US2243857A - Fiber articles, such as mats and the like - Google Patents

Fiber articles, such as mats and the like Download PDF

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US2243857A
US2243857A US65841A US6584136A US2243857A US 2243857 A US2243857 A US 2243857A US 65841 A US65841 A US 65841A US 6584136 A US6584136 A US 6584136A US 2243857 A US2243857 A US 2243857A
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sheet
fibrous material
clay
fibrous
compacted
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Albert C Fischer
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    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A01AGRICULTURE; FORESTRY; ANIMAL HUSBANDRY; HUNTING; TRAPPING; FISHING
    • A01GHORTICULTURE; CULTIVATION OF VEGETABLES, FLOWERS, RICE, FRUIT, VINES, HOPS OR SEAWEED; FORESTRY; WATERING
    • A01G20/00Cultivation of turf, lawn or the like; Apparatus or methods therefor
    • A01G20/20Cultivation on mats
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A01AGRICULTURE; FORESTRY; ANIMAL HUSBANDRY; HUNTING; TRAPPING; FISHING
    • A01GHORTICULTURE; CULTIVATION OF VEGETABLES, FLOWERS, RICE, FRUIT, VINES, HOPS OR SEAWEED; FORESTRY; WATERING
    • A01G24/00Growth substrates; Culture media; Apparatus or methods therefor
    • A01G24/10Growth substrates; Culture media; Apparatus or methods therefor based on or containing inorganic material
    • A01G24/12Growth substrates; Culture media; Apparatus or methods therefor based on or containing inorganic material containing soil minerals
    • A01G24/15Calcined rock, e.g. perlite, vermiculite or clay aggregates
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A01AGRICULTURE; FORESTRY; ANIMAL HUSBANDRY; HUNTING; TRAPPING; FISHING
    • A01GHORTICULTURE; CULTIVATION OF VEGETABLES, FLOWERS, RICE, FRUIT, VINES, HOPS OR SEAWEED; FORESTRY; WATERING
    • A01G24/00Growth substrates; Culture media; Apparatus or methods therefor
    • A01G24/40Growth substrates; Culture media; Apparatus or methods therefor characterised by their structure
    • A01G24/44Growth substrates; Culture media; Apparatus or methods therefor characterised by their structure in block, mat or sheet form
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B32LAYERED PRODUCTS
    • B32BLAYERED PRODUCTS, i.e. PRODUCTS BUILT-UP OF STRATA OF FLAT OR NON-FLAT, e.g. CELLULAR OR HONEYCOMB, FORM
    • B32B2305/00Condition, form or state of the layers or laminate
    • B32B2305/70Scrap or recycled material

Definitions

  • This invention relates to the utilization of waste farm products and involves the utilization of such fiber products as straw, corn stalks, cane ber, shredded fibers, of Various kinds, waste fibrous materials, or brous materials which may occur in abundance and which will be available for various manufacturing purposes.
  • the object of my invention is to manufacture and prepare this waste straw, fiber, etc. into a compacted sheet without digestion as distinguished from such process as precedes the manufacture of Wall boards and the like.
  • the object of my invention is to take the raw material
  • One of the features of the process would be to provide equipment with a device for threading these mats so that when they are released from the pressure they will be controlled more or less to the size to which they have been compacted.
  • adhesion is depended upon by the fibers to make the sheet cohesive and remain to auniform Ymay be produced by a compacting action in a compacting machine which is operated by a stroke thrust, by compacting, by extrusion and by compacting by a stroke thrust in which the compactedmaterial is traveled upon a foundation sheet.
  • the simplest form of my invention relates to a fibrous mat compacted in a manner so that the thrust arm of the compacting device pushes and interlaces the fibers in the mat being created,
  • My invention relates to treating this compacted mass either with an adhesive binding material which may be added, or with its own adhesive material self-contained, or thru a stitching means to keep the material compacted to its form while in the machine after its release from the machine.
  • One of the features of my invention is to utilize waste material on the farms and 'facilitate the spreading of fibrous materialfor mulching or other purposes.
  • Another feature of my invention consists in a compacted mat of fibrous material held together in a compacted form and utilized between a road surfacing and the sub-soil, as a protective covering over hot beds, as litter for animals or poultry, as an insulation means for crude wall and housing purposes, and also for an overlay over concrete roads as a moisture preserving means in the concrete, and the' possibilities of later use for mulching purposes.
  • This mat may also be used as an underlay on roof decks under waterproofing paper or roofing materials, and consists in its simplest form of mats ⁇ from one-quarter to two inches in thickness and ranging from 12 to 48 inches in width and in lengths from three to ten feet or longer.
  • these mats are fabricatedV from undigested fibrous material, although there is nothing to -either on a compacting machine, an extrusion machine or if preferred may be rolled where consistent.
  • These sheets are prepared by mixing fibrous material with the clay, and where it is prepared from dry materials the sheet would be prepared by compacting the straw and powdered clay in a compacting machine as previously described. In. transportation some of the clay would be lost .which was not held in position by the fibrous material, but Where the clay was used mixed with the fibrous material it could be prepared either in the compacting machine or in an extrusion press or under rolls.
  • My fibrated clay sheets are for the purpose of providing a clay layer where it is desirable to preserve moisture in upper strata in soils where there isvery little clay evident.
  • clay sheets mixed with straw may further be used as covering material by baking the clay in the straw and imparting thereto rigidity and permanency.
  • These clay sheets therefore, serve in a powdered fibrous form, in a wet clay fibrous form, in a dry compacted clay fibrous form, in a baked clay fibrous form, or in an oiled clay form, covering a very great diversified use for this type of material.
  • Another feature of my invention is to utilize muck in much the same manner with fibrous material, which more readily lends itself to mixs ture with this fibrous matter in the dry form.
  • Another featutre of my invention is to form 'a lime bearing, fibrous, compacted sheet, as shown in Fig. 2, for soils which are negligible in lime, and particularly in sandy soils where it is diflicult to hold the lime in suspension in a satisfacing the soil which is negligible in these qualities over it.
  • Another feature of my invention is to provide these compacted fibrous sheets containing fertilizer, plant food, nitrogen or hydrogen elements, in much the same manner as described above,
  • Another feature of. my invention is to provide these same fibrous sheets as linings for poultry houses. and in such case insecticides are incorporatedwith the fibrous material and compacted y into these fibrous sheets. I also prepare these sheets in various thicknesses as mulch covering sheets, both for utilization above the ground and below the ground. In such instances I may incorporate therein ⁇ various ingredients which would -be helpful to plant growth, particularly where sheets such as these were utilized around broad-leaved evergreens, which require treatment from time to time of such products as aluminum sulphate, tannic acid and other acid forming products'helpful to the soil surrounding this type material upon a base sheet and suitably fastening said fiber thereto, as shown in Fig. 5.
  • I may likewise take a base sheet of a very thin tissue paper or other types of paper, impregnating same with an adhesive glue, waterproofed or otherwise, or other colloid substances, which may cause fibrous matter which comes in contact therewith to adhere to one or both sides thereof. Or I may mix a fibrous material with some of this colloid matter and by suitable compression form a very thin sheet of the coarse, brous material by pressure rolls, which would press together a sheet as thin as als of an inch. I likewise may take digested fibrous material and press the same to the thinnest possible dimension, making a continuous sheet and drying the same for the purpose of creating an emulsion sheet or a suitable base sheet for clay deposit or other earthy materials or fertilizers, for the purpose of placing the same in the soil.
  • I may use any suitable colloid binder or I may use varnishes, resin, formaldehyde products, water-A proofed glues, ordinary glues, in either widely diffused or concentrated form, as may be required, or I may use a stitching or binding means where it is desirable. I likewise may use such binders as clay, peat and other soil binders, where desirable to incorporate certain soil with the fibrous material.
  • I therefore, provide for compacting sheets in a thicker form, in very thin layers, in a gathered form, in which ⁇ the fibers are laid in regular form, for instance, as for thatching.
  • I also provide a sheet in whichthe surfacing is placed on a base sheet fiatwise, and a sheet in which the fibrous material is compressed underheavy rolls and used as a mulching sheet.
  • Another regular alignment and. mounting said compacted form is a sheet in which the fibrous material is adhesively fastened and compressed to a very thin sheet or adhesively fastened to a base.
  • Another form is that in which the fibrous material is mixed with clay, peat, or other soil mixture for the purpose of furnishing a water preserving means, a fertilizing means and a soil treatment means.
  • I may take the fibrous material and mix it with a binder and compact it. I may take fibrous material and mix it with earthy materials in a dry state and compact it. I may also take fibrous material and mix it with earthy materials in a wet state and compact it, later drying out the moisture, or I may take fibrous material without any additions except a binder, such as, silicate of soda, vegetable glue and various colloids which might do for binding purposes.
  • a binder such as, silicate of soda, vegetable glue and various colloids which might do for binding purposes.
  • I may also take these same compacted sheets, immerse the same in an emulsion or a liquid of various types, and further compact the same in a press to effect a denser mat, or I may previously mix binding material in with the coarse, fibrous material in an undigested state, compact the same and later further press the same in a hydraulic press to obtain still more compacted sheets.
  • Another feature of my invention is to prepare a preformed sod in sheet form, which comprises a mixture of fibrous material and earthy material, the earthy material to be of a consistency which will quite readily adhere, and also to contain necessary plant foods and fertilizer for the proper development of a good sod. It may be desirable to line the bottom of this sheet with a layer of clay in order to keep the moisture in the earthy material comprising the upper layer, as shown in Fig. 3. In this sense it would also be a laminated sheet in that it would contain a moisture preserving means as well as the earthy means for the growth of the seed planted therein.
  • the laminated sheets may assume the form of a core of undigested fibrous material coated with clay and held between sheets bonded to the side or sides thereof by an adhesive binder as shown in Fig. 4.
  • the laminated fibrous sheet may have center laminations comprising a mixture of undigested fibrous material and lime with fibrous material on opposite faces of the center laminations, as shown in Fig. 5.
  • the center laminations may consist of clay without necessarily'being bound together by the undigested fibrous material.
  • Fig. 6 is shown a plurality of layers of compacted undigested fibrous material, each of which may be modified by the addition of materials for specific purposes, such as clay, lime, earthy materials, fertilizer, plant food, seeds, or insecticides.
  • This sheet may be prepared merely in the fibrated, earthy form, or it may be prepared in the fibrated, earthy form with a clay liner, or in the fibrated earthy form having seed contained therein, the purpose being to ship this prepared sod to the place Where it is to be utilized as a cover for grass and sod purposes.
  • the matted sheets of fibrous material would be constructed primarily of such material as wheat or oat straw, flax, hemp, rye, in fact any fibrous material which may prove satisfactory and which may be available.
  • the fibrous matter in its compacted state would be stitched with suitable twine or if it was preferred to use an adhesive binder, such binding material as silicate of soda, Waterproof glues, synthetic resins, and like materials may be employed by mixing the adhesive material with the fiber material either at the time of mixing or by allowing same to percolate through the sheet in a liquid form. In either case the sheet would be flexible and suitable for handling.
  • an adhesive binder such binding material as silicate of soda, Waterproof glues, synthetic resins, and like materials may be employed by mixing the adhesive material with the fiber material either at the time of mixing or by allowing same to percolate through the sheet in a liquid form. In either case the sheet would be flexible and suitable for handling.
  • the sheet is prepared with earthy material
  • fiber to the extent of fifteen or twenty per cent may be mixed with the earthy material and compacted into sheet form.
  • the compacting and stitching would be done in much the same manner as the previously described sheet.
  • clay is mixed with the fibrous material
  • thirty per cent or more may be employed in admixture with the wet plastic clay and either extruded or compacted into sheet form.
  • the sheets may also be fabricated by mixing the fibrous material with lime and then compacting same into sheet form by stitching or otherwise.
  • the fibrous material may be placed in an insecticide liquid solution, suitably dried. and compacted and fabricated into sheet form as previously described, or the dry straw sheet may be immersed in the insecticide or fertilizer solution for the purpose of coating this material with these solutions and later drying them.
  • Such insecticides as solutions prepared from tobacco stems, dusting materials, arsenate 0f lead powder, copper solution, Black Leaf, Bordeaux lime, sulphur and numerous others may be employed.
  • fertilizer solutions such materials as the usual nitrates, -potash substances, plant foods, blood and bone, bone meal, sheep manure, aluminum or ammonium potash, sulphate nitrate and numerous others.
  • Another feature of my invention is to fabricate fibrous mulching mats, either for the purpose of placing over the surface of the soil or placing within the soil for the purpose of retaining moisture and eventually as a leaf mould or fertilizing material in the soil.
  • a compacted fibrous mat comprising undigested fibrous material in substantial alignment held together by an adhesive mass dispersed throughout said fibrous material.
  • a compacted sheet comprising clay and undigested compacted brous material in substantially aligned elongate form acting as a carrier for said clay.
  • An extruded sheet comprising a substantial proportion of clay mixed with undigested fibrous material in substantially aligned elongate form acting as a carrier for said clay.
  • a preformed sheet comprising undigested fibrous material in substantially aligned elongate form and coated with clay held between sheets bonded to the side or sides thereof by an adhesive binder.
  • a preformed sheet comprising compacted undigested fibrous material in substantially elongate alignment and earthy material dispersed throughout said undigested fibrous materials.
  • a compacted sheet comprising undigested fibrous material in a compacted state ln substantially elongate alignment and agricultural line dispersed throughout said fibrous material.
  • a soil sweetener comprising undigested fibrous material in substantially elongate alignment and lime dispersed throughout said fibrous material and preformed in sheet form.
  • a preformed fibrous sheet saturated with a lime solution and dried.
  • a preformed sheet comprising undigested fibrous material in a compacted state, lime and earthy material.
  • a preformed sheet comprising undigested fibrous material in a compacted state in Substantially elongate alignment and agricultural lime in a plastic state dispersed throughout said fibrous material.
  • a preformed laminated sheet comprising undigested fibrous material, one of the lamina.- ticns containing agricultural lime.
  • a preformed laminated fibrous sheet, the center laminations comprising a. mixture of undigested fibrous material in a compacted and aligned state and lime.
  • a preformed sheet comprising a plurality of outer and inner laminations, the outer layers comprising fibrous material and the inner layers consisting of clay.
  • a preformed sod forming sheet comprising compacted undigested fibrous material, earthy material and seed material.
  • a sheet comprising undigested fibrous material, a clay base and an earthy top suitable for planting seed therein.
  • a preformed sheet comprising undigested compacted fibrous material in substantially elongate alignment and clay dispersed therethrough.
  • a flexible mat comprising undigested fibrous material mixed with clay, impacted and extruded.
  • a mat comprising undigested fibrous material mixed with clay, impacted and extruded.

Description

June 3, 1941. 4 A Q FISCHER 2,243,857
FIBER ARTICLES, SUCH AS MATS AND THE LIKE Filed Feb. 2F
Patented June 3, 1941 man ARTICLES, lSUCH As MATS AND THE LIKE Albert C. Fischer, Chicago, Ill.
Application February 26, 11936, 'Serial No. 65,841
zo claims.
This invention relates to the utilization of waste farm products and involves the utilization of such fiber products as straw, corn stalks, cane ber, shredded fibers, of Various kinds, waste fibrous materials, or brous materials which may occur in abundance and which will be available for various manufacturing purposes.
The object of my invention is to manufacture and prepare this waste straw, fiber, etc. into a compacted sheet without digestion as distinguished from such process as precedes the manufacture of Wall boards and the like. The object of my invention is to take the raw material,
place it in a compacting machine, either alone or together with other materials, and form Various articles of manufacture. The purpose is to utilize a compacting machine somewhat on the order of a mechanical hay baler. The present process, however, involves a machine which will manufacture sheets one quarter of an inch to one inch or more in thickness, by no means approximating the dimensions of a bale of hay or a bale of shavings. The sheets are preferably made up to 48 inches in width and to the thickness enumerated. The sheets are formed by placing into a receptacle the necessary ber and continuously impacting it between spaced walls and thru the impacting device interlacing or intertwining the bers so as to make a cohesive, interlaced mat. An apparatus for producing a sheet mat of the type described above is fully disclosed in my copending application Serial No. 80,465, led May 18, 1936, entitled Compacting apparatus and method.
One of the features of the process would be to provide equipment with a device for threading these mats so that when they are released from the pressure they will be controlled more or less to the size to which they have been compacted. Where adhesion is depended upon by the fibers to make the sheet cohesive and remain to auniform Ymay be produced by a compacting action in a compacting machine which is operated by a stroke thrust, by compacting, by extrusion and by compacting by a stroke thrust in which the compactedmaterial is traveled upon a foundation sheet. The simplest form of my invention relates to a fibrous mat compacted in a manner so that the thrust arm of the compacting device pushes and interlaces the fibers in the mat being created,
and by forcing fibrous material thru a conned area which causes it to compact and depend upon the thrust for forward travel.
My invention relates to treating this compacted mass either with an adhesive binding material which may be added, or with its own adhesive material self-contained, or thru a stitching means to keep the material compacted to its form while in the machine after its release from the machine.
One of the features of my invention is to utilize waste material on the farms and 'facilitate the spreading of fibrous materialfor mulching or other purposes.
Another feature of my invention consists in a compacted mat of fibrous material held together in a compacted form and utilized between a road surfacing and the sub-soil, as a protective covering over hot beds, as litter for animals or poultry, as an insulation means for crude wall and housing purposes, and also for an overlay over concrete roads as a moisture preserving means in the concrete, and the' possibilities of later use for mulching purposes. This mat may also be used as an underlay on roof decks under waterproofing paper or roofing materials, and consists in its simplest form of mats `from one-quarter to two inches in thickness and ranging from 12 to 48 inches in width and in lengths from three to ten feet or longer. Where utilized for this purpose these mats are fabricatedV from undigested fibrous material, although there is nothing to -either on a compacting machine, an extrusion machine or if preferred may be rolled where consistent. These sheets are prepared by mixing fibrous material with the clay, and where it is prepared from dry materials the sheet would be prepared by compacting the straw and powdered clay in a compacting machine as previously described. In. transportation some of the clay would be lost .which was not held in position by the fibrous material, but Where the clay was used mixed with the fibrous material it could be prepared either in the compacting machine or in an extrusion press or under rolls. My fibrated clay sheets are for the purpose of providing a clay layer where it is desirable to preserve moisture in upper strata in soils where there isvery little clay evident. These may be-in the wet or dry state, or in powdered clay form, and these clay sheets mixed with straw may further be used as covering material by baking the clay in the straw and imparting thereto rigidity and permanency. These clay sheets, therefore, serve in a powdered fibrous form, in a wet clay fibrous form, in a dry compacted clay fibrous form, in a baked clay fibrous form, or in an oiled clay form, covering a very great diversified use for this type of material.
Another feature of my invention is to utilize muck in much the same manner with fibrous material, which more readily lends itself to mixs ture with this fibrous matter in the dry form.
When mixed in the wet form with fibrous material and later dried or baked I would be providing an acid condition in the soil and likewise would be providing a moisture retarding means in the soil, at the same time forming a mulching or peat bearing layer, which may be readily utilized in soils where plants desiring this foundation may be accommodated.
Another featutre of my invention is to form 'a lime bearing, fibrous, compacted sheet, as shown in Fig. 2, for soils which are negligible in lime, and particularly in sandy soils where it is diflicult to hold the lime in suspension in a satisfacing the soil which is negligible in these qualities over it.
Another feature of my invention is to provide these compacted fibrous sheets containing fertilizer, plant food, nitrogen or hydrogen elements, in much the same manner as described above,
and utilize them for agricultural purposes, as
shown in Fig. 2.
Another feature of. my invention is to provide these same fibrous sheets as linings for poultry houses. and in such case insecticides are incorporatedwith the fibrous material and compacted y into these fibrous sheets. I also prepare these sheets in various thicknesses as mulch covering sheets, both for utilization above the ground and below the ground. In such instances I may incorporate therein `various ingredients which would -be helpful to plant growth, particularly where sheets such as these were utilized around broad-leaved evergreens, which require treatment from time to time of such products as aluminum sulphate, tannic acid and other acid forming products'helpful to the soil surrounding this type material upon a base sheet and suitably fastening said fiber thereto, as shown in Fig. 5.
I may likewise take a base sheet of a very thin tissue paper or other types of paper, impregnating same with an adhesive glue, waterproofed or otherwise, or other colloid substances, which may cause fibrous matter which comes in contact therewith to adhere to one or both sides thereof. Or I may mix a fibrous material with some of this colloid matter and by suitable compression form a very thin sheet of the coarse, brous material by pressure rolls, which would press together a sheet as thin as als of an inch. I likewise may take digested fibrous material and press the same to the thinnest possible dimension, making a continuous sheet and drying the same for the purpose of creating an emulsion sheet or a suitable base sheet for clay deposit or other earthy materials or fertilizers, for the purpose of placing the same in the soil.
In preparing these materials for manufacture I prefer to use them in their natural dry state, but where compacted they may be utilized in a wet state and may previously have gone thru a digesting process, such as is customary with insulating fibers and paper bers. In either case the material would be compacted but in one case it would be dried by a heating process after being compacted. On the thicker sheets the preferred form is a compacting process rather than a rolling process. On extremely thin sheets where mulching materials and depository linings or fertilizers and soils are to be considered I may squeeze this material 4between heavy rolls in order to reduce it to lthe thinnest possible dimension. Where the fibrous material is undigested I may use any suitable colloid binder or I may use varnishes, resin, formaldehyde products, water-A proofed glues, ordinary glues, in either widely diffused or concentrated form, as may be required, or I may use a stitching or binding means where it is desirable. I likewise may use such binders as clay, peat and other soil binders, where desirable to incorporate certain soil with the fibrous material.
Where rolls are utilized there, of course, would be no compacting machine employed. This material before compacting may be mixed in suitable mixers. Where the fiber and soil elements are to be in intimate contact the material may be suitably compacted thru an extrusion machine, or where it is desired to have a consistency which permits such operation, or the soil elements may be placed upon the already compacted sheet in the shape of an emulsion or a plastic mass spread over the surface of one or both sides, the purpose being to provide a matted material which could be readily placed under diflcult soil conditions and preserve moisture and at the same time furnish a fertilizer in the soil, or where the material is to be used in thin sheets for mulching purposes the soils conditioner may be placed oyer flbrous material as a thin veneer or wash. AThis would be for application to the surface of the soil rather than being imbedded in the soil.
I, therefore, provide for compacting sheets in a thicker form, in very thin layers, in a gathered form, in which` the fibers are laid in regular form, for instance, as for thatching. I also provide a sheet in whichthe surfacing is placed on a base sheet fiatwise, and a sheet in which the fibrous material is compressed underheavy rolls and used as a mulching sheet. .Another regular alignment and. mounting said compacted form is a sheet in which the fibrous material is adhesively fastened and compressed to a very thin sheet or adhesively fastened to a base. Another form is that in which the fibrous material is mixed with clay, peat, or other soil mixture for the purpose of furnishing a water preserving means, a fertilizing means and a soil treatment means.
It is readily understood that I may use waterproofing means to effect waterproofing conditions in the various sheets and likewise I may use reproongmaterials to effect fireproofing qualities in the fibrous material.
It can be readily understood that I may take the fibrous material and mix it with a binder and compact it. I may take fibrous material and mix it with earthy materials in a dry state and compact it. I may also take fibrous material and mix it with earthy materials in a wet state and compact it, later drying out the moisture, or I may take fibrous material without any additions except a binder, such as, silicate of soda, vegetable glue and various colloids which might do for binding purposes. Where wet clays, peat or other soils are used in conjunction with the fibrous material I may extrude these sheets rather than compact them thru an extrusion press or suitable brick making machine, in which the die would be adapted for extruding wide or narrow sheets, the purpose being to facilitate the use of various soils in places where sandy soils are predominant and furnish clay from nearby clay beds for the benefit of those requiring clay strata to preserve moisture in the soil.
I may also take these same compacted sheets, immerse the same in an emulsion or a liquid of various types, and further compact the same in a press to effect a denser mat, or I may previously mix binding material in with the coarse, fibrous material in an undigested state, compact the same and later further press the same in a hydraulic press to obtain still more compacted sheets.
In fabricating this product I do not Wish to be limited to undigested fibrous material but I may use digested material and use the natural adhesive which is formed from `the digestion process as a binding material for the fibrous material, but insofar as compacting and sheet forming is concerned it would be prepared in the same manner.
Another feature of my invention is to prepare a preformed sod in sheet form, which comprises a mixture of fibrous material and earthy material, the earthy material to be of a consistency which will quite readily adhere, and also to contain necessary plant foods and fertilizer for the proper development of a good sod. It may be desirable to line the bottom of this sheet with a layer of clay in order to keep the moisture in the earthy material comprising the upper layer, as shown in Fig. 3. In this sense it would also be a laminated sheet in that it would contain a moisture preserving means as well as the earthy means for the growth of the seed planted therein. The laminated sheets may assume the form of a core of undigested fibrous material coated with clay and held between sheets bonded to the side or sides thereof by an adhesive binder as shown in Fig. 4. Furthermore, the laminated fibrous sheet may have center laminations comprising a mixture of undigested fibrous material and lime with fibrous material on opposite faces of the center laminations, as shown in Fig. 5. If desired, the center laminations may consist of clay without necessarily'being bound together by the undigested fibrous material. In Fig. 6 is shown a plurality of layers of compacted undigested fibrous material, each of which may be modified by the addition of materials for specific purposes, such as clay, lime, earthy materials, fertilizer, plant food, seeds, or insecticides.
This sheet may be prepared merely in the fibrated, earthy form, or it may be prepared in the fibrated, earthy form with a clay liner, or in the fibrated earthy form having seed contained therein, the purpose being to ship this prepared sod to the place Where it is to be utilized as a cover for grass and sod purposes.
In the manufacture of thesheets herein described, the matted sheets of fibrous material would be constructed primarily of such material as wheat or oat straw, flax, hemp, rye, in fact any fibrous material which may prove satisfactory and which may be available.
The fibrous matter in its compacted state would be stitched with suitable twine or if it was preferred to use an adhesive binder, such binding material as silicate of soda, Waterproof glues, synthetic resins, and like materials may be employed by mixing the adhesive material with the fiber material either at the time of mixing or by allowing same to percolate through the sheet in a liquid form. In either case the sheet would be flexible and suitable for handling.
Where the sheet is prepared with earthy material, fiber to the extent of fifteen or twenty per cent may be mixed with the earthy material and compacted into sheet form. Where it is desirous to use a fibrous material with a very slight admixture of earthy material, the compacting and stitching would be done in much the same manner as the previously described sheet.
Where clay is mixed with the fibrous material, thirty per cent or more may be employed in admixture with the wet plastic clay and either extruded or compacted into sheet form. The sheets may also be fabricated by mixing the fibrous material with lime and then compacting same into sheet form by stitching or otherwise.
Likewise, the fibrous material may be placed in an insecticide liquid solution, suitably dried. and compacted and fabricated into sheet form as previously described, or the dry straw sheet may be immersed in the insecticide or fertilizer solution for the purpose of coating this material with these solutions and later drying them.
Such insecticides as solutions prepared from tobacco stems, dusting materials, arsenate 0f lead powder, copper solution, Black Leaf, Bordeaux lime, sulphur and numerous others may be employed. Where fertilizer solutions are used, such materials as the usual nitrates, -potash substances, plant foods, blood and bone, bone meal, sheep manure, aluminum or ammonium potash, sulphate nitrate and numerous others.
The exact proportions for the manufacture of these sheets will depend a great deal upon the distance they must be shipped and how they must be transported. Also various mats for different localities will be furnished from various earthy substances peculiar to the locality, and, therefore, ingredients will have to be examined and such properties added as will bring them up to the highest efficiency. This can readily be ascertained by the proper tests and such fertilizer and plant foods added as to bring the fibrated sheet up to its proper strength and eectiveness.
Another feature of my invention is to fabricate fibrous mulching mats, either for the purpose of placing over the surface of the soil or placing within the soil for the purpose of retaining moisture and eventually as a leaf mould or fertilizing material in the soil.
I do not Wish to be limited in the type of fiber or in the finished surface material which may be produced in this manner. Any of the vegetable, grain or plant fibers may be utilized in whole or in part, shredded or in full, preferably in an undigested state. Y
I do not wish my invention to be limited to undigested brous material when digested brous material may give as'good results, although the raw fibrous material will make a coarser and more economical product than digested vegetable matter, which would be broken down more or less thru the digesting process.
Various modifications of fibrous matted material rather than limitations to specific kinds are intended and I, therefore, do not wish to be limited to any particular type of fibrous material. My invention primarily consists of the compacting, binding together and preservation in sheet form of brous products, further in surfacing these products and incorporating therewith earthy materials and preparing thatchlike surfaces welded with long straw ber, palmetto strands, or other suitable tough brous material suitable for this purpose.
The machine with which this fibrous material is to be compacted is fully described in a separate application for Letters Patent, Serial No. 69,814, led March 20, 1936, now Patent 2,200,269.
Having thus described my invention what I claim is:
l. A compacted fibrous mat comprising undigested fibrous material in substantial alignment held together by an adhesive mass dispersed throughout said fibrous material.
2. A compacted sheet comprising clay and undigested compacted brous material in substantially aligned elongate form acting as a carrier for said clay.
3. An extruded sheet comprising a substantial proportion of clay mixed with undigested fibrous material in substantially aligned elongate form acting as a carrier for said clay.
4. A preformed sheet comprising undigested fibrous material in substantially aligned elongate form and coated with clay held between sheets bonded to the side or sides thereof by an adhesive binder.
5. A preformed sheet comprising compacted undigested fibrous material in substantially elongate alignment and earthy material dispersed throughout said undigested fibrous materials.
6. A compacted sheet comprising undigested fibrous material in a compacted state ln substantially elongate alignment and agricultural line dispersed throughout said fibrous material.
7. A soil sweetener comprising undigested fibrous material in substantially elongate alignment and lime dispersed throughout said fibrous material and preformed in sheet form.
8. A compacted fibrous sheet saturated with a lime'solution and dried.
9. A preformed fibrous sheet saturated with a lime solution and dried.
l0. A preformed sheet comprising undigested fibrous material in a compacted state, lime and earthy material.
ll. A preformed sheet comprising undigested fibrous material in a compacted state in Substantially elongate alignment and agricultural lime in a plastic state dispersed throughout said fibrous material.
l2. A preformed laminated sheet comprising undigested fibrous material, one of the lamina.- ticns containing agricultural lime.
13. A preformed laminated fibrous sheet, the center laminations comprising a. mixture of undigested fibrous material in a compacted and aligned state and lime.
14. A preformed sheet comprising a plurality of outer and inner laminations, the outer layers comprising fibrous material and the inner layers consisting of clay.
l5. A preformed sod forming sheet comprising compacted undigested fibrous material, earthy material and seed material.
16. A sheet comprising undigested fibrous material, a clay base and an earthy top suitable for planting seed therein.
17. A preformed sheet comprising undigested compacted fibrous material in substantially elongate alignment and clay dispersed therethrough.
18. A flexible mat comprising undigested fibrous material mixed with clay, impacted and extruded.
19. A mat comprising undigested fibrous material mixed with clay, impacted and extruded.
20. A mat formed mainly of undigested fibrous material in layers having their edges exposed on the sides of the sheet impacted together in a direction in the plane of the sheet and secured approximately in this impacted position.
' ALBERT C. FISCHER.
CERTIFICATE OF CORRECTION. Patent No. 21,2Li5,857. June 5,- 19M.
ALBERT C. FISCHER.
It 'is hereby certified that error appears in the printed specification of the above numbered patent requiring correction as follows: Page )4., second column, line 6, claim 6, for the word "line" read --1ime; and that the said Letters Patent should be read with this correction therein that the same may conform to the record of the case in the Patent Office.
signed and Sealed this 21mm day of June, A. D. 19in.
l l Henry'v'an Arzidale,I (Seal) 4 ActingCommissioner of Patents.
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Cited By (32)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2542555A (en) * 1948-03-18 1951-02-20 Urban A Moores Seed germinating and planting apparatus
US2601620A (en) * 1947-07-28 1952-06-24 Preston F Marshall Method and apparatus for preparing grass seed for planting
US2605589A (en) * 1950-11-14 1952-08-05 Alfred E E Kuestner Sod unit
US2648165A (en) * 1945-06-04 1953-08-11 Minnesota Mining & Mfg Seed carrier
US2789399A (en) * 1955-01-03 1957-04-23 Charles O Finn Method and means for protecting soil slopes, water runs, gulches, ditches and the like by seeding and covering
US2909003A (en) * 1955-11-30 1959-10-20 Kendall & Co Grass seed mat and process for making same
US2923093A (en) * 1958-04-11 1960-02-02 Troy Blanket Mills Seed planting mat
US3583099A (en) * 1969-02-06 1971-06-08 Engelhard Min & Chem Tile for germinating seed and manufacture thereof
US3719545A (en) * 1971-03-15 1973-03-06 Carborundum Co Reinforced laminated material
US3900963A (en) * 1972-09-12 1975-08-26 Pre Germ Seeding Corp Method and means of pregerminating grass seeds
US3914901A (en) * 1974-11-25 1975-10-28 Muldner Lawrence Carl Mat for growing lawns or other vegetation and process for producing same
US4062145A (en) * 1975-08-04 1977-12-13 Terra-Tex Corporation Mulch carpet and method for making same
US4219600A (en) * 1979-01-08 1980-08-26 Chicopee Moisturizing mat and process for making the same
US4272919A (en) * 1978-07-28 1981-06-16 Schmidt Evald G Seed carrier and method of producing same
US4369054A (en) * 1978-02-17 1983-01-18 Shinholster Jr Leavie J Fiber/slag composition
US4580960A (en) * 1983-10-04 1986-04-08 Feber Search Partnership Apparatus for making laminated lignocellulose fiber mats
US4949503A (en) * 1987-01-27 1990-08-21 Rockwool Lapinus B.V. Porous product for cultivation plants and a method for manufacturing same
US4972627A (en) * 1987-12-19 1990-11-27 Bussan G. & A. Co., Ltd. Sheet material for use in cultivating plants
US5009031A (en) * 1987-01-27 1991-04-23 Rockwool Lapinus B.V. Grow-mat for cultivating plants and a method for manufacturing same
US5235781A (en) * 1990-12-17 1993-08-17 Holley Carl A Paper briquettes containing seed and fertilizer
US5819688A (en) * 1997-04-21 1998-10-13 Walker; Robert T. Pet animal odor adsorbing and liquid absorbing mat
EP1212934A2 (en) * 2000-12-11 2002-06-12 Brunel University Turf laying system
US6739089B1 (en) * 1996-11-21 2004-05-25 Wolfgang Behrens Vegetation element
US20040202851A1 (en) * 2003-04-08 2004-10-14 Goodrum Richard A. Turf reinforcement mat composite including support mat core and attached fiber matrix
US20050060933A1 (en) * 2003-08-22 2005-03-24 Henson David Lee Horticultural container lining for enhancing contained soil's water absorption
WO2005084422A1 (en) * 2004-03-02 2005-09-15 Jackson Paper Manufacturing Company Absorbent material for animal bedding
US20140259909A1 (en) * 2011-10-29 2014-09-18 Synbra Technology B.V. Growth substrate for plants
US8844194B1 (en) * 2013-03-15 2014-09-30 Furbish Company, Llc Vegetative roofing systems
US8997399B2 (en) 2013-02-19 2015-04-07 Furbish Company, Llc Vegetative roofing systems
US20180279608A1 (en) * 2015-11-30 2018-10-04 Alonim Breeders Farm Ltd. System for prevention of infectious disease
WO2019158632A1 (en) * 2018-02-15 2019-08-22 Dietmar Schulz Method and device for producing pressed formats from renewable raw materials
US20220174894A1 (en) * 2018-12-21 2022-06-09 Green's Green Co., Ltd. Vegetation sheet

Cited By (36)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2648165A (en) * 1945-06-04 1953-08-11 Minnesota Mining & Mfg Seed carrier
US2601620A (en) * 1947-07-28 1952-06-24 Preston F Marshall Method and apparatus for preparing grass seed for planting
US2542555A (en) * 1948-03-18 1951-02-20 Urban A Moores Seed germinating and planting apparatus
US2605589A (en) * 1950-11-14 1952-08-05 Alfred E E Kuestner Sod unit
US2789399A (en) * 1955-01-03 1957-04-23 Charles O Finn Method and means for protecting soil slopes, water runs, gulches, ditches and the like by seeding and covering
US2909003A (en) * 1955-11-30 1959-10-20 Kendall & Co Grass seed mat and process for making same
US2923093A (en) * 1958-04-11 1960-02-02 Troy Blanket Mills Seed planting mat
US3583099A (en) * 1969-02-06 1971-06-08 Engelhard Min & Chem Tile for germinating seed and manufacture thereof
US3719545A (en) * 1971-03-15 1973-03-06 Carborundum Co Reinforced laminated material
US3900963A (en) * 1972-09-12 1975-08-26 Pre Germ Seeding Corp Method and means of pregerminating grass seeds
US3914901A (en) * 1974-11-25 1975-10-28 Muldner Lawrence Carl Mat for growing lawns or other vegetation and process for producing same
US4062145A (en) * 1975-08-04 1977-12-13 Terra-Tex Corporation Mulch carpet and method for making same
US4369054A (en) * 1978-02-17 1983-01-18 Shinholster Jr Leavie J Fiber/slag composition
US4272919A (en) * 1978-07-28 1981-06-16 Schmidt Evald G Seed carrier and method of producing same
US4219600A (en) * 1979-01-08 1980-08-26 Chicopee Moisturizing mat and process for making the same
US4580960A (en) * 1983-10-04 1986-04-08 Feber Search Partnership Apparatus for making laminated lignocellulose fiber mats
US5009031A (en) * 1987-01-27 1991-04-23 Rockwool Lapinus B.V. Grow-mat for cultivating plants and a method for manufacturing same
US4949503A (en) * 1987-01-27 1990-08-21 Rockwool Lapinus B.V. Porous product for cultivation plants and a method for manufacturing same
US4972627A (en) * 1987-12-19 1990-11-27 Bussan G. & A. Co., Ltd. Sheet material for use in cultivating plants
US5235781A (en) * 1990-12-17 1993-08-17 Holley Carl A Paper briquettes containing seed and fertilizer
US6739089B1 (en) * 1996-11-21 2004-05-25 Wolfgang Behrens Vegetation element
US5819688A (en) * 1997-04-21 1998-10-13 Walker; Robert T. Pet animal odor adsorbing and liquid absorbing mat
EP1212934A2 (en) * 2000-12-11 2002-06-12 Brunel University Turf laying system
EP1212934A3 (en) * 2000-12-11 2004-01-02 Brunel University Turf laying system
US20040202851A1 (en) * 2003-04-08 2004-10-14 Goodrum Richard A. Turf reinforcement mat composite including support mat core and attached fiber matrix
US20050060933A1 (en) * 2003-08-22 2005-03-24 Henson David Lee Horticultural container lining for enhancing contained soil's water absorption
US20100251611A1 (en) * 2003-08-22 2010-10-07 Think Mint Incorporated Horticultural container lining for enhancing contained soil's water absorption
WO2005084422A1 (en) * 2004-03-02 2005-09-15 Jackson Paper Manufacturing Company Absorbent material for animal bedding
US20140259909A1 (en) * 2011-10-29 2014-09-18 Synbra Technology B.V. Growth substrate for plants
US9521814B2 (en) * 2011-10-29 2016-12-20 Synbra Technology B.V. Growth substrate for plants
US8997399B2 (en) 2013-02-19 2015-04-07 Furbish Company, Llc Vegetative roofing systems
US8844194B1 (en) * 2013-03-15 2014-09-30 Furbish Company, Llc Vegetative roofing systems
US20180279608A1 (en) * 2015-11-30 2018-10-04 Alonim Breeders Farm Ltd. System for prevention of infectious disease
WO2019158632A1 (en) * 2018-02-15 2019-08-22 Dietmar Schulz Method and device for producing pressed formats from renewable raw materials
CN111726982A (en) * 2018-02-15 2020-09-29 迪特玛·舒尔茨 Method and apparatus for producing pressed shapes from renewable raw materials
US20220174894A1 (en) * 2018-12-21 2022-06-09 Green's Green Co., Ltd. Vegetation sheet

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