US2300254A - Yarn production - Google Patents
Yarn production Download PDFInfo
- Publication number
- US2300254A US2300254A US307596A US30759639A US2300254A US 2300254 A US2300254 A US 2300254A US 307596 A US307596 A US 307596A US 30759639 A US30759639 A US 30759639A US 2300254 A US2300254 A US 2300254A
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- US
- United States
- Prior art keywords
- cake
- yarn
- bucket
- treatment
- cakes
- 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
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- D—TEXTILES; PAPER
- D01—NATURAL OR MAN-MADE THREADS OR FIBRES; SPINNING
- D01D—MECHANICAL METHODS OR APPARATUS IN THE MANUFACTURE OF ARTIFICIAL FILAMENTS, THREADS, FIBRES, BRISTLES OR RIBBONS
- D01D10/00—Physical treatment of artificial filaments or the like during manufacture, i.e. during a continuous production process before the filaments have been collected
- D01D10/04—Supporting filaments or the like during their treatment
- D01D10/0418—Supporting filaments or the like during their treatment as cakes or similar coreless thread packages
Definitions
- This invention relates to an improved method and apparatus for centrifugally forcing purification liquids, and other treatment liquids, through coreless yarn packages which shrink as a result of such treatment. More particularly, it relates to such treatment of coreless yarn packages which have anexternal conical taper, such as bucket cakes of regenerated cellulose yarn produced by the viscose bucket spinning process.
- the fact that the outer edge of the cake I is no longer jrigidly supported by the. bucket wall may cause the structure of the cake to be so damaged that the subsequent unwinding of the yarn from the cake is made difiicult, if not impossible. Also, the fact that the assembly is thus thrown out of balance, places an eccentric overload on the driving mechanism of the bucket and thus causes an undue strain on these parts.
- reference numeral I generally designates a bucket for use in centrifugally forcing a liquid through the walls of a bucket cake or similar externally tapered annular yarn cake.
- the circular side wall 2 of the bucket is constructed with an internal surface having an outwardly flared conical taper approximately the same as the external conical taper of the cake.
- the wall is sufliciently long that a cake of :yarn 3 being treated therein will be supported solely from the external periphery of the cake throughout the whole treatment cycle, regardless of the shrinkage of the cake.
- the internal diameter of the bucket I at the upper portion thereof is substantially the same as that oi an untreated yarn cake.
- the yarn cake 3 shown in solid lines designates the position of the cake in the bucket at the beginning of the liquid treatment.
- the dotted line representation of the cake in the drawing designates the approximate position of the cake at the end .of the liquid treatment, after the cake has been shrunk and slid down in the bucket.
- the bucket I is provided with numerous openings in the side wall thereof to provide for ade quate drainage of the liquid from the bucket.
- the liquid is sprayed against the internal periphery of the cake 3 by means of a conduit 5 having a pluralityof openings 6.
- the cake 3 is preferably covered with a fabric 1 to prevent entanglement of the yarn or yarn filaments.
- the essential feature of the present invention is the use of a liquid treating bucket which has external taper of a yarn cake and which is sufiiciently deep that a yarn-cake, regardless of shrinkage during treatment, will be supported by its external periphery throughout the liquid treatmentt thereof.
- a liquid treating bucket which has external taper of a yarn cake and which is sufiiciently deep that a yarn-cake, regardless of shrinkage during treatment, will be supported by its external periphery throughout the liquid treatmentt thereof.
- the latter may be provided with internal grooves for drainage as disclosed in Patent No. 2,098,633 granted to Ovid S. Petrescu or with a top drainage construction as disclosed in Patent No. 2,073,840 granted to Paul E. Harrison.
- the liquid may be applied to the internal peripheral surface of the cake in any desired manner.
- the yarn cake may be wrapped with a fabric, or the cake may be positioned within a knitted tubing and the ends of the tubing positioned in overlapping relationship on the inside of the cake as illustrated.
- the bucket may be made of any suitable madepending upon the size and taper of the package to be treated. If the taper of the bucket is only 1 or 2, it will be necessary to have the bucket very much deeper than if the taper were quite large, for instance, 5 or 6, because when the taper of the bucket is smali, the cake will slide down therein much farther than when the taper is relatively large.
- the bucket may be operated at any speed at which suflicient centrifugal force is developed to force the purifying fluid through the cake of yarn.
- the preferred speed is about 4,000 revolutions per minute but satisfactory results have been obtained at speeds throughout the range of 1,800 to 8,000 revolutions per minute.
- This invention provides a means whereby cakes of yarn spun by the bucket process or formed by any other process that will yield a coreless, tapered annular cake of yarn may be well and uniformly treated by a centrifugal purification process which has a short cycle and which efficiently uses the treating fluid.
- This use of a short cycle is not only economical but also has the advantage of allowing the yarn cake but little opportunity to filter impurities from the treating fluid and thus become stained and discolored.
- This invention also provides a means of allowing for the shrinkage of a yarn cake during the purification process and thus permits the side wall contact of the cake in the bucket to be accurately controlled at alltimes during the treating operation.
- This control of the side wall contact of the cake not only prevents the bucket assembly from being thrown out of balance with a resultant undue wear on the equipment involved, but also prevents the mechanical degradation of the yarn in the cake since the original shape of the cake is maintained throughout the purification operation.
- the invention also makes possible the production of a centrifugaliy purified yarn cake which is of good mechanical structure and which can be efficiently unwound to produce a high quality yarn.
- the invention further provides a means whereby the excessive handling of such coreless, annular packages of yarn during the purification operation may be avoided, since the yarn cake may be satisfactorily treated in succession with all of the various necessary purifying fluids while still positioned in the one bucket, it only being necessary that the bucket be made of a material that will resist the action of the fluids used.
- a process for the. centrifugal forcing of j 4 treatment liquids through tapered, annular yarn cakes which comprises the steps of covering said yarn cake with a fabric, rotating said covered yarn cake at a sufliciently high speed to force the treatment liquid outwardly through the side wall thereof, passing a quantity of treatment liquid against the intemal periphery of said cake, and supporting said cake during the entire centrifuging treatment solely from .the external periphery thereof.
- a process for the centrifugal forcing of treatment liquids through tapered, annular yam cakes which comprises the steps of rotating said yarn cake at a sufliciently high speed to force the treatment liquid outwardly through the side wall thereof, passing a quantity of treatment liquid which has a shrinking action on said cake against the internal periphery of the latter, and supporting said cake during the entire centrifuging treatment solely from the external periphery thereof.
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- Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
- Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
- Textile Engineering (AREA)
- Centrifugal Separators (AREA)
Description
Oct. 27. 1942. JACKSON YARN PRODUCTION Filed Dec. 5, 1939 INVENTOR BY M aTORNEY Zerag g1 Jaa/wm Patented Oct. 21, 1942 YARN PRODUCTION Leroy G. Jackson, Kenmore, N. Y., assignor to E. I. du Pont de Nemours & Company, Wilmington, Del., a corporation of Delaware Application December 5, 1939, Serial No. 307,596
3 Qlaims.
This invention relates to an improved method and apparatus for centrifugally forcing purification liquids, and other treatment liquids, through coreless yarn packages which shrink as a result of such treatment. More particularly, it relates to such treatment of coreless yarn packages which have anexternal conical taper, such as bucket cakes of regenerated cellulose yarn produced by the viscose bucket spinning process.
It has been proposed, heretofore, to purify, wash and otherwise treat yarn cakes by centrifugally forcing liquids through suchcakes. Heretofore, however, yarn cakes treated in this manner were positioned in centrifuging buckets with the cake resting on the bottom of the bucket or on some supporting means fixed in the bucket and bearing against at least some 'portibn of the bottomsurface of the cake. such previously. known centrifuging buckets is objectionable, in that the cake is supported there- When placed in a bucket fOr treatment, the
cake shrinks away from contact with the bucket wall. This tends to throw the entire assembly out of balance with a resulting adverse effect on both the uniformity and the rate of purification.
Further, the fact that the outer edge of the cake I is no longer jrigidly supported by the. bucket wall may cause the structure of the cake to be so damaged that the subsequent unwinding of the yarn from the cake is made difiicult, if not impossible. Also, the fact that the assembly is thus thrown out of balance, places an eccentric overload on the driving mechanism of the bucket and thus causes an undue strain on these parts.
It is, therefore, an object of this invention to .provide an improved process and apparatus for the centrifugal forcing of liquids through bucket cakes and similar coreless yarn cakes having conically tapered external side walls.
It is a further object of this invention to cene I trifugally force treatment liquids through bucket cakes and the like, which are subject to shrinkage during such treatment, and supporting the cakes solely from their external peripheryduring the entire treatment operation.
The use of v Other objects of the invention will appear hereinafter.
The details of the invention will be more clearlyapparent by reference to the following detailed description when taken in connection with the accompanying illustration which shows in vertical cross-section, one constructional form of yarn cake treating bucket suitable for use in accordance with the present invention.
Referring to the illustration, reference numeral I generally designates a bucket for use in centrifugally forcing a liquid through the walls of a bucket cake or similar externally tapered annular yarn cake. The circular side wall 2 of the bucket is constructed with an internal surface having an outwardly flared conical taper approximately the same as the external conical taper of the cake. The wall is sufliciently long that a cake of :yarn 3 being treated therein will be supported solely from the external periphery of the cake throughout the whole treatment cycle, regardless of the shrinkage of the cake. The internal diameter of the bucket I at the upper portion thereof is substantially the same as that oi an untreated yarn cake. I
In the illustration the yarn cake 3 shown in solid lines designates the position of the cake in the bucket at the beginning of the liquid treatment. The dotted line representation of the cake in the drawing designates the approximate position of the cake at the end .of the liquid treatment, after the cake has been shrunk and slid down in the bucket.
The bucket I is provided with numerous openings in the side wall thereof to provide for ade quate drainage of the liquid from the bucket. The liquid is sprayed against the internal periphery of the cake 3 by means of a conduit 5 having a pluralityof openings 6. The cake 3 is preferably covered with a fabric 1 to prevent entanglement of the yarn or yarn filaments.
The essential feature of the present invention is the use of a liquid treating bucket which has external taper of a yarn cake and which is sufiiciently deep that a yarn-cake, regardless of shrinkage during treatment, will be supported by its external periphery throughout the liquid treatmentt thereof. Instead ofside drainage openings in the side walls of the bucket, the latter may be provided with internal grooves for drainage as disclosed in Patent No. 2,098,633 granted to Ovid S. Petrescu or with a top drainage construction as disclosed in Patent No. 2,073,840 granted to Paul E. Harrison. The liquid may be applied to the internal peripheral surface of the cake in any desired manner.
The yarn cake may be wrapped with a fabric, or the cake may be positioned within a knitted tubing and the ends of the tubing positioned in overlapping relationship on the inside of the cake as illustrated.
The bucket may be made of any suitable madepending upon the size and taper of the package to be treated. If the taper of the bucket is only 1 or 2, it will be necessary to have the bucket very much deeper than if the taper were quite large, for instance, 5 or 6, because when the taper of the bucket is smali, the cake will slide down therein much farther than when the taper is relatively large.
The bucket may be operated at any speed at which suflicient centrifugal force is developed to force the purifying fluid through the cake of yarn. The preferred speed is about 4,000 revolutions per minute but satisfactory results have been obtained at speeds throughout the range of 1,800 to 8,000 revolutions per minute.
While this invention has been described in terms of cakes of yarn spun by the bucket process, it is not so limited, but maybe advantageously used in the centrifugal purification of any coreless tapered annular cake of yarn that shrinks during liquid processing.
This invention provides a means whereby cakes of yarn spun by the bucket process or formed by any other process that will yield a coreless, tapered annular cake of yarn may be well and uniformly treated by a centrifugal purification process which has a short cycle and which efficiently uses the treating fluid. This use of a short cycle is not only economical but also has the advantage of allowing the yarn cake but little opportunity to filter impurities from the treating fluid and thus become stained and discolored.
This invention also provides a means of allowing for the shrinkage of a yarn cake during the purification process and thus permits the side wall contact of the cake in the bucket to be accurately controlled at alltimes during the treating operation. This control of the side wall contact of the cake not only prevents the bucket assembly from being thrown out of balance with a resultant undue wear on the equipment involved, but also prevents the mechanical degradation of the yarn in the cake since the original shape of the cake is maintained throughout the purification operation. Thus, the invention also makes possible the production of a centrifugaliy purified yarn cake which is of good mechanical structure and which can be efficiently unwound to produce a high quality yarn.
The invention further provides a means whereby the excessive handling of such coreless, annular packages of yarn during the purification operation may be avoided, since the yarn cake may be satisfactorily treated in succession with all of the various necessary purifying fluids while still positioned in the one bucket, it only being necessary that the bucket be made of a material that will resist the action of the fluids used.
This reduction in the handling of the yarn cake not only effects an economy in the purifying operation but also yields a yarn of better mechanical quality since the cake is not subjected to so many handlings, each of which tends to degrade the yarn contained in the cake.
Since it is obvious that many changes and modifications can be made in the details abovedescribed without departing from the nature and spirit of the invention, it is to be understood that the invention is not to be limited to the detailed description except as set forth in the appended claims.
I claim:
1. 'A process for the centrifugal forcing of treatment liquids through tapered, annular yarn cakes which comprises the steps of rotating said yarn cake at a suificiently high speed to force the treatment liquid outwardly through the side wall thereof, passing a quantity of treatment liquid against the internal periphery of said cake, and supporting said cake during the entire centrifuging treatment solely from the external periphery thereof.
2. A process for the. centrifugal forcing of j 4 treatment liquids through tapered, annular yarn cakes which comprises the steps of covering said yarn cake with a fabric, rotating said covered yarn cake at a sufliciently high speed to force the treatment liquid outwardly through the side wall thereof, passing a quantity of treatment liquid against the intemal periphery of said cake, and supporting said cake during the entire centrifuging treatment solely from .the external periphery thereof.
3. A process for the centrifugal forcing of treatment liquids through tapered, annular yam cakes which comprises the steps of rotating said yarn cake at a sufliciently high speed to force the treatment liquid outwardly through the side wall thereof, passing a quantity of treatment liquid which has a shrinking action on said cake against the internal periphery of the latter, and supporting said cake during the entire centrifuging treatment solely from the external periphery thereof.
Priority Applications (1)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
US307596A US2300254A (en) | 1939-12-05 | 1939-12-05 | Yarn production |
Applications Claiming Priority (1)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
US307596A US2300254A (en) | 1939-12-05 | 1939-12-05 | Yarn production |
Publications (1)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
---|---|
US2300254A true US2300254A (en) | 1942-10-27 |
Family
ID=23190412
Family Applications (1)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
---|---|---|---|
US307596A Expired - Lifetime US2300254A (en) | 1939-12-05 | 1939-12-05 | Yarn production |
Country Status (1)
Country | Link |
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US (1) | US2300254A (en) |
Cited By (4)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US2513381A (en) * | 1945-12-06 | 1950-07-04 | American Viscose Corp | Method for treatment of filaments |
US2847750A (en) * | 1953-09-15 | 1958-08-19 | Du Pont | Fluid process for treating rayon yarn packages |
US2922696A (en) * | 1954-08-04 | 1960-01-26 | Hickory Dyeing & Winding Co In | Centrifugal space dyeing machine and method |
US3145398A (en) * | 1961-12-11 | 1964-08-25 | Turbo Machine Co | Dyeing of yarn packages |
-
1939
- 1939-12-05 US US307596A patent/US2300254A/en not_active Expired - Lifetime
Cited By (4)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US2513381A (en) * | 1945-12-06 | 1950-07-04 | American Viscose Corp | Method for treatment of filaments |
US2847750A (en) * | 1953-09-15 | 1958-08-19 | Du Pont | Fluid process for treating rayon yarn packages |
US2922696A (en) * | 1954-08-04 | 1960-01-26 | Hickory Dyeing & Winding Co In | Centrifugal space dyeing machine and method |
US3145398A (en) * | 1961-12-11 | 1964-08-25 | Turbo Machine Co | Dyeing of yarn packages |
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