US2633446A - Method of treating textile articles - Google Patents

Method of treating textile articles Download PDF

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Publication number
US2633446A
US2633446A US167490A US16749050A US2633446A US 2633446 A US2633446 A US 2633446A US 167490 A US167490 A US 167490A US 16749050 A US16749050 A US 16749050A US 2633446 A US2633446 A US 2633446A
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United States
Prior art keywords
yarn
chloro
salt
socks
subjecting
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US167490A
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Joseph C King
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Fairforest Co
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Fairforest Co
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    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D06TREATMENT OF TEXTILES OR THE LIKE; LAUNDERING; FLEXIBLE MATERIALS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • D06MTREATMENT, NOT PROVIDED FOR ELSEWHERE IN CLASS D06, OF FIBRES, THREADS, YARNS, FABRICS, FEATHERS OR FIBROUS GOODS MADE FROM SUCH MATERIALS
    • D06M16/00Biochemical treatment of fibres, threads, yarns, fabrics, or fibrous goods made from such materials, e.g. enzymatic
    • 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
    • Y10STECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10S428/00Stock material or miscellaneous articles
    • Y10S428/907Resistant against plant or animal attack

Definitions

  • This invention relates to a method of impregnating yarns or articles of clothing which are made to shield the wearer against infection from the outside, such as the germ of athletes foot, commonly known as Trichophyton interdz'gitale. It has been found by various tests that to soak the feet of a patient for about five minutes in a water bath containing about .04 gram per liter of sodium hypochlorite, and then having the wearer wear exclusively socks which were treated according to my method or socks knitted from yarns which were treated according to my method, provides for the elimination of the infection. By the treatment in the sodium hypochlorite solution and the wearing of the socks treated according to the hereinafter described method or the yarns from which they are made, shields the foot of the wearer from reinfection from shoes which the patient has heretofore worn.
  • this invention consists in thoroughly wetting socks, stockings or other wearing apparel, or the yarn from which such are made, with an aqeous solution containing a small percentage, as of the order of one to ten percent by weight, of lauryl pyridinium salt of 5 -chloro-2- mercapto benzc thiazole, then removing a major part of the water, drying and subjecting the thus impregnated textile product to a temperature above 212 F. but below the scorching point of the goods or yarn.
  • the lauryl pyridinium salt of 5-chloro-2-mercapto benzo thiazole is set therein. It will not wash out in laundering operations. An exposure to a temperature of 230 F. for five minutes after dryill ing is ample to set this impregnating agent in the textile.
  • the operation could be first carried out by forcing from outside to inside and then inside to outside as this would make no difference. This cycle should be repeated about twice. After this, the cones are removed from the dyeing machine and placed in an extractor and extracted until the yarn cones have about a 76 percent moisture pick-up. Then thecones are placed in a suitable drying machine or oven and dried. After drying, the yarn should be kept at about 230 degrees for at least five minutes in a curing operation, preferably in another retort. The yarn is now ready tov be woven into socks, leggings and other articles of wearing apparel where it is desired to protect the portions of the body covered by the articles of clothing knit or woven from this yarn from infection of the germ of athlete's foot.
  • That method of treating yarn and articles of clothing made therefrom to render such impenetrableby Trichophyton interdigitale which comprises subjecting the same-to an aqueous so- -lutioncontaining a smallpercentage of lauryl i'pyridinium saltof-a chloro-2 mercapto benzo thiazole, removing muchof the water, then-drying it, and then subjecting the-yarn or article made-therefrom to a temperature OffabOVB, 212
  • That method treating textile products to render them impenetrable by therungus Trichophyton interdigz'tale which comprises .subjecting the textile products to an aqueous solution containing from one to ten percent oflauryl pyridinium'salt of 5 chloro-2 mercapto benzo thiazole, then removing a major part of the moisture, and thensubjecting the products so treated tcatemperature of above 212 degrees to set the lauryl pyridinium salt of- 5 chloro-Z mercapto benzo thiazole therein to prevent its being washed out; in laundering operations.
  • That method of treating a textile product embracing yarn to render the same impervious to the fungus Trichophyton interdigitalc which comprises subjecting the product to an aqueous splution containing about three percent by weight of ar 25 solution-of l-auryl pyridinium salt of 5 :chlorqgkmercaptc-benzo thiazole, for about five minutes at a,temperature of about degrees F., then extracting some of the moisture from the produch then drying the product, then subjecting the product to a temperature of about 230 degrees F. for about five minutes to set the said salt therein to-prevent its being washed out by laundering.

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  • Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Biochemistry (AREA)
  • Chemical Kinetics & Catalysis (AREA)
  • General Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Microbiology (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Textile Engineering (AREA)
  • Treatments For Attaching Organic Compounds To Fibrous Goods (AREA)

Description

Patented Mar. 31, 1953 I 2,633,446 METHOD OF TREATING TEXTILE ARTICLES Joseph C. King, Spartanburg, S. 0., assignor to Fairforest Company, Spartanburg, S. 0., a corporation of South Carolina No Drawing. Application June 10, 1950, Serial No. 167,490
Claims. 1
This invention relates to a method of impregnating yarns or articles of clothing which are made to shield the wearer against infection from the outside, such as the germ of athletes foot, commonly known as Trichophyton interdz'gitale. It has been found by various tests that to soak the feet of a patient for about five minutes in a water bath containing about .04 gram per liter of sodium hypochlorite, and then having the wearer wear exclusively socks which were treated according to my method or socks knitted from yarns which were treated according to my method, provides for the elimination of the infection. By the treatment in the sodium hypochlorite solution and the wearing of the socks treated according to the hereinafter described method or the yarns from which they are made, shields the foot of the wearer from reinfection from shoes which the patient has heretofore worn.
This application is a continuation in part of my patent application Serial No. 119,195 filed October 1, 1949, now abandoned.
Broadly this invention consists in thoroughly wetting socks, stockings or other wearing apparel, or the yarn from which such are made, with an aqeous solution containing a small percentage, as of the order of one to ten percent by weight, of lauryl pyridinium salt of 5 -chloro-2- mercapto benzc thiazole, then removing a major part of the water, drying and subjecting the thus impregnated textile product to a temperature above 212 F. but below the scorching point of the goods or yarn. By holding the dried or comparatively dry impregnated goods at such ele vated temperatures for one to ten minutes, the time varying inversely with the temperature, the lauryl pyridinium salt of 5-chloro-2-mercapto benzo thiazole is set therein. It will not wash out in laundering operations. An exposure to a temperature of 230 F. for five minutes after dryill ing is ample to set this impregnating agent in the textile.
In the treatment of socks or stockings to serve as a shield against reinfection, the socks are immersed for about five minutes in a water bath at approximately 120 degrees F. having a three percent by weight dispersion of twenty-five percent lauryl pyridinium chloro-captax, which is the commonly used expression for lauryl pyridinium salt of 5 chloro-2-mercapto benzo-thiazole or C24H33N2S2C101 structurally:
The socks'are then removed and placed in an extractor wherethey are extracted. to approximately' 76 percent moisture pick-up and then placed in a chamber and cured for about five minutes at 230 degrees F. At this point the socks are ready for use.
Now, in the event the yarn from which the socks are to be knitted is desired to be'treated instead of treating the socks after they have been knitted, the yarn is processed while it is in cone or cheese form in a package dyeing machine by forcing through the packages a water solution havingabout three percent of the solution thereof composed of 25% lauryl pyridinium chlorocaptax, which is fully described above, and the water solution being held at approximately degrees F. The water solution is forced from the insideout for about 10 minutes, and then the direction of flow is reversed for about 10 minutes.
.Of course, the operation could be first carried out by forcing from outside to inside and then inside to outside as this would make no difference. This cycle should be repeated about twice. After this, the cones are removed from the dyeing machine and placed in an extractor and extracted until the yarn cones have about a 76 percent moisture pick-up. Then thecones are placed in a suitable drying machine or oven and dried. After drying, the yarn should be kept at about 230 degrees for at least five minutes in a curing operation, preferably in another retort. The yarn is now ready tov be woven into socks, leggings and other articles of wearing apparel where it is desired to protect the portions of the body covered by the articles of clothing knit or woven from this yarn from infection of the germ of athlete's foot.
It is, of course, to be recognized that it is entirely possible to use-other methods of treating than above described, as a different type of carrier to treat the fibres before processing into yarn could be employed. The method of pumping; the time element, the temperatures, and method and means of drying and curing could be varied without departing from the spirit of the invention.
It is thus seen that after all fungi on the feet have been destroyed by suitable chemicals, an example of which is above described, the feet of a person can be effectively shielded or insulated in socks or stockings that have been impregnated with the lauryl pyridinum salt of 5-chloro-2- mercapto benzo thiazole; this prevents the normal passage of fresh spores to the skin. Therefore, this invention is not a cure but a means of greatly reducing the possibility of further foot infection. The above outlined treatment of socks and yarn andother articles of wearing apparel is permanent for the normal life of the wearing apparel or for shoe linings, or any other type of material which is disposed adjacent the skin of the wearer. Articles of wearing apparel treated as above described will withstand numerous washings and boilings without causing the chemioal lauryl pyridinium; chloro-eaptax frop'l being removed fromthe articles.
It is also desirable to treat the interior of the shoes of the wearer with the above described solution of lauryl pyridinium chloro-captaxyfully described above.
In the specification therehas be en;sciforth a preferred embodiment of the invention; thi'sis however not for purposes of limitation, the scope of the invention being defined in the claims.
I claim:
1. That method of treating yarn and articles of clothing made therefrom to render such impenetrableby Trichophyton interdigitale which comprises subjecting the same-to an aqueous so- -lutioncontaining a smallpercentage of lauryl i'pyridinium saltof-a chloro-2 mercapto benzo thiazole, removing muchof the water, then-drying it, and then subjecting the-yarn or article made-therefrom to a temperature OffabOVB, 212
degrees but below the scorching point to set the said salt therein to prevent its being washed out by laundering.
2. That method treating textile products to render them impenetrable by therungus Trichophyton interdigz'tale which comprises .subjecting the textile products to an aqueous solution containing from one to ten percent oflauryl pyridinium'salt of 5 chloro-2 mercapto benzo thiazole, then removing a major part of the moisture, and thensubjecting the products so treated tcatemperature of above 212 degrees to set the lauryl pyridinium salt of- 5 chloro-Z mercapto benzo thiazole therein to prevent its being washed out; in laundering operations.
3: That methodof treating a stocking to prevent the fungus Trz'chcphyton interdigz'taleirom penetrating the same, which comprises subjecting the stocking to an aqueous solution containing-apercentage of betweenwone and ten percent by weight of lauryl pyridinium salt of 5 :chloro"-2 mercaptobenzo thiazole, then extracting-a portion of the moisture from the stocking, andthen removing the remaining moisture therefrom by heat and subjecting the stocking to a temperature above 212degrees Fzfon-a period of from one to ten minutes to set the said salt therein to-prevent its being washed out by laundering.
4; That-method of treating. a yarn to prevent the fungus Trichophyton interdigitale from penetrating the same, which comprises subjectingthe yarn'toa bath containing a percentage of between one and ten percent by weight of lauryl pyridini-um-saltof 5 chloro-2 -mercapto' benzo thiazole, then extracting-a portion of the moisturefrom the yarn, and then removing theremaining moisture therefrom and subjecting the yarn to a temperature above 212 degrees F. for a period of from one to ten minutes to set the said salt therein to prevent its being washed out F -la n er 5. That method of treating a textile product embracing yarn to render the same impervious to the fungus Trichophyton interdigitalc which comprises subjecting the product to an aqueous splution containing about three percent by weight of ar 25 solution-of l-auryl pyridinium salt of 5 :chlorqgkmercaptc-benzo thiazole, for about five minutes at a,temperature of about degrees F., then extracting some of the moisture from the produch then drying the product, then subjecting the product to a temperature of about 230 degrees F. for about five minutes to set the said salt therein to-prevent its being washed out by laundering.
The-following references are of record inthe file of this patent:
UNITE .S'IA'IES; PAT NTS Number Name Date 1,962,109 Alv ord June 5; 1934 2,095,092 Barton Oct.5, 1937 2,131,244 -Wi1liams Sept. 27, 1938 2,446,796 Van Campen Aug, 10, 1948 12349374 Broll r Sept. 14, 1948 FOREIGNePATEN TS Numbe Cc. m ':.1'Da
- 4 9 925 Gr at;.13r t ina. .May..ll, 9
IliLER'EEEERE QE Qlinical'Medicine,December 1940, page 432,
flliingworm of the; Feet, Greenbaum.
'J. lextile Institute, March 1945, page A113, ImpregnatedCotton Hose: Use in Treatment'of Athletes Foot. Crittenden et al.
Journal American Medical Association, October 29, 1932, page 1531, Disinfection of Shoes and Stockings in Ringworm of the'Feet.
"J. investigative Dermatology, volume 7, 1946, pages '23911'10' 253, especially page 247, Fungistatic Agents for Treatment of Dermatophytosis. Hopkins et a1.
Am. "J;- Pharm., "January- 1941- pages" 5 to 14, especially 7 page 9, Progress Fungou Disease Therapy? Schwartz.
American Druggist, February 1947,- page- 201, New Therapy for Ringworm" Trimethyl Cetyl Ammonium Pentachlorphenate (Ad) Davies, Chemical Constitution and Fungistatic Action of Organic Sulphur Compounds. Biochem. J volume 40, 1946, pages 331 to 334.

Claims (1)

1. THAT METHOD OF TREATING YARN AND ARTICLES OF CLOTHING MADE THEREFROM TO RENDER SUCH IMPENETRABLE BY TRICHOPHYTON INTERDIGITALE WHICH COMPRISES SUBJECTING THE SAME TO AN AQUEOUS SOLUTION CONTAINING A SMALL PERCENTAGE OF LAURYL PYRIDINIUM SALT OF 5 CHLORO-2 MERCAPTO BENZO THIAZOLE, REMOVING MUCH OF THE WATER, THEN DRYING IT, AND THEN SUBJECTING THE YARN OR ARTICLE MADE THEREFROM TO A TEMPERATURE OF ABOVE 212 DEGREES F., BUT BELOW THE SCORCHING POINT TO SET THE SAID SALT THEREIN TO PREVENT ITS BEING WASHED OUT BY LAUNDERING.
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Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3109776A (en) * 1960-04-06 1963-11-05 Commercial Solvents Corp Process for the protection of textiles
US3116207A (en) * 1961-06-07 1963-12-31 Commercial Solvents Corp Process for the protection of textiles
US3424546A (en) * 1965-02-02 1969-01-28 Swift & Co Method for treating washable goods
US3498829A (en) * 1967-10-19 1970-03-03 Kendall & Co Method for producing a bacteriostatic finish on synthetic fabrics
US4855139A (en) * 1987-01-20 1989-08-08 Med. Fab (Lafayette), Inc. Fungicidally active cellulosic textile compositions, or articles of manufacture
US5778702A (en) * 1996-09-06 1998-07-14 Wrightenberry; Jerry O. Double ply sock and method of making same
US6550289B1 (en) 2000-11-06 2003-04-22 Knit-Rite, Inc. Double-layer sock having inverted, side-by-side toe closure seams

Citations (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1962109A (en) * 1931-07-18 1934-06-05 Grasselli Chemical Co Fungicides and bactericides
US2095092A (en) * 1936-02-21 1937-10-05 Clorox Chemical Co Ointment
GB479925A (en) * 1935-05-09 1938-02-14 Heyden Chem Fab Process for disinfecting and preserving
US2131244A (en) * 1934-01-11 1938-09-27 Du Pont Vulcanization of rubber
US2446796A (en) * 1946-02-04 1948-08-10 Wm S Merrell Co Substituted pyridinium and piperidinium compounds
US2449274A (en) * 1946-05-27 1948-09-14 Fuld Bros Inc Self-indicating quaternary ammonium bacteriocidal composition

Patent Citations (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1962109A (en) * 1931-07-18 1934-06-05 Grasselli Chemical Co Fungicides and bactericides
US2131244A (en) * 1934-01-11 1938-09-27 Du Pont Vulcanization of rubber
GB479925A (en) * 1935-05-09 1938-02-14 Heyden Chem Fab Process for disinfecting and preserving
US2095092A (en) * 1936-02-21 1937-10-05 Clorox Chemical Co Ointment
US2446796A (en) * 1946-02-04 1948-08-10 Wm S Merrell Co Substituted pyridinium and piperidinium compounds
US2449274A (en) * 1946-05-27 1948-09-14 Fuld Bros Inc Self-indicating quaternary ammonium bacteriocidal composition

Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3109776A (en) * 1960-04-06 1963-11-05 Commercial Solvents Corp Process for the protection of textiles
US3116207A (en) * 1961-06-07 1963-12-31 Commercial Solvents Corp Process for the protection of textiles
US3424546A (en) * 1965-02-02 1969-01-28 Swift & Co Method for treating washable goods
US3498829A (en) * 1967-10-19 1970-03-03 Kendall & Co Method for producing a bacteriostatic finish on synthetic fabrics
US4855139A (en) * 1987-01-20 1989-08-08 Med. Fab (Lafayette), Inc. Fungicidally active cellulosic textile compositions, or articles of manufacture
US5778702A (en) * 1996-09-06 1998-07-14 Wrightenberry; Jerry O. Double ply sock and method of making same
US6550289B1 (en) 2000-11-06 2003-04-22 Knit-Rite, Inc. Double-layer sock having inverted, side-by-side toe closure seams

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