US1349112A - Fibrous product - Google Patents

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US1349112A
US1349112A US31013519A US1349112A US 1349112 A US1349112 A US 1349112A US 31013519 A US31013519 A US 31013519A US 1349112 A US1349112 A US 1349112A
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bark
fibers
redwood
fibrous
fiber
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Howard F Weiss
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CF Burgess Laboratories Inc
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CF Burgess Laboratories Inc
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    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D21PAPER-MAKING; PRODUCTION OF CELLULOSE
    • D21BFIBROUS RAW MATERIALS OR THEIR MECHANICAL TREATMENT
    • D21B1/00Fibrous raw materials or their mechanical treatment
    • 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
    • D04H1/42Non-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 characterised by the use of certain kinds of fibres insofar as this use has no preponderant influence on the consolidation of the fleece
    • D04H1/425Cellulose series
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T442/00Fabric [woven, knitted, or nonwoven textile or cloth, etc.]
    • Y10T442/50FELT FABRIC
    • Y10T442/51From natural organic fiber [e.g., wool, etc.]

Definitions

  • the bark from the redwood tree ⁇ after appropriate mechanical treatment to educe the part to particles or pieces of co venient size and form, is'softened by treatment with hot water and is then subjected to a disintegrating or maceratin operation for separating the individual fibers with as little cutting or breaking of the fibers as is prac- I tical.
  • the separated fibers are then dried,
  • The-fibrous mat so formed may be used without further variety of purposes.
  • the fibrous mat is usually inclosed between covering sheets of fabric, such as paper, cloth, or the like. These covering sheets may be attached to the mat by sewing, or may be attached adhesive, in which case'the covering sheets are. cemented to Specification of Letters Patent..
  • the covering sheets may moreover be water-proofed, fire-proofed, insect-proofed, etc., in accordance with well understood principles.
  • Figure l is a view as it exists in nature wood tree
  • Fig. 2 is a greatly magnified sectional of a redwood bark fiber in the bark of the redview of the bark fiber;
  • F 1g. 3 is a perspective view of an individual bark fiber after the separating and drying operations contemplated by the invention and illustrates the flattened and twisted or wavy character of the fiber resulting from this treatment;
  • ig. 4 is a perspective view of the improved fibrous mat of the invention emodied in an insulating material: and Fig. 5 is a diagrammatic flow. sheet repre senting the general operations involved in the production of the fibrous mat of the in- Throughout this specification and the apredwood in a generic sense to cover the family of trees technically known as the Sequoia.
  • the California redwood, or Seguoz'a semperoirms is the best known and most available ofthis family.
  • the seguoz'a gigantea, or big tree, and the 8 0- guoia Washingtom'a are examples of other species of the genus Sequoia.
  • the redwood trees of mature growth are several centuries old and, of course, have resisted the weather for these long periods of time.
  • the imperviousness of redwood to decay and its fire-resisting qualities are well known.
  • These desirable properties of the wood are possessed by the bark to substantially the'same extent.
  • the tree is covered of bark, often a foot or more in thickness, and has heretofore been practically regarded as a waste product, and, in fact, a detriment to sawmill operations. Redwood bark is therefore available in large quantities andv is moreover a very cheap source of raw material.
  • the bark fibers will average approximately ameter. 1 proximate y wide.
  • Fig. 1 of the drawings is intended to indicate the relatively great length of the redwood bark fiber with respect to its diameter, and shows the general appearance of the raw fiber as it exists in the bark of the redwood tree.
  • Fig. 2 of the drawings I have shown a very high magnification of a raw fiber taken from the redwood bark.
  • the ends of the fiber are closed, and the walls are about two-thirds the width of the fiber, thus providing a fine capillary cavity within the fiber.
  • the walls of the fiber are marked with what are known as pits. These are tiny openings, which generally become closed as the fiber advances in age.
  • Redwood bark fibers are quite smooth on the outside and do not possess bristles such as certain animal fibers possess.
  • the fibers in the redwood bark are thicker walled than any other bark fibers I have studied.
  • redwood bark fibers average a greater length than those from the barks of any trees I have studied.
  • the thick and heavy wall of the redwood bark fiber glves it greater strength than is possessed by bark fibers of other trees.
  • the redwood bark fibers contain no gums which attract insects and the like, or within which insects will thrive.
  • the fibers are, moreover, extremely clean and sanitary and do not furnish a favorable medium for the development or propagation of bacteria and other unsanitary organisms. This property very sharply differentiates redwood bark fibers from animal fibers and makes it safe to use bark fiberproducts in places where food is stored.
  • the fiber in redwood bark is of such a nature that it does not require special chemical treatment in order to make it satisfac' tory for articles of the character herein contemplated.
  • redwood bark fiber The physical and chemical characteristics shredding of redwood bark fiber are such as to ive it great durability, and the gums herein efore referred to undoubtedly contribute to this property.
  • the bark fiber is thus especially characterized by itsextreme durability and its resistance to the attack of decay and insects.
  • redwood bark fibers produce a remarkably .springy felt.
  • This property I attribute to their shape, physical and chemical composition, to their relatively thick or heavy walled structure.
  • This springy characteristic of redwood bark mats gives lightness to the material and at the Same time increases the number of dead air spaces within the mat, thereby adding to the thermal resistance of the product.
  • redwood bark fibers are such that they are not hollow tubes open at each end,'as in the case with many vegetable fibers, such, for example, as straw and flax fibers, but-on the contrary the redwood bark fiber is closed at each end and has somewhat the same form and shape as cow hair.
  • the closed capillary cavity of the redwood bark fiber provides a very large number of sealed; air spaces within the mat, thereby adding to the value of the latter as a heat insulator.
  • the redwood logs are hauled to the mill pond where the-bark is ripped or peeled off of them, usually by a mechanical device, although, of course, the bark may be removed by hand.
  • a mechanical device usually, of course, the bark may be removed by hand.
  • the peeled bark is first mechanically broken up into pieces of convenient form for the subsequent operations. This can be done by passing the bark through a engine in which the bark is torn apart or shredded. The shredded bark is then washed in a riffler or other appropriand shredded bark is Water.
  • the bark, prepared in the foregoing manner, is next softened by treatment with hot
  • the hot water may be advantageously obtained from condensed and waste steam at the sawmill and felt plant.
  • the temperature of this Water will be in the boiling temperature of water.
  • the purpose of the preliminary hot bed plate wide in order that the lumps and particles water treatment is to soften the fibers and make them more pliable and amenable to the subsequent separating operation.
  • the length of time necessary to accomplish this result will depend upon the size of the bark particles'as well as upon the temperature of the water. I have found that shredded bark particles from an ordinary shredding engine can be satisfactorily softened by soaking in water at a temperature of approximately 200 F. for a period of one hour.
  • the softenedv bark particles are next fed into a beating engine provided with a washing drum, in which the fibers are, in the presence of water, subjected to a macerating or separating operation followed by a washing" operation.
  • the beating engine may be generally of the ordinary Hollander type, and in Fig. 5 of the drawings I have diagrammatically indicated the essential features of such an apparatus.
  • The-beater roll 10 of this engine is raised from the so that the space between the and the beater roll blades of the is relatively of bark may pass through this too great a cutting action.
  • the beating engine is that of separating rather than cutting the fibers, and this result is attained more by throwing and rubbing them together than by the cutting action between the and the bed plate. In. the process of macerating and separating the fibers, a certain number of them are inevitably cut or broken, but I aim to break just as few as possible.
  • the bark particles contain much dirt and other matter of no fiber making value. This is comparatively heavy and sinks in water. This non-fibrous material may be advantageously removed by providing a wiremesh or screen 12 in the back-fall of the beating engine, so that such material may pass through this screen and be thus automatspace Without The action of preferably dumped bed plate 11,
  • a washing drum 14 is provided for the purpose of removing much of-the floating non-fibrous material, thereby enabling the formation of a practically clean pulp containing the separated fibers.
  • the washed fibrous pulp from the beating engine is squeezed and dried.
  • the squeezing operation is merely a pressing or filtering operation to remove the surplus water and should not be such as to mat the fibers together.
  • the drying of the fibers is preferably effected by artificial heat.
  • the result aimed at in these operations is to obtain the separated fibers in a dry condition suitable for felting.
  • the felting of the dry fibers may be effected in any appropriate manner, as, for example, on an ordinary feltin machine.
  • the fibrous batting or felted mat is to be used as an insulating material, I have found it satisfactory to form the fibers into a felted mat approximately one-half inch in thickness. This mat may be sewed between sheets of paper, cloth or other suitable fablie, or in lieu of sewing the sheets of fabric may be attached to the mat by gluing, cementing, stapling, or by any other suitable instrumentality.
  • Fig. 4 of the drawings I have shown an insulating material having a body portion 15,-made up of redwood bark fibers felted into a mat as hereinbefore described, attached to sheets of fabric 16 by a stitched or sewed agent 17.
  • the macerating" particles in the beating engine not only separates the fibers but removes from them a certain amount of foreign matter which has no fibrous structure. In addition to separating the fibers the beating engine treatment tends to flatten and twist them.
  • Redwood bark fibers produced in the manner herein before described may be termed mechanically disintegrated or pulped fibers.
  • the fibrous felts or mats of the invention may be made exclusively of such mechanically disintegrated bark fibers, or such fibers may be admixed with a certain proportion of other fibrous materials.
  • fiax straw, wheat straw, mineral wool, v asbestos, etc may be mixed with the redwood bark-fibers. This mixture can be made after the redwood bark fibers are dried, or the admixed fibrous materials may be dumped into the beating engine and subjected to the same subsequent treatment as 80- the redwood bark fibers.
  • I claim: 7 1. The process of treating redwood bark which comprises softening the bark by treatment with hot water, beating the softened :5 bark in Water to disintegrate the same and separate the fibers thereof with a minimum of breaking or cutting, washing the separated fibers to remove non-fibrous matter, and drying'the washed and separated bark 4o fibers; substantially as described.
  • a fibrous mat consisting essentially of flattened and entangled fibers of the bark of the redwood tree, the greater part of said fibers being of full length.
  • a fibrous mat consisting essentially of mechanically disintegrated fibers of the bark of the redwood tree.
  • an insulating material comprising a fibrous mat of redwood bark fibers having a covering agent attached to one or more of the surfaces thereof.

Description

H. F. wuss. FIBROUS PRODUCT. APPLICATION FILED JULY .1919.
. Patented Aug. 10, 1920. I
2 SHEETS-SHEET l- H.-F. WEISS. FIBROUS PRODUCT. APPLICATION mm JULY 11,-1919.
Bark 1960 ed or Peeled Patented Aug. 10,1920.
2 SHEETS-SHEET 2. v
I eeZed Bar/r Tam aparf in shredder fPemora/ of P er/7W7 0/ M20 F/ln vus Mailer \slarayc 60fZe/7ed fibres fieparazed and Washed /Zres Squeezed and fir/ed Ur/ed F/Zres Formed 1h fa Bel/0 79 arFelZ on nveMJcoz nowm r. wnrss, or'mrson, WISCONSIN; nssronoa TO o.
others skilled in the pipes and the like,
u mr|-:,o' STATES P'mm orr ca.
ll-Om, OF MADISON, WISCONSIN,
A CORPORATION OF WISCONSIN.-
rmaous'raonocr.
' Application filed July 11,
' an improved fibrous article of this character for use as an insulating, deadening, padding or packing material, as 'a covering for and as a substitute for hair in such products as furniture upholstering,-cushions, pads, mattresses, and the ike. I
I have discovered that the fibers of the bark of the so-called redwood tree ossess certain peculiar characteristics whic render them of particular advantage in the production of fibrous felts or mats. further discovered that by appropriate treatment such bark fibers may be separated without destroyin these advantageous characteristics, and" tiiat the separated fibers maytlien be formed into a batting or felt on a suitable felting machine, thereby producingan improved fibrous felt or mat of exceptional utility for a wide variety of uses and purposes.
Incarrying out theinvention, the bark from the redwood tree,\after appropriate mechanical treatment to educe the part to particles or pieces of co venient size and form, is'softened by treatment with hot water and is then subjected to a disintegrating or maceratin operation for separating the individual fibers with as little cutting or breaking of the fibers as is prac- I tical. The separated fibers are then dried,
.treatment for a materials,
and the dried fibers formed into a felt or mat of the desired dimensions. The-fibrous mat so formed may be used without further variety of purposes. In the manufacture of insulatingand similar the fibrous mat is usually inclosed between covering sheets of fabric, such as paper, cloth, or the like. These covering sheets may be attached to the mat by sewing, or may be attached adhesive, in which case'the covering sheets are. cemented to Specification of Letters Patent..
I have b vention.
' with a very thick layer Patented Aug. 10,- 1920. 1919. Serial No. 310,135.
the exposed surfaces of the mat. The covering sheets may moreover be water-proofed, fire-proofed, insect-proofed, etc., in accordance with well understood principles.
Reference will be made in the following discussionof the invention to panying drawings for the purpose of more clearly explaining and illustrating certain aspects of the invention. In these draw- 1ngs,'
Figure l is a view as it exists in nature wood tree;
Fig. 2 is a greatly magnified sectional of a redwood bark fiber in the bark of the redview of the bark fiber;
F 1g. 3 is a perspective view of an individual bark fiber after the separating and drying operations contemplated by the invention and illustrates the flattened and twisted or wavy character of the fiber resulting from this treatment;
ig. 4 is a perspective view of the improved fibrous mat of the invention emodied in an insulating material: and Fig. 5 is a diagrammatic flow. sheet repre senting the general operations involved in the production of the fibrous mat of the in- Throughout this specification and the apredwood in a generic sense to cover the family of trees technically known as the Sequoia. The California redwood, or Seguoz'a semperoirms, is the best known and most available ofthis family. The seguoz'a gigantea, or big tree, and the 8 0- guoia Washingtom'a are examples of other species of the genus Sequoia.
The redwood trees of mature growth are several centuries old and, of course, have resisted the weather for these long periods of time. The imperviousness of redwood to decay and its fire-resisting qualities are well known. These desirable properties of the wood are possessed by the bark to substantially the'same extent. The tree is covered of bark, often a foot or more in thickness, and has heretofore been practically regarded as a waste product, and, in fact, a detriment to sawmill operations. Redwood bark is therefore available in large quantities andv is moreover a very cheap source of raw material.
Redwood bark fibers length,
F. BURGESS LABORA- the accomv 12 mm. in length and about 16 mm. or greater. Usually, however,
the bark fibers will average approximately ameter. 1 proximate y wide. The
shorter than those of the bark and average about 5 mm. in length and about 0.03 mm. in
. diameter.
the wood fibers long as they are In other words, are onl about 20 times as wide. It will, moreover, be observed that the bark fibers are approximatelyten (10)- times as long as the wood fibers. Fig. 1 of the drawings is intended to indicate the relatively great length of the redwood bark fiber with respect to its diameter, and shows the general appearance of the raw fiber as it exists in the bark of the redwood tree.
In Fig. 2 of the drawings I have shown a very high magnification of a raw fiber taken from the redwood bark. The ends of the fiber are closed, and the walls are about two-thirds the width of the fiber, thus providing a fine capillary cavity within the fiber. The walls of the fiber are marked with what are known as pits. These are tiny openings, which generally become closed as the fiber advances in age.
Redwood bark fibers are quite smooth on the outside and do not possess bristles such as certain animal fibers possess. The fibers in the redwood bark are thicker walled than any other bark fibers I have studied. Furthermore redwood bark fibers average a greater length than those from the barks of any trees I have studied. The thick and heavy wall of the redwood bark fiber glves it greater strength than is possessed by bark fibers of other trees. I have furthermore found that many of the fibers in the redwood bark contain gums which probably add to the durability of the fiber and increase somewhat thetendency of the fibers to stick together when felted, probably in a manner similar to the effect of coating a nail with a small quantity of cement, which materially increases its' resistance to withdrawal from the wood into which it is driven.
The redwood bark fibers contain no gums which attract insects and the like, or within which insects will thrive. The fibers are, moreover, extremely clean and sanitary and do not furnish a favorable medium for the development or propagation of bacteria and other unsanitary organisms. This property very sharply differentiates redwood bark fibers from animal fibers and makes it safe to use bark fiberproducts in places where food is stored.
The fiber in redwood bark is of such a nature that it does not require special chemical treatment in order to make it satisfac' tory for articles of the character herein contemplated.
The physical and chemical characteristics shredding of redwood bark fiber are such as to ive it great durability, and the gums herein efore referred to undoubtedly contribute to this property. The bark fiber is thus especially characterized by itsextreme durability and its resistance to the attack of decay and insects.
Furthermore, redwood bark fibers produce a remarkably .springy felt. This property I attribute to their shape, physical and chemical composition, to their relatively thick or heavy walled structure. This springy characteristic of redwood bark mats gives lightness to the material and at the Same time increases the number of dead air spaces within the mat, thereby adding to the thermal resistance of the product.
The form of redwood bark fibers is such that they are not hollow tubes open at each end,'as in the case with many vegetable fibers, such, for example, as straw and flax fibers, but-on the contrary the redwood bark fiber is closed at each end and has somewhat the same form and shape as cow hair. The closed capillary cavity of the redwood bark fiber provides a very large number of sealed; air spaces within the mat, thereby adding to the value of the latter as a heat insulator.
I have devised -a special and novel mode of treating redwood bark whereby the fibers thereof are separated without being badly broken and are thereafter permitted to shrink in accordance with their natural tendencies toward deformation, the result being a crinkled or crimped and relatively fiat fiber tangles well with preserves its resiliency for a long time. This and more especially mode of treating redwood bark and forming resilient mats or felts of the fibers thereof is diagrammatically represented by the flow sheet of Fig. 5 of the accompanying drawings, which is intended merely to indicate the principal steps of the process, and various types of apparatus suitable for the performance of these steps will occur to those skilled in the art-from the following description of the general features and pr1nciples of the process.
In accordance with the present customary practice, the redwood logs are hauled to the mill pond where the-bark is ripped or peeled off of them, usually by a mechanical device, although, of course, the bark may be removed by hand. In the practice of the invention use all of the bark, whether alive or dead. The peeled bark is first mechanically broken up into pieces of convenient form for the subsequent operations. This can be done by passing the bark through a engine in which the bark is torn apart or shredded. The shredded bark is then washed in a riffler or other appropriand shredded bark is Water.
' neighborhood of the remove a portion of matter. The washed ate washing device to the dirt and non-fibrous for storage from whence it is withdrawn as required. 1
The bark, prepared in the foregoing manner, is next softened by treatment with hot The hot water may be advantageously obtained from condensed and waste steam at the sawmill and felt plant. The temperature of this Water will be in the boiling temperature of water. The purpose of the preliminary hot bed plate wide in order that the lumps and particles water treatment is to soften the fibers and make them more pliable and amenable to the subsequent separating operation. The length of time necessary to accomplish this result will depend upon the size of the bark particles'as well as upon the temperature of the water. I have found that shredded bark particles from an ordinary shredding engine can be satisfactorily softened by soaking in water at a temperature of approximately 200 F. for a period of one hour.
The softenedv bark particles are next fed into a beating engine provided with a washing drum, in which the fibers are, in the presence of water, subjected to a macerating or separating operation followed by a washing" operation. The beating engine may be generally of the ordinary Hollander type, and in Fig. 5 of the drawings I have diagrammatically indicated the essential features of such an apparatus. The-beater roll 10 of this engine is raised from the so that the space between the and the beater roll blades of the is relatively of bark may pass through this too great a cutting action. the beating engine is that of separating rather than cutting the fibers, and this result is attained more by throwing and rubbing them together than by the cutting action between the and the bed plate. In. the process of macerating and separating the fibers, a certain number of them are inevitably cut or broken, but I aim to break just as few as possible.
y carrying out the macerating and separating operations in themanner, described the bark particles readily separate into individual fibers with a minimum of breaking of the fibers, and at the same time the operations are attended with the expenditure of a relatively small amount of mechanical power; v
The bark particles contain much dirt and other matter of no fiber making value. This is comparatively heavy and sinks in water. This non-fibrous material may be advantageously removed by providing a wiremesh or screen 12 in the back-fall of the beating engine, so that such material may pass through this screen and be thus automatspace Without The action of preferably dumped bed plate 11,
blades of the beater roll ushed from time to time and the material discharged through the outlet 13. .A washing drum 14 is provided for the purpose of removing much of-the floating non-fibrous material, thereby enabling the formation of a practically clean pulp containing the separated fibers.
The washed fibrous pulp from the beating engine is squeezed and dried. The squeezing operation is merely a pressing or filtering operation to remove the surplus water and should not be such as to mat the fibers together. The drying of the fibers is preferably effected by artificial heat. The result aimed at in these operations is to obtain the separated fibers in a dry condition suitable for felting. The felting of the dry fibers may be effected in any appropriate manner, as, for example, on an ordinary feltin machine.
here the fibrous batting or felted mat is to be used as an insulating material, I have found it satisfactory to form the fibers into a felted mat approximately one-half inch in thickness. This mat may be sewed between sheets of paper, cloth or other suitable fablie, or in lieu of sewing the sheets of fabric may be attached to the mat by gluing, cementing, stapling, or by any other suitable instrumentality. In Fig. 4 of the drawings, I have shown an insulating material having a body portion 15,-made up of redwood bark fibers felted into a mat as hereinbefore described, attached to sheets of fabric 16 by a stitched or sewed agent 17.
The macerating" particles in the beating engine not only separates the fibers but removes from them a certain amount of foreign matter which has no fibrous structure. In addition to separating the fibers the beating engine treatment tends to flatten and twist them. In Fig. 3
of the drawings I have indicated the general appearance of a single fiber (dried) after it has passed through the beating engine. As will be seen from this figure the fiber is materially flattened and has a pronounced wavy or crinkled configuration. This crinkled configuration gives the fibers added felting properties. The wavy or crinkled configuration of the separated and dried fibers appears to be due to a shrinking and warping of the individual fibers as the result of acertain release of stress caused by separating and subsequently drying the fibers. Thus, in certain stresses in the wood are relieved, which cause the boards to twist on drying, unless they are held flat. I believe that a similar action occurs in the case of the individual redwood bark fibers, that is to say, unequal drying and shrinkage in the fiber walls causes the treatment of the bark sawing lumber from logs,
twisting action. I believe i 85 ticles by that the closed ends of the bark fiber effect the twisting and that the fiber or cell walls are proportionately thicker at the ends of the cells than at the middle.
Redwood bark fibers produced in the manner herein before described may be termed mechanically disintegrated or pulped fibers. The fibrous felts or mats of the invention may be made exclusively of such mechanically disintegrated bark fibers, or such fibers may be admixed with a certain proportion of other fibrous materials. Thus, for example, fiax straw, wheat straw, mineral wool, v asbestos, etc, may be mixed with the redwood bark-fibers. This mixture can be made after the redwood bark fibers are dried, or the admixed fibrous materials may be dumped into the beating engine and subjected to the same subsequent treatment as 80- the redwood bark fibers.
I claim: 7 1. The process of treating redwood bark which comprises softening the bark by treatment with hot water, beating the softened :5 bark in Water to disintegrate the same and separate the fibers thereof with a minimum of breaking or cutting, washing the separated fibers to remove non-fibrous matter, and drying'the washed and separated bark 4o fibers; substantially as described.
2. The process of treating redwood bark which comprises mechanically reducing the bark to particles of appropriate size for subsequent treatment, softening the bark pare treatment with hot water, disintegrating the softened bark,to separate the fibers thereof with a minimum of breaking and cutting, to remove non-fibrous matter, and drying the 40 washed and separated bark fibers; substantially as described.
3. The process of treating redwood bark fibers which comprises softenin the bark by treatment with hot water, disintegrating the softened bark in water to separate the fibers thereof, eliminating the Water from the resulting pulp containin the separated bark fibers, and drying the bers; substantially as described.
mum of breaking or cutting, was
washing the separated fibers 4. The process of producing fibrous mats of redwood bark fibers which comprises softening the bark by treatment with hot water, disintegratin the softened bark in water to separate the fibers thereof, eliminating the water from the resulting pulp containing the the fibers, and
separated bark fibers, drying felted mat;
forming the dried fibers into a substantially as described.
5. The process of producing fibrous mats of redwood bark fibers which comprises mechanically reducing the bark to particles of appropriate size for subsequent treatment, softening the bark particles by treatment withhot water, beating the softened bark particles in water to disintegrate the same and separate the fibers thereof with a minihing the separated fibers to remove non-fibrous matter, drying the washed and separated bark fibers, and forming the dried fibers into a felted mat; substantially as described.
6. As a new article of manufacture, a fibrous mat consisting essentially of flattened and entangled fibers of the bark of the redwood tree, the greater part of said fibers being of full length.
7. As a new article of manufacture, a fibrous mat containing separated redwood bark fibers of twisted form felted together.
8. As a new article of manufacture, a fibrous mat consisting essentially of mechanically disintegrated fibers of the bark of the redwood tree.
9. As a new article of manufacture, an insulating material comprising a fibrous mat of redwood bark fibers having a covering agent attached to one or more of the surfaces thereof. g
10. As a new article of manufacture, a mass of entangled fibers of the bark of the redwood tree, said fibers being for the greater part of full length and of a flattened and twisted form.
11. As a new article of manufacture, a
resilient, springy mat of redwood bark fibers. In testimony whereof I aflix my signature.
HOWARD F. WEISS.
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Cited By (13)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2550070A (en) * 1945-06-29 1951-04-24 Hilliard Corp Method of making filter units
US2571334A (en) * 1946-08-30 1951-10-16 Houdaille Hershey Corp Method of making resilient batts
US2614655A (en) * 1943-08-10 1952-10-21 Sidney H Katz Filter material
US2918138A (en) * 1957-02-13 1959-12-22 Gen Motors Corp Disposable and cleanable filter
US2928765A (en) * 1957-02-11 1960-03-15 C H Dexter & Sons Inc Air filter paper and method of making same
US3150215A (en) * 1959-03-30 1964-09-22 Willits Redwood Products Compa Method of producing acoustic tile from redwood bark fibre and product obtained
US3187895A (en) * 1963-01-23 1965-06-08 Pall Corp Fuel-water separator
US3224925A (en) * 1962-05-21 1965-12-21 Cons Paper Bahamas Ltd Fibrous products from barking waste
US3521753A (en) * 1968-04-30 1970-07-28 Werner P Schoening Filtering and heating of liquids by use of a flexible cellular blanket
US3535708A (en) * 1969-03-05 1970-10-27 Blessings Inc Disposable hot pad
US3878994A (en) * 1973-11-28 1975-04-22 Urban Wood & Fiber Products In Apparatus and process for treating waste wood
US4197100A (en) * 1976-06-14 1980-04-08 Hausheer Hans P Filtering member for filters
US5075001A (en) * 1989-07-13 1991-12-24 Taylor James W Method and apparatus for recovering fibrous material from a paper/pulp process water stream

Cited By (13)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2614655A (en) * 1943-08-10 1952-10-21 Sidney H Katz Filter material
US2550070A (en) * 1945-06-29 1951-04-24 Hilliard Corp Method of making filter units
US2571334A (en) * 1946-08-30 1951-10-16 Houdaille Hershey Corp Method of making resilient batts
US2928765A (en) * 1957-02-11 1960-03-15 C H Dexter & Sons Inc Air filter paper and method of making same
US2918138A (en) * 1957-02-13 1959-12-22 Gen Motors Corp Disposable and cleanable filter
US3150215A (en) * 1959-03-30 1964-09-22 Willits Redwood Products Compa Method of producing acoustic tile from redwood bark fibre and product obtained
US3224925A (en) * 1962-05-21 1965-12-21 Cons Paper Bahamas Ltd Fibrous products from barking waste
US3187895A (en) * 1963-01-23 1965-06-08 Pall Corp Fuel-water separator
US3521753A (en) * 1968-04-30 1970-07-28 Werner P Schoening Filtering and heating of liquids by use of a flexible cellular blanket
US3535708A (en) * 1969-03-05 1970-10-27 Blessings Inc Disposable hot pad
US3878994A (en) * 1973-11-28 1975-04-22 Urban Wood & Fiber Products In Apparatus and process for treating waste wood
US4197100A (en) * 1976-06-14 1980-04-08 Hausheer Hans P Filtering member for filters
US5075001A (en) * 1989-07-13 1991-12-24 Taylor James W Method and apparatus for recovering fibrous material from a paper/pulp process water stream

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