Global Patent Index - EP 1751337 A2

EP 1751337 A2 20070214 - FILAMENTARY BLANKET

Title (en)

FILAMENTARY BLANKET

Title (de)

FILAMENTHALTIGE DECKE

Title (fr)

COUVERTURE EN FIBRES

Publication

EP 1751337 A2 20070214 (EN)

Application

EP 05756027 A 20050525

Priority

  • US 2005018293 W 20050525
  • US 57466804 P 20040526

Abstract (en)

[origin: US2005272340A1] The present invention is directed to continuous filament nonwoven fabrics, and more specifically directed to continuous filament nonwoven fabrics for use as low-cost disposable airline and rescue operation blankets. Continuous filament fabrics are formed utilizing the spunbond process. The spunbond process and the manner of preparing a spunbond web is set forth in U.S. Pat. No. 3,341,394 to Kinney and U.S. Pat. No. 4,043,201 to Brock, et al., both of which are herein incorporated by reference. The filamentary blankets of the present invention may be disposed after a single use or semi-reusable, wherein the blanket has a limited number of uses before needing to be replaced. Such blankets are suitable for a variety of applications, such as insulative blankets, emergency rescue blankets, institutional blankets, airline blankets, and other applications where blankets are used only a limited number of times or in some cases only once before being discarded.

IPC 8 full level

D04H 3/08 (2006.01); D04H 3/10 (2012.01); D04H 3/16 (2006.01)

CPC (source: EP US)

D04H 3/11 (2013.01 - EP US); D04H 3/16 (2013.01 - EP US); Y10T 442/60 (2015.04 - EP US); Y10T 442/69 (2015.04 - EP US)

Designated contracting state (EPC)

AT BE BG CH CY CZ DE DK EE ES FI FR GB GR HU IE IS IT LI LT LU MC NL PL PT RO SE SI SK TR

Designated extension state (EPC)

AL BA HR LV MK YU

DOCDB simple family (publication)

US 2005272340 A1 20051208; EP 1751337 A2 20070214; EP 1751337 A4 20080430; MX PA06013641 A 20070323; WO 2005118933 A2 20051215; WO 2005118933 A3 20061012

DOCDB simple family (application)

US 13711805 A 20050525; EP 05756027 A 20050525; MX PA06013641 A 20050525; US 2005018293 W 20050525