WO1997006393A1 - Procede permettant de donner du volume a des moquettes tuftees - Google Patents

Procede permettant de donner du volume a des moquettes tuftees Download PDF

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Publication number
WO1997006393A1
WO1997006393A1 PCT/US1996/012864 US9612864W WO9706393A1 WO 1997006393 A1 WO1997006393 A1 WO 1997006393A1 US 9612864 W US9612864 W US 9612864W WO 9706393 A1 WO9706393 A1 WO 9706393A1
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
carpet
pile
heating
temperature
oven
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/US1996/012864
Other languages
English (en)
Inventor
Mohinder Kumar Gupta
Jeffrey Lee Kennard
Kalika Ranjan Samant
Vijayendra Kumar
Original Assignee
E.I. Du Pont De Nemours And Company
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.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by E.I. Du Pont De Nemours And Company filed Critical E.I. Du Pont De Nemours And Company
Priority to AU67199/96A priority Critical patent/AU6719996A/en
Priority to EP96927342A priority patent/EP0843801A1/fr
Publication of WO1997006393A1 publication Critical patent/WO1997006393A1/fr

Links

Classifications

    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F26DRYING
    • F26BDRYING SOLID MATERIALS OR OBJECTS BY REMOVING LIQUID THEREFROM
    • F26B13/00Machines and apparatus for drying fabrics, fibres, yarns, or other materials in long lengths, with progressive movement
    • F26B13/10Arrangements for feeding, heating or supporting materials; Controlling movement, tension or position of materials

Definitions

  • This application is a continuation-in-part of copending application Serial No. 08/298,642 filed 8/31/94.
  • This invention relates to bulking nylon carpet, and more particularly, it relates to bulking nylon carpet by directing heated air toward the carpet.
  • the pile yarn is inserted into a primary backing substrate by tufting needles to form an assembly having loops of yarn on the pile of the backing; the loops may be left as loops to form loop pile carpet, cut to form cut pile carpet, or only some of the loops cut to form a cut/loop pile carpet.
  • the pile yarn in this assembly may already have the color in the yarn polymer (pre-dyed or solution dyed yarn) , or the yarn must be treated in a dye bath or other liquid borne dyeing process that requires heating and drying of the carpet structure.
  • the colored carpet must then have the tufts locked to the primary backing by an adhesive that impregnates the base of the tufts on the back side of the primary, and a secondary backing must be applied to protect the base of the tufts against abrasion and provide structural stiffness for handling the carpet.
  • the adhesive is usually a water borne latex adhesive that must be dried to set the adhesive by passing the carpet assembly through a heated oven.
  • the pile yarn will be heated at least once and may be heated twice; once to dry the dye fluid and once to dry the adhesive. These heating processes also activate the filament crimp that was inserted in the pile yarn during spinning and pulled out during tensioning in manufacturing. This recovery of latent crimp causes the yarn to bulk, which is beneficial to achieve good area coverage with the minimum yarn and create a springy feel to the carpet.
  • a predyed yarn in a tufted carpet structure useful in automobiles where the backing is a foamed material that is molded under heat while the pile yarn is cooled.
  • the tufted carpet is bulked by treatment with steam after the carpet is assembled.
  • a process is disclosed in copending U.S. Application Serial No. 08/017,162, incorporated herein by reference, for making a nylon tuftstring carpet by bonding pile yarn to a support strand to form a tuftstring, and bonding the tuftstrings to a backing substrate to form a carpet structure.
  • the bonding process does not require bulk heating of the pile yarn.
  • Such a process does not use latex or other water borne adhesives to bind the filaments in the tufts to each other or bind the tufts to the backing substrate or bind a secondary backing to the primary backing/tuft assembly.
  • the process also uses a smaller creel of pile yarn to form a carpet than does the conventional tufting process.
  • a predyed yarn since a color change is easier to handle with a small creel.
  • Use of predyed yarn eliminates the dyeing step requiring heated drying of the carpet assembly; this also eliminates the environmental problems often associated with liquid borne dyes.
  • the bonded tuftstring carpet using pre-dyed pile yarn, never is exposed to heating of the carpet assembly.
  • the pile yarn never is exposed to heat to bulk the yarn.
  • the invention is a method of bulking an unbulked nylon carpet having a pile side and a backing side comprising the steps of : removing wrinkles and holding the carpet with a holding means in an extended wrinkle-free condition; heating the carpet to a temperature between 90-150°C; and cooling the carpet to a temperature below 60°C before removing the carpet from the holding means .
  • the means for accomplishing the method may particularly include a pin tenter for transporting an extended length of carpet through an oven, or a moveable frame for transporting a discrete piece of carpet through an oven, or a shroud covering a portion of a rotating cylinder used in forming the carpet for treating a portion of the carpet just after the portion is formed.
  • Fig. 1 is a schematic view of a finishing line incorporating a bulking system.
  • Fig. 2 shows a section view of a bulking oven.
  • Fig. 3 is an isometric view of another bulking oven.
  • Fig. 4 is an isometric view of a means of bulking the carpet as it is being made.
  • Fig. 1 shows a finishing line for a tuftstring carpet that requires bulking. It consists of an unwinder 20, a bulking heating oven 22, a cooling chamber 24, a conventional shearing device 26, an inspection conveyor 28, and a windup 30. After winding, the rolls of finished carpet are strapped by strapper 32 and held for shipping at table 34. Conventional web accumulators are provided at 36, 38, and 40 to provide continuity of operations. Arrow 41 shows the path of the carpet through the line.
  • the heating oven is shown in more detail in Fig. 2. It comprises an enclosure 42; tenter clip loop 44 and opposed loop 46 driven by motors 48 and 50, respectively; a plurality of pile side nozzles, such as nozzle 52, and back side nozzles, such as nozzle 54, which extend across the path of the carpet 55; return inlet 56, blower 58, and header 59 for circulating gaseous fluids through the nozzles; main damper 60; trim dampers 62 and 64 for balancing flow to the pile side and back side of carpet 55, respectively; and heat exchanger 65 for heating or cooling the circulating fluid.
  • the nozzles have a plurality of orifices, such as orifice 66 in nozzle 52 and orifice 68 in nozzle 54 for forming streams of gaseous fluid 70 and 72, respectively, directed at the carpet .
  • the plurality of pile side and back side nozzles are spaced apart along the path of the carpet so the gases passing from the orifices can be redirected upwardly and downwardly without having to flow completely across the carpet to reach the return inlet .
  • a porous support belt 77 between the nozzles may also be a porous support belt 77 between the nozzles to temporarily support the carpet, if it should sag during threadup or treatment.
  • the belt would move at the same speed as the tenter clips so the carpet would not drag over the belt.
  • the carpet may be attached to the belt instead of the tenter clips.
  • Such an oven can be obtained from Krantz America, Inc., Charlotte, NC, and is known as a pin frame drying oven model Aeronot D74.
  • air may be selected as the treatment fluid, and the air is heated by heat exchanger 65 and is forced through header 59 by blower 58.
  • the heater air passes along pile side nozzle 52 and through orifices, such as orifice 66, that extend across the width of the tuftstring carpet 55.
  • the heated air is also passing along back side nozzle to heat the back side of the carpet.
  • the carpet is placed with the pile yarn facing up and the backing substrate facing down.
  • the carpet is placed on the pins on the tenter pin loops in a wrinkle-free condition by applying a slight tension in the longitudinal and lateral directions (machine direction and cross machine direction, MD and XD, respectively) as it is placed on the pins.
  • the tension should be in a range of about 0.5 to 1.0 pounds per linear inch.
  • the weight of the carpet causes sag that will add some tension in the lateral XD direction.
  • the tenter pin loops may diverge over a portion of their path to further tension the carpet in the XD.
  • the hot air exiting the orifices impinges on the tuft tips and rapidly penetrates the pile yarn to heat the filaments making up the yarn.
  • the hot air is then redirected from the pile of the carpet and drawn into the return air inlet 56 through the spaces between nozzles and at the lateral edges of the carpet.
  • the return air then passed through damper 60 and to blower 58.
  • the damper 60 is adjusted to ensure the total flow of air is appropriate for the particular pile yarn denier, density, and height so the velocity coming through the orifices will not deform the pile yarn causing bending of the tufts and matting.
  • the heated air then passes to the pile side nozzle through trim damper 62, which is set to balance the flow to the two nozzles.
  • the tenter clip loops are driven at a speed to pass a given length of the tuftstring carpet through the oven in the number of seconds necessary to heat all the pile yarn to a temperature required to recover the latent crimp in the filaments.
  • the temperature of the filaments should be about 90-100°C to recover the latent crimp.
  • the time for the nylon pile yarn to go from room temperature to at least 90°C throughout depends on the temperature of the air impinging on the carpet, the flow velocity of air impinging on the pile yarn, and the denier, density, and tuft height of the carper:. When hot air is applied to the pile side of the carpet, it must penetrate the entire pile height to also heat the base of the pile adjacent the backing to achieve the full bulk possible.
  • the samples tested were tuftstring carpets made with nylon 6-6 BCF pile yarn.
  • the carpet is a moisture stable nylon tuftstring carpet, as described in copending U.S. Application Serial No. 08/298,642, incorporated herein by reference.
  • the samples were a particularly preferred embodiment wherein the pile yarn is nylon 6-6 BCF, the strand comprises a core of fiberglass filaments coated with a sheath of nylon 6-6, and the backing substrate is a composite fabric of entangled non-bonded layers of nylon 6-6 filaments attached to the top and bottom of a fiberglass scrim layer by adhesive present on the scrim.
  • the yarn is joined to the strand by fusion and the tuftstring is joined to the backing by fusion, both without the addition of a separate adhesive. It is important that the tuftstring, which includes the pile yarn, is mounted on a backing substrate that will not wrinkle during the heating required for bulking.
  • the bulked carpet should lay flat under its own weight after cooling.
  • the carpet samples were run through an oven just to test the temperature response. The carpet samples were not held in a wrinkle-free condition, but the samples were small enough that wrinkling was not evident.
  • the orifices in the nozzle of the test oven were slots that spanned the width of the samples so the velocity distribution was very uniform across the width of the sample.
  • the sample was a nylon 6-6 tuftstring carpet with 1/2 inch tuft length, 24 oz/sq yd density, and 1275 denier, 8 dpf pile yarn.
  • the air temperature at the top of the pile was measured with a temperature indicator coupon stapled to the pile yarn; the temperature at the base of the pile was measured with a thermocouple attached to the backing at the base of the pile.
  • the air velocity was 1500 ft/min, and the temperature impinging on the top of the pile was 143°C.
  • the temperature at the base of the pile was 92°C after about 80 seconds.
  • the air velocity was 2100 ft/min, and the temperature impinging on the top of the pile was 143°C.
  • the temperature at the base of the pile was 93°C after about 60 seconds.
  • the air velocity was 2100 ft/min, and the temperature impinging on the top of the pile was 127°C.
  • the temperature at the base of the pile was 92°C after about 90 seconds. Comparing Case I and II, an increase in velocity heated the base of the pile yarn more quickly. Comparing Case II and Case III, decreasing the temperature at the same velocity took longer to heat the base of the pile yarn. It was discovered that if the temperature of the air impinging on the top of the pile yarn was above about 150°C, the tips of the pile yarn began to have a harsh feel. In another test, temperatures above 150°C also caused problems with lay- flat of the carpet.
  • the tuftstring carpet must be cooled before releasing it from the tenter loops or some distortion of the backing substrate may occur that will prevent the bulked carpet from laying flat.
  • the tenter loops therefore, must extend beyond the oven 22 and through the cooling chamber 24 in Fig. 1.
  • the cooling chamber can be designed similarly to the oven of Fig. 2, except the heat exchanger 64 will be removing heat from the return air instead of adding it.
  • an external source of cool room air may be used instead of a heat exchanger.
  • the tuftstring carpet should be cooled to a temperature of about 60°C, and preferably 50°C, before releasing it from the tenter loops. It may also be desirable to further cool the carpet to facilitate shearing.
  • the carpet should be below about 40°C before winding into a roll to minimize roll set.
  • Fig. 3 shows an alternate embodiment for bulking a discrete piece of carpet that is a simpler, lower cost device than the system of Fig. 2.
  • a frame 84 to hold the carpet in a wrinkle-free condition by pins 86 engaging the edges of the discrete carpet piece 88.
  • a conveyor 90 extends from a loading position 92 to a cooling and unloading position 94, and passes through an oven 96 having nozzles 97 that may have orifices as in the oven of Fig. 2, or they may have a slot (not shown) for an orifice.
  • the oven 96 has an entrance end 98 and an exit end 100.
  • the carpet is placed in the frame in a wrinkle-free condition at the loading position, and the conveyor transports the frame and carpet through the oven from the entrance end to the exit end at a speed to insure the pile yarn is heated throughout to a temperature exceeding 90°C.
  • the carpet may be transported into the oven and stopped while the heated fluid is directed at the pile yarn.
  • the velocity of fluid through the nozzles that impinges on the pile yarn is uniform and low enough so matting does not occur.
  • the frame and carpet are then transported to the cooling and unloading position, and the carpet is allowed to cool in the room air while still held on the frame.
  • the carpet is unloaded after the pile yarn is below about 50°C, and the frame is transported back through the oven to the loading position for loading the next carpet piece.
  • Fig. 4 shows an alternate embodiment for heating the carpet as the tuftstrings are being arranged and attached to the backing substrate to form the carpet.
  • a drum 102 which holds the backing substrate 104 in a wrinkle-free condition by grasping the ends in a clamp 106 along the axis of the drum.
  • the drum is rotated in the direction of arrow 107, and tuftstring 108 is guided onto the drum by traversing guide 110 driven in the direction of arrow 112 by a screw and nut assembly 114.
  • the substrate includes a coating of a layer of thermoplastic adhesive which is softened by hot air jet 116 attached to guide 110.
  • the jet heats a small portion of the coating just before the tuftstring comes into contact with the backing substrate. As the heated thermoplastic coating rotates away from the jet, it is cooled to bond the tuftstring to the backing substrate.
  • Attached to the guide 110 is a shroud 118 which is supplied with heated fluid through flexible hose 120.
  • the shroud has an entrance end 122 and an exit end 124.
  • Within shroud 118 is a nozzle (not shown) to direct the heated fluid at the pile yarn on the carpet that has been formed.
  • the length of the shroud is such that the yarn passing from the entrance end to the exit end as the cylinder rotates beneath the shroud is heated for a time sufficient to bulk the yarn.
  • the thermoplastic adhesive used to attach the tuftstring to the backing substrate must have a bonding temperature that is higher than the bulking temperature required for the pile yarn so the tuftstring remains securely bonded during the bulking operation.
  • the carpet may also be treated by first bonding all the tuftstring to the backing and then heating the carpet by traversing the shroud across the carpet at a speed so the yarn is only subjected to bulking heating once.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Textile Engineering (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Treatment Of Fiber Materials (AREA)

Abstract

Procédé permettant de donner du gonflant à une moquette en nylon (55) comportant un côté poils et un envers. Le procédé consiste à porter la moquette à une température comprise entre 90 et 150 °C avant de la refroidir à une température inférieure à 60 °C. Le chauffage s'effectue en dirigeant un fluide chaud sur le côté poils, ou à la fois sur le côté poils et sur l'envers. Le four de chauffage comprend un espace clos (42); un circuit fermé (44) pour la pince de rame et un circuit fermé opposé (46) entraînés chacun par un moteur (48 et 50); une pluralité de buses (52, 54); une entrée de recirculation (56); une soufflante (58) et un collecteur (59) pour assurer la circulation des fluides gazeux par les buses; des étouffoirs (60, 62 et 64) et un échangeur de chaleur (65) pour chauffer ou refroidir le fluide circulant.
PCT/US1996/012864 1995-08-10 1996-08-08 Procede permettant de donner du volume a des moquettes tuftees WO1997006393A1 (fr)

Priority Applications (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
AU67199/96A AU6719996A (en) 1995-08-10 1996-08-08 Method for bulking tuftstring carpets
EP96927342A EP0843801A1 (fr) 1995-08-10 1996-08-08 Procede permettant de donner du volume a des moquettes tuftees

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US209195P 1995-08-10 1995-08-10
US60/002,091 1995-08-10

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
WO1997006393A1 true WO1997006393A1 (fr) 1997-02-20

Family

ID=21699213

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
PCT/US1996/012864 WO1997006393A1 (fr) 1995-08-10 1996-08-08 Procede permettant de donner du volume a des moquettes tuftees

Country Status (3)

Country Link
EP (1) EP0843801A1 (fr)
AU (1) AU6719996A (fr)
WO (1) WO1997006393A1 (fr)

Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO2001096652A2 (fr) * 2000-06-13 2001-12-20 Milliken & Company Produits et processus de renouvellement de dalles de moquette
WO2002070809A1 (fr) * 2001-03-05 2002-09-12 Ontera Modular Carpets Pty Ltd Ameliorations relatives aux tapis constitues de fibres courtes
CN102642377A (zh) * 2012-04-01 2012-08-22 江苏天明机械集团有限公司 聚氨酯保温板水泥基卷材连续生产线烘干机构
CN104918761A (zh) * 2012-12-14 2015-09-16 乔拉·比斯尼克 建筑业用簇绒的制造方法及其制造装置
CN109595903A (zh) * 2018-11-19 2019-04-09 喻正江 一种具有余热回收功能的纺织烘干设备

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US1716293A (en) 1925-05-22 1929-06-04 William G Bond Process of and apparatus for making cork articles
US3921308A (en) * 1973-11-23 1975-11-25 Challenge Cook Bros Inc Methods for treating yarn bundles
US3962012A (en) * 1974-06-28 1976-06-08 E. I. Du Pont De Nemours And Company Process for laminating pressure-sensitive material
US4270283A (en) * 1979-01-10 1981-06-02 Ellis James F Air recycling apparatus for drying a textile web
US4578132A (en) * 1982-09-23 1986-03-25 Heuge Export Ag Process for the production of tufted carpet tiles
US4617218A (en) * 1983-07-19 1986-10-14 Modern Fibers, Inc. Tightly curled, cut pile, tufted carpet

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DE1785689A1 (de) * 1965-07-13 1976-02-05 Vepa Ag Vorrichtung zum waermebehandeln von vorzugsweise textilgut
DE1913932A1 (de) * 1969-03-19 1970-10-01 Artos Meier Windhorst Kg Verfahren und Vorrichtung zur kontinuierlichen Waermebehandlung von poroesen schwereren Warenbahnen
US3629953A (en) * 1970-09-22 1971-12-28 Lansdowne Steel & Iron Co Material drying apparatus
US3806310A (en) * 1971-02-22 1974-04-23 Texile Sys Inc Side fired carpet drying method and apparatus
US4005979A (en) * 1974-03-22 1977-02-01 Astec Industries, Inc. Multistage progressive drying method
US4301577A (en) * 1979-08-30 1981-11-24 Bigelow-Sanford, Inc. Process for treating tufted pile fabric

Patent Citations (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1716293A (en) 1925-05-22 1929-06-04 William G Bond Process of and apparatus for making cork articles
US3921308A (en) * 1973-11-23 1975-11-25 Challenge Cook Bros Inc Methods for treating yarn bundles
US3962012A (en) * 1974-06-28 1976-06-08 E. I. Du Pont De Nemours And Company Process for laminating pressure-sensitive material
US4270283A (en) * 1979-01-10 1981-06-02 Ellis James F Air recycling apparatus for drying a textile web
US4578132A (en) * 1982-09-23 1986-03-25 Heuge Export Ag Process for the production of tufted carpet tiles
US4617218A (en) * 1983-07-19 1986-10-14 Modern Fibers, Inc. Tightly curled, cut pile, tufted carpet

Non-Patent Citations (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Title
See also references of EP0843801A4 *

Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO2001096652A2 (fr) * 2000-06-13 2001-12-20 Milliken & Company Produits et processus de renouvellement de dalles de moquette
WO2001096652A3 (fr) * 2000-06-13 2002-05-30 Milliken & Co Produits et processus de renouvellement de dalles de moquette
US6989037B2 (en) 2000-06-13 2006-01-24 Milliken & Company Carpet tile renewal process and products
WO2002070809A1 (fr) * 2001-03-05 2002-09-12 Ontera Modular Carpets Pty Ltd Ameliorations relatives aux tapis constitues de fibres courtes
CN102642377A (zh) * 2012-04-01 2012-08-22 江苏天明机械集团有限公司 聚氨酯保温板水泥基卷材连续生产线烘干机构
CN104918761A (zh) * 2012-12-14 2015-09-16 乔拉·比斯尼克 建筑业用簇绒的制造方法及其制造装置
CN109595903A (zh) * 2018-11-19 2019-04-09 喻正江 一种具有余热回收功能的纺织烘干设备

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
AU6719996A (en) 1997-03-05
EP0843801A1 (fr) 1998-05-27
EP0843801A4 (fr) 1998-07-08

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