EP1548165A1 - Verfahren zur Zugabe von Weichmacher und/oder Entbindungsmittel zu einem hydrodynamisch vernadelten Vliesstoff - Google Patents

Verfahren zur Zugabe von Weichmacher und/oder Entbindungsmittel zu einem hydrodynamisch vernadelten Vliesstoff Download PDF

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Publication number
EP1548165A1
EP1548165A1 EP04029654A EP04029654A EP1548165A1 EP 1548165 A1 EP1548165 A1 EP 1548165A1 EP 04029654 A EP04029654 A EP 04029654A EP 04029654 A EP04029654 A EP 04029654A EP 1548165 A1 EP1548165 A1 EP 1548165A1
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EP
European Patent Office
Prior art keywords
softening
nonwoven material
fibers
debonding agent
hydroentangled nonwoven
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
EP04029654A
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English (en)
French (fr)
Inventor
Anders Stralin
Ewa Rucinska
Mikael Strandqvist
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Essity Hygiene and Health AB
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SCA Hygiene Products AB
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Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by SCA Hygiene Products AB filed Critical SCA Hygiene Products AB
Publication of EP1548165A1 publication Critical patent/EP1548165A1/de
Withdrawn legal-status Critical Current

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Classifications

    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D04BRAIDING; LACE-MAKING; KNITTING; TRIMMINGS; NON-WOVEN FABRICS
    • D04HMAKING TEXTILE FABRICS, e.g. FROM FIBRES OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL; FABRICS MADE BY SUCH PROCESSES OR APPARATUS, e.g. FELTS, NON-WOVEN FABRICS; COTTON-WOOL; WADDING ; NON-WOVEN FABRICS FROM STAPLE FIBRES, FILAMENTS OR YARNS, BONDED WITH AT LEAST ONE WEB-LIKE MATERIAL DURING THEIR CONSOLIDATION
    • D04H1/00Non-woven fabrics formed wholly or mainly of staple fibres or like relatively short fibres
    • D04H1/40Non-woven fabrics formed wholly or mainly of staple fibres or like relatively short fibres from fleeces or layers composed of fibres without existing or potential cohesive properties
    • D04H1/44Non-woven fabrics formed wholly or mainly of staple fibres or like relatively short fibres from fleeces or layers composed of fibres without existing or potential cohesive properties the fleeces or layers being consolidated by mechanical means, e.g. by rolling
    • D04H1/46Non-woven fabrics formed wholly or mainly of staple fibres or like relatively short fibres from fleeces or layers composed of fibres without existing or potential cohesive properties the fleeces or layers being consolidated by mechanical means, e.g. by rolling by needling or like operations to cause entanglement of fibres
    • D04H1/492Non-woven fabrics formed wholly or mainly of staple fibres or like relatively short fibres from fleeces or layers composed of fibres without existing or potential cohesive properties the fleeces or layers being consolidated by mechanical means, e.g. by rolling by needling or like operations to cause entanglement of fibres by fluid jet
    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D04BRAIDING; LACE-MAKING; KNITTING; TRIMMINGS; NON-WOVEN FABRICS
    • D04HMAKING TEXTILE FABRICS, e.g. FROM FIBRES OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL; FABRICS MADE BY SUCH PROCESSES OR APPARATUS, e.g. FELTS, NON-WOVEN FABRICS; COTTON-WOOL; WADDING ; NON-WOVEN FABRICS FROM STAPLE FIBRES, FILAMENTS OR YARNS, BONDED WITH AT LEAST ONE WEB-LIKE MATERIAL DURING THEIR CONSOLIDATION
    • D04H3/00Non-woven fabrics formed wholly or mainly of yarns or like filamentary material of substantial length
    • D04H3/08Non-woven fabrics formed wholly or mainly of yarns or like filamentary material of substantial length characterised by the method of strengthening or consolidating
    • D04H3/10Non-woven fabrics formed wholly or mainly of yarns or like filamentary material of substantial length characterised by the method of strengthening or consolidating with bonds between yarns or filaments made mechanically
    • D04H3/11Non-woven fabrics formed wholly or mainly of yarns or like filamentary material of substantial length characterised by the method of strengthening or consolidating with bonds between yarns or filaments made mechanically by fluid jet
    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D21PAPER-MAKING; PRODUCTION OF CELLULOSE
    • D21HPULP COMPOSITIONS; PREPARATION THEREOF NOT COVERED BY SUBCLASSES D21C OR D21D; IMPREGNATING OR COATING OF PAPER; TREATMENT OF FINISHED PAPER NOT COVERED BY CLASS B31 OR SUBCLASS D21G; PAPER NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • D21H21/00Non-fibrous material added to the pulp, characterised by its function, form or properties; Paper-impregnating or coating material, characterised by its function, form or properties
    • D21H21/14Non-fibrous material added to the pulp, characterised by its function, form or properties; Paper-impregnating or coating material, characterised by its function, form or properties characterised by function or properties in or on the paper
    • D21H21/22Agents rendering paper porous, absorbent or bulky
    • D21H21/24Surfactants

Definitions

  • the invention relates to a method of adding a softening and/or debonding agent to a fiber web of a hydroentangled nonwoven material comprising cellulose pulp fibers.
  • hydroentangled nonwoven include the ready ability to absorb tensile stress energy, their drapability, and good textile-like flexibility, properties that are frequently referred to as bulk softness, a high surface softness, and a high specific volume with a perceptible thickness. Further desirable properties are as high a liquid absorbency as possible and, depending on the application, a suitable wet and dry strength as well as an attractive visual appearance of the outer product surface. These properties, among others, allow hydroentangled nonwoven to be used for example as cleaning wipes: paper or nonwoven wipe, windscreen cleaning wipe, kitchen paper, etc, sanitary products: e.g. toilet paper, paper or nonwoven handkerchiefs, household towels, towels, cosmetic wipes: facials and as serviettes or napkins just to mention some of the products that can be used.
  • cleaning wipes paper or nonwoven wipe, windscreen cleaning wipe, kitchen paper, etc
  • sanitary products e.g. toilet paper, paper or nonwoven handkerchiefs, household towels, towels, cosmetic wipes: facials and as serviettes or napkins
  • the components and added chemicals included in nonwoven material are chosen in accordance with the intended field of use.
  • the softening and/or debonding agents decrease the hydrogen bonding between the cellulose pulp fibers, resulting in higher bulk softness.
  • US 3,736,097 describes a method of producing a nonwoven material with a softening or swelling agent added to the fibers in the wet end.
  • the fibers are pretreated with the softening or swelling agent.
  • the fibers are formed into a web in a forming step.
  • Such a web could have a hydroentanglement process step succeeding the forming step.
  • Hydroentangling or spunlacing is a technique introduced during the 1970'ies, see e.g. CA patent no. 841 938.
  • the method involves forming a fiber web, which is either drylaid or wetlaid, after which the fibers are entangled by means of very fine water jets under high pressure. Several rows of water jets are directed against the fiber web, which is supported by a movable fabric or drum. The fibers are thereby subjected to a mechanically entangling and intertwining action of the fibers to form the nonwoven web. The entangled fiber web is then dried.
  • the fibers that are used in the nonwoven web can be synthetic or regenerated cellulose staple fibers, e.g.
  • Hydroentangled materials of high quality can be produced to a reasonable cost and have a high absorption capacity. They can be used as wiping materials for household or industrial use, for hygiene purposes or as disposable materials in medical care or hygiene products, etc.
  • hydroentangled nonwoven materials are also pressed in order to dewater the material before drying. This process step makes the material stiffer.
  • the enriched chemicals in the water systems will cause a number of problems, and further it may cause stops in the production process.
  • the chemicals are cationically charged they will disturb the water cleaning process, especially the flocculation in the flotation filtration, in which most of the dry substance in the entanglement water is separated. For example filters could be clogged.
  • the formation of foam is mainly due to surfactants or tensides or that the added agent has a higher charge density.
  • the flocks in the flocculation are broken, etc.
  • the chemical cost may be very expensive. Further, the yield and efficiency of the chemical additive is very low.
  • the water cleaning process may be disturbed as well as the different water recirculation systems.
  • softening agents are applied onto paper by spraying onto the surface of the material.
  • the surface is lubricated and friction between fibers at the surface and friction between the surface of the material and the hand of the user is reduced.
  • US 5,484,453 it is known to spray water based treatment liquors onto textile materials, where the used liquors contain deaeration components, which are foam-free in order to thoroughly wet the textile material almost immediately.
  • a coating process is known from EP-B1-594, 983 which comprises a brush spray application method, in which the material to be treated is passed through a path of fluid spray emitted from the brush spray applicator.
  • the smoothness of the surface will be improved, but only limited improvement of the softness as to e.g. drapability stiffness and bulk softness will be obtained. Also, only the fibers at the surface of the material will be affected.
  • a purpose of the invention is to reduce or remove any of the above-mentioned problems and negative effects.
  • the invention relates thus to a method of adding a softening and/or debonding agent to a fiber web of a hydroentangled nonwoven material comprising cellulose pulp fibers without encountering the above-mentioned problems.
  • the present invention relates thus to a method of adding the softening and/or debonding agent in an inline manufacturing process of the hydroentangled nonwoven material, subsequent to the hydroentanglement of the nonwoven material, whereby the softening and/or debonding agent is added by means of a size press or a foulard comprising a soaking step to soak the hydroentangled nonwoven material with the added softening and/or debonding agent, and a pressing step, which causes the added softening and/or debonding agent to penetrate and impregnate the hydroentangled nonwoven material.
  • a size press or a foulard comprising a soaking step to soak the hydroentangled nonwoven material with the added softening and/or debonding agent, and a pressing step, which causes the added softening and/or debonding agent to penetrate and impregnate the hydroentangled nonwoven material.
  • the added softening and/or debonding agent is preferably a dilute solution, which comprises water and a softening and/or debonding agent or resin.
  • the provided method enables the softening and/or debonding agent to penetrate throughout the whole material and will not only treat the surface of the material.
  • the inline operation will avoid the drawbacks connected to additions of softening and/or debonding agents when they are added in a separate post treatment.
  • the manufacturing process is thus an inline operation.
  • This provides many advantages; among others that there is no need to dry the material several times, since all is done in the same process.
  • Offline processes or operations can according to conventional technique be used in order to achieve the desired bulk and surface softness in the nonwoven material, and the cost will due to this increase substantially.
  • any offline treatment will negatively affect the nonwoven material, as it is subjected to two drying operations. When the material is dried, the available hydrogen bonding functional groups at the cellulose molecules will bond within or to other cellulose molecules.
  • An inline process on the other hand, according to the claimed method, will manufacture a hydroentangled nonwoven material with improved bulk softness as well as with improved surface softness in one subsequence of following process steps without any disrupting, cost demanding or detoriating step where the nonwoven material is substantially dried as it would be in an offline process.
  • Pressing is sometimes optional for a hydroentangled nonwoven material comprising cellulose pulp fibers in order to get a smoother web, but it will also lead to a more stiff material.
  • a softening and/or debonding agent is added according to an embodiment of the claimed method in combination with the pressing action a less stiff material is obtained compared to what it would be if it would have been pressed without adding a softening and/or debonding agent.
  • the pressing will result in more hydrogen bondings and this in turn will result in a more stiff material.
  • the material is pressed together with the addition of the softening and/or debonding agent, a very good surface smoothness can be obtained. It is according to an embodiment of the claimed method possible to press and thereby dewater the soaked hydroentangled nonwoven material without that the hydroentangled nonwoven material will be stiffer, on the contrary, it can be more soft. Also, by being able to press the hydroentangled nonwoven material, the thickness of the hydroentangled nonwoven material can be determined without the conventional drawbacks such as a more stiff material. There may also be a reduction in linting due to the pressing effect.
  • the nonwoven material in question is a hydroentangled nonwoven material that has just been subjected to the hydroentanglement at the point of adding the softening and/or debonding agent.
  • the recently hydroentangled nonwoven material will probably permit the softening and/or debonding agent to penetrate into the fiber to fiber intersections in the hydroentangled nonwoven while the hydroentangled nonwoven still is wet and affected from the recent hydroentanglement.
  • the high-pressure water jets at the hydroentanglement in the preceding hydroentanglement process step will move the fibers in the material and create the integration of the fibers and/or filaments as well as available sites on the cellulose molecules that may create bondings of the fibers and/or filaments to each other.
  • the thereafter added softening and/or debonding agents may also occupy sites on the cellulose molecule that would otherwise form hydrogen bonds within or between the cellulose molecules. It is an advantage that the material is kept wet since the available sites on the cellulose molecules well as the newly formed bondings still has many water molecules surrounding the hydrogen bonding functional groups at the cellulose molecules as the hydroentangled nonwoven material is kept in its wet state.
  • the surrounding water molecules may disrupt or participate in the disrupture of the already formed hydrogen bonding.
  • the surrounding water molecules may disrupt or participate in the disrupture of the already formed hydrogen bonding.
  • the claimed method would make it possible to get the added softening and/or debonding agent into the fiber-to-fiber intersections of the nonwoven material.
  • the preceding hydroentanglement has thus opened up a way and a possibility to force the added softening and/or debonding agent into these fiber to fiber intersections by the soaking of the size press or foulard and the penetrative and impregnation effect of the pressing step.
  • the added softening and/or debonding agent will penetrate into and throughout the whole material, get into the bulk and not only treat the surface.
  • the desired soft feel in the hydroentangled nonwoven material is achieved by means of a treatment according to an embodiment of the invention subsequent to the hydroentanglement step.
  • the softening and/or debonding agent added to the wet fiber web is to some extent replaced with the preferred dilute solution of the softening and/or debonding agent.
  • the softening and/or debonding agent is applied in an amount such that an exchange and saturation of the dilute solution comprising the softening and/or debonding agent can take place in the fiber web. It is most probably the capillary water in pores and capillary that can be replaced.
  • a preferred method according to the invention results in a good retention of the chemical softening and/or debonding agent.
  • a penetration is especially desirable since the bulk properties are enhanced as the hydrogen bonds at the fiber-to-fiber intersections are broken in the material or at least softened or loosened up by the softening and/or debonding agent. Decreasing or reducing the interfiber bonding within the web when the nonwoven web comprises cellulose pulp fibers to a certain degree can thus increase the softness and bulk. But also the stiffness of the material will be lower as the softeners and/or debonders will influence the fibers throughout the material. The effect of the additive will be greater since substantially most of the fibers and fiber intersections are treated and not only the surface of the nonwoven material.
  • the softening and/or debonding agent is either used as a separate agent or in combination with other softening and/or debonding resins or agents.
  • the softening and/or debonding agent can be a chemical or chemicals and of course also be a group of chemicals.
  • the method according to embodiments of the present invention gives the hydroentangled nonwoven material a number of other desirable features as well as the desired bulk and softening effect.
  • the product manufactured according to an embodiment of the claimed method is rather homogenous. Also, the softness experience of the two sides of the nonwoven material can be pretty much the same on both sides due to the soaking and penetrative impregnation of the softening and/or debonding agent adjacent and subsequent to the hydroentanglement step. Further features of the present invention are disclosed in the description below and also in the dependent claims.
  • the dry content of the material when adding the softening and/or debonding agent is at least about 25% but not more than about 50%, preferably at least about 30% but not more than about 40%.
  • the softening and/or debonding agent is either added in the soaking step by means of a size press at the pressing step or the pressing step is subsequent to the soaking step where the softening and/or debonding agent is added by means of a foulard.
  • the invention could be embodied in various ways.
  • the hydroentangled nonwoven material comprises synthetic fibers, such as staple fibers, and/or continuous filaments.
  • the manufacturing process of the hydroentangled nonwoven material may comprises a step where the synthetic fibers and/or filaments are extruded or laid down into a web in one step, and that the cellulose pulp fibers are wetlaid or foamformed onto this thus formed web in a step preceding the hydroentanglement step.
  • the manufacturing process of the hydroentangled nonwoven material comprises a step where the cellulose pulp fibers are wetlaid or foamformed, and that the synthetic fibers and/or filaments are laid down onto this thus formed web in a step preceding the hydroentanglement step.
  • the cellulose pulp fibers comprises synthetic fibers in the form of staple fibers when being wetlaid or foamformed.
  • the synthetic component i.e. fibers and/or filaments
  • the synthetic component can preferably be synthetic staple fibers and/or continuous filaments.
  • Continuous filaments can preferably be laid down directly or extruded on a forming wire where they form into a web in one step.
  • the cellulose pulp fibers alone or together with synthetic fibers are either drylaid or wetlaid.
  • the synthetic component comprises continuous filaments
  • the cellulose pulp fibers, with or without synthetic fibers are drylaid or wetlaid in a preceding step or onto the web of continuous filaments in a subsequent step.
  • the wetlaying step can be a conventional step or a foam-forming step. Subsequent to the forming of the fiber web of the nonwoven material comprising cellulose pulp fibers there could preferably be at least one hydroentanglement step. The formed fibrous web is hydroentangled while it is still supported by the wire. The entangling wire may optionally be patterned in order to form a patterned nonwoven material.
  • the filaments can be manufactured in different ways. Extruding a molten polymer through a spinneret to form discrete filaments produces spunlaid fibers. Subsequently, the filaments are cooled and stretched out to an appropriate diameter in a mechanic or pneumatic way so that they form a fiber web of continuous filaments.
  • the fiber diameter is usually above 10 ⁇ m, e.g. between 10 and 100 ⁇ m.
  • Meltblown fibers are formed by means of meltblown equipment, for example of the kind shown in the US patents 3,849,241 or 4,048,364. The method shortly involves that a polymer melt is extruded through a nozzle in very fine streams.
  • the polymer melt discharges from the nozzle, it is stretched out into thin, continuous filaments by means of converging air streams in a high-pressure fluid, such as hot air or vapor, which are directed towards the polymer streams.
  • the fibers can be microfibers or macrofibers depending on their dimension. Microfibers have a diameter of up to 20 ⁇ m.
  • the extrusion method can thus be carried out, for example, by means of a meltblowing or spunbonding technique.
  • the cellulose pulp fiber fraction is laid on top of the continuous filaments as an aqueous or a foamed fibrous dispersion from a head box.
  • the fibers are dispersed in water and the fiber dispersion is dewatered on a forming fabric to form a wetlaid fibrous web.
  • Foam forming is an alternative to the wetforming of the fiber web.
  • foam forming a foam forming surfactant is added to the fiber dispersion, hereafter the fiber dispersion is dewatered on a wire in corresponding way as in wetforming.
  • a foamformed fibrous web has a very uniform fiber formation; the foam forming technique is described in for example WO 96/02701, GB 1,329,409, US 4,443,297 and EP-A-0938 601.
  • the hydroentangled nonwoven material can use different fibers in various mixing proportions.
  • the synthetic fibers and/or filaments used in the nonwoven material can be fibers such as e.g. polyester, polypropylene, polyamide, polyethylene, and polylactides. Copolymers of these polymers may of course also be used, as well as natural polymers with thermoplastic properties.
  • the nonwoven material can be formed of rayon, lyocell etc, but also of natural fibers, such as cellulose or cotton fibers, or a mix of different fibers.
  • the synthetic component may be continuous filaments in the form of meltblown and/or spunbond fibers, or prefabricated fibers of a finite length, as synthetic fibers produced in situ or in the form of staple fibers.
  • natural fibers with a long fiber length can be used, e.g. above 12 mm, such as seed hair fibers, e.g. cotton, kapok and milkweed; leaf fibers, e.g. sisal, abaca, pineapple, New Zealand hamp, or bast fibers, e.g. flax, hemp, ramie, jute, kenaf. Varying fiber lengths can be used.
  • Cellulose pulp fibers that can be used in accordance with the invention may be of any kind available. Some of the conventional available chemical pulps may be sulphite, sulphate or organosolve pulp. Mechanical cellulose pulp can be grinded, refined, thermo-mechanical, high thermo-mechanical, chemi-mechanical and so on. The pulp may be of any kind: coniferous, deciduous or any other alternative source of cellulose fibers or the like. Another important pulp source is recycled fibers, both from internal rejects and brokes as well as from external recycled fibers.
  • the fiber web of nonwoven material to which a chemical additive is added according to the invention may thus use any synthetic fibers.
  • fibers of many different kinds and in different mixing proportions of varying fiber lengths can be used for making the wetlaid, drylaid or foam formed fibrous web.
  • Cellulose pulp fibers, synthetic fibers or mixtures thereof can be used.
  • the hydroentangled nonwoven material may comprise cellulose pulp fibers and synthetic fibers and/or filaments.
  • the cellulose pulp makes the material cheaper to produce since synthetic fibers are expensive. Further, the pulp may be necessary in order to be able to reach the right material properties depending on the manufacturing process.
  • the fiber web of hydroentangled nonwoven material comprises at least about 20% dry weight of cellulose pulp fibers. There is a visible and clear change in the nonwoven product when the cellulose pulp reaches and exceeds the amount of about 20% by dry weight.
  • the cellulose pulp contributes with absorbent properties to the material, but it also makes the material stiffer mainly due to the strong hydrogen bonding.
  • the fibers in the cellulose pulp fills up the holes in the network and thereby contributes to the strength and the integrity and opacity of a much more solid material.
  • the softeners and/or debonders used according to an embodiment of the invention could be any of the commercially available softeners and/or debonders.
  • Examples of often used softeners and/or debonders are chemicals containing one or more substances such as cationic and/or nonionic surfactants, quaternary ammonium compounds, polyhydroxy compounds and imidazolinium quaternary compounds, polysiloxanes, or mixtures thereof.
  • tissue paper consisting mainly of cellulose fibers depends very much on the fiber-to-fiber bond. Therefore, when a material with cellulose pulp fibers is treated with softeners or debonders, the hydrogen fiber to fiber hydrogen bonding of the cellulose pulp fibers is reduced and higher bulk softness is obtained, however at the same time the material tends to lose some or even much of its original strength which may adversely affect the strength of the product.
  • the strength in hydroentangled nonwoven materials depend more on the hydroentanglement of the pulp and the synthetic staple fibers and/or the continuous filaments. The strength is of course also highly dependent of any continuous filaments in the hydroentangled nonwoven material, which have a reinforcement effect of the material. The effect on strength reduction by debonder or softening chemicals is thus less in a hydroentangled nonwoven material compared with tissue paper manufactured in a conventional paper machine. Therefore, the chemical treatments to improve softness and bulk have a great potential in hydroentangled nonwoven materials.
  • each hydroentanglement step includes several hydroentanglement manifolds.
  • the dry content of the material when adding the softening and/or debonding agent is preferably about 30-40% by weight.
  • Pilot trials were conducted in order to simulate a process for adding a softening and/or debonding agent subsequent to the hydroentanglement according to the invention.
  • E-TORK Strong® is produced by means of hydroentangling a precurser web consisting of a mixture of bleached softwood sulphate pulp fibers, polyester staple fibers, and polypropylene staple fibers.
  • a sample treated without any chemical additives of the hydroentangled nonwoven material was extracted as a control for subsequent testing.
  • prewetted hydroentangled nonwoven web materials to about 40-45% dry weight were treated with different softening and/or debonding agents in a lab size press at 3 bar.
  • the solutions had a dilute concentration of 0.5% and 1.0% of the softening and/or debonding agent.
  • the addition of the softening and/or debonding agent for soaking the hydroentangled nonwoven fiber web is applied in an amount such that an exchange and saturation of the softening and/or debonding agent will take place in the fiber web.
  • the debonder Berocell 589 is an additive in the manufacture of fluff pulp and is a mixture of cationic and nonionic surfactants and comprises alkyl-benzyl-dimethyl ammonium chloride and fatty alcohol ethoxylate.
  • XP 7026 is a softener for tissue and also a mixture of cationic and nonionic surfactants and comprises benxyl-dimethylammonium chloride.
  • TQ1003 is a fatty acid amine.
  • the method for determining the Drapability stiffness is based on Edana, 50.2-80.
  • a rectangular shaped test specimen is cut from the nonwoven material and will be bent under its own weight to a specific angle.
  • the test specimen is brought over the edge of a measuring instrument and the length of the material will be determined as the intersecting point of the test specimen and an imagined sloped plane of a specific angle is reached.
  • Table 1 shows results from drapability stiffness Sqr root (MDCD) [cm] measurements on the different samples by impregnation of wet sheets with a size press with the three different softening and/or debonding agents added.
  • the invention also comprises any evidently suitable method or methods that will involve the claimed method.
  • the invention is also capable of other embodiments and of being carried out in various ways.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Nonwoven Fabrics (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Textile Engineering (AREA)
EP04029654A 2003-12-22 2004-12-15 Verfahren zur Zugabe von Weichmacher und/oder Entbindungsmittel zu einem hydrodynamisch vernadelten Vliesstoff Withdrawn EP1548165A1 (de)

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SE0303511A SE0303511D0 (sv) 2003-12-22 2003-12-22 Method for adding a softening and/or debonding agent to a hydroentangled nonwoven material
SE0303511 2003-12-22

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WO2009024897A2 (en) * 2007-08-21 2009-02-26 The Procter & Gamble Company Layered sanitary tissue product having trichomes
DE102008013817A1 (de) * 2008-03-12 2009-09-17 Fleissner Gmbh Verfahren und Vorrichtung zur Vorverfestigung eines Vlieses
DE102008018976A1 (de) * 2008-04-14 2009-10-15 Fleissner Gmbh Verfahren und Vorrichtung zur Herstellung eines Vliesstoffes
WO2011017522A3 (en) * 2009-08-05 2011-06-03 International Paper Company Dry fluff pulp sheet additive
US8029645B2 (en) 2010-01-14 2011-10-04 The Procter & Gamble Company Soft and strong fibrous structures and methods for making same
US8056841B2 (en) 2005-06-23 2011-11-15 The Procter & Gamble Company Methods for individualizing trichomes
US8465624B2 (en) 2010-07-20 2013-06-18 International Paper Company Composition containing a multivalent cationic metal and amine-containing anti-static agent and methods of making and using
US8613836B2 (en) 2009-08-05 2013-12-24 International Paper Company Composition containing a cationic trivalent metal and debonder and methods of making and using the same to enhance fluff pulp quality
US8871054B2 (en) 2010-07-22 2014-10-28 International Paper Company Process for preparing fluff pulp sheet with cationic dye and debonder surfactant
EP3367862A4 (de) * 2015-10-30 2019-04-03 Kimberly-Clark Worldwide, Inc. Wischprodukte und verfahren zur herstellung davon
US10260201B2 (en) 2009-08-05 2019-04-16 International Paper Company Process for applying composition containing a cationic trivalent metal and debonder and fluff pulp sheet made from same

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WO2003106748A1 (en) * 2002-06-13 2003-12-24 Sca Hygiene Products Ab Nonwoven material and process for its manufacturing

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