[0001] This invention relates to foam plastics sheet materials, for example, with foamed
wallcoverings having decorative effects based mainly on comparative colour intensity.
Such effects can be achieved by the necessary number of printing operations, possibly
with simultaneous mechanical embossing, but this tends to increase cost and the practical
range of variation becomes limited.
[0002] The invention aims to provide a new way of producing, in foam wallcovering and the
like, decorative effects based on colour intensity without the need for supplementary
printing operations and mechanical embossing and providing an easy way of controlling
colour intensity, the control being co-related and registered with relief decorative
effects.
[0003] The material according to the invention comprises a substrate web having thereon
a base coat and a foam coat characterised in that the base coat comprises an organic
pigment and some of the pigment has migrated through the foam coat to the surface
of the foam coat so that the overall surface of the material exposes two different
colourations.
[0004] The coats may be partial or overall so long as a part of the foam coat overlaps the
base coat to give a migration path.
[0005] The two colourations may differ in intensity or differ in spectral position.
[0006] The foam coat may have varying thickness so that the amount of pigment migrating
to the surface varies according to the thickness.
[0007] The invention also provides a process for the production of a decorative sheet material
comprising applying to at least parts of the surface of a substrate web a composition
'containing an organic pigment, applying, over at least some of the parts of the substrate
to which said organic pigment had been applied, a foamable composition containing
a thermoplastic polymeric material and a heat decomposable blowing agent, and heating
said coated substrate to effect foaming of the foamable composition, wherein said
organic pigment is soluble in, and migrates into, said foamable composition to the
extent that some appear on the surface of the material.
[0008] The pigment composition may be printed on to selected areas of the substrate and
then the foamable composition may be applied as an overall coating. Alternatively,
if the foamable composition is applied only to some of the areas to which the pigment
composition has been applied (whether or not the pigment composition had been applied
overall), the foam areas above the migratory pigment bearing areas of the substrate
will be depicted in a colour or tone contrasting to that of those areas where the
pigment composition, but not the foam composition, had been applied. Both the migratory
pigment composition and the foam composition may be applied as overall coatings with
the foam composition varying in thickness, such as by applying a foamable composition
of varying thickness or by using a chemical embossing technique or coating on to a
pre-embossed substrate. The valleys regions of the foamed material will then exhibit
a deeper colouration than the peaks.
[0009] The amount of migratory pigment, in the areas to which the migratory pigment composition
is applied, is preferably in the range 0.1 to 5 g/n
2. By using in the migratory pigment composition one or more non-migratory pigments,
further decorative effects can be achieved if the foam composition is not applied
as a coating overall. A colour change can be derived also by having mixed pigments
only one of which migrates.
[0010] The substrate web may be any sheet or film material or may be a textile web. Particularly
suitable substrates include paper, board, wood, plastics film or sheet, and woven
or non-woven textiles made of natural or synthetic fibrous materials. The substrate
web may be given a coating, over some or all of its surface, of a material containing
a polymeric binder prior to application of the migratory pigment composition.
[0011] In the case of a paper substrate, an overall ground coat may be applied. In some
cases, particularly where an overall migratory pigment coating is desired, the ground
coat may form the migratory pigment coating by incorporation of the migratory pigment
into a conventional ground coat.
[0012] The migratory pigment composition preferably contains a polymeric binder. The binder
may be thermoplastic or thernosetting and may be a synthetic or a natural polymeric
material. Examples of binders include the thermoplastic polymeric materials listed
hereinafter in relation to the foamable composition, thermosetting polymers such as
polyurethanes, phenol formaldehyde, urea formaldehyde, or melanine formaldehyde resins,
synthetic rubbers, natural polymeric materials such as rubber, starch, gums and rosins.
[0013] The migratory pigment composition may be applied in liquid form and dried or fused
or by application of a powdered or particulate migratory pigment to an adhesive layer
on the substrate. The migratory pigment composition may be an ink or lacquer containing
the migratory pigment. Alternatively it may comprise a plastisol.
[0014] Examples of suitable thermoplastic polymeric materials that may be used as binder
in the migratory pigment composition and in the foamable composition include polymers
or copolymers of at least one ethylenically unsaturated monomeric material selected
from olefins, for example, ethylene, propylene, butene, isobutene; vinyl chloride;
vinyl esters, for example vinyl acetate; vinylidene chloride; vinyl ethers; acrylonitrile;
esters of acrylic or methacrylic acids, for example methyl acrylate, ethyl acrylate,
butyl acrylate, and methyl methacrylate; acrylic or methacrylic acids; styrene; butadiene;
and isobutylene.
[0015] Other polymers that may be used include thermoplastic cellulosic polymers such as
cellulose acetate and cellulose nitrate. Mixtures of polymers may be employed.
[0016] Preferred thermoplastic polymeric materials include homopolymers of vinyl chloride
and copolyners of vinyl chloride with comonomers such as vinyl acetate, vinyl ethers,
vinylidene chloride and olefins; copolymers of esters of acrylic or methacrylic acids;
and cellulose nitrate. Vinyl chloride homo and copolymers are particularly preferred.
[0017] Where the main coating composition is a vinyl chloride polymer plastisol, suitable
organic pigments for the preliminary coating are those that are soluble in the plasticiser
employed. Examples of such pigments include C.I. Pigment Red 5, 7 and 112; C.I. Pigment
Yellow 1 and 3: C.I. Pigment Orange 5; C.I. Pigment Violet 2; and C.I. Pigment Green
7. The C.I. Pigment numbers refer to the classified group of pigments as set out in
the "Society of Dyers and Colorists, Colour Index" second edition and supplement 1963.
[0018] The migratory pigment composition may contain the same or different polymeric material
to cnat containe in the foamable composition.
[0019] Additives that modify the decomposition temperature of the blowing agent may be.
incorporated into the composition.
[0020] The migratory pigment composition may itself contain a heat decomposable blowing
agent.
[0021] The foamable composition is preferably applied at a rate of 4C to 1200 g of binder
material in the foamable composition per square metre of substrate.
[0022] The foamable composition preferably contains 0.5 to 15%, particularly 1 to 10%, by
weight of blowing agent, based cn the weight of the binder material in the composition.
By the term binder material we mean the non-volatile components of the coating composition,
that, on heating, coalesce to form an integrated film. In computing the quantity of
binder material, inorganic non- film forming ingredients such as fillers and pigments
are excluded.
[0023] A printed pattern may be applied, if desired, by known printing techniques, to the
substrate bearing the layer of the foamable composition. Additionally, or alternatively,
a wear layer of transparent polymeric composition, e.g. an unpigmented vinyl plastisol,
may be applied. Where, after application of the foamable composition, the substrate
is printed, whether with an ink containing a compound that modifies the decomposition
temperature of the blowing agent or simply with a decorative ink, the wear layer,
if used, should be applied after application of the ink. The coating compositions
may contain other conventional ingredients, e.g. pigments, dyes, fillers, extenders,
plasticisers, stabilisers, and viscosity modifiers.
[0024] After application of the foamable composition, and after application of any printing
and or wear layers thereto, the coated substrate is heated to cause foaming. Where
the migratory pigment composition contains a heat decomposable blowing agent, it should
not be foamed prior to application of the foamable composition unless the migratory
pigment composition is of such a nature that, on decomposition of the blowing agent,
a residual foamed coating is obtained. This is largely a matter of the proportion
of the binder material relative to the proportion of other ingredients, such as pigments,
in the migratory pigment composition. Thus if the proportion of binder is such that
the coating of the migratory pigment composition is merely a layer of blowing agent,
migratory pigment, and any other solid ingredients adherent to the substrate, rather
than a continuous matrix of the binder encapsulating the solid ingradients, upon heating
to decompose the blowing agent, the gas evolved will be lost to the atmosphere and
little or no foaming will occur. In such cases it is necessary that the blowing agent
in the migratory pigment composition is not decomposed until after application of
the foamable composition.
[0025] The invention will now be described further with reference to the accompanying drawings
and examples.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
[0026]
Fig. 1 is a sectional view of material according to the present invention;
Fig. 2 is a plan diagrammatic view of the material shown in Fig. 1;
Fig. 3 is a sectional view of another material according to the present invention
in the course of manufacture;
Fig. 4 is the material of Fig. 3 at the end of manufacture; and
Fig. 5 is a plan diagrammatic view of the material of Fig. 4.
DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
[0027] In Fig. 1 a base paper 10 has applied to it a pattern in the form of spaced parallel
lines 11 of pigmented ink (exaggerated in the depth dimension). This was dried and
then partially coated with a plastisol at two thicknesses 12a, 12b and the plastisol
was foamed.
[0028] The lines 11 which were not covered with foam (indicated in Fig. 2 by close cross-hatching)
presented their strong original colour. The lines 11 below foam thickness 12a migrated
through the foam to reach the surface (indicated by open cross-hatching) to present
the pigment colour lla reduced in intensity. At the foam thickness 12b, pigment migration
had taken place but the surface of the material had not been reached, level 13 only
being reached.
[0029] In Fig. 3, an embossed paper base 20 has been given an overall coating 21 of pigmented
ink (exaggerated in the depth dimension). This overall coating 21 was then itself
coated overall with a foamable plastisol composition 22, the composition being at
various depths by reason of the embossing of base 20. The plastisol composition 22
was then heated to cause the plastisol to foam and take up various dayths and the
pigment in the ink to migrate. Pigment migrates intensely to level 30 (as indicated
by the close hatched box); it migrates weakly to the level 31 (as indicated by the
open hatched box); and migration stops at level 33 and hence level 32 of the foam
is unpigmented.
[0030] Three examples of the invention will now be given. In these examples all parts and
percentages are by weight.
Example 1
(This example can be related to Figs. 1 and 2 of the drawings)
[0031] A brown printing ink was nade up to the following forzulation:

[0032] A white grounded wallpaper base paper of substance 1
20 gm
-2 was printed flexographically with the ink in a simple design consisting of lines
and dots.
[0033] The printed paper was dried and then screen printed with a PVC plastisol of the following
formulation in a series of broad stripes of thickness 0.1 mm.

[0034] The plastisol print was gelled at 150°C for 20 secs. and then a second plastisol
of the same formulation overprinted onto the gelled print in the form of a few narrow
stripes.
[0035] The wallcovering was then heated at 200 °C for 60 secs. to expand the vinyl print.
[0036] The single layer of plastisol expanded to a thickness of 0.6 mm and showed the original
flexo print design in orange where the orange pigment alone had migrated into the
foam layer on heating. This contrasted with the original dark brown print design in
the valleys between the plastisol print.
[0037] The double thickness of plastisol print expanded to a thickness of 1.3 mm and showed
no migration of the pigment, remaining completely white.
Example 2
(This example can be related to Figs. 3, 4 and 5 of the drawings)
[0038] A 150 gm
-2 wallpaper base paper was given an all over air knife coating of an orange ground
coat of the following formulation:

[0039] The coating was dried at 120°C to give a dry weight of 25 gm
-2 and then the coated paper mechanically embossed with an overall design having many
different depths of emboss.
[0040] The embossed paper was then given an all over coating of foamable plastisol of formulation
as in example 1 by means of a knife over roller coater.
[0041] Total plastisol coat weight was 150 gm
-2 but the coat thickness varied depending on the depth of embos3 in the paper.
[0042] The coating was then foamed by heating at 200°C for 75 secs.
[0043] The resulting product showed the emboss in the paper in reverse relief and had the
appearance of being valley inked.
[0044] Where only a thin layer of PVC had been coated the orange pigment had migrated through
to the surface but in the high relief areas where the thickness of foam was greater
than 1.0 mm the foamed PVC remained white. In between the extremes the orange colouration
varied in strength as the foam thickness varied.
Example 3
(This example also uses the invention disclosed in our co-pending application which
claims priority from GB 30409/78 and 30408/78)
[0045] A printing ink was made up to the following formulation:

The pigment (C.I. Pigment Violet 2) is soluble in dicaprylphthalate.
[0046] A wallpaper base paper of substance 90 g/m
2 was sereen printed with the above ink to a floral design. The combined weight of
blowing agent and pigment applied was 4.7 g/m
2 to the printed areas.
[0047] The printed paper was dried and then coated with a PVC plastisol having the formulations
as given in Example 1.
[0048] The plastisol was applied as an overall coating of thickness 0.25 mm (corresponding
to a polymer weight of 162 g/m
2) and then the coated paper was heated in an oven for 60 sees. at 200°C to effect
foaming.
[0049] The resultant product displayed the floral design in a fine blister texture which
was pale pink in colour, while the parts of the foam that were not above the printed
pattern exhibited a smooth white coloured surface.
1. Foam plastics sheet material having a decorative finish such as wallcovering materials
and the like comprising a substrate web having thereon a base coat and a foam coat
characterised in that the base coat comprises an organic pigment and some of the pigment
has migrated through the foam coat to the surface of the foam coat so that the overall
surface of the material exposes at least two different colourations
2. Material is claimed in claim 1 characterised in that the foam coat has plural thicknesses.
3. Material as claimed in claim 1 or 2 in which th colourations differ in intensity.
4. Material as claimed in claim 1 or 2 or 3 in which the colourations differ in spectral
position.
5. A process for the production of a decorative sheet material comprising applying
to at least parts of the surface of a substrate web a composition containing an organic
pigment, applying, over at least some of the parts of the substrate to which said
organic pigment had been applied, a foamable composition containing a thermoplastic
polymeric material and a heat decomposable blowing agent, and heating said coated
substrate to effect foaming of the foamable composition, wherein said organic pigment
is soluble in, and migrates into, said foamable composition to the extent that some
appears on the surface of the material.
b. A process according to claim 5 in which the foamed composition has at least two
thicknesses and the pigment has migrated to the surface of the shallower thickness
but not to the surface of the deeper thickness.
7. A process according to claim 5 or 6 in which the foamable composition includes
a polymer dispersed in a plasticiser and the pigment, which contains a polymeric binder,
is soluble in the plasticiser.
8. A process according to any one of claims 5 to 7 in which the pigment composition
is applied at a rate to give a pigment application of from 0.1 to 5 g/m2 and the foamable composition is applied at a rate of from 40 to 1200 g/m2.
9. A process according to any one of claims 5 to 8 in which the substrate web is embossed
before application of the foamable composition.
10. A process according to any one of claims 5 to 9 in which the pigment composition
includes a heat decomposable blowing agent which causes foaming of the pigment composition.