US2668786A - Corrugated packing sheet - Google Patents

Corrugated packing sheet Download PDF

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Publication number
US2668786A
US2668786A US100702A US10070249A US2668786A US 2668786 A US2668786 A US 2668786A US 100702 A US100702 A US 100702A US 10070249 A US10070249 A US 10070249A US 2668786 A US2668786 A US 2668786A
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United States
Prior art keywords
corrugations
sheet
pulp
cylinder
roller
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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
US100702A
Inventor
Helen M Swope
Gubernator Grace
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Packaging Materials Corp
Original Assignee
Packaging Materials Corp
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.)
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Publication date
Application filed by Packaging Materials Corp filed Critical Packaging Materials Corp
Priority to US100702A priority Critical patent/US2668786A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2668786A publication Critical patent/US2668786A/en
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Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B65CONVEYING; PACKING; STORING; HANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL
    • B65DCONTAINERS FOR STORAGE OR TRANSPORT OF ARTICLES OR MATERIALS, e.g. BAGS, BARRELS, BOTTLES, BOXES, CANS, CARTONS, CRATES, DRUMS, JARS, TANKS, HOPPERS, FORWARDING CONTAINERS; ACCESSORIES, CLOSURES, OR FITTINGS THEREFOR; PACKAGING ELEMENTS; PACKAGES
    • B65D65/00Wrappers or flexible covers; Packaging materials of special type or form
    • B65D65/38Packaging materials of special type or form
    • B65D65/44Applications of resilient shock-absorbing materials, e.g. foamed plastics material, honeycomb material
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B29WORKING OF PLASTICS; WORKING OF SUBSTANCES IN A PLASTIC STATE IN GENERAL
    • B29CSHAPING OR JOINING OF PLASTICS; SHAPING OF MATERIAL IN A PLASTIC STATE, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; AFTER-TREATMENT OF THE SHAPED PRODUCTS, e.g. REPAIRING
    • B29C53/00Shaping by bending, folding, twisting, straightening or flattening; Apparatus therefor
    • B29C53/22Corrugating
    • B29C53/24Corrugating of plates or sheets
    • B29C53/28Corrugating of plates or sheets transverse to direction of feed
    • B29C53/285Corrugating of plates or sheets transverse to direction of feed using rolls or endless bands
    • 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
    • Y10T428/24Structurally defined web or sheet [e.g., overall dimension, etc.]
    • Y10T428/24479Structurally defined web or sheet [e.g., overall dimension, etc.] including variation in thickness
    • Y10T428/24595Structurally defined web or sheet [e.g., overall dimension, etc.] including variation in thickness and varying density

Definitions

  • the object of the present invention is to provide a corrugated packing sheet made of pulp which is flexible for folding both along lines parallel with the corrugations and also along lines transverse to the corrugations, to thereby facilitate folding the paper around cylindrical articles such, for example, as glass jars con- .3 taining pharmaceutical preparations, and then folding the projecting end portions of the wrapping sheet down over the ends of the jars to protect the jar in all directions from breakage.
  • FIG. 1 is a perspective view on an enlarged scale showing a portion of a sheet of paper manufactured in accordance with my new method
  • Fig. 2 is a section on line 2-2 of Fig. 1;
  • Fig. 3 is a diagrammatic sectional View showing the essential parts of the apparatus disclosed in my former patent with the addition of the parts for providing the transverse scores in the freshly formed sheet;
  • Fig. 4 is a detail view showing the scoring roll in plan view.
  • my improved packing sheet is formed directly from pulp on a suction drum having its surface formed with corrugations of any desired contour, but preferably somewhat fiatter than shown in my previous patent.
  • the cylinder is covered with an underlying coarse screen and a superimposed fine screen of the construction shown in my prior patent and therefore not shown in detail herein.
  • the pulp is supplied to the cylinder I from a flow box indicated at 2 which may be of the construction shown in my former patent.
  • a metering roll 3 At the forward end of the flow box in the direction of rotation of the cylinder.
  • the contour of the corrugations is such that the grooves in the cylinder in which the corrugations are formed are substantially filled with the pulp as the cylinder passes through the flow box, so that when the water is drawn from the pulp through the suction holes in the bottom of the grooves the exposed face of the sheet, that is, the face opposite the corrugations, will have depressions on the other side but of a very slight depth compared with the height of the corrugations.
  • the corrugations on the face of the paper are composed throughout substantially their depth of loosely matted fibres which have been compressed somewhat by the suction extraction of the Water, but which have not been compressed by the metering roller or by the facing roller 4 which will now be described.
  • This facing roller is of the construction shown in my prior patent and is mounted in a flow box from which it picks up a layer of pulp through the suction supplied from a suction port 6.
  • This roller is of smooth cylindrical contour and is covered with coarse and fine screens in the manner described in my prior patent.
  • the periphery of the facing roller lies adjacent to the periphery of the corrugating roller and is spaced from the crowns of the corrugations on the cylinder to an extent corresponding to the desired thickness of the sheet between the corrugations.
  • the layer of pulp picked up by the facing roller is transferred to the surface of the sheet formed on the cylinder at a time when both sheets are quite wet, and the suction through the surface of the cylinder draws the soft sheet of wet pulp on the facing roller down against the sheet of pulp so that the sheet formed on the facing roller assumes the contour of the exposed face of the corrugated sheet and the contacting fibres are so intermeshed by the suction that there is no significant line of demarcation between the pulp applied by the facing roller and the pulp sheet formed on the cylin der.
  • the transfer of the pulp from the facing roller is aided by a discharge of compressed air from the compressed air pipe I, and the suction in the cylinder draws the pulp from the facing roller down somewhat into the corrugations while at the same time the portions between the corrugations are compressed between the crowns of the corrugations and the surface of the facing roller.
  • the composite sheet has the cross sectional contour shown in Fig. 1, wherein A indicates the corrugations and B the spaces between the corrugations. In the spaces B there is no discernible line of demarcation between the layer of pulp picked up on the cylinder and the layer transferred from the facing roller.
  • the composite sheet formed as above described is discharged from the cylinder by compressed air from a compressed air pipe 8 onto a drying belt 9 underlying the cylinder.
  • the' belt isdis'con'tinued'and a pair of scoring rolls l and II are introduced which serve to impress into the corrugations a series of parallel score lines such as illustrated at fl2 in Fig. 1, these score lines being of a depth of approximately one-half the height of 'the corrugations above the surface of the 'iiaperfhetween the corrugations.
  • the upper scoringiroller is preferably mounted in an adjustable hearing 1S6 that-[the depth of the score lines may be adjusted for sheets of diiferent thickness.
  • another drying belt-43 is provided to support the sheet until it is fully dried.
  • V p v It desired, the facing 'roller with its pulp supply may be"timittedalt'ogether, in which case the iliga'ted' sheet Will have substantially the same 'con'touroflboth'surfaces, as illustrated, but will "1 not "be'coriipressed to the same extent between the corrugations.
  • the 'facing rol ler may be empl'oyedbut' Without supplying the flovv'bbx'itithpulp;

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Absorbent Articles And Supports Therefor (AREA)

Description

Feb. 9, 1954 PERRY 2,668,786
CORRUGATED PACKING SHEET Filed June 22, 1949 INVENTOR.
EUGENE Lv PERRY ATTORNEYS Patented Feb. 9, 1954 CORRUGATED PACKING SHEET Eugene L. Perry, Bloomfield, N. J.; Helen M. Swope and Grace Gubernator, executrices of said Eugene L. Perry, deceased, assignors, by mesne assignments, to Packaging Materials Corp., Providence, R. L, a corporation of Rhode Island Application June 22, 1949, Serial No. 100,702
1 Claim. 1
This application is directed to an improvement The object of the present invention is to provide a corrugated packing sheet made of pulp which is flexible for folding both along lines parallel with the corrugations and also along lines transverse to the corrugations, to thereby facilitate folding the paper around cylindrical articles such, for example, as glass jars con- .3 taining pharmaceutical preparations, and then folding the projecting end portions of the wrapping sheet down over the ends of the jars to protect the jar in all directions from breakage.
In the accompanying drawings Fig. 1 is a perspective view on an enlarged scale showing a portion of a sheet of paper manufactured in accordance with my new method;
Fig. 2 is a section on line 2-2 of Fig. 1;
Fig. 3 is a diagrammatic sectional View showing the essential parts of the apparatus disclosed in my former patent with the addition of the parts for providing the transverse scores in the freshly formed sheet; and
Fig. 4 is a detail view showing the scoring roll in plan view.
Referring to the drawings, my improved packing sheet is formed directly from pulp on a suction drum having its surface formed with corrugations of any desired contour, but preferably somewhat fiatter than shown in my previous patent. The cylinder is covered with an underlying coarse screen and a superimposed fine screen of the construction shown in my prior patent and therefore not shown in detail herein. The pulp is supplied to the cylinder I from a flow box indicated at 2 which may be of the construction shown in my former patent. At the forward end of the flow box in the direction of rotation of the cylinder is a metering roll 3 for regulating the amount of pulp deposited on the cylinder.
In the drawing the contour of the corrugations is such that the grooves in the cylinder in which the corrugations are formed are substantially filled with the pulp as the cylinder passes through the flow box, so that when the water is drawn from the pulp through the suction holes in the bottom of the grooves the exposed face of the sheet, that is, the face opposite the corrugations, will have depressions on the other side but of a very slight depth compared with the height of the corrugations. In other words, the corrugations on the face of the paper are composed throughout substantially their depth of loosely matted fibres which have been compressed somewhat by the suction extraction of the Water, but which have not been compressed by the metering roller or by the facing roller 4 which will now be described.
This facing roller is of the construction shown in my prior patent and is mounted in a flow box from which it picks up a layer of pulp through the suction supplied from a suction port 6. This roller is of smooth cylindrical contour and is covered with coarse and fine screens in the manner described in my prior patent. The periphery of the facing roller lies adjacent to the periphery of the corrugating roller and is spaced from the crowns of the corrugations on the cylinder to an extent corresponding to the desired thickness of the sheet between the corrugations.
The layer of pulp picked up by the facing roller is transferred to the surface of the sheet formed on the cylinder at a time when both sheets are quite wet, and the suction through the surface of the cylinder draws the soft sheet of wet pulp on the facing roller down against the sheet of pulp so that the sheet formed on the facing roller assumes the contour of the exposed face of the corrugated sheet and the contacting fibres are so intermeshed by the suction that there is no significant line of demarcation between the pulp applied by the facing roller and the pulp sheet formed on the cylin der. The transfer of the pulp from the facing roller is aided by a discharge of compressed air from the compressed air pipe I, and the suction in the cylinder draws the pulp from the facing roller down somewhat into the corrugations while at the same time the portions between the corrugations are compressed between the crowns of the corrugations and the surface of the facing roller.
The composite sheet has the cross sectional contour shown in Fig. 1, wherein A indicates the corrugations and B the spaces between the corrugations. In the spaces B there is no discernible line of demarcation between the layer of pulp picked up on the cylinder and the layer transferred from the facing roller. The same is true of the corrugations A except that the fibres at both surfaces of the corrugations are somewhat more compressed than in the intermediate part and the whole surface on both sides carries the impression of the fine screen forming the surface of both the cylinder and the finishing roller.
The composite sheet formed as above described is discharged from the cylinder by compressed air from a compressed air pipe 8 onto a drying belt 9 underlying the cylinder. At a point somewhat beyond the point at which the sheet is received by the dryingbelt where the pulp is partially dried butis still soft enough to receive impressions, the' belt isdis'con'tinued'and a pair of scoring rolls l and II are introduced which serve to impress into the corrugations a series of parallel score lines such as illustrated at fl2 in Fig. 1, these score lines being of a depth of approximately one-half the height of 'the corrugations above the surface of the 'iiaperfhetween the corrugations. The upper scoringiroller is preferably mounted in an adjustable hearing 1S6 that-[the depth of the score lines may be adjusted for sheets of diiferent thickness. Immediately beyond the scoring rollers another drying belt-43 is provided to support the sheet until it is fully dried. V p v It desired, the facing 'roller with its pulp supply may be"timittedalt'ogether, in which case the iliga'ted' sheet Will have substantially the same 'con'touroflboth'surfaces, as illustrated, but will "1 not "be'coriipressed to the same extent between the corrugations. Also, if desired, the 'facing rol ler may be empl'oyedbut' Without supplying the flovv'bbx'itithpulp; When so used the facing "rolleractsas a press roller to give a Wire finish "'trfthe b ack'of the sheet fiand'oompress the pulp "bettveenthe corrugations, but Without any substa'fitial compression where the corrugation are 'biifltu'pbn the Cylinder. I I have sho'wflmy'nev'v packing sheet in its pre- "reread-"farm and also illustrated a preferred method and apharatusf formaking the same; but i itis"to'beunderstood thatthe invention is not ""liinited"to thedetails hereina-b'ove described but sheetbfflt edpulp having corrugations built up of substantially uncompressed pulp with intervening portions pressed to greater density, the opposite-'face of the sheet having shallow recesses extending therein opposite said corrugations, and
spaceds'core line's on the corrugated face of the sheetextending."transversely of the corrugations,
"thespa'ces' between said corrugations being not 5 less inwidthth'anthe corrugations.
EUGENE L. PERRY.
' Refcrences -Gited in the file of this patent UNITED STATES PATENTS
US100702A 1949-06-22 1949-06-22 Corrugated packing sheet Expired - Lifetime US2668786A (en)

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Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3057771A (en) * 1958-11-07 1962-10-09 Riegel Paper Corp Ribbed battery separator paper and method and apparatus for making the same
US3454168A (en) * 1965-10-23 1969-07-08 Arno Cahn Grid sheet shelf liner
US5045378A (en) * 1988-05-19 1991-09-03 Specialty Paperboard Inc. Paperboard sheets with a scribed grid and a method for making the same
US20120204905A1 (en) * 2011-02-15 2012-08-16 Georgia-Pacific Consumer Products Lp System and Methods Involving Fabricating Sheet Products
US20140027066A1 (en) * 2011-06-10 2014-01-30 The Procter & Gamble Company Method and Apparatus for Making Absorbent Structures with Absorbent Material

Citations (14)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US261865A (en) * 1882-08-01 Henry w
US1211229A (en) * 1915-12-17 1917-01-02 Seamless Products Corp Machine for making articles from pulp.
US1547613A (en) * 1922-11-06 1925-07-28 Orange J Salisbury Method and apparatus for producing thick sheets from fibrous pulp
US1661727A (en) * 1922-04-15 1928-03-06 Moulded Pulp Devices Inc Method and apparatus for making packing for fragile articles
US1676655A (en) * 1927-02-02 1928-07-10 Otaka Fabric Company Paper-making machine
US1677905A (en) * 1921-09-13 1928-07-24 Orange J Salisbury Continuous process apparatus for forming articles from pulp
DE618066C (en) * 1934-03-28 1935-08-31 Cartonnagenindustrie Ag F Process and machine for the continuous production of corrugated cardboard that is flexible in all directions
USRE20034E (en) * 1936-07-14 Fabrication of corrugated papers
US2169505A (en) * 1937-01-15 1939-08-15 H P Smith Paper Company Method for making stretchable paper
US2209537A (en) * 1937-05-10 1940-07-30 Eugene L Perry Corrugated sheet
US2221200A (en) * 1937-05-11 1940-11-12 Eugene L Perry Method and apparatus for forming articles from paper pulp
US2245014A (en) * 1936-08-29 1941-06-10 American Reenforced Paper Co Stretchable paper
US2253718A (en) * 1939-01-11 1941-08-26 Sherman Paper Products Corp Manufacture of indented, corrugated papers
US2475868A (en) * 1945-04-13 1949-07-12 Fibreboard Products Inc Rotary die creasing mechanism for corrugated paperboard

Patent Citations (14)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
USRE20034E (en) * 1936-07-14 Fabrication of corrugated papers
US261865A (en) * 1882-08-01 Henry w
US1211229A (en) * 1915-12-17 1917-01-02 Seamless Products Corp Machine for making articles from pulp.
US1677905A (en) * 1921-09-13 1928-07-24 Orange J Salisbury Continuous process apparatus for forming articles from pulp
US1661727A (en) * 1922-04-15 1928-03-06 Moulded Pulp Devices Inc Method and apparatus for making packing for fragile articles
US1547613A (en) * 1922-11-06 1925-07-28 Orange J Salisbury Method and apparatus for producing thick sheets from fibrous pulp
US1676655A (en) * 1927-02-02 1928-07-10 Otaka Fabric Company Paper-making machine
DE618066C (en) * 1934-03-28 1935-08-31 Cartonnagenindustrie Ag F Process and machine for the continuous production of corrugated cardboard that is flexible in all directions
US2245014A (en) * 1936-08-29 1941-06-10 American Reenforced Paper Co Stretchable paper
US2169505A (en) * 1937-01-15 1939-08-15 H P Smith Paper Company Method for making stretchable paper
US2209537A (en) * 1937-05-10 1940-07-30 Eugene L Perry Corrugated sheet
US2221200A (en) * 1937-05-11 1940-11-12 Eugene L Perry Method and apparatus for forming articles from paper pulp
US2253718A (en) * 1939-01-11 1941-08-26 Sherman Paper Products Corp Manufacture of indented, corrugated papers
US2475868A (en) * 1945-04-13 1949-07-12 Fibreboard Products Inc Rotary die creasing mechanism for corrugated paperboard

Cited By (10)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3057771A (en) * 1958-11-07 1962-10-09 Riegel Paper Corp Ribbed battery separator paper and method and apparatus for making the same
US3454168A (en) * 1965-10-23 1969-07-08 Arno Cahn Grid sheet shelf liner
US5045378A (en) * 1988-05-19 1991-09-03 Specialty Paperboard Inc. Paperboard sheets with a scribed grid and a method for making the same
US20120204905A1 (en) * 2011-02-15 2012-08-16 Georgia-Pacific Consumer Products Lp System and Methods Involving Fabricating Sheet Products
US9670617B2 (en) * 2011-02-15 2017-06-06 Georgia-Pacific Consumer Products Lp System and methods involving fabricating sheet products
US10337793B2 (en) 2011-02-15 2019-07-02 Gpcp Ip Holdings Llc System and methods involving fabricating sheet products
US20140027066A1 (en) * 2011-06-10 2014-01-30 The Procter & Gamble Company Method and Apparatus for Making Absorbent Structures with Absorbent Material
US9492328B2 (en) * 2011-06-10 2016-11-15 The Procter & Gamble Company Method and apparatus for making absorbent structures with absorbent material
US10245188B2 (en) 2011-06-10 2019-04-02 The Procter & Gamble Company Method and apparatus for making absorbent structures with absorbent material
US11000422B2 (en) 2011-06-10 2021-05-11 The Procter & Gamble Company Method and apparatus for making absorbent structures with absorbent material

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