US2039753A - Process of oil-proofing material and product thereof - Google Patents

Process of oil-proofing material and product thereof Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2039753A
US2039753A US63414432A US2039753A US 2039753 A US2039753 A US 2039753A US 63414432 A US63414432 A US 63414432A US 2039753 A US2039753 A US 2039753A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
oil
casein
soap
film
sulphonated
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.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
Inventor
Benjamin H Thurman
Arthur W Thomas
Mattikow Morris
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.)
REFINING Inc
Original Assignee
REFINING Inc
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
Priority to DENDAT623471D priority Critical patent/DE623471C/de
Application filed by REFINING Inc filed Critical REFINING Inc
Priority to US63414432 priority patent/US2039753A/en
Priority to GB2601833A priority patent/GB425986A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2039753A publication Critical patent/US2039753A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D21PAPER-MAKING; PRODUCTION OF CELLULOSE
    • D21HPULP COMPOSITIONS; PREPARATION THEREOF NOT COVERED BY SUBCLASSES D21C OR D21D; IMPREGNATING OR COATING OF PAPER; TREATMENT OF FINISHED PAPER NOT COVERED BY CLASS B31 OR SUBCLASS D21G; PAPER NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • D21H19/00Coated paper; Coating material
    • D21H19/10Coatings without pigments
    • D21H19/12Coatings without pigments applied as a solution using water as the only solvent, e.g. in the presence of acid or alkaline compounds
    • 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
    • Y10T428/00Stock material or miscellaneous articles
    • Y10T428/13Hollow or container type article [e.g., tube, vase, etc.]
    • Y10T428/1303Paper containing [e.g., paperboard, cardboard, fiberboard, etc.]
    • 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
    • Y10T428/00Stock material or miscellaneous articles
    • Y10T428/31504Composite [nonstructural laminate]
    • Y10T428/31971Of carbohydrate
    • Y10T428/31993Of paper
    • Y10T428/31996Next to layer of metal salt [e.g., plasterboard, etc.]

Definitions

  • This invention relates to the production of articles that are impervious to mineral and other oils and to the production of coating compounds or compositions which are suitable for rendering articles impervious to oil.
  • 110- rous materials such as paper, for example, and other objects can be treated or coated so as to render them oil-proof and at the same time their mechanical strength is usually increased, while tried but have not been found to be satisfactory as they do not form a permanent continuous film or they dry out and crack or do not adhere to the surfaces sufficiently well.
  • casein When casein is employed it becomes brittle on ageing and cracks when the moisture dries out. This is true of either solubilized casein or sulphuric acid precipitated casein. The same faults occur with certain other materials.
  • the addition of glycerine to casein is not satisfactory as it' sweats out and ceases to act as a plasticizer.
  • solubilizers for the casein such' as sodium or potassium hydroxide or borax weakens the casein.
  • castor and other vegetable oils, and rosin and shellac canbe treated with soluble alkalies such as sodium, potassium and am monium so as to form compounds that can be spread out into films that are oil impervious.
  • soluble alkalies such as sodium, potassium and am monium
  • These compounds, which are soaps, can be dissolved in water to make concentrated solutions and the solutions can be applied to surfaces in films'thus oil-proofing the same.
  • Paper containers may be coated, preferably on the inside, with the solution or solutions and will then hold oil indefinitely. Soaps made from liquid fats are? generally preferable to those from solid fats.
  • Soaps made from cottonseed oil, soya bean oil, and sulphonated olive and castor oils have been lution'should also be free from a tendency to jel-,
  • An excellent oil impervious film or coating can also be formed by using casein and the sodium soap of castor oil or olive oil, as these soaps are very suitable for adding body and giving filmforming properties, and at'the same time the formed.
  • the shellac may be solubilized by boiling the shellac in water containing borax in the proportion of grams of shellac to 283 cc. of water containing 25 grams of borax. The solution is filtered and the filtrate is added preferablyto an-equal part of a casein solution prepared by introducing 100 grams of casein into 500 cc. of water containing 10 cc, of triethanolamine. The proportions of shellac and casein solutions may be varied greatly.
  • a sulphonated vegetable oil soap in proportions from about one fourth to three fourths is added to the mixture of triethanolamine, shellac and casein a product is formed that is not a gum.
  • This material can be flowed or spread on paper or other materials to form an oil-proof coating.
  • Ethylene glycol may be added as'a plasticizer, but glycerine is not suitable to be added.
  • compositions that are suitable for forming oil- "proof coatings or filmsthat can be ap lied to porousmaterials or other surfaces as by dipping,
  • the solution is applied to the surface to be coated.
  • Example H The fatty acids from a vegetable oil, such as olive oil, for examplaare treated with a sufiicient amount of triethanolamine to saponify the fattyacids and the resulting product is dissolved in water in approximately the proportions given in Example I and the solution is applied to the surface to be oilproofed.
  • Example III -Sulphonated vegetable oil, such as castor oil, for example, is treated with a sufficient amount of sodium or potassium hydroxide to produce a soluble soap and the resulting prodnot is dissolved in water and used as the oilproofing coat or film.
  • Example IV Instead of a vegetable oil, rosin may be used and saponified by means of sodium or potassium hydroxide or .triethanolamine. When using triethanolamine about 100 parts by weight of rosin is saponified with parts of triethanolamine and 300 grams of water is added. The boilingis continued for about four hours, the product is then filtered and the filtrate concentrated by evaporation until it contains about 20% of water.
  • Example V.Shellac is. saponified with potassium or sodium hydroxide and about 30 parts by weight of the resulting product is dissolved in 100 parts of water and the solution is used for coating purposes, or about parts by weight of triethanolamine may be used to saponify 100 parts of shellac and 300 parts of water added. The mixture is heated until it boils, is filtered and is then ready for use.
  • the fatty acids may be extracted from the oils and saponified, or the fatty acids after extraction may be first sulphonated and then saponified. Also, mixtures of the alkali resinates or trlethanolamine resinate with saponified sulphonated vegetable oils may "be used..
  • Example VI.100 parts by weight of casein are dissolved in 500 parts of water containing about 2% by weightof triethanolamine and 40 parts by weight of the approximately 15% casein solution thereby formed is mixedwith 10 parts of sulphonated vegetable oil to make an oil-proof film for the inside or outside of containers or a flexible oil-proof coating for braided insulated andtsubstantia'l'ly colorless and is free from tackiness.
  • This product is especially useful in making colored varnishes for insulated wire as pigments can be ground into the sulphonated oil and impart the desired color to the film or coating. In'this way a coating for an insulated wire can be formed that is very attractivein appearance by adding calcium carbonate and lead carbonate ground in sulphonated castor oil to triethanolamine and the casein solution to which glycerine.
  • casein and triethanol amine and sulphonated oil soap is also good for oil proofing paper as a film. Also casein and sulphonated oil and glycerine is a good coating for insulated wire.
  • a mixture of soap of sulphonated vegetable oils and casein solubilized with triethanolamine produces a very flexible oil-proof coating for fabrics and textiles and insulated wire which is veryadherent.
  • the coating can be colored with colors and pigments by grinding the colors or pigments in a soap, such as sulphonated castor oil, and then dissolving the soap in a water solution of casein and triethanolamine, glycerine, or ethylene glycol.
  • An oil-impervious impregnating or coating material may also be formed by mixing 10 cc. of an aqueous solution containing 30% dextrine with 10 cc, of an aqueous solution containing 3.0% of sodium or potassium resinate and 10 cc. of sulphonated castor oil soap.
  • an oil-proof paper having as an oil-proofing material on a surface thereof a film of a composition consisting essentialiy of water soluble soap.
  • an oil-proof paper container having as an oil proofing material on a surface thereof a film of a composition consisting essentially of water soluble soap.

Description

. stances to the surfaces thereof.
Patented May 5, 1936 UNITED STATES -PArear OFFICE PROCESS or OKL-PROQFING Mlirsamr. Ann raonoo'r 'rnamaor Benjamin H. Thurman, Bronxville, Arthur W. Thomas, New York, and Morris Mattikow, Brooklyn, N. Y., assignors, by mesne assignments, to Refining, 1110., Reno, Nev., a corporation of Nevada No Drawing. Application September 21, 1932,
Serial No. 634,144
'5 Claims. (01. 91-68) This invention relates to the production of articles that are impervious to mineral and other oils and to the production of coating compounds or compositions which are suitable for rendering articles impervious to oil. By this invention 110- rous materials such as paper, for example, and other objects can be treated or coated so as to render them oil-proof and at the same time their mechanical strength is usually increased, while tried but have not been found to be satisfactory as they do not form a permanent continuous film or they dry out and crack or do not adhere to the surfaces sufficiently well. When casein is employed it becomes brittle on ageing and cracks when the moisture dries out. This is true of either solubilized casein or sulphuric acid precipitated casein. The same faults occur with certain other materials. The addition of glycerine to casein is not satisfactory as it' sweats out and ceases to act as a plasticizer. The use of solubilizers for the casein such' as sodium or potassium hydroxide or borax weakens the casein.
By the present invention such materials as cottonseed, rapeseed, linseed, olive, peanut, sesame,
castor and other vegetable oils, and rosin and shellac, for example, canbe treated with soluble alkalies such as sodium, potassium and am monium so as to form compounds that can be spread out into films that are oil impervious. These compounds, which are soaps, can be dissolved in water to make concentrated solutions and the solutions can be applied to surfaces in films'thus oil-proofing the same. Paper containers may be coated, preferably on the inside, with the solution or solutions and will then hold oil indefinitely. Soaps made from liquid fats are? generally preferable to those from solid fats.
Soaps made from cottonseed oil, soya bean oil, and sulphonated olive and castor oils have been lution'should also be free from a tendency to jel-,
as this would interfere with the formation of a proper coating or film. Solutions of soaps of sulphonated oils have very little tendency to foam or jel and the addition of a small amount of alcohol to the solutions also aids in preventing foaming or jelling. I
It has also been found that mixtures of two or more such soaps not only form good oil-proof films, but are also useful as adhesives. For ex ample rosin soap and sulphonated castor oil soap make an oil-proof film that securely binds together paper laminations, and is free from odor and is inexpensive.
example, is mixedwith the soap of sulphonat-ed castor oil either with or without casein being present. Other mixtures may also be used.
An excellent oil impervious film or coating can also be formed by using casein and the sodium soap of castor oil or olive oil, as these soaps are very suitable for adding body and giving filmforming properties, and at'the same time the formed. The shellac may be solubilized by boiling the shellac in water containing borax in the proportion of grams of shellac to 283 cc. of water containing 25 grams of borax. The solution is filtered and the filtrate is added preferablyto an-equal part of a casein solution prepared by introducing 100 grams of casein into 500 cc. of water containing 10 cc, of triethanolamine. The proportions of shellac and casein solutions may be varied greatly. However, if a sulphonated vegetable oil soap in proportions from about one fourth to three fourths is added to the mixture of triethanolamine, shellac and casein a product is formed that is not a gum. This material can be flowed or spread on paper or other materials to form an oil-proof coating. Ethylene glycol may be added as'a plasticizer, but glycerine is not suitable to be added.
The following are given for illustrative purposes as specific examples of. producing compounds or The same sort of result is produced when thejsodium soap of shellac, for
compositions that are suitable for forming oil- "proof coatings or filmsthat can be ap lied to porousmaterials or other surfaces as by dipping,
the solution is applied to the surface to be coated.
Other vegetable oils may be used instead of, or
with, olive oil.
Example H.--The fatty acids from a vegetable oil, such as olive oil, for examplaare treated with a sufiicient amount of triethanolamine to saponify the fattyacids and the resulting product is dissolved in water in approximately the proportions given in Example I and the solution is applied to the surface to be oilproofed.
Example III.-Sulphonated vegetable oil, such as castor oil, for example, is treated with a sufficient amount of sodium or potassium hydroxide to produce a soluble soap and the resulting prodnot is dissolved in water and used as the oilproofing coat or film.
Example IV.--Instead of a vegetable oil, rosin may be used and saponified by means of sodium or potassium hydroxide or .triethanolamine. When using triethanolamine about 100 parts by weight of rosin is saponified with parts of triethanolamine and 300 grams of water is added. The boilingis continued for about four hours, the product is then filtered and the filtrate concentrated by evaporation until it contains about 20% of water.
Example V.Shellac is. saponified with potassium or sodium hydroxide and about 30 parts by weight of the resulting product is dissolved in 100 parts of water and the solution is used for coating purposes, or about parts by weight of triethanolamine may be used to saponify 100 parts of shellac and 300 parts of water added. The mixture is heated until it boils, is filtered and is then ready for use.
Instead of using the vegetableoils and saponifying them with the sodium or potassium hydroxide or triethanolamine the fatty acids may be extracted from the oils and saponified, or the fatty acids after extraction may be first sulphonated and then saponified. Also, mixtures of the alkali resinates or trlethanolamine resinate with saponified sulphonated vegetable oils may "be used..
Example VI.100 parts by weight of casein are dissolved in 500 parts of water containing about 2% by weightof triethanolamine and 40 parts by weight of the approximately 15% casein solution thereby formed is mixedwith 10 parts of sulphonated vegetable oil to make an oil-proof film for the inside or outside of containers or a flexible oil-proof coating for braided insulated andtsubstantia'l'ly colorless and is free from tackiness. This product is especially useful in making colored varnishes for insulated wire as pigments can be ground into the sulphonated oil and impart the desired color to the film or coating. In'this way a coating for an insulated wire can be formed that is very attractivein appearance by adding calcium carbonate and lead carbonate ground in sulphonated castor oil to triethanolamine and the casein solution to which glycerine.
may also be added if desired. The presencefof the lead carbonate makes the coatingfire resistant. Other coloring pigments can be added to differentiate between different wires to which the respective coatings are applied. The triethanolamine acts as a solubilizer to cause the casein to go into solution in water and at the same time it combines with the casein and acts as The film or coating is pale The combination of casein and triethanol amine and sulphonated oil soap is also good for oil proofing paper as a film. Also casein and sulphonated oil and glycerine is a good coating for insulated wire.
A mixture of soap of sulphonated vegetable oils and casein solubilized with triethanolamine produces a very flexible oil-proof coating for fabrics and textiles and insulated wire which is veryadherent. The coating can be colored with colors and pigments by grinding the colors or pigments in a soap, such as sulphonated castor oil, and then dissolving the soap in a water solution of casein and triethanolamine, glycerine, or ethylene glycol.
The following is given as a, specific example for a very satisfactory oil-proof film made by mixing w nolamine resinate soap is added to the above mixture the film is kept more flexible and the addition of a small amount of alcohol is advisable when it is desired to spray the solution on the surfaces to be coated.
An oil-impervious impregnating or coating material may also be formed by mixing 10 cc. of an aqueous solution containing 30% dextrine with 10 cc, of an aqueous solution containing 3.0% of sodium or potassium resinate and 10 cc. of sulphonated castor oil soap.
We claim:
1. The process of rendering paper oil-proof, which consists in applying to a surface thereof a film of a composition consisting essentially of a solution of a water soluble soap.
2. The process of rendering paper oil-proof,
which consists in applying to a surface thereof a film of a composition consisting-essentially of a solution of a water soluble soap free from bub bles.
3. The process of rendering paper containers oil proof, which consistsvin applying to a surface thereof a film of a composition consisting essentially of a solution of a water soluble soap.
4. As an article of manufacture, an oil-proof paper having as an oil-proofing material on a surface thereof a film of a composition consisting essentialiy of water soluble soap.
5. As an article of manufacture, an oil-proof paper container having as an oil proofing material on a surface thereof a film of a composition consisting essentially of water soluble soap.
BENJAMIN H. THURMAN.
ARTHUR w. THOMAS. MORRIS MATTIKOW.
US63414432 1932-09-21 1932-09-21 Process of oil-proofing material and product thereof Expired - Lifetime US2039753A (en)

Priority Applications (3)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
DENDAT623471D DE623471C (en) 1932-09-21
US63414432 US2039753A (en) 1932-09-21 1932-09-21 Process of oil-proofing material and product thereof
GB2601833A GB425986A (en) 1932-09-21 1933-09-20 Improvement in process of oil-proofing material and product therefor

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US63414432 US2039753A (en) 1932-09-21 1932-09-21 Process of oil-proofing material and product thereof

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2039753A true US2039753A (en) 1936-05-05

Family

ID=24542596

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US63414432 Expired - Lifetime US2039753A (en) 1932-09-21 1932-09-21 Process of oil-proofing material and product thereof

Country Status (3)

Country Link
US (1) US2039753A (en)
DE (1) DE623471C (en)
GB (1) GB425986A (en)

Families Citing this family (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE767084C (en) * 1936-07-11 1951-10-29 Emil Holtzmann Fa Layer paper for measuring devices
DE973808C (en) * 1950-12-08 1960-06-09 Statens Skogsind Ab Process for the production of non-porous, hard, colored fiberboard

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
GB425986A (en) 1935-03-20
DE623471C (en) 1900-01-01

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2503624A (en) Dextran base wrinkle drying compositions
US2039753A (en) Process of oil-proofing material and product thereof
US2382533A (en) Oil in water dispersions
US1936533A (en) Phosphates of alkylolamine compounds and their production
US2380043A (en) Greaseproof and water repellent paper
US2213643A (en) Coated fibrous sheet materials
US1857274A (en) Pigmented oil composition and process of inhibiting oxidation thereof
US2439377A (en) Utilization of tall oil
US2326387A (en) Drawing composition and method of making the same
US2503623A (en) Dextran base wrinkle drying compositions
US1948314A (en) Manufacture of paper utensils
US2230230A (en) Aqueous dispersions of terpene-maleic anhydride, polyhydric alcohol resins
US2246085A (en) Composition and process for softening leather, paper, and textile materials
US2205428A (en) Moistureproofing
US2563991A (en) Process for the preparation of an emulsion paint
US2063541A (en) Paint and varnish
US1956343A (en) Oilcloth
US1799949A (en) Art of stiffening
US1995219A (en) Polishing composition and process of manufacturing same
US3092601A (en) Latex coating compositions
US2156335A (en) Adhesive tape
US1737222A (en) Cleaning compound
US2357073A (en) Adhesive composition
US2450072A (en) Paint paste
US2490070A (en) Wrinkle drying composition containing dextran benzyl ether