer.
The subject invention provides a smoking material comprising a non-polyol aerosol generator, up to 20% by weight tobacco, binder at not more than 20% by weight and not less than 30% by weight inorganic filler.
Triethylene glycol diacetate ('TEGDA'), glycerol triacetate ('triacetin') or glycerol diacetate ('diacetin'), for example, can be used as the non-polyol aerosol generator either individually or in combination. As is well known to those skilled in smoking article science and technology, TEGDA and triacetin are substances with an established use as plasticisers (bonding agents) for cellulose acetate cigarettefilter tow. It was thus surprising to find that these substances and similar substances, when used as aerosol generating substances in smoking materials according to the subject invention, provide aerosols in mainstream smoke which smokers register as very acceptable.
2 Non-polyol aerosol generator is usefully present in smoking materials of the subject invention at levels in a range of about 2% to about 30% by weight. More usually the range will be about 5% to about 20% by weight, and more usually Total aerosol generator can include a polyol aerosol generator, such as for example one or more of glycerol, propylene glycol and triethylene glycol.
Smoking materials according to the subject invention can, as will be readily appreciated by those skilled in the art, be fabricated by slurrying the components, in fine particulate form, with water and casting the slurry to sheet form on a band or wire sheet-forming machine or on a heated drum. An alternative is to feed a mixture of the components, together with water, to an extruder. The product of casting or extrusion is suitably cut and shredded to provide smoking material of particulate form.
If the components used to provide the smoking material do not include tobacco, then advantageously the smoking material, in particulate form, is blended with particulate tobacco. In such case, the smoking material expediently accounts for at least about 30% by weight of the blend. Suitably, the smoking material will account for the majority, by weight, of the blend, that is more than 50% by weight of the blend. The tobacco in the blend may be expanded tobacco.
A class of substance suitable for the selection therefrom of binder in smoking materials according to the subject invention is the alginates. Sodium alginate has been found to be advantageous. Other suitable binder substances are celluloses or modified celluloses, hydroxypropyl cellulose or carboxymethyl cellulose, for example, starches or modified starches and natural gums.
Suitable substances for use as inorganic filler are calcium carbonate, perlite, vermiculite, diatomaceous earth, colloidal silica, magnesium oxide, magnesium sulphate, magnesium carbonate or other low density inorganic filler materials known to those skilled in the art.
In smoking materials according to the subject invention inorganic filler is preferably present at a level of at least about 35%, preferably at least about 40% and more preferably at least about 45% by weight.
In smoking materials according to the subject invention tobacco may be present at less than 15%, preferably less than and more preferably less than The binder of smoking materials according to the invention may be present at less than 15%, and more preferably less than 10% by weight.
Smoking materials according to the subject invention may comprise one or more mechanical stabiliser or strengthening materials, examples being cocoa, sugar and fibre, paper fibre for instance. Expansion medium, such as starch, pullulan or other polysaccharides or foaming agents, for example, and high fat or high oil materials, such as cocoa butter or olive oil, corn oil, for example, may also be advantageously included.
Smoking material according to the invention may be used in a conventional smoking article, either blended with another smoking material, which may be tobacco material, or not or in a coaxial arrangement, for example.
According to a second aspect of the subject invention a smoking article comprising a smokable rod and a filter, said rod comprising a core and an outer part, said core comprising a first particulate smoking material and a first cigarette paper wrapper enwrapping said first smoking material and said outer part comprising a second particulate smoking material disposed annularly about said core and a second cigarette paper wrapper enwrapping said second smoking material, wherein either of said first or said second smoking material comprises a non-polyol aerosol generator, up to 20% by weight tobacco, binder at not more than 20% by weight and not less than 30% by weight inorganic filler.
As will be observed, one of the said smoking materials of the smoking article of the second aspect of the subject invention is as per the smoking material of the first above recited aspect of the subject invention. The smoking material of the first above recited aspect of the subject invention may be present in both the first smoking material and the second smoking material of the smoking article above.
Preferably the said second smoking material of the smoking article is as per the smoking material of the first above recited aspect of the subject invention.
Expediently, the first smoking material is cut tobacco filler, suitably cut lamina filler.
Much by preference, in smoking articles in accordance with the subject invention both the core and the outer part of the smokable rod extend over the full length of the rod. It is much by preference too for the core to be disposed coaxially of the rod.
In a third aspect of the invention, there is provided a smoking article comprising a smokable rod and a filter, the smokable rod comprising smoking material and the filter comprising filtration material provided with an elutable aerosol generator which is a polyol and/or a non-polyol aerosol generator, the aerosol generator being elutable from the filter upon smoking of the smoking article to enhance the aerosol provided from the smoking material.
The smoking article may be of a coaxial arrangement or non-coaxial arrangement.
Advantageously the smoking material comprises an aerosol generator, a binder and an inorganic filler, and is more advantageously comprised of a non-polyol aerosol generator, up to 20% by weight tobacco, binder at not more than 20% by weight and not less than 30% by weight inorganic filler.
Alternatively the smoking material may comprise one or more of the aerosol generating means or aerosol generating fuel sources of our co-pending application filed on 6 September 1995 under International Patent Application No. PCT/GB 95/02110. As a further alternative, the smoking material may comprise conventional cut tobacco leaf material.
The aerosol generator may be a polyhydric alcohol, an ester, a high boiling point hydrocarbon, glycerol, propylene glycol, triethylene glycol, methylene glycol, methyl citrate, triacetin or diacetin, either alone or in combination.
In a smoking article of an exterior circumference conventional for a cigarette, i.e. c.25mm, the exterior circumference of the said core is suitably about 17mm.
EXAMPLE 1 A smoking article, a cigarette, exemplary of the subject invention comprised a core of approximately 17mm circumference, which core consisted of cut lamina filler conventional for ultra-slim cigarettes, such, for example, as the ultra-slim cigarette made by British American Tobacco (Germany) under the brand name CAPRICE, and a wrapper of conventional cigarette paper. The outer part of the cigarette disposed annularly about the core consisted of a blend of 50% by weight of expanded lamina tobacco and 50% by weight of a smoking material according to the subject invention enwrapped in an outer wrapper of low sidestream cigarette paper made by Glatz Inc.
under the experimental designation GNS40MV. The expanded tobacco had been expanded by the well known Dry Ice Expanded Tobacco (DIET) tobacco expansion process. The smoking material according to the subject invention, which had been band cast and then cut and shredded, had a percentage composition by weight as follows.
TEGDA 2.6 Glycerol Conventional Tobacco Blend (ground) 19.8 Sodium Alginate 9.9 Chalk 48.3 Cocoa 6.4 Demerera Sugar Paper Fibre The core and the outer part were lengthwise coterminous.
The cigarette according to the subject invention further comprised a conventional ventilated fibrous cellulose acetate filter.
EXAMPLE 2 A second exemplary smoking material in accordance with the subject invention is of a percentage composition by weight as follows.
TEGDA 6 Glycerol 6 Conventional Tobacco Blend (ground) Sodium Alginate Chalk 51 Cocoa 4 Demerera Sugar 3 This second smoking material in cut and shredded form could, for example, be blended with a conventional cut tobacco cigarette filler. The ratio in the blend of smoking material to filler might, for instance, be 7:3. The blend could be fed to a cigarette making machine to provide cigarette rod comprising the blend and a wrapper of conventional cigarette paper or a low sidestream paper, for example.
EXAMPLE 3 A third exemplary smoking material in accordance with the subject invention is of a percentage composition by weight as follows.
TEGDA Glycerol 4 Sodium Alginate 8 Chalk 78 This third smoking material in cut and shredded form could, for example, be blended with conventional cut tobacco filler in a ratio of, for instance, 4:6 and used for the provision of cigarette rod.
EXAMPLE 4 The following three smoking material formulations were prepared for comparison. The compositions are percentage by weight of each component.
TABLE 1 Sample Number 1 2 3 Triacetin 0 9.6 4 Glycerol 8.6 0 4 Conventional Tobacco Blend (ground) 20.3 20.1 Sodium Alginate 8.1 8 8 Fibre 1 1 1 Perlite 62 61.3 63 Smoke Deliveries Puff No. 3.4 5.3 TPM (mg/cig) 7.5 5.3 7.6 Water (mg/cig) 2.7 0.8 2.1 Nicotine (mg/cig) 0.19 0.1 0.2 Glycerol (mg/cig) 1.11 n/m n/m Triacetin n/m 2.03 n/m NFDPM (mg/cig) 4.59 4.36 5.35 NAFDPM (mg/cig) 3.48 2.33 n/m NAFDM Nicotine, aerosol free dry particulate matter (aerosol being glycerol or triacetin).
NFDPM Nicotine free dry particulate matter.
n/m Not measured The cigarettes were smoked under standard machine smoking conditions of 35cm 3 puff of 2 seconds duration taken every minute to a butt length of EXAMPLE In order to observe the influence of an aerosol generator held on a filter element against a smoking article having a standard fibrous cellulose acetate filter the mixed glycerol and triacetin sheet (Sample 3 of Example 4 above) was used in smoking articles with an aerosol generator in the filter at various levels. The cigarettes were of 84mm length, c.8mn diameter with a 27mm filter element and were smoked under standard machine smoking conditions to 35mm butt length. The aerosol generator on the filter was propylene glycol (PG).
TABLE 2 Sample Number 4 5 6 7 8 PG on filter (mg) 0 5 10 20 Smoke Deliveries Puff Number 4 4 4 3.75 4 TPM (mg/cig) 7.6 5.7 7.56 8.4 11.6 Water (mg/cig) 2.05 1.35 1.33 1.58 2.23 Nicotine (mg/cig) 0.20 0.17 0.17 0.13 0.15 NFDPM (mg/cig) 5.35 4.18 6.06 6.69 9.22 Smoke Composition Water 27.0 23.7 17.6 18.8 19.2 Nicotine(%) 2.6 3.0 2.2 1.5 1.3 It can be seen that the presence of additional aerosol generator dilutes the smoke constituents and provides a useful means for reducing the smoke delivery levels of various smoke components.
EXAMPLE 6 Other formulations of smoking material according to the invention were made according to Table 3. Additional materials included starch, oils and alkaline water. In Sample 58a a 0.1M solution of sodium carbonate was made up and added to the dry mixture instead of the usual water, until the required pH was reached. The compositions are percentage by weight of each component.
TABLE 3 Sample Tobacco No.
2a 20 3a 20 20 7a 20 8a 20 20 11a 18 12a 20 16a 20 17a 20 26a 20 34a 20 39a 20 41a 20 42a 20 51a 20 52a 20 58a 20 Sodi umn Alginate 10 10 10 10 10 10 9 10 10 10 25 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 Sugar Cocoa Chalk Glycerol Tegda Tr facet in other Components 4 39 20 4 37 4 51 4 37 4 51 4 56 4 41 45 45 4 36 45
A
-10 -10 -10 (Paper Fibre) (Starch) (Cocoa Butter) 10 (Corn oil) 3 4 26 3 30 55 3 4 51 51 (Perlite) 25 (Perlite) 15 (Cooked Starch) 15 (olive Oil) p11=9.3

Claims (24)

1. A smoking material comprising a non-polyol aerosol generator, up to 20% by weight tobacco, binder at not more than 20% by weight and not less than 30% by weight inorganic filler.
2. A smoking material according to Claim 1, wherein said non- polyol aerosol generator is one or more of triethylene glycol diacetate, glycerol triacetate and glycerol diacetate.
3. A smoking article according to Claim 1 or 2, wherein said non-polyol aerosol generator is present in said smoking material in a range of about 2% to about 30% by weight.
4. A smoking material according to Claim 3, wherein said non- polyol aerosol generator is present in a range of about to about 20% by weight. A smoking material according to Claim 4, wherein said non- polyol aerosol generator is present in a range of about to about 15% by weight.
6. A smoking material according to any one of Claims 1 to wherein said inorganic filler is present in said smoking material at a level of at least 35% by weight.
7. A smoking material according to Claim 6, wherein said inorganic filler is present at a level of at least 40% by weight.
8. A smoking material according to Claim 7, wherein said inorganic filler is present at a level of at least 45% by weight.
9. A smoking material according to any one of the preceding claims, wherein said tobacco in said smoking material is present at less than 15% by weight. A smoking material according to Claim 9, wherein said tobacco is present at less than 10% by weight.
11. A smoking material according to Claim 10, wherein said tobacco is present at less than 5% by weight.
12. A smoking material according to any one of the preceding claims, wherein said binder in said smoking material is present at less than 15% by weight.
13. A smoking material according to Claim 12, wherein said binder is present at less than 10% by weight.
14. A smoking material according to any one of the preceding claims, wherein said inorganic filler is one or more of calcium carbonate, perlite, vermiculite, diatomaceous earth, colloidal silica, magnesium oxide, magnesium sulphate, magnesium carbonate or other low density inorganic filler materials. A smoking article according to any one of the preceding claims, wherein said binder is one or more of an alginate, celluloses or modified celluloses, starches or modified starches, and natural gums.
16. A smoking material according to any one of the preceding claims, wherein said smoking material further comprises a mechanical stabiliser or strengthening material, an expansion medium or a high fat or high oil containing material.
17. A smoking material according to Claim 16, wherein said material further comprises one or more of cocoa, sugar, fibre, starch, pullulan, other polysaccharide expansion agents, foaming agents, cocoa butter, olive oil and corn oil.
18. A smoking article comprising a smokable rod and a filter, said rod comprising a core and an outer part, said core comprising a first particulate smoking material and a first cigarette paper wrapper enwrapping said first smoking material and said outer part comprising a second particulate smoking material disposed annularly about said core and a second cigarette paper wrapper enwrapping said second smoking material, wherein either of said first or said second smoking material comprises a non-polyol aerosol generator, up to 20% by weight tobacco, binder at not more than 20% by weight and not less than 30% by weight inorganic filler.
19. A smoking article according to Claim 18, wherein said smoking material of either of said first or second smoking material comprises a smoking material in accordance with any one of Claims 2 to 17. A smoking article according to Claim 18 or 19, wherein said second smoking material is said smoking material according to any one of Claims 1 to 17.
21. A smoking article according to Claim 18 or 19, wherein both said first and said second smoking materials comprises a proportion of a smoking material comprising a non-polyol aerosol generator, up to 20% by weight tobacco, binder at not more than 20% by weight and not less than by weight inorganic filler.
22. A smoking article according to any one of Claims 18-21, wherein the other of said first or second smoking material is cut tobacco filler.
23. A smoking article according to any one of Claims 18-22, wherein both said core and said outer part of said smokable rod extend over the full length of said rod.
24. A smoking article according to any one of Claims 18-23, wherein said core is disposed coaxially of said rod. A smoking article comprising a smokable rod and a filter, the smokable rod comprising smoking material and the filter comprising filtration material provided with an elutable aerosol generator which is a polyol and/or a non- polyol aerosol generator, the aerosol generator being elutable from the filter upon smoking of the smoking article to enhance the aerosol provided from the smoking material.
26. A smoking article according to claim 25, wherein said rod comprises an axially arranged core disposed within an annulus.
27. A smoking article according to Claims 25 or 26, wherein said smoking material comprises an aerosol generator, a binder and an inorganic filler.
28. A smoking article according to Claim 27, wherein said smoking material is the smoking material described in any one of Claims 1 to 17. 17
29. A smoking material substantially as hereinabove described with reference to any one of Examples 1 to 6 hereof. A smoking article substantially as hereinabove described with reference to any one of Examples 1 to 6 hereof. DATED this 16th Day of October 2003 BALDWIN SHELSTON WATERS Attorneys for: British American Tobacco (Investments) Limited
AU2003254762A 1997-06-19 2003-10-16 Smoking article and smoking material therefor Ceased AU2003254762B2 (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (3)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB9712815 1997-06-19
AU76680/98A AU756450B2 (en) 1997-06-19 1998-05-29 Smoking article and smoking material therefor
AU89352/01A AU763222C (en) 1997-06-19 2001-11-09 Smoking article and smoking material thereof

Related Parent Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
AU89352/01A Division AU763222C (en) 1997-06-19 2001-11-09 Smoking article and smoking material thereof

Publications (2)

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AU2003254762A1 true AU2003254762A1 (en) 2003-11-13
AU2003254762B2 AU2003254762B2 (en) 2007-03-29

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AU2003254762A Ceased AU2003254762B2 (en) 1997-06-19 2003-10-16 Smoking article and smoking material therefor

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Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO2017077110A1 (en) * 2015-11-05 2017-05-11 Philip Morris Products S.A. Homogenized tobacco material with improved volatile transfer

Family Cites Families (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE1202699B (en) * 1960-01-23 1965-10-07 Hoechst Ag Triacetin loaded tobacco smoke filter
GB1091408A (en) * 1963-12-30 1967-11-15 Eastman Kodak Co Compositions containing polyethylene glycol for the treatment of cellulose acetate tow
US4153064A (en) * 1975-07-11 1979-05-08 Daicel Ltd. Cigarette filters

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO2017077110A1 (en) * 2015-11-05 2017-05-11 Philip Morris Products S.A. Homogenized tobacco material with improved volatile transfer
US11540556B2 (en) 2015-11-05 2023-01-03 Philip Morris Products S.A. Homogenized tobacco material with improved volatile transfer

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