GB2108364A - Improvements relating to the making of smoking articles - Google Patents

Improvements relating to the making of smoking articles Download PDF

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Publication number
GB2108364A
GB2108364A GB08230367A GB8230367A GB2108364A GB 2108364 A GB2108364 A GB 2108364A GB 08230367 A GB08230367 A GB 08230367A GB 8230367 A GB8230367 A GB 8230367A GB 2108364 A GB2108364 A GB 2108364A
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GB
United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
rod
smoke
modifying agent
smoking
lengths
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
GB08230367A
Other versions
GB2108364B (en
Inventor
John David Green
Philip John Kinnard
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 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
Application filed by British American Tobacco Co Ltd filed Critical British American Tobacco Co Ltd
Priority to GB08230367A priority Critical patent/GB2108364B/en
Publication of GB2108364A publication Critical patent/GB2108364A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of GB2108364B publication Critical patent/GB2108364B/en
Expired legal-status Critical Current

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Classifications

    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A24TOBACCO; CIGARS; CIGARETTES; SIMULATED SMOKING DEVICES; SMOKERS' REQUISITES
    • A24CMACHINES FOR MAKING CIGARS OR CIGARETTES
    • A24C5/00Making cigarettes; Making tipping materials for, or attaching filters or mouthpieces to, cigars or cigarettes
    • A24C5/14Machines of the continuous-rod type
    • A24C5/18Forming the rod
    • A24C5/1892Forming the rod with additives, e.g. binding agent, flavorants

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  • Cigarettes, Filters, And Manufacturing Of Filters (AREA)

Abstract

In a method of making lengths of smoking-material rod, particularly cigarette lengths, smoking material and wrapper-web material are each continuously fed to a rod maker operable to wrap and seam-seal said wrapper material about said smoking material to provide smoking material rod which is fed to a cutter for cutting said rod into lengths and smoke-modifying agent is so applied intermittently to one of the said materials during their feeding to the rod maker that, in each of the said lengths, the smoke-modifying agent is distributed over one end zone which is accounted for by a few puffs, generally a first few puffs only, in the smoking of the length. Preferably tobacco material and wrapper-web material are each fed to a rod maker operable to wrap and seam-seal said web material about said tobacco material to form cigarette rod which is cut into cigarette lengths and smoke-modifying agent is so applied intermittently to one of the said materials during their feeding to the rod maker that, in each of the said lengths, the smoke-modifying agent is distributed over not less than 25% of each said length. Further smoke modifying agent may be distributed outside the said zone.

Description

SPECIFICATION lmprovements relating to the making of smoking articles This invention relates to the making of smoking articles incorporating smoke-modifying agents.
It is well known to incorporate smoke-modifying agents in cigarettes and other smoking articles.
Smoke-modifying agents include materials acting to impart a desired flavour or aroma to the mainstream and/or sidestream smoke of a cigarette, and physiologically active agents or smoke-body enhancing agents acting to modify the smoker's perception of the quality of mainstream smoke.
It is an established practice in incorporating a smoke-modifying agent in the tobacco rods of cigarettes to apply the agent to the tobacco in such manner that the agent is substantially uniformly distributed along the full length of the tobacco rod.
Advantages can, however, be obtained from an asymetric distribution of a smoke-modifying agent.
Asymmetric smoke-modifying agent distributions are described in United Kingdom Patent Specification No. 2078487 A. That specfication proposed methods for introducing smoke-modifying agents into filter tipped cigarettes subsequent to the manufacture thereof. These methods rely upon the entrainment of particles of smoke-modifying agent in a stream of air induced to flow through each cigarette.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a practical method by which lengths of smoking material rod, cigarette rods for example, can be obtained having an asymmetric distribution of smoke-modifying agent, the method being consistent with and involving minimal departure from current high-speed rod-making technology. It is a further object of the invention to provide a method by the use of which there can be obtained uniform loadings of smoke-modifying agent from rod length to rod length.
The present invention provides a method of making lengths of smoking material rod, wherein smoking material and wrapper-web material are each continuously fed to a rod maker operable to wrap and seam seal said wrapper-web material about said smoking material to provide smokingmaterial rod, said rod being fed to a cutter operable to cut the rod into uniform lengths, particularly cigarette lengths, and smoke-modifying agent is so applied intermittently to one of said materials during the feeding thereof to said rod maker that, in each of the lengths of rod, said smoke-modifying agent is distributed over one end zone, which zone is accounted for by a few puffs, particularly a first few puffs, in the smoking of the rod length.
The same or a different smoke-modifying agent may be applied to the other of the materials during the feeding thereof to the rod maker.
Advantageously, the zone extends from one end of the length of smoking-material rod for a distance therealong accounted for by from two puffs to half the total number of puffs as measured when the rod length is machine smoked under standard conditions of 35 cc puffs of 2 seconds duration at one minute intervals. In percentage terms, the zone of distribution of the smoke-modifying agent may occupy from 15%, preferably at least 25%, to 50% of the rod length.
In the portion of the length of smoking-material rod outside of the aforementioned zone there may be distributed another smoke-modifying agent. The latter may be of a different agent or of the same agent at a significantly lower application level than in the said zone.
There currently exists an interest in low-delivery cigarettes, that is to say cigarettes which, during smoking, give low mainstream-smoke deliveries of specified smoke constituents, tar and nicotine for example. However, it is has been observed that, in some cases, smokers of low-delivery cigarettes have registered some lack of satisfaction, in regard to flavour for example, during the first few puffs.
Cigarettes may be provided by use of the present invention which meetthis problem if a smoke-modifying agent, for instance a tobacco-flavour enhancer, is incorporated in a low-delivery cigarette over a portion of the length thereof accounted for by the first few puffs, the first three to five puffs say. The application level of the agent over this portion may be the same as that which would be adopted in accordance with the prior orthodox practice for distribution of the agent over the full length of the tobacco rod. Alternatively, it may be arranged that the quantity of agent applied to the portion in question of the tobacco rod might be approximately equivalent to that which would have been applied over the full length of the rod, or an application level may be selected between or in excess of these values.
It is common practice to incorporate a filter in cigarettes for the purpose of removing constituents of the mainstream smoke. Currently the preponderance of filters embody a plug formed of cellulose acetate fibres. Although cellulose acetate possesses a number of merits as a filtration material, it has a disadvantage when incorporated in filters of cigarettes the tobacco rods of which have been treated with a smoke-modifying agent distributed along the full length of the tobacco rod. This is because cellulose acetate preferentially attracts some agents when they are incorporated in the tobacco rod in a manner such that they are free to migrate.Migration of a smoke-modifying agent to a cellulose acetate filter results in a reduction of the delivery of the agent when the cigarette is subsequently smoked because the agent does not, in most cases, transfer from the cellulose acetate to the smoke as readily as it does from the tobacco to the smoke. By use of the present invention, there may be provided improved filter cigarettes the tobacco rods of which incorporate a free-to-migrate smoke-modifying agent, since if the agent is applied to the rod at a zone thereof in the region of the end remote from the filter, the agent has less opportunity of migrating to the filter during storage subsequent to cigarette manufacture.Thus, if a given quantity of smoke-modifying agent is applied at a forward end zone of the rod, instead of in accordance with prior practice, a significantly higher proportion of the agent will be available to fulfil the object for which it is used.
Cigarettes are known which are judged by some smokers thereof to produce in the last few puffs a mainstream smoke which is perceived to be of a harsh nature. Cigarettes may be provided by use of the present invention which embody a smoke-modifying agent in a portion thereof accounting for the last few puffs, the agent being selected to provide a smoothing effect counteracting the harshness of the mainstream smoke.
In cigarettes and other smoking articles made by the method in accordance with the present invention, the smoking material may be selected from one of more of cut tobacco, reconstituted tobacco and tobacco substitute material.
If, in accordance with the present invention, a smoke-modifying agent is to be applied to tobacco andlorto cigarette paper just before the entry thereof into a rod-making garniture of a cigarette making machine, the agent, dissolved in a suitable volatile vehicle, may be sprayed by use of an intermittently operating spray device. Such device could be a spray device similar to that described in United Kingdom Patent Specification kds. 1 357057.
The device according to that specification may be arranged to spray a liquid containing an aromatic substance onto a layer of tobacco ak a location close to the entry of a cigarette-maker garniture to which the tobacco is fed. In orderto serve for the purpose of the present invention, the spray device would have to be modified so as to operate intermittently in correct phase with the rod cutter of the cigarette maker. As disclosed in Specification No. 1357057, liquid is supplied to a spray nozzle by means of pressurized air. Modification of the spray device to adapt it for present purposes could comprise, for example, replacement for the pressureized-air system by a pump operable to deliver predetermined quantities of liquid additive to the nozzle.
If smoke-modifying agent is to be applied to rod wrapper, it may, as an alternative to being sprayed onto the wrapper web, be applied thereto by means df a continuously rotating applicator operable to transfer the agent to the web from one or more portions of its periphery.
The preferred smoke-modifying agents suitable for use in the method according to the invention inherently have, or have imparted to them, a limited propensity for migration. Thus if an agent is to be applied directly to the smoking material rod it should be of low volatility at ambient temperatures. A class of substantially non-volatile compounds is known which is applied to tobacco, release to the smoke thereof volatile smoke-modifying agents when the tobacco is burned. Members of this class may be selected for use according to the present invention.
They include polymers with pendentflavour molecules. They also include glycosides in which the alglycone is a flavourant material such as menthol, eugenol,ss phenylethanol or benzylalcohol. Use may also be conveniently made of micro-encapsulated agents whether included in the smoking material or applied to the wrapper web.
There follows a description of a laboratory experiment which illustrates advantages to be obtained from asymmetric distribution of a smoke-modifying agent in cigarettes.
Filter tipped cigarettes were selected having a 64 mm long rod of cut flue-cured tobacco enwrapped in cigarette paper of an air permeability of 120 Coresta units. The filters were of cellulose acetate and were unventilated. These cigarettes when machine smoked under standard conditions had an average puff number of 8.4.
Aflavourantcompound, coumarin, which was in rediolabelled form for analytical purposes, was dissolved in ethanol at a concentration level of 309 > 9 cam~3. The cigarettes were divided into three groups (A, Band C) and equal quantities, each of 10 ! of the coumarin solution were introduced into the tobacco rod of each of the cigarettes by means of a syringe. In the cigarettes of Group A the coumarin solution was deposited substantially uniformly along the full length of each tobacco rod.In Group B the coumarin solution was deposited over the forward three-eighths of each tobacco rod, whereas in Group C it was deposited over the rearward three-eighths of each rod adjacent to the filter.
Afer invention, the cigarstt were stored for tv-ienty-four hours. They were then machine-smoked under standard conditions until the coal had reached the mid-point of the tobacco rod, at which time they were extinguished by contact with crushed solid carbon dioxide. During the smoking period mainstream total particulate matter (TPM) was collected on Carnbridge filter pads and the mainstream vapour phase components were collected using cooled ethanol contained in a glass-ball filled bubble trap.
The cambridge filter pads, the remaining halves of the tobacco rods and the filters were individually subjected to ethanolic extraction using measured amounts of ethanol. Liquid scintillation techniques were then used to count the radioactivity content of each of the ethanolic extracts and of solution from the bubble trap. By this means a determination was made of the coumarin distribution on a percentage basis after smoking. The results are given in the table below.
Coumarin, Percentage Distribution Mainstream Sidestream Group Tobacco Filter Smoke Smoke A 46.1 6.3 7.8 39.8 B 4.5 8.1 10.6 76.8 C 88.5 3.2 2.3 6.0 The value forthe percentage of the coumarin in the sidestream smoke was calculated on the basis that all coumarin not accounted for in the tobacco, filter and mainstream smoke would be in the sidestream smoke. Inasmuch as a small proportion of the coumarin introduced into the cigarettes may have been lost by migration during the storage period preceding the smoking, these sidestream values are possibly slightly in excess of the actual values. The results do though clearly show that the coumarin distributions after the smoking of half the tobacco rod, i.e. after about 4 puffs, is very different for the three groups of cigarettes. It can be seen, for example, that by distributing a quantity of coumarin over the forward half of the tobacco rod rather than over the full length thereof, the proportion of the oumarin entering the mainstream smoke during the smoking of the forward half of the rod is increased by 36%, whereas that entering the sidestream smoke increases by 93%.

Claims (8)

1. A method of making lengths of smoking-material rod, wherein smoking material and wrapper-web material are each continuously fed to a rod maker operable to wrap and seam-seal said wrapper web material about said smoking material to provide smoking-material rod which is fed to a cutter operable to cut said rod into uniform lengths and smoke-modifying agent is so applied intermittently to one of the said materials during their feeding to the rod maker that, in each of the said lengths, the smoke-modifying agent is distributed over one end zone which is accounted for by a few puffs in the smoking of the rod length.
2. A method of making cigarettes, wherein cigarette-tobacco material and wrapper-web material are each continuously fed to a rod maker operable to wrap and seam-seal said wrapper-web material about said tobacco material to form cigarette rod which is fed to a cutter operable to cut the rod into cigarette lengths and smoke-modifying agent is so applied intermittently to one of the said materials during their feeding to the rod maker that, in each of the said cigarette lengths, the smoke-modifying agent is distributed over one end zone which is accounted for by a few puffs in the smoking of the said length.
3. A method according to claim 1 or 2, wherein the smoke-modifying agent is distributed over not less than 25% of each said length.
4. A method according to claim 1 or 2, wherein the smoke-modifying agent is distributed in each said length over a zone accounting for a first few puffs only in the smoking of the said length.
5. A method according to claim 1, wherein further smoke-modifying agent is distributed over a portion of the rod which is outside the said zone.
6. A method according to claim 2, as applied to low-delivery cigarettes, wherein a tobacco-flavour enhancing agent is distributed over the said end zone.
7. A method according to claim 2 incorporating a filter of cellulose acetate, wherein the zone in which smoke-modifying agent is provided is remote from said filter.
8. A method according to claim 2, wherein the smoke-modifying agent is of low volatility and low propensity for migration.
GB08230367A 1981-10-29 1982-10-25 Improvements relating to the making of smoking articles Expired GB2108364B (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB08230367A GB2108364B (en) 1981-10-29 1982-10-25 Improvements relating to the making of smoking articles

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB8132620 1981-10-29
GB08230367A GB2108364B (en) 1981-10-29 1982-10-25 Improvements relating to the making of smoking articles

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
GB2108364A true GB2108364A (en) 1983-05-18
GB2108364B GB2108364B (en) 1985-10-23

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Family Applications (1)

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Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP0310579A2 (en) * 1987-09-11 1989-04-05 Svenska Tobaks Ab A method for adding a flavouring substance to a tobacco rod and apparatus for carrying out the method
WO1998036650A1 (en) * 1997-02-18 1998-08-27 British American Tobacco (Investments) Limited Incorporating smoke-modifying agents in smoking material rods

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP0310579A2 (en) * 1987-09-11 1989-04-05 Svenska Tobaks Ab A method for adding a flavouring substance to a tobacco rod and apparatus for carrying out the method
EP0310579A3 (en) * 1987-09-11 1990-11-28 Svenska Tobaks Ab A method for adding a flavouring substance to a tobacco rod and apparatus for carrying out the method
WO1998036650A1 (en) * 1997-02-18 1998-08-27 British American Tobacco (Investments) Limited Incorporating smoke-modifying agents in smoking material rods
US6273093B1 (en) 1997-02-18 2001-08-14 British American Tobacco (Investments) Limited Incorporating smoke-modifying agents in smoking material rods

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
GB2108364B (en) 1985-10-23

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PE20 Patent expired after termination of 20 years

Effective date: 20021024