US3619354A - Laminated felted sheets and asbestos containing coating composition for use therein - Google Patents

Laminated felted sheets and asbestos containing coating composition for use therein Download PDF

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US3619354A
US3619354A US796913A US3619354DA US3619354A US 3619354 A US3619354 A US 3619354A US 796913 A US796913 A US 796913A US 3619354D A US3619354D A US 3619354DA US 3619354 A US3619354 A US 3619354A
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asbestos
percent
binder
base sheet
paper
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Robert G Woolery
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KCAC Inc
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Union Carbide Corp
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    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D21PAPER-MAKING; PRODUCTION OF CELLULOSE
    • D21FPAPER-MAKING MACHINES; METHODS OF PRODUCING PAPER THEREON
    • D21F11/00Processes for making continuous lengths of paper, or of cardboard, or of wet web for fibre board production, on paper-making machines
    • D21F11/02Processes for making continuous lengths of paper, or of cardboard, or of wet web for fibre board production, on paper-making machines of the Fourdrinier type
    • D21F11/04Processes for making continuous lengths of paper, or of cardboard, or of wet web for fibre board production, on paper-making machines of the Fourdrinier type paper or board consisting on two or more layers

Definitions

  • binders have been used for this purpose, for example, natural and synthetic resins, gums starches, waxes and various rubbery lattices.
  • binders have been incorporated into the felted fibrous materials in one of three ways.
  • the most common way of incorporating the binder is to mix it with the fibrous furnish composition and then lay and dewater the mixture on a conventional Fourdrinier screen or cylinder machine. This type of process suffers from a variety of difficulties, the most important of which is improper coagulation and self-agglomeration of the binder causing weakness and lack of uniformity in the paper.
  • a laminated sheet can, of course, be made by simply coating the surface of finished paper with a rubber, resinous or waxy binder. Such products, however, tend to have poor adhesion between the coating and the paper.
  • Another aspect of this invention consists of a laminated product consisting essentially of a felted fibrous base sheet and integrally bonded thereto a coating or lamina; the latter comprising an intimate mixture of chrysotile asbestos having certain critical properties (hereafter defined) and a binder therefor.
  • a third aspect of this invention consists of a composition, suitable for coating nonwoven felted sheets, comprising an intimate mixture of chrysotile asbestos fibers having certain critical properties (hereafter defined) and a binder therefor.
  • Said composition which may also be used to form a self-supporting sheet, may if desired, include optional ingredients such as conventional paper-making fibers, fillers, pigments, dyes and the like.
  • the asbestos used must have the following critical properties:
  • Asbestos having the aforementioned properties is commercially available as high purity grade Calidria* Trademark of Union Carbide Corp.asbestos.
  • Specific surface area is calculated from adsorption data using the BET (Brunauer, Emmet, Teller) method as described in Brunauer, The Adsorption of Gases and Vapors, Princeton University Press 1945).
  • Magnetite content is measured by a permeametric device patterned after ASTM standard method D-l I 18-57. Since the lower limit of detection of the ASTM device is only about 0.20 percent magnetite, the ASTM method has been im proved with respect to sensitivity to measure a limit of detection of 0.005 percent magnetite, and the range of measurements has been extended to measure 0.10 percent magnetite in the midscale of the instrument. In order to obtain this greater range and improved sensitivity, the ASTM method has been modified to detect the phase changes of the current generated when magnetic materials are placed in the transfomier core rather than the voltage changes generated.
  • Reflectance is measured on a sample prepared according to TAPPI (Technical Association of the Pulp and Paper Industry) standard T-452-m-58 and is reported as percent of ultimate reflectance based on magnesium oxide as the standard of percent reflectance.
  • the pulpability of the high purity asbestos must be such that less than 1.0 percent and preferably less than 0.5 percent is retained on a 65-mesh Tyler screen when measured in accordance with the procedure described below.
  • the term +65 -mesh is used tomean the amount, expressed as the percent of the sample, which does not pass through but is retained on a 65-mesh Tyler screen.
  • the measurements are made on a wet pulped sample rather than a dry sample, since the particle size under wet pulped conditions is significant for purposes of paper manufacture.
  • the pulpability is determined by adding 40 g. of asbestos and 2 liters of water to a TAPPl Standard Disintegrator and agitating the mixture for 4 minutes. A 250 ml.
  • Table I illustrates the differences in the properties of the closest chrysotile asbestos of the prior art and the chrysotile asbestos essential for use in the present invention.
  • Coalinga chrysotile* asbestos is preferred as the source of the asbestos, any chrysotile asbestos is suitable *Coalinga chrysotile asbestos is mined from a large deposit near Cooling. California.
  • Binders which are useful in the preparation of the coating composition of this invention include all of the common sizing agents used in the paper industry, such as animal glues, starches, gelatin, rosin, rosin derivatives, waxes, bituminous materials such as asphalts, tars, pitches and bituminous as well as resinous and rubbery lattices.
  • Synthetic, resinous and rubbery lattices are the preferred binders.
  • Illustrative suitable rubbery lattices are copolymers of butadiene and styrene (i.e. GR-S rubber containing 50-80 percent by weight butadiene), copolymers of butadiene and acrylonitrile (i.e. Buna-Nor Hycar rubber containing 50-80 percent butadiene), polychloroprenes (i.e. neoprenes), homopolymers of butadiene, butadiene-isoprene copolymers, and terpolymers of butadiene, styrene and acrylic acid or lower alkyl acrylites.
  • thermosetting resins such as phenol aldehyde resins, and melamine formaldehyde resins.
  • Suitable thermoplastic resin binders include, for example, vinyl and substituted vinyl resins such as polyvinylchloride, polyvinylacetate, polyvinylacetal, polyvinylalcohol, polystyrene, polyacrylates, polymethacrylates, polyacrylonitrile, polyacrylamide and copolymers of these materials.
  • Any resinous binder is useful for depositing the asbestos of this invention onto a base sheet, as long as it is dispersible in an aqueous medium or suspendible therein in particulate form.
  • the coating composition is prepared by first dispersing the asbestos in an aqueous slurry by means of a high shear device; for example, a Reitz disintegrator, a Fitzmill or a Waring blender.
  • a high shear device for example, a Reitz disintegrator, a Fitzmill or a Waring blender.
  • the binder usually in an aqueous suspension, is then blended in with the asbestos using low shear mixing such as obtained with an ordinary mixer.
  • the concentrations of both the asbestos slurry and the binder suspension are ordinarily kept below about 3 percent solids by weight, since at higher concentrations the composition becomes too viscous for easy handling.
  • the proportions of asbestos to binder are controlled to give optimum efficiency in terms of the retention of the solids on the paper-making screen.
  • the asbestos content must be sufficiently high to insure that its cationic charge will be adequate to coflocculate all the other solid components of the mixture. If the concentration of the binder is too high, the binder in excess of that which the asbestos can flocculate will in large part be lost by draining through the base sheet into the white water.
  • the optimum proportions of asbestos to binder will vary depending upon the particular binder and other additives used.
  • the ratio of asbestos to binder is from 3:1 to 9:1.
  • the same proportions are useful whether the composition is to be used for coating purposes or for making an extruded, self-supporting film.
  • Self-supporting films of this composition have the properties of an asbestos filled plastic film, and can be used, for example, as packaging film or as wallpaper.
  • the asbestos-binder coating composition may contain additives such as fillers, pigments or fibrous materials.
  • additives such as fillers, pigments or fibrous materials.
  • TiO and clay are illustrated below, however, any conventional paper making fillers and/or pigments may be used, as well as mixtures thereof.
  • fibrous materials other than asbestos, both synthetic and natural may also be included, if desired, in the coating composition.
  • one or more natural or synthetic mineral or vegetable fibers may be added to the composition. in all such cases, however, the weight of asbestos having the critical characteristics previously described must be at least 50 percent of the weight in the composition.
  • the asbestos in such a coating composition is believed to act as a coupling agent between the binder and the other fiber or nonfibrous additives, since the cationic nature of the asbestos is believed to be attracted by the other fibers, the nonfibrous additives, as well as the latex binder, all of which are anionic in character.
  • the binder is preferably added after the asbestos and additive have been adequately mixed, since the asbestos will cause the binder to coagulate.
  • the asbestos-binder composition of this invention is novel and unusual in that it can be applied directly on top of a wet base sheet before the sheet is taken ofi' the paper-making screen. Such on the wire coating" has not previously been feasible because coating formulations tried in the past have drained through the base sheet.
  • Use of asbestos having the critical properties previously defined holds out the coating composition from the base sheet, and enables the binder composition to be applied directly onto the paper making screen containing the wet base sheet.
  • organic surfactants, wetting agents, dispersing agents, or other fiocculating agents required by prior art methods to obtain flocculation and deposition of a binder onto the fibers.
  • the critical properties of the above described asbestos itself assure both proper cofiocculation of the binder onto the asbestos and deposition of the asbestos-binder coating onto the base sheet.
  • felted product which can be prepared on a paper making screen can be used as the base sheet in the present invention.
  • felted products can be formed from organic, inorganic or mixed materials.
  • Paper base sheets are preferred.
  • the term paper is used in its generic sense, i.e. to include any nonwoven, felted fibrous sheet, including but not restricted to bond, wrapping, tissue, printing, wall and backing paper as well as cardboard, wallboard, millboard, and the like.
  • Suitable inorganic fibrous materials for base sheets include glass wool, mineral wool, and silicate fibers.
  • Useful organic fibers include, for example, cotton, silk, hemp, ramie, alpaca, hair, fur and animal bristles.
  • Useful synthetic organic fibers are fibers made from polyamides, acrylates, polyesters, cellulose acetate, regenerated cellulose (rayon), polyvinyl chloride, polyethylene, polyurethane, polytetrafluoroethylene and the like.
  • Preferred base sheets are those made from conventional cellulosic pulp used for the manufacture of paper for example, mechanical, semichemical, sulfite, sulfate, or craft (soda) pulp. Mixtures of cellulosic pulp or mixtures of cellulosic and noncellulosic fibers may also be used.
  • the paper base sheet useful in this invention may have included in it conventional fillers such as, for example, clay, sodium silicoaluminate, diatomaceous silica, calcium silicate, talc, calcium carbonate, calcium sulfate, barium sulfate, zinc sulfate and titanium dioxide.
  • conventional fillers such as, for example, clay, sodium silicoaluminate, diatomaceous silica, calcium silicate, talc, calcium carbonate, calcium sulfate, barium sulfate, zinc sulfate and titanium dioxide.
  • Such fillers may be incorporated not only into the base sheet, but also into the asbestos coating composition of this invention, if desired.
  • a base sheet is made by first preparing a dilute aqueous pulp of suspended fibers, incorporating into the pulp desired additives such as fillers or pigments to make a paper furnish composition, depositing the furnish composition from a head box onto a moving fine mesh screen, and then draining the excess water through the screen.
  • the asbestos-binder coating composition of this invention is then applied directly onto the wet felted fibrous web or sheet while the latter is still moving on the paper making screen.
  • the coating step is conveniently carried out by having a second head box from which the coating composition is applied onto the wet base-covered screen.
  • the base sheet with a coating of asbestos and binder were prepared on a laboratory Noble and Wood handsheet machine using the UNEround wood and sulfate was 250.
  • the only additive used in the base sheet furnish was alum, added in sufficient amount to give a pH of 4.5 at the first headbox.
  • the first headbox contained the furnish composition for the base sheet, and the lowing procedure.
  • a base sheet having a basis weight of 60 secondafy headbox contained the coating composition for the g./m was first prepared by adding unbleached craft pulp to cop e the deckle box of the handsheet machine and allowing it to Three dliferem fumlshes were used m the Secondary headdrain almost completely.
  • the binder used was an aque- F F and e f T th'rd P P eoatlhg ous dispersion of a Synthetic late of a copolymel. containing 1 5 position, labeled composition Cm table 1" below, consisted of about 60 percent styrene and 40 percent butadiene.
  • the laminated sheet one objective of this senes of experimental e was [0 was then removed from the deckle box, pressed with a felt T the P layer as heavy as posslble and to PP Onto press, and dried in a drum dryer operated at a temperature of hght base ehee as as Onto a heavy base Sheet- Changes in about 105 C.
  • the heat of the drier not only dried the the thlekhese of both the top P y and the hotmm P y were l i d sheet b l cured h l made by setting the flow rate from a headbox at a steady rate Twelve Samples were prepared i the manner described and then ad usting the speed of the Fourdrinier wire.
  • 3 H2O adsorption was determined by placing a drop of water on the surface of the sheet and recording the time in minutes for the water to be adsorbed.
  • the laminated paper of the present invention has numerous advantages not possessed by prior art materials, such as improved ply bonding and low cost of manufacture due to the fact that separate equipment for coating is not required.
  • the coated paper of the present invention is particularly useful for one side hold out items such as paper plates, drinking cups, flexible packaging and the like.
  • a process for the manufacture of laminated sheets comprising the steps of:
  • a wet base sheet of felted fibrous material and prior to removal of said base sheet from said screen providing a nonseparable, uniform, asbestos-binder coating on the surface of said base sheet by applying on top of said wet base sheet before said wet base sheet is removed from the paper-making screen a composition comprising an intimate mixture containing at least 50 percent by weight of chrysotile asbestos characterized by a specific surface area between about 60 to m/gm., a magnetite content of from about 0.04 to 0.5 percent, a reflectance of about 72 to 78 percent and a pulpability such that 0.2 to 1 percent of the asbestos is retained on a (SS-mesh Tyler screen and a binder therefor, the ratio of asbestos to binder, on a dry weight basis, being from about 3: l to 9: 1.
  • the coating composition applied on top of said base sheet contains an additive selected from the group consisting of fibrous materials, fillers, pigments and mixtures thereof.

Abstract

Disclosed is a process for forming laminated felted sheets wherein a wet base sheet of fibrous material is formed on a paper making screen and, before the wet base sheet is removed from the screen, a nonseparable, uniform asbestos-binder composition is applied thereto. The composition comprises an intimitate mixture containing (a) at least 50 percent by weight of chrysotile asbestos having a specific surface area from about 60-80 m2/g., a magnetite content of from about 0.04-0.5 percent, a reflectance of from about 72-78 percent, and a pulpability such that 0.2-1 percent of the asbestos is retained on a 65 mesh Tyler screen and (b) a binder therefore. The ratio of asbestos to binder, on a dry weight basis, ranges from about 3:1 to 9:1.

Description

United States Patent [72] Inventor Robert G. Woolery Lewiston,N.Y.
[2]] Appl. No. 796,913
[22] Filed Feb. 5, 1969 Continuation-impart of Ser. No. 576,248, Aug. 31, 1966, abandoned [45] Patented Nov. 9, 1971 [73] Assignee Union Carbide Corporation New York, N.Y.
[54] LAMINATED FELTED SHEETS AND ASBESTOS CONTAINING COATING COMPOSITION FOR USE THEREIN 3 Claims, No Drawings [52] U.S.Cl 162/129, 117/28, 117/140, 161/156, 161/205, 162/153, 162/ 155 [51] Int. Cl B32b 5/08, B32b 19/06, D21h 5/18 [50] Field of Search 162/3, 127, 129, 132, 133, 153,201, 186; 161/155, 156,205; 117/140, 28, 126; 106/63 56] References Cited UNITED STATES PATENTS 367,424 8/1887 162/129 2,993,802 7/1961 Cascone 162/129 X 3,246,767 4/1966 Pall et a1. 1 17/140 X OTHER REFERENCES Paper Trade Journal (Feb. 14, 1966) pg. 40- 4, New Type of Asbestos Shows Advantages in Papermuking lngalls et ul.
Pulp and Paper, Casey, James P., lnterscience Publishers, N.Y. 1961 p. 1553- 4 Vol.3
Primary Examiner-S. Leon Bashore Assistant Examiner-Alfred D'Andrea, Jr.
Anorneys- Paul A. Rose, Thomas I. O'Brien, Frederick J. McCarthy, .Ir., Robert C. Cummings and Lawrence G. Kastriner ABSTRACT: Disclosed is a process for forming laminated felted sheets wherein a wet base sheet of fibrous material is formed on a paper making screen and, before the wet base sheet is removed from the screen, a nonseparable, unifonn The desirability of adding a binder to nonwoven felted sheets has been known for a long time, and numerous binders have been used for this purpose, for example, natural and synthetic resins, gums starches, waxes and various rubbery lattices. In accordance with prior art methods these binders have been incorporated into the felted fibrous materials in one of three ways. The most common way of incorporating the binder is to mix it with the fibrous furnish composition and then lay and dewater the mixture on a conventional Fourdrinier screen or cylinder machine. This type of process suffers from a variety of difficulties, the most important of which is improper coagulation and self-agglomeration of the binder causing weakness and lack of uniformity in the paper.
Another way of incorporating binders into felted fibrous sheets has been the practice, disclosed, for example, in US. Pat No. 2,022,687, of first forming a fibrous web upon a paper-making machine and thereafter impregnating the web, while supported on the paper-making screen, by passing it through a permeating bath containing the binder material. This practice suffers from the disadvantage of requiring a separate saturating machine, as well as difficulty in controlling the amount of binder added to the original sheet. Neither of the above-described methods serves to produce a laminated or coated structure, but rather produces a more or less imperfectly impregnated sheet.
A laminated sheet can, of course, be made by simply coating the surface of finished paper with a rubber, resinous or waxy binder. Such products, however, tend to have poor adhesion between the coating and the paper.
It has long been desirable to produce a paper product which contains on at least one side thereof a coating of a binder which is integrally bound to and substantially inseparable from its paper base sheet, ie to produce a laminated product wherein the lamina will not separate, and to be able to apply such coating to the base sheet simply, economically and without the need for additional complex machinery.
OBJECTS It is an object of this invention to produce a coated nonwoven felted fibrous sheet containing on at least one surface thereof a substantially nonseparable uniform and smooth rubbery, resinous or waxy coating.
It is another object of this invention to provide a process for applying to at least one surface of a felted fibrous base sheet, a resinous, rubbery or waxy coating by use of conventional paper-making machinery.
It is yet another object of this invention to produce a composition suitable for coating nonwoven felted fibrous base sheets, such as paper and the like, which coating will be integrally bonded to said base sheet and form a uniform, smooth coating thereon.
DESCRIPTION OF INVENTION The above mentioned and other objects which will become apparent from the detailed description to follow are achieved by a process comprising the steps of l providing a base sheet of felted fibrous material on a paper-making screen, and prior to removal of said base sheet from the screen, (2) applying on top of said base sheet a composition comprising an intimate mixture of chrysotile asbestos fibers having certain critical properties (hereafter defined) and a binder therefor.
Another aspect of this invention consists of a laminated product consisting essentially of a felted fibrous base sheet and integrally bonded thereto a coating or lamina; the latter comprising an intimate mixture of chrysotile asbestos having certain critical properties (hereafter defined) and a binder therefor.
A third aspect of this invention consists of a composition, suitable for coating nonwoven felted sheets, comprising an intimate mixture of chrysotile asbestos fibers having certain critical properties (hereafter defined) and a binder therefor. Said composition, which may also be used to form a self-supporting sheet, may if desired, include optional ingredients such as conventional paper-making fibers, fillers, pigments, dyes and the like.
To be suitable for purposes of this invention the asbestos used must have the following critical properties:
specific surface area 60-80 m./g. Magnetite content 004-0051 Reflectance 7278% Pulpability 0.24.095
Asbestos having the aforementioned properties is commercially available as high purity grade Calidria* Trademark of Union Carbide Corp.asbestos.
The properties of the asbestos material set forth above are critical in the sense that only by use thereof are the desired results of the invention obtained.
Specific surface area is calculated from adsorption data using the BET (Brunauer, Emmet, Teller) method as described in Brunauer, The Adsorption of Gases and Vapors, Princeton University Press 1945).
Magnetite content is measured by a permeametric device patterned after ASTM standard method D-l I 18-57. Since the lower limit of detection of the ASTM device is only about 0.20 percent magnetite, the ASTM method has been im proved with respect to sensitivity to measure a limit of detection of 0.005 percent magnetite, and the range of measurements has been extended to measure 0.10 percent magnetite in the midscale of the instrument. In order to obtain this greater range and improved sensitivity, the ASTM method has been modified to detect the phase changes of the current generated when magnetic materials are placed in the transfomier core rather than the voltage changes generated.
Reflectance is measured on a sample prepared according to TAPPI (Technical Association of the Pulp and Paper Industry) standard T-452-m-58 and is reported as percent of ultimate reflectance based on magnesium oxide as the standard of percent reflectance.
The pulpability of the high purity asbestos must be such that less than 1.0 percent and preferably less than 0.5 percent is retained on a 65-mesh Tyler screen when measured in accordance with the procedure described below. The term +65 -mesh is used tomean the amount, expressed as the percent of the sample, which does not pass through but is retained on a 65-mesh Tyler screen. The measurements are made on a wet pulped sample rather than a dry sample, since the particle size under wet pulped conditions is significant for purposes of paper manufacture. The pulpability is determined by adding 40 g. of asbestos and 2 liters of water to a TAPPl Standard Disintegrator and agitating the mixture for 4 minutes. A 250 ml. aliquot sample is then taken from the disintegrator and diluted to 3 liters with water. The diluted slurry is then poured through a 65-mesh (Tyler standard) wire screen held at an angle of about 30 from the horizontal position. The oversize remaining on the screen is washed back into a 4 liter beaker diluted with water and poured through the screen again as before. The oversize remaining is then backwashed, diluted and poured over the screen a third time. The oversize remaining is then dried at about 50 C. and weighed. The net weight of the oversize multiplied by 20 is the percent +65-mesh asbestos material contained in the original sample. This is the value referred to as the Pulpability."
Table I below illustrates the differences in the properties of the closest chrysotile asbestos of the prior art and the chrysotile asbestos essential for use in the present invention. Although Coalinga chrysotile* asbestos is preferred as the source of the asbestos, any chrysotile asbestos is suitable *Coalinga chrysotile asbestos is mined from a large deposit near Cooling. California.
TABLE I.COMPARATIVE PHYSICAL PROPERTIES OF ASBESTOS FIBERS Pulpability percent Specific Percent surface magnetits Percent reflectance area,
Type of asbestos rnJ/gm. mesh Canadian chrysotile Conventional coaiinga chrysotile Required for invention Binders which are useful in the preparation of the coating composition of this invention include all of the common sizing agents used in the paper industry, such as animal glues, starches, gelatin, rosin, rosin derivatives, waxes, bituminous materials such as asphalts, tars, pitches and bituminous as well as resinous and rubbery lattices.
Synthetic, resinous and rubbery lattices are the preferred binders. Illustrative suitable rubbery lattices are copolymers of butadiene and styrene (i.e. GR-S rubber containing 50-80 percent by weight butadiene), copolymers of butadiene and acrylonitrile (i.e. Buna-Nor Hycar rubber containing 50-80 percent butadiene), polychloroprenes (i.e. neoprenes), homopolymers of butadiene, butadiene-isoprene copolymers, and terpolymers of butadiene, styrene and acrylic acid or lower alkyl acrylites.
illustrative resinous binders which are useful are thermosetting resins such as phenol aldehyde resins, and melamine formaldehyde resins. Suitable thermoplastic resin binders include, for example, vinyl and substituted vinyl resins such as polyvinylchloride, polyvinylacetate, polyvinylacetal, polyvinylalcohol, polystyrene, polyacrylates, polymethacrylates, polyacrylonitrile, polyacrylamide and copolymers of these materials. Any resinous binder is useful for depositing the asbestos of this invention onto a base sheet, as long as it is dispersible in an aqueous medium or suspendible therein in particulate form.
The coating composition is prepared by first dispersing the asbestos in an aqueous slurry by means of a high shear device; for example, a Reitz disintegrator, a Fitzmill or a Waring blender. The binder, usually in an aqueous suspension, is then blended in with the asbestos using low shear mixing such as obtained with an ordinary mixer.
The concentrations of both the asbestos slurry and the binder suspension are ordinarily kept below about 3 percent solids by weight, since at higher concentrations the composition becomes too viscous for easy handling. The proportions of asbestos to binder are controlled to give optimum efficiency in terms of the retention of the solids on the paper-making screen. The asbestos content, however, must be sufficiently high to insure that its cationic charge will be adequate to coflocculate all the other solid components of the mixture. If the concentration of the binder is too high, the binder in excess of that which the asbestos can flocculate will in large part be lost by draining through the base sheet into the white water. The optimum proportions of asbestos to binder will vary depending upon the particular binder and other additives used. Preferably, the ratio of asbestos to binder (on a dry weight basis) is from 3:1 to 9:1. The same proportions are useful whether the composition is to be used for coating purposes or for making an extruded, self-supporting film. Self-supporting films of this composition have the properties of an asbestos filled plastic film, and can be used, for example, as packaging film or as wallpaper.
The asbestos-binder coating composition may contain additives such as fillers, pigments or fibrous materials. The use of TiO and clay are illustrated below, however, any conventional paper making fillers and/or pigments may be used, as well as mixtures thereof. Furthermore, fibrous materials other than asbestos, both synthetic and natural, may also be included, if desired, in the coating composition. For example, one or more natural or synthetic mineral or vegetable fibers may be added to the composition. in all such cases, however, the weight of asbestos having the critical characteristics previously described must be at least 50 percent of the weight in the composition. The asbestos in such a coating composition is believed to act as a coupling agent between the binder and the other fiber or nonfibrous additives, since the cationic nature of the asbestos is believed to be attracted by the other fibers, the nonfibrous additives, as well as the latex binder, all of which are anionic in character. The binder is preferably added after the asbestos and additive have been adequately mixed, since the asbestos will cause the binder to coagulate.
The asbestos-binder composition of this invention is novel and unusual in that it can be applied directly on top of a wet base sheet before the sheet is taken ofi' the paper-making screen. Such on the wire coating" has not previously been feasible because coating formulations tried in the past have drained through the base sheet. Use of asbestos having the critical properties previously defined holds out the coating composition from the base sheet, and enables the binder composition to be applied directly onto the paper making screen containing the wet base sheet. Furthermore, there is no need for using organic surfactants, wetting agents, dispersing agents, or other fiocculating agents required by prior art methods to obtain flocculation and deposition of a binder onto the fibers. The critical properties of the above described asbestos itself assure both proper cofiocculation of the binder onto the asbestos and deposition of the asbestos-binder coating onto the base sheet.
Any felted product which can be prepared on a paper making screen can be used as the base sheet in the present invention. These felted products can be formed from organic, inorganic or mixed materials. Paper base sheets are preferred. As used throughout the specification and claims of this disclosure the term paper" is used in its generic sense, i.e. to include any nonwoven, felted fibrous sheet, including but not restricted to bond, wrapping, tissue, printing, wall and backing paper as well as cardboard, wallboard, millboard, and the like.
Suitable inorganic fibrous materials for base sheets include glass wool, mineral wool, and silicate fibers. Useful organic fibers include, for example, cotton, silk, hemp, ramie, alpaca, hair, fur and animal bristles. Useful synthetic organic fibers are fibers made from polyamides, acrylates, polyesters, cellulose acetate, regenerated cellulose (rayon), polyvinyl chloride, polyethylene, polyurethane, polytetrafluoroethylene and the like.
Preferred base sheets are those made from conventional cellulosic pulp used for the manufacture of paper for example, mechanical, semichemical, sulfite, sulfate, or craft (soda) pulp. Mixtures of cellulosic pulp or mixtures of cellulosic and noncellulosic fibers may also be used.
The paper base sheet useful in this invention may have included in it conventional fillers such as, for example, clay, sodium silicoaluminate, diatomaceous silica, calcium silicate, talc, calcium carbonate, calcium sulfate, barium sulfate, zinc sulfate and titanium dioxide. Such fillers may be incorporated not only into the base sheet, but also into the asbestos coating composition of this invention, if desired.
In general, a base sheet is made by first preparing a dilute aqueous pulp of suspended fibers, incorporating into the pulp desired additives such as fillers or pigments to make a paper furnish composition, depositing the furnish composition from a head box onto a moving fine mesh screen, and then draining the excess water through the screen. The asbestos-binder coating composition of this invention is then applied directly onto the wet felted fibrous web or sheet while the latter is still moving on the paper making screen. The coating step is conveniently carried out by having a second head box from which the coating composition is applied onto the wet base-covered screen.
sheet with a coating of asbestos and binder were prepared on a laboratory Noble and Wood handsheet machine using the folground wood and sulfate was 250. The only additive used in the base sheet furnish was alum, added in sufficient amount to give a pH of 4.5 at the first headbox. The first headbox contained the furnish composition for the base sheet, and the lowing procedure. A base sheet having a basis weight of 60 secondafy headbox contained the coating composition for the g./m was first prepared by adding unbleached craft pulp to cop e the deckle box of the handsheet machine and allowing it to Three dliferem fumlshes were used m the Secondary headdrain almost completely. Then a second compositionconsistbox for laynig down e Ply of the l P The first ing of a mixture of binder and asbestos having the critical protop ply coating composmon labeled composmon A m table perties heretofore defined was poured on top of the base sheet below conslsted of 85 percent e and Percent i e which was Sm] in the deckle The proportions (on a dry The second top ply coating composition, labeled composition weight basis) of asbestos to binder used are given in table n B in table Ill below, consisted of 40 percent asbestos, 40 perbelow. in examples 1 through 7 the binder used was an aque- F F and e f T th'rd P P eoatlhg ous dispersion of a Synthetic late of a copolymel. containing 1 5 position, labeled composition Cm table 1" below, consisted of about 60 percent styrene and 40 percent butadiene. in exam- Percent asbestos Pe ahd 20 peleeht latexples 8 through 12 the binder used was an aqueous dispersion of 8 composmohs were PP h 1 Percent of a copolymer containing about 40 percent styrene, 5 percent Sends Slumes directly onto he wet ba5e sheet as it moved acrylic acid and 55 percent ethylhexyl acrylate. The asbestos tmuoiisly along theFourdnhler wire The asbestos used had latex coating composition contained about 1 percent solids. it 20 the emleal Properties e forth above- In all cases l was added to the deckle box slowly in order to minimize the used was an aqueous dlspersloh of a p yf eomalhlhg disturbance of the wet cellulosic base sheet. The deckle box about 60 Pe e styrene 40 h huadlehe was then allowed to drain completely. The laminated sheet one objective of this senes of experimental e was [0 was then removed from the deckle box, pressed with a felt T the P layer as heavy as posslble and to PP Onto press, and dried in a drum dryer operated at a temperature of hght base ehee as as Onto a heavy base Sheet- Changes in about 105 C. The heat of the drier not only dried the the thlekhese of both the top P y and the hotmm P y were l i d sheet b l cured h l made by setting the flow rate from a headbox at a steady rate Twelve Samples were prepared i the manner described and then ad usting the speed of the Fourdrinier wire. Once a above and tested to determine optimum retention of the coatbase Ph had been long enough to insure Steady State ing, as well as the physical properties of the laminates 3 Conditions the flow of 1 P y furnish was started from the produced. second headbox and increased slowly until the wet web ap- The data from table ll demonstrates that optimum retention P to be j the verge of break g een the uch of the coating is achieved when the ratio of asbestos to latex roll n the fir preSS- nder these conditions the run was (on a dry weight basis) is from 80:20 to 90:10, in other words, continued for 10 to 15 minutes. Thereafter the wire speed was when about 10-20 percent of the asbestos latex composition is g and the Procedure repeated with a different P p y latex and 80-90 percent is asbestos. The data above also ling f rni hdemonstrates that in general the best physical properties are Samples of paper were taken from each set of runs and cut obtained when there is maximum retention of the coating. into sheets. Some Of the sheets from each set were calendered at room temperature and some at approximately 230 F. After EXAMPLES 13-22 40 conditioning at a constant temperature and humidity room The following examples demonstrate the method of making critical wax tests were made on the calendered sheets, as well a two-ply l m n p pe in accordance with the invention, as on uncalendered samples of sheet. The results of the critical on a continuous paper-making machine by using a secondary wax tests are shown in table Ill below. head box on a conventional Fourdrinier machine. The base The critical wax tests were conducted in accordance with sheets were TAPPI standard test T-459 six-65. This test consists of taking TABLE II Tensile Top strength H2O Oil Ratio of laminate Percent adsorpadsporasbestos retention reflec- Dry Wet tion a on 4 to latex (percent) l tapes 1 (lbs.) (oz) (minutes) (minutes) 1 Top laminate retention is the percent asbestos-latex retained based on the quantity applied to the base sheet.
2 Percent reflectance was determined with a photovolt meter according to TAPPI standards.
3 H2O adsorption was determined by placing a drop of water on the surface of the sheet and recording the time in minutes for the water to be adsorbed.
of oil.
made from a furnish containing 50 percent wood and 50 percent bleached soft wood sulfate pulp. The sulfate pulp was a standard series of wax sticks, each having a different tackine'ss. heating them to their melting point and then applying refined to a freencss of 370 and the freeness of the mixture of 75 ea h f the sticks to the paper sheet, Th number f 1 TABLE III Critical wax number Weight Galen Basis ratio dared Hot Top Wei ht. top ply: room calenply (gmirm) base ply Uncalontemperacred ered ture F.
A 117 .86 6 6 7 B 154 81 7 l0 11 B 100 35 6 9 B 126 91 6 8 11 B 88 76 7 7 10 B 105 1. 06 8 9 10 C 109 .36 10 10 C 88 .33 10 10 11 C 69 35 8 9 10 C 79 .20 S 9 10 highest numbered stick that does not pull fibers from the surface is the critical wax value of the paper. It can be seen from table Ill that very good bonding between the plies was obtained as indicated by the critical wax numbers ranging from 6 to l 1 Some increase in critical wax was obtained by calendering the sheet, with hot calendering giving the best results. The tests also indicate that an increase in the ratio of latex to asbestos and pigment increases ply bonding.
The laminated paper of the present invention has numerous advantages not possessed by prior art materials, such as improved ply bonding and low cost of manufacture due to the fact that separate equipment for coating is not required. The coated paper of the present invention is particularly useful for one side hold out items such as paper plates, drinking cups, flexible packaging and the like.
I claim:
1. A process for the manufacture of laminated sheets comprising the steps of:
l. forming on a paper making screen, a wet base sheet of felted fibrous material and prior to removal of said base sheet from said screen providing a nonseparable, uniform, asbestos-binder coating on the surface of said base sheet by applying on top of said wet base sheet before said wet base sheet is removed from the paper-making screen a composition comprising an intimate mixture containing at least 50 percent by weight of chrysotile asbestos characterized by a specific surface area between about 60 to m/gm., a magnetite content of from about 0.04 to 0.5 percent, a reflectance of about 72 to 78 percent and a pulpability such that 0.2 to 1 percent of the asbestos is retained on a (SS-mesh Tyler screen and a binder therefor, the ratio of asbestos to binder, on a dry weight basis, being from about 3: l to 9: 1.
2. The process of claim 1 wherein the coating composition applied on top of said base sheet contains an additive selected from the group consisting of fibrous materials, fillers, pigments and mixtures thereof.
3. The process of claim 1 wherein the base sheet is paper.

Claims (3)

  1. 2. providing a nonseparable, uniform, asbestos-binder coating on the surface of said base sheet by applying on top of said wet base sheet before said wet base sheet is removed from the paper-making screen a composition comprising an intimate mixture containing at least 50 percent by weight of chrysotile asbestos characterized by a specific surface area between about 60 to 80 m2/gm., a magnetite content of from about 0.04 to 0.5 percent, a reflectance of about 72 to 78 percent and a pulpability such that 0.2 to 1 percent of the asbestos is retained on a 65-mesh Tyler screen and a binder therefor, the ratio of asbestos to binder, on a dry weight basis, being from about 3:1 to 9:1.
  2. 2. The process of claim 1 wherein the coating composition applied on top of said base sheet contains an additive selected from the group consisting of fibrous materials, fillers, pigments and mixtures thereof.
  3. 3. The process of claim 1 wherein the base sheet is paper.
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Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3770569A (en) * 1971-02-22 1973-11-06 Nicolet Ind Inc Asbestos-plastic film laminates
US3910814A (en) * 1973-01-22 1975-10-07 Nasa Reconstituted asbestos matrix
EP1495187A1 (en) * 2002-04-10 2005-01-12 Fibermark, Inc. High temperature paper

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US1558495A (en) * 1915-07-29 1925-10-27 Flintkote Co Process of making roofing felt or like material
US2626213A (en) * 1948-12-21 1953-01-20 Raybestos Manhattan Inc Asbestos dispersions and method of forming same
US2881072A (en) * 1956-01-17 1959-04-07 Fibrofelt Corp Method of making reinforced multiply paper
US2927038A (en) * 1956-09-11 1960-03-01 Patent & Licensing Corp Fibrated mastic coatings
US2993802A (en) * 1957-09-23 1961-07-25 Owens Corning Fiberglass Corp Fibrous acoustical members and method for producing the same
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US2626213A (en) * 1948-12-21 1953-01-20 Raybestos Manhattan Inc Asbestos dispersions and method of forming same
US2881072A (en) * 1956-01-17 1959-04-07 Fibrofelt Corp Method of making reinforced multiply paper
US2927038A (en) * 1956-09-11 1960-03-01 Patent & Licensing Corp Fibrated mastic coatings
US2993802A (en) * 1957-09-23 1961-07-25 Owens Corning Fiberglass Corp Fibrous acoustical members and method for producing the same
US3246767A (en) * 1962-08-06 1966-04-19 Pall Corp Fluid-permeable materials and process of making the same

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Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3770569A (en) * 1971-02-22 1973-11-06 Nicolet Ind Inc Asbestos-plastic film laminates
US3910814A (en) * 1973-01-22 1975-10-07 Nasa Reconstituted asbestos matrix
EP1495187A1 (en) * 2002-04-10 2005-01-12 Fibermark, Inc. High temperature paper
EP1495187A4 (en) * 2002-04-10 2007-10-17 Fibermark Inc High temperature paper

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