GB2102853A - A process for treating tufted pile fabric - Google Patents

A process for treating tufted pile fabric Download PDF

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Publication number
GB2102853A
GB2102853A GB08122309A GB8122309A GB2102853A GB 2102853 A GB2102853 A GB 2102853A GB 08122309 A GB08122309 A GB 08122309A GB 8122309 A GB8122309 A GB 8122309A GB 2102853 A GB2102853 A GB 2102853A
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United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
fabric
pile
temperature
range
beating
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.)
Granted
Application number
GB08122309A
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GB2102853B (en
Inventor
Harry G Gallagher
Helmut C Mueller
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Bigelow Sanford Inc
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Bigelow Sanford Inc
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Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Bigelow Sanford Inc filed Critical Bigelow Sanford Inc
Priority to GB08122309A priority Critical patent/GB2102853B/en
Publication of GB2102853A publication Critical patent/GB2102853A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of GB2102853B publication Critical patent/GB2102853B/en
Expired legal-status Critical Current

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Classifications

    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D06TREATMENT OF TEXTILES OR THE LIKE; LAUNDERING; FLEXIBLE MATERIALS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • D06CFINISHING, DRESSING, TENTERING OR STRETCHING TEXTILE FABRICS
    • D06C11/00Teasing, napping or otherwise roughening or raising pile of textile fabrics
    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D06TREATMENT OF TEXTILES OR THE LIKE; LAUNDERING; FLEXIBLE MATERIALS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • D06BTREATING TEXTILE MATERIALS USING LIQUIDS, GASES OR VAPOURS
    • D06B5/00Forcing liquids, gases or vapours through textile materials to effect treatment, e.g. washing, dyeing, bleaching, sizing impregnating
    • D06B5/02Forcing liquids, gases or vapours through textile materials to effect treatment, e.g. washing, dyeing, bleaching, sizing impregnating through moving materials of indefinite length
    • D06B5/08Forcing liquids, gases or vapours through textile materials to effect treatment, e.g. washing, dyeing, bleaching, sizing impregnating through moving materials of indefinite length through fabrics

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Textile Engineering (AREA)
  • Treatment Of Fiber Materials (AREA)

Abstract

In a process for erecting the pile and increasing the yarn bulk of dyed or printed carpeting which has been bent, matted and crushed during processing, the carpeting 11 is heated in a steam chamber 25 to a temperature above the highest processing temperature and in the range of 170 DEG F to 212 DEG F (76.7 DEG C to 100 DEG C) to override the yarn memory. A beater bar 26, 26' within the steam chamber 25 then beats the carpet to reduced the bending, matting and crushing of the pile. Steam boxes 23. 24 heat the carpet with rollers 14, 15, 16, 17 preventing contact of the carpet with the edge of the steam box. Two three-bar beaters 26, 26' are provided either both inside the chamber 25 or one inside and one outside this chamber. <IMAGE>

Description

SPECIFICATION Process for treating tufted pile fabric The present invention relates to a process for treating a tufted pile fabric, such as for example, carpeting.
The present invention is directed to the application of steaming and beating techniques (which have been applied to carpets, to improve surface appearance, for many years) to the alleviation of a processing defect that has been inherent and most difficult to correct, particularly in tufted plushes, cut/loop and zig-zag styles. It is particularly prevalent in fabrics having pile yarns of synthetic fibers. It also occurs, but to a lesser extent, in tufted loop pile styles and in woven carpet.
Changes in dyeing and finishing procedures and apparatus, introduced in recent years, have increased the prevalence and severity of this defect. The defect is a bending, matting and crushing of the pile tufts. This is imposed on the fabric pile by the various rolls, particularly squeeze rolls used in, for example, the dyeing, rinsing, drying, etc. cycles. This bending, matting and crushing remains, to a large degree, in the finished fabric.
Most dyeing and/or printing of pile yarns and pile fabrics is now done at high speeds and usually as a continuous process. In the past, the dyeing and/or printing and subsequent processes were done at lower speeds and usually not in a continuous process flow, but in step by step cycles. Further, most dyeing is now done at temperatures that can be considered as cold when compared to past dyeing which was done at or near the boil.
The lower speeds and higher temperatures of past procedures resulted in considerable agitation being imparted to the fabric and pile yarns and the yarn was opened or bulked to a considerable extent during the long dyeing and finishing cycle.
The high speeds and lower temperatures of the present day procedures impart little or no agitation to the pile fabric and pile yarn is given little bulk or opening. As a result, the bending, matting and crushing imparted during the processing remains, is not removed to the desired extent, and shows up as a defect in the finished carpet.
Accordingly, an object of the present invention is to provide a process for erecting the pile and increasing the bulk of pile fabrics which have been subjected to bending, matting, and/or crushing as described above.
As herein described there is provided, in a process for dyeing or printing a tufted pile fabric, in which said fabric is heated to a predetermined maximum temperature and passed over various rolls, resulting in bending, matting and crushing of the fabric pile, the improvement comprising the steps of subsequently heating said fabric to a yarn memory overriding temperature above said predetermined temperature and in the range of 1 700 F to 21 20F (76.70C to 1000C) and thereafter beating the heated fabric while said fabric is within 200F 11.1 OC of said memory overriding temperature, thereby erecting said pile and increasing the bulk thereof.
The accompanying drawing is a diagram illustrating the movement of pile fabric through the apparatus utilized for carrying out an embodiment of the process of the present invention.
With today's high speed continuous dyeing and/or printing equipment for pile fabrics such as carpeting, little or nothing is being done to develop the maximum bulk of the pile yarn. The dyes are applied cold and then steam-fixed. In many cases, depending on dye application, the carpet enters the steam chamber with considerable pile distortion (matted down), which distortion is "Heat-Set" at around 2120F(1000C).
After dye fixation, the carpet usually goes through a cold or warm rinse and is dried and rolled up.
The resulting finished carpet lacks bulk (hand), and shows considerable pile-lay induced during various stages of the finishing process.
The embodiment of the present invention described further below provides a simple and reliabie method to bulk and erect the pile-yarn at the same time. Prior to backcoating, the carpet is heated in an enclosed steam chamber to a yarn memory overriding temperature above the highest temperature used during the prior finishing processes. After reaching this memory overriding temperature, the carpet is subjected to beating by means of one or more backbeaters located in the steam chamger. Since the pile yarn is hot and pliable at the time of beating the pile is fluffed (bulked), and snapped-up (erected). The carpet is cooled prior to making contact with any face-rolls.
As shown in the drawing, a continuous length of carpet 10 which has been dyed or printed in a process resulting in bending, matting and crushing of the fabric pile 11, is guided over a series of rollers 12-22. These rollers guide the carpet through a steam chamber 25 in which are disposed horizontally oriented steam boxes 23 and 24, and three-bar beaters 26 and 26'. The openings of the steam boxes 23 and 24 are upwardly oriented, so as direct steam in an upward direction through the back of the carpet and out through the pile face thereof. Guide rollers 14 and 1 5 within the steam box 23, and rollers 1 6 and 1 7 within the steam box 24, prevent the carpet from contacting the edge of the steam box.
The three-bar beater 26 is disposed within the steam chamber 25 between the rollers 18 and 1 9 downstream of the steam boxes 23 and 24; and the other three-bar beater 26' is disposed within the steam chamber 25 between the rollers 1 9 and 20 downstream of the beater 26.
After leaving the steam chamber 25, the carpeting 10 traverses a cooling zone 28 between the steam chamber 25 and fluted roll 22.
The speed of movement of the carpet 10 through the arrangement shown in the drawing is typically in the range of 25 to 50 feet per minute (0.127 to 0.254 m/s) and preferably in the order of 35 feet per minute (0.178 m/s). However, if the length of the steam chamber 25 and the cooling zone 28 are increased, the speed of movement of the carpeting 10 may be similarly increased.
The length of the cooling zone 28, the temperature to which the carpet is heated in the steam chamber 25, and the speed of movement of the carpet are such that by the time the carpet reaches the fluted roll 22, its temperature has decreased to below 1 100F (43.30C).
The steam boxes 23 and 24 are filled with steam 27 which is directed against the backing of the carpeting 10 (by means not shown in the drawing), to heat the carpeting 10 to a temperature in the range of 1 700F to 21 20F (76.70C to 1000C) and higher than the maximum temperature at which the carpeting was processed during previous dyeing or printing operations. Preferably, the temperature to which the steam chamber 25 heats the carpeting 10 is in the range of 1 700F to 1 900F (76.70C to 87.80C), and it is this temperature at which the carpet is beat by the three-bar beaters 26 and 26' within the steam chamber 25.
Optimum bulk and pile erection are realized when the steam flows directly from the steam box up through the back of the fabric and out of the face of the fabric. Air entrapped in the pile depths can increase the time required to raise the temperature within the pile to the required temperature. Direct impingement of the steam on to the back to the fabric provides a means by which the immediate displacement of the entrapped air is insured.
Alternatively, one or both of the beaters 26 and 26' may be situated outside and downstream of the steam chamber 25, provided that the temperature of the carpet when it reaches the beater(s) has not decreased more than 200F (11.1 C) from the temperature to which the carpet is heated by the steam chamber 25.
Preferably, the carpeting 10 should be at a temperature in the range of 1 700F to 190"F (76.70C to 87.80C) at the time it is beaten by the beater(s) 26 and/or 26'.
The beaters 26 and 26' may each typically subject the carpeting 10 to 400-1000 beats per minutes. In a typical processing set-up, the threebar beaters 26 and 26' are rotated at 283 rpm, imparting about 850 impacts per minute to the carpeting 10. The beater-carpet interference, i.e.
the distance by which the beaters 26 and 26' deflect the carpeting 10 from its path of movement, may be in the range of 1 to 3 inches (2.54 to 7.63 cm), with a 2 inch (5.08 cm) deflection being preferred.
Beaters having less or more than three bars may be employed if desired, and more than two beaters may be employed as well.

Claims (11)

1. A process for erecting and increasing the bulk of a tufted pile fabric, subsequent to a process in which said fabric is heated to a predetermined maximum temperature and passed over various rolls, resulting in bending, matting and crushing of the fabric pile, the process comprising the steps of heating said fabric to a yarn memory overriding temperature above said predetermined temperature and in the range of 1 700 F to 2120F (7 6.7 OC to 1000C) by directing steam through the back of the fabric and out the pile face thereof, and thereafter beating the heated fabric while said fabric is within 2O0F (11.1 "C) of said memory overriding temperature.
2. A process according to claim 1, wherein said yarn memory overriding temperature is in the range of 1 700F to 190 F (76.70C to 87.8cm).
3. A process according to claim 1 or 2, wherein said fabric is subjected to 400-1 ,000 beats per minute during said beating step.
4. A process according to any of the preceding claims wherein said fabric is deflected a distance in the range of 1 to 3 inches (2.54 to 7.62 cm) during said beating step.
5. A process according to any of the preceding claims, wherein said fabric is linearly moved along a path thereof at a speed in the range of 25 to 50 feet per minute (0.127 to 0.254 m/s) during said subsequent heating and beating steps.
6. A process according to any one of the preceding claims, comprising the additional step after said beating step, of cooling said fabric to a temperature below 11 00F (43.30C before said fabric contacts any downstream processing rolls.
7. A process for erecting and increasing the bulk of a tufted pile fabric substantially as herein described and as illustrated in the accompanying drawing.
8. A process for dyeing or printing a tufted pile fabric substantially as described herein and as illustrated in the accompanying drawing.
9. A tufted pile fabric whenever obtained by a process according to any one of the preceding claims.
New claims or amendments to claims filed on 26 July 1982.
Superseded claims: None.
New or amended claims:
10. A process for erecting and increasing the bulk of a tufted pile fabric, subsequent to a process in which said fabric is heated to a predetermined maximum temperature and passed over various rolls, resulting in bending, matting and crushing of the fabric pile, the process comprising the steps of heating said fabric within a chamber to a yarn memory overriding temperature above said predetermined temperature and in the range of 1 7O0F to 21 20F (76.70C to 1O00C) by directing steam through the back of the fabric and out the pile face thereof; thereafter subjecting the heated fabric to a plurality of heating steps while said fabric is within said chamber and within 2O0F (11.1 OC) of said memory overriding temperature and at a temperature in the range of 1 700F to 190cm (76.70C to 87.80C), said fabric being subjected to 400 1 ,000 beats per minute and deflected a distance in the range of 1 to 3 inches (2.54 to 7.62 cm) during each beating step, said beating steps being carried out along a vertical path of travel of said fabric, thereby erecting said pile and increasing the bulk thereof and after said beating steps, cooling said fabric to a temperature below 11 O0F (43.30C) before said fabric contacts any downstream processing rolls, wherein said fabric is moved along a path thereof at a speed in the range of 25 to 50 feet per minute (0.127 to 0.254 m/s) during said subsequent heating and beating steps.
11. A process for dyeing a tufted pile fabric, wherein said fabric is heated to a predetermined maximum temperature and passes over various rolls, resulting in bending, matting and crushing of the fabric pile in which the fabric is subsequently subjected to the process as claimed in any one of the preceding claims.
GB08122309A 1981-07-20 1981-07-20 A process for treating tufted pile fabric Expired GB2102853B (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB08122309A GB2102853B (en) 1981-07-20 1981-07-20 A process for treating tufted pile fabric

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB08122309A GB2102853B (en) 1981-07-20 1981-07-20 A process for treating tufted pile fabric

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
GB2102853A true GB2102853A (en) 1983-02-09
GB2102853B GB2102853B (en) 1985-01-16

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Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO2005014910A1 (en) * 2003-08-11 2005-02-17 S.T. Ritvanen Oy Beating apparatus for carpets and beating method
US20170114477A1 (en) * 2014-04-01 2017-04-27 Kordsa Global Endustriyel Iplik Ve Kord Bezi Sanayi Ve Ticaret Anonim Sirketi System for industrial yarn production from composite polyethylene naphthalate material
BE1027941B1 (en) * 2019-12-30 2021-08-05 Finipur Bvba Method and device for upgrading viscose carpets

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO2005014910A1 (en) * 2003-08-11 2005-02-17 S.T. Ritvanen Oy Beating apparatus for carpets and beating method
US20170114477A1 (en) * 2014-04-01 2017-04-27 Kordsa Global Endustriyel Iplik Ve Kord Bezi Sanayi Ve Ticaret Anonim Sirketi System for industrial yarn production from composite polyethylene naphthalate material
BE1027941B1 (en) * 2019-12-30 2021-08-05 Finipur Bvba Method and device for upgrading viscose carpets

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
GB2102853B (en) 1985-01-16

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