Field of the invention
[0001] The present invention relates to bicomponent fibers with improved bonding properties.
In particular, the present invention relates to bicomponent fibers comprising an exterior
component, which in turn comprises a polypropylene that has been degraded from a first
melt flow index MFI
1 (measured according to ISO 1133, condition L, 230°C, 2.16 kg) to a second melt flow
index MFI
2 (measured according to ISO 1133, condition L, 230°C, 2.16 kg), such that the degradation
ratio MFI
1/MFI
2 is within a well-defined range and such that the second melt flow index MFI
2 is in the range from 50 dg/min to 300 dg/min. Further, the present invention relates
to nonwovens, composites and laminates comprising said bicomponent fibers. The present
invention also relates to a process for making such bicomponent fibers, nonwovens,
composites and laminates.
The technical problem and the prior art
[0002] Polypropylene is one of the most widely used synthetic polymers for fibers and nonwovens
because it has good mechanical and chemical properties and can be easily processed.
Mostly, the production of polypropylene fibers and nonwovens is done by a melt extrusion
process, wherein molten polypropylene is extruded through a number of fine capillaries
to form fibers or filaments, which can then be collected to form a nonwoven.
[0003] Depending upon the final application the polypropylene fibers and nonwovens need
to have certain properties. For example fibers and nonwovens used in baby diapers
should at the same time be strong, and also have a soft touch and good nonwoven forming
properties, such as good thermal bonding behavior.
[0004] Frequently, it is not possible to produce fibers or nonwovens having all the desired
properties with a single polypropylene and one has to revert to technically more demanding
solutions, such as for example bicomponent fibers. Bicomponent fibers and nonwovens
are made of an exterior component and an interior component with the interior component
being largely covered by the exterior component. Such an arrangement allows producing
fibers and nonwovens wherein the interior component provides the mechanical strength,
and the exterior component provides the thermal bonding properties and/or the soft
touch etc. This is exemplified by bicomponent fibers and nonwovens having a polypropylene
as interior component and a polyethylene as exterior component.
[0005] However, fibers and nonwovens comprising polyethylene have the disadvantage that
they are more difficult to produce because the processability of polyethylene in fiber
spinning is not as good as that of polypropylene. In addition, in view of the requirements
for recycling of consumer products, it is desired to have fibers and nonwovens that
are mono-material, i.e. that are made from polypropylene only.
[0006] The industry therefore has a need for bicomponent fibers and nonwovens that are easy
to produce and have good properties.
[0007] It is therefore an object of the present invention to provide bicomponent fibers
and nonwovens that can be easily produced.
[0008] It is a further object of the present invention to provide bicomponent fibers and
nonwovens that have an exterior component comprising polypropylene, with the exterior
component having good thermal bonding properties.
[0009] It is also an object of the present invention to provide bicomponent fibers and nonwovens
with improved mechanical properties.
Brief description of the invention
[0010] We have now discovered that at least one of the above objectives can be met when
the bicomponent fibers and nonwovens comprise an exterior component, which in turn
comprises a polypropylene having specific properties.
[0011] The present invention therefore provides a bicomponent fiber comprising
- (a) an exterior component covering at least 50 % of the surface of the bicomponent
fibers, and
- (b) an interior component comprising a thermoplastic polymer,
wherein the exterior component comprises a polypropylene, which has been degraded
chemically or thermally from a first melt flow index MFI
1 (measured according to ISO 1133, condition L, 230°C, 2.16 kg) to a second melt flow
index MFI
2 (measured according to ISO 1133, condition L, 230°C, 2.16 kg), such that the second
melt flow index MFI
2 is in the range from 50 dg/min to 300 dg/min and such that the degradation ratio
MFI
1/MFI
2 is at least 0.10 and at most 0.80..
[0012] The present invention further provides spunbond nonwovens, composites and laminates
comprising such bicomponent fibers.
[0013] In addition, the present invention provides a process for the production of bicomponent
fibers comprising the steps of
- (a) polymerizing propylene and one or more optional comonomers with a polymerization
catalyst to produce a polypropylene having a first melt flow index MFI1 (measured according to ISO 1133, condition L, 230°C, 2.16 kg),
- (b) thermally or chemically degrading the polypropylene obtained in step (a) to a
second melt flow index MFI2 (measured according to ISO 1133, condition L, 230°C, 2.16 kg),
- (c) melting a polypropylene composition comprising the polypropylene obtained in step
(b) in a first extruder to form a molten polypropylene composition,
- (d) melting a thermoplastic polymer composition comprising a thermoplastic polymer
in a second extruder to form a molten thermoplastic polymer composition,
- (e) extruding the molten thermoplastic polymer composition from a number of fine,
usually circular, capillaries of a spinneret,
- (f) extruding the molten polypropylene composition of step (c) from a number of fine
openings surrounding said capillaries of step (e), and
- (g) combining the extrudates of steps (e) and (f) to form a single filament of an
intermediate diameter, such that the extrudates of step (f) form an exterior component
covering at least 50 % of the surface of the so-produced filament,
wherein the polypropylene obtained in step (b) has a second melt flow index MFI
2 (measured according to ISO 1133, condition L, 230°C, 2.16 kg) in the range from 50
dg/min to 300 dg/min and wherein the degradation ratio MFI
1/MFI
2 is at least 0.10 and at most 0.80.
[0014] Further, the present invention provides a process for the production of nonwovens,
composites and laminates comprising the bicomponent fibers of the present invention.
Detailed description of the invention
[0015] For the purposes of the present invention the terms "fiber" and "filament" may be
used interchangeably.
[0016] The bicomponent fibers of the present invention comprise an exterior component and
an interior component. The exterior component covers at least 50 % of the surface
of the bicomponent fibers. More preferably it covers at least 70 %, even more preferably
at least 90 %, 95 %, 97 % or 99 % and most preferably 100 % of the surface.
[0017] Bicomponent fibers are known in many different configurations, such as for example
side-by-side, sheath-core, islands-in-the-sea, pie or stripe configurations. Bicomponent
fibers can be formed by co-extrusion of two different components into one fiber or
filament. This is done by separately feeding the components to two extruders and combining
the melts (or extrudates) into a single fiber or filament. The resulting fiber or
filament has two different, essentially continuous polymer phases. Such fibers, their
production as well as their forming a nonwoven, are well known to the skilled person
and are for example described in
F. Fourné, Synthetische Fasern, Carl Hanser Verlag, 1995, chapter 5.2 or in
B.C. Goswami et al., Textile Yarns, John Wiley & Sons, 1977, p. 371 - 376.
EXTERIOR COMPONENT
[0018] The exterior component of said component fiber comprises a polypropylene. Preferably,
the exterior component comprises at least 50 wt%, more preferably at least 70 wt%
or 90 wt%, even more preferably at least 95 wt% or 97 wt% or 99 wt% of polypropylene
relative to the total weight of the exterior component; it is most preferred that
the exterior layer consists of polypropylene.
[0019] The polypropylene used in the exterior component may be produced by polymerizing
propylene and one or more optional comonomers as defined below in the presence of
a Ziegler-Natta catalyst system. Such catalyst systems are well known to the person
skilled in the art. They comprise a titanium compound having at least one titanium-halogen
bond and an internal electron donor, both on a suitable support (for example on a
magnesium halide in active form), an organoaluminium compound (such as an aluminium
alkyl), and an optional external donor (such as a silane or a diether compound).
[0020] The polymerization of propylene and one or more optional comonomers can be carried
out in a slurry, bulk or gas phase process. In a slurry process the polymerization
is carried out in a diluent, such as an inert hydrocarbon. In a bulk process the polymerization
is carried out in liquid propylene as reactor medium.
[0021] For the purpose of the present invention the polypropylene recovered from the polymerization
reactor is degraded either by thermal or by chemical treatment. Degradation by chemical
treatment is preferred ("visbreaking"). For chemical degradation the molten polypropylene
is mixed with a peroxide (for example with 2,5-dimethylhexane-2,5-di-tert-butylperoxide),
leading to the generation of radicals, which in turn leads to a breakdown of the polypropylene
polymer chains. Thus, the melt flow of the polypropylene increases and the molecular
weight distribution narrows. Visbreaking of polypropylene is generally carried out
at temperatures in the range from 200°C to 250°C. It can for example be done in the
extruder in the granulation step of a polypropylene manufacturing plant or in the
extruder feeding a fiber or nonwoven production line.
[0022] The degree to which a polypropylene has been degraded can be described by the degradation
ratio MFI
1/MFI
2, which is the ratio between a first melt flow index MFI
1 (measured according to ISO 1133, condition L, 230°C, 2.16 kg) before degradation
and a second melt flow index MFI
2 (measured according to ISO 1133, condition L, 230°C, 2.16 kg) after degradation.
The polypropylene used in the exterior component of the present invention has a degradation
ratio MFI
1/MFI
2 of at least 0.1, preferably at least 0.12, more preferably at least 0.14, even more
preferably of at least 0.16, still even more preferably of at least 0.18, and most
preferably at least 0.20. The polypropylenes used in the present invention have a
degradation ratio MFI
1/MFI
2 of at most 0.8, more preferably of at most 0.7, even more preferably of at most 0.6,
and most preferably of at most 0.5.
[0023] The second melt flow index MFI
2 (measured according to ISO 1133, condition L, 230°C, 2.16 kg) of the polypropylenes
used in the exterior component is at least 50 dg/min, preferably at least 55 dg/min,
and most preferably at least 60 dg/min. The second melt flow index MFI
2 of the polypropylenes used in the present invention is at most 300 dg/min, preferably
at most 200 dg/min, more preferably at most 150 dg/min and most preferably at most
100 dg/min.
INTERIOR COMPONENT
[0024] The interior component of said bicomponent fiber comprises a thermoplastic polymer
that adheres to polypropylene. Preferably said thermoplastic polymer is a polypropylene.
Most preferably said thermoplastic polymer is a polypropylene that is different from
the polypropylene comprised in the exterior component.
[0025] Preferably, the interior component comprises at least 50 wt%, more preferably at
least 70 wt% or 90 wt%, even more preferably at least 95 wt% or 97 wt% or 99 wt% of
said thermoplastic polymer relative to the total weight of the interior component;
it is most preferred that the interior layer consists of said thermoplastic polymer.
[0026] The polypropylene suitable for use in the interior component has a melt flow index
(measured according to ISO 1133, condition L, 230°C, 2.16 kg) in the range from 5
dg/min to 500 dg/min. When used for the production of fibers the polypropylene used
in the interior component preferably has a melt flow index in the range from 5 dg/min
40 dg/min. When used in the spunbonding process the polypropylene used in the interior
component preferably has a melt flow index of at least 10 dg/min, more preferably
of at least 15 dg/min and most preferably of at least 20 dg/min; preferably the melt
flow index is at most 300 dg/min, more preferably at most 200 dg/min, even more preferably
at most 100 dg/min and most preferably at most 60 dg/min.
[0027] Preferably, the polypropylene suitable for use in the interior component has a molecular
weight distribution (M
w/M
n) in the range from 2.0 to 8.0, more preferably in the range from 2.0 to 5.0. Such
a polypropylene can for example be produced with a metallocene catalyst or with a
Ziegler-Natta catalyst. When produced with a Ziegler-Natta catalyst it is preferred
that the molecular weight distribution is reduced by thermal or chemical post-reactor
treatment, for example by degradation with a peroxide ("visbreaking"). Molecular weights
may be determined by size exclusion chromatography (SEC) as described in the examples.
[0028] The polypropylenes used in the present invention, irrespectively of whether used
in the exterior or the interior component, can either be homopolymers or random copolymers
of propylene with one or more comonomers. Homopolymers are preferred.
[0029] The comonomers can be ethylene or a C
4 - C
20 α-olefin, such as for example butene-1, pentene-1, hexene-1, octene-1 or 4-methyl-pentene-1.
The preferred random copolymer is a copolymer of propylene and ethylene. The random
copolymers of the present invention comprise at least 0.1 wt%, preferably at least
0.2 wt% and most preferably at least 0.5 wt% of comonomer. Preferably they comprise
at most 6.0 wt%, more preferably at most 5.0 wt% and most preferably at most 4.0 wt%
of comonomer.
[0030] Preferably the polypropylenes used in the present invention, irrespectively of whether
used in the exterior or the interior component, are predominantly isotactic polypropylenes,
meaning that they are characterized by high isotacticity, for which the content of
mmmm pentads is a measure. The content of mmmm pentads is at least 95.0 % and most
preferably at least 96.0 wt%.
[0032] The polypropylenes used in the present invention either in the exterior or the interior
component may also contain additives such as, by way of example, antioxidants, light
stabilizers, acid scavengers, lubricants, antistatic additives, and colorants. An
overview of suitable additives is given for example in the
Plastics Additives Handbook, 5th edition, ed. Hans Zweifel, Carl Hanser Verlag, 2001.
[0033] The bicomponent fibers as described above may be comprised in nonwovens, particularly
in thermally bonded nonwovens or in spunbond nonwovens. It is preferred that such
nonwovens comprise at least 50 wt%, preferably at least 70 wt% or 90 wt%, more preferably
at least 95 wt% and most preferably that they consist of the bicomponent fibers of
the present invention.
[0034] Surprisingly, the bicomponent fibers and nonwovens in accordance with the present
invention are characterized by no or at most very little improvement in softness as
had been expected from the use of the higher melt flow polypropylene as exterior component.
[0035] However, equally surprisingly it has been found that the nonwovens, especially the
spunbond nonwovens, of the present invention show an increase of around 10 % in tenacity.
It needs to be emphasized that the tenacity increase was observed in machine as well
as in cross-machine direction when compared to nonwovens comprising fibers made from
the polypropylene of the interior component only.
[0036] The present inventors have also been surprised that the increase in tenacity that
was observed on the nonwovens, especially the spunbond nonwovens, of the present invention
was not accompanied by a decrease in elongation but on the contrary by an increase
in elongational properties. Thus, the present invention allows the production of nonwovens
that at the same time have improved tenacity and elongation, and this in machine as
well as cross-machine direction.
[0037] Nonwovens comprising the bicomponent fibers of the present invention may be used
to form a composite of nonwoven layers or a laminate with film. A composite according
to the present invention comprises a spunbond nonwoven layer (S) according to the
present invention and/or a melt blown nonwoven layer (M). The composite can for example
be of the SS, SSS, SMS, SMMSS or any other type. A laminate according to the present
invention comprises a spunbond nonwoven layer (S) according to the present invention
and a film layer (F) The laminate can be of the SF, SFS or any other type. Preferably,
the film is a polyolefin film. The film of said laminate may be a breathable barrier
film, thus resulting in a laminate with breathable properties.
[0038] The bicomponent fibers of the present invention as well as the nonwovens, composites
and laminates comprising them are produced by methods well known to the person skilled
in the art.
[0039] For the production of the bicomponent fibers of the present invention a polypropylene
composition comprising the polypropylene as defined above for the exterior component
is molten in a first extruder. Preferably, said polypropylene composition comprises
at least 50 wt%, more preferably at least 70 wt% or 90 wt%, even more preferably at
least 95 wt% or 97 wt% or 99 wt% of the polypropylene as defined above for the exterior
component relative to the total weight of the exterior component; it is most preferred
that the exterior layer consists of the polypropylene as defined above for the exterior
component.
[0040] A thermoplastic polymer composition comprising a thermoplastic polymer as defined
for the interior component is molten in a second extruder. Preferably said thermoplastic
polymer composition comprises at least 50 wt%, more preferably at least 70 wt% or
90 wt%, even more preferably at least 95 wt% or 97 wt% or 99 wt% of said thermoplastic
polymer as defined for the interior component relative to the total weight of the
exterior component; it is most preferred that the interior layer consists of said
thermoplastic polymer as defined for the interior component.
[0041] The molten thermoplastic polymer composition is then extruded from a number of fine,
usually circular, capillaries of a spinneret. The molten polypropylene composition
is extruded from a number of fine openings surrounding said capillaries. The extrudates
from capillary and corresponding fine opening (Depending upon the type or bicomponent
fiber to be produced it can also mean the extrudates from one or more capillaries
and one or more surrounding fine opening that are intended to form a single filament.)
are then combined to form a single, usually circular, filament of an intermediate
diameter, whereby the extruded polypropylene composition forms the exterior component
and the extruded thermoplastic polymer composition forms the interior component. In
an optional step the intermediate diameter of the filaments is rapidly reduced to
a final diameter (drawing step). In the drawing step the fibers can be drawn over
heated rolls or in a heated oven to further reduce the intermediate diameter to a
final diameter and increase the tenacity of the fibers. If no further drawing step
is performed the intermediate diameter is the final diameter. The production of bicomponent
fibers is for example described in
F. Fourné, Synthetische Fasern, Carl Hanser Verlag, 1995, chapter 5.2 or in
B.C. Goswami et al., Textile Yarns, John Wiley & Sons, 1977, p. 371 - 376.
[0042] The nonwovens comprising the bicomponent fibers of the present invention may be produced
either by thermal bonding of the bicomponent fibers of the present invention or by
the spunbonding process. Preferably, the nonwovens of the present invention are produced
by the spunbonding process.
[0043] Stated in general terms, the nonwovens are produced by collecting the bicomponent
fibers of the present invention on a support and subsequently bonding the collected
fibers to form a bonded nonwoven.
[0044] For the production of thermally bonded nonwovens the bicomponent fibers of the present
invention are cut into staple fibers having a length in the range from 5 to 30 mm.
Said staple fibers are then carded, i.e. collected as a more or less continuous non-consolidated
web on a support. In a final step the non-consolidated web is consolidated by thermal
or chemical bonding, with thermal bonding being preferred.
[0045] For the spunbonding process fiber formation can be accomplished either by using one
single spinneret with a large number of holes, generally several thousand, or by using
several smaller spinnerets with a correspondingly smaller number of holes per spinneret.
The combined extrudates with the polypropylene composition forming the exterior component
and the thermoplastic polymer composition forming the interior component are quenched
by a current of cold air. The diameter of the filaments is then rapidly reduced to
a final diameter by a stream of high-pressure air. Air velocities in the drawdown
step can be of several thousand meters per minute. After drawdown the filaments are
collected on a support, for example a wire mesh belt, thus creating a first fabric,
which may then be passed through compaction rolls and finally goes through a bonding
step. Bonding of the fabric may be accomplished by thermobonding, hydroentanglement,
needlepunching, or chemical bonding.
[0046] In comparison to the production of the well known bicomponent fibers having a polypropylene
as interior component and a polyethylene as exterior component the fibers of the present
invention proved very easy to process. No problems were encountered in the production
of the nonwovens, especially the spunbond nonwovens, comprising the bicomponent fibers
of the present invention.
[0047] In addition the bicomponent fibers and nonwovens of the present invention proved
to also have the advantage of being more easily produced that fibers and nonwovens
made from a commercial polypropylene of melt flow index 25 dg/min (measured according
to ISO 1133, condition L, 230°C, 2.16 kg) and of narrow molecular weight distribution.
Without wishing to be bound by theory it is believed that this is due to the higher
melt flow index of the polypropylene used in the exterior component of the bicomponent
fibers and nonwovens of the present invention. Interestingly, the higher melt flow
index of the polypropylene in the exterior component does not lead to a loss in mechanical
properties of the bicomponent nonwovens of the present invention when comprised of
fibers having comparable titer but rather to an increase in both, tenacity and elongational
properties in both directions, machine and cross-machine direction.
[0048] One or more nonwovens in accordance with the present invention may be applied to
one or more other nonwovens, which may but need not be in accordance with the present
invention, to form a composite as described above. Preferably the one or more other
nonwovens are thermally bonded nonwovens, spunbond nonwovens or melt blown nonwovens.
Spunbond nonwovens are most preferred.
[0049] One of more nonwovens in accordance with the present invention may be laminated to
a film to form a laminate. The film preferably is a polyolefin film. The film may
be a breathable barrier film, thus resulting in a laminate with breathable properties.
[0050] The fibers, nonwovens, composites and laminates of the present invention may be used
in hygiene articles, such as baby diapers, adult incontinence products, female hygiene
products, and wipes, or in products for the construction industry or for agriculture,
or for medical drapes and gowns, protective garments, lab coats etc.
Examples
TEST METHODS
[0051] The melt flow index was measured according to norm ISO 1133, condition L, using a
weight of 2.16 kg and a temperature of 230°C.
[0052] Molecular weights are determined by Size Exclusion Chromatography (SEC) at high temperature
(145°C). A 10 mg PP sample is dissolved at 160°C in 10ml of TCB (technical grade)
for 1 hour. The analytical conditions for the Alliance GPCV 2000 from WATERS are :
- Volume : +/- 400µl
- Injector temperature : 140°C
- Column and detector: 145°C
- Column set: 2 Shodex AT-806MS and 1 Styragel HT6E
- Flow rate 1ml/min
- Detector: Refractive index
- Calibration : Narrow standards of polystyrene
- Calculation : Based on Mark-Houwink relation (log(MPP) = log(MPS) - 0.25323)
[0054] Tensile strength and elongation of the nonwovens were measured according to ISO 9073-3:1989.
POLYPROPYLENES
[0055] Nonwovens were produced using a polypropylene homopolymer, denoted as PP1, and a
commercial polypropylene homopolymer, denoted as PP2. An overview of their properties
is given in table 1.
Table 1
| |
|
PP1 |
PP2 |
| |
|
|
|
| Degradation ratio MFI1/MFI2 |
|
0.2 |
0.08 |
| Final MFI |
dg/min |
60 |
25 |
| Mn |
kDa |
33 |
46 |
| Mw |
kDa |
152 |
189 |
| Mz |
kDa |
431 |
452 |
| MWD = Mw/Mn |
|
4.6 |
4.1 |
SPUNBOND NONWOVEN
[0056] Polypropylenes PP1 and PP2 were used to produce the following spunbond nonwovens
| Example 1 |
- Bicomponent nonwoven with PP1 as exterior component and PP2 as interior component
wherein the exterior layer comprised 30 wt% of the total weight of the fibers |
| Comparative example 1 |
- Nonwoven made from PP2 |
[0057] The spunbond nonwovens were produced on a 1.1 m wide Reicofil 4 line with a single
beam having about 6800 holes per meter length, the holes having a diameter of 0.6
mm.. The nonwoven had a fabric weight of 12 g/m
2. The nonwoven were thermally bonded using an embossed roll. Further processing conditions
are given in table 2. The bonding roll temperature reported in table 2 is the bonding
temperature at which the highest values for elongation were obtained. Properties of
the nonwoven obtained under these conditions are shown in table 3.
Table 2
| |
|
Ex. 1 |
|
Comp. ex. 1 |
| |
|
|
|
|
| |
|
|
|
|
| Belt speed |
m/min |
300 |
|
300 |
| Throughput |
Kg/h/m |
220 |
|
220 |
| Extruder temperature |
|
|
|
|
| - Exterior component |
°C |
240 |
|
250 |
| - Interior component |
°C |
250 |
|
n.a. |
| Melt temperature at the die |
|
|
|
|
| - Exterior component |
°C |
247 |
|
256 |
| - Interior component |
°C |
249 |
|
249 |
| Cabin pressure |
Pa |
8000 |
|
8000 |
| Nip pressure |
N/mm |
80 |
|
80 |
| Calender temperature (set point) for max. elongation |
°C |
152 |
|
155 |
Table 4
| |
|
Ex. 1 |
|
Comp. ex. 1 |
| |
|
|
|
|
| |
|
|
|
|
| Filament titer |
den |
1.25 |
|
1.16 |
| Tensile strength @ max MD |
N/5cm |
34.0 |
|
31.5 |
| Tensile strength @ max CD |
N/5cm |
18.0 |
|
17.1 |
| Elongation MD |
% |
81 |
|
68 |
| Elongation CD |
% |
72 |
|
71 |
[0058] The results clearly demonstrate the advantages of the present invention:
- Because the polypropylene of the exterior component has a higher melt flow index than
the current commercial polypropylene spunbond grades (as exemplified by PP2) the extruder
temperature of the respective extruder could be lowered. This leads to a reduction
in energy consumption but also to less thermal degradation of the polypropylene.
- The combination of polypropylene PP1 of higher melt flow index as exterior component
and polypropylene PP2 of lower melt flow index as interior component allowed to improve
the strength of the nonwoven in machine direction as well as in cross-machine direction.
- At the same time as the nonwoven strength could be increased the bicomponent nonwovens
of the present invention allowed increasing the elongational properties, which is
quite surprising as the elongation normally decreases when strength increases and
vice versa.
[0059] Thus, the results show that the fibers and nonwovens in accordance with the present
invention have improved properties in comparison to the fibers and nonwovens of the
prior art. The present invention further allows the production of bicomponent fibers
and nonwovens based on polypropylene only, without having to revert to the use of
polyethylene in the exterior component, thus facilitating the production of such bicomponent
fibers and nonwovens.
1. Bicomponent fiber comprising
(a) an exterior component covering at least 50 % of the surface of the bicomponent
fiber, and
(b) an interior component comprising a thermoplastic polymer,
wherein the exterior component comprises a polypropylene, which has been degraded
chemically or thermally from a first melt flow index MFI
1 (measured according to ISO 1133, condition L, 230°C, 2.16 kg) to a second melt flow
index MFI
2 (measured according to ISO 1133, condition L, 230°C, 2.16 kg), such that the second
melt flow index MFI
2 is in the range from 50 dg/min to 300 dg/min and such that the degradation ratio
MFI
1/MFI
2 is at least 0.10 and at most 0.80.
2. Bicomponent fiber according to claim 1, wherein the exterior component comprises said
polypropylene in at least 50 wt% relative to the total weight of the exterior component.
3. Bicomponent fiber according to claim 1 or claim 2, wherein the thermoplastic polymer
of the interior component is a polypropylene.
4. Bicomponent fiber according to claim 1 or claim 2, wherein the thermoplastic polymer
of the interior component is a polypropylene different from the polypropylene of the
exterior component.
5. Nonwoven comprising the bicomponent fiber of any of claims 1 to 4.
6. Composite and laminate comprising the nonwoven of claim 5.
7. Process for the production of bicomponent fibers comprising the steps of
(a) polymerizing propylene and one or more optional comonomers with a polymerization
catalyst to produce a polypropylene having a first melt flow index MFI1 (measured according to ISO 1133, condition L, 230°C, 2.16kg),
(b) thermally or chemically degrading the polypropylene obtained in step (a) to a
second melt flow index MFI2 (measured according to ISO 1133, condition L, 230°C, 2.16 kg),
(c) melting a polypropylene composition comprising the polypropylene obtained in step
(b) in a first extruder to form a molten polypropylene composition,
(d) melting a thermoplastic polymer composition comprising a thermoplastic polymer
in a second extruder to form a molten thermoplastic polymer composition,
(e) extruding the molten thermoplastic polymer composition from a number of fine,
usually circular, capillaries of a spinneret,
(f) extruding the molten polypropylene composition of step (c) from a number of fine
openings surrounding said capillaries of step (e), and
(g) combining the extrudates of steps (e) and (f) to form a single filament of an
intermediate diameter, such that the extrudates of step (f) form an exterior component
covering at least 50 % of the surface of the so-produced filament,
wherein the polypropylene obtained in step (b) has a second melt flow index MFI
2 (measured according to ISO 1133, condition L, 230°C, 2.16 kg) in the range from 50
dg/min to 300 dg/min and wherein the degradation ratio MFI
1/MFI
2 is at least 0.10 and at most 0.80.
8. Process according to claim 7, wherein the polypropylene in step (a) is produced by
a Ziegler-Natta polymerization catalyst.
9. Process according to claim 7 or claim 8, wherein the thermoplastic polymer of step
(d) is a polypropylene.
10. Process according to any of claims 7 to 9, wherein the process further comprises the
step of
(h) rapidly reducing the intermediate diameter of the filaments extruded in the previous
step to a final diameter.
11. Process according to any of claims 7 to 10, wherein the process further comprises
the step of
(i) collecting the filaments obtained in step (g) or (h) on a support, and
(k) subsequently bonding the collected filaments to form a bonded nonwoven.
12. Process according to any of claims 7 to 11, further comprising the step of
(I-1) laminating a film to the bonded nonwoven obtained in step (k) to form a laminate
13. Process according to any of claims 7 to 11, further comprising the step of
(1-2) applying a spunbond and/or a meltblown nonwoven to the bonded nonwoven obtained
in step (k).
14. Process according to any of claims 7 to 13, wherein the bonded nonwoven is a spunbond
nonwoven.