US20050224087A1 - Method and a machine for manufacturing filters for tobacco products - Google Patents
Method and a machine for manufacturing filters for tobacco products Download PDFInfo
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- US20050224087A1 US20050224087A1 US11/100,439 US10043905A US2005224087A1 US 20050224087 A1 US20050224087 A1 US 20050224087A1 US 10043905 A US10043905 A US 10043905A US 2005224087 A1 US2005224087 A1 US 2005224087A1
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- Prior art keywords
- filaments
- activated carbon
- particles
- carbon fibers
- continuous
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- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A24—TOBACCO; CIGARS; CIGARETTES; SIMULATED SMOKING DEVICES; SMOKERS' REQUISITES
- A24D—CIGARS; CIGARETTES; TOBACCO SMOKE FILTERS; MOUTHPIECES FOR CIGARS OR CIGARETTES; MANUFACTURE OF TOBACCO SMOKE FILTERS OR MOUTHPIECES
- A24D3/00—Tobacco smoke filters, e.g. filter-tips, filtering inserts; Filters specially adapted for simulated smoking devices; Mouthpieces for cigars or cigarettes
- A24D3/02—Manufacture of tobacco smoke filters
- A24D3/0229—Filter rod forming processes
- A24D3/0233—Filter rod forming processes by means of a garniture
Definitions
- the present invention relates to a method and to a machine for manufacturing filters applicable to tobacco products, in particular cigarettes.
- filters are manufactured by a process in which a flow of filter material, usually cellulose acetate drawn from a supply such as a bale, is extended, stretched and treated with additives, in particular plasticizers.
- the flow is processed in such a way as to obtain a continuous stream of filter material and the stream then enveloped in a paper plugwrap to fashion a continuous filter rod, which will be divided ultimately into single filter plugs.
- activated carbon is an excellent filtration medium, that is to say with a high capacity for absorbing nicotine, tar and other harmful products contained in smoke.
- filters of this type do not present a sufficiently compact structure.
- the interstitial spaces between the granules offer a path of least resistance to the smoke, thus significantly reducing the capacity of such filters to trap impurities.
- a further drawback consists in the fact that the equipment employed in manufacturing such filters is relatively complex, not least in view of the need to place the granular filters in question between two cellulose acetate filter plugs produced by the method outlined briefly above, which function not only as filters but also as a means of preventing the endmost granules of the activated carbon filter element from escaping during the various processing steps.
- the object of the present invention is to provide filters affording a high absorption capacity and guaranteed devoid of the drawbacks mentioned above.
- a further object of the invention is to provide a method and a system for the manufacture of such filters that will be unaffected by the drawbacks of conventional equipment as mentioned above, while affording simplicity and ease of implementation.
- a method of manufacturing filters for tobacco products which comprises the steps of feeding a continuous stream of filaments or particles consisting in activated carbon fibers to the infeed of a unit by which a continuous filter rod is formed, enveloping the continuous stream in a strip of wrapping material to form the continuous filter rod, and feeding the continuous rod to a cutter device by which it is divided into discrete filter sticks.
- a filter maker embodied according to the invention, comprising a reservoir that serves to collect and to contain a mass of filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers, also feed means supplying the reservoir, a unit by which the activated carbon filaments or particles are formed into at least one continuous stream, a unit by which the continuous stream is formed into a continuous filter rod, and cutter means by which the continuous rod is divided into discrete filter sticks.
- FIG. 1 illustrates a portion of a machine for making filters applicable to tobacco products, embodied in accordance with the present invention, viewed schematically and in perspective and cut away in part;
- FIG. 2 illustrates the machine of FIG. 1 with certain parts omitted and others added, viewed in elevation and on a different scale;
- FIG. 3 illustrates the machine of FIG. 1 in a second embodiment, viewed schematically and in perspective, and cut away in part;
- FIG. 4 illustrates a variation in embodiment of the portion of the machine in FIG. 3 , viewed schematically and in perspective;
- FIG. 5 illustrates the machine according to the present invention in a third embodiment, viewed in elevation
- FIG. 6 illustrates a cigarette, in perspective, furnished with a filter manufactured by the method and employing a machine according to the present invention.
- a filter making machine in its entirety.
- Such a machine 1 comprises a reservoir 2 containing a mass 3 of filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers, also a unit 4 by which the filaments or particles of the mass 3 are formed into a continuous flow 5 , and a unit 6 by which the continuous flow 5 is formed into two continuous streams 7 of filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers.
- the machine 1 comprises a forming unit 8 on which two continuous filter rods 9 are assembled by wrapping each of the aforementioned continuous streams 7 of fibers in a respective strip 10 of paper decoiled by a relative feed device 11 from a corresponding roll 12 .
- the continuous filter rods 9 advance along a path denoted P to the outfeed end of the forming unit 8 , where they are divided into discrete sticks 13 by a cutter device 14 .
- the material in question is obtained by a process of calcination in the absence of air or oxygen, known as carbonization, followed by an activating step consisting in oxidation at high temperature.
- the resulting fibers can be prepared for use, as in the case considered here, in the form of fabric.
- decoil and guide means denoted 16 in their entirety, constituting means by which to feed the web 15 of fabric along a predetermined path denoted P 1 .
- Such means comprise a device 17 serving to decoil a bulk roll 18 of the fabric 15 rotatable about a horizontal axis 18 a , also a roller 19 by which the fabric 15 is diverted onto a substantially vertical leg of the path P 1 toward a fragmentation device 20 positioned above the reservoir 2 and illustrated schematically as a pair of rollers 21 and 22 contrarotating about axes parallel to the aforementioned horizontal axis 18 a.
- the fragmentation device 20 serves to break up the fabric 15 , for example utilizing teeth or tines presented by the rollers 21 and 22 , and reduce it to filaments or particles having the consistency of fluff, accumulating to create the aforementioned mass 3 internally of the reservoir 2 .
- the unit 4 serving to form the continuous flow 5 of filaments or particles is housed in a vertically oriented enclosure denoted 23 , delimited laterally by two vertical walls 24 and 25 , and uppermost by a horizontal wall 26 presenting an opening 27 to the reservoir 2 through which the mass 3 of fluff can drop onto a power-driven toothed roller 28 .
- the mass 3 of fluff is directed by the roller 28 downwards and into a lower chamber 29 delimited at the bottom by a conveyor belt 30 which carries the fluff toward a carding device 31 equipped with a carding roller 32 rotatable about an axis 32 a lying transversely to the vertical side walls 24 and 25 and operating in conjunction with a proportioning roller 33 .
- the mass 3 of fluff consisting in filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers is directed by the toothed roller 28 onto the belt 30 , and by the belt toward the carding roller 32 , from which a layer of fluff substantially equal in thickness to the radial dimension of the carding teeth is transferred away from the chamber 29 and beyond the position of the selfsame roller 32 tangential to the proportioning roller 33 .
- toothed roller 28 and the belt 30 constitute first conveyor means serving to supply the carding device 31 with fluff from the reservoir 2 .
- the layer of filaments or particles of activated carbon fiber is taken up by an impeller roller 34 rotatable about an axis parallel to the axis 32 a of the carding roller, and projected into a descent channel 35 .
- the descent channel 35 extends in a substantially vertical direction and is disposed with the bottom end facing the periphery of a toothed take-up unit denoted 36 , comprising a first and a second toothed roller combining one with another to transfer the layer of filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers onto a transfer belt 37 .
- the transfer belt 37 runs from right to left, as viewed in FIG. 1 , and is angled upward with the runout end located beneath the inlet of an ascent channel 38 internally of which a continuous flow 5 of the filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers is entrained in an ascending air current generated by pneumatic means of conventional type (not illustrated).
- the descent channel 35 , the toothed take-up unit 36 and the transfer belt 37 combine to establish second conveyor means interposed between the carding device 31 and the ascent channel 38 .
- the top outlet end 39 of the ascent channel is enclosed by a pair of aspirating belts 40 made of air-permeable material and constituting a part of the unit 6 by which the aforementioned continuous streams 7 are formed.
- the two belts 40 are looped around two return pulleys 41 driven in rotation about respective horizontal axes.
- a chamber 42 connected to a source of negative pressure (not illustrated) and delimited on the underside by a wall 43 pierced with suction holes 44 .
- filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers making up the continuous flow 5 are directed up through the ascent channel 38 and into contact with the bottom branches of the aspirating belts 40 as these slide against the aforementioned wall 43 , whereupon the fibers cling to the belts and gather progressively to form the aforementioned continuous streams 7 , which are conveyed to the infeed 45 of the unit 8 that will form them into continuous filter rods 9 .
- the continuous streams 7 of material are released onto respective strips 10 of paper supported by the top branches of respective looped conveyor belts 46 , of which one only is visible in FIG. 2 , forming part of the aforementioned feed device 11 and fashioned from a textile material.
- the forming unit 8 further comprises a beam 47 , extending along the aforementioned path P, by which the paper strips 40 are constrained to wrap around the respective continuous streams 7 of filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers, thus bringing about the assembly of the two filter rods 9 .
- a beam 47 extending along the aforementioned path P, by which the paper strips 40 are constrained to wrap around the respective continuous streams 7 of filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers, thus bringing about the assembly of the two filter rods 9 .
- the assembled components advance along the beam 47 , one longitudinal edge of each strip 10 will be gummed by applicator means (not illustrated) and stuck, so as to stabilize the wrap around the two rods 9 .
- FIG. 3 illustrates an embodiment of the machine differing from that of FIG. 1 inasmuch as the reservoir 2 is placed at the outlet of a duct 48 of which the inlet is connected to a fragmentation device shown schematically as a block denoted 20 .
- the unit 4 forming the continuous flow 5 of filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers is simplified in this embodiment, comprising only the toothed take-up unit 36 , placed at the bottom outlet end of the reservoir 2 in this instance, the transfer belt 37 , and the ascent channel 38 .
- decoiling and guiding means 16 serving to direct a web 15 of fabric along a predetermined path P 1 in the example of FIG. 1 , and the duct 48 in FIG. 2 , are designed to act as feed means serving the reservoir 2 .
- FIG. 4 illustrates an embodiment of the machine differing from that of FIG. 1 inasmuch as the reservoir 2 is fed by a conveyor belt 49 angled downward and toward the inlet of the reservoir 2 , onto which the mass 3 of filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers is released from above. More exactly, the top infeed end of the belt 49 is positioned beneath the fragmentation device 20 by which the web 15 of activated carbon fiber fabric will be broken up.
- the unit 4 serving to form the continuous flow 5 of filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers is simplified in this embodiment, consisting only in the toothed take-up unit 36 , positioned at the bottom outlet end of the reservoir 2 , the transfer belt 37 and the ascent channel 38 .
- the block denoted 50 represents a spinning unit such as will produce a plurality of strands 51 consisting in filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers, obtainable from the web 15 of fabric or from a mass 3 of fluff containing filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers, or unwound from respective reels.
- the strands 51 emerging from the spinning unit 50 are fed into a forming unit shown as a block denoted 52 , and gathered by this same unit into a continuous stream 7 of filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers.
- the stream 7 could consist in a rope or braid of activated carbon filaments or particles unwound from a respective reel.
- the stream 7 could be processed directly by the forming unit 52 from a layer of fluff.
- the unit 8 by which the filter rods 9 are assembled is no different to that described with reference to the example of FIG. 2 .
- FIG. 6 illustrates a cigarette 53 with a filter 54 obtained from a stick 13 manufactured on the machine 1 by the methods described above.
- the filter 54 in question presents a much higher capacity for absorbing impurities than traditional filters made with cellulose acetate or activated carbon granules.
- the microporosity of the filter in question is such as to make it especially suitable for trapping pollutants of low molecular weight.
- the filter described and illustrated might also be utilized in conjunction with traditional cellulose filters to assemble composite filters.
- a filter 54 obtained in this manner is considerably simpler to manufacture than a conventional filter.
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- Cigarettes, Filters, And Manufacturing Of Filters (AREA)
Abstract
Filters for cigarettes are manufactured on a machine by which a web of activated carbon fiber fabric is decoiled from a roll, fed into a fragmentation device and broken up into filaments or particles. The fragments are gathered by a first unit into a continuous flow directed up and through the top outlet of an ascent channel into a further unit with a slidable and air-permeable aspirating belt such as will attract and retain the filaments or particles rising through the channel and shape them progressively into a continuous stream which is then released by the belt to the infeed of a unit equipped with a garniture section along which a strip of paper is wrapped around the continuous stream to form a continuous filter rod. Finally, the rod is fed through a rotary cutter and divided into sticks that will provide the single filter plugs for attachment to cigarettes.
Description
- The present invention relates to a method and to a machine for manufacturing filters applicable to tobacco products, in particular cigarettes.
- The prior art embraces the practice of attaching filters to cigarettes with tipping papers. Such filters are manufactured by a process in which a flow of filter material, usually cellulose acetate drawn from a supply such as a bale, is extended, stretched and treated with additives, in particular plasticizers. The flow is processed in such a way as to obtain a continuous stream of filter material and the stream then enveloped in a paper plugwrap to fashion a continuous filter rod, which will be divided ultimately into single filter plugs.
- Also embraced by the prior art are filters for cigarettes utilizing activated carbon granules as the filter material. In effect, activated carbon is an excellent filtration medium, that is to say with a high capacity for absorbing nicotine, tar and other harmful products contained in smoke.
- Owing to the relatively large particle size of the granules, however, filters of this type do not present a sufficiently compact structure.
- In effect, the interstitial spaces between the granules offer a path of least resistance to the smoke, thus significantly reducing the capacity of such filters to trap impurities.
- A further drawback consists in the fact that the equipment employed in manufacturing such filters is relatively complex, not least in view of the need to place the granular filters in question between two cellulose acetate filter plugs produced by the method outlined briefly above, which function not only as filters but also as a means of preventing the endmost granules of the activated carbon filter element from escaping during the various processing steps.
- The object of the present invention is to provide filters affording a high absorption capacity and guaranteed devoid of the drawbacks mentioned above.
- A further object of the invention is to provide a method and a system for the manufacture of such filters that will be unaffected by the drawbacks of conventional equipment as mentioned above, while affording simplicity and ease of implementation.
- The stated objects are realized according to the present invention in a method of manufacturing filters for tobacco products, which comprises the steps of feeding a continuous stream of filaments or particles consisting in activated carbon fibers to the infeed of a unit by which a continuous filter rod is formed, enveloping the continuous stream in a strip of wrapping material to form the continuous filter rod, and feeding the continuous rod to a cutter device by which it is divided into discrete filter sticks.
- The stated objects are realized similarly in a filter maker embodied according to the invention, comprising a reservoir that serves to collect and to contain a mass of filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers, also feed means supplying the reservoir, a unit by which the activated carbon filaments or particles are formed into at least one continuous stream, a unit by which the continuous stream is formed into a continuous filter rod, and cutter means by which the continuous rod is divided into discrete filter sticks.
- The invention will now be described in detail, by way of example, with the aid of the accompanying drawings, in which:
-
FIG. 1 illustrates a portion of a machine for making filters applicable to tobacco products, embodied in accordance with the present invention, viewed schematically and in perspective and cut away in part; -
FIG. 2 illustrates the machine ofFIG. 1 with certain parts omitted and others added, viewed in elevation and on a different scale; -
FIG. 3 illustrates the machine ofFIG. 1 in a second embodiment, viewed schematically and in perspective, and cut away in part; -
FIG. 4 illustrates a variation in embodiment of the portion of the machine inFIG. 3 , viewed schematically and in perspective; -
FIG. 5 illustrates the machine according to the present invention in a third embodiment, viewed in elevation; -
FIG. 6 illustrates a cigarette, in perspective, furnished with a filter manufactured by the method and employing a machine according to the present invention. - Referring to
FIGS. 1 and 2 of the accompanying drawings, 1 denotes a filter making machine, in its entirety. Such amachine 1 comprises areservoir 2 containing amass 3 of filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers, also aunit 4 by which the filaments or particles of themass 3 are formed into acontinuous flow 5, and aunit 6 by which thecontinuous flow 5 is formed into twocontinuous streams 7 of filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers. - In addition, and as illustrated in
FIG. 2 , themachine 1 comprises a formingunit 8 on which twocontinuous filter rods 9 are assembled by wrapping each of the aforementionedcontinuous streams 7 of fibers in arespective strip 10 of paper decoiled by arelative feed device 11 from acorresponding roll 12. - The
continuous filter rods 9 advance along a path denoted P to the outfeed end of the formingunit 8, where they are divided intodiscrete sticks 13 by acutter device 14. - Whilst the example described and illustrated relates to a machine with two processing lines, hence able to assemble two continuous filter rods simultaneously from respective streams of fibers, it will be appreciated that the disclosure applies equally to a machine with just one processing line.
- 15 denotes a continuous web of fabric made from activated carbon fibers. More particularly, the material in question is obtained by a process of calcination in the absence of air or oxygen, known as carbonization, followed by an activating step consisting in oxidation at high temperature. The resulting fibers can be prepared for use, as in the case considered here, in the form of fabric.
- Also indicated in
FIG. 1 are decoil and guide means denoted 16, in their entirety, constituting means by which to feed theweb 15 of fabric along a predetermined path denoted P1. Such means comprise adevice 17 serving to decoil abulk roll 18 of thefabric 15 rotatable about ahorizontal axis 18 a, also aroller 19 by which thefabric 15 is diverted onto a substantially vertical leg of the path P1 toward afragmentation device 20 positioned above thereservoir 2 and illustrated schematically as a pair ofrollers horizontal axis 18 a. - The
fragmentation device 20 serves to break up thefabric 15, for example utilizing teeth or tines presented by therollers aforementioned mass 3 internally of thereservoir 2. - The
unit 4 serving to form thecontinuous flow 5 of filaments or particles is housed in a vertically oriented enclosure denoted 23, delimited laterally by twovertical walls horizontal wall 26 presenting anopening 27 to thereservoir 2 through which themass 3 of fluff can drop onto a power-driventoothed roller 28. - The
mass 3 of fluff is directed by theroller 28 downwards and into alower chamber 29 delimited at the bottom by aconveyor belt 30 which carries the fluff toward acarding device 31 equipped with acarding roller 32 rotatable about anaxis 32 a lying transversely to thevertical side walls proportioning roller 33. - With the arrangement thus described, the
mass 3 of fluff consisting in filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers is directed by thetoothed roller 28 onto thebelt 30, and by the belt toward thecarding roller 32, from which a layer of fluff substantially equal in thickness to the radial dimension of the carding teeth is transferred away from thechamber 29 and beyond the position of theselfsame roller 32 tangential to theproportioning roller 33. - It will be seen that the
toothed roller 28 and thebelt 30 constitute first conveyor means serving to supply thecarding device 31 with fluff from thereservoir 2. - The layer of filaments or particles of activated carbon fiber is taken up by an
impeller roller 34 rotatable about an axis parallel to theaxis 32 a of the carding roller, and projected into adescent channel 35. - The
descent channel 35 extends in a substantially vertical direction and is disposed with the bottom end facing the periphery of a toothed take-up unit denoted 36, comprising a first and a second toothed roller combining one with another to transfer the layer of filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers onto atransfer belt 37. - The
transfer belt 37 runs from right to left, as viewed inFIG. 1 , and is angled upward with the runout end located beneath the inlet of anascent channel 38 internally of which acontinuous flow 5 of the filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers is entrained in an ascending air current generated by pneumatic means of conventional type (not illustrated). - Accordingly, the
descent channel 35, the toothed take-up unit 36 and thetransfer belt 37 combine to establish second conveyor means interposed between thecarding device 31 and theascent channel 38. - The
top outlet end 39 of the ascent channel is enclosed by a pair ofaspirating belts 40 made of air-permeable material and constituting a part of theunit 6 by which the aforementionedcontinuous streams 7 are formed. The twobelts 40 are looped around tworeturn pulleys 41 driven in rotation about respective horizontal axes. Compassed within the loop created by thebelts 40 is achamber 42 connected to a source of negative pressure (not illustrated) and delimited on the underside by awall 43 pierced withsuction holes 44. - Thus, filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers making up the
continuous flow 5 are directed up through theascent channel 38 and into contact with the bottom branches of theaspirating belts 40 as these slide against theaforementioned wall 43, whereupon the fibers cling to the belts and gather progressively to form the aforementionedcontinuous streams 7, which are conveyed to the infeed 45 of theunit 8 that will form them intocontinuous filter rods 9. - More precisely, and referring to
FIG. 2 , thecontinuous streams 7 of material are released ontorespective strips 10 of paper supported by the top branches of respective loopedconveyor belts 46, of which one only is visible inFIG. 2 , forming part of theaforementioned feed device 11 and fashioned from a textile material. - The forming
unit 8 further comprises abeam 47, extending along the aforementioned path P, by which thepaper strips 40 are constrained to wrap around the respectivecontinuous streams 7 of filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers, thus bringing about the assembly of the twofilter rods 9. As the assembled components advance along thebeam 47, one longitudinal edge of eachstrip 10 will be gummed by applicator means (not illustrated) and stuck, so as to stabilize the wrap around the tworods 9. -
FIG. 3 illustrates an embodiment of the machine differing from that ofFIG. 1 inasmuch as thereservoir 2 is placed at the outlet of aduct 48 of which the inlet is connected to a fragmentation device shown schematically as a block denoted 20. Also, theunit 4 forming thecontinuous flow 5 of filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers is simplified in this embodiment, comprising only the toothed take-up unit 36, placed at the bottom outlet end of thereservoir 2 in this instance, thetransfer belt 37, and theascent channel 38. - It will be seen that the decoiling and guiding means 16 serving to direct a
web 15 of fabric along a predetermined path P1 in the example ofFIG. 1 , and theduct 48 inFIG. 2 , are designed to act as feed means serving thereservoir 2. -
FIG. 4 illustrates an embodiment of the machine differing from that ofFIG. 1 inasmuch as thereservoir 2 is fed by aconveyor belt 49 angled downward and toward the inlet of thereservoir 2, onto which themass 3 of filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers is released from above. More exactly, the top infeed end of thebelt 49 is positioned beneath thefragmentation device 20 by which theweb 15 of activated carbon fiber fabric will be broken up. - In like manner to the example of
FIG. 3 , theunit 4 serving to form thecontinuous flow 5 of filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers is simplified in this embodiment, consisting only in the toothed take-upunit 36, positioned at the bottom outlet end of thereservoir 2, thetransfer belt 37 and theascent channel 38. - Referring to the example illustrated in
FIG. 5 , the block denoted 50 represents a spinning unit such as will produce a plurality ofstrands 51 consisting in filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers, obtainable from theweb 15 of fabric or from amass 3 of fluff containing filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers, or unwound from respective reels. Thestrands 51 emerging from thespinning unit 50 are fed into a forming unit shown as a block denoted 52, and gathered by this same unit into acontinuous stream 7 of filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers. - Alternatively, the
stream 7 could consist in a rope or braid of activated carbon filaments or particles unwound from a respective reel. - In a further embodiment of the
machine 1, not illustrated in the drawings, thestream 7 could be processed directly by the formingunit 52 from a layer of fluff. - Proceeding downstream of the forming
unit 52, theunit 8 by which thefilter rods 9 are assembled is no different to that described with reference to the example ofFIG. 2 . - Finally,
FIG. 6 illustrates acigarette 53 with afilter 54 obtained from astick 13 manufactured on themachine 1 by the methods described above. In particular, thefilter 54 in question presents a much higher capacity for absorbing impurities than traditional filters made with cellulose acetate or activated carbon granules. - In effect, the microporosity of the filter in question is such as to make it especially suitable for trapping pollutants of low molecular weight. The filter described and illustrated might also be utilized in conjunction with traditional cellulose filters to assemble composite filters.
- Furthermore, and in the light of the foregoing, a
filter 54 obtained in this manner is considerably simpler to manufacture than a conventional filter.
Claims (20)
1. A method of manufacturing filters for tobacco products, comprises the steps of:
feeding a continuous stream of filaments or particles consisting in activated carbon fibers to the infeed of a unit by which a continuous filter rod is formed;
enveloping the continuous stream in a strip of wrapping material to form the continuous filter rod; and
feeding the continuous rod toward a cutter device by which it is divided into discrete filter sticks.
2) A method as in claim 1 , further comprising the steps of collecting a mass of filaments or particles consisting in activated carbon fibers internally of a reservoir, transforming the mass into a continuous flow of such filaments or particles, and directing the continuous flow toward a unit by which the filaments or particles consisting in activated carbon fibers are formed into the continuous stream.
3) A method as in claim 1 , comprising the steps of feeding a web of fabric composed of activated carbon fibers along a predetermined path, subjecting the web of fabric to the action of a fragmentation device by which it is broken up into filaments or particles, forming the filaments or particles into a continuous flow, and directing the continuous flow into a unit by which it is gathered into the continuous stream of filaments or particles consisting in activated carbon fibers.
4) A method as in claim 3 comprising a step, included between the fragmentation step and the step of forming the filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers into a continuous flow, of collecting the mass of filaments or particles consisting in activated carbon fibers internally of a reservoir.
5) A method as in claim 1 , wherein the continuous stream of filaments or particles consisting in activated carbon fibers is obtained, beginning with a plurality of strands, through a step of feeding the strands into means by which they are formed into the continuous stream of filaments or particles consisting in activated carbon fibers.
6) A method as in claim 1 , wherein the continuous stream of filaments or particles consisting in activated carbon fibers is obtained, beginning with a layer of filaments or particles consisting in activated carbon fibers, through a step of feeding the layer into means by which it is formed into the continuous stream.
7) A method as in claim 1 , wherein the continuous stream consists in a rope or braid unwound from respective reel.
8) A machine for manufacturing filters for tobacco products, comprising:
a reservoir internally of which to collect and to contain a mass of filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers; feed means supplying the reservoir; a unit by which the filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers are formed into at least one continuous stream; a unit by which the continuous stream is formed into a continuous filter rod; and cutter means by which the continuous rod is divided into discrete filter sticks.
9) A machine as in claim 8 , wherein the feed means comprise means by which to decoil and guide a web of fabric composed of activated carbon fibers from a relative roll, and a fragmentation device by which the web is broken up into filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers.
10) A machine as in claim 8 , comprising a unit by which filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers are formed into a continuous flow, interposed between the reservoir and the unit by which the filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers are formed into a continuous stream.
11) A machine as in claim 10 , wherein the unit by which filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers are formed into a continuous flow comprises a carding device, first conveyor means feeding the carding device from the reservoir, an ascent channel in which the filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers are formed into a continuous flow and from which the flow is fed to the unit forming the continuous stream, and second conveyor means interposed between the carding device and the ascent channel.
12) A machine as in claim 10 , wherein the unit by which filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers are formed into a continuous flow comprises an ascent channel inside which the filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers are formed into a continuous flow and from which the flow is fed to the unit forming the continuous stream of filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers, and second conveyor means interposed between the reservoir and the ascent channel.
13) A machine as in claim 8 , wherein the unit by which filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers are formed into at least one continuous stream comprises an aspirating conveyor belt looped around return pulleys and positioned at the top outlet end of the ascent channel supplying the unit by which the continuous stream of filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers is formed into continuous filter rod together with a strip of wrapping material designed to envelop the selfsame continuous stream of filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers.
14) A machine as in claim 8 , comprising means, interposed between the reservoir in which to collect and contain a mass of filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers and the unit by which the continuous filter rod is formed, such as will form the continuous stream of filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers directly from the mass of filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers.
15) A machine as in claim 8 , comprising a spinning unit, interposed between the reservoir in which to collect and contain a mass of filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers and the unit by which the continuous filter rod is formed, such as will produce a plurality of strands consisting in filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers, and means by which to form the continuous stream of filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers from the selfsame strands.
16) A machine as in claim 13 , wherein the unit by which the continuous filter rod is formed with the strip of wrapping material comprises a beam along which the strip of wrapping material is closed around the continuous stream of filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers.
17) A filter for tobacco products, characterized in that it is composed at least in part of filaments or particles consisting in activated carbon fibers prepared by the method as in claim 1 .
18) A machine as in claim 9 , comprising a unit by which filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers are formed into a continuous flow, interposed between the reservoir and the unit by which the filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers are formed into a continuous stream.
19) A machine as in claim 9 , wherein the unit by which filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers are formed into at least one continuous stream comprises an aspirating conveyor belt looped around return pulleys and positioned at the top outlet end of the ascent channel supplying the unit by which the continuous stream of filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers is formed into continuous filter rod together with a strip of wrapping material designed to envelop the selfsame continuous stream of filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers.
20) A machine as in claim 10 , wherein the unit by which filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers are formed into at least one continuous stream comprises an aspirating conveyor belt looped around return pulleys and positioned at the top outlet end of the ascent channel supplying the unit by which the continuous stream of filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers is formed into continuous filter rod together with a strip of wrapping material designed to envelop the selfsame continuous stream of filaments or particles of activated carbon fibers.
Applications Claiming Priority (2)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
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IT000202A ITBO20040202A1 (en) | 2004-04-08 | 2004-04-08 | METHOD AND MACHINE FOR THE PACKAGING OF FILTERS FOR SMOKING ITEMS |
ITBO2004A000202 | 2004-04-08 |
Publications (1)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
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US20050224087A1 true US20050224087A1 (en) | 2005-10-13 |
Family
ID=34897764
Family Applications (1)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
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US11/100,439 Abandoned US20050224087A1 (en) | 2004-04-08 | 2005-04-07 | Method and a machine for manufacturing filters for tobacco products |
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US (1) | US20050224087A1 (en) |
EP (1) | EP1584248B1 (en) |
JP (1) | JP4708832B2 (en) |
CN (1) | CN1679420B (en) |
DE (1) | DE602005007410D1 (en) |
IT (1) | ITBO20040202A1 (en) |
RU (1) | RU2375935C2 (en) |
Cited By (2)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US20070243985A1 (en) * | 2006-04-18 | 2007-10-18 | Hauni Maschinenbau Ag | Fiber filter production |
US11896049B2 (en) | 2020-06-03 | 2024-02-13 | International Tobacco Machinery Poland Sp. Z O. O. | Method and apparatus for manufacturing of rods |
Families Citing this family (9)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
ITBO20060751A1 (en) * | 2006-10-31 | 2007-01-30 | Gd Spa | FILTER PACKAGING MACHINE FOR SMOKE ITEMS |
EP2088877B1 (en) * | 2006-11-29 | 2018-08-01 | Imperial Tobacco Canada Limited | Cigarette filter with flavored particles |
DE102010000680A1 (en) | 2010-01-05 | 2011-07-07 | Hauni Maschinenbau AG, 21033 | Production of filter strands and filter rod machine |
CN101933649B (en) * | 2010-09-20 | 2012-07-04 | 湖北中烟工业有限责任公司 | Process for improving crushing resistance of rolled slices |
WO2012175333A1 (en) * | 2011-06-20 | 2012-12-27 | Philip Morris Products S.A. | Apparatus and method for introducing objects into a smoking article |
PL2797442T3 (en) * | 2011-12-30 | 2019-01-31 | Philip Morris Products S.A. | Apparatus and method for supplying a continuous web of crimped sheet material |
ITBO20120106A1 (en) * | 2012-03-05 | 2013-09-06 | Montrade Srl | METHOD AND MACHINE FOR THE PRODUCTION OF FILTERS WITHOUT PAPER FOR SMOKE ITEMS |
ITUA20163825A1 (en) * | 2016-05-26 | 2017-11-26 | Gd Spa | Device for replacing operating parts for tobacco industry machines |
CN113229529B (en) * | 2021-04-16 | 2022-10-25 | 浙江泽田电气工程有限公司 | Winding gathering type tobacco sheet filter stick processing device |
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US4593706A (en) * | 1980-08-04 | 1986-06-10 | Molins Limited | Producing filler material, particularly for cigarette filters |
US4889143A (en) * | 1986-05-14 | 1989-12-26 | R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company | Cigarette rods and filters containing strands provided from sheet-like materials |
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US7287529B2 (en) * | 2003-04-29 | 2007-10-30 | G.D S.P.A. | Cigarette maker |
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CH313367A (en) * | 1951-09-12 | 1956-04-15 | Hauni Werke Koerber & Co Kg | Cylindrical smoke filter plug and process for its manufacture |
JPS5758878A (en) * | 1980-08-04 | 1982-04-08 | Molins Ltd | Filler material, especially, apparatus and method for producing tobacco filter |
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2005
- 2005-04-07 JP JP2005110877A patent/JP4708832B2/en not_active Expired - Fee Related
- 2005-04-07 US US11/100,439 patent/US20050224087A1/en not_active Abandoned
- 2005-04-07 EP EP05425201A patent/EP1584248B1/en not_active Not-in-force
- 2005-04-07 DE DE602005007410T patent/DE602005007410D1/en active Active
- 2005-04-07 RU RU2005109972/12A patent/RU2375935C2/en not_active IP Right Cessation
- 2005-04-08 CN CN2005100650693A patent/CN1679420B/en not_active Expired - Fee Related
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US2796810A (en) * | 1952-09-09 | 1957-06-25 | Muller Paul Adolf | Machinery for producing filter strands from fibrous pulp |
US3377220A (en) * | 1967-06-09 | 1968-04-09 | American Filtrona Corp | Process for making stable elongated elements |
US4593706A (en) * | 1980-08-04 | 1986-06-10 | Molins Limited | Producing filler material, particularly for cigarette filters |
US4463767A (en) * | 1981-04-01 | 1984-08-07 | G. D. Societa Per Azioni | Continuous twin rod cigarette-making machine |
US4889143A (en) * | 1986-05-14 | 1989-12-26 | R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company | Cigarette rods and filters containing strands provided from sheet-like materials |
US5331977A (en) * | 1992-01-15 | 1994-07-26 | G. D. Societa' Per Azioni | Distributor for cigarette manufacturing machine |
US7287529B2 (en) * | 2003-04-29 | 2007-10-30 | G.D S.P.A. | Cigarette maker |
Cited By (3)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US20070243985A1 (en) * | 2006-04-18 | 2007-10-18 | Hauni Maschinenbau Ag | Fiber filter production |
US7588524B2 (en) | 2006-04-18 | 2009-09-15 | Hauni Maschinenbau Ag | Fiber filter production |
US11896049B2 (en) | 2020-06-03 | 2024-02-13 | International Tobacco Machinery Poland Sp. Z O. O. | Method and apparatus for manufacturing of rods |
Also Published As
Publication number | Publication date |
---|---|
DE602005007410D1 (en) | 2008-07-24 |
JP4708832B2 (en) | 2011-06-22 |
RU2375935C2 (en) | 2009-12-20 |
JP2005296015A (en) | 2005-10-27 |
EP1584248A1 (en) | 2005-10-12 |
EP1584248B1 (en) | 2008-06-11 |
CN1679420A (en) | 2005-10-12 |
ITBO20040202A1 (en) | 2004-07-08 |
CN1679420B (en) | 2011-12-21 |
RU2005109972A (en) | 2006-10-20 |
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