U.S. patent number 3,853,687 [Application Number 05/212,044] was granted by the patent office on 1974-12-10 for modified synthetic fibers and a process for the manufacture of same.
This patent grant is currently assigned to Asahi Kasei Kogyo Kabushiki Kaisha. Invention is credited to Tatsuo Ishikawa, Tetsuhiro Kusunose, Arimichi Okamoto, Norio Okubo, Masahira Sakashita, Keiji Yamashita.
United States Patent |
3,853,687 |
Ishikawa , et al. |
December 10, 1974 |
MODIFIED SYNTHETIC FIBERS AND A PROCESS FOR THE MANUFACTURE OF
SAME
Abstract
Synthetic fibers capable of absorbing aqueous medium are
manufactured by simultaneously extruding the fiber material and a
second material in a core and sheath arrangement. Turbulence is
produced in the zone where these two materials combine which
results in undulations in their cross-sections. The second material
is then dissolved away with a solvent to leave a fiber with an
undulating surface. When the second material is extruded as the
core, the fiber is hollow with undulations on the inside while when
the second material is extruded as the sheath the solid fiber has
an undulating outer surface.
Inventors: |
Ishikawa; Tatsuo (Nobeoka,
JA), Yamashita; Keiji (Nobeoka, JA), Okubo;
Norio (Nobeoka, JA), Sakashita; Masahira
(Nobeoka, JA), Okamoto; Arimichi (Nobeoka,
JA), Kusunose; Tetsuhiro (Nobeoka, JA) |
Assignee: |
Asahi Kasei Kogyo Kabushiki
Kaisha (Osaka, JA)
|
Family
ID: |
26454952 |
Appl.
No.: |
05/212,044 |
Filed: |
December 27, 1971 |
Foreign Application Priority Data
|
|
|
|
|
Dec 24, 1970 [JA] |
|
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45-116657 |
Dec 24, 1970 [JA] |
|
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45-116658 |
|
Current U.S.
Class: |
428/373;
428/376 |
Current CPC
Class: |
D01D
5/34 (20130101); A46D 1/00 (20130101); A46D
1/023 (20130101); Y10T 428/2935 (20150115); Y10T
428/2929 (20150115); Y10T 428/2975 (20150115) |
Current International
Class: |
A46D
1/00 (20060101); D01D 5/34 (20060101); D02g
003/36 () |
Field of
Search: |
;161/162,173,174,177,178,180 |
References Cited
[Referenced By]
U.S. Patent Documents
Primary Examiner: McCamish; Marion E.
Attorney, Agent or Firm: Sughrue, Rothwell, Mion, Zinn &
Macpeak
Claims
The embodiments of the invention in which an exclusive property or
privilege is claimed are as follows:
1. A synthetic fiber comprising a core portion and a sheath portion
with an interface between said core and said sheath which is
characterized by extruded extreme irregular undulations which vary
in cross-section along the entire length of the fiber, wherein said
core has been removed, leaving a hollow sheath with said extreme
irregular undulations on the internal surface thereof.
2. A synthetic fiber as set forth in claim 1 wherein said hollow
sheath is provided with randomly disposed passages communicating
the interior of the hollow sheath with ambient atmosphere.
3. An indefinite length synthetic fiber having a central hollow
portion along its longitudinal axis and extruded irregular
undulations on the internal surface thereof, said extruded
irregular undulations varying in cross-section along the entire
length of the fiber.
4. The synthetic fiber of claim 3 wherein passages communicate said
central hollow portion with the ambient atmosphere at random
locations along the axial length of the fiber.
Description
This invention relates to physically improved, modified and
conditioned synthetic fibers and a process for the manufacture of
same.
The synthetic fiber has, generally speaking only a poor
aqua-absorbing power. As an example, nylon fibers may pick up
aqueous medium in the order of only 7 - 8 percent of their own
weight and thus underwears made from such fibers as nylon can pick
up only a small amount of sweat from the wearer who suffers thus
from his unpleasant and unsanitary feelings during his or her
wearing period. This drawback is fatal to this kind of fibers and
constitutes an appreciable braking factor to a more broad and
accelerated use of these fibers, as is well known among both
skilled and unskilled persons.
In addition, the synthetic fibers have generally appreciable waxy
looks and feelings, as is highly well known.
Regenerated fibers such as rayon fibers are rather superior over
the synthetic fibers in this respect, but they are defective in
such that the spinning velocity for these regenerated fibers
amounts only to one several of that for the representative
synthetic fibers such as nylon. Therefore, it is a general tendency
that the regenerated fibers are gradually overwhelmed by the
synthetic fibers.
In order to improve or obviate the aforementioned lower pick-up
rate of aqueous medium by the synthetic fibers, foam yarns have
already proposed. These improved fibers are manufactured in such a
way that a proper foaming agent such as sodium hydrogencarbonate,
ammonium carbonate, amyl acetate, butyl acetate or
diazoaminobenzene is admixed before spinning to the spinning
material and the thus modified material is extruded from a
spinneret. In this way, the aqueous pick-up rate of the synthetic
fiber can be substantially improved, in addition to the
simultaneous reduction of the defective waxy feelings by forming an
infinitely large number of finely distributed random depressions on
the surface of the fiber. At the same time, however, fine
gas-filled cells are formed within the whole material of the fiber,
thereby the tensile strength thereof being naturally and
defectively reduced.
The main object of the present invention is to provide a synthetic
fiber devoid of the aforementioned various conventional drawbacks
inherent in the synthetic fibers, and a process for the manufacture
of same.
A further object is to provide an improved and modified synthetic
fiber having a silk-like glaze and feeling, and a process for the
manufacture of same.
Almost all of conventional synthetic fibers, except specially
prepared one for specific purpose, have a smooth surface which
invites a high thermal conductivity and thus a low performance of
heat preservation.
It is, therefore, a further object of the invention to provide a
synthetic resin having a substantially increased overall surface
area for improving the heat preserving capability over the
conventional corresponding synthetic fibers, and a process for the
manufacture of same.
In this respect, conventional foam fibers can satisfy substantially
the last-mentioned object of the invention. However, when a
substantially fine yarn, less than 50 denier by way of example,
frequent yarn breakage could be encountered. A still finer yarn,
for instance 5 denier or less, can not be produced by the
conventional foam yarn technique without fear of frequent yarn
breakage.
It is, therefore, a still further object of the present invention
to provide a multifilament of the kind above referred to, composed
of fine individual constituent filaments, each of which may have a
fine denier such as 5 denier or less when required, and a process
for the manufacture of same.
In order to fulfil the aforementioned objects, the improved and
modified synthetic fiber according to this invention has at an
outer or inner surface thereof a specific undulated cross-sectional
configuration similar to that which is owned by the regular and
conventional layon. These undulations are formed and arranged on
the inside or outside surface of the fiber, as the case may be, in
randon manner when seen in the longitudinal axis of the fiber.
Excepting the case of a hollow filament, the synthetic fiber
according to this invention has on any cross-section thereof, no
cellular structure in the filled-in and even body material of the
fiber. The undulations or recesses are found on the outer or inner
surface of the fiber.
The manufacturing material for the improved and modified synthetic
fiber according to this invention may be that any of known polymer
or copolymer which has a fiber-forming ability. Representative
thereof, and in non-limitative sense, it may be of the origin of
polyamide, polyester, polyolefine, polyvinylchloride or
polyacrylonitrile.
Applicable polyamides may include lactams, linear high polymers as
obtainable from diamine and dicarboxylic acid, as being enumerated:
nylon 6, nylon 66, nylon 12, nylon 610, nylon 612 and the like
which may be grouped as polyamide per se and its copolymer.
Applicable polyesters may be, by way of example, polyethylene
terephthalate, polyethylene isophthalate and the like which may be
grouped in polyester per se and its copolymer with adipic acid,
2-dodecanoic acid, butan diol, polyethylene glycol and the like,
said polyesters per se being such linear high polymers as
obtainable by condensating reaction between diol and dicarboxylic
acid and lacto- or hydroxybenzoic acid.
As may be seen from the foregoing disclosed, the irregular
undulations may be provided on the inside of the fiber when it is
formed into a hollow configuration, as will become more apparent as
the description proceeds. In the case of the hollow structure mode
of the fiber, it may have non-closed cross-section at certain, yet
randomly selected-out lateral sections of the fiber, so as to
establish a pneumatic communication between the interior hollow
space of the fiber and the ambient open atmosphere. These
communication passages formed through the body of the fiber does
not extend along the whole length of the fiber. Therefore, it will
be seen that these lateral communication passages have generally
different configurations and different circum pherential positions
at different cross-sections of the fiber. These communication
passages have therefore only short axial distances, thus providing
no axially extended slit or slot form.
The term "rayon-like cross-sectional configuration" as used
throughout this specification and appended claims has such means
that the cross-sectional configuration of the fiber according to
this invention as viewed on a microscope represents similar surface
undulations as those of the rayon filament. However, the
undulations in the case of the invention have a rather profound
shade. In the case of the rayon filament, there are only simpler
convex and concave undulations, thus representing no deeply coved
recesses. The term "coved" means to express a deep "bay"-like
recess having a smaller inlet distance than that measured at a
deeper and wider place of the recess entered further thereinto from
the inlet opening portion thereof. The cross-sectional
configuration of the fiber according to this invention, however,
represents rather normally such deeply coved recesses. In the
similar way, the convexed parts of the undurations as observed on
the outer or inner surface of the fiber according to this invention
are rather steeper than those appearing on rayon filaments may take
frequently pleat-like forms. In comparison with the rayon
filaments, the undulations on the fiber according to this invention
have generally substantially longer radical lengths, thus having
high convex undulations and deeper concave undulations than those
on the rayon filaments. In the case of conventional foam yarns, the
undulations are generally still shorter and shallower than those of
the rayon filaments, the former representing rather shallow
crater-like configurations as having formed by the escapement of a
gaseous foaming agent.
The novel and peculiar shape and arrangement of the undulations on
the fiber according to this invention have a very important role
for the fulfilment of the objects of the invention, especially for
the realization of an amazingly increased pick-up ability of human
sweat. Other advantages of the invention may also be derived
therefrom.
According to the known technique, non-round cross-sectional
configuration may be realized by extruding the spinning material
through a nozzle having a cross-sectioned orifice. In this case,
all the cross-sectional configurations must be same at every
sections and the fiber represents longitudinally extended ridges
and valleys which are naturally very different in their overall
configuration, arrangement and effects, from the undulations formed
in accordance with the inventive technique.
According to a prior proposal, textile fabrics are treated with a
solvent capable of dissolving partially the constituting fibrous
components. By this treatment, the textile fabrics become bulky and
softer, by virtue of reduced interyarn pressure. The final products
obtained according to this prior proposal is highly difficult to
control the treating conditions for the realization of the desired
silky and other effects without inviting appreciable detrimental
effects upon the strength of the fabrics. In addition, it should be
noted that the surface undulations thus formed on the yarn surfaces
are very similar to those obtainable with the foam yarn technique
and thus highly different from those of the fiber according to this
invention.
In order to manufacture the improved and modified fiber according
to this invention two different kinds of spinning materials of
which the one is capable of being dissolved by contact with a
specifically selected solvent are extruded through a spinneret
designed and arranged to produce sheath-core type conjugate
composite fiber, yet having a turbulence-providing zone, preferably
made of a mass of flow-disturbing particles or the like solid
members held in position within each of the extrusion orifices of
the spinneret, so as to provide modified conjugate fibers, each
having complexedly shaped and arranged undulations on and along the
conjugating surface between the two different spinning materials
now having been conjugated with each other. Then, the thus provided
conjugate fibers are treated with the solvent above referred to, so
as to dissolvingly remove the sheath component or the core
component, as the case may be, which has affinity with the
solvent.
In the case wherein the component has been dissolved away, the core
component does constitute the physically modified fiber according
to this invention so that it is solid or in fullness overall its
cross-section and the complexed undulations appear on the outer
surface of the fiber.
On the contrary, when the core component has been dissolved out,
the fiber will take the form of a hollow fiber which represents the
undulations on its inside surface.
The intrinsic viscosity of the spinning material may preferably be
about 0.8 - 2.0 for polyamide; and 0.6 - 1.5 for polyester. The
volumetric ratio between sheath and core may preferably be 1 : 5 -
5 : 1. As the tubulence-providing and flowresisting material held
in position within the extrusion orifice may be sand particles
passed through a filter net of 20 - 100 mesh; bearing balls of 0.1
- 2.0 mm dia.; a wire net of 80 - 400 mesh; steel balls, 1 - 2 mm
dia. prepared from 0.1 - 1.0 mm .phi., stainless steel rod upon cut
in lengths; or pervious and resilient resin or the like mass having
flow passages, preferably 0.1 - 0.5 mm dia. or width, as the case
may be. Naturally, these are only several preferred embodiments of
the mass and are not limitative of the invention only thereto.
The temperature of the spinneret may be set to a properly selected
one between the softening point and the decomposing point of ether
of the two different conjugating materials. Practically, however,
it extends between about 200.degree. and 350.degree.C.
As the treating agent for dissolving one of the conjugated
components, sulfuric acid, hydrochloric acid, formic acid, phenol,
solution of calcium chloride in methanol or the like, for
polyamide. Metacresol, aqueous caustic soda solution or the like
may preferably be used for polyester. Benzene, xylene, toluene,
tetraline or the like may preferably be used for polyolefine.
As the treating conditions, the concentration of solvent may be set
to 1 - 100 percent, as occasion may desire. The treating period may
preferably extend for 0.5 second - 120 minutes.
The fibers according to this invention have a specific non-waxy,
linen-like hand-feeling and an amazingly improved liquid-absorbing
power, at least several or five times, and frequently even ten and
several times over conventional nylon filaments as an example,
without fear of appreciable loss of fiber strength. Dyestuff
affinity and heat-preserving power can be accordingly
increased.
These and further objects, features and advantages of the invention
will become more apparent when read the following detailed
description of the invention by reference to the sole accompanying
drawing, in which:
FIG. 1 is a partial and sectional view of a spinneret used for the
manufacture of a conjugate fiber as an intermediate product in the
manufacturing process.
FIG. 2 is a sectional plan view taken substantially along a section
line II-II' shown in FIG. 1.
FIG. 3 is a schematic cross-sectional view of the intermediate
conjugate composite fiber to be used for the manufacture of the
inventive fiber.
FIGS. 4 and 5 are two different cross-sections of different
inventive filaments which have been prepared from the same
intermediate product shown in FIG. 3.
In the spinneret adapted for the preparation of an intermediate
product in the form of a two-component conjugate composite fiber
shown in FIGS. 1 - 2, numeral 1 represents an upper nozzle plate; 2
an intermediate nozzle plate and 3 a bottom nozzle plate assembled
together fixedly as shown and housed in a cup-shaped nozzle holder
11 only partially shown.
Upper nozzle plate 1 is formed with a plurality of first passage
openings 4 which are arranged radially on an imaginary circle
around the center of the spinneret, although the detaileds have
been omitted from the drawing only for simplicity, said first
openings 4 being adapted for reception of a first kind of fused
polymer for forming the core of the conjugate fiber, as will become
more fully as the description proceeds. Second passage openings 7
are also formed through the upper or top nozzle plate 1 and
arranged concentrically around the center of the spinneret,
although the details have been omitted only for simplicity. These
second openings 7 are for the purpose of introducing a second kind
of fused spinning material adapted for forming the sheath of the
conjugate fiber shown in FIG. 3.
Directly below each of said first passage opening 4, there is
provided a passage opening 12 bored through the intermediate nozzle
plate 2, a circular and raised shoulder 13 is formed concentrically
around each of the passage openings 12, although only one is shown
as a representative. The bottom part of each of these openings 12
is enlarged, so as to receive a wire net 6 in position and for
preventing a mass of granular or particle-shaped members,
preferably sand particles, bearing balls or the like members as was
briefly referred to hereinbefore, so as to provide a
turbulence-providing and flow-restricting zone 5 held within the
interior space of each of said passage openings 12.
Directly below each of the passage opening 12, there is provided a
nozzle orifice 10 having a gradually reducing mode and in
concentric arrangement with the intermediate passage opening 12 and
bored through the bottom nozzle plate 3. On the upper surface and
defined between the top and intermediate plates 1; 2, there is
provided a distributing space 8 adapted for distributing the second
fused conjugating material received from second passage openings 7
into the intermediate passage openings 12, so as to constitute
sheaths, as known per se.
The first fused material is introduced from a first spinning pump,
not shown, to each of the first passage openings 4, thence through
a reduced part 9 of space 8, the turbulence-providing zone 5 formed
within intermediate passage opening 12, wire net 6 and extrusion
orifice 10, in the form of a conjugating core.
On the other hand, second fused material is fed from a second
spinning pump, not shown, to second passage openings 7, thence
through space 8 and its reduced part 9 to each of the said zone 5
and concentrically around the core consisting of the first
material. In this way, a sheath is formed during passage through
the zone 5, so as to provide a sheath-core type conjugate fiber
from each of the intermediate passage openings 12. This conjugate
fiber is fed further through the extrusion orifice 10, as commonly
known per se.
By the provision of the said zones 5, however, each of the thus
extruded conjugate fibers delivered from the orifices 10 does not
take a substantially truely shaped circular sheath and core, yet
taking the form as illustrated generally at 14 in FIG. 3. This
intermediate fiber product formed into a conjugate composite fiber
14 has heavy undulations on and along the conjugating orifice 17
between the sheath 15 and core 16.
When the sheath 15 has been dissolved out by contact with a
dissolving solvent, then the core 16 is isolatedly provided which
has on its outer surface heavy undulations 17 of the nature
substantially similar to that of a rayon filament. The nature of
these undulations has already been disclosed in detail
hereinbefore.
On the contrary, when the core 16 has been dissolved out by contact
with a dissolving agent, then, the sheath 15 having substantially
the conjugated shape is isolatedly provided which has on its inside
surface heavy undulations 17' of the nature of which has been
described hereinbefore. These undulations 17' are, so to speak, a
negative impression of the cross-sectional configuration of that of
a rayon filament; yet, however, these undulations can be equally
expressed as before to have a cross-sectional configuration similar
to that of a rayon filament, because the true relative
relation-ship is only in the positive-negative correspondence with
each other.
EXAMPLE 1
Polycapramide dissolved in 99 percent-sulfuric acid and having a
relative viscosity: 2.6 (intrinsic viscosity: 1:6) and polyethylene
phthalate, [.eta.] : 0.90, were fused and fed from respective first
and second spinning pumps finally through a spinneret of the
structure as shown in FIGS. 1 and 2. Polycapramide was used as
sheath and polyethylene terephthalate was utilized as core. The
volumetric ratio between the sheath material and the core material
was set to 1 : 3.
The spinneret had thirteen extrusion orifices 10, each having 0.5
mm .phi..
The zone 5 was constituted by twenty sand particles per extrusion
orifice, having passed through a sieve of 20 mesh.
The spinneret temperature was set to 300.degree.C and the winding
speed of the produced conjugate fiber was adjusted to 1,000
m/min.
The thus formed and unstretched yarn was stretched as
conventionally to its 30-times length into a 50 d/13 fils.,
polyamide/polyester, sheath-core conjugate yarn which was then
treated with an aqueous caustic soda solution for dissolving out
the core component. In this way, a hollow yarn as shown in FIG. 5
was obtained, representing random and heavy undulating inside
surface 17'.
The dissolvingly treating conditions were:
core-dissolving bath: aqueous 20%-caustic soda solution; bath
ratio: 1 : 20; bath temp. 90.degree.C; treating period: 30 minutes.
Main physical properties of this yarn were:
Young's Strength, g/d Deg. of Elon- gation, % modulus, Dyeing
Ability kg/mm.sup.2 for acid dyestuff
______________________________________ 4.1 37 514 good
______________________________________
Sweat-absorbing power of the fiber was measured amazingly to about
10 times when compared with that of corresponding plain nylon
multifilament. Appearance and feeling were silky and linen-like,
respectively.
EXAMPLE 2
50 d/13 fils. - polyester/polyamide sheath-core type conjugate
composite yarns were prepared as in the similar way as disclosed
hereinbefore by way of Example 1.
These conjugate yarns were treated with an aqueous caustic soda
solution continuously and, upon washing with water, solid unified
fibers as shown by way of Example in FIG. 4 were provided, upon
dissolving out the polyester. The undulations were formed as at 17
in the same figure.
The sheath-dissolving treatment conditions were as follows:
treating bath : 40%-aqueous NaOH solution; bath temp. :
90.degree.C; treating period : 2 sec. curing : 180.degree.C for 10
seconds.
Sweat-absorbing capability was about eight times that of
conventional comparative plain nylon multifilament. Appearance and
feeling were silky and linen-like, respectively.
EXAMPLE 3
Polystyrene, having a molecular weight of 200,000, and
polyhexamethyleneadipamide dissolved in 95 percent-sulfuric acid
and having a relative viscosity 2.5 and intrinsic viscosity: 1.2,
were fused separately and fed from respective spinning pumps to the
spinneret shown in FIGS. 1 - 2 and in the vol. ratio of 1 : 3. The
extrusion orifices were 130 in number, each having 0.5 mm .phi..
Polystyrene was used for the sheath and polyhexamethyleneadipamide
was utilized for the core.
The zone 5 was filled with 12 sand particles of 30 mesh.
Temperature of spinneret was set to 280.degree.C and the winding
speed was adjusted to 200 m/min.
The unstretched conjugate yarns were stretched to about 2.7-times
length, and the stretched filaments were 480 d/120 fils.
These conjugate fibers were treated with benzene, so as to dissolve
the sheaths. The resulted yarns were as shown in FIG. 4, as a
representative.
Sweat-absorbing capability was about nine-times in comparison with
those of conventional comparative plain nylon uarns. Appearance was
silky and hand feeling was linen-like.
Sheath-dissolving treating conditions were:
bath benzene; bath ratio : 1 : 50; bath temp. : 60.degree.C;
treating period : 120 mm.
EXAMPLE 4
.epsilon.-caprolactam/hexamethylene diadipate copolymerized in wt.
ratio of 3 : 7 and dissolved in 95 percent-sulfuric acid and having
a relative viscosity of 2.6 (intrinsic viscosity : 1.2), and
polyethyleneterephthalate, [.eta.] : 0.70, were fused separately
and fed at a vol. ratio, 1 : 2 from respective spinning pumps to
the spinneret, having a similar structure as shown by way example
in FIGS. 1 and 2, said spinneret having ten extrusion orifices,
each being of 0.25 mm .phi., so as to provide sheath-core conjugate
yarns. Polyamide copolymer was used for sheath, while
polyethyleneterephthalate was utilized for the core.
The zone 5 shown in FIGS. 1 - 2, was filled with eight ball-like
members, 1.5 mm .phi., made from a length of stainless steel rod,
10 cm long, 0.5 mm .phi..
Temperature of spinneret was set to 275.degree.C and the winding-up
speed was set to 600 m/min.
The unstretched conjugate yarns were stretched to 3.2-time lengths,
to provide yarns of 100 d/10 fils.
These yarns were treated with a sulfuric acid bath, under the
following treating conditions.
______________________________________ bath : 70%-aqueous H.sub.2
SO.sub.4 solution; bath ratio : 1 : 30; bath temp. 50.degree.C;
treating period : 5 min. ______________________________________
In this way, the sheath was dissolved away, and the thus obtained
yarns took a cross-sectional configuration similar to that in FIG.
4 as a representative.
Sweat absorption was nine-times as that of conventional comparative
plain nylon multifilaments. Appearance was silky and hand feeling
was linen-like .
* * * * *