FIELD OF THE INVENTION
[0001] This invention relates to a novel structure of paper and to a method of making paper.
within the tern, "paper" we .include all hydraulically deposited webs of fibres of
all kinds including for example fibres made from cellulose, glass, asbestos, carbon
fibre and mineral wool or other synthetic materials.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0002] The conventional wisdom in the paper-making art is that it is possible to form a
properly coherent paper from a slurry of cellulosic fibres such as wood, cotton or
flax fibres which have been subjected to an appropriate treatment, for example by
beating or refining. Binders or other materials may be added. The inter-action between
the fibres is partly due to such friction as is caused by mechanical intermeshing
but is primarily by hydrogen bonding between the hydroxyl groups existing on the fibres
and on fibrils formed by the treatment to which the fibres have been subjected. Binders
if present will act to adhere the surfaces of the fibres together, or to form a self
bonding matrix in and around the fibrous web.
[0003] There are many fibres, particularly synthetic polymer fibres and inorganic fibres,
for which inherent interengagement is weak and there are some applications for which
such adherence without binders is inadequate. It is impossible, for example, to achieve
high strength without binders when the fibres in question are glass, mineral wool
fibres, guartz, alumina and so on, or when non-fibrous materials, such as ion exchange
resins or silica gels or activated carbon, are incorporated. Furthermore, although
cellulosic fibres on the one hand can be interengaged with adequate strength and,
on the other hand, inorganic fibres such as glass fibres can, by special treatments,
form a paper of some strength, it has been impossible in the past to make a material
where layers made from certain sorts of fibres form a strong interface except by using
large amounts of binder or, of course, by adhesive lamination of pre-prepared webs.
[0004] It appears that the interengagement between fibres of one type in one layer is taking
place by one mechanism and of another type in a separate layer by a different one,
even when the fibres in each layer are different types only to the extent that they
are fibres of the same material but have been differently treated or are of different
lenath or of different thickness. One layer is usually stronger than the other. The
problem of forming an interface is particularly difficult when the fibres are different
in each layer. This is especially so when the fibres in each layer are of different
materials
[0005] Where great thickness was not required, papers have generally been made of a single
slurry and any special surfaces were achieved by surface treatment of the web as for
example in the application of coatings or sizes.
[0006] For a lot of applications however it is the properties of the surface of the paper
which matter, the remainder of its bulk giving only mechanical strength or the like.
Alternatively, one property may be desired on one surface and a different one within
the thickness of the paper or at the other surface.
[0007] In these cases therefore it would be economic to make such papers in a single process
by selecting the material of a surface layer of the paper itself with a view to its
having a desired property and making the body of the paper or its other surface of
some other material
[0008] For example, in some chemical treatment/filtration applications we wish to have a
paper having inert surface characteristics but a reactive material such as an ion
exchange compound incorporated in the body of the paper between the two surface layers.
Alternatively, for filter papers a layer of glass fibres having desirable filtration
properties may be supported by a layer of cellulosic or different glass fibres giving
mechanical strength. We would also wish to have the facility for building up a comparatively
thick paper from thin layers of fibres which of their nature could not practicably
be applied in the full thickness - for example because of slow water removal due to
their extreme fineness.
[0009] It has previously been proposed to build up a relatively thick paper board having
the same type of fibre across it by a continuous "wet-on wet" process in which a first
slurry of the fibres is deposited onto the wire of a Fourdrinier papermaking machine
and, while the first slurry is still wet, a second slurry of the fibres is deposited
on the first so as to allow interlaminar mixing of the fibres. In such processes it
is known to introduce the second slurry to the first at a speed slower than that at
which the first slurry is moving.
[0010] A theoretical discussion of the "wet-on wet" process is given by B. Radvan and A.J.
Willis, in "Paper Industry Conference Papers", available at Royal Hall, Exhibition
Centre, Harrogate 26-28th October 1982. Though not specifically stated, it appears
that the article relates to conventional cellulosic paper board the fibres of which
are of the same physical and chemical characteristics throughout the thickness of
the paper. Radvan and Willis address themselves to the problem of forming the second
layer on the first without disturbing the first so that the number of fibres at the
interface which lie across the board is reduced so that the board appears homogeneous.
To this end they employ the "Coanda effect" to introduce the respective stocks at
zero angle and zero speed relative to a moving wire in which the stocks are deposited.
The success of such a process relies upon the hydrogen bonding between the cellulosic
fibres and the presence in the slurries of a binder which is conventionally present.
The possibility of radically affecting the fibrous structure of the web, e.g. through
repeated application of "micro- turbulence" throughout the process of formation, is
also suggested by Radvan and Willis as something which may be discerned in the future,
though this suggestion is clearly within the same general principle of keeping disturbance
of the respective layers to a minimum.
[0011] U.S. 2098733 discloses a practical method of forming a thick paper board by depositing
a second slurry on a first slurry while the first is still wet so as to allow interlaminar
mixing of the fibres. The fibres in the first may be longer than those in the second
slurry. Again the process is controlled so as to minimize the number of fibres oriented
generally across the paper so that the paper appears homogeneous. A size binder is
included in both slurries to achieve adequate bond strength, and it appears that a
silicate adhesive is also employed.
[0012] A process in which a second slurry is deposited on a partially dehydrated first slurry
has also been employed to produce papers which are at least primarily of asbestos
fibre. The fibres throughout the width of the paper are of the same chemical and physical
characteristics, but those in one layer are more densely packed than those in the
other. In this process the degree of flocculation of the fibres was controlled so
as to provide some fibres lying generally in the Z-direction in an attempt to improve
bonding (U.S. 3353682).
[0013] Paper made by the abovementioned known processes is weakest at the interface between
adjacent layers.
[0014] Even though the fibres throughout the width of the paper made by such known processes
were generally of the same chemical and often physical nature, it was still considered
necessary to include a binder, often in large amounts (see particularly U.S. 3353682)
to achieve adequate strength. The presence of such a binder is, however, highly undesirable
in certain applications, such as in scientific laboratory papers and battery separators
(see U.S. 4216280 which employs a single layer containing glass fibres, some coarse,
some fine and no binder). In other applications, such as filters for cleansing gases,
e.g. air filters, especially so-called "HEPA" (high efficiency particulate air) filters,
the presence of more than small amounts of binder is highly undesirable though such
small amounts have sometimes, in the past, been included to give the paper sufficient
strength.
[0015] For a battery separator or HEPA filter, it is known to be desirable to have one layer
of relatively coarse fibres and another of finer ones. To date, because it was believed
that too mcuh binder would be required to form a unitary structure, the two layers
were separately preformed and then laminated either with an adhesive or mechanically
(see, for example, U.S. 4262068). It would be particularly advantageous to be able
to provide a battery separator or HEPA filter comprising a single unitary sheet which
was of varying density throughout its thickness, which contained no binder, and which
could be made by a single process.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0016] The present invention permits the manufacture in a single process of a paper having
at least two material layers which are inherently bonded together during the papermaking
operation from distinct slurries which will usually be of different fibres (i.e. different
chemically, physically or both), and which layers are joined at an interface which
comprises a region where the fibres of the two distinct slurries are intermingled.
If the first slurry has fibres A and the second has fibres B then the structure of
the finished paper is layer A followed by interface A+B followed by layer B and then
optionally B+C, C and so on. This is achieved in the present invention without the
necessary use of a binder.
[0017] The present invention provides a papermaking process in which a plurality of layers
of distinct slurries are laid down one upon the other in the paper- making machine
such that a composite is built up in the wet state, a second layer being applied to
the first in a determinate relationship of the composition of the two slurries at
the time of application and of the physical relationship between the slurries at that
time, whereby disturbance is caused only in a surface region of the two layers to
cause penetration of the fibres of the second slurry among the fibres of the first
in that region but to leave substantially undisturbed the fibres in the majority of
the thickness of each of the respective layers. It is found that by such control we
can have an adherence strength at the interface which is equal to or, frequently,
greater than the strength of at least one and possibly each of the respective layers,
even in the case where the fibres of the two layers are widely dissimilar, and all
this without necessarily using a binder material.
[0018] This is because the fibres are,by the controlled disturbance, intermingled at the
interface between adjacent layers. This allows the fibres to become interlinked. Thus,
on attempting to tear the adjacent layers apart from one another the fibres interengage
so as to resist the tearing. Hence the paper has a tendency to tear along a plane
in the weakest of the two adjacent layers rather than at the interface. On attempting
delamination, a high percentage of the top ply fibres are still physically attached
to the bottom ply via the interface.
[0019] By enabling adjacent layers to be bonded to one another in this manner, a binderless
unitary structure having characteristics which vary through its width, including variations
in the chemical nature of the fibres, variation in their physical characteristics
(especially fineness) and variations in the loading of other additives which paperfor
certain uses,desirably includes, e.g. silica gel or particles of ion exchange resin
in laboratory filter paper, or perlite in battery separators, may be obtained.
[0020] The physical relationships which are of primary importance in a process of the invention
are the relative velocities of the two slurries at the time of application, the height
of the flow box nozzle of the second above the first layer and the angle of that nozzle
to the first layer. By these variables we can control the degree and extent of intermingling
of fibres at the interface and the degree and extent to which fibres are reorientated
in the interface region from the plane in which they are predominantly deposited in
either layer. The liquid content of the respective layers may also play a part in
determining the characteristics of the final paper.
[0021] It is particularly preferred that the second slurry is introduced to the first at
a speed greater than that at which the first slurry is moving.
[0022] In certain fields the use of a binder material is highly undesirable. This is so
in the field of scientific laboratory papers such as filter papers, etc. where the
object of using fibres such as glass fibres is to provide a paper which is chemically
highly inert and pure. The presence of binders in such papers may be deleterious to
the results obtained, since they may introduce chemical impurity and do reduce filtration
efficiency. Binders are also highly undesirable in battery separators; the binder
would not be chemically compatible with the electrolytic cell and would also restrict
absorption of electrolyte into the separator.
[0023] . In another aspect of the invention we provide a paper made integrally of different
fibres in respective layers with an interface between the layers comprising fibres
of both layers and causing a cohesion between the layers, and in particular such a
paper when free of binder. The fibres may be different either chemically or physically
or both. Furthermore, one or other or each of the layers may have incorporated into
it in the slurry stage or deposited onto it non-fibrous materials appropriate to the
use of the paper and this in the laboratory context may include particles of ion exchange
resin or in the ordinary context incorporating in a surface layer (which may be of
lesser thickness than the other layer or layers), furnishes for achieving a desired
surface characteristic. It is also possible to affect the properties of the paper
as a whole by controlling the properties of the interface. For example, desirable
properties of, for example, a filter paper, battery separator or gas-cleansing filter,
such as an air filter, especially a so-called "HEPA" filter, can be affected or even
determined by control of the amount of disturbance and hence of disorientation and
intermingling which is induced at the time of application of the second or other subsequent
slurries.
[0024] The preferred parameters for the relative consistencies and relationships of adjacent
layers at the time that a subsequent layer is applied to an earlier layer are determined
by the respective properties of the two fibres involved.
[0025] It can be generally said that the greater the dissimilarity between the fibres of
the layers and especially when one (or both) have a low bond strength within the layer,
the greater should be the angle of incidence and the height from which the subsequent
layer is applied. In dependence upon the nature of the paper required, each of the
relative velocities, angle and height may be chosen independently of one another.
Suitable angles of incidence may be between 1.5° and. 20°, preferably between 2.5°
and 12°. For many papers a particularly suitable angle is about 4°-6°. The height
may lie between 1 and 50mm, preferably between 1 and 20mm, more preferably between
1 and 10mm. The velocity difference between the two slurries may be 2 to 15%, preferably
between 2 and 12%, and, for many papers, more preferably about 5-7, (the second travelling
, further than the first). If
[0026] For example to apply a glass layer (e.g. Johns Manville 106 glass microfibres having
an average diameter of 0.49 - 0.58 micrometers) to a cellulosic layer (e.g. cotton)-the
glass slurry is most effectively applied from a height of 8mm at an angle of incidence
of 7.0° to the cellulosic layer: if the lower layer were a glass layer (e.g. Johns
Manville 104 glass microfibres having an average diameter of 0.34 - 0.48 micrometers)
it would require 6.0mm and 4.0° respectively.
[0027] In all cases, control of the consistency of the layers at the time of -application
is critical. A second layer should be applied to a first when the first slurry is
still highly liquid and, in dependence upon the nature of the paper to be made, preferably
contains between 80-95%, more preferably between 86.5 and 93.5%, more particularly
87.5 - 92.5%, especially 89-91% by weight water, and when the second contains between
98 and 99.9% water, more particularly 99.0 to 99.8%, especially 99.5-99.7% by weight
water (the rest in each case being solid content). A third slurry if used may be applied
at a consistency of 85 to 95% water, more particularly 90%, at which time the consistency
of these first two layers, taken together overall, may be between 89 and 91% of water:
in this case, where the first two layers have already consolidated to a certain extent,
the formation of an interface may be aided by mechanical disruption of the face of
the third layer by subjecting this layer to a change of direction by passing it over
a roll immediately prior to its being deposited upon the first two (or more) layers.
[0028] In each case an interface is formed of mixed fibres which is about 5 to 15% of the
total thickness of the two layers, more usually about 10%. The extent of thickness
of the interface layer depends primarily, though not solely, on the nature of the
first layer rather than on the consistencies and the variables mentioned above.
[0029] Processes embodying the invention may be carried out so as to produce novel materials
for two fields of use which present particular difficulty, battery separators and
gas-cleansing filters such as air filters, especially HEPA filters. Thus, a multilayer
structure can be produced for use as a gas-cleansing filter or battery separator which
structure will consist of two or more layers of cellulose, synthetic organic or inorganic
fibres.
[0030] In particular, such processes allow the preparation of a paper suitable for use,
inter alia, as a battery separator or gas-cleansing filter comprising a paper having
a density gradient across it, the fibres at the interface between adjacent respective
layers being sufficiently intermingled and interlinked to provide sufficient bond
strength between the layers without the necessity for binder to be present. Such binderless
graded density paper does not appear to have been previously disclosed in the literature.
[0031] A battery separator embodying the invention is particularly suitable for use in gas
recombination batteries which require separator integrity. The separator, in a single
unitary structure, provides sufficient bulk to absorb and hold the electrolyte and
efficiently prevents passage therethrough of bodies such as small crystals harmful
to the battery, while allowing the gases to pass through it. The process of the invention
allows particularly efficient use of the fibres when producing such battery separators.
[0032] In a process in accordance with the invention, the fibres in respective slurries
may be different from one another in either their physical or chemical characteristics,
or both. Furthermore each respective slurry may contain in that slurry a mixture of
fibres different from each other in their physical and/or chemical characteristics.
[0033] The fibre may be natural or synthetic, inorganic or organic, for example, cellulosic
(either natural or regenerated) fibres such as wood pulp, cotton and cellulose acetate,
inorganic fibres such as glass, asbestos and alumina, natural organic fibres such
as mineral wool and synthetic organic fibres such as polyesters (e.g. polyethylene
terephthalate), polyolefins (e.g. polyethylene, polypropylene), acrylics (e.g. polyacrylonitrile),
carbon fibre and polyamides (e.g. nylon), especially aromatic polyamides (e.g. Kevlar
R - Kevlar is commercially available from Du Pont). Kevlar is particularly suitable for
HEPA filters for use in the nuclear industry because it is not attacked by the hydrofluoric
acid emitted by reactors.
[0034] , Preferred papers made by processes embodying the invention are those in which at
least one of the fibres is non-cellulosic and these may be selected from inorganic
and synthetic organic fibres, e.g. glass, polyester, polyamide or polyolefin.
[0035] Other preferred papers have one layer comprising cellulosic fibres and another comprising
non-cellulosic fibres, e.g. cellulose on glass, especially fine cellulosic fibres
on relatively coarse glass fibres.
[0036] The process is particularly applicable to forming papers having two adjacent layers
each of which comprises non-cellulosic fibres. For example filters having respective
layers of polyester and glass are useful in gas masks.
[0037] The fibres in the respective layers may be the same as one another chemically but
differ in their respective thicknesses. Such papers, when made entirely out of glass,
provide especially suitable battery separators or HEPA filters.
[0038] Where glass fibres are employed these may be of a thickness within a range wider
than for many other fibres. Thus, the glass in the fine layer may be as fine as a
Johns Manville 100 microfibre (having an average diameter of from 0.2 to 0.29 micrometers),
while the glass in the coarse layer may be as coarse as Johns Manville "Chop Pak"
fibres, which are either about 12.7 or 6.3mm in length and 15 micrometers in thickness.
[0039] Typically, a battery separator may have an average weight/unit area of from 60-240g/m
2 and comprise two layers, viz a coarse layer of e.g. a mixture of Johns Manville 112
and 110 microfibres (average diameters 2.6-3.8 and 2.17-3.10 micrometers respectively)
and a fine layer of either Johns Manville 108 or 106 microfibres (average diameter
0.59-0.88 or 0.49-0.58 respectively). The glass may be a borosilicate glass with or
without zinc oxide (e.g. Johns Manville type 475 or 753 respectively).
[0040] A two-layer battery separator embodying the invention may have:-
Layer (1) - a furnish of acid resistant glass micro-fibre having a nominal fibre diameter
of 3.5 microns and a grammage between 50 and 250 g/m2.
Layer (2) - (and layer (3) if used) - a furnish of acid resistant glass microfibre
having a nominal value of 0.65 microns and a grammage between 5 and 100 g/m2.
[0041] In the case of a three ply structure layer (1) would form the centre ply with layers
(2) and (3) forming the outer surfaces of the structure.
[0042] The qualities which make such unitary glass micro- fibre separators embodying the
invention successful are as follows:
1. Their stability in sulphuric acid.
2. They are binder free multiple structures which provide the ability to make more
efficient use of the different grades of glass fibres by
(a) using a thin continuous layer of fine fibres to give a fine pore structure and
so reduce the possibility of unwanted transfer between the electrodes, and
(b) increasing the bulk of the material by use of continuous layers of coarse fibres,
capable of absorbing comparatively large amounts of electrolyte per unit weight of
separator.
3. Their improved strength as compared with the thin, flimsy, single, mixed fibre,
layer. In the unitary structure embodying the invention, the thin layer of fine fibres
is strongly bonded without binder or mechanical aids to the bulk layer of coarse fibres
by which it is supported.
[0043] A typical HEPA filter may have an average weight/ unit area of from 60-110 g/m
2 and comprise two layers, viz. a coarse layer of e.g. Johns Manville 112 microfibres
(average diameter 2.6-3.8 µm), and a fine layer of Johns Manville 110 microfibres
(average diameter 0.2-0.29 micrometres). The glass may be a borosilicate glass containing
a small amount of zinc oxide (e.g. Johns Manville type 475).
[0044] A two-layer HEPA filter embodying the invention may have:-.
(a) Layer (1) - a furnish of between 50% ---> 100% glass microfibre having a nominal
fibre diameter of 0.3 microns, 0-50%, preferably 5% ---> 50%, synthetic organic fibre
and 0 → 10% acrylic binder with a grammage between 20 ---> 200 g/m2.
Layer (2) - a furnish of 90% ---> 100% glass microfibre having a nominal fibre diameter
of 0.65 microns or less and 0 ---> 10% additive, with a weight of between 5 and 100
g/m2.
(b) Layer (1) - a furnish of 50% ---> 100% cellulose, 50% → 100% synthetic organic
fibre with a grammage between 10 ---> 100 g/m2.
Layer (2) - a furnish of 90% ---> 100% glass microfibre having a nominal fibre diameter
of 0.65 microns or less and 0 ---> 10% additive with a grammage between 5 and 100 g/m2
[0045] A multi-density HEPA filter embodying the invention thus produced has the following
advantages over a conventional filter, which is a homogeneous mixture of glass fibres.
1. Substitution of relatively fine fibres by coarser fibres in part of the thickness
gives a reduction in pressure drop without loss of strength and may also mean that
lower-cost materials can be used.
2. The material has a gradation of pore sizes from the relatively large pores in the
continuous coarse fibre structure of the layer we call a "pre-filter" layer through
a range of medium sized pores in the central (mixed fibre) area, to the relatively
small pores of the continuous fine fibre structure of the filter layer.
3. The structure allows for more efficient depth filtration to take place. Particles
are in effect more evenly distributed throughout the structure.
4. Loading capacity can be greatly increased by the careful design of a filter/pre-filter
material for specific applications.
5. For a given loading, i.e. similar weights of particulate matter, the pressure drop
would be lower for the multi-density filter than for a single ply filter.
6. The layer of fine fibres would be protected by the pre-filter layer and hence the
effective life of the filter could be increased.
7. The amount and diameter of the fine fibres used would be determined by the required
filtration performance. This would lead to a more efficient use of the expensive fine
fibres.
DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
[0046] In the accompanying drawings:
Figure 1 is a highly diagrammatic view of a Fourdrinier type machine modified to operate
the invention;
Figure 2 is a detailed scheme of the region of the flow-box nozzle applying a second
slurry;
Figures 3 to 7 are photomicrographs of partial sections through various papers according
to the invention, at various enlargements, showing the region of the interface.
[0047] A Fourdrinier machine 1 has the conventional flow-box nozzle 3 to deposit a slurry
onto a moving web (or "wires") 4 to form a layer 5 of wet fibre. Water drains conventionally
from this into a sump 6 for recycling/treatment. At a selected position along the
wire is provided a second flow box 7, fed with a different slurry from a second header.
The second head box nozzle 8 issues a stream 9 of the second slurry directly onto
the upper surface of the layer 5 which at that time is of a known consistency dependent
on the constitution of the first slurry, the speed of the wires, the speed of drainage
and the distance of the second box 8 from the first. The nozzle is set at a height
h above the surface of the layer 5 and has a flow angle a to that layer. The velocity
of the layer 5 is V1 and the velocity of the stream 9 as it leaves the nozzle is V
2. The effect of this and of making the consistency of this layer 5 be about 90% water
while the slurry stream 9 is about 99.5% water, is to cause a disturbance of the upper
surface only of the layer 5 and an intermingling of the fibres of the two layers in
the interface between them, indicated at 10.
[0048] Fibres of the second slurry if finer than those of the first may be drawn down between
them by gravity, drainage or suction so as to enhance the effect of the disturbance
in the interface region; if the fibres of the second layer are coarser than those
of the first they may be thought of as stakes penetrating into the first layer and
anchoring the layers together.
[0049] The composite layer then passes to a suction belt 11 and to drying rollers 12 in
the conventional way.
[0050] If desired a third layer may be applied from a third flow box 13 via an auxiliary
wire 14 to be pressed onto the composite layer at a time when that, as a whole, has
a water content of 89 to 91ξ and when the third slurry has a water content of approximately
90t.
[0051] Examples of the manufacture of various specific papers, using in each case the apparatus
of Figures 1 and 2, follow.
EXAMPLE 1: WOOD ON COTTON
[0052] A first slurry was made of cotton fibres and a second of wood pulp. The first slurry
was run onto the wire and at a position where its water content was 90%. the second
slurry was projected onto it with the second nozzle being at a height h 3mm from the
surface of the layer formed by the first slurry at an angle of about 3°, and at a
velocity V
2 5% or 6% greater than that, V
1, of the layer formed by the first slurry. The consistency of the second slurry was
at the time of contact 99.5% water.
[0053] A coherent two-layer paper was formed after the conventional drying and pressing
stages the two layers of which were separated only with difficulty and which showed
under the microscope an interface layer, extending to about 10% of the thickness of
the paper, where there was great intermingling and disorientation of the wood and
cotton fibres.
EXAMPLE 2: GLASS ON COTTON
[0054] A first slurry was made of cotton fibres and a second of Johns Manville 104 glass
microfibres. The first slurry was run onto the wire and at a position where its water
content was 90% the second slurry was projected onto it with the second nozzle being
at a height h, 10mm from the surface of the layer formeo by the first slurry at an
angle of about 6°, and at a velocity V
2 about 5% greater than that, V
1, of the first slurry. The consistency of the second slurry was at the time of contact
99.6% water.
[0055] A coherent two-layer paper was formed after the conventional drying and pressing
stages the two layers of which were not separable, in the sense that the bond strength
between the layers was greater than the fibre- fibre bonding in the glass layer.
[0056] Examination of the structure of the paper showed an intermediate layer 10 in which
fibre from the two layers 5,9 were intermingled and disorientated. The thickness of
the layer 10 was about 10% of that of the paper. Photomicrographs of sections through
this sample are seen in Figures 3, 4 and 5 which are respectively at x500, x1800 and
x5500 magnifications. Figure 5 is also of interest showing at 15 a glass fibre penetrating
a cotton fibre. This product provides a particularly efficient strong, flexible liquid
filtration medium.
EXAMPLE 3: GLASS ON COTTON
[0057] Example 2 was repeated except that the glass fibres were Johns Manville 106 microfibres,
the nozzle was spaced at 13mm from the surface of the layer and at an angle of 9
0. A photomicrograph at x550 of the paper thus prepared is Figure 6.
EXMPLE 4: GLASS ON GLASS
[0058] A first slurry was made of Johns Manville 108B glass microfibre and a second of Johns
Manville 104 glass microfibre. 108B is coarser than 104. The first slurry was run
onto the wire and at a position where its water content was 91.5%. The second slurry
was projected onto it with the second nozzle being at a height h 4mm from the surface
of the layer formed by the first slurry at an angle of about 3°, and at a velocity
V
2 5 or 6% greater than that V
1, of the layer formed by the first slurry. The consistency of the second slurry was
at the time of contact 99.7%. water.
[0059] A coherent two-layer paper was formed after the conventional drying and pressing
stages, the two layers of which were not separable, in the sense that the bond strength
between the layers was greater than the fibre- fibre bonding in the glass layer.
[0060] Examination of the structure of the paper showed an intermediate layer 10 on which
fibre from the two layers 5,9 were intermingled and disorientated, a photomicrograph
at x550 of the paper produced being seen at Figure 7.
[0061] This structure provides a particularly efficient pre-filter (or depth) filter,, especially
a HEPA filter, or battery separator.
EXAMPLE 5: GLASS ON GLASS/POLYETHYLENE
[0062] Example 4 was repeated except that a first slurry was made of 90% Johns Manville
108B glass microfibre and 10% Solvay Pulpex polyethylene fibres, and a second of Johns
Manville 104 glass microfibre.
[0063] A coherent two-layer paper was formed after the conventional drying and pressing
stages the two layers of which were not separable, in the sense that the bond strength
between the layers was greater than the fibre- fibre bonding in the glass layer.
[0064] Examination of the structure of the paper showed an intermediate layer 10 on which
fibresfrom the two layers 5,9 were intermingled and disorientated.
[0065] Similarly, a quantity of granules of ion-exchange material or other non-fibrous material
may be incorporated in one of the slurries.
[0066] A strong, flexible laboratory liquid filter with high wet strength is obtained.
.EXAMPLE 6: GLASS ON POLYESTER
[0067] In a manner similar to Examples 4 and 5 a slurry of glass microfribres was laid down
on a slurry of polyester fibres, with the same satisfactory results.
[0068] This is useful as a highly efficient gas face mask medium.
EXAMPLES 7 - 11
[0069] Papers particularly suitable for HEPA filters and battery separators were made as
follows.
Equipment
[0070]
1. Black Clawson 8' HCVT Tile Hydrapulper, 24" Diameter Vokes Rotor and Drive Assembly
- 100 hp. 1800 r.p.m. Westinghouse Motor.
2. Semtile Chests, 3000-gal. and 7000-gal. capacities with side-entering lightning
mixers.
3. Black Clawson Secondary Flow Box - installed on a36-inch Fourdrinier.
4. Fourdrinier Paper Machine 36", described in detail as follows:
Sandy Hill Corporation Fourdrinier Paper Machine with a wire width of 36" and designed
to operate at speeds from 5 f.p.m. to 300 f.p.m. Headbox with multiple-type operation
- static, pressure or vacuum - equipped with manifold-type inlet and various specially
designed homogenizer and distributor rolls and Neilson slice. Fourdrinier table adjustable
for inclined operation of 3" in 15' table length. The press section consists of two
main presses, the first one being a straight through plain press and the second press
a plain reversing press. The rolls are cast iron with various special rubber and stonite
covers. One smoothing press has a straight through run. The drier sections consist
of seven and five driers with integrally cast journals and two felt driers on the
bottom and top first section felts. A combination horizontal and vertical size press
is provided and equipped with various composition coverings. It was not used in this
series of runs. The calender stack consists of eight rolls with the intermediate rolls
bored for steam. Each roll is constructed of chilled iron and is precision ground
and carried in anti-friction bearings. Also included is a 36" diameter Pope type reel
with a 36" face and capable of winding rolls up to 40" in diameter.
Stock Preparation
[0071] Each furnish was dispersed in the Hydrapulper at 3.0 pH for designated periods of
time. The furnish was then pumped to either the 7,000-gal. Secondary stock chest or
the two 3,500-gal. Primary Stock Chests and adjusted to the required consistency and
pH.
Papermaking
Primary System
[0072] The Fourdrinier wet-end was used for the primary layer. Each furnish was pumped from
the machine chests and metered with a Foxboro Flow Controller to the suction of the
fan pump where white water from the wire was added to give the required papermaking
consistency. From the fan pump, the diluted furnish was metered with a Foxboro Flow
Controller (total flow) through a five- pipe manifold into the headbox.
Secondary System
[0073] The Black Clawson Secondary Flow Box was installed over the fourth foil box and used
to form the secondary layer. The furnish was pumped from a 7,000-gal. stock chest
and metered with a Foxboro Flow Controller into the flow box.
[0074] The edges of the first press were taped to prevent any pressure being applied to
the sheet.
[0075] All dryer cans were felted during the trial.
[0076] In all Examples, the secondary slurry was deposited on the primary slurry at an angle
of 4° 15' from a height of 10mm. The second slurry issued at a speed of around 8%
faster than the primary.
Example 7 (HEPA filter)
[0077] Furnish - Primary slurry:-
90% Johns Manville glass 112 microfibre =(average thickness 2.6-3.8 micrometres),
type 475 (borosilicate glass containing a small quantity of zinc oxide).
10% Johns Manville Chop Pak A20 BC z" glass fibre (average thickness 15 micrometres).
Water content when second slurry impinges - 93.32%
Weight basis of primary layer - 54g/m2.
[0078] Second slurry:
100% Johns Manville glass 104 microfibre (average thickness 0.34-0.48 micrometres)
type 475.
Water content - 99.765%.
Weight basis of secondary layer - 26g/m2.
Example 8 (HEPA filter) (Best Method)
[0079] Furnish - Primary slurry:-
90% Johns Manville glass 110 microfibre (average thickness 2.17-3.10 micrometres)
type 475
10% Johns Manville Chop Pak A20 BC 2" glass fibre.
Water content when second slurry impinges - 94.37%.
Weight basis of primary layer - 52g/m2.
[0080] Second slurry:-
100% Johns Manville glass 100 microfibre (average thickness 0.2-0.29 micrometres),
type 475.
Water content - 99.765%.
Weight basis of secondary layer - 26g/m2.
[0081] This gave a particularly efficient HEPA filter, there being a substantial density
gradient from the coarse primary to the fine secondary layer.
Example 9 (HEPA filter)
[0082] Furnish - Primary slurry:-
90% Johns Manville glass 110 microfibre (average thickness 2.17-3.10 micrometres),
type 475.
10% Johns-.Manville Chop Pak A20 BC ½" glass fibre (average thickness 15 micrometres).
Water content when second slurry impinges - 93.72%.
Weight basis of primary layer - 55g/m2.
[0083] Secondary slurry:-
100% Johns Manville glass 106 microfibre (average thickness 0.49-0.58 micrometres).
Water content - 99.769%.
Weight basis of secondary layer - 29g/m2.
Example 10 (Battery separator)
[0084] Furnish - Primary Slurry:-
90% Johns Manville glass 110 microfibre, type 475
10% Johns Manville Chop Pak A20 BC ½" glass fibre. Water content when second slurry
impinges - 94.41%.
Weight basis of primary layer - 75g/m2
[0085] Second Slurry:-
100% Johns Manville glass 108A microfibre (average thickness 0.59-0.88 micrometres),
type 753 (a zinc oxide free borosilicate glass).
Water content - 99.755%.
Weight basis of secondary layer - 30g/m2.
Example 11 (Battery separator)
[0086] Furnish - Primary slurry:-
90% Johns Manville glass 110 microfibres, type 475
10% Johns Manville Chop Pak A20 BC ½" glass fibre.
Water content when second slurry impinges - 91.60%.
Weight basis of primary layer - 155g/m2.
[0087] Secondary slurry:-
100% Johns Manville glass 108A microfibre, type 475.
Water content - 99.752%.
Weight basis of secondary layer - 40g/m2.
[0088] Delamination tests were conducted on papers embodying the invention by adhering double
sided tape to both faces of the paper and a pulling member to the other face of the
two sided tape. The pulling members were then pulled apart from one another and the
paper examined to determine where tearing occurred.
[0089] With papers such as those of Examples 7-11, tearing occurred in either the primary
layer or the secondary layer, the interface remaining in tact.
1. A method of making paper which involves applying a second slurry to a first slurry
layer at a time when the both layers have a consistency which is primarily liquid
but the first is less liquid than the second, the second slurry being applied to the
first so as to provide a disturbance only at an interface between the surfaces of
the said first and second layers, the said application of the second layer being carried
out under predetermined conditions of angle, distance and rate relative to the first
layer at the time of application and in relation to the relative consistencies of
the layers at that time whereby to control the extent of the said disturbance in the
interface between the layers and hence the degree of intermingling and interlinking
in the interface region and thereby ensure the bonding together of the layers irrespective
of the nature of the material of the slurries.
2. A method according to claim 1, wherein the second slurry is applied to the first
layer from flow box nozzles set at an angle of between 2.5° and 12° to the plane of
the first layer.
3. A method according to claim 1 or claim 2, wherein the second slurry is applied
to the first layer from flow box nozzles set at a height of between 1mm and 20mm from
the surface of the first layer.
4. A method according to any one of the preceding claims, wherein the second slurry
is applied to the first layer from flow box nozzles set to cause the second slurry
to issue at a speed between 102% and 115% of the speed of the first layer beneath
the nozzles.
5. A method according to any one of the preceding claims, wherein the first slurry
layer has at the said time a consistency of 80 to 95% water and the second has a consistency
of 98 to 99.9% water.
6. A method according to claim 5, wherein the first slurry layer has at the said time
a consistency of 89 to 91% water and the second has a consistency of 99.0 to 99.8%
water.
7. A method according to any one of the preceding claims, wherein one of the said
first and second slurries contains fibres which are finer than fibres in the other
of the said first and second slurries, whereby a density gradient across the resulting
paper is produced.
8. A method according to any one of the preceding claims, wherein each of the slurries
is essentially free of binder.
9. A paper having a first layer of a first fibre and a second layer of a second fibre
different from the first, and an interface region between the layers in which the
first and second fibres are intermingled and interlinked to an extent sufficient to
bond together the said first and second layers.
10. A paper according to claim 9, wherein the bond strength of the paper at the interface
is stronger than that in at least one of the two layers.
11. A paper according to claim 9 or claim 10, wherein at least one of the fibres is
non-cellulosic.
12. A paper according to claim 11, wherein the non-cellulosic fibres are selected
from inorganic fibres and synthetic organic fibres.
13. A paper according to claim 12, wherein the non-cellulosic fibres are selected
from glass, polyester, polyamide and polyolefin fibres.
14. A paper according to any one of claims 9 to 13, having one layer comprising cellulosic
fibres and another layer comprising non-cellulosic fibres.
15. A paper according to claim 14, wherein the non-cellulosic fibres are glass.
16. A paper according to any one of claims 9 to 13, having two adjacent layers, each
of which comprises non-cellulosic fibres.
17. A paper according to claim 16, wherein the two adjacent layers comprise respective
fibres which are the same as one another chemically but differ in their respective
thicknesses.
18. A paper according to claim 17, wherein the non-cellulosic fibres are glass.
19. A paper according to any one of claims 9 to 18, wherein one of the said first
and second layers contains fibres which are finer than fibres in the other of the
said first and second layers, whereby the paper has a density gradient across it.
20. A paper according to any one of claims 9 to 19, having only two layers, the thickness
of the interface region being between 5% and 15% of the thickness of the paper.
21. A paper according to any one of claims 9 to 20, which is essentially free of binder.
22. A paper having a first layer of a first fibre and a second layer of a second fibre
different from the first, and an interface region between the layers in which the
first and second fibres are intermingled and interlinked, characterized in that the
said paper comprises essentially solely the said fibres.
23. A battery separator comprising a paper having a first layer of a first fibre and
a second layer of a second fibre different from the first, and an interface region
between the layers in which the first and second fibres are intermingled and interlinked
to an extent sufficient to bond together the said first and second layers, one of
the said first and second layers containing fibres which are finer than fibres in
the other of the said first and second layers, whereby the paper has a density gradient
across it.
24. A gas-cleansing filter comprising a paper having a first layer of a first fibre
and a second layer of a second fibre different from the first, and an interface region
between the layers in which the first and second fibres are intermingled and interlinked
to an extent sufficient to bond together the said first and second layers, one of
the said first and second layers containing fibres which are finer than fibres in
the other of the said first and second layers, whereby the paper has a density gradient
across it.