Technical Field
[0001] The present invention relates to a primary cloth to stitch pile yarns for a tufted
carpet.
Background Art
[0002] The tufted carpet is manufactured by the following steps. After pile yarns are stitched
to the primary cloth by a tufting machine (tufting step), pre-coating and backing
are performed on a back side of the primary cloth (backing step), and then the tufted
carpet is manufactured. A dyeing step may be inserted after the tufting step. The
primary cloth needs an anti-strain by a stress force in the tufting step and the dyeing
step, and an anti-destruction by stitching with needles in the tufting step.
[0003] The patent reference 1 of the applicant discloses that a nonwoven fabric consisted
of continuous filaments is used as the primary cloth. The nonwoven fabric has the
specific thermocompression parts by heated-embossing.
[0004] In the specific thermocompression part, the continuous filaments are weakly bonded
and restricted to prevent that the continuous filaments are damaged with the needles.
The example 1 of the patent reference 1 discloses that the heated-embossing is performed
in the lower temperature, that is, 25 degrees in temperature than the melting point
of the bonding agent of the polyester. When the needles stitch in the specific thermocompression
part, the weakly restricted continuous filaments are freed and the continuous filaments
freely move. Therefore, the continuous filaments are not cut by the needles, the continuous
filaments maintain the original strength.
[0005] However, the nonwoven fabric does not maintain the original properties to free the
continuous filaments in the tufting step. Therefore, when bad parts exist in the tufted
carpet, a second tufting step can not be performed after pulling out pile yarns in
the bad parts.
Description of the Invention
Problem to be solved by the invention
[0007] The present invention provides the primary cloth in which the continuous filaments
are bonded and restricted after the tufting step, and which maintains the original
properties.
[0008] The inventor discovers the primary cloth consisting of the specific continuous filaments
which have the specific shape in the cross section. The specific continuous filaments
of polyester are not damage by the needles, and maintain the bonding and restricting
after the tufting step. Therefore, the primary cloth maintains the original properties,
especially in the rigidness.
Means for solving the problem
[0009] The invention relates to the primary cloth for the tufted carpet comprising of a
nonwoven fabric which is consisting of continuous filaments of more than 10 dtex in
fineness;
the shape of the continuous filament in the cross section has the following nearly
'Y4' shape which connects the bottom sides of nearly 'Y' parts to up, down, left and
right;
the continuous filament is consisting of polyester which has a nearly 'V' part of
the nearly 'Y4' shape made of a low melting point polyester and a nearly '+' part
excluding the nearly 'V' part made of a high melting point polyester;
the continuous filaments are bonded one another by melting the low melting point polyester.
[0010] The nonwoven fabric of the primary cloth is consisting of continuous filaments. The
invention is characteristic of the cross section of the continuous filament. The cross
section has four nearly 'Y' parts as shown fig. 1. The bottom sides of the four nearly
'Y' parts connect to up, down, left and right, then the nearly 'Y4' shape is formed
as shown fig.2. The nearly 'Y4' shape has four big concave sections 2, eight convex
sections 3 and four small concave sections 4. The continuous filament has high rigidness
with the shape in the cross section, especially the nearly '+' part 5 in the center
and the four nearly 'V' parts 6 which are connected to the four tips of the nearly
'+' part 5. That is, the continuous filament has higher rigidness with the combination
of the nearly '+' part 5 and the nearly 'V' parts than a continuous filament having
modified cross section such as hexagonal shape or 'Y' shape.
[0011] The continuous filament is consisting of the low melting point polyester and the
high melting point polyester. The four nearly 'V' parts 6 are made of the low melting
point polyester and the nearly '+' part 5 is made of the high melting point polyester.
Therefore the continuous filament is a conjugate filament. The primary cloth consists
of the nonwoven fabric which is manufactured by accumulating the conjugate filaments,
and melting or softening the low melting point polyester, and bonding the conjugate
filaments one another by cooling and solidifying the low melting point polyester.
The primary cloth is superior in rigidness to bond the conjugate filaments one another
with the low melting point polyester.
[0012] The melting or softening the low melting point polyester is performed by a heat treatment.
The heat treatment may be performed on the heated-embossing or blowing of heated-air.
In the case of the heated-embossing, the continuous filaments are bonded at the intersection
thereof by melting or softening in the thermocompression part. In the case of the
blowing of heated-air, the continuous filaments are bonded at the intersection thereof
by melting or softening in the whole. Both the heated-embossing and the blowing of
heated-air may be performed. In the invention, the heated-embossing may be preferably
performed because of stabilization of the form of the primary cloth. The emboss role
may be preferably have the convex parts which occupy 10∼20 percent by area of the
emboss role. When the convex parts less occupy, the primary cloth may be not maintain
the original rigidness after the tufting step because the thermocompression parts
may be vanished by the needles to decrease the area of the thermocompression parts.
When the convex parts more occupy, the primary cloth may be not maintain the original
strength after the tufting step because the thermocompression parts may be destroyed
by the needles.
[0013] The ratio of the low melting point polyester and the high melting point polyester
may be 1 to 1 from 4 because considering the strength of the continuous filament,
the bonding strength among the continuous filaments and to prevent the bonding part
to more harden. Then the ratio of the low melting point polyester is less, the nearly
'V' parts 6 of the low melting point polyester tend to flatness and the tips of the
nearly '+' part 5 of the high melting point polyester tend to broadness. Even if the
continuous filament has the above flatness or the above broadness, the continuous
filament may be used in the invention.
[0014] The primary cloth of the nonwoven fabric is manufactured with a known method except
changing a nozzle orifice on a melt spinning. In a method of manufacturing the nonwoven
fabric by making the continuous filaments with the melt spinning of two polyesters
and accumulating the continuous filaments, the nozzle orifice having the following
figure is used. The figure of the nozzle orifice is said 'Y4' figure which connects
the bottom sides of 'Y' parts to up, down, left and right, besides the '/' and the
'\' of the adjacent 'Y' parts is parallel.

[0015] The nozzle orifice has four 'Y' parts as shown Fig.3. The bottom sides of 'Y' parts
are connected to up, down, left and right to become 'Y4' figure. The '/' 8, 8 of the
adjacent 'Y' parts is parallel each other, and the '\' 9, 9 of the adjacent 'Y' parts
is parallel each other. The two polyester resin is provided and melt spun in the nozzle
orifice which has 'Y4' figure to become the polyester conjugate filament having the
nearly 'Y4' shape in the cross section. Especially, the polyester conjugate filament
has the four big concave sections 2 because the '/' 8, 8 and the '\' 9, 9 of the nozzle
orifice is parallel. Furthermore, the polyester conjugate filament has the nearly
'+' part 5 and the nearly 'V' parts 6 joined to the each tip of it. The low melting
point polyester resin is provided in a 'V' part 10 of the nozzle orifice and the high
melting point polyester resin is provided in a '+' part 11 of the nozzle orifice.
After melt spinning, the conjugate continuous polyester filament in which the nearly
'V' parts 6 is formed from the low melting point polyester and the nearly '+' part
5 is formed from the high melting point polyester is obtained.
[0016] After obtained the conjugate continuous polyester filaments, the filamentous web
is formed with accumulating them. The heat treatment is applied to the filamentous
web. The low melting point polyester of the conjugate polyester filament is molten
or softened, and cooled to solidify. Then, the conjugate polyester filaments are one
another bonded with the low melting point polyester. So, the nonwoven fabric of the
continuous polyester filaments is manufactured. If necessary, a few binder agent may
be applied to the nonwoven fabric.
[0017] The continuous polyester filament is preferably over 10 dtex, more preferably over
15 dtex in fineness so that the nowoven fabric has the rigidness and stabilization
after the tufting step. Because the continuous polyester filament is over 10 dtex
in fineness, it is prevented to damage the continuous polyester filament by the needles
in the tufting step. The upper limit of the fineness is not limited, but may be about
30 dtex to easily cool the continuous polyester filament in the melt spinning.
[0018] The weight of the primary cloth may be 60 ∼130 g/m 2 to hold the pile yarns. Because
the primary cloth is superior in the rigidness and stabilization, the weight of it
may be lowered than the known primary cloth.
[0019] The pile yarns are stitched to the primary cloth to form piles on the primary cloth,
then the tufted carpet is obtained. As the pile yarn, a nylon yarn, a polypropylene
yarn or a polyester yarn etc. is used. If necessary, the back side of the primary
cloth having the piles is coated with a backing material after applied with a resin
to pre-coat so that the piles are fixed and the tufted carpet is stabilized. As the
backing material, a polyvinylchloride resin or polyethylene resin etc. is used.
Effect of the invention
[0020] The primary cloth comprises of the nonwoven fabric consisting of the continuous polyester
filaments. The continuous polyester filament has the nearly '+' part and the nearly
'V' parts joined to the each tip of it in the cross section. Both the nearly '+' part
and the nearly 'V' parts are more rigid than a circle etc. in the cross section. It
increases the rigidness to combine the both. Therefore, the primary cloth comprising
the continuous polyester filaments is superior in the rigidness. When the pile yarns
are stitched with the needles, even if the needles hit the continuous polyester filaments,
the rigidness of the continuous polyester filaments is not substantially lowered.
Therefore, the primary cloth maintains the original form, and is difficult to be deformed
by the force of the dyeing step and the backing step. By using the primary cloth,
the tufted carpet is manufactured in stabilization.
[0021] Additionally, the primary cloth is rigid because that the continuous polyester filaments
are bonded with the low melting point polyester consisting of the nearly 'V' parts.
The bonding points become at the nearly 'V' parts, the area of the bonding points
become smaller than the filaments which are circle sheath-core filaments in the cross
section. Therefore, the bonding points are difficult to damage as they are not resinous.
The primary cloth maintains the original form after the tufting step. Furthermore,
the primary cloth strongly holds the pile yarns because that the continuous polyester
filaments have a lot of the concave parts.
Example
[0022] Hereinafter, the invention is described on the basis of the examples. The melting
point and etc. in the examples are measured as the following methods.
- (1) Melting point (°C) of polyester:
The melting point was measured on 20°C/min. of rising temperature speed with differential
scanning calorimeter DSC-2 produced by Perkin Elmer Co., Ltd..
- (2) Relative viscosity of polyester:
Using the solution that 0.5 g of the polyester is solved in 100 g of the solvent which
a phenol and an ethane tetrachloride are mixed in equal weight, it was measured at
20°C.
- (3) Fineness of continuous polyester filament (dtex):
After five continuous polyester filaments of 1.5 meter length were kept for 24 hr.
under 20°C and 60 %RH, each weight of the continuous polyester filament was measured
and the average was calculated.
- (4) Weight of nonwoven fabric (g/m2):
Ten samples which had 50 cm in length and 50 cm in width were picked from the obtained
nonwoven fabric. After the samples contained the equilibrium moisture, each weight
of ten samples was measured. And the average was calculated at a square meter. The
average was the weight of the nonwoven fabric (g/m2).
- (5) Tensile strength of nonwoven fabrics (N/5cm in width):
It was measured on JIS L 1096. Ten samples of 5 cm in width and 30 cm in length were
prepared. Each sample was tensioned by using Tensilon RTM-500 provided by Toyo Baldwin
on the conditions of 20 cm in distance between chucks and 20 cm/min. in tensile speed.
Tensile strength of each sample was measured and the average was calculated. The average
was the tensile strength of nonwoven fabric (N/5cm in width). The average in MD direction
(machine direction) and in CD direction (cross direction to MD direction) were measured
and calculated.
- (6) Stress force (N/5cm in width) at 10 percent elongation:
Each stress force was measured at 10 percent elongation on the stress-strain curve
when each sample was tensioned with the above method described in (5). The average
stress force was calculated and was the stress force (N/5cm in width) at 10 percent
elongation. The each average in MD direction (machine direction) and in CD direction
(cross direction to MD direction) was calculated.
Example 1
[0023] The low melting point polyester was prepared by copolymerizing terephthalic acid
of 92 mol percent and isophthalic acid of 8 mol percent as a dicarboxylic acid with
ethylene glycol of 100 mol percent as a diol. The low melting point polyester has
a melting point of 230 °C and a relative viscosity of 1.44. A Titanium oxide of 4
percent of weight as a nucleating agent was added into the low melting point polyester.
[0024] The high melting point polyester was prepared by copolymerizing terephthalic acid
of 100 mol percent as a dicarboxylic acid with ethylene glycol of 100 mol percent
as a diol. The high melting point polyester has a melting point of 260°C and a relative
viscosity of 1.38.
[0025] The low melting point polyester was provided and melt spun in 'V' parts shown Fig.
4 of the nozzle orifice and the high melting point polyester was provided in a '+'
part shown Fig. 4. The melt spinning was performed by discharging the two types of
polyester at the rate of 8.33 g/min. per nozzle orifice and at 285°C. The two polyester
is the low melting point polyester of 1 weight mass and the high melting point polyester
of 2 weight mass.
[0026] By melt spinning, continuous filaments were spun from the nozzle orifices. The continuous
filaments were passed in an air sucker device to be drawn into 17 dtex in fineness.
The air sucker device was set the place which was 2 meters under the nozzle orifices.
The conjugate continuous filaments were opened by an opening device, and accumulated
on a moving conveyor of net to obtain a filamentous web. The filamentous web was passed
between an embossing role and a flat role which was a heat embossing device. The embossing
role had a large number of convex parts each of which had the area of 0.7 mm 2 in
the tip, and total area of the convex parts were occupied 15 percent of the entire
surface of the embossing role. The embossing condition was 210 °C on the surface of
the embossing role, and the linear pressure was 300 N/cm. The obtained nonwoven fabric
was 120 g/m 2 by the weight. A dimethylpolysiloxane emulsion was applied to the obtained
nonwoven fabric to put on the solid dimethylpolysiloxane of 0.7 percent by the weigh
of the nonwoven fabric. As the above, the primary cloth was manufactured.
Example 2
[0027] With only changing the speed of the conveyor, the tufted carpet was obtained of 100
g/m 2 by the same method of the example 1.
Comparative Example 1
[0028] The low melting point polyester and the high melting point polyester used in the
example 1 were prepared. The two types of polyester were provided in the nozzle orifice
as shown Fig. 5 which had six slit orifices radially extending from the center. The
low melting point polyester were provided and melt spun in the 'a' parts in the orifices
and the high melting point polyester were provided in the 'b' parts in the orifices.
The melt spinning was performed by discharging the two types of polyester at the rate
of 2.46 g/min. per nozzle orifice and at 285 °C. The two polyesters are the low melting
point polyester of 1 weight mass and the high melting point polyester of 2 weight
mass.
[0029] By melt spinning, continuous filaments were spun from the nozzle orifices. The continuous
filaments were passed in an air sucker device to be drawn into 4.9 dtex in fineness.
The air sucker device was set the place which was 2 meters under the nozzle orifices.
The conjugate continuous filaments each of which had a six leaf in the cross section
were opened by an opening device, and accumulated on a moving conveyor of net to obtain
a filamentous web. The filamentous web was passed between the heat embossing device
used in the example 1. The embossing condition was 240 °C on the surface of the embossing
role, and the linear pressure was 300 N/cm. The obtained nonwoven fabric was 120 g/m
2 by the weight. A dimethylpolysiloxane emulsion was applied to the obtained nonwoven
fabric to put on the solid dimethylpolysiloxane of 0.7 percent by the weigh of the
nonwoven fabric. As the above, the primary cloth was manufactured.
[0030] The original tensile strength and original stress force at 10 percent elongation
of each primary cloth of the example 1, 2 and the comparative example 1 was described
in the following.
[The original tensile strength]
[0031]
The example 1: MD=281 N/5cm in width, CD = 158 N/5cm in width
The example 2: MD= 262 N/5cm in width, CD = 127 N/5cm in width
The comparative example 1
[0032] 
[The stress force at 10 percent elongation]
[0033]
The example 1: MD= 234 N/5cm in width, CD = 137 N/5cm in width
The example 2: MD=219 N/5cm in width, CD = 110 N/5cm in width
The comparative example 1
[0034] 
[0035] A pile yarns were stitched to each primary cloth of the example 1, 2 and the comparative
example 1. The pile yarn was a crimped nylon yarn which has 1930 dtex in fineness.
The condition of stitching was the gauge ratio of 10 needles/2.54 cm, and the stitch
ratio of 10 times/2.54 cm. The height of the cut pile was 3.5 cm. After stitching,
the pile yarns were pulled from each primary cloth. After pulling from, the tensile
strength and stress force at 10 percent elongation of each of the primary cloths used
were in the following.
[The original tensile strength]
[0036]
The example 1: MD= 174 N/5cm in width, CD = 47 N/5cm in width
The example 2: MD= 265 N/5cm in width, CD = 42 N/5cm in width
The comparative example 1
[0037] 
[The stress force at 10 percent elongation]
[0038]
The example 1: MD = 125 N/5cm in width, CD = 20 N/5cm in width
The example 2: MD = 128 N/5cm in width, CD = 16 N/5cm in width
The comparative example 1
[0039] 
[0040] The primary cloths by the example 1 and 2 maintained the tensile strength and the
stress force at 10 percent elongation compared with the primary cloth by the comparative
example. Therefore, when bad parts exist in the tufted carpet, the pile yarns were
pulling from the primary cloth and the second tufting step can be applied to the primary
cloth used. The primary cloths by the example 1 and 2 strongly held the pile yarns
because it is difficult to pull from them compared with the primary cloth by the comparative
example. The thermocompression parts of the primary cloths by the example 1 and 2
were remained after pulling from, therefore the primary cloths was superior to maintain
the original form.
Description of drawings
[0041]
Fig. 1 is one nearly 'Y' part in the nearly 'Y4' shape which is the cross sectional
view of the continuous filament used in the invention.
Fig.2 is the cross sectional view of the continuous filament used in the invention.
Fig. 3 is one 'Y' part in the Y4' figure of the nozzle orifice.
Fig. 4 is the 'Y4' figure of the nozzle orifice.
Fig. 5 is the nozzle orifice which is used in the comparative example 1. Using the
nozzle orifice, the continuous filament which has a six leaf in the cross section
is obtained.
Description of numeral of drawings
[0042]
Numeral 1 is the tip of the nearly 'Y' part in the nearly Y4' shape which is the cross
section of the continuous filament.
Numeral 2 is the concave section in the nearly 'Y4' shape.
Numeral 3 is the convex section in the nearly 'Y4' shape.
Numeral 4 is the small concave section in the nearly 'Y4' shape.
Numeral 5 is the nearly +' part in the nearly 'Y4' shape.
Numeral 6 is the nearly 'V' part in the nearly 'Y4' shape.
Numeral 7 is the tip of the 'Y4' figure of the nozzle orifice used at the melt spinning.
Numeral 8 is / of the 'Y' part.
Numeral 9 is \ of the 'Y' part.
Numeral 10 is the 'V' part of the 'Y4' figure.
Numeral 11 is the +' part of the 'Y4' figure.