[0001] The present invention relates to a coated paper product that allows a coated light
weight, inexpensive paper product to perform favorably when compared to a heavier
coated paper product while maintaining the optical, tactile, and printing properties
of the heavier coated paper product. Furthermore, this invention relates to the method
for producing the same coated paper product.
[0002] A method for preparing a coated paper product having improved properties while maintaining
high bulk, as disclosed in U.S. Patent No. 6,531,183, involves applying on a surface
of a base stock at least one layer of a coating composition comprising a particulate
plastic pigment; and, passing the base stock through a multi-nip calender device maintained
at relatively low roll temperature and nip pressure. Additionally, U.S. Patent No.
6,387,213, discloses a printing paper having the appearance of uncoated paper and
improved printability properties approaching those of coated papers which result from
the application of 5-25 lbs. of coating per side, per ream of paper.
[0003] The problem addressed by the present invention is achieving good bulk and optical
and printing properties while reducing the coat weight and moderating the calendering
conditions in a relatively inexpensive ground-wood containing paper.
[0004] An aspect of this invention is a coated paper product comprising:
a 16 to 36 lbs per ream uncoated paper web comprising ground wood-containing pulp;
wherein the paper web is coated on both sides with an aqueous coating composition
comprising:
0 to 45 parts inorganic pigment per 100 parts of total pigment on a dry basis,
55 to 100 parts void-containing polymeric pigment particles per 100 parts of total
pigment on a dry basis wherein said void containing particles have a diameter from
0.2 to 5 µm and a void volume of 20 ― 80%,
10 to 50 parts of starch-based or protein-based polymeric binder per 100 parts of
total pigment on a dry basis, wherein
the dried and calendered coated paper product has 1 to 3 lbs per ream per side of
the dried coating composition and has a weight of 18 to 40 lbs per ream, an opacity
of not greater than about 90, a gloss from 40 to 85, and a brightness from 70 to 83.
As used herein, one ream is equivalent to 3300 ft2.
[0005] Another aspect of this invention is a method for producing a coated paper product
comprising the steps of:
coating a ground wood containing paper web having an uncoated weight of 16 to 36 pounds
per ream on at least one side of the ground wood containing paper web with a coating
composition comprising:
0 to 45 parts inorganic pigment per 100 parts of total pigment on a dry basis,
55 to 100 parts void-containing polymeric pigment particles per 100 parts of total
pigment on a dry basis wherein said void containing particles have a diameter from
0.2 to about 5 µm and a void volume of 20 ― 80%,
10 to 50 parts of starch-based or protein-based polymeric binder per 100 parts of
total pigment on a dry basis, and
water in an amount greater than 60% of the total aqueous composition,
drying the coating composition on the paper product such that 1 to 3 lbs per ream
per side of the dried coating composition remains on the dried coated paper product
providing a dried coated paper product having a weight of 18 to 40 lbs per ream, an
opacity of not greater than about 90, a gloss from 40 to 85, and a brightness from
70 to 83, and;
passing the dried coated paper product through a calender device, wherein the calender
device comprises at least two rolls and at least one nip.
[0006] The combination of 55 to 100 parts of voided polymeric particles per total pigment
particles on a dry basis, and 10 to 50 parts of starch-based and/or protein-based
binder per volume of total pigment particles on a dry basis combined with the aforementioned
calender conditions enables the use of a lower coat weight; and, it enables the manufacture
of lightweight and ultra light weight papers which use a greater fiber to coat ratio
than is typically used in coated papers. Preferable coated paper product weight ranges
from 24-34 lbs per ream.
[0007] Additionally, the combination of 55 to 100 part of voided polymeric particles per
total pigment particles on a dry basis, and 10 to 50 parts of starch-based and/or
protein-based binder per volume of total pigment particles on a dry basis combined
with the aforementioned calender conditions provides for a strong paper at a given
weight, which in turn provides for better runnability/ productivity on the paper machine,
as well as, in subsequent printing operations than heavier counterparts. Less compression
of the lighter coated paper than conventional heavier paper and retention of bulk
and stiffness are some of the additional attributes achieved by using this combination.
Furthermore, the optical, tactile, and printing properties of the coated paper product
may be maintained at a level comparable to coated paper products having a higher initial
base weight.
[0008] Following the application of this coating composition in the amount specified, gloss
(measured according to TAPPI 75° test procedure), opacity (measured according to TAPPI
test procedure T425-OM-91), and brightness (measured according to TAPPI test procedure
T452-OM-92) were calculated. A coated paper product with comparable properties to
a paper coated with no voided polymeric pigment and at least double the coat weight
resulted. Preferable ranges for opacity and gloss are 85-90 and 50-55 respectively.
[0009] In the coating of the present invention, there are included voided polymeric pigment
particles, hereinafter particles, with a particle size ranging from approximately
0.2 to 5.0 microns, preferably 0.3 to 2.0 microns and void volumes ranging from approximately
20 to 80%, preferably 40-70%. These particles have a density in the range of 0.4 -
1.0g/cc, preferably 0.4 - 0.6 g/cc. Additionally, these particles include a single
hollow core or void, or multiple voids within each particle; the voids may be spherical
or irregular in shape and the voided areas may be isolated or connected. These particles
may have an appearance of being sponge-like. The surface of these particles may range
from smooth and unbroken to rough and perforated. Such particles are disclosed in,
for example, the following patents: US 4,427,836; US 5,036,109; US 5,157,084; US 5,216,044;
US 5,409,776; US 5,494,971; US 5,521,253; US 5,527,613, US 5,989,630; US 6,020,435;
US 6,139,961; and US 6,673,451. Additionally, these particles may be cross-linked
and charged; examples of cross-linked charged particles are disclosed in US 6,624,272.
[0010] Other polymeric pigment particles, including but not limited to, solid polystyrene
bead particles such as DOW711 and DOW722, both made by Dow Chemical Company (Midland,
Mich.); solid polymethylmethacrylate bead particles; polymer particles with a morphology
(particles comprising at least one polymer core phase containing at least one void,
at least one polymer shell phase at least partially surrounding the core, and at least
one channel connecting the void in the core to the exterior of the particle) and composition
defined in U.S. Pat. No. 5,510,422 and European Published Patent Application No. 0
842 992 A2; and any polymer particles with a glass transition temperature greater
than 40° C may be used in the present invention.
[0011] Furthermore, mineral pigments may also be included in the present invention. Suitable
mineral pigments include but are not limited to ground and precipitated calcium carbonate,
kaolin, calcined kaolin, delaminated and structured kaolin clay, titanium dioxide,
aluminum silicate, magnesium silicate, magnesium carbonate, amorphous silica, zinc
oxide, zinc hydroxide, aluminum oxide, aluminum hydroxide, talc, satin white, barium
sulfate and calcium silicate.
[0012] Suitable starch-based and protein-based polymeric binders of the present invention
include but are not limited to, caseins, starch and wheat flours, gelatin and alginates,
cellulose, hydroxyethylcellulose, methylcellulose, and carboxymethylcellulose as modified
natural products, dextrins, ethylated starch (including ethylated corn starch), lignin,
and the like. Starches which are obtainable by reacting natural, cationic, anionic
and/or amphoteric starch with synthetic cationic polymers are used as dry strength
agents. The natural starches used may be, for example, corn starch, potato starch,
wheat starch, rice starch, tapioca starch, sago starch, sorghum starch, cassava starch,
pea starch, rye starch or mixtures of the stated natural starches. Other suitable
starches are ryemeal and other meals. Protein-containing starches from rye, wheat
and leguminous plants are also suitable. Those natural starches which have an amylopectin
content of at least 95% by weight are also suitable for the cationic modification
with polymers. Starches containing at least 99% by weight of amylopectin are preferred.
Such starches can be obtained, for example, by starch fractionation of conventional
natural starches or by cultivation measures from plants which produce virtually pure
amylopectin starch. Starches having an amylopectin content of at least 95, preferably
at least 99%, by weight, are commercially available. They are offered, for example,
as waxy corn starch, waxy potato starch or waxy wheat starch. The natural starches
can be modified either alone or as a mixture with cationic polymers.
[0013] Synthetic polymeric binders are included within the present invention from about
0 to 25 parts of synthetic binder per 100 parts of total pigment on a dry basis, preferably
5 to 25 parts of synthetic binder per 100 parts of total pigment on a dry basis. Suitable
synthetic polymeric binders of the present invention include but are not limited to,
homopolymers, copolymers or terpolymers such as acrylic and/or methacrylic polymers,
polyvinyl acetate, polyvinyl alcohol, styrene-acrylic copolymers, styrene-butadiene
copolymers, vinyl acetate-acrylic copolymers, ethylene-vinyl acetate copolymers, vinyl
acetate-vinyl versatate copolymers, vinyl acetate-vinyl maleate copolymers, vinyl
acetate-vinyl chloride-acrylic terpolymers, ethylene-vinyl acetate-acrylic terpolymers,
polyurethane, polyvinyl butyral, structural acrylic polymers, anaerobic, cyanoacrylate
polymers, polyvinyl chloride, polyvinylidene chloride, polyethylene, ethylene-vinyl
acetate copolymers, polypropylene, ethylene/acrylic acid copolymer, ethylene/methyl
acrylate copolymers, irradiated polyethylene, polyamide, polyester, epoxy, phenolic,
amino, furan, polyimides, natural rubber, styrene copolymers and terpolymers, non-block,
styrenic block copolymers, neoprene, nitrile rubber, butylene, polybutene, ethylene-propylene-diene
rubbers, rubber silicone, and animal glue. The polymers or prepolymers may optionally
contain up to about 10% by weight of a functional monomer, for example, but not limited
to, carboxylic acid, phosphate, sulfate, sulfonate, and amide monomers and combinations
thereof, non-functional monomers, and mixtures thereof. The polymeric binders are
preferably water-borne latex polymers.
[0014] In a preferred embodiment, the synthetic polymeric binders include styrene-acrylate,
styrene-butadiene, styrene-butadiene-acrylonitrile, vinyl-acetate, and vinyl-acrylate.
[0015] The coating of the present invention contains water in an amount greater than 60%
of the total weight of the coating composition. Amounts of water less than 60% may
achieve comparable results.
[0016] The coating of the present invention may additionally include minor amounts,
i.e., less than about 20% by weight, based on the total weight of the coating composition
of conventional adhesive additives such as crosslinkers, slip agents, thickeners,
bases, optical brighteners, defoamers, dispersing resins, mildewcides, biocides, opacifying
pigments, extender pigments, and colorants. These optional ingredients may be added
separately or added to the premixes.
[0017] The method of the current invention involves coating the base stock by applying the
aforementioned coating with a coater and then subsequently drying the coated paper
such that 1 to 3 lbs per ream per side, preferably 1.0- 2.5 lbs per ream per side
of the dried coating composition remains on the coated paper product.
[0018] Suitable coaters include but are not limited to short dwell, roller applicator, jet,
metered size press, spray, curtain, and rod. In one embodiment the coater is a short
dwell trailing blade coater having a blade of 0.457 mm/45°. In another embodiment
the coater is a jet coater.
[0019] Suitable drying methods include, but are not limited to, infrared, air-flow, and
air-caps or a combination thereof. In one embodiment the coated paper is dried using
IR and hot-air dryers to a moisten target of 5%.
[0020] The coated paper is then calendered to produce the gloss and smoothness that is required
for the final paper product. At constant temperature and pressure the calender intensity
is lowered by reducing the number of nips, resulting in a bulkier sheet. Maintaining
the number of rolls and nips while lowering the temperature and pressure has the same
effect of producing a bulkier sheet. The coated paper web may be calendered on both
sides by either two on-line soft nip calenders arranged in series or by using an offline
multi-nip super-calender stack to achieve a target gloss of 50-55. Other suitable
calenders include, but are not limited to, Jamis, Optiload, extended nip and Shoe
used either on-line or off-line. The calendering devices of the present invention
are comprised of a series of nips and rolls. The nips are present in quantity in a
range of one to eleven. The rolls are present in a quantity in a range of two to twelve.
The calendering conditions of the present invention are milder than those typically
used for lightweight coated papers.
[0021] In one embodiment, the light weight coated paper product is calendered on both sides
simultaneously by two on-line soft-nip calenders arranged in series to achieve a target
gloss of 50-55. The soft nip calender rolls are heated to 70-200°C and a pressure
load of 100-350 kN/m at each nip is applied to obtain the target gloss.
[0022] In another embodiment, the low weight coated paper product is calendered on an offline
super-calender using at least 3 nips but no greater than 5 nips at a speed of 500m/min
and a temperature from 50-150°C. No pressure is added other than the gravitational
load of the rolls.
Examples
[0023] In the following examples, the paper coatings were made and applied at a pilot coater
facility. The base stock used in the examples was a ground wood containing paper with
a basis weight of 24 lbs/3300 sq. ft. This base stock was coated on two sides (one
side at a time) using a short-dwell (blade: 0.457mm/45°) coater at a coating speed
of ca. 4000 ft/min. and dried using IR and hot-air dryers to a moisture target of
5%.
Example 1
Experimental Details:
[0024] Example 1 was a control coated paper product having a coating that contains no voided
polymeric pigment particles per total pigment volume. The coating was applied to the
base stock, a 24 lb ground wood-containing base stock, using a short-dwell (blade
coater) at a coating speed of 4000 ft/min, one side at a time, such that the coat
weight, as measured by an in-line beta gauge, was 5.5 lbs/ream/side. During the coating
operation on the second side, half of the paper web was passed through two in-line
soft-nip calender rolls, each set maintained at 170 deg C with nip loads of 350 kN/m,
such that a sheet gloss of about 52-53 resulted (measured by in-line gloss meter).
At the end of this coating operation, the remaining coated, but uncalendered, half
roll was passed through 5 nips of an off-line supercalender stack maintained at 80
deg C with an applied nip load of 150 PSI to obtain sheet gloss of about 51-52 (measured
by in-line gloss meter). Soft-nip calendering results are displayed within the table.
Examples 2-7
Experimental Details:
[0025] Examples 2-7 were paper products having a coating that contains between 55 and 100
parts of voided polymeric particles per total pigment volume. The coating was applied,
as aforementioned, to the base stock using a short-dwell (blade coater) at a coating
speed of 4000 ft/min, one side at a time, however, the coat weight of Examples 2-7,
measured by an in-line beta gauge, was 2.0 lbs/ream/side. During the coating operation
half of the paper web was passed through two in-line soft-nip calender rolls, each
set maintained at 90 deg C with nip loads of 125 and 300 kN/m, such that a sheet gloss
of about 50-65 was achieved (measured by in-line gloss meter). At the end of this
coating operation, the remaining coated, but uncalendered, half roll passed through
3 nips of an off-line supercalender stack maintained at 60 deg C with no applied nip
loads (other than the gravitational weight of calender stack) to obtain a sheet gloss
from about 50-65 (measured by in-line gloss meter). Soft-Nip calendering results are
displayed within the table in examples 2-4, 6, and 7. Supercalendering results are
displayed in Example 5.
Example→ |
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
6 |
7 |
Composition↓ |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Eng. Clay (Contour 100) |
87 |
45 |
|
|
|
|
|
# 2 Coating Clay |
|
|
25 |
25 |
|
25 |
|
Calcined Clay (Alphatex) |
10 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Delam. Clay |
|
|
|
|
25 |
|
|
TiO2 |
3 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Hollow plastic pigment (AF-1055) |
|
55 |
75 |
|
75 |
75 |
100 |
Hollow plastic pigment (AF-1353) |
|
|
|
75 |
|
|
|
Starch (PG 280/270) |
7 |
17.6 |
24 |
24 |
24 |
36 |
32 |
Synthetic Latex Binder (GenFlo® 5128) |
9 |
12.1 |
16.5 |
16.5 |
16.5 |
16.5 |
22 |
Optical Brightner (Blancafor P) |
1 |
|
1 |
1 |
1 |
1 |
|
Crosslinker (Sequerez 755) |
0.28 |
0.7 |
0.96 |
0.96 |
0.96 |
1.44 |
1.28 |
Lubricant (Sunkote 455) |
1 |
1 |
1 |
1 |
1 |
1 |
1 |
Total Target Coat Weight (lbs/3300 sq. ft.) |
11.0 |
4.0 |
4.0 |
4.0 |
4.0 |
4.0 |
3.5 |
Total solids content (%) |
58 |
38 |
33 |
31 34 |
34 |
33 |
29 |
BF Viscosity (cP) 100rpm, 35 deg C; (Spindle # 4) |
1556 |
2400 |
1294 |
1680 |
1352 |
2516 |
2600 |
Applications data presented below is for soft-nip calendered samples (except for #
5 which was supercalendered). The opticals were measured from the rough-side. |
Total Measured Ct. wt. (lbs/3300ft2) |
11.8 |
5.0 |
4.0 |
4.2 |
4..7 |
4.4 |
4.1 |
75 deg Gloss |
51.5 |
55.2 |
55.6 |
65 |
48.9 |
50.7 |
55.6 |
Opacity |
90.7 |
88.3 |
89.5 |
89.4 |
90.2 |
88.9 |
89.3 |
Brightness |
73.1 |
75.8 |
73.7 |
75.2 |
74.8 |
73.1 |
76.8 |
Caliper (mils) |
2.0 |
2.2 |
2.1 |
2.2 |
2.2 |
2.0 |
2.3 |
Smoothness (PPS) |
1.85 |
2.22 |
2.34 |
2.19 |
2.59 |
2.34 |
2.31 |
Sheet Porosity (mL/min) |
2.1 |
- |
3.6 |
4.2 |
4.6 |
2.9 |
- |
1. A coated paper product comprising:
a 16 to 36 lbs per ream uncoated paper web comprising ground wood-containing pulp;
wherein the paper web is coated on both sides with an aqueous coating composition
comprising:
0 to 45 parts inorganic pigment per 100 parts of total pigment on a dry basis,
55 to 100 parts void-containing polymeric pigment particles per 100 parts of total
pigment on a dry basis wherein said void containing particles have a diameter from
0.2 to 5 µm and a void volume of 20 ― 80%,
10 to 50 parts of starch-based or protein-based polymeric binder per 100 parts of
total pigment on a dry basis, wherein
the dried and calendered coated paper product has 1 to 3 lbs per ream per side of
the dried coating composition and has a weight of 18 to 40 lbs per ream, an opacity
of not greater than about 90, a gloss from 40 to 85, and a brightness from 70 to 83.
2. The coated paper product of claim 1 further comprising 5 to 25 parts of synthetic
binder per 100 parts of total pigment on a dry basis.
3. The coated paper product of claim 2 wherein the void-containing pigment particles
comprise a particle size of 0.3-2.0 µm.
4. The coated paper product of claim 3 wherein said void-containing pigment particles
comprise a void volume of 40-70%.
5. The coated paper product of claim 4 wherein the paper product has a weight of 24-34
lbs per ream after coating with the composition.
6. The coated paper product of claim 5 wherein the opacity is 85-90.
7. The coated paper product of claim 6 wherein the gloss is 50-55.
8. A method of producing a coated paper product comprising the steps of coating a ground
wood containing paper web having an uncoated weight of 16 to 36 pounds per ream on
at least one side of the ground wood containing paper web with a coating composition
comprising:
0 to 45 parts inorganic pigment per 100 parts of total pigment on a dry basis,
55 to 100 parts void-containing polymeric pigment particles per 100 parts of total
pigment on a dry basis wherein said void containing particles have a diameter from
0.2 to about 5 µm and a void volume of 20 ― 80%,
10 to 50 parts of starch-based or protein-based polymeric binder per 100 parts of
total pigment on a dry basis, and
water in an amount greater than 60% of the total aqueous composition,
drying the coating composition on the paper product such that 1 to 3 lbs per ream
per side of the dried coating composition remains on the dried coated paper product
providing a dried coated paper product having a weight of 18 to 40 lbs per ream;,
an opacity of not greater than about 90, a gloss from 40 to 85, and a brightness from
70 to 83, and;
passing the dried coated paper product through a calender device, wherein the calender
device comprises at least two rolls and at least one nip.
9. The method of claim 8, wherein the coating composition is applied with a short dwell
coater at a weight of 1.0 pound per ream per side to 2.5 pounds per ream per side,
based on the total dry weight of the coating composition.
10. The method of claim 8, wherein the coating composition is applied with a jet coater
at a weight of 1.0 pound per ream per side to 2.5 pounds per ream per side, based
on the total dry weight of the coating composition.
11. The method of clam 8 wherein the paper product is calendered by a soft-nip calender
device comprising rolls which are arranged in series wherein the device is heated
to 70-200°C.
12. The method of claim 8 wherein the paper product is calendered on an off-line super-calender
device comprising about 3-5 nips wherein the device is heated to 50-150°C.