[0001] This invention relates to creping fibrous webs.
[0002] In the manufacture of tissue and towel products, a common step is the creping of
the product. This creping is done to provide desired aesthetic and performance properties
to the product. Many of the aesthetic properties of tissue and towel products rely
more upon the perceptions of the consumer than on properties that can be measured
quantitatively. Such things as softness, and perceived bulk are not easily quantified,
but have significant impacts on consumer acceptance. Since many of the properties
of tissue and towel products are controlled or are at least influenced by the creping
process, it is of interest to develop methods for controlling the creping process.
Although the creping process is not well understood, it is known that changes in the
process can result in significant changes in the product properties. A need exists
to provide a method for influencing the creping process by allowing the control of
the adhesion of the tissue or towel substrate to the surface from which it is creped,
most usually large cylindrical dryers known in the industry as Yankee dryers.
[0003] Obtaining and maintaining adhesion of tissue and towel products to Yankee dryers
is an important factor in determining crepe quality. Inadequate adhesion results in
poor or non-existing creping, whereas excessive adhesion may result in poor sheet
quality and operational difficulties. Traditionally, creping adhesives alone or in
combination with release agents have been applied either to the sheet or to the surface
of the dryer in order to provide the appropriate adhesion to produce the desired crepe.
[0004] Various types of creping adhesives have been used to adhere fibrous webs to dryer
surfaces such as Yankee dryers. Prior art creping adhesives rely upon combinations
of self-crosslinkable soft polymers having a Tg of less than 10°C with a non-film
forming hard polymer emulsion having a Tg greater than 50°C (U.S. Patent 4,886,579
) or thermoset resins (U.S. Patents 4,528,316 and 4,501,640). The ability to control
the mechanical properties of the polymers, as well as the adhesion and release of
the fibrous web from the Yankee dryer, is limited when using these types of creping
adhesives.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0005] The present invention provides an improved creping adhesive which provides the ability
to readily control Tg and adhesion and which can be more easily removed from dryer
surfaces. Thus, the adhesive can provide high adhesion of a fibrous web to a dryer
surface with low "friction", i.e., the fibrous web can be easily removed from the
dryer surface. This can be accomplished while at the same time reducing or inhibiting
corrosion of the dryer surface.
[0006] The essence of the present invention is that the adhesion properties of specific
types of polymers can be systematically changed by varying the amount of crosslinking
that may occur when the polymer is dried onto the surface of a Yankee dryer. Because
crosslink density influences the mechanical properties (i.e., modulus, brittleness,
Tg), this permits the adjustment of adhesion/release of the fibrous substrate onto
the surface of the dryer. The nature of the polymers and types of crosslinkers used
permits the incorporation of anti-corrosion components in the formulations of the
present invention. This can have significant benefits in that corrosion of dryer surfaces
can be a major problem in some tissue and towel mills.
[0007] The method of the present invention includes the steps of providing to the interface
of a fibrous web and a support surface for the fibrous web a creping adhesive which
contains a non-self-crosslinkable material and a crosslinking agent and removing the
fibrous web from the support surface by creping. The process preferably includes the
steps of providing to the interface of a fibrous web and a drying surface a creping
adhesive which contains a polymer or oligomer having functional groups which can be
crosslinked by ionic crosslinking and an ionic crosslinking agent which contains metal
cations having a valence of three or more and removing the fibrous web from the drying
surface with a creping blade to thereby crepe the fibrous web.
[0008] The adhesive of the present invention preferably comprises a crosslinkable polymer,
oligomer or mixture thereof, metal cations having a valence of three or more to crosslink
the polymer and/or oligomer and an aqueous solvent.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING
[0009] The sole drawing Figure is a schematic illustration of a Yankee dryer to which a
tissue web is presented, dried, creped and then wound into a soft roll.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0010] The drawing Figure illustrates the conventional steps in formation of a tissue paper
web suitable for use as a facial tissue. This conventional process includes the steps
of preforming a fibrous web, applying a creping adhesive to the surface of a Yankee
dryer, applying the fibrous web to the surface of the Yankee dryer having the creping
adhesive on the external surface thereof, removing the fibrous web from the Yankee
dryer by use of a creping blade and winding the dried fibrous web onto a roll. Alternatively,
the creping adhesive can be applied to the surface of the fibrous web that will contact
the dryer, before the fibrous web is presented to the dryer.
[0011] Referring to the drawing Figure, this represents one of a number of possible configurations
used in processing tissue products. In this particular arrangement, the transfer and
impression fabric designated at 1 carries the formed, dewatered web 2 around turning
roll 3 to the nip between press roll 4 and Yankee dryer 5. The fabric, web and dryer
move in the directions indicated by the arrows. The entry of the web to the dryer
is well around the roll from creping blade 6 which, as schematically indicated, crepes
the traveling web from the dryer as indicated at 7. The creped web 7 exiting from
the dryer is wound into a soft creped tissue roll 8. To adhere the nascent web 2 to
the surface of the dryer, a spray 9 of adhesive is applied to the surface ahead of
the nip between the press roll 4 and Yankee 5. Alternately, the spray may be applied
to the traveling web 2 directly as shown at 9'. Suitable apparatus for use with the
present invention are disclosed in U.S. Patents 4,304,625 and 4,064,213, which are
hereby incorporated by reference.
[0012] This illustration does not incorporate all the possible configurations used in presenting
a nascent web to a Yankee dryer. It is used only to describe how the adhesive of the
present invention can be used to promote adhesion and thereby influence the crepe
of the product. The present invention can be used with all other known processes that
rely upon creping the web from a dryer surface. In the same manner, the method of
application of the adhesive to the surface of the dryer or the web is not restricted
to spray applications, although these are generally the simplest method for adhesive
application.
[0013] The present invention is useful for the preparation of fibrous webs which are creped
to increase the thickness of the web and to provide texture to the web. The invention
is particularly useful in the preparation of final products such as facial tissue,
toilet tissue, paper towels and the like. The fibrous web can be formed from various
types of wood pulp based fibers which are used to make the above products such as
hardwood kraft fibers, softwood kraft fibers, hardwood sulfite fibers, softwood sulfite
fibers, high yield fibers such as chemi-thermomechanical pulps (CTMP), thermomechanical
pulps (TMP) or refiner mechanical pulps (RMP). Furnishes used may also contain or
be totally comprised of recycled fibers (i.e., secondary fibers). The fibrous web,
prior to application to the Yankee dryer, usually has a water content of 40 to 80
wt. %, more preferably 50 to 70 wt. %. At the creping stage, the fibrous web usually
has a water content of less than 7 wt. %, preferably less than 5 wt. %. The final
product, after creping and drying, has a base weight of 7 to 80 pounds per ream.
[0014] The creping operation itself can be conducted under conventional conditions except
that the creping adhesive of the present invention is substituted for a conventional
creping adhesive.
[0015] The non-self-crosslinkable material of the present invention may be a polymer or
oligomer which contains crosslinkable functional groups. Exemplary crosslinkable functional
groups include hydroxyl, carboxyl, sulfonate, sulfate, phosphate and other functional
groups containing active hydrogens and mixtures thereof.
[0016] Examples of hydroxylated polymers and oligomers that can be used in the process include
polysaccharides and oligosaccharides such as starch, modified starches, partially
hydrolyzed or oxidized starches, alginic acid, carageenans, water soluble derivatives
of cellulose, dextrins, maltodextrins, and naturally occurring water soluble polysaccharides.
Other useful hydroxylated polymers include polyvinyl alcohols, partially hydrolyzed
polyvinyl acetates, and ethylenevinyl alcohols.
[0017] Examples of carboxylated polymers useful in this invention include homopolymers of
acrylic and methacrylic acids, acrylic acid/methacrylic acid copolymers, partially
hydrolyzed polyacrylamides and polymethylac- rylamides, carboxylated polymers and
copolymers obtained by polymerization or copolymerization of acrylic, methacrylic,
maleic, itaconic, fumaric, crotonic, and other ethylenically unsaturated acids with
suitable ethylenically unsaturated monomers. Suitable carboxylated polymers and copolymers
can also be obtained through polymerization or copolymerization of unsaturated anhydrides
such as maleic or itaconic anhydrides with suitable unsaturated monomers followed
by hydrolysis.
[0018] Examples of sulfonate containing polymers are those derived from polymerization or
suitable copolymerization of unsaturated sulfonic acids such as styrene sulfonic acid,
2-vinyl-3-bromo benzenesulfonic acid, 2-allyl-benzenesulfonic acid, vinyl phenylmethane-sulfonic
acid, ethylene sulfonic acid, phenylethylene sulfonic acid, 2-sulfo-vinylfurane, 2-sulfo-5-allylfurane
and 1-phenylethylene sulfonic acid.
[0019] Examples of phosphate containing polymers include homopolymers or copolymers of unsaturated
monomers containing a phosphoric acid moiety such as methacryloxy phosphate. Sulfated
polymers useful in the invention may be derived from treatment of hydroxylated or
unsaturated polymers with either sulfuric acid or sulfur trioxide/H
2S0
4 mixtures.
[0020] Polymers containing more than one type of functional group can also be used in this
invention. Oxidized starches, carboxymethyl celluloses, potato starches, sulfated
polyvinyl alcohols, gelatin, casein, protein as well as sulfated and phosphated derivatives
of celluloses or starches could all find application in this invention.
[0021] Although in certain instances, some of the polymers containing more than one functional
group could conceivably crosslink, e.g., internal esterification of a carboxylated
cellulose, the present invention is drawn to rely upon the ability to finely control
the level of crosslinking through addition of an appropriate amount of crosslinking
agent. In addition to having crosslinkable functional groups, the polymer or oligomer
should be water-soluble, water dispersable or capable of being formed into a water-based
emulsion. The polymer or oligomer is preferably water soluble.
[0022] The non-self-crosslinkable material should be present in the creping adhesive in
an amount sufficient to provide the desired results in the creping operation. If it
is intended to spray the creping adhesive onto the surface of Yankee dryer, the creping
adhesive should have a viscosity low enough to be easily sprayed yet high enough to
provide a sufficient amount of adhesion. If the creping adhesive will be sprayed onto
the surface of the Yankee dryer, it will probably have a total solids content of about
0.01 to 0.5, preferably 0.03 to 0.2 % by weight based on the total weight of the adhesive.
The solids content is constituted primarily by the polymer or oligomer, i.e., the
crosslinkable material and the crosslinker.
[0023] Various types of crosslinking agents may be used in accordance with the present invention.
Preferred crosslinking agents are ionic crosslinking agents which provide ionic crosslinking
between functional groups of polymers. An added benefit of ionic crosslinking is that
it is reversible at high pH. This is in contrast with many other crosslinking resins
that have been used as adhesives that are thermoset resins. The reversibility of the
crosslinking provides the flexibility to remove excess amounts of material that may
have built up on dryer surfaces as a result of machine operational problems. For example,
if it is desired to remove built up adhesives, the adhesive can be treated with a
basic solution, which preferably is an aqueous basic solution having a nonvolatile
base dissolved therein. As the water evaporates, the pH of the solution will rise
causing the crosslinks to hydrolyze thereby allowing easier removal of the built up
layer(s) of polymer from the machine.
[0024] Metal cations with a valency of 3 or more, and more preferably 4 or more may be used
as crosslinking agents. Exemplary cations are Fe+
3, Cr+
4, Cr,
6, Ti+4, Zr
+4, etc. Zirconium has been found to be a particularly useful crosslinking agent because
it is capable of crosslinking hydroxylated polymers as well as the more acidic carboxylated
and sulfonated polymers.
[0025] Although zirconium compound cations are the preferred crosslinkers, it has been found
that mixtures of zirconium and aluminum ions are effective in providing crosslinking
of complex polymers containing more than one type of functional group. For example,
aluminum will crosslink carboxyl and sulfonate groups. Mixtures of polymers, for example,
polyvinyl alcohol and polyacrylamides (partially hydrolyzed) can be effectively crosslinked
using mixtures of aluminum and zirconium ions.
[0026] The crosslinker will usually be added to the creping adhesive in the form of a water-soluble
salt or water-soluble "complex" which provides cations upon dissolution in water.
An example of one type of complex is ammonium zirconium carbonate.
[0027] The crosslinker should be present in the creping adhesive in an amount sufficient
to provide changes in the mechanical properties of the polymer once the solution has
been evaporated and the polymer crosslinked. As the level of crosslinking increases,
the mechanical properties change with the crosslink density. Increased crosslinking
generally will increase the Tg, increase the brittleness and provide different responses
to mechanical stresses than uncrosslinked polymers. Obtaining the appropriate crosslink
density will depend not only on the relative concentration of added crosslinker but
also on the type of polymer employed, the functional groups present, and the molecular
weight of the polymer. Early work demonstrated that, in general, as the molecular
weight of the starting polymer increases, the amount of crosslinker necessary to provide
particular levels of final properties (i.e., Tg, brittleness, etc.) decreases. A discussion
concerning the relationship between Tg and crosslinking of polymers is contained in
the article by Stutz et al, Journal of Polymer Science, 28, 1483-1498 (1990), the
entire contents of which is hereby incorporated by reference.
[0028] For most of the polymers used in the present invention, the amount of crosslinker,
i.e., the compound which provides the cations, necessary to promote improvements in
adhesion is in the range of 0.5 to 10% by weight based on the weight of the polymer
to be crosslinked. The ability to control the mechanical properties of crosslinked
polymers by varying the amount of crosslinker is the essential part of the invention.
It is believed that a key property influenced by crosslink density is the Tg. Since
prior work has claimed that Tg does influence adhesive properties (see U.S. Patents
4,064,213; 4,886,579; 4,063,995; 4,304,625), the ability to change or modify Tg through
crosslink density offers an opportunity to control the adhesion and subsequent creping.
The exact amount of crosslinker will depend upon the desired properties of the adhesive,
the type of non-self-crosslinking material, and the molecular weight of the non-self-crosslinking
material.
[0029] While the polymer and crosslinker are the major "active" ingredients of the present
invention, other materials can be incorporated with beneficial results. Materials
can be added to modify the mechanical properties of the crosslinked polymers. Some
of these materials may actually be incorporated into the crosslinked polymer. Examples
would include glycols (ethylene glycol, propylene glycol, etc.), polyethylene glycols,
and other polyols (simple sugars and oligosaccharides). Other components can be added
to modify interfacial phenomena such as surface tension or wetting of the adhesive
solution. Nonionic surfactants such as the octyl phenoxy based Triton (Rohm & Haas,
Inc.) surfactants orthe Pluronic or Tetronic (BASF Corp.) surfactants can be incorporated
in the present invention to improve surface spreading or wetting capabilities. Mineral
oils or other low molecular weight hydrocarbon oils or waxes can be included to modify
interfacial phenomena.
[0030] Finally, one additional class of materials can be added to the formulation. These
are phosphate salts or salts of phosphate oligomers. Addition of these materials will
provide some buffering capability as well as provide changes in the surface tension
of the solution. The major purpose for inclusion is, however, the anti-corrosive properties
of phosphates. While some of the other materials used in the formulations of the present
invention provide anti-corrosive properties (most notably the zirconium containing
crosslinkers), it is expected that the addition of phosphates to the formulation will
enhance the overall anti-corrosive properties of the adhesive formulation. If phosphate
is incorporated, it should be added in an amount of 5 to 15 wt. %, preferably 5 to
10 wt. % based on the total weight of the adhesive formulation.
[0031] The various components of the adhesive formulation, i.e., non-self-crosslinking polymer,
crosslinking agent, polymer modifiers, surfactants, and anti-corrosive additives,
will all be dissolved, dispersed, suspended, or emulsified in a liquid carrying fluid.
This liquid will usually be a non-toxic solvent such as water.
[0032] The liquid component is usually present in an amount of 90 to 99.98 wt. %, preferably
99 to 99.9 wt. % based on the total weight of the creping adhesive. The pH of the
adhesive when it is applied to the desired surface in the papermaking operation will
usually be about 7.5 to 11. The solvent preferably consists essentially (or completely)
of water. If other types of solvents are added, they are preferably added in small
amounts.
EXAMPLES
[0033] In the following Examples, the adhesive is prepared by dissolving the indicated ingredients
in water in the amounts indicated. The creping adhesive is applied to a small hand
sheet which is then applied to a hot oil- heated cylinder which can be rotated at
a controlled speed. This small lab-sized piece of equipment is used to simulate a
Yankee dryer. The drum is rotated until the sheet is virtually dry, and a creping
blade is placed on the surface of the drum to crepe the sheet from the drum. During
this creping, the torque necessary to bring about creping is measured. This measurement
allows the calculation of a torque-adhesion relationship and provides indications
of the lubrication and release characteristics of the coating adhesive. Torque, adhesion
and polymer buildup/release observations and calculations are shown in Table 1. The
properties of some of these products are shown in Table 2.

1. A method of creping a fibrous web, comprising:
providing to the interface of a fibrous web and a support surface for the fibrous
web a creping adhesive which contains a non-self-crosslinkable material and a crosslinking
agent; and
removing said fibrous web from said support surface by creping.
2. A method as claimed in claim 1 wherein the support surface is a drying surface
and said fibrous web is removed from said drying surface by means of a creping blade.
3. The method of claim 2, wherein said drying surface is provided by a Yankee dryer.
4. The method of claim 2 or claim 3, wherein said creping adhesive is sprayed onto
said drying surface prior to presentation of said fibrous web to said dryer surface.
5. A method as claimed in any one of claims 1 to 4 wherein said non-self-crosslinkable
material comprises polymer, oligomer, or mixture thereof having functional groups
which can be crosslinked by ionic crosslinking and said crosslinking agent comprises
an ionic crosslinking agent which contains metal cations having a valence of three
or more.
6. The method of any one of claims 1 to 5, wherein said non-self-crosslinkable material
comprises polymer, oligomer, or mixture thereof which contains crosslinkable functional
groups selected from hydroxyl groups, carboxyl groups, sulfonate groups, phosphate
groups and mixtures thereof.
7. The method of any one of claims 1 to 5, wherein said non-self-crosslinkable material
is selected from polyacrylate, polymethacrylate, polyvinyl alcohol, partially hydrolyzed
polyacrylamide, partially hydrolyzed polymethacrylamide, carboxymethylcellulose, alginic
acid, polysaccharide and sulfonated polymer.
8. The method of claim 5, claim 6 or claim 7, wherein said crosslinking agent comprises
zirconium cations or a mixture of aluminum cations and zirconium cations.
9. The method of any one of claims 1 to 8, wherein said creping adhesive also contains
a phosphate.
10. An adhesive, comprising:
polymer, oligomer or mixture thereof having functional groups which can be crosslinked
by cations; an effective crosslinking amount of metal cations having a valence of
three or more; and an aqueous solution or diluent for said polymer, oligomer or mixture
thereof.
11. The adhesive of claim 10, wherein said polymer, oligomer or mixture thereof is
present in an amount of about 0.01 to 0.5% by weight, based on the total weight of
said adhesive.
12. The adhesive of claim 10 or claim 11 wherein a crosslinker is present in an amount
of about 0.5 to 10% by weight based on the amount of the polymer to be crosslinked
to provide said cations.
13. The adhesive of any one of claims 10 to 12, said adhesive containing a water soluble
polymer selected from polyacrylate, polymethacrylate, polyvinyl alcohol, partially
hydrolyzed polyacrylamide, partially hydrolyzed polymethacrylamide, carboxymethylcellulose,
alginic acid, polysaccharide and a sulfonated polymer.
14. The adhesive of anyone of claims 10 to 13 wherein said metal cations are selected
from zirconium ions and mixtures thereof with aluminum ions.