WO2006069120A2 - Polymeric structures comprising an hydroxyl polymer and processes for making same - Google Patents

Polymeric structures comprising an hydroxyl polymer and processes for making same Download PDF

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Publication number
WO2006069120A2
WO2006069120A2 PCT/US2005/046284 US2005046284W WO2006069120A2 WO 2006069120 A2 WO2006069120 A2 WO 2006069120A2 US 2005046284 W US2005046284 W US 2005046284W WO 2006069120 A2 WO2006069120 A2 WO 2006069120A2
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WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
hydroxyl polymer
fiber
polymer
hydroxyl
fibers
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/US2005/046284
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French (fr)
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WO2006069120A3 (en
Inventor
Larry Neil Mackey
Gregory Charles Gordon
Stephen Wayne Heinzman
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The Procter & Gamble 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
Priority claimed from US11/018,746 external-priority patent/US20060134410A1/en
Priority to EP05854923.9A priority Critical patent/EP1828450B1/en
Priority to CA2591596A priority patent/CA2591596C/en
Priority to ES05854923T priority patent/ES2424358T3/en
Priority to JP2007547037A priority patent/JP4574682B2/en
Priority to PL05854923T priority patent/PL1828450T3/en
Application filed by The Procter & Gamble Company filed Critical The Procter & Gamble Company
Priority to AU2005319271A priority patent/AU2005319271B2/en
Priority to BRPI0519131-9A priority patent/BRPI0519131A2/en
Priority to MX2007007506A priority patent/MX2007007506A/en
Publication of WO2006069120A2 publication Critical patent/WO2006069120A2/en
Publication of WO2006069120A3 publication Critical patent/WO2006069120A3/en
Priority to AU2009213034A priority patent/AU2009213034A1/en

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    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D01NATURAL OR MAN-MADE THREADS OR FIBRES; SPINNING
    • D01FCHEMICAL FEATURES IN THE MANUFACTURE OF ARTIFICIAL FILAMENTS, THREADS, FIBRES, BRISTLES OR RIBBONS; APPARATUS SPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR THE MANUFACTURE OF CARBON FILAMENTS
    • D01F9/00Artificial filaments or the like of other substances; Manufacture thereof; Apparatus specially adapted for the manufacture of carbon filaments

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to hydroxyl polymers, more particularly, to polymeric structures, especially fibers, comprising an association agent, fibrous structures comprising such polymeric structures and processes for making such polymeric structures and/or fibrous structures.
  • Polymeric structures such as fibers and/or films, comprising hydroxyl polymers are known in the art.
  • polymeric structures especially in the form of fibers, comprising an association agent wherein the polymeric structures exhibit an apparent peak wet tensile stress greater than 0.2 MPa and/or an average fiber diameter of less than 10 ⁇ m have been until now unobtainable.
  • polymeric structures that comprise an association agent wherein the polymeric structures exhibit an apparent peak wet tensile stress greater than 0.2 MPa and/or an average fiber diameter of less than 10 ⁇ m, webs comprising such polymeric structures and processes for making such polymeric structures.
  • the present invention fulfills the needs described above by providing polymeric structures comprising an association agent and/or webs comprising such polymeric structures and processes for making such polymeric structures and/or webs.
  • a non-naturally occurring polymeric structure in the form of a fiber wherein the fiber comprises a hydroxyl polymer and an association agent, is provided.
  • a non-naturally occurring polymeric structure comprising an association agent wherein the polymeric structure exhibits an apparent peak wet tensile stress greater than 0.2 MPa is provided.
  • a fiber comprising an association agent wherein the fiber exhibits an average fiber diameter of less than 10 ⁇ m is provided.
  • a web comprising a polymeric structure according to the present invention is provided.
  • a fibrous structure comprising one or more non-naturally occurring fibers comprising a hydroxyl polymer and an association agent.
  • a process for making a polymeric structure comprising an association agent wherein the process comprises the step of polymer processing a hydroxyl polymer-containing composition comprising an association agent into a polymeric structure comprising an association agent.
  • a process for making a polymeric structure comprising an association agent wherein the process comprises the steps of: a. providing a hydroxyl polymer-containing composition comprising a hydroxyl polymer and an association agent; and b. polymer processing the hydroxyl polymer-containing composition into a polymeric structure comprising the hydroxyl polymer and the association agent, is provided.
  • the present invention provides a polymeric structure comprising an association agent, a web comprising such a polymeric structure and a process for making such a polymeric structure and/or web.
  • Fig. IA is a schematic side view of a barrel of a twin screw extruder suitable for use in the present invention.
  • Fig. IB is a schematic side view of a screw and mixing element configuration suitable for use in the barrel of Fig. IA.
  • Fig. 2 is a schematic side view of a process for synthesizing a polymeric structure in accordance with the present invention.
  • Fig. 3 is a schematic partial side view of the process of the present invention, showing an attenuation zone.
  • Fig. 4 is a schematic plan view taken along lines 4-4 of Fig. 3 and showing one possible arrangement of a plurality of extrusion nozzles arranged to provide polymeric structures of the present invention.
  • Fig. 5 is a view similar to that of Fig. 4 and showing one possible arrangement of orifices for providing a boundary air around the attenuation zone.
  • Fig. 6 is a schematic plan view of a coupon that can be used for determining apparent peak wet tensile stress of fibers according to the present invention.
  • Polymeric structure as used herein means any physical structure formed as a result of processing a hydroxyl polymer-containing composition in accordance with the present invention.
  • Nonlimiting examples of polymeric structures in accordance with the present invention include fibers, films and/or foams.
  • the polymeric structures of the present invention are non-naturally occurring physical structures. In other words, they are man-made physical structures.
  • Fiber or “filament” as used herein means a slender, thin, and highly flexible object having a major axis which is very long, compared to the fiber's two mutually- orthogonal axes that are perpendicular to the major axis.
  • a fiber may exhibit an aspect ratio of the major's axis length to an equivalent diameter of the fiber's cross-section perpendicular to the major axis greater than 100/1, more specifically greater than 500/1, and still more specifically greater than 1000/1, and even more specifically, greater than 5000/1.
  • the fibers may be continuous or substantially continuous fibers or they may be discontinuous fibers.
  • the hydroxyl polymer fibers of the present invention may have an average fiber diameter of less than about 50 ⁇ m and/or less than about 20 ⁇ m and/or less than about 10 ⁇ m and/or less than about 8 ⁇ m and/or less than about 6 ⁇ m and/or less than about 4 ⁇ m as measured by the Average Fiber Diameter Test Method described herein.
  • Such a fiber may exhibit an average fiber diameter of greater than about 1 ⁇ m and/or greater than about 2 ⁇ m and/or greater than about 3 ⁇ m.
  • the hydroxyl polymer fibers of the present invention may include melt blown fibers, dry spun fibers, rotary spun fibers, spunbond fibers, staple fibers, hollow fibers, shaped fibers, such as multi-lobal fibers and multicomponent fibers, especially bicomponent fibers.
  • the multicomponent fibers, especially bicomponent fibers may be in a side-by-side, sheath-core, segmented pie, ribbon, islands-in-the-sea configuration, or any combination thereof.
  • the sheath may be continuous or non-continuous around the core.
  • the ratio of the weight of the sheath to the core can be from about 5:95 to about 95:5.
  • the hydroxyl polymer fibers of the present invention may have different geometries that include round, elliptical, star shaped, rectangular, and other various eccentricities.
  • the polymeric structures of the present invention may include a multiconstituent polymeric structure, such as a multicomponent fiber, comprising a hydroxyl polymer and an association agent of the present invention along with another polymer.
  • a multicomponent fiber as used herein, means a fiber having more than one separate part in spatial relationship to one another.
  • Multicomponent fibers include bicomponent fibers, which is defined as a fiber having two separate parts in a spatial relationship to one another. The different components of multicomponent fibers can be arranged in substantially distinct regions across the cross-section of the fiber and extend continuously along the length of the fiber.
  • a nonlimiting example of such a multicomponent fiber is a bicomponent fiber in which the hydroxyl polymer of the present invention represents the core of the fiber and another polymer represents the sheath, which surrounds or substantially surrounds the core of the fiber.
  • the hydroxyl polymer- containing composition from which such a polymeric structure is derived may include both the hydroxyl polymer and the other polymer.
  • the sheath may comprise a hydroxyl polymer and a crosslinking system having a crosslinking agent
  • the core may comprise a hydroxyl polymer and a crosslinking system having a crosslinking agent.
  • the hydroxyl polymer may be the same or different and the crosslinking agent may be the same or different.
  • the level of hydroxyl polymer may be the same or different and the level of crosslinking agent may be the same or different.
  • One or more polymeric structures of the present invention may be incorporated into a multi-polymeric structure product, such as a fibrous structure and/or web, if the polymeric structures are in the form of fibers.
  • a multi-polymeric structure product may ultimately be incorporated into a commercial product, such as a single- or multi-ply sanitary tissue product, such as facial tissue, bath tissue, paper towels and/or wipes, feminine care products, diapers, writing papers, cores, such as tissue cores, and other types of paper products.
  • a "fibrous structure” as used herein means a single web structure that comprises at least one fiber.
  • a fibrous structure of the present invention may comprise one or more fibers, wherein at least one of the fibers comprises a hydroxyl polymer fiber.
  • a fibrous structure of the present invention may comprise a plurality of fibers, wherein at least one (sometimes a majority, even all) of the fibers comprises a hydroxyl polymer fiber.
  • the fibrous structures of the present invention may be layered such that one layer of the fibrous structure may comprise a different composition of fibers and/or materials from another layer of the same fibrous structure.
  • "Web" as used herein means a physical structure that comprises at least one planar surface.
  • a web is a physical structure that comprises two planar surfaces.
  • a web may be a film, if no fibers are present within the web.
  • a web that comprises one or more fibers may be a fibrous structure.
  • One or more hydroxyl polymer fibers of the present invention may be associated together to form a web.
  • numerous fibers are collected, such as on a forming wire and/or belt and/or three dimensional molding member, in order to the association of the fibers into a web.
  • a web and/or fibrous structure of the present invention exhibits an initial total wet tensile of greater than about 10 g/2.54 cm (10 g/in).
  • Hydroxyl polymer as used herein means any polymer that contains greater than 10% and/or greater than 20% and/or greater than 25% by weight hydroxyl groups.
  • Hydroxyl polymer-containing composition as used herein means a composition that comprises a hydroxyl polymer (substituted or unsubstituted).
  • "Unsubstituted hydroxyl polymer” and/or “unsubstituted form of a hydroxyl polymer” and/or “unsubstituted form of a substituted hydroxyl polymer” as used herein means a hydroxyl polymer in which all of its original hydroxyl moieties are intact. In other words, no derivatized hydroxyl moieties exist in the hydroxyl polymer. For example, a hydroxyethyl starch is not an unsubstituted hydroxyl polymer. The mere removal of the hydrogen from the oxygen in the hydroxyl moieties does not create a substituted hydroxyl polymer.
  • Substituted hydroxyl polymer and/or “substituted form of a hydroxyl polymer” and/or “substituted form of an unsubstituted hydroxyl polymer” as used herein means a hydroxyl polymer comprising at least one derivative of an original hydroxyl moiety. In other words, at least one oxygen originally present in a hydroxyl moiety is covalently bonded to a moiety other than hydrogen.
  • association agent means an agent that is capable of interacting with a hydroxyl polymer to influence the hydroxyl polymer-containing composition's properties, especially the hydroxyl polymer-containing composition's spinning
  • Non-naturally occurring as used herein with respect to “non-naturally occurring fiber” means that the fiber is not found in nature in that form. In other words, some chemical processing of materials needs to occur in order to obtain the non-naturally occurring fiber.
  • a wood pulp fiber is a naturally occurring fiber, however, if the wood pulp fiber is chemically processed, such as via a lyocell-type process, a solution of cellulose is formed. The solution of cellulose may then be spun into a fiber.
  • this spun fiber would be considered to be a non-naturally occurring fiber since it is not directly obtainable from nature in its present form.
  • Naturally occurring as used herein means that a fiber and/or a material is found in nature in its present form.
  • An example of a naturally occurring fiber is a wood pulp fiber.
  • Apparent Peak Wet Tensile Stress or simply “Wet Tensile Stress” is a condition existing within a polymeric structure, such as a fiber, at the point of its maximum (i.e., “peak") stress as a result of strain by external forces, and more specifically elongation forces, as described in the Apparent Peak Wet Tensile Stress Test
  • the stress is "apparent" because a change, if any, in the polymeric structures average thickness, such as a fiber's average fiber diameter, resulting from the polymeric structure's elongation, is not taken into consideration for the purposes of determining the apparent peak wet tensile stress of a polymeric structure.
  • the apparent peak wet tensile stress of the polymeric structures is proportional to their wet tensile strength and is used herein to quantitatively estimate the latter.
  • Weight average molecular weight means the weight average molecular weight as determined using gel permeation chromatography according to the protocol found in Colloids and Surfaces A. Physico Chemical & Engineering Aspects, Vol. 162, 2000, pg. 107-121.
  • Polymer as used herein generally includes, but is not limited to, homopolymers, copolymers, such as for example, block, graft, random and alternating copolymers, terpolymers, etc., and blends and modifications thereof.
  • the term “polymer” includes all possible geometric configurations of the material. The configurations include, but are not limited to, isotactic, atactic, syndiotactic, and random symmetries.
  • Spinning process temperature means the temperature at which the hydroxyl polymer polymeric structures in the form of fibers are attenuated at the external surface of the spinning die as the hydroxyl polymer polymeric structures are formed. Fibers
  • the hydroxyl polymer fibers of the present invention may be a polymeric structure. In other words, one or more polymers may form the fiber.
  • the hydroxyl polymer fibers of the present invention may be continuous or substantially continuous.
  • a fiber is continuous if it exhibits a length greater than about 2.54 cm (1 inch) and/or greater than 5.08 cm (2 inches).
  • the hydroxyl polymer fibers of the present invention may be produced by crosslinking two or more hydroxyl polymers together.
  • a suitable crosslinking system for achieving crosslinking of the hydroxyl polymer comprises a crosslinking agent and optionally a crosslinking facilitator, wherein the hydroxyl polymer is crosslinked by the crosslinking agent.
  • An example of a suitable crosslinking system for use in the present invention is described in U.S. Patent Application Publication 2004/0249066.
  • the hydroxyl polymer fiber of the present invention as a whole, exhibits no melting point. In other words, it degrades before melting.
  • the webs of the present invention may include pulp fibers, such as cellulose fibers and/or other polymer fibers besides the hydroxyl polymer fibers.
  • a hydroxyl polymer fiber of the present invention exhibits an apparent peak wet tensile stress greater than 0.2 MPa and/or greater than 0.5 MPa and/or greater than 1 MPa and/or
  • a hydroxyl polymer fiber of the present invention comprises at least about 50% and/or at least about 60% and/or at least about 70% to about 100% and/or to about 95% and/or to about 90% by weight of the fiber of a hydroxyl polymer.
  • a hydroxyl polymer fiber of the present invention exhibits a pH of less than about 7 and/or less than about 6 and/or less than about 5 and/or less than about 4.5 and/or less than about 4.
  • a hydroxyl polymer fiber of the present invention comprises an association agent.
  • the association agent may be separate and discrete from the hydroxyl polymer. In other words, the association agent may not be covalently bound to an oxygen atom of a hydroxyl moiety of the hydroxyl polymer.
  • Hydroxyl polymers in accordance with the present invention include any unsubstituted hydroxyl-containing polymer, for example, native dent corn starch hydroxyl polymer and/or acid-thinned dent corn starch hydroxyl polymer and/or any substituted hydroxyl-containing polymer, for example, hydroxyethyl starch hydroxyl polymer.
  • the hydroxyl polymer of the present invention includes greater than 10% and/or greater than 20% and/or greater than 25% by weight hydroxyl moieties.
  • Nonlimiting examples of hydroxyl polymers in accordance with the present invention include polyols, such as polyvinyl alcohol, polyvinyl alcohol derivatives, polyvinyl alcohol copolymers, starch, starch derivatives, starch copolymers, chitosan, chitosan derivatives, chitosan copolymers, cellulose, cellulose derivatives such as cellulose ether and ester derivatives, cellulose copolymers, gums, arabinans, galactans, proteins and various other polysaccharides and mixtures thereof.
  • polyols such as polyvinyl alcohol, polyvinyl alcohol derivatives, polyvinyl alcohol copolymers, starch, starch derivatives, starch copolymers, chitosan, chitosan derivatives, chitosan copolymers, cellulose, cellulose derivatives such as cellulose ether and ester derivatives, cellulose copolymers, gums, arabinans, galactans, proteins and various other polysacchari
  • Classes of hydroxyl polymers are defined by the hydroxyl polymer backbone.
  • polyvinyl alcohol and polyvinyl alcohol derivatives and polyvinyl alcohol copolymers are in the class of polyvinyl alcohol hydroxyl polymers whereas starch and starch derivatives are in the class of starch hydroxyl polymers.
  • the hydroxyl polymers of the present invention may have a weight average molecular weight of greater than about 10,000 g/mol and/or greater than about 40,000 g/mol and/or from about 10,000 to about 80,000,000 g/mol and/or from about 10,000 to about 40,000,000 g/mol and/or from about 10,000 to about 10,000,000 g/mol.
  • Higher and lower molecular weight hydroxyl polymers may be used in combination with hydroxyl polymers having weight average molecular weights within the above ranges.
  • hydroxyl polymers such as polysaccharides, for example natural starches
  • a natural starch can be acid-thinned, hydroxy-ethylated, hydroxy- propylated, and/or oxidized.
  • the hydroxyl polymer may comprise native dent corn starch hydroxyl polymer.
  • the hydroxyl polymer of the present invention comprises a starch hydroxyl polymer.
  • the starch hydroxyl polymer may be acid thinned starch hydroxyl polymer and/or alkaline cooked starch hydroxyl polymer.
  • the starch hydroxyl polymer may be derived from corn, potato, wheat, tapioca and the like.
  • the weight ratio of amylose to amylopectin in the starch hydroxyl polymer may be from about 10:90 to about 99:1 respectively.
  • the starch hydroxyl polymer comprises from at least about 10% and/or at least about 20% to about 99% and/or to about 90% by weight of amylose.
  • Polysaccharides as used herein means natural polysaccharides and polysaccharide derivatives or modified polysaccharides. Suitable polysaccharides include, but are not limited to, starches, starch derivatives, chitosan, chitosan derivatives, cellulose derivatives, gums, arabinans, galactans and mixtures thereof.
  • Nonlimiting examples of polyvinylalcohols which are suitable for use as the hydroxyl polymers (alone or in combination) of the present invention can be characterized by the following general formula:
  • the polyvinylalcohol has no "y" and/or "z" units.
  • Polyvinyl alcohols herein can be grafted with other monomers to modify its properties. A wide range of monomers has been successfully grafted to polyvinyl alcohol.
  • the hydroxyl polymer-containing compositions of the present invention may contain an association agent.
  • the association agent is capable of associating, typically other than by covalent bond, with the hydroxyl polymer, particularly the hydroxyl moieties thereof.
  • the association agent is a cationic agent.
  • the cationic agent may be selected from the group consisting of: quaternary ammonium compounds, quaternary alkyl amines, quaternary aryl amines, imidizolinium quats, polyethoxylated quaternary alkyl amines and mixture thereof.
  • suitable association agents include quaternary ammonium compounds, amine oxides and amines.
  • Nonlimiting examples of quaternary ammonium compounds include dodecyltrimethylammonium chloride, stearyltrimethylammonium chloride, stearyldimethylbenzylammonium chloride, didodecyldimethylammonium chloride, tetraethylammonium chloride, polyethoxylated quaternary ammonium chloride such as Ethoquad C/12 from Akzo Nobel Chemicals Inc.
  • a suitable quaternary ammonium compound is commercially available from Akzo Nobel Chemicals Inc. under the tradename Arquad 12-50.
  • Nonlimiting examples of amine oxides include cetyldimethylamine oxide, lauryldimethylamine oxide, cocamidopropylamine oxide.
  • a suitable amine oxide is commercially available from Stepan Company under the tradename Ammonyl CO.
  • Nonlimiting examples of amines such as alkyl amines, include ethoxylated dodecylamine, ethoxylated stearylamine, and ethoxylated oleylamine.
  • a suitable amine is commercially available from Akzo Nobel Chemicals Inc. under the tradename Ethomeen C/12.
  • the association agent may be present in the polymeric structure, such as the fiber, at a level from greater than 0% to less than about 100%. In one example, the association agent is present in the polymeric structure at a level of from greater than 0% and/or from at least about 0.001% and/or at least about 0.01% and/or at least about 0.1% and/or at least about 1% to about 50% and/or to about 40% and/or to about 30% and/or to about 15% and/or to about 10% and/or to about 5% and/or to about 3%.
  • Hvdroxyl Polymer-Containing Composition The hydroxyl polymer-containing composition of the present invention may comprise an unsubstituted hydroxyl polymer and/or a substituted hydroxyl polymer.
  • the hydroxyl polymer-containing composition may be a blend and/or mixture of polymers, such as two or more different hydroxyl polymers, for example an unsubstituted hydroxyl polymer (i.e., native dent corn starch hydroxyl polymer) and a substituted hydroxyl polymer (i.e., a hydroxyethyl starch hydroxyl polymer).
  • the hydroxyl polymer-containing composition may comprise two or more different classes of hydroxyl polymers, such as a starch hydroxyl polymer and a polyvinyl alcohol hydroxyl polymer.
  • Optional ingredients for example fillers both inorganic and organic and/or fibers and/or foaming agents may also be included in the hydroxyl polymer-containing composition and/or in the fibrous structure made therefrom.
  • the hydroxyl polymer-containing composition may already be formed.
  • the hydroxyl polymer may be solubilized via contact with a liquid, such as water, in order to form the hydroxyl polymer-containing composition.
  • a liquid such as water
  • Such a liquid may be considered for the purposes of the present invention as performing the function of an external plasticizer.
  • any other suitable processes known to those skilled in the art to produce the hydroxyl polymer-containing composition such that the hydroxyl polymer-containing composition exhibits suitable properties for polymer processing the composition into a polymeric structure in accordance with the present invention may be used.
  • the hydroxyl polymer-containing composition may have and/or be exposed to a temperature of from about 23 0 C to about 140°C and/or from about 50°C to about 13O 0 C and/or from about 65 0 C to about 100 0 C and/or from about 65 0 C to about 95 °C and/or from about 70 0 C to about 90 0 C when making polymeric structures from the hydroxyl polymer-containing composition.
  • the hydroxyl polymer-containing composition may have and/or be exposed to a temperature that is generally higher when making film and/or foam polymeric structures, as described below.
  • the pH of the hydroxyl polymer-containing composition may be from about 2.5 to about 11 and/or from about 2.5 to about 10 and/or from about 3 to about 9.5 and/or from about 3 to about 8.5 and/or from about 3.2 to about 8 and/or from about 3.2 to about 7.5.
  • a hydroxyl polymer-containing composition of the present invention may comprise at least about 5% and/or at least about 15% and/or from at least about 20% and/or 30% and/or 40% and/or 45% and/or 50% to about 75% and/or 80% and/or 85% and/or 90% and/or 95% and/or 99.5% by weight of the hydroxyl polymer- containing composition of a hydroxyl polymer.
  • the hydroxyl polymer may have a weight average molecular weight greater than about 10,000 g/mol prior to crosslinking.
  • a crosslinking system may be present in the hydroxyl polymer-containing composition and/or may be added to the hydroxyl polymer-containing composition before polymer processing of the hydroxyl polymer-containing composition.
  • the hydroxyl polymer-containing composition may comprise a) at least about 5% and/or at least about 15% and/or from at least about 20% and/or 30% and/or 40% and/or 45% and/or 50% to about 75% and/or 80% and/or 85% by weight of the hydroxyl polymer-containing composition of a hydroxyl polymer; b) a crosslinking system comprising from about 0.1% to about 10% by weight of the hydroxyl polymer-containing composition of a crosslinking agent; and c) from about 10% and/or 15% and/or 20% to about 50% and/or 55% and/or 60% and/or 70% by weight of the hydroxyl polymer- containing composition of external plasticizer e.g., water.
  • the crosslinking system of the present invention may further comprise, in addition to the crosslinking agent
  • Crosslinking facilitator as used herein means any material that is capable of activating a crosslinking agent thereby transforming the crosslinking agent from its unactivated state to its activated state.
  • the crosslinking agent Upon crosslinking the hydroxyl polymer, the crosslinking agent becomes an integral part of the polymeric structure as a result of crosslinking the hydroxyl polymer as shown in the following schematic representation:
  • the crosslinking facilitator may include derivatives of the material that may exist after the transformation/activation of the crosslinking agent. For example, a crosslinking facilitator salt being chemically changed to its acid form and vice versa.
  • Nonlimiting examples of suitable crosslinking facilitators include acids having a pKa of between 2 and 6 or salts thereof.
  • the crosslinking facilitators may be Bronsted Acids and/or salts thereof, preferably ammonium salts thereof.
  • metal salts such as magnesium and zinc salts
  • Bronsted Acids and/or salts thereof can be used alone or in combination with Bronsted Acids and/or salts thereof, as crosslinking facilitators.
  • Nonlimiting examples of suitable crosslinking facilitators include acetic acid, benzoic acid, citric acid, formic acid, glycolic acid, lactic acid, maleic acid, phthalic acid, phosphoric acid, succinic acid and mixtures thereof and/or their salts, preferably their ammonium salts, such as ammonium glycolate, ammonium citrate, ammonium sulfate, and ammonium chloride.
  • a hydroxyl polymer-containing composition of the present invention may be prepared using a screw extruder, such as a vented twin screw extruder.
  • a barrel 10 of an APV Baker (Peterborough, England) twin screw extruder is schematically illustrated in Fig. IA.
  • the barrel 10 is separated into eight zones, identified as zones 1-8.
  • the barrel 10 encloses the extrusion screw and mixing elements, schematically shown in Fig. IB, and serves as a containment vessel during the extrusion process.
  • a solid feed port 12 is disposed in zone 1 and a liquid feed port 14 is disposed in zone 1.
  • a vent 16 is included in zone 7 for cooling and decreasing the liquid, such as water, content of the mixture prior to exiting the extruder.
  • An optional vent stuffer commercially available from APV Baker, can be employed to prevent the hydroxyl polymer-containing composition from exiting through the vent 16.
  • the flow of the hydroxyl polymer-containing composition through the barrel 10 is from zone 1 exiting the barrel 10 at zone 8.
  • a screw and mixing element configuration for the twin screw extruder is schematically illustrated in Fig IB.
  • the twin screw extruder comprises a plurality of twin lead screws (TLS) (designated A and B) and single lead screws (SLS) (designated C and D) installed in series.
  • Screw elements (A - D) are characterized by the number of continuous leads and the pitch of these leads.
  • a lead is a flight (at a given helix angle) that wraps the core of the screw element.
  • the number of leads indicates the number of flights wrapping the core at any given location along the length of the screw. Increasing the number of leads reduces the volumetric capacity of the screw and increases the pressure generating capability of the screw.
  • the pitch of the screw is the distance needed for a flight to complete one revolution of the core. It is expressed as the number of screw element diameters per one complete revolution of a flight. Decreasing the pitch of the screw increases the pressure generated by the screw and decreases the volumetric capacity of the screw.
  • the length of a screw element is reported as the ratio of length of the element divided by the diameter of the element.
  • Screw element A is a TLS with a 1.0 pitch and a 1.5 length ratio.
  • Screw element B is a TLS with a 1.0 pitch and a 1.0 L/D ratio.
  • Screw element C is a SLS with a 1 A pitch and a 1.0 length ratio.
  • Screw element D is a SLS and a 1 A pitch and a 1 A length ratio.
  • Bilobal paddles, E serving as mixing elements, are also included in series with the
  • zone 1 the hydroxyl polymer is fed into the solid feed port at a rate of 230 grams/minute using a K-Tron (Pitman,NJ) loss-in- weight feeder.
  • This hydroxyl polymer is combined inside the extruder (zone 1) with water, an external plasticizer, added at the liquid feed at a rate of 146 grams/minute using a Milton Roy (Ivyland, PA) diaphragm pump (1.9 gallon per hour pump head) to form an hydroxyl polymer/water slurry.
  • This slurry is then conveyed down the barrel of the extruder and cooked, in the presence of an alkaline agent, such as ammonium hydroxide and/or sodium hydroxide.
  • an alkaline agent such as ammonium hydroxide and/or sodium hydroxide.
  • the cooking causes a hydrogen from at least one hydroxyl moiety on the hydroxyl polymer to become disassociated with the hydroxyl moiety and thus create a negative charge on the oxygen atom of the former hydroxyl moiety.
  • This oxygen atom is now open for association by an association agent, such as a quaternary ammonium compound, for example a quaternary amine. Accordingly, an association agent is added to the hydroxyl polymer/water slurry, thus creating an associated hydroxyl polymer.
  • Table 1 describes the temperature, pressure, and corresponding function of each zone of the extruder.
  • part of the associated hydroxyl polymer/water slurry can be dumped and another part (10Og) can be fed into a Zenith®, type PEP II (Sanford NC) and pumped into a SMX style static mixer (Koch-Glitsch, Woodridge, Illinois).
  • the static mixer is used to combine additional additives such as crosslinking agents, crosslinking facilitators, external plasticizers, such as water, with the associated hydroxyl polymer/water slurry to form an associated hydroxyl polymer-containing composition.
  • the additives are pumped into the static mixer via PREP 100 HPLC pumps (Chrom Tech, Apple Valley MN). These pumps provide high pressure, low volume addition capability.
  • the associated hydroxyl polymer-containing composition of the present invention is ready to be polymer processed into a hydroxyl polymer polymeric structure.
  • Polymer processing as used herein means any operation and/or process by which a polymeric structure comprising a hydroxyl polymer is formed from a hydroxyl polymer-containing composition.
  • Nonlimiting examples of polymer processing operations include extrusion, molding and/or fiber spinning. Extrusion and molding (either casting or blown), typically produce films, sheets and various profile extrusions. Molding may include injection molding, blown molding and/or compression molding. Fiber spinning may include spun bonding, melt blowing, continuous filament producing, rotary spinning and/or tow fiber producing.
  • the hydroxyl polymer-containing composition can be subjected to one or more polymer processing operations such that the hydroxyl polymer-containing composition is processed into a polymeric structure comprising the hydroxyl polymer and optionally, a crosslinking system, according to the present invention.
  • the crosslinking system via the crosslinking agent crosslinks hydroxyl polymers together to produce the polymeric structure of the present invention, with or without being subjected to a curing step.
  • the crosslinking system in accordance with the present invention acceptably crosslinks, as determined by the Initial Total Wet Tensile Test Method described herein, the hydroxyl polymers of a processed hydroxyl polymer-containing composition together via the crosslinking agent to form an integral polymeric structure.
  • the crosslinking agent is a "building block" for the polymeric structure. Without the crosslinking agent, no polymeric structure in accordance with the present invention could be formed.
  • Polymeric structures of the present invention do not include coatings and/or other surface treatments that are applied to a pre-existing form, such as a coating on a fiber, film or foam.
  • the polymeric structure produced via a polymer processing operation may be cured at a curing temperature of from about 110°C to about 315 0 C and/or from about 110°C to about 250 0 C and/or from about 110 0 C to about 200 0 C and/or from about 120 0 C to about 195°C and/or from about 130 0 C to about 185°C for a time period of from about 0.01 and/or 1 and/or 5 and/or 15 seconds to about 60 minutes and/or from about 20 seconds to about 45 minutes and/or from about 30 seconds to about 30 minutes.
  • Alternative curing methods may include radiation methods such as UV, e-beam, IR and other temperature-raising methods.
  • the polymeric structure may also be cured at room temperature for days, either after curing at above room temperature or instead of curing at above room temperature.
  • the polymeric structure may exhibit an initial total wet tensile, as measured by the Initial Total Wet Tensile Test Method described herein, of at least about 1.18 g/cm (3 g/in) and/or at least about 1.97 g/cm (5 g/in) and/or at least about 5.91 g/cm (15 g/in) and/or at least about 9.84 g/cm (25 g/in) to about 51.
  • a polymeric structure of the present invention may comprise from at least about 20% and/or 30% and/or 40% and/or 45% and/or 50% to about 75% and/or 80% and/or 85% and/or 90% and/or 95% and/or 99.5% by weight of the polymeric structure of a hydroxyl polymer.
  • a hydroxyl polymer-containing composition is prepared according to the Synthesis of a Hydroxyl Polymer-Containing Composition described above. As shown in Fig. 2, the hydroxyl polymer-containing composition may be processed into a polymeric structure.
  • the hydroxyl polymer-containing composition present in an extruder 102 is pumped to a die 104 using pump 103, such as a Zenith®, type PEP II, having a capacity of 0.6 cubic centimeters per revolution (cc/rev), manufactured by Parker Hannifin Corporation, Zenith Pumps division, of Sanford, NC, USA.
  • the hydroxyl polymer's, such as starch, flow to die 104 is controlled by adjusting the number of revolutions per minute (rpm) of the pump 103.
  • Pipes connecting the extruder 102, the pump 103, the die 104, and optionally a mixer 116 are electrically heated and thermostatically controlled to 65 0 C.
  • the die 104 has several rows of circular extrusion nozzles 200 spaced from one another at a pitch P (Fig. 3) of about 1.524 millimeters (about 0.060 inches).
  • the nozzles 200 have individual inner diameters D2 of about 0.305 millimeters (about 0.012 inches) and individual outside diameters (Dl) of about 0.813 millimeters (about 0.032 inches).
  • Each individual nozzle 200 is encircled by an annular and divergently flared orifice 250 formed in a plate 260 (Figs. 3 and 4) having a thickness of about 1.9 millimeters (about 0.075 inches).
  • a pattern of a plurality of the divergently flared orifices 250 in the plate 260 correspond to a pattern of extrusion nozzles 200.
  • the orifices 250 have a larger diameter D4 (Figs. 3 and 4) of about 1.372 millimeters (about 0.054 inches) and a smaller diameter D3 of 1.17 millimeters (about 0.046 inches) for attenuation air.
  • the plate 260 was fixed so that the embryonic fibers 110 being extruded through the nozzles 200 are surrounded and attenuated by generally cylindrical, humidified air streams supplied through the orifices 250.
  • the nozzles can extend to a distance from about 1.5 mm to about 4 mm, and more specifically from about 2 mm to about 3 mm, beyond a surface 261 of the plate 260 (Fig. 3).
  • a plurality of boundary-air orifices 300 is formed by plugging nozzles of two outside rows on each side of the plurality of nozzles, as viewed in plane, so that each of the boundary-layer orifice comprised a annular aperture 250 described herein above. Additionally, every other row and every other column of the remaining capillary nozzles are blocked, increasing the spacing between active capillary nozzles
  • Attenuation air can be provided by heating compressed air from a source 106 by an electrical-resistance heater 108, for example, a heater manufactured by Chromalox, Division of Emerson Electric, of Pittsburgh, PA, USA.
  • the attenuating air has an absolute pressure from about 130 kPa to about 310 kPa, measured in the pipe 115.
  • the polymeric structure fibers 110 being extruded have a moisture content of from about 20% and/or 25% to about 50% and/or 55% by weight.
  • the polymer structure fibers 110 are dried by a drying air stream 109 having a temperature from about 149° C (about 300° F) to about 315° C (about 600° F) by an electrical resistance heater (not shown) supplied through drying nozzles 112 and discharged at an angle generally perpendicular relative to the general orientation of the embryonic fibers being extruded.
  • the polymeric structure fibers are dried from about 45% moisture content to about 15% moisture content (i.e., from a consistency of about 55% to a consistency of about 85%) and are collected on a collection device 111, such as, for example, a movable foraminous belt.
  • a collection device 111 such as, for example, a movable foraminous belt.
  • the hydroxyl polymer-containing composition for foam formation is prepared similarly as for fiber formation except that the water content will be less, typically from about 10-21% of the hydroxyl polymer weight. With less water to plasticize the hydroxyl polymer, higher temperatures may be needed in extruder zones 5-8 (Fig. IA), typically from 150-250 0 C. Also with less water available, it may be necessary to add the crosslinking system, especially the crosslinking agent, with the water in zone 1. In order to avoid premature crosslinking in the extruder, the hydroxyl polymer-containing composition pH should be between 7 and 8, achievable by using a crosslinking facilitator e.g., ammonium salt. A die is placed at the location where the extruded material emerges and is typically held at 160-210 0 C.
  • a crosslinking facilitator e.g., ammonium salt.
  • Modified high amylose starches for example greater than 50% and/or greater than 75% and/or greater than 90% by weight of the starch of amylose
  • granulated to particle sizes ranging from 400-1500 microns are preferred for this application.
  • a nucleating agent such as microtalc or alkali metal or alkaline earth metal salt such as sodium sulfate or sodium chloride in an amount of about 1 -8% of the starch weight.
  • the foam may be shaped into various forms.
  • the hydroxyl polymer-containing composition for film formation is prepared similarly as for foam formation except that the added water content is less, typically 3- 15% of the hydroxyl polymer weight and a polyol external plasticizer such as glycerol is included at 10-30% of the hydroxyl polymer weight.
  • zones 5-7 (Fig. IA) are held at 160-210 0 C, however, the slit die temperature is lower between 60- 12O 0 C.
  • the crosslinking system especially the crosslinking agent, may be added along with the water in zone 1 and the hydroxyl polymer-containing composition pH should be between 7-8 achievable by using a crosslinking facilitator e.g., ammonium salt.
  • Films of the present invention may be utilized for any suitable products known in the art.
  • the films may be used in packaging materials.
  • polymeric structures of the present invention may be made by any suitable process known to those skilled in the art.
  • a nonlimiting example of a suitable process for making a polymeric structure according to the present invention comprises the step of obtaining a polymeric structure comprising an hydroxyl polymer from a hydroxyl polymer-containing composition comprising a substituted form of the hydroxyl polymer.
  • a process for making a polymeric structure comprising an hydroxyl polymer wherein the process comprises the step of polymer processing a hydroxyl polymer-containing composition comprising an hydroxyl polymer into a polymeric structure comprising the hydroxyl polymer, is provided.
  • a process for making a polymeric structure comprising an hydroxyl polymer comprises the steps of: a. providing a hydroxyl polymer-containing composition comprising an hydroxyl
  • a hydroxyl polymer specifically one or more hydroxyl moieties present on the hydroxyl polymer, is associated, during an associating step, with an association agent for a time sufficient to permit a polymeric structure comprising the hydroxyl polymer and association agent to be formed.
  • the association agent temporarily impacts the properties of the hydroxyl polymer in a manner such that it can be spun and/or otherwise polymer processed into a polymeric structure, such as a fiber.
  • the associating step may comprise subjecting the hydroxyl polymer to an alkaline pH.
  • the associating step may comprise subjecting the hydroxyl polymer to a pH of greater than 7 and/or at least about 7.5 and/or at least about 8 and/or at least about 8.5.
  • an alkaline agent may be used in the associating step.
  • suitable alkaline agents may be selected from the group consisting of sodium hydroxide calcium hydroxide, magnesium hydroxide, potassium hydroxide, ammonium hydroxide and mixtures thereof.
  • the associating step may occur at a temperature in the range of from about 70 0 C to about 140°C and/or from about 7O 0 C to about 120 0 C and/or from about 75 0 C to about 100 0 C.
  • the associating step may comprise interacting the hydroxyl polymer with an association agent to form an associated hydroxyl polymer.
  • the step of obtaining a fiber from the associated hydroxyl polymer may comprise subjecting the associated hydroxyl polymer to an acidic pH.
  • the step of obtaining a fiber from the associated hydroxyl polymer may comprise subjecting the associated hydroxyl polymer to a pH of less than 7 and/or less than about 6 and/or less than about 5 and/or less than about 4.5 and/or less than about 4.
  • an acidic agent may be used in the obtaining a fiber step.
  • suitable acidic agents may be selected from the group consisting of: acetic acid, benzoic acid, citric acid, formic acid, glycolic acid, lactic acid, maleic acid, phthalic acid, phosphoric acid, succinic acid and mixtures thereof and/or their salts, preferably their ammonium salts, such as ammonium glycolate, ammonium citrate, ammonium sulfate, ammonium chloride, and mixtures thereof.
  • the obtaining a fiber step may occur at a temperature in the range of from about 60°C to about 100° and/or from about 70°C to about 95°C.
  • the step of obtaining a polymeric structure may comprise spinning the associated hydroxyl polymer such that a fiber comprising a hydroxyl polymer and an association agent is formed.
  • the spinning may be any suitable spinning operation known to those skilled in the art.
  • the process of the present invention may further comprise a step of collecting a plurality of the fibers to form a web.
  • the water droplet velocity and the water droplet diameter of the mist generated by the humidifier can be measured using photogrammetric techniques. Images can be captured using a Nikon®, Model Dl, of Japan, 3-megapixel digital camera equipped with a 37 mm coupling ring, a Nikon® PB -6 bellows, and a Nikon® auto-focus AF Micro Nikkor® 200 mm 1:4D lens. Each pixel had the dimension of about 3.5 micrometer assuming a square pixel. Images can be taken in shadow mode using a Nano Twin Flash (High-Speed Photo-Systeme, of Wedel, Germany). Any number of commercially available image-processing packages can be used to process the images. The dwell time between the two flashes of this system is set at 5, 10, and 20 microsecond. The distance traveled by water droplets between flashes is used to calculate droplet velocity.
  • Water droplets were found to be from about 12 microns to about 25 microns in diameter.
  • the velocity of the water droplets at a distance of about (25 ⁇ 5) mm from the outlet of the flexible hose was calculated to be about 27 meters per second (m/sec), ranging from about 15 m/sec to about 50 m/sec.
  • m/sec meters per second
  • the flexible hose is positioned so that the mist stream totally engulfs the fiber thereby thoroughly wetting the fiber.
  • the distance between the outlet of the flexible hose and the fiber is adjusted until the mist stream stalls at or just past the fiber.
  • FSR is based on a design similar to that described in an article titled “A Filament Stretching Device For Measurement Of Extensional Viscosity,” published by J. Rheology 37 (6), 1993, pages 1081-1102 (Tirtaatmadja and Sridhar), incorporated herein by reference, with the following modifications:
  • (a) FSR is oriented so that the two end plates can move in a vertical direction.
  • FSR comprises two independent ball screw linear actuators, Model PAGOOl (manufactured by Industrial Device Corp. of Petaluma, CA, USA), each actuator driven by a stepper motor (for example, Zeta® 83-135, manufactured by Parker Hannifin Corp., Compumotor Division, Rohnert Park, CA, USA).
  • a stepper motor for example, Zeta® 83-135, manufactured by Parker Hannifin Corp., Compumotor Division, Rohnert Park, CA, USA.
  • One of the motors can be equipped with an encoder (for example, Model E151000C865, manufactured by Dynapar Brand, Danaher Controls of Gurnee, IL, USA) to track the position of the actuator.
  • the two actuators can be programmed to move equal distances at equal speeds in opposite directions.
  • a wide-bandwidth single-channel signal-conditioning module Model 5B41-06, manufactured by Analog Devices Co. of Norwood, MA, USA can be used to condition the signal from the force transducer, Model 405A, manufactured by Aurora Scientific Inc., of Aurora, Ontario, Canada.
  • Example of Hydroxyl Polymer-Containing Fibers and Method for Determining Apparent Peak Wet Tensile Stress Thereof Twenty five grams of an unsubstituted hydroxyl polymer, for example Eclipse G starch (acid thinned dent corn starch of approximate average molecular weight of 3,000,000 g/mol, from A. E. Staley Manufacturing Corporation of Decatur, IL, USA), 10.00 grams of a hydroxyl polymer, for example 10% Celvol 310 solution in water (Ethenol, homopolymer from Celanese Ltd.
  • Eclipse G starch acid thinned dent corn starch of approximate average molecular weight of 3,000,000 g/mol, from A. E. Staley Manufacturing Corporation of Decatur, IL, USA
  • a hydroxyl polymer for example 10% Celvol 310 solution in water (Ethenol, homopolymer from Celanese Ltd.
  • Ammonium chloride solution (4% based on the weight of the starch) are added to the beaker and mixed. Then the mixture is cooled to a temperature of about 40 0 C. A portion of the mixture is transferred to a 10 cubic centimeter (cc) syringe and is extruded therefrom to form a fiber.
  • the fiber is manually elongated so that the fiber has a diameter between about 10 ⁇ m and about 100 ⁇ m. Then, the fiber is suspended in an ambient air for approximately one minute to allow the fiber to dry and solidify.
  • the fiber is placed on an aluminum pan and is cured in a convection oven for about 10 minutes at a temperature of about 130°C. The cured fiber is then placed in a room having a constant temperature of about 22°C and a constant relative humidity of about 25% for about 24 hours.
  • a coupon 90 (Fig. 6) can be used to support the fiber 110.
  • the coupon 90 can be manufactured from an ordinary office copy paper or a similar light material.
  • the coupon 90 comprises a rectangular structure having the overall size of about 20 millimeters by about 8 millimeters, with a rectangle cutout 91 sized about 9 millimeters by about 5 millimeters in the center of the coupon 90.
  • the ends 110a, 110b of the fiber 110 can be secured to the ends of the coupon 90 with an adhesive tape 95 (such as, for example, a conventional Scotch tape), or otherwise, so that the fiber 110 spans the distance (of about 9 millimeters in the instant example) of the cut-out 91 in the center of the coupon 90, as shown in Fig. 6.
  • the coupon 90 may have a hole 98 in the top portion of the coupon 90, structured to receive a suitable hook mounted on the upper plate of the force transducer.
  • the fiber's diameter can be measured with an optical microscope at 3 positions and averaged to obtain the average fiber diameter used in calculations.
  • the coupon 90 can then be mounted onto a fiber-stretching rheometer (not shown) so that the fiber 110 is substantially parallel to the direction of the load "P" (Fig. 6) to be applied. Side portions of the coupon 90 that are parallel to the fiber 110 can be cut (along lines 92, Fig. 6), so that the fiber 110 is the only element receiving the load. Then the fiber 110 can be sufficiently moistened.
  • an ultrasonic humidifier (not shown) can be turned on, with a rubber hose positioned about 200 millimeters (about 8 inches) away from the fiber so as to direct the output mist directly at the fiber.
  • the fiber 110 can be exposed to the vapor for about one minute, after which the force load P can be applied to the fiber 110.
  • the fiber 110 continues to be exposed to the vapor during the application of the force load that imparts elongation force to the fiber 110. Care should be taken to ensure that the fiber 110 is continuously within the main stream of the humidifier output as the force is applied to the fiber. When correctly exposed, droplets of water are typically visible on or around the fiber 110. The humidifier, its contents, and the fiber 110 are allowed to equilibrate to an ambient temperature before use.
  • the wet tensile stress can be calculated in units of MegaPascals (MPa).
  • the test can be repeated multiple times, for example eight times.
  • the results of wet tensile stress measurements of eight fibers are averaged.
  • the force readings from the force transducer are corrected for the mass of the residual coupon by subtracting the average force transducer signal collected after the fiber had broken from the entire set of force readings.
  • the stress at failure for the fiber can be calculated by taking the maximum force generated on the fiber divided by the cross- sectional area of the fiber based on the optical microscope measurements of the fiber's average fiber diameter measured prior to conducting the test.
  • the actual beginning plate separation (bps) can be dependent on a particular sample tested, but is recorded in order to calculate the actual engineering strain of the sample. In the instant example, the resulting average wet tensile stress of 0.33 MPa, with the standard deviation of 0.29, was obtained.
  • B. Average Fiber Diameter Test Method A web comprising fibers of appropriate basis weight (approximately 5 to 20 grams/square meter) is cut into a rectangular shape, approximately 20 mm by 35 mm. The sample is then coated using a SEM sputter coater (EMS Inc, PA, USA) with gold so as to make the fibers relatively opaque. Typical coating thickness is between 50 and 250 run. The sample is then mounted between two standard microscope slides and compressed together using small binder clips.
  • the sample is imaged using a 1OX objective on an Olympus BHS microscope with the microscope light-collimating lens moved as far from the objective lens as possible. Images are captured using a Nikon Dl digital camera. A Glass microscope micrometer is used to calibrate the spatial distances of the images. The approximate resolution of the images is 1 ⁇ m/pixel. Images will typically show a distinct bimodal distribution in the intensity histogram corresponding to the fibers and the background. Camera adjustments or different basis weights are used to achieve an acceptable bimodal distribution. Typically 10 images per sample are taken and the image analysis results averaged.
  • the images are analyzed in a similar manner to that described by B. Pourdeyhimi, R. and R. Dent in "Measuring fiber diameter distribution in nonwovens” (Textile Res. J. 69(4) 233-236, 1999).
  • Digital images are analyzed by computer using the MATLAB (Version. 6.3) and the MATLAB Image Processing Tool Box (Version 3.)The image is first converted into a grayscale. The image is then binarized into black and white pixels using a threshold value that minimizes the intraclass variance of the thresholded black and white pixels. Once the image has been binarized, the image is skeltonized to locate the center of each fiber in the image. The distance transform of the binarized image is also computed.
  • the scalar product of the skeltonized image and the distance map provides an image whose pixel intensity is either zero or the radius of the fiber at that location. Pixels within one radius of the junction between two overlapping fibers are not counted if the distance they represent is smaller than the radius of the junction. The remaining pixels are then used to compute a length- weighted histogram of fiber diameters contained in the image.
  • An electronic tensile tester (Thwing-Albert EJA Materials Tester, Thwing-Albert Instrument Co., 10960 Dutton Rd., Philadelphia, Pa., 19154) is used and operated at a crosshead speed of 4.0 inch (about 10.16 cm) per minute and a gauge length of 1.0 inch (about 2.54 cm), using a strip of a polymeric structure of 1 inch wide and a length greater than 3 inches long.
  • the two ends of the strip are placed in the upper jaws of the machine, and the center of the strip is placed around a stainless steel peg (0.5 cm in diameter). After verifying that the strip is bent evenly around the steel peg, the strip is soaked in distilled water at about 20°C for a soak time of 5 seconds before initiating cross-head movement.
  • the initial result of the test is an array of data in the form load (grams force) versus crosshead displacement (centimeters from starting point).
  • the sample is tested in two orientations, referred to here as MD (machine direction, i.e., in the same direction as the continuously wound reel and forming fabric) and CD (cross-machine direction, i.e., 90° from MD).
  • MD machine direction
  • CD cross-machine direction, i.e., 90° from MD
  • the MD and CD wet tensile strengths are determined using the above equipment and calculations in the following manner:
  • Peak LoadcD (gf) / 2 (inch W jdth)
  • the Initial Total Wet Tensile value is then normalized for the basis weight of the strip from which it was tested.
  • the initial total wet tensile of a polymeric structure comprising a crosslinking system of the present invention is at least 1.18 g/cm (3 g/in) and/or at least 1.57 g/cm (4 g/in) and/or at least 1.97 g/cm (5 g/in), then the crosslinking system is acceptable and is within the scope of the present invention.
  • the initial total wet tensile is less than or equal to about 23.62 g/cm (60 g/in) and/or less than or equal to about 21.65 g/cm (55 g/in) and/or less than or equal to about 19.69 g/cm (50 g/in).
  • association agent is present in a polymeric structure, such as a fiber, and/or in a fibrous structure and/or in a sanitary tissue product
  • standard test methods namely HPLC-mass spectroscopy or GC-mass spectroscopy or capillary electrophoresis-mass spectroscopy, examples of such methods are described in Vogt, Carla; Heinig, Katja. Trace analysis of surfactants using chromatographic and electrophoretic techniques. Fresenius' Journal of Analytical Chemistry (1999), 363(7), 612-618. CODEN: FJACES ISSN:0937-0633. CAN 130:283696 AN 1999:255335 CAPLUS

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Abstract

A polymeric structure in the form of a fiber, wherein the fiber comprises an unsubstituted polymer and wherein the fiber exhibits an apparent peak wet tensile stress greater than 0.2 Mpa, fibrous structures comprising such polymeric structures and processes for making such polymeric structures and/or fibrous structures are provided.

Description

POLYMERIC STRUCTURES COMPRISING AN ASSOCIATION AGENT AND PROCESSES FOR MAKING SAME
Field of the Invention The present invention relates to hydroxyl polymers, more particularly, to polymeric structures, especially fibers, comprising an association agent, fibrous structures comprising such polymeric structures and processes for making such polymeric structures and/or fibrous structures.
Background of the Invention
Polymeric structures, such as fibers and/or films, comprising hydroxyl polymers are known in the art. However, polymeric structures, especially in the form of fibers, comprising an association agent wherein the polymeric structures exhibit an apparent peak wet tensile stress greater than 0.2 MPa and/or an average fiber diameter of less than 10 μm have been until now unobtainable.
Accordingly, there exists a need for polymeric structures that comprise an association agent wherein the polymeric structures exhibit an apparent peak wet tensile stress greater than 0.2 MPa and/or an average fiber diameter of less than 10 μm, webs comprising such polymeric structures and processes for making such polymeric structures.
Summary of the Invention
The present invention fulfills the needs described above by providing polymeric structures comprising an association agent and/or webs comprising such polymeric structures and processes for making such polymeric structures and/or webs.
In one example of the present invention, a non-naturally occurring polymeric structure in the form of a fiber, wherein the fiber comprises a hydroxyl polymer and an association agent, is provided.
In another example of the present invention, a non-naturally occurring polymeric structure comprising an association agent wherein the polymeric structure exhibits an apparent peak wet tensile stress greater than 0.2 MPa is provided. In another example of the present invention, a fiber comprising an association agent wherein the fiber exhibits an average fiber diameter of less than 10 μm is provided. In another example of the present invention, a web comprising a polymeric structure according to the present invention is provided. In still another example of the present invention, a fibrous structure comprising one or more non-naturally occurring fibers comprising a hydroxyl polymer and an association agent.
In yet another example of the present invention, a process for making a polymeric structure comprising an association agent, wherein the process comprises the step of polymer processing a hydroxyl polymer-containing composition comprising an association agent into a polymeric structure comprising an association agent, is provided. In even yet another example of the present invention, a process for making a polymeric structure comprising an association agent, wherein the process comprises the steps of: a. providing a hydroxyl polymer-containing composition comprising a hydroxyl polymer and an association agent; and b. polymer processing the hydroxyl polymer-containing composition into a polymeric structure comprising the hydroxyl polymer and the association agent, is provided. Accordingly, the present invention provides a polymeric structure comprising an association agent, a web comprising such a polymeric structure and a process for making such a polymeric structure and/or web.
Brief Description of the Drawings Fig. IA is a schematic side view of a barrel of a twin screw extruder suitable for use in the present invention.
Fig. IB is a schematic side view of a screw and mixing element configuration suitable for use in the barrel of Fig. IA.
Fig. 2 is a schematic side view of a process for synthesizing a polymeric structure in accordance with the present invention. Fig. 3 is a schematic partial side view of the process of the present invention, showing an attenuation zone.
Fig. 4 is a schematic plan view taken along lines 4-4 of Fig. 3 and showing one possible arrangement of a plurality of extrusion nozzles arranged to provide polymeric structures of the present invention.
Fig. 5 is a view similar to that of Fig. 4 and showing one possible arrangement of orifices for providing a boundary air around the attenuation zone.
Fig. 6 is a schematic plan view of a coupon that can be used for determining apparent peak wet tensile stress of fibers according to the present invention.
Detailed Description of the Invention Definitions
"Polymeric structure" as used herein means any physical structure formed as a result of processing a hydroxyl polymer-containing composition in accordance with the present invention. Nonlimiting examples of polymeric structures in accordance with the present invention include fibers, films and/or foams. The polymeric structures of the present invention are non-naturally occurring physical structures. In other words, they are man-made physical structures.
"Fiber" or "filament" as used herein means a slender, thin, and highly flexible object having a major axis which is very long, compared to the fiber's two mutually- orthogonal axes that are perpendicular to the major axis. A fiber may exhibit an aspect ratio of the major's axis length to an equivalent diameter of the fiber's cross-section perpendicular to the major axis greater than 100/1, more specifically greater than 500/1, and still more specifically greater than 1000/1, and even more specifically, greater than 5000/1. The fibers may be continuous or substantially continuous fibers or they may be discontinuous fibers.
The hydroxyl polymer fibers of the present invention may have an average fiber diameter of less than about 50 μm and/or less than about 20 μm and/or less than about 10 μm and/or less than about 8 μm and/or less than about 6 μm and/or less than about 4 μm as measured by the Average Fiber Diameter Test Method described herein. Such a fiber may exhibit an average fiber diameter of greater than about 1 μm and/or greater than about 2 μm and/or greater than about 3 μm.
The hydroxyl polymer fibers of the present invention may include melt blown fibers, dry spun fibers, rotary spun fibers, spunbond fibers, staple fibers, hollow fibers, shaped fibers, such as multi-lobal fibers and multicomponent fibers, especially bicomponent fibers. The multicomponent fibers, especially bicomponent fibers, may be in a side-by-side, sheath-core, segmented pie, ribbon, islands-in-the-sea configuration, or any combination thereof. The sheath may be continuous or non-continuous around the core. The ratio of the weight of the sheath to the core can be from about 5:95 to about 95:5. The hydroxyl polymer fibers of the present invention may have different geometries that include round, elliptical, star shaped, rectangular, and other various eccentricities.
In another example, the polymeric structures of the present invention may include a multiconstituent polymeric structure, such as a multicomponent fiber, comprising a hydroxyl polymer and an association agent of the present invention along with another polymer. A multicomponent fiber, as used herein, means a fiber having more than one separate part in spatial relationship to one another. Multicomponent fibers include bicomponent fibers, which is defined as a fiber having two separate parts in a spatial relationship to one another. The different components of multicomponent fibers can be arranged in substantially distinct regions across the cross-section of the fiber and extend continuously along the length of the fiber.
A nonlimiting example of such a multicomponent fiber, specifically a bicomponent fiber, is a bicomponent fiber in which the hydroxyl polymer of the present invention represents the core of the fiber and another polymer represents the sheath, which surrounds or substantially surrounds the core of the fiber. The hydroxyl polymer- containing composition from which such a polymeric structure is derived may include both the hydroxyl polymer and the other polymer.
In another multicomponent, especially bicomponent fiber embodiment, the sheath may comprise a hydroxyl polymer and a crosslinking system having a crosslinking agent, and the core may comprise a hydroxyl polymer and a crosslinking system having a crosslinking agent. With respect to the sheath and core, the hydroxyl polymer may be the same or different and the crosslinking agent may be the same or different. Further, the level of hydroxyl polymer may be the same or different and the level of crosslinking agent may be the same or different.
One or more polymeric structures of the present invention may be incorporated into a multi-polymeric structure product, such as a fibrous structure and/or web, if the polymeric structures are in the form of fibers. Such a multi-polymeric structure product may ultimately be incorporated into a commercial product, such as a single- or multi-ply sanitary tissue product, such as facial tissue, bath tissue, paper towels and/or wipes, feminine care products, diapers, writing papers, cores, such as tissue cores, and other types of paper products. A "fibrous structure" as used herein means a single web structure that comprises at least one fiber. For example, a fibrous structure of the present invention may comprise one or more fibers, wherein at least one of the fibers comprises a hydroxyl polymer fiber. In another example, a fibrous structure of the present invention may comprise a plurality of fibers, wherein at least one (sometimes a majority, even all) of the fibers comprises a hydroxyl polymer fiber. The fibrous structures of the present invention may be layered such that one layer of the fibrous structure may comprise a different composition of fibers and/or materials from another layer of the same fibrous structure. "Web" as used herein means a physical structure that comprises at least one planar surface. In another example, a web is a physical structure that comprises two planar surfaces. A web may be a film, if no fibers are present within the web. A web that comprises one or more fibers may be a fibrous structure.
One or more hydroxyl polymer fibers of the present invention may be associated together to form a web. Typically, numerous fibers are collected, such as on a forming wire and/or belt and/or three dimensional molding member, in order to the association of the fibers into a web.
In one example of the present invention, a web and/or fibrous structure of the present invention exhibits an initial total wet tensile of greater than about 10 g/2.54 cm (10 g/in).
"Hydroxyl polymer" as used herein means any polymer that contains greater than 10% and/or greater than 20% and/or greater than 25% by weight hydroxyl groups.
"Hydroxyl polymer-containing composition" as used herein means a composition that comprises a hydroxyl polymer (substituted or unsubstituted). "Unsubstituted hydroxyl polymer" and/or "unsubstituted form of a hydroxyl polymer" and/or "unsubstituted form of a substituted hydroxyl polymer" as used herein means a hydroxyl polymer in which all of its original hydroxyl moieties are intact. In other words, no derivatized hydroxyl moieties exist in the hydroxyl polymer. For example, a hydroxyethyl starch is not an unsubstituted hydroxyl polymer. The mere removal of the hydrogen from the oxygen in the hydroxyl moieties does not create a substituted hydroxyl polymer.
"Substituted hydroxyl polymer" and/or "substituted form of a hydroxyl polymer" and/or "substituted form of an unsubstituted hydroxyl polymer" as used herein means a hydroxyl polymer comprising at least one derivative of an original hydroxyl moiety. In other words, at least one oxygen originally present in a hydroxyl moiety is covalently bonded to a moiety other than hydrogen.
"Association agent" as used herein means an agent that is capable of interacting with a hydroxyl polymer to influence the hydroxyl polymer-containing composition's properties, especially the hydroxyl polymer-containing composition's spinning
(rheological) properties, without covalently binding to the hydroxyl polymer.
"Non-naturally occurring" as used herein with respect to "non-naturally occurring fiber" means that the fiber is not found in nature in that form. In other words, some chemical processing of materials needs to occur in order to obtain the non-naturally occurring fiber. For example, a wood pulp fiber is a naturally occurring fiber, however, if the wood pulp fiber is chemically processed, such as via a lyocell-type process, a solution of cellulose is formed. The solution of cellulose may then be spun into a fiber.
Accordingly, this spun fiber would be considered to be a non-naturally occurring fiber since it is not directly obtainable from nature in its present form. "Naturally occurring" as used herein means that a fiber and/or a material is found in nature in its present form. An example of a naturally occurring fiber is a wood pulp fiber.
"Apparent Peak Wet Tensile Stress," or simply "Wet Tensile Stress," is a condition existing within a polymeric structure, such as a fiber, at the point of its maximum (i.e., "peak") stress as a result of strain by external forces, and more specifically elongation forces, as described in the Apparent Peak Wet Tensile Stress Test
Method described herein below. The stress is "apparent" because a change, if any, in the polymeric structures average thickness, such as a fiber's average fiber diameter, resulting from the polymeric structure's elongation, is not taken into consideration for the purposes of determining the apparent peak wet tensile stress of a polymeric structure. The apparent peak wet tensile stress of the polymeric structures is proportional to their wet tensile strength and is used herein to quantitatively estimate the latter.
"Weight average molecular weight" as used herein means the weight average molecular weight as determined using gel permeation chromatography according to the protocol found in Colloids and Surfaces A. Physico Chemical & Engineering Aspects, Vol. 162, 2000, pg. 107-121. "Polymer" as used herein generally includes, but is not limited to, homopolymers, copolymers, such as for example, block, graft, random and alternating copolymers, terpolymers, etc., and blends and modifications thereof. In addition, unless otherwise specifically limited, the term "polymer" includes all possible geometric configurations of the material. The configurations include, but are not limited to, isotactic, atactic, syndiotactic, and random symmetries.
"Spinning process temperature" as used herein means the temperature at which the hydroxyl polymer polymeric structures in the form of fibers are attenuated at the external surface of the spinning die as the hydroxyl polymer polymeric structures are formed. Fibers
The hydroxyl polymer fibers of the present invention may be a polymeric structure. In other words, one or more polymers may form the fiber.
The hydroxyl polymer fibers of the present invention may be continuous or substantially continuous. In one example, a fiber is continuous if it exhibits a length greater than about 2.54 cm (1 inch) and/or greater than 5.08 cm (2 inches).
The hydroxyl polymer fibers of the present invention, may be produced by crosslinking two or more hydroxyl polymers together. Nonlimiting examples of a suitable crosslinking system for achieving crosslinking of the hydroxyl polymer comprises a crosslinking agent and optionally a crosslinking facilitator, wherein the hydroxyl polymer is crosslinked by the crosslinking agent. An example of a suitable crosslinking system for use in the present invention is described in U.S. Patent Application Publication 2004/0249066. In one example, the hydroxyl polymer fiber of the present invention, as a whole, exhibits no melting point. In other words, it degrades before melting.
In addition to the hydroxyl polymer fibers of the present invention, other fibers may be included in the webs of the present invention. For example, the webs may include pulp fibers, such as cellulose fibers and/or other polymer fibers besides the hydroxyl polymer fibers.
In one example of the present invention, a hydroxyl polymer fiber of the present invention exhibits an apparent peak wet tensile stress greater than 0.2 MPa and/or greater than 0.5 MPa and/or greater than 1 MPa and/or In another example of the present invention, a hydroxyl polymer fiber of the present invention comprises at least about 50% and/or at least about 60% and/or at least about 70% to about 100% and/or to about 95% and/or to about 90% by weight of the fiber of a hydroxyl polymer.
In another example of the present invention, a hydroxyl polymer fiber of the present invention exhibits a pH of less than about 7 and/or less than about 6 and/or less than about 5 and/or less than about 4.5 and/or less than about 4.
In another example of the present invention, a hydroxyl polymer fiber of the present invention comprises an association agent. The association agent may be separate and discrete from the hydroxyl polymer. In other words, the association agent may not be covalently bound to an oxygen atom of a hydroxyl moiety of the hydroxyl polymer. Hydroxyl Polymers
Hydroxyl polymers in accordance with the present invention include any unsubstituted hydroxyl-containing polymer, for example, native dent corn starch hydroxyl polymer and/or acid-thinned dent corn starch hydroxyl polymer and/or any substituted hydroxyl-containing polymer, for example, hydroxyethyl starch hydroxyl polymer.
In one example, the hydroxyl polymer of the present invention includes greater than 10% and/or greater than 20% and/or greater than 25% by weight hydroxyl moieties.
Nonlimiting examples of hydroxyl polymers in accordance with the present invention include polyols, such as polyvinyl alcohol, polyvinyl alcohol derivatives, polyvinyl alcohol copolymers, starch, starch derivatives, starch copolymers, chitosan, chitosan derivatives, chitosan copolymers, cellulose, cellulose derivatives such as cellulose ether and ester derivatives, cellulose copolymers, gums, arabinans, galactans, proteins and various other polysaccharides and mixtures thereof.
Classes of hydroxyl polymers are defined by the hydroxyl polymer backbone. For example polyvinyl alcohol and polyvinyl alcohol derivatives and polyvinyl alcohol copolymers are in the class of polyvinyl alcohol hydroxyl polymers whereas starch and starch derivatives are in the class of starch hydroxyl polymers.
The hydroxyl polymers of the present invention may have a weight average molecular weight of greater than about 10,000 g/mol and/or greater than about 40,000 g/mol and/or from about 10,000 to about 80,000,000 g/mol and/or from about 10,000 to about 40,000,000 g/mol and/or from about 10,000 to about 10,000,000 g/mol. Higher and lower molecular weight hydroxyl polymers may be used in combination with hydroxyl polymers having weight average molecular weights within the above ranges.
Well known modifications of hydroxyl polymers, such as polysaccharides, for example natural starches, include chemical modifications and/or enzymatic modifications. For example, a natural starch can be acid-thinned, hydroxy-ethylated, hydroxy- propylated, and/or oxidized. In addition, the hydroxyl polymer may comprise native dent corn starch hydroxyl polymer.
In one example, the hydroxyl polymer of the present invention comprises a starch hydroxyl polymer. The starch hydroxyl polymer may be acid thinned starch hydroxyl polymer and/or alkaline cooked starch hydroxyl polymer. The starch hydroxyl polymer may be derived from corn, potato, wheat, tapioca and the like. The weight ratio of amylose to amylopectin in the starch hydroxyl polymer may be from about 10:90 to about 99:1 respectively. In one example, the starch hydroxyl polymer comprises from at least about 10% and/or at least about 20% to about 99% and/or to about 90% by weight of amylose.
"Polysaccharides" as used herein means natural polysaccharides and polysaccharide derivatives or modified polysaccharides. Suitable polysaccharides include, but are not limited to, starches, starch derivatives, chitosan, chitosan derivatives, cellulose derivatives, gums, arabinans, galactans and mixtures thereof. Nonlimiting examples of polyvinylalcohols which are suitable for use as the hydroxyl polymers (alone or in combination) of the present invention can be characterized by the following general formula:
Figure imgf000011_0001
Structure I each R is selected from the group consisting of C1-C4 alkyl; C1-C4 acyl; and x / x + y + z = 0.5-1.0. In one example, the polyvinylalcohol has no "y" and/or "z" units. Polyvinyl alcohols herein can be grafted with other monomers to modify its properties. A wide range of monomers has been successfully grafted to polyvinyl alcohol. Nonlimiting examples of such monomers include vinyl acetate, styrene, acrylamide, acrylic acid, 2-hydroxyethyl methacrylate, acrylonitrile, 1,3-butadiene, methyl methacrylate, methacrylic acid, vinylidene chloride, vinyl chloride, vinyl amine and a variety of acrylate esters. Association Agents
The hydroxyl polymer-containing compositions of the present invention may contain an association agent. The association agent is capable of associating, typically other than by covalent bond, with the hydroxyl polymer, particularly the hydroxyl moieties thereof.
In one example, the association agent is a cationic agent. The cationic agent may be selected from the group consisting of: quaternary ammonium compounds, quaternary alkyl amines, quaternary aryl amines, imidizolinium quats, polyethoxylated quaternary alkyl amines and mixture thereof. Nonlimiting examples of suitable association agents include quaternary ammonium compounds, amine oxides and amines.
Nonlimiting examples of quaternary ammonium compounds include dodecyltrimethylammonium chloride, stearyltrimethylammonium chloride, stearyldimethylbenzylammonium chloride, didodecyldimethylammonium chloride, tetraethylammonium chloride, polyethoxylated quaternary ammonium chloride such as Ethoquad C/12 from Akzo Nobel Chemicals Inc. A suitable quaternary ammonium compound is commercially available from Akzo Nobel Chemicals Inc. under the tradename Arquad 12-50. Nonlimiting examples of amine oxides include cetyldimethylamine oxide, lauryldimethylamine oxide, cocamidopropylamine oxide. A suitable amine oxide is commercially available from Stepan Company under the tradename Ammonyl CO.
Nonlimiting examples of amines, such as alkyl amines, include ethoxylated dodecylamine, ethoxylated stearylamine, and ethoxylated oleylamine. A suitable amine is commercially available from Akzo Nobel Chemicals Inc. under the tradename Ethomeen C/12.
The association agent may be present in the polymeric structure, such as the fiber, at a level from greater than 0% to less than about 100%. In one example, the association agent is present in the polymeric structure at a level of from greater than 0% and/or from at least about 0.001% and/or at least about 0.01% and/or at least about 0.1% and/or at least about 1% to about 50% and/or to about 40% and/or to about 30% and/or to about 15% and/or to about 10% and/or to about 5% and/or to about 3%. Hvdroxyl Polymer-Containing Composition The hydroxyl polymer-containing composition of the present invention may comprise an unsubstituted hydroxyl polymer and/or a substituted hydroxyl polymer. The hydroxyl polymer-containing composition may be a blend and/or mixture of polymers, such as two or more different hydroxyl polymers, for example an unsubstituted hydroxyl polymer (i.e., native dent corn starch hydroxyl polymer) and a substituted hydroxyl polymer (i.e., a hydroxyethyl starch hydroxyl polymer). In another example, the hydroxyl polymer-containing composition may comprise two or more different classes of hydroxyl polymers, such as a starch hydroxyl polymer and a polyvinyl alcohol hydroxyl polymer.
Optional ingredients, for example fillers both inorganic and organic and/or fibers and/or foaming agents may also be included in the hydroxyl polymer-containing composition and/or in the fibrous structure made therefrom.
The hydroxyl polymer-containing composition may already be formed. In one example, the hydroxyl polymer may be solubilized via contact with a liquid, such as water, in order to form the hydroxyl polymer-containing composition. Such a liquid may be considered for the purposes of the present invention as performing the function of an external plasticizer. Alternatively, any other suitable processes known to those skilled in the art to produce the hydroxyl polymer-containing composition such that the hydroxyl polymer-containing composition exhibits suitable properties for polymer processing the composition into a polymeric structure in accordance with the present invention may be used.
The hydroxyl polymer-containing composition may have and/or be exposed to a temperature of from about 230C to about 140°C and/or from about 50°C to about 13O0C and/or from about 650C to about 1000C and/or from about 650C to about 95 °C and/or from about 700C to about 900C when making polymeric structures from the hydroxyl polymer-containing composition. The hydroxyl polymer-containing composition may have and/or be exposed to a temperature that is generally higher when making film and/or foam polymeric structures, as described below.
The pH of the hydroxyl polymer-containing composition may be from about 2.5 to about 11 and/or from about 2.5 to about 10 and/or from about 3 to about 9.5 and/or from about 3 to about 8.5 and/or from about 3.2 to about 8 and/or from about 3.2 to about 7.5. In another example, a hydroxyl polymer-containing composition of the present invention may comprise at least about 5% and/or at least about 15% and/or from at least about 20% and/or 30% and/or 40% and/or 45% and/or 50% to about 75% and/or 80% and/or 85% and/or 90% and/or 95% and/or 99.5% by weight of the hydroxyl polymer- containing composition of a hydroxyl polymer. The hydroxyl polymer may have a weight average molecular weight greater than about 10,000 g/mol prior to crosslinking.
A crosslinking system may be present in the hydroxyl polymer-containing composition and/or may be added to the hydroxyl polymer-containing composition before polymer processing of the hydroxyl polymer-containing composition. The hydroxyl polymer-containing composition may comprise a) at least about 5% and/or at least about 15% and/or from at least about 20% and/or 30% and/or 40% and/or 45% and/or 50% to about 75% and/or 80% and/or 85% by weight of the hydroxyl polymer-containing composition of a hydroxyl polymer; b) a crosslinking system comprising from about 0.1% to about 10% by weight of the hydroxyl polymer-containing composition of a crosslinking agent; and c) from about 10% and/or 15% and/or 20% to about 50% and/or 55% and/or 60% and/or 70% by weight of the hydroxyl polymer- containing composition of external plasticizer e.g., water. The crosslinking system of the present invention may further comprise, in addition to the crosslinking agent, a crosslinking facilitator.
"Crosslinking facilitator" as used herein means any material that is capable of activating a crosslinking agent thereby transforming the crosslinking agent from its unactivated state to its activated state.
Upon crosslinking the hydroxyl polymer, the crosslinking agent becomes an integral part of the polymeric structure as a result of crosslinking the hydroxyl polymer as shown in the following schematic representation:
Hydroxyl polymer - Crosslinking agent - Hydroxyl polymer The crosslinking facilitator may include derivatives of the material that may exist after the transformation/activation of the crosslinking agent. For example, a crosslinking facilitator salt being chemically changed to its acid form and vice versa.
Nonlimiting examples of suitable crosslinking facilitators include acids having a pKa of between 2 and 6 or salts thereof. The crosslinking facilitators may be Bronsted Acids and/or salts thereof, preferably ammonium salts thereof.
In addition, metal salts, such as magnesium and zinc salts, can be used alone or in combination with Bronsted Acids and/or salts thereof, as crosslinking facilitators.
Nonlimiting examples of suitable crosslinking facilitators include acetic acid, benzoic acid, citric acid, formic acid, glycolic acid, lactic acid, maleic acid, phthalic acid, phosphoric acid, succinic acid and mixtures thereof and/or their salts, preferably their ammonium salts, such as ammonium glycolate, ammonium citrate, ammonium sulfate, and ammonium chloride. A. Synthesis of Hydroxyl Polymer-Containing Composition
A hydroxyl polymer-containing composition of the present invention may be prepared using a screw extruder, such as a vented twin screw extruder.
A barrel 10 of an APV Baker (Peterborough, England) twin screw extruder is schematically illustrated in Fig. IA. The barrel 10 is separated into eight zones, identified as zones 1-8. The barrel 10 encloses the extrusion screw and mixing elements, schematically shown in Fig. IB, and serves as a containment vessel during the extrusion process. A solid feed port 12 is disposed in zone 1 and a liquid feed port 14 is disposed in zone 1. A vent 16 is included in zone 7 for cooling and decreasing the liquid, such as water, content of the mixture prior to exiting the extruder. An optional vent stuffer, commercially available from APV Baker, can be employed to prevent the hydroxyl polymer-containing composition from exiting through the vent 16. The flow of the hydroxyl polymer-containing composition through the barrel 10 is from zone 1 exiting the barrel 10 at zone 8. A screw and mixing element configuration for the twin screw extruder is schematically illustrated in Fig IB. The twin screw extruder comprises a plurality of twin lead screws (TLS) (designated A and B) and single lead screws (SLS) (designated C and D) installed in series. Screw elements (A - D) are characterized by the number of continuous leads and the pitch of these leads. A lead is a flight (at a given helix angle) that wraps the core of the screw element.
The number of leads indicates the number of flights wrapping the core at any given location along the length of the screw. Increasing the number of leads reduces the volumetric capacity of the screw and increases the pressure generating capability of the screw. The pitch of the screw is the distance needed for a flight to complete one revolution of the core. It is expressed as the number of screw element diameters per one complete revolution of a flight. Decreasing the pitch of the screw increases the pressure generated by the screw and decreases the volumetric capacity of the screw.
The length of a screw element is reported as the ratio of length of the element divided by the diameter of the element.
This example uses TLS and SLS. Screw element A is a TLS with a 1.0 pitch and a 1.5 length ratio. Screw element B is a TLS with a 1.0 pitch and a 1.0 L/D ratio. Screw element C is a SLS with a 1A pitch and a 1.0 length ratio. Screw element D is a SLS and a 1A pitch and a 1A length ratio. Bilobal paddles, E, serving as mixing elements, are also included in series with the
SLS and TLS screw elements in order to enhance mixing. Various configurations of bilobal paddles and reversing elements F, single and twin lead screws threaded in the opposite direction, are used in order to control flow and corresponding mixing time.
In zone 1, the hydroxyl polymer is fed into the solid feed port at a rate of 230 grams/minute using a K-Tron (Pitman,NJ) loss-in- weight feeder. This hydroxyl polymer is combined inside the extruder (zone 1) with water, an external plasticizer, added at the liquid feed at a rate of 146 grams/minute using a Milton Roy (Ivyland, PA) diaphragm pump (1.9 gallon per hour pump head) to form an hydroxyl polymer/water slurry. This slurry is then conveyed down the barrel of the extruder and cooked, in the presence of an alkaline agent, such as ammonium hydroxide and/or sodium hydroxide. The cooking causes a hydrogen from at least one hydroxyl moiety on the hydroxyl polymer to become disassociated with the hydroxyl moiety and thus create a negative charge on the oxygen atom of the former hydroxyl moiety. This oxygen atom is now open for association by an association agent, such as a quaternary ammonium compound, for example a quaternary amine. Accordingly, an association agent is added to the hydroxyl polymer/water slurry, thus creating an associated hydroxyl polymer.
Table 1 describes the temperature, pressure, and corresponding function of each zone of the extruder.
Table I
Figure imgf000016_0001
After the slurry exits the extruder, part of the associated hydroxyl polymer/water slurry can be dumped and another part (10Og) can be fed into a Zenith®, type PEP II (Sanford NC) and pumped into a SMX style static mixer (Koch-Glitsch, Woodridge, Illinois). The static mixer is used to combine additional additives such as crosslinking agents, crosslinking facilitators, external plasticizers, such as water, with the associated hydroxyl polymer/water slurry to form an associated hydroxyl polymer-containing composition. The additives are pumped into the static mixer via PREP 100 HPLC pumps (Chrom Tech, Apple Valley MN). These pumps provide high pressure, low volume addition capability. The associated hydroxyl polymer-containing composition of the present invention is ready to be polymer processed into a hydroxyl polymer polymeric structure.
B. Polymer Processing
"Polymer processing" as used herein means any operation and/or process by which a polymeric structure comprising a hydroxyl polymer is formed from a hydroxyl polymer-containing composition. Nonlimiting examples of polymer processing operations include extrusion, molding and/or fiber spinning. Extrusion and molding (either casting or blown), typically produce films, sheets and various profile extrusions. Molding may include injection molding, blown molding and/or compression molding. Fiber spinning may include spun bonding, melt blowing, continuous filament producing, rotary spinning and/or tow fiber producing.
C. Polymeric Structure
The hydroxyl polymer-containing composition can be subjected to one or more polymer processing operations such that the hydroxyl polymer-containing composition is processed into a polymeric structure comprising the hydroxyl polymer and optionally, a crosslinking system, according to the present invention.
The crosslinking system via the crosslinking agent crosslinks hydroxyl polymers together to produce the polymeric structure of the present invention, with or without being subjected to a curing step. In other words, the crosslinking system in accordance with the present invention acceptably crosslinks, as determined by the Initial Total Wet Tensile Test Method described herein, the hydroxyl polymers of a processed hydroxyl polymer-containing composition together via the crosslinking agent to form an integral polymeric structure. The crosslinking agent is a "building block" for the polymeric structure. Without the crosslinking agent, no polymeric structure in accordance with the present invention could be formed. Polymeric structures of the present invention do not include coatings and/or other surface treatments that are applied to a pre-existing form, such as a coating on a fiber, film or foam. In one example, the polymeric structure produced via a polymer processing operation may be cured at a curing temperature of from about 110°C to about 3150C and/or from about 110°C to about 2500C and/or from about 1100C to about 2000C and/or from about 1200C to about 195°C and/or from about 1300C to about 185°C for a time period of from about 0.01 and/or 1 and/or 5 and/or 15 seconds to about 60 minutes and/or from about 20 seconds to about 45 minutes and/or from about 30 seconds to about 30 minutes. Alternative curing methods may include radiation methods such as UV, e-beam, IR and other temperature-raising methods.
Further, the polymeric structure may also be cured at room temperature for days, either after curing at above room temperature or instead of curing at above room temperature.
The polymeric structure may exhibit an initial total wet tensile, as measured by the Initial Total Wet Tensile Test Method described herein, of at least about 1.18 g/cm (3 g/in) and/or at least about 1.97 g/cm (5 g/in) and/or at least about 5.91 g/cm (15 g/in) and/or at least about 9.84 g/cm (25 g/in) to about 51. 18 g/cm (130 g/in) and/or to about 43.31 g/cm (110 g/in) and/or to about 35.43 g/cm (90 g/in) and/or to about 25.53 g/cm (75 g/in) and/or to about 23.62 g/cm (60 g/in) and/or to about 21.65 g/cm (55 g/in) and/or to about 19.69 g/cm (50 g/in).
In one example, a polymeric structure of the present invention may comprise from at least about 20% and/or 30% and/or 40% and/or 45% and/or 50% to about 75% and/or 80% and/or 85% and/or 90% and/or 95% and/or 99.5% by weight of the polymeric structure of a hydroxyl polymer. Synthesis of Polymeric Structure
Nonlimiting examples of processes for preparing polymeric structures in accordance with the present invention follow. i) Fiber Formation
A hydroxyl polymer-containing composition is prepared according to the Synthesis of a Hydroxyl Polymer-Containing Composition described above. As shown in Fig. 2, the hydroxyl polymer-containing composition may be processed into a polymeric structure. The hydroxyl polymer-containing composition present in an extruder 102 is pumped to a die 104 using pump 103, such as a Zenith®, type PEP II, having a capacity of 0.6 cubic centimeters per revolution (cc/rev), manufactured by Parker Hannifin Corporation, Zenith Pumps division, of Sanford, NC, USA. The hydroxyl polymer's, such as starch, flow to die 104 is controlled by adjusting the number of revolutions per minute (rpm) of the pump 103. Pipes connecting the extruder 102, the pump 103, the die 104, and optionally a mixer 116 are electrically heated and thermostatically controlled to 65 0C.
The die 104 has several rows of circular extrusion nozzles 200 spaced from one another at a pitch P (Fig. 3) of about 1.524 millimeters (about 0.060 inches). The nozzles 200 have individual inner diameters D2 of about 0.305 millimeters (about 0.012 inches) and individual outside diameters (Dl) of about 0.813 millimeters (about 0.032 inches). Each individual nozzle 200 is encircled by an annular and divergently flared orifice 250 formed in a plate 260 (Figs. 3 and 4) having a thickness of about 1.9 millimeters (about 0.075 inches). A pattern of a plurality of the divergently flared orifices 250 in the plate 260 correspond to a pattern of extrusion nozzles 200. The orifices 250 have a larger diameter D4 (Figs. 3 and 4) of about 1.372 millimeters (about 0.054 inches) and a smaller diameter D3 of 1.17 millimeters (about 0.046 inches) for attenuation air. The plate 260 was fixed so that the embryonic fibers 110 being extruded through the nozzles 200 are surrounded and attenuated by generally cylindrical, humidified air streams supplied through the orifices 250. The nozzles can extend to a distance from about 1.5 mm to about 4 mm, and more specifically from about 2 mm to about 3 mm, beyond a surface 261 of the plate 260 (Fig. 3). As shown in Fig. 5, a plurality of boundary-air orifices 300, is formed by plugging nozzles of two outside rows on each side of the plurality of nozzles, as viewed in plane, so that each of the boundary-layer orifice comprised a annular aperture 250 described herein above. Additionally, every other row and every other column of the remaining capillary nozzles are blocked, increasing the spacing between active capillary nozzles
As shown in Fig. 2, attenuation air can be provided by heating compressed air from a source 106 by an electrical-resistance heater 108, for example, a heater manufactured by Chromalox, Division of Emerson Electric, of Pittsburgh, PA, USA. An appropriate quantity of steam 105 at an absolute pressure of from about 240 to about 420 kiloPascals (kPa), controlled by a globe valve (not shown), is added to saturate or nearly saturate the heated air at the conditions in the electrically heated, thermostatically controlled delivery pipe 115. Condensate is removed in an electrically heated, thermostatically controlled, separator 107. The attenuating air has an absolute pressure from about 130 kPa to about 310 kPa, measured in the pipe 115. The polymeric structure fibers 110 being extruded have a moisture content of from about 20% and/or 25% to about 50% and/or 55% by weight. The polymer structure fibers 110 are dried by a drying air stream 109 having a temperature from about 149° C (about 300° F) to about 315° C (about 600° F) by an electrical resistance heater (not shown) supplied through drying nozzles 112 and discharged at an angle generally perpendicular relative to the general orientation of the embryonic fibers being extruded. The polymeric structure fibers are dried from about 45% moisture content to about 15% moisture content (i.e., from a consistency of about 55% to a consistency of about 85%) and are collected on a collection device 111, such as, for example, a movable foraminous belt. The process parameters are as follows.
Figure imgf000020_0001
The hydroxyl polymer-containing composition for foam formation is prepared similarly as for fiber formation except that the water content will be less, typically from about 10-21% of the hydroxyl polymer weight. With less water to plasticize the hydroxyl polymer, higher temperatures may be needed in extruder zones 5-8 (Fig. IA), typically from 150-2500C. Also with less water available, it may be necessary to add the crosslinking system, especially the crosslinking agent, with the water in zone 1. In order to avoid premature crosslinking in the extruder, the hydroxyl polymer-containing composition pH should be between 7 and 8, achievable by using a crosslinking facilitator e.g., ammonium salt. A die is placed at the location where the extruded material emerges and is typically held at 160-2100C. Modified high amylose starches (for example greater than 50% and/or greater than 75% and/or greater than 90% by weight of the starch of amylose) granulated to particle sizes ranging from 400-1500 microns are preferred for this application. It may also be advantageous to add a nucleating agent such as microtalc or alkali metal or alkaline earth metal salt such as sodium sulfate or sodium chloride in an amount of about 1 -8% of the starch weight. The foam may be shaped into various forms. iii) Film Formation
The hydroxyl polymer-containing composition for film formation is prepared similarly as for foam formation except that the added water content is less, typically 3- 15% of the hydroxyl polymer weight and a polyol external plasticizer such as glycerol is included at 10-30% of the hydroxyl polymer weight. As with foam formation, zones 5-7 (Fig. IA) are held at 160-2100C, however, the slit die temperature is lower between 60- 12O0C. As with foam formation, the crosslinking system, especially the crosslinking agent, may be added along with the water in zone 1 and the hydroxyl polymer-containing composition pH should be between 7-8 achievable by using a crosslinking facilitator e.g., ammonium salt.
Films of the present invention may be utilized for any suitable products known in the art. For example, the films may be used in packaging materials. Process for Making Polymeric Structures
The polymeric structures of the present invention may be made by any suitable process known to those skilled in the art.
A nonlimiting example of a suitable process for making a polymeric structure according to the present invention comprises the step of obtaining a polymeric structure comprising an hydroxyl polymer from a hydroxyl polymer-containing composition comprising a substituted form of the hydroxyl polymer.
In still another example of the present invention, a process for making a polymeric structure comprising an hydroxyl polymer, wherein the process comprises the step of polymer processing a hydroxyl polymer-containing composition comprising an hydroxyl polymer into a polymeric structure comprising the hydroxyl polymer, is provided.
In even yet another example of the present invention, a process for making a polymeric structure comprising an hydroxyl polymer, wherein the process comprises the steps of: a. providing a hydroxyl polymer-containing composition comprising an hydroxyl
polymer and an association agent; and b. polymer processing the hydroxyl polymer-containing composition comprising the hydroxyl polymer and the association agent into a polymeric structure, is provided.
In one example, a hydroxyl polymer, specifically one or more hydroxyl moieties present on the hydroxyl polymer, is associated, during an associating step, with an association agent for a time sufficient to permit a polymeric structure comprising the hydroxyl polymer and association agent to be formed. In other words, without wishing to be bound by theory, the association agent temporarily impacts the properties of the hydroxyl polymer in a manner such that it can be spun and/or otherwise polymer processed into a polymeric structure, such as a fiber.
The associating step may comprise subjecting the hydroxyl polymer to an alkaline pH. For example, the associating step may comprise subjecting the hydroxyl polymer to a pH of greater than 7 and/or at least about 7.5 and/or at least about 8 and/or at least about 8.5. To achieve the alkaline pH, an alkaline agent may be used in the associating step. Nonlimiting examples of suitable alkaline agents may be selected from the group consisting of sodium hydroxide calcium hydroxide, magnesium hydroxide, potassium hydroxide, ammonium hydroxide and mixtures thereof. Further, the associating step may occur at a temperature in the range of from about 700C to about 140°C and/or from about 7O0C to about 1200C and/or from about 750C to about 1000C. The associating step may comprise interacting the hydroxyl polymer with an association agent to form an associated hydroxyl polymer. The step of obtaining a fiber from the associated hydroxyl polymer may comprise subjecting the associated hydroxyl polymer to an acidic pH. For example, the step of obtaining a fiber from the associated hydroxyl polymer may comprise subjecting the associated hydroxyl polymer to a pH of less than 7 and/or less than about 6 and/or less than about 5 and/or less than about 4.5 and/or less than about 4. To achieve the acidic pH, an acidic agent may be used in the obtaining a fiber step. Nonlimiting examples of suitable acidic agents may be selected from the group consisting of: acetic acid, benzoic acid, citric acid, formic acid, glycolic acid, lactic acid, maleic acid, phthalic acid, phosphoric acid, succinic acid and mixtures thereof and/or their salts, preferably their ammonium salts, such as ammonium glycolate, ammonium citrate, ammonium sulfate, ammonium chloride, and mixtures thereof. Further, the obtaining a fiber step may occur at a temperature in the range of from about 60°C to about 100° and/or from about 70°C to about 95°C.
The step of obtaining a polymeric structure may comprise spinning the associated hydroxyl polymer such that a fiber comprising a hydroxyl polymer and an association agent is formed. The spinning may be any suitable spinning operation known to those skilled in the art.
The process of the present invention may further comprise a step of collecting a plurality of the fibers to form a web. TEST METHODS
All tests described herein including those described under the Definitions section and the following test methods are conducted on samples that have been conditioned in a conditioned room at a temperature of 730F ± 4°F (about 23°C ± 2.20C) and a relative humidity of 50% + 10% for 24 hours prior to the test. Further, all tests are conducted in such conditioned room. Tested samples and felts should be subjected to 730F ± 4°F (about 23°C ± 2.2°C) and a relative humidity of 50% + 10% for 24 hours prior to capturing images. A. Apparent Peak Wet Tensile Stress Test Method
The following test has been designed to measure the apparent peak wet tensile stress of a starch fiber during the first minutes of the fiber being moistened — to reflect a consumer's real-life expectations as to the strength properties of the end product, such as, for example, a toilet tissue, during its use. (A) Equipment:
• Sunbeam® ultrasonic humidifier, Model 696-12, manufactured by Sunbeam Household Products Co. of McMinnville, TN, USA. The humidifier has an on/off switch and is operated at room temperature. A 27-inch length of 0.625" OD 0.25" ID rubber hose was attached to an output. When operating correctly, the humidifier will output between 0.54 and 0.66 grams of water per minute as a mist.
The water droplet velocity and the water droplet diameter of the mist generated by the humidifier can be measured using photogrammetric techniques. Images can be captured using a Nikon®, Model Dl, of Japan, 3-megapixel digital camera equipped with a 37 mm coupling ring, a Nikon® PB -6 bellows, and a Nikon® auto-focus AF Micro Nikkor® 200 mm 1:4D lens. Each pixel had the dimension of about 3.5 micrometer assuming a square pixel. Images can be taken in shadow mode using a Nano Twin Flash (High-Speed Photo-Systeme, of Wedel, Germany). Any number of commercially available image-processing packages can be used to process the images. The dwell time between the two flashes of this system is set at 5, 10, and 20 microsecond. The distance traveled by water droplets between flashes is used to calculate droplet velocity.
Water droplets were found to be from about 12 microns to about 25 microns in diameter. The velocity of the water droplets at a distance of about (25 ± 5) mm from the outlet of the flexible hose was calculated to be about 27 meters per second (m/sec), ranging from about 15 m/sec to about 50 m/sec. Obviously, as the mist stream encountered room air, the velocity of the water droplets slows with increasing distance from the hose exit due to drag forces. The flexible hose is positioned so that the mist stream totally engulfs the fiber thereby thoroughly wetting the fiber. To ensure that the fiber is not damaged or broken by the mist stream, the distance between the outlet of the flexible hose and the fiber is adjusted until the mist stream stalls at or just past the fiber.
• Filament Stretching Rheometer (FSR) with 1-gram Force Transducer, Model 405 A, manufactured by Aurora Scientific Inc., of Aurora, Ontario, Canada, equipped with small metal hook. Initial instrument settings are: initial gap = 0.1 cm strain rate = 0.1 s"1
Hencky strain limit = 4 data points per second = 25 post move time = 0
FSR is based on a design similar to that described in an article titled "A Filament Stretching Device For Measurement Of Extensional Viscosity," published by J. Rheology 37 (6), 1993, pages 1081-1102 (Tirtaatmadja and Sridhar), incorporated herein by reference, with the following modifications:
(a) FSR is oriented so that the two end plates can move in a vertical direction.
(b) FSR comprises two independent ball screw linear actuators, Model PAGOOl (manufactured by Industrial Device Corp. of Petaluma, CA, USA), each actuator driven by a stepper motor (for example, Zeta® 83-135, manufactured by Parker Hannifin Corp., Compumotor Division, Rohnert Park, CA, USA). One of the motors can be equipped with an encoder (for example, Model E151000C865, manufactured by Dynapar Brand, Danaher Controls of Gurnee, IL, USA) to track the position of the actuator. The two actuators can be programmed to move equal distances at equal speeds in opposite directions.
(c) The maximal distance between the end plates is approximately 813 mm (about 32 inches).
A wide-bandwidth single-channel signal-conditioning module, Model 5B41-06, manufactured by Analog Devices Co. of Norwood, MA, USA can be used to condition the signal from the force transducer, Model 405A, manufactured by Aurora Scientific Inc., of Aurora, Ontario, Canada.
Example of Hydroxyl Polymer-Containing Fibers and Method for Determining Apparent Peak Wet Tensile Stress Thereof Twenty five grams of an unsubstituted hydroxyl polymer, for example Eclipse G starch (acid thinned dent corn starch of approximate average molecular weight of 3,000,000 g/mol, from A. E. Staley Manufacturing Corporation of Decatur, IL, USA), 10.00 grams of a hydroxyl polymer, for example 10% Celvol 310 solution in water (Ethenol, homopolymer from Celanese Ltd. Dallas Texas, USA) (4% based on the weight of the starch), 1.00 grams of an alkaline agent, for example 25% Sodium hydroxide solution (1% based on the weight of starch), 0.67g of a substitution agent, for example Arquad 12-37W (Trimethyldodecylammonium chloride from Akzo Nobel Chemicals Inc. of Chicago, Illinois, USA) (1% based on the weight of the starch), and 50 grams of water are added to a 200ml beaker. The beaker is disposed in a water bath to boil for approximately one hour while the starch mix is stirred manually to destructure the starch and to evaporate the amount of water until about 25 grams of water remain in the breaker.
Then 1.66 grams of a crosslinking agent, for example Parez® 490 from Lanxess
Corp. (formerly Bayer Corp.), Pittsburgh, PA, USA, (3% urea-glyoxal resin based on the weight of the starch), and 4.00 grams of a crosslinking facilitator, for example 25%
Ammonium chloride solution (4% based on the weight of the starch) are added to the beaker and mixed. Then the mixture is cooled to a temperature of about 400C. A portion of the mixture is transferred to a 10 cubic centimeter (cc) syringe and is extruded therefrom to form a fiber. The fiber is manually elongated so that the fiber has a diameter between about 10 μm and about 100 μm. Then, the fiber is suspended in an ambient air for approximately one minute to allow the fiber to dry and solidify. The fiber is placed on an aluminum pan and is cured in a convection oven for about 10 minutes at a temperature of about 130°C. The cured fiber is then placed in a room having a constant temperature of about 22°C and a constant relative humidity of about 25% for about 24 hours.
Since the single fibers are fragile, a coupon 90 (Fig. 6) can be used to support the fiber 110. The coupon 90 can be manufactured from an ordinary office copy paper or a similar light material. In an illustrative example of Fig. 6, the coupon 90 comprises a rectangular structure having the overall size of about 20 millimeters by about 8 millimeters, with a rectangle cutout 91 sized about 9 millimeters by about 5 millimeters in the center of the coupon 90. The ends 110a, 110b of the fiber 110 can be secured to the ends of the coupon 90 with an adhesive tape 95 (such as, for example, a conventional Scotch tape), or otherwise, so that the fiber 110 spans the distance (of about 9 millimeters in the instant example) of the cut-out 91 in the center of the coupon 90, as shown in Fig. 6. For convenience of mounting, the coupon 90 may have a hole 98 in the top portion of the coupon 90, structured to receive a suitable hook mounted on the upper plate of the force transducer. Prior to applying a force to the fiber, the fiber's diameter can be measured with an optical microscope at 3 positions and averaged to obtain the average fiber diameter used in calculations. The coupon 90 can then be mounted onto a fiber-stretching rheometer (not shown) so that the fiber 110 is substantially parallel to the direction of the load "P" (Fig. 6) to be applied. Side portions of the coupon 90 that are parallel to the fiber 110 can be cut (along lines 92, Fig. 6), so that the fiber 110 is the only element receiving the load. Then the fiber 110 can be sufficiently moistened. For example, an ultrasonic humidifier (not shown) can be turned on, with a rubber hose positioned about 200 millimeters (about 8 inches) away from the fiber so as to direct the output mist directly at the fiber. The fiber 110 can be exposed to the vapor for about one minute, after which the force load P can be applied to the fiber 110. The fiber 110 continues to be exposed to the vapor during the application of the force load that imparts elongation force to the fiber 110. Care should be taken to ensure that the fiber 110 is continuously within the main stream of the humidifier output as the force is applied to the fiber. When correctly exposed, droplets of water are typically visible on or around the fiber 110. The humidifier, its contents, and the fiber 110 are allowed to equilibrate to an ambient temperature before use.
Using the force load and diameter measurements, the wet tensile stress can be calculated in units of MegaPascals (MPa). The test can be repeated multiple times, for example eight times. The results of wet tensile stress measurements of eight fibers are averaged. The force readings from the force transducer are corrected for the mass of the residual coupon by subtracting the average force transducer signal collected after the fiber had broken from the entire set of force readings. The stress at failure for the fiber can be calculated by taking the maximum force generated on the fiber divided by the cross- sectional area of the fiber based on the optical microscope measurements of the fiber's average fiber diameter measured prior to conducting the test. The actual beginning plate separation (bps) can be dependent on a particular sample tested, but is recorded in order to calculate the actual engineering strain of the sample. In the instant example, the resulting average wet tensile stress of 0.33 MPa, with the standard deviation of 0.29, was obtained. B. Average Fiber Diameter Test Method A web comprising fibers of appropriate basis weight (approximately 5 to 20 grams/square meter) is cut into a rectangular shape, approximately 20 mm by 35 mm. The sample is then coated using a SEM sputter coater (EMS Inc, PA, USA) with gold so as to make the fibers relatively opaque. Typical coating thickness is between 50 and 250 run. The sample is then mounted between two standard microscope slides and compressed together using small binder clips. The sample is imaged using a 1OX objective on an Olympus BHS microscope with the microscope light-collimating lens moved as far from the objective lens as possible. Images are captured using a Nikon Dl digital camera. A Glass microscope micrometer is used to calibrate the spatial distances of the images. The approximate resolution of the images is 1 μm/pixel. Images will typically show a distinct bimodal distribution in the intensity histogram corresponding to the fibers and the background. Camera adjustments or different basis weights are used to achieve an acceptable bimodal distribution. Typically 10 images per sample are taken and the image analysis results averaged.
The images are analyzed in a similar manner to that described by B. Pourdeyhimi, R. and R. Dent in "Measuring fiber diameter distribution in nonwovens" (Textile Res. J. 69(4) 233-236, 1999). Digital images are analyzed by computer using the MATLAB (Version. 6.3) and the MATLAB Image Processing Tool Box (Version 3.)The image is first converted into a grayscale. The image is then binarized into black and white pixels using a threshold value that minimizes the intraclass variance of the thresholded black and white pixels. Once the image has been binarized, the image is skeltonized to locate the center of each fiber in the image. The distance transform of the binarized image is also computed. The scalar product of the skeltonized image and the distance map provides an image whose pixel intensity is either zero or the radius of the fiber at that location. Pixels within one radius of the junction between two overlapping fibers are not counted if the distance they represent is smaller than the radius of the junction. The remaining pixels are then used to compute a length- weighted histogram of fiber diameters contained in the image.
C. Initial Total Wet Tensile Test Method
An electronic tensile tester (Thwing-Albert EJA Materials Tester, Thwing-Albert Instrument Co., 10960 Dutton Rd., Philadelphia, Pa., 19154) is used and operated at a crosshead speed of 4.0 inch (about 10.16 cm) per minute and a gauge length of 1.0 inch (about 2.54 cm), using a strip of a polymeric structure of 1 inch wide and a length greater than 3 inches long. The two ends of the strip are placed in the upper jaws of the machine, and the center of the strip is placed around a stainless steel peg (0.5 cm in diameter). After verifying that the strip is bent evenly around the steel peg, the strip is soaked in distilled water at about 20°C for a soak time of 5 seconds before initiating cross-head movement. The initial result of the test is an array of data in the form load (grams force) versus crosshead displacement (centimeters from starting point). The sample is tested in two orientations, referred to here as MD (machine direction, i.e., in the same direction as the continuously wound reel and forming fabric) and CD (cross-machine direction, i.e., 90° from MD). The MD and CD wet tensile strengths are determined using the above equipment and calculations in the following manner: Initial Total Wet Tensile = ITWT (gf/inch) = Peak LoadMD (gf) / 2 (inchwidth) +
Peak LoadcD (gf) / 2 (inchWjdth)
The Initial Total Wet Tensile value is then normalized for the basis weight of the strip from which it was tested. The normalized basis weight used is 36 g/m2, and is calculated as follows: Normalized {ITWT} = {ITWT} * 36 (g/m2) / Basis Weight of Strip (g/m2)
If the initial total wet tensile of a polymeric structure comprising a crosslinking system of the present invention is at least 1.18 g/cm (3 g/in) and/or at least 1.57 g/cm (4 g/in) and/or at least 1.97 g/cm (5 g/in), then the crosslinking system is acceptable and is within the scope of the present invention. Preferably, the initial total wet tensile is less than or equal to about 23.62 g/cm (60 g/in) and/or less than or equal to about 21.65 g/cm (55 g/in) and/or less than or equal to about 19.69 g/cm (50 g/in). D. Presence of Association Agent Test Method
Whether an association agent is present in a polymeric structure, such as a fiber, and/or in a fibrous structure and/or in a sanitary tissue product can be determined utilizing standard test methods, namely HPLC-mass spectroscopy or GC-mass spectroscopy or capillary electrophoresis-mass spectroscopy, examples of such methods are described in Vogt, Carla; Heinig, Katja. Trace analysis of surfactants using chromatographic and electrophoretic techniques. Fresenius' Journal of Analytical Chemistry (1999), 363(7), 612-618. CODEN: FJACES ISSN:0937-0633. CAN 130:283696 AN 1999:255335 CAPLUS
All documents cited in the Detailed Description of the Invention are, in relevant part, incorporated herein by reference; the citation of any document is not to be construed as an admission that it is prior art with respect to the present invention. Terms or phrases defined herein are controlling even if such terms or phrases are defined differently in the incorporated herein by reference documents.
While particular embodiments of the present invention have been illustrated and described, it would be obvious to those skilled in the art that various other changes and modifications can be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. It is therefore intended to cover in the appended claims all such changes and modifications that are within the scope of this invention.

Claims

What is claimed is:
1. A polymeric structure in the form of a fiber, wherein the fiber comprises an unsubstituted hydroxyl polymer and wherein the fiber exhibits an apparent peak wet tensile stress greater than 0.2 MPa.
2. The fiber according to Claim 1 wherein the unsubstituted hydroxyl polymer has a weight average molecular weight of at least 10,000 g/mol.
3. The fiber according to Claim 1 wherein the unsubstituted hydroxyl polymer comprises starch.
4. The fiber according to Claim 1 wherein the fiber has an average fiber diameter of less than 50 μm.
5. The fiber according to Claim 1 wherein the fiber further comprises a substitution agent.
6. The fiber according to Claim 1 wherein the fiber exhibits a pH of less than 7.
7. Use of a fiber according to any of the preceding claims in a web, wherein the web exhibits an initial total wet tensile greater than 10 g/in ( 10 g/2.54 cm).
8. A process for making a fiber according to any of the preceding claims, wherein the process comprises the steps of: a. providing an unsubstituted hydroxyl polymer; b. substituting the unsubstituted hydroxyl polymer to produce a substituted hydroxyl polymer; and c. polymer processing the fiber from the substituted hydroxyl polymer.
9. The process according to Claim 8 wherein the step of substituting the unsubstituted hydroxyl polymer comprises subjecting the unsubstituted hydroxyl polymer to an alkaline pH.
10. The process according to Claim 8 or 9 wherein the step of substituting the unsubstituted hydroxyl polymer further comprises reacting the unsubstituted hydroxyl polymer with a cationic agent.
11. The process according to any of Claims 8 to 10 wherein the step of obtaining a fiber from the substituted hydroxyl polymer comprises subjecting the substituted hydroxyl polymer to an acidic pH.
12. The process according to any of Claims 8 to 11 wherein the process further comprises a step of collecting a plurality of the fibers to form a web.
PCT/US2005/046284 2004-12-20 2005-12-20 Polymeric structures comprising an hydroxyl polymer and processes for making same WO2006069120A2 (en)

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ES05854923T ES2424358T3 (en) 2004-12-20 2005-12-20 Polymeric structures comprising a hydroxylated polymer and processes for producing the same.
JP2007547037A JP4574682B2 (en) 2004-12-20 2005-12-20 Polymer structure containing hydroxyl polymer and method for producing the same
PL05854923T PL1828450T3 (en) 2004-12-20 2005-12-20 Polymeric structures comprising an hydroxyl polymer and processes for making same
EP05854923.9A EP1828450B1 (en) 2004-12-20 2005-12-20 Polymeric structures comprising an hydroxyl polymer and processes for making same
AU2005319271A AU2005319271B2 (en) 2004-12-20 2005-12-20 Polymeric structures comprising an hydroxyl polymer and processes for making same
BRPI0519131-9A BRPI0519131A2 (en) 2004-12-20 2005-12-20 polymeric structures comprising a hydroxyl polymer and processes for the production thereof
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US8852474B2 (en) 2007-07-17 2014-10-07 The Procter & Gamble Company Process for making fibrous structures
US9458573B2 (en) 2009-11-02 2016-10-04 The Procter & Gamble Company Fibrous structures and methods for making same
US9631321B2 (en) 2010-03-31 2017-04-25 The Procter & Gamble Company Absorptive fibrous structures
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WO2007023455A2 (en) * 2005-08-22 2007-03-01 The Procter & Gamble Company Hydroxyl polymer fiber fibrous structures and processes for making same
WO2007023455A3 (en) * 2005-08-22 2007-10-18 Procter & Gamble Hydroxyl polymer fiber fibrous structures and processes for making same
US8921244B2 (en) 2005-08-22 2014-12-30 The Procter & Gamble Company Hydroxyl polymer fiber fibrous structures and processes for making same
US8852474B2 (en) 2007-07-17 2014-10-07 The Procter & Gamble Company Process for making fibrous structures
US9926648B2 (en) 2007-07-17 2018-03-27 The Procter & Gamble Company Process for making fibrous structures
US10024000B2 (en) 2007-07-17 2018-07-17 The Procter & Gamble Company Fibrous structures and methods for making same
US10858785B2 (en) 2007-07-17 2020-12-08 The Procter & Gamble Company Fibrous structures and methods for making same
US9458573B2 (en) 2009-11-02 2016-10-04 The Procter & Gamble Company Fibrous structures and methods for making same
US10895022B2 (en) 2009-11-02 2021-01-19 The Procter & Gamble Company Fibrous elements and fibrous structures employing same
US11618977B2 (en) 2009-11-02 2023-04-04 The Procter & Gamble Company Fibrous elements and fibrous structures employing same
US9631321B2 (en) 2010-03-31 2017-04-25 The Procter & Gamble Company Absorptive fibrous structures

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