CA2267530C - Readily defibered pulp products and method of their manufacture - Google Patents

Readily defibered pulp products and method of their manufacture Download PDF

Info

Publication number
CA2267530C
CA2267530C CA002267530A CA2267530A CA2267530C CA 2267530 C CA2267530 C CA 2267530C CA 002267530 A CA002267530 A CA 002267530A CA 2267530 A CA2267530 A CA 2267530A CA 2267530 C CA2267530 C CA 2267530C
Authority
CA
Canada
Prior art keywords
product
cellulose
fibers
fiber
pulp
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Fee Related
Application number
CA002267530A
Other languages
French (fr)
Other versions
CA2267530A1 (en
Inventor
Jian Wu
Hugh West
Terry M. Grant
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Weyerhaeuser Co
Original Assignee
Weyerhaeuser Co
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Weyerhaeuser Co filed Critical Weyerhaeuser Co
Publication of CA2267530A1 publication Critical patent/CA2267530A1/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of CA2267530C publication Critical patent/CA2267530C/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Fee Related legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D21PAPER-MAKING; PRODUCTION OF CELLULOSE
    • D21HPULP COMPOSITIONS; PREPARATION THEREOF NOT COVERED BY SUBCLASSES D21C OR D21D; IMPREGNATING OR COATING OF PAPER; TREATMENT OF FINISHED PAPER NOT COVERED BY CLASS B31 OR SUBCLASS D21G; PAPER NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • D21H17/00Non-fibrous material added to the pulp, characterised by its constitution; Paper-impregnating material characterised by its constitution
    • D21H17/63Inorganic compounds
    • D21H17/67Water-insoluble compounds, e.g. fillers, pigments
    • D21H17/68Water-insoluble compounds, e.g. fillers, pigments siliceous, e.g. clays
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61LMETHODS OR APPARATUS FOR STERILISING MATERIALS OR OBJECTS IN GENERAL; DISINFECTION, STERILISATION OR DEODORISATION OF AIR; CHEMICAL ASPECTS OF BANDAGES, DRESSINGS, ABSORBENT PADS OR SURGICAL ARTICLES; MATERIALS FOR BANDAGES, DRESSINGS, ABSORBENT PADS OR SURGICAL ARTICLES
    • A61L15/00Chemical aspects of, or use of materials for, bandages, dressings or absorbent pads
    • A61L15/16Bandages, dressings or absorbent pads for physiological fluids such as urine or blood, e.g. sanitary towels, tampons
    • A61L15/18Bandages, dressings or absorbent pads for physiological fluids such as urine or blood, e.g. sanitary towels, tampons containing inorganic materials
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61LMETHODS OR APPARATUS FOR STERILISING MATERIALS OR OBJECTS IN GENERAL; DISINFECTION, STERILISATION OR DEODORISATION OF AIR; CHEMICAL ASPECTS OF BANDAGES, DRESSINGS, ABSORBENT PADS OR SURGICAL ARTICLES; MATERIALS FOR BANDAGES, DRESSINGS, ABSORBENT PADS OR SURGICAL ARTICLES
    • A61L15/00Chemical aspects of, or use of materials for, bandages, dressings or absorbent pads
    • A61L15/16Bandages, dressings or absorbent pads for physiological fluids such as urine or blood, e.g. sanitary towels, tampons
    • A61L15/22Bandages, dressings or absorbent pads for physiological fluids such as urine or blood, e.g. sanitary towels, tampons containing macromolecular materials
    • A61L15/28Polysaccharides or their derivatives
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61LMETHODS OR APPARATUS FOR STERILISING MATERIALS OR OBJECTS IN GENERAL; DISINFECTION, STERILISATION OR DEODORISATION OF AIR; CHEMICAL ASPECTS OF BANDAGES, DRESSINGS, ABSORBENT PADS OR SURGICAL ARTICLES; MATERIALS FOR BANDAGES, DRESSINGS, ABSORBENT PADS OR SURGICAL ARTICLES
    • A61L15/00Chemical aspects of, or use of materials for, bandages, dressings or absorbent pads
    • A61L15/16Bandages, dressings or absorbent pads for physiological fluids such as urine or blood, e.g. sanitary towels, tampons
    • A61L15/42Use of materials characterised by their function or physical properties
    • A61L15/60Liquid-swellable gel-forming materials, e.g. super-absorbents
    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D21PAPER-MAKING; PRODUCTION OF CELLULOSE
    • D21CPRODUCTION OF CELLULOSE BY REMOVING NON-CELLULOSE SUBSTANCES FROM CELLULOSE-CONTAINING MATERIALS; REGENERATION OF PULPING LIQUORS; APPARATUS THEREFOR
    • D21C9/00After-treatment of cellulose pulp, e.g. of wood pulp, or cotton linters ; Treatment of dilute or dewatered pulp or process improvement taking place after obtaining the raw cellulosic material and not provided for elsewhere
    • D21C9/001Modification of pulp properties
    • D21C9/002Modification of pulp properties by chemical means; preparation of dewatered pulp, e.g. in sheet or bulk form, containing special additives
    • D21C9/004Modification of pulp properties by chemical means; preparation of dewatered pulp, e.g. in sheet or bulk form, containing special additives inorganic compounds
    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D21PAPER-MAKING; PRODUCTION OF CELLULOSE
    • D21HPULP COMPOSITIONS; PREPARATION THEREOF NOT COVERED BY SUBCLASSES D21C OR D21D; IMPREGNATING OR COATING OF PAPER; TREATMENT OF FINISHED PAPER NOT COVERED BY CLASS B31 OR SUBCLASS D21G; PAPER NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • D21H21/00Non-fibrous material added to the pulp, characterised by its function, form or properties; Paper-impregnating or coating material, characterised by its function, form or properties
    • D21H21/06Paper forming aids
    • D21H21/10Retention agents or drainage improvers
    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D21PAPER-MAKING; PRODUCTION OF CELLULOSE
    • D21HPULP COMPOSITIONS; PREPARATION THEREOF NOT COVERED BY SUBCLASSES D21C OR D21D; IMPREGNATING OR COATING OF PAPER; TREATMENT OF FINISHED PAPER NOT COVERED BY CLASS B31 OR SUBCLASS D21G; PAPER NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • D21H17/00Non-fibrous material added to the pulp, characterised by its constitution; Paper-impregnating material characterised by its constitution
    • D21H17/63Inorganic compounds
    • D21H17/67Water-insoluble compounds, e.g. fillers, pigments
    • D21H17/675Oxides, hydroxides or carbonates
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T428/00Stock material or miscellaneous articles
    • Y10T428/29Coated or structually defined flake, particle, cell, strand, strand portion, rod, filament, macroscopic fiber or mass thereof
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T428/00Stock material or miscellaneous articles
    • Y10T428/29Coated or structually defined flake, particle, cell, strand, strand portion, rod, filament, macroscopic fiber or mass thereof
    • Y10T428/2913Rod, strand, filament or fiber
    • Y10T428/2933Coated or with bond, impregnation or core

Abstract

The invention relates to cellulose fluff pulp products that are debondable into fluff with markedly lower energy input, to a process for making the products, and to absorbent products using the fluff. Most of the pulp products show no reduction in liquid absorbency rate from that of untreated fiber and significantly higher rates than pulps treated with the usual debonding agents. The products are made by adhering fine noncellulosic particles to the fiber surfaces using a retention aid. The fiber is preferably treated with the retention aid in an aqueous suspension for a sufficient time so that the retention aid is substantively bonded with little or none left free in the water.
The fine particulate additive is then added and becomes attached and uniformly distributed over the fiber surfaces with very little particle agglomeration occurring. The fiber is most usually not refined or only very lightly refined before sheeting. However, it may be significantly refined to produce a product having a very high surface area. Kaolin clay is a preferred particulate additive. The treated pulp may be mixed with other fibers before sheeting or after it is debonded into a fluff. The fluff is highly advantageous in the absorbent portions of personal care products such as diapers or sanitary napkins.

Description

READILY DEFIBERED PULP PRODUCTS AND METHOD
OF THEIR MANUFACTURE
The invention is a modified wood pulp product especially useful for pro-s duction of fluff intended for use as the absorbent layer in disposable diapers, sanitary napkins, and similar absorbent hygienic products. The product may be debonded from the sheet form into an absorbent fluff with significantly reduced fiberization energy being required when compared to untreated pulps. Static generation during fluffing is mark-edly reduced or eliminated. The fluff has a lower content of knots and has a water ab-sorbency rate essentially equivalent to untreated fiber. The products may also be used in sheeted form. with or without admixture of other fibers, as an absorbent layer in dispos-able diapers, sanitary napkins, and similar hygienic products.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Absorbent hygienic products employing fiberized wood pulp have been available for many years. However, the tonnage used for this purpose was relatively modest until the advent of disposable diapers, first for infants and later for incontinent adults. The advent of these products and their worldwide use created an explosion in demand. The basic product leaving the papermill is most usually termed a "fluff pulp".
In the United States it is most typically a fully bleached southern pine kraft process pulp produced in relatively heavy caliper, high basis weight sheets. The product is rewound into continuous rolls for shipment to the customer. Since the sheeted product is in-tended to be later reprocessed into individual fibers, low sheet strength is desirable and typically little or no refining is used prior to sheeting. The requirements for surface uni-formity and formation are similarly moderate.
At the customer's plant, the rolls are continuously fed into a device, such as a hammermill, to be reduced as much as reasonably possible to individual fibers. The fiberized product is generally termed a cellulose "fluff'. This is then continuously air laid into pads for inclusion in the intended product. U.S. Patent No.
3,975,222 to Me-sek is exemplary of such a process.
There are a number of well recognized problems associated with produc-tion of cellulose fluff The hammermills used for fluff production are very large energy consumers. Further, the fluff may contain significant numbers of fiber bundles usually termed knots or nits. More vigorous defiberizing can reduce the knot content but at the expense of considerable fiber breakage and a high resulting content of very fine dusty material. To offset this problem the pulp mill may add chemical debonders prior to sheet formation. These are usually cationic quaternary ammonium compounds with ali-phatic substituents on the nitrogen atom that, in essence, coat the fibers with a hydrocar-bon film and interfere with the natural hydrogen bonding tendency of cellulose f bers. A
typical debonder might have the formula R~ w / R3 / N' ~ ~ X-R, R'' where R, and Rz are long chain hydrocarbons or aliphatic polyether, R3 and R;
may be IO lower alkyl groups, and X is a salt forming anion. Examples of such compounds are seen in Canadian Patent 1,151,213 and Breese, U.S. Patent No. 4,432,833.
Debonders are effective for reducing energy consumption but create their own problem in the form of significantly poorer water absorption rates and somewhat lower water holding capac-ity. Considerable research has been expended on overcoming this problem; e.g_, as ex-emplified in May et al., U. S. Patent No. 4,425,186 and Laursen U. S. Patent No.
4,303,471. However, as yet no fully satisfactory solution to the problem has been found. Manipulation during the papermaking process; e.g., by low or no wet end press-ing or by using a higher headbox consistency can contribute only minimally to reduction in fiberization energy. Thus, there had been an unfilled need for a fluff pulp that can be fiberized with significantly lower energy input without losing the excellent water absorp-tion rate of fluff made from an untreated pulp. The product of the present invention ably fills this need.
Lyness et al., in U. S. Patent 3.998,690, separate a fiber stock into two portions. One is treated with an additive to make it cationic while the other is treated with an additive to make it more anionic. The portions are then recombined.
The object is to cause flocculation in order to reduce loss of short fibers and fines.
Clays are one of the materials said to increase the negative charge on the anionic portion.
Weisman et al., in U.S. Patent No. 4,469,746, describe coating fibers with a continuous film of silica to improve hydrophilicity. The fibers themselves may be ei they a naturally hydrophilic material, such as cellulose, or a hydrophobic polymer such as polypropylene.
Jokinen et al., in U. S. Patent 5,068.009 describe preparation of a cellulosic fluff pulp with improved fiberizing characteristics. This is made by treatment of the cel-lulose by a cellulolytic or hemicellulolytic enzyme at any time during the pulp making 3 5 process.

Kobayashi et al., in U.S. Patent No. 5,489,469 describe a liquid absorbent composite product in which water insoluble hydrophilic fibers and a S water insoluble inorganic material are embedded into the surface of water absorbent polymer granules, such as a superabsorbent polymer. The inorganic material is chosen from a broad spectrum which includes alumina, silica, talc, clays, and many others. The fibers may be cellulosic. A sheeted pulp product is apparently not contemplated by these inventors.
Eriksson et al., in U.S. Patent 5,492,759 describe methods of adhering hydrophilic inorganic chemicals to fiber surfaces for production of fluff pulps. Aluminum and iron compounds are suggested. The hydrophilic layer results in a decrease in contact angle and an increase in absorption rate.
Finnish Patent No. 77065C published on November 28, 1989 describes making an easily debonded pulp by removal of at least 75% of the fines fraction that would pass through a 200 mesh screen. Up to 20-30% of the furnish is removed prior to and during sheet formation.
Swedish Patent No. 462,91 8 describes an easily debonded fluff pulp made by depositing very finely ground high alpha cellulose particles on the primary fibers. The particles act as spacers between fibers and prevent strong hydrogen bonding between adjacent fibers, Chauvette et al., in U.S. Patent No. 5,562,649 describe a flexible absorbent pulp sheet made by incorporating a debonder and then pert-embossing the product. The material may be used as is as an absorbent layer in absorbent hygienic products.
Vinson et al., in U.S. Patent 5,611,890, describe a low dusting tissue product, useful as bath or facial tissue, which incorporates a particulate filler such as kaolin clay as a softening agent.
Research Disclosure Abstract 93355052 (1993) describes air-laid pads made from talc treated wood pulp useful as oil absorbent products or as a hydrophobic low density pad used as cover stock for diapers or other absorbent products. The talc is said to be distributed in the pad as aggregates, submicron particles, or as coatings on the fibers.

3a It is common practice to use talc in papermaking in very low percentages; e.g., <1%, as a pitch absorbent.
Mineral fillers have long been used in paper manufacture to lower costs and improve surface smoothness and printing properties. Internal usage may vary from as low as about 3% in products such as newsprint to as high as 30%
or greater in magazine stock. This internal use must be differentiated from the use of surface coatings that may also have a high content of mineral products. In common with cellulose fibers, most fillers have a negative surface charge.
Thus, filler particles and fibers generally tend to repel each other unless some chemical material is used as a retention aid.

Without such an aid fillers are primarily retained by filtration in the web as it is dewa-tered on the forming wire and, since individual filler particles typically have an average equivalent spherical diameter of only about 1 um or less, loss into the white water is usually quite high.
Retention aids are primarily charge modifiers. They may be anionic or nonionic but are much more usually cationic materials. Depending on their manner of use, retention aids can act by making the fibers cationic or less anionic, or the filler cati-onic or less anionic, so there is an electrostatic attraction between filler particles and fi-bers. More generally the retention aids are very high molecular weight cationic water soluble polymers that act as polyelectrolytes. As such. they act as bridges linking filler particles to fibers. Typically they are polyacrylamides, polyamines, polyethyleneimines, polyamidoamines, or polyethylene oxides.
Retention aids can act in a number of ways besides charge control to in crease filler retention. They can be used to attract individual filler particles to the fiber surfaces for opacity improvement More usually they are used in a manner that will cause flocculation of fillers with themselves or with fibrils and fiber fines so that the ef fective particle size is very significantly increased. As such, the flocs are much more ef fectively retained by filtration within the interstices of the dewatering sheet.
Fillers affect paper sheet properties in several ways. Strength, particularly burst and tensile strength, may be reduced. Opacity, brightness, surface smoothness, and ink holdout are usually increased. Particles primarily adhered to the fiber surfaces in terfere with fiber-to-fiber bonding. This increases the opacity due to the increased inter facial area that causes a higher proportion of incident or transmitted light to be scattered.
Although there are exceptions, in general papermaking practice it is usually most desirable to encourage filler flocculation so that the filler is predominantly retained in the interfiber spaces rather than on the fiber surfaces. This is done in part to minimize strength loss from use of the filler. Papers are normally rather highly refined to develop strength and ensure excellent formation. However, never before, to the present inven-toys' knowledge, have mineral fillers been used in conjunction with fluff pulps, which may be either refined or unrefined, in order to deliberately effect strength loss so as to reduce debonding energy.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention is a cellulosic fluff pulp product and the method of its manufacture. The product can be converted from sheeted form into individual fibers with significantly reduced energy input and very low static generation during debonding.
The terms "debonded" or "debonding" should be considered to have the above meaning unless the context of usage of the words clearly indicate a different meaning;
e.g., a chemical "debonding agent" as described earlier added to a pulp slurry to reduce 5 strength of a sheet. The terms are synonymous with the words "defibered", "defiber-ing", or "defiberizing". Unrefined pulps show essentially no reduction in water absorbency rate in the ultimate fluff Other advantages of the product will also become apparent. The product comprises a relatively high basis weight wet formed cellulosic ii-her sheet or web in which the fiber surfaces are coated with finely divided fillers in order to reduce fiber-to-fiber bond strength.
Accordingly, the present invention provides a readily defibered wet laid cellulose product having a basis weight of at least about 250 g/mZ in which interfiber bonds are minimized by an effective amount of fine mineral filler particles attached to said fiber surfaces before wet forming the product, the mineral filler particles being selected from the group consisting of clays, calcium carbonate, titanium dioxide, talc, and mixtures thereof, the product having a Kamas fiberization energy less than about 140 kJ/kg.
The present invention also provides a readily defibered wet laid cellulose fluff pulp product having a basis weight of at least about 250 g/ m2 and characterized by low static generation upon subsequent defibering in which interfiber hydrogen bonds between cellulose fibers are substantially interrupted by an effective amount of fine mineral filler particles attached to said fiber surfaces before wet forming the product, the mineral filler particles being selected from the group consisting of clays, calcium carbonate, titanium dioxide, talc, and mixtures thereof, the product having a Kamas fiberization energy less than about 140 kJ/kg.
The present invention also provides a refined cellulose pulp product comprising cellulose fibers in admixture with 10-90% of fibers selected from the group consisting of other cellulose fibers, chemically modified cellulose fibers, and noncellulosic fibers in which interfiber hydrogen bonds are minimized by an effective amount of fine mineral filler particles attached to said fiber surfaces, the mineral filler particles being being selected form the group consisting of clays, calcium carbonate, titanium dioxide, talc, and mixtures thereof, the product having a Kamas fiberization energy less than about 140 kJ/kg.

The present invention also provides a refined wet-laid cellulose pulp product having a basis weight of at least about 250 g/m2 comprising cellulose fibers in an admixture with 10-90% of fibers selected from the group consisting of other cellulose fibers, chemically modified cellulose fibers, and noncellulosic fibers in which interfiber hydrogen bonds are minimized by an effective amount of fine mineral filler particles attached to said fiber surfaces before wet forming the product, the mineral filler particles being being selected form the group consisting of clays, calcium carbonate, titanium dioxide, talc, and mixtures thereof, the product having a Kamas fiberization energy less than about 140 kJ/kg.
By wet forming is meant preparation of the sheet or web from a suspen-sion in water by conventional papermaking techniques.
The pulp products of the present invention are clearly differentiated from products intended as letter, book, magazine, or similar papers. These are usually relatively highly refined to develop web strength and most have basis weights under about 100 g/m. Some specialty papers, such as cover stocks, may have basis weights that are significantly higher. Good strength is essential. Papers are normally sized to improve ink holdout and other printing properties. The products of the present invention are un-sized and the strength properties such as tensile, burst, and tear strength, which are considered essential in papers, are generally much lower, The basis weight of the products of the present invention may be as low as about 250 g/m2 and are preferably at least about 550 g/m2. The fiber will most usually be unrefined or only lightly refined although the invention is not so limited.
Where a high surface area product is desired the fiber will normally be significantly refined. The mineral filler particle is present in an amount ranging between about 1-30% based on the combined weight of particles and cellulose, more preferably between about 3-20%. The higher basis weight of the products, their lower strength, and the fact that they are un-sized is such as to clearly distinguish them from ordinary papers which might contain similar amounts of fillers.
The cellulose pulp of the invention may be made using conventional kraft, sulfite, chemithermomechanical or other well known processes. The furnish can be from any of various cellulose containing raw materials. Most usually these will be deciduous hardwoods; coniferous species, usually termed softwoods; or mixtures of these materials. A preferred pulp is a bleached softwood kraft pulp that would normally be intended for ultimate use as absorbent fluff. While so-called "dissolving pulps' may be used these are not preferred because of their low yield and resultant much greater cost.
Among the mineral fillers that are suitable are clays, both kaolin and bentonite; calcium carbonate such as ground chalk, limestone, or marble or precipitated calcium carbonate. While titanium dioxide is normally used as a pigment for improving brightness it can also serve as a mineral filler. Talc (magnesium silicate) may be useful for some purposes. This is normally not preferred in the liquid storage potion of absorbent products such as diapers since it tends to decrease wicking 1 S rates and hydrophilicity. However, for some products such as oil absorbents, or where control of hydrophilicity is desired, this property can be advantageous.
Kaolin clays are the preferred fillers.
Mineral fillers are present in the product preferably in a range of about 1-30% of total product weight, more preferably in the range of 3-20% by weight, and most preferably about 5-20% by weight.
The mineral fillers are bonded to the fibers by the use of retention aids used in an amount of about 0.5-5 kg/t of fiber, typically about 1-3 kg/t.
although this will depend somewhat on the particular retention aid being used. The retention aid should not be used in excess and should be added to the fiber prior to addition of mineral filler so that it is bonded to the fiber with little or none remaining free in the pulp shiny prior to addition of the filler. This is done to promote bonding of the mineral filler directly to the fiber and discourage flocculation of the filler.
While not the most preferred procedure, it is within the scope of the invention to use the opposite approach and first alter the negative charge on the mineral filler particles by treating them in an aqueous suspension with a retention aid and then adding the cationic or less anionic treated particles to the untreated cellulose fibers. It is also possible to mix fibers and mineral filler particles and then add a 7a suitable retention aid. However, it is important that the retention aid used and the conditions of use should be such as to avoid any significant flocculation of the particles and ensure even deposition on the fibers.
In a further aspect, the present invention provides the method of making a wet laid cellulose pulp product having a basis weight of at least about 250 g/m2 which comprises slurrying the cellulose fibers in a dilute aqueous suspension, coating the fiber surface with at least 1%, based on the combined weight of filler material and cellulose, of a finely divided noncellulosic filler material to substantially interrupt normal hydrogen bonding between the fibers and to reduce Kamas fiberization energy below about 140 kJ/kg, forming the fibers into a sheet, and drying the sheet.
The invention provides a sheeted fluff pulp that is readily debonded with reduced energy input.
The present invention also provides a sheeted fluff pulp that is readily debonded yet produces a fluff that retains an excellent water absorption rate.
The present invention also provides a sheeted fluff pulp that is not subject to static electricity generation during the debonding process.
The present invention provides a readily debonded pulp product having an exceptionally high surface area.
The present invention also provides a process for making fluff pulps having the properties noted above.
The present invention also provides a pulp product that is soft and absorbent that may be used directly as a component in personal care products.
These and many other features of the present invention will become readily apparent to those skilled in the art upon reading the following detailed description along with reference to the figures.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 is a bar graph showing fiberization energy of the various product samples.

7b FIGS. 2A, 2B, 3A, and 3B are scanning electron micrographs of untreated fibers and treated fibers with 24.4% clay at respective magnifications of 150X and 8000X.
FIG. 4 is a scanning electron micrograph of a filled lithographic paper showing flocculated filler particles.
FIGS. 5 and 6 are photographs showing respectively the effects of static electricity generation on untreated pulp vs a product of the present invention.
FIG. 7 is a graph showing variation in basis weight of air laid mats formed from conventional fibers and from those of the present invention.
FIG. 8 is a graph showing liquid absorbed vs time for a treated and untreated fiber with added superabsorbent polymer.
FIG. 9 is a graph showing liquid holding capacity vs absorption time for fluff pads formed from two commercial pulps and one product of the present 1 S invention using an inclined wicking test.
FIG. 10 shows a sanitary napkin for menstrual protection made using a product of the present invention FIG. 11 similarly shows a baby diaper using one of the products of the invention.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
The product of the invention can be produced by employing wholly con-ventional papermaking techniques as will be seen from the following example.
Three test methods are generally used to evaluate fluff pulp quality. Fiberization energy requirement is determined using a laboratory scale hammermill instrumented to measure power necessary to fiberize a given weight of pulp. The mill used in the following tests was a Kamas Laboratory Mill, Model HOE manufactured by Kamas Industri, AB, Vellinge. Sweden. The breaker bar clearance of the mill was set at 4.0 mm, the screen size was 19 mm, and rotor speed was adjusted to 3024 rpm.
Samples were conditioned at 50% R.H. for a minimum of 4 hours prior to testing. The samples were cut into strips 5.0 cm wide and as long as the sample would permit.
Sufficient strips were cut to yield about _g_ 150 g of fiberized pulp. Basis weight of the samples was previously determined and the hammermill feed roller speed was adjusted to achieve a target feed rate of 2.80 g/sec Fiberization efficiency is determined by dry fractionation using a sonically agitated screen stack using Tyler Standard Screens of 5, 8, 12, 60, and 200 mesh having respective openings of 3.96 mm. 2.36 mm, 1.40 mm, 246 pm, and 74 um. This is basi cally a determination of the percentages of knots, desired fiber, and fines.
Material re-tained on the coarsest screen is considered to be knots and that through the 60 mesh screen is considered fines.
Water absorption rate was determined by using the automatic fluff absorp tion quality (FAQ) test described in detail by Martinis et al., Tappi Annual Meeting Pre print No. 7-3, pp 1-8, Chicago ( 1981 ). The fluff is first formed into an air formed pad within a cylinder 160 mm long and 56.4 mm in diameter having a 1 b mesh screen at the bottom. Pad area is 25 cm'. The tared cylinder is placed on a balance and pad weight adjusted to 4.0 g by carefizlly removing any excess fiber from the top with tweezers.
The pad within the cylinder is then placed in the tester and a 150 g plunger lowered onto the fluff mat. Water is then introduced at the base of the pad. Absorption rate is calcu-lated from the time required for water wicking from the bottom of the pad to contact the plunger; i.e., through the pad thickness. Dry bulk, wet bulk, and liquid holding capacity can also be readily determined Example 1 Samples were obtained of a never dried bleached southern pine kraft wood pulp from a southeastern U. S. pulp mill. The pulp when sheeted and dried at the mill is sold as Grade NB-416 by Weyerhaeuser Company, New Bern, North Carolina. This grade is produced as a market fluff pulp and was used as a control material in all of the examples that follow. Other materials used were a retention aid "7135"
supplied by Nalco Chemical Company, Naperville, Illinois and a kaolin clay supplied as a 60% slurry designated SWW supplied by J. M. Huber, St. Louis, Missouri. The retention aid is a medium molecular weight cationic polyamine in a solution with 50% active material.
This was diluted with ten parts of water to one pan 50% solution before use and was used at a rate of 3 kg/t based on the combined oven dry weight of clay and fiber.
Hand sheets 305 X 305 mm were made using unrefined pulp at a targeted basis weight of 750 g/m' and density of 600 kg/m'. Clay retention was targeted at 5%, 10%, 20% and 30%. One batch of sheets was made without retention aid to see how much clay would be retained by physical entrapment in the sheets. Ash content of these sheets showed that virtually no clay was retained. The clay particles were so fine that the very open unrefined fiber matrix failed to capture them by filtration and virtually all of the clay passed out into the white water.

As was noted earlier, in most papers it is desirable to flocculate the mineral filler while leaving the fiber surface relatively uncoated. This enables maximum strength retention from hydrogen bonds between fibers but the increased size of the mineral filler flocs is suffcient to allow them to be captured by the fiber web during sheet formation.
For the present invention an opposite mechanism is desired. Formation of filler flocs is discouraged while maximum attachment to and coating of the fibers is the preferred mechanism. This is accomplished by first adding the retention aid to the fiber suspen-sion and allowing a sufficient time for substantially all of it to bond to the fiber surface.
Only then is the mineral filler added to the fiber slurry. The amount of retention aid used should not exceed that which will bond to available anionic sites on the fiber. Otherwise filler flocculation may occur. While this is not especially harmful to achieving the goal of improved debonding characteristics it does represent a waste of both retention aid and filler.
Based on the target basis weight the required amount of never dried pulp was weighed and retention aid at a 3 kg/t loading was added to the pulp slurry which was at 2-3% consistency. The mixture was stirred for about 20 minutes to permit maxi-mum attachment of the retention aid to the fiber. The slurry was drained to remove any unbonded retention aid free in the suspension. However, later tests showed this step to be unnecessary. The desired amount of clay was then added to the drained pulp, water was also added to return the consistency to 2-3% and the slurry stirred an additional five minutes to permit the clay to bond to the fiber surfaces.
Hand sheets were formed at a pulp consistency, based on fiber plus re-twined clay, of 0.2%. The sheets were initially dried between blotters then wet pressed at a pressure of 380 kPa. After drying at 105°C and conditioning, sheets were tested for required debonding energy, fluff quality evaluation, absorption properties, and clay re-tention. Dried hand sheets were tested for ash content before and after fiberization.
Comparison sheets were also made using 3 kg/t of commercially available debonder (Berocell 509, available from Eka Nobel) to simulate commercially available debonder treated fluff pulps using this approach. An additional control sample was made using only retention aid without any clay. Table 1 shows the sheet and resultant fluff proper-ties obtained.

Table I
Properties of Hand Sheets and Fluff with Clav Added Control + Tar eted Cla Le el Lab.
Retention g ~ Debonder Treatment Control Aid 5% 10% 20% 25% Treated Sheet Properties Basis weight g/mz 703 704 739 768 767 730 712 Caliper, mm 1.33 1.37 1.46 1.4 1.36 1.22 I.53 Density, kg/m' 530 514 508 549 562 600 466 Clay~'~, % (sheet 0.1~z~ -- 6.5 15.7 22.6 28.4 --form) Clay~'~, % (after 0.1~'' --6 14.2 20 26 --fiberization) . .

Fluff Properties Defibering Energy, 143 170 79 42 25 18 50 kJ/kg Total knots, % 1 3 NA 1 1 1 1 Absorption by FAQ
Test Absorption time, sec 3. I 3.1 2.6 2.3 2.2 2.1 5.3 Absorption rate, mmlsec27.7 28.8 31.1 28.1 25.8 25.7 15 ~'' Determined by dividing ash content by a factor of 0.86.
~2~ Actual ash content.
Several features of the clay coated product are readily apparent from refer-ence to Table I. The clay added is practically quantitatively substantive on the reten-tion aid treated fiber and surprisingly little clay is lost during fiberization. Defiberization energy at all levels of clay usage is dramatically lower than that required for the control pulp and at usages of 10% or higher is signif cantly lower even than the debonder l0 treated pulp. Of particular importance, water absorption rates of all the clay treated samples are not reduced relative to the control samples and are about 65%
higher than the debonder treated material. Water absorption times are about 35% faster than the control pulp and over twice as fast as debonder treated pulp. The control sample with retention aid but no clay had closely similar properties to the untreated control pulp ex-cept in its slightly higher fiberization energy requirement. What is not shown in the table was the subjective observation that, in marked contrast to the control samples, the clay treated sheets showed little or no static generation on defibering.

The fiberization energy data from Table 1 are shown graphically in FIG. 1.
It is noted that fiberization energy increases by 20% from addition of the retention aid alone. Apparently the retention aid by itself enhances fiber-fiber bonding.
However, fi-berization energy decreases below the control pulp even at the lowest level of clay addi-tion and continues to drop as the clay content increases. At the 13.5 % level of clay loading the fiberization energy is reduced to a level below that of the chemically debonded sheets with at an energy input only about 30% of that of the control.
It is evi-dent that the filler particles are highly effective at disrupting fiber-to-fiber bonding, even at low levels of addition.
Scanning electron micrographs of the fibers were revealing. As seen in FIGS. 2A and 2B , at a relatively low magnification of 150X the untreated control fibers were seen to have a clean smooth surface while the treated fibers with 24.4%
clay had a scaly rough surface. At the higher magnification of 8000X, shown in FIGS. 3A
and 3B, the individual clay platelets on the treated fibers are easily observed.
Surface coverage even with as low as 5% clay content (not shown in the micrographs) was surprisingly complete and uniform and this was even more the case at the higher loadings.
Even when the pulp was not refined, as in the present case, there is usually at least a minor amount of fibrillation that occurs during the pulping and bleaching proc-ess. In the scanning electron micrographs of FIG. 2A it is revealing to note that very few fibrils are seen on the surface of the uncoated fibers. However, significantly more fibrils are seen on the clay coated samples. As is apparent in FIG. 3A, these stood out much like the bristles of a brush and are, along with the body of the fiber, coated with clay particles to give a dendritic appearance similar to rime frost.
Comparison of FIG.
2B with FIG. 4 clearly shows the marked difference between the fluff pulp of the present invention and a filled paper. The scanning electron micrograph at 200X of FIG.
4 is of the felt side of a lithographic paper with a calcium carbonate filler. In the product shown relatively little filler clings.to the fibers but it is retained mostly as flocs in the in-terfiber interstices.
Electrostatic phenomena were observed qualitatively during fiberization and mat formation. Electrostatic buildup was observed to be very significant for chemi-cally debonded pulp in comparison with the untreated control while essentially no static buildup was observed in the clay treated material. This is clearly shown in the photo-graphs of FIG. 5, using an untreated fluff pulp, and FIG. 6 where the pulp is a product of the present invention. The gobs of suspended fiber and poorer mat formation are clearly visible in F1G. 5. These fiber gobs eventually are rubbed off onto the mat and form lumpy areas or, by dragging against the mat, may form stripes which are under-weight zones. This is shown quantitatively in FIG. 7 where basis weight variation of continuously formed mats is shown. Two commercially available North Carolina kraft fluff pulps are used for comparison. One was untreated and the other was debonder treated. The clay treated pulp materials were from the large scale pilot trial to be de-scribed in Example 3. Vertical bars on the graph represent two standard deviations in mat weight. The superior uniformity of the clay treated pulps is immediately evident and is due to the reduced static generation during fluff production.
Examvie 2 The samples described in Example 1 were all based on handsheets. These normally correlate well in most properties with machine run pulps. However, since the addition of clay to an essentially unrefined pulp is a radical departure from normal pa-permill practice, a run was made on a continuous Noble and Wood pilot scale paper ma-chine having a 30 cm trim width. Materials and target basis weight and density on the pilot machine were identical to those used in Example I. The identical never dried southern pine bleached kraft wood fiber was again used. The fiber was slurried in water at 2-3% consistency and retention aid at 3 kg/t usage was added with continuous stirring for about five minutes. The stock was drained to about 20% consistency, and water again added to bring consistency back to the 2-3% Level. Clay was then added at levels sufficient to achieve about 5% and 10% loading levels. After mild agitation for about 5 minutes consistency was reduced to about 0.7% and the pulp slung was then continu-ously sheeted. Results are seen in Table 2.

Table 2 Properties of Clay Treated Pulp from Pilot Scale Trial Commercial Pult~s Untreated Debonder Pilot Scale Pulps Sample Pula Treated Control 5%
C lav 10% Clav Sheet Properties Basis Weight, 780 700 474 456 584 g/mz Density. kg/m' 605 ~ 15 445 524 469 Chemical Properties Clay. % In sheet form~'~ -- -- -- 7 I 1.6 Clay. % In fluff form~'~ -- -- -- 7 10.5 Fluff Properties De&bering Energy, k3/kg 138 53 79 .I1 38 Total knots. % I I 1 't 0 0 Absorption by FAQ Test Absorption time, sec 2.8 5.8 2.8 2.4 2.2 Absorption rate, mm/sec 28.8 14.6 32 34.1 36 ~'~ Determined by dividing ash content by 0.86.
Due to mechanical limitations, the targeted conditions of basis weight and density could not be achieved on the pilot machine. The values obtained for these two properties were significantly lower than those desired. However, it is again evident that clay addition was substantive and that defiberization properties were similar to those of the hand sheets. Even the addition of a nominal 5% clay reduced defiberization energy to almost half that of the pilot sheeted control.
Example 3 Since it was not possible to reach the desired higher basis weight due to machine limitations using the Noble and Wood pilot scale paper machine, a similar run was made on a larger 91 cm (36 in) trim width pilot machine at Herty Foundation, Sa vannah, Georgia. All runs were made using an undried pulp similar to that used in Ex amples 1 and 2 Table 3 Properties of Clay Treated Pulp from Larger Pilot Scale Trial Targeted Clay Level Treatment Control 5% 10%
Sheet Properties Basis weight g/m' 724 687 766 Caliper, mm 1.15 1.07 1.28 Density, kg/m; 630 640 601 Clays'', % (sheet -- 5.4 14.2 form) Clays", % (after -- 5.4 12.9 fiberization) Fluff Properties Defibering Energy, 127 72 26 kJ/kg Total knots, % 30 1 1 Absorption by FAQ
Test Absorption time, 2.4 2.2 2.1 sec Absorption rate, 30.1 36.6 32.2 mm/sec '' Determined by dividing ash content by 0.86.
It is evident that basis weight has little effect on the defibering and absorp-tion rate properties of the pulps since results are similar to those seen in Table 2.
Example 4 Most personal hygienic absorbent products are now predominantly made using superabsorbent polymers (SAP) in conjunction with the cellulosic fluff In some cases the polymer particles are physically attached to the fibers by various mechanisms, for example as seen in Hansen et al. U.S. Patent 5,308,896. More commonly the fiber and SAP particles are simply mixed in an air stream during pad formation. Pads of the latter type were made using the pulp sheets with clay at the 10% level made in the Noble and Wood pilot trials described in Example 2. The sheets were fiberized and mixed with 40% based on ultimate product weight of a SAP, IM 3900 available from Hoechst Cela-nese Corp., Charlotte, N.C., during formation of air laid pads. A similar set of samples was made using a commercially available southern pine bleached kraft fluff pulp The never dried fiber used in all of the experiments was obtained from the furnish used for manufacture of this commercial pulp. The pads were compressed to similar densities, about 0.11 g/cmj, under identical applied loads and submitted for a gravimetric absorption test. In this absorption test the pads are held under an applied load of 3.4 kPa and are wet from the bottom by a synthetic urine composition. Weight increase from liquid uptake is continuously measured by an electronic balance and plotted as grams of liquid absorbed per gram of dry pulp/ SAP composite as a function of time.
FIG. 8 shows a plot of the clay treated pulp vs the commercial fluff pulp.
Fluff from the treated pulp has an equilibrium capacity about 7% higher than its untreated equivalent.
The results show an enhanced absorbency in compressed structures made in conjunction with superabsorbent polymers.
The clay treated fluffed pulp also was observed to exhibit greater softness and bulk after dry compaction under the same load compared to control pulp.
This was observed both in the presence and absence of SAP.
Example S
As will be seen in this example, the present invention is not limited to kao lin clay as a filler material. Using the never dried fiber and procedures of Example I, ad i S ditional handsheet samples were made in which the kaolin clay was replaced with precipitated calcium carbonate, ground calcium carbonate, bentonite clay, and talc. The latter product was used to prepare a hydrophobic material. The furnish consisted of 65 g oven dry weight of the fiber and 14 g, solids basis, of the filler ( 17.7%
filler). Materi-als and sources are as follows: precipitated calcium carbonate (PCC) -Specialty Miner-als. Longview, Washington; ground calcium carbonate (GCC)- Microna S-93, Columbia River Carbonate Company, Woodland, Washington; bentonite clay - Hydrocol HSUF, Allied Colloids, Suffolk, Virginia; and talc- XP961, Luzenac America, Englewood, Colorado. Filler content of the sheets (by ashing), absorption rate, and debonding en-ergy are seen in the following table:
Table 4 Products With Fillers Other Than Kaolin Cla Absorption Fiberization Fiiier MaterialFiller Retained Rate, Energy, %"' _ mm/sec kJ/k~

Precip. CaC039.9 31. 6 76 Ground CaC037.4 34.2 g7.9 Bentonite 6.4 30.5 70_g clay Talc 17. 6 0.3 92.4 "' Determined from ash content and corrected for known weight loss of filler during ashing.

It can be seen that despite the lower retention of mineral filler than was achieved with kaolin clay, absorption rate was equivalent and fiberization energy essen-tially halved from the control sample in Example i .
Example 6 Eriksson et al., in U.S. Patent No. 5,492,759, describe a method of making an enhanced surface area cellulose fiber by depositing a silica coating on the fibers. The inventors found that liquid absorption rate was related to surface area. The techniques of the present invention can also be used to make an enhanced surface area fiber but us ing a process much simpler and more practical for typical paper mills than those of Eriksson et al.
While most fluff pulps are essentially unrefined or only lightly brushed in a refiner, the technology of the present invention can be applied to refined pulps to pro-duce fibers of very high surface area in the dry state. The filler particles prevent collapse of the cellulose fibrils upon drying. Approximately 2 tons of never dried pulp similar to that of the previous examples were used in a pilot scale trial made on the 91 cm (36 in) trim width fourdrinier machine at Herty Foundation, Savannah, Georgia. The pulp was refined to 230 mL CSF. A filer retention aid (Nalco 7607, Nalco Chemical Company, Naperville Illinois) was added at a rate of 3 kgft. After a short reaction time 30% kaolin clay was added (based on dry pulp). A sheeted product was produced at a basis weight of 750 g/mz and 6% moisture content. Sheet density was 700 kg/m;, slightly higher than target value. Approximately 750 kg of clay treated sheet was produced. Results of tests on the product are found in the following table.
Table 5 Results of Large Scale Pilot Run of Refined Pulp Sample Mill Produced Unrefined Refined Control CIaX Treated Clay content,%"' 0 ca. 25 Defibering energy, kJ/kg 131 56 FAQ Absorption Rate. mm/sec 28.8 15.5 Surface Area, m'-/g '2', defibered < 1 7.6 "' Determined from dividing ash content by 0.86.
~2' B.E.T. Nitrogen absorption method Defibering energy of the clay treated pulp was significantly reduced com-pared with the commercially produced unrefined pulp used as a control sample.
Surface area of the treated material was equal or superior to the best obtained by Eriksson et al.
Surface area of the treated sheeted pulp before defibering was measured as 7.2 m/g2. It was noted subjectively that opacity of the material was exceptionally high.
The lower absorption rate of the clay treated material was expected for a refined pulp.
Even lighter refining than that used for the above material can contribute substantially to increased surface area. Improvements are seen at freeness values as high as 550 CSF although the most significant increase in surface area is obtained at freenesses of about 350 CSF or lower. While the absorption rate of the increased sur-face area refined products may be lower than unrefined pulps, the driving force for ab-sorption is increased. This can be considered as analogous to a suction force tending to absorb and distribute a liquid with which the product is in contact. The greater driving force can be used to move liquid fi~rther, hold liquid more tightly and, in combination with other materials, move liquid more rapidly.
It may be advantageous to make blends of the high surface material just described with other fibers. These other fibers can be cellulosic, chemically modified cellulose, or noncellulosic in composition. As one example, a fiber having greater ab sorbency rates or higher bulk might be blended with the high surface area material to take advantage of the higher suction capability of the latter material. For example, this added fiber could be a conventional untreated cellulose fiber or one of the unrefined treated fibers of the earlier examples.
Blends with noncellulosic fibers can frequently be used to advantage. Ex-emplary of these noncellulosic fibers are synthetic polymer materials such as poiyolefins, nylons, and polyesters.
The mixtures can have a ratio of 10-90% added fiber to 90-10% high sur face area fiber. A particularly advantageous additive fiber would be a crosslinked cellu lose fiber. Most typically the blend would have about 25% of the high surface area material and 75% of the crosslinked fiber. An exemplary crosslinked fiber might be one available from Weyerhaeuser Company, Tacoma, Washington as High Bulk Additive or HBAT"~ fiber. The blends can be made at any time, either before or after addition of the retention aid and filler particles. Most typically, the refined fiber would first be treated with the filler, as in the present example, and then the added fiber would be added and thoroughly blended.
While it is anticipated that in most cases a blended product would be pre pared in sheeted form, it should be considered to be within the scope of the invention if the product was prepared as bulk individual fibers; e.g., by flash drying or other known means.

Where the other fibers in admixture with the high surface area fibers are cellulosic, they would normally be refined only to a very high freeness value;
e.g. 550 CSF or higher, or not refined at all.
Example 7 Liquid holding capacity may be measured by the FAQ test noted earlier.
Another procedure that is an indicator of actual performance in a diaper or similar article is the inclined wicking capacity test. A sample having dimensions of 7 X 30 cm is cut from an air laid fluff pad. This is placed on an acrylic plate on a stand inclined at a 30°
angle. Pads nay be pressed to a predetermined density prior to commencing the test.
Tie stand is on an electronic balance so that weight can be constantly recorded as a function of time. The end of the pad is then slid into a constant height water reservoir and weight gain over time is recorded. Tests are run in triplicate and results averaged.
FIG. 9 shows results of tests on a 10% clay treated pulp, a compared with two commercially available debonder treated pulps. The very significantly increased liq uid holding capacity of the clay treated sample is immediately evident.
Example 8 Swedish Patent No. 462,918 describes the use of finely ground alpha cellu-lose as a fluff pulp additive for reducing debonding energy without the need for chemical additives. When sheeted, the alpha cellulose particles are said to prevent surface contact between the fibers and reduce natural hydrogen bonding forces. The alpha cellulose par-ticles (alpha content of 92.5%) had been ground by undisclosed means to a particle size falling between about 0.001-0.1 mm. A usage of 10 kg/t ( 1 %) was noted without any other chemicals being added. Sheets having a basis weight of about 800 g/m'-were wet formed and dried. The sheets were defibered in an undescribed test apparatus and found to have a defibering energy of 150 kJ/kg compared with 400 kJ/kg for the untreated pulp. Absorption capacity was also slightly increased.
In an effort to duplicate the Swedish work the never dried control pulp used in the previous examples was treated with I % and 4% of Avicel'~ Type-PH
I O 1 mi-crocrystalline cellulose from FMC Corp., Newark, Delaware. This has an average parti-cle size of about 50 um which falls in the middle of the Swedish particle size distribution.. Since no better description of the ground cellulose was given in the Swed-ish patent this material was chosen as its probable equivalent. Handsheets having a simi-lar basis weight to the Swedish material were made.
In contrast to the Swedish results, no improvement in defibering energy was observed, as is seen in the following table. The experiment was repeated using a re-tention aid (Nalco 7607 at 1.5 kg/t) with results being similar to those without the WO 98/17856 PCT/US97i18081 retention aid. There was an increase noted in liquid holding capacity of the treated sam-ples but no differences were seen in FAQ absorption rate.
It was subjectively observed that static generation during defibering and during formation for the FAQ test was high, about the same as the control sample.
Table 5 LJse of Fine Cellulose ding Particles as Potential Aid Debon 1 % Fine4% Fine 1 % Fine 4% Finewith with Ret. Ret.

C ontrol CelluloseCelluloseAid Aid Basis weight, g/m ' 785 778 772 768 768 Density, kg/m' 521 494 5 I 473 S 12 Defibering energy, 136 144 130 148 141 kJ/kg Capacity, g H,O/g 8.5 11.5 I I 11.6 1 I
.4 .4 FAQ Absorption rate, 31.5 30.8 31.3 29.8 31.7 mm/sec In general, all the products of the present invention will have a Kamas defi-berization energy of less than about 90 kJ/kg. With the exception of the refined high surface area pulps, they will have a minimum FAQ wicking rate of at least about 25 mm/sec.
Example 9 The high surface area product of Example 6 is blended before sheeting with a crosslinked cellulose fiber in a ratio of 25% of the clay treated fiber and 75%
I S chemically crosslinked cellulose fiber by weight. The crosslinked cellulose fiber is sup-plied as HBATM by Weyerhaeuser Company, Tacoma Washington. The mixed product is then sheeted and dried in normal fashion. After defibering in a hammermill an air laid web having a basis weight of I 00 g/mz is made from the product. This web is strength-ened by addition of a bonding material. In the present case 15% by weight of an ethyl-ene vinyl acetate latex is sprayed onto both sides of the product after the web is formed.
The bonded web is then dried and the latex cured. The product is beneficial as an aquisition/distribution layer in sanitary napkins or diapers As such it accepts an initial flood of fluid and distributes it into a storage zone. Alternatively, the product is useful as wipes.
As an alternative construction, the latex binder is replaced with a ther-mobondable fiber at the time the web is formed. A product of this type is prepared by uniform inclusion of 16% by weight Celbond fiber supplied by Hoechst Celanese Corp., Charlotte, N.C. Celbond is believed to be a bicomponent fiber having a polyester core and polyethylene sheath. The formed product is passed over a zone where heated air at about 130°C is passed through it to create a strong bond.
Example 10 Fiber made from defibered sheets similar to the product described in Ex ample 4 is formed into a web and used to prepare sanitary napkins. The fiber used con tains 10% kaolin clay. To this was added 15% by weight of the superabsorbent polymer to give an 85:15 mixture of treated fiber to SAP. As seen in FIG. 10, a sanitary napkin 2 was formed using as an absorbent core portion 4 an air laid web of the fiber/SAP mix ture with a basis weight of 215 g/m' pressed to a thickness of 1.56 mm and density of about 0.14 g/cm3. This fiber web is backed with a liquid impermeable thin sheet of poly-ethylene film 6 and enclosed within a moisture permeable nonwoven wrapper 8. A
pres-sure sensitive adhesive 10 is formed on the lower side of wrapper and protected by a removable peel strip 12. Tests show the product to have excellent fluid absorbency.
In another construction, the sheeted product can be used directly, without defiberization, either as the sole absorbent component or as one component in a multiple layer absorbent core portion. Depending somewhat on the basis weight, density, and other properties of the sheet, it may or may not be desirable to further soften or tender ize it. This may be done by any of the well known methods; e.g., by needling or embossing.
Example I l In similar fashion to the product of Example 10, as seen in FIG. I 1 a baby diaper 20 is made using a major core portion having 20 parts by weight of fluff and 10 parts of the superabsorbent polymer. The treated fiber from which the fluff is formed is similar to that of the previous example but contains only 5% by weight kaolin clay. The SAP containing fluff is air laid into a pad 22 having a basis weight of about 500 g/mz.
This fluff layer is used as the liquid storage portion of the diaper. This is overlaid by a lighter aquisition/distribution layer 23 having a basis weight of about 200 g/mz com-posed of the high surface area fibers prepared from the product of Example 6.
Alterna-tively, layer 23 may be formed from a blend of high surface area fibers and crossllinked fibers such as Weyerhaeuser 1-IBA fiber as was shown in Example 9. In turn, this is cov-ered by a skin contacting, liquid permeable nonwoven web 24 and liquid impermeable polyethylene film backing 26. Elastic strips 28 along the edges assist in preventing leak-age when the diaper is in use. Adhesive strips 30 are used to secure the diaper to the infant. The product has excellent absorbency of a synthetic urine composition.
Option-3 5 ally, high surface area fibers could be used as a component of the core.

The products of the present invention present many advantages over simi-lar products previously available. It will be understood by those skilled in the art that many variations will be possible in the products and method of their production that have not been suggested in the examples. Thus, it is the intention of the inventors that these variations should be included within the scope and spirit of the invention if they are encompassed within the following claims.

Claims (60)

The embodiments of the invention in which an exclusive property or privilege is claimed are defined as follows:
1. A readily defibered wet laid cellulose product having a basis weight of at least about 250 g/m2 in which interfiber bonds are minimized by an effective amount of fine mineral filler particles attached to said fiber surfaces before wet forming the product, the mineral filler particles being selected from the group consisting of clays, calcium carbonate, titanium dioxide, talc, and mixtures thereof, the product having a Kamas fiberization energy less than about 140 kJ/kg.
2. The cellulose pulp product of claim 1 in which the basis weight is at least about 550 g/m2.
3. The cellulose pulp product of claim 1 in which the mineral filler particles are kaolin clay.
4. The cellulose pulp product of claim 1 in which the mineral filler particles are present in an amount of about 1-30% based on the combined weight of particles and cellulose.
5. The cellulose pulp product of claim 1 in which the mineral filler particles are present in an amount of about 3-20% based on the combined weight of particles and cellulose.
6. The cellulose pulp product of claim 1 in which the mineral filler particles are bonded to the cellulose fibers by a filler retention aid.
7. The cellulose pulp product of claim 1 in which the Kamas fiberization energy of the product is less than about 90 kJ/kg.
8. The cellulose pulp product of claim 1 which in fluffed form has a water wicking rate by a standard FAQ test greater than about 25 mm/sec.
9. The cellulose pulp product of claim 1 in which the fibers are essentially unrefined.
10. The cellulose pulp product of claim 1 in which the fibers are refined to a Canadian Standard Freeness less than about 350.
11. The cellulose pulp products of claims 9 or 10 in admixture with 10-90% by weight of other fibers selected from the group consisting of cellulosic, chemically modified cellulose, and noncellulosic fibers.
12. The cellulose pulp product of claim 11 in which the other fiber is a crosslinked cellulose fiber.
13. The method of making a wet laid cellulose pulp product having a basis weight of at least about 250 g/m2 which comprises slurrying the cellulose fibers in a dilute aqueous suspension, coating the fiber surface with at least 1 %, based on the combined weight of filler material and cellulose, of a finely divided noncellulosic filler material to substantially interrupt normal hydrogen bonding between the fibers and to reduce Kamas fiberization energy below about 140 kJ/kg, forming the fibers into a sheet, and drying the sheet.
14. The method of claim 13 which comprises adding a filler retention aid to the fiber suspension, allowing a sufficient time for the retention aid to bond to the fiber surface, adding the noncellulosic filler material to the suspension so that it bonds to the fibers, and sheeting and drying the product.
15. The method of claim 14 in which substantially all of the retention aid is bonded to the fiber surface prior to addition of the filler material in order to minimize flocculation of the filler material.
16. The method of claim 14 in which the retention aid is selected from the group consisting of polyacrylamides, polyamines, polyethyleneimines, polyamidoamines, polyethylene oxides and mixtures thereof
17. The method of claim 13 which comprises adding a filler retention aid to an aqueous suspension of the filler material in order to reduce the negative potential of said filler material without significantly flocculating the filler material prior to adding it to the aqueous suspension of cellulose fibers.
18. The method of claim 13 in which the noncellulosic filler material is a mineral filler selected from the group consisting of clays, calcium carbonate, talc, and mixtures thereof.
19. The method of claim 18 in which the filler material is kaolin clay.
20. The method of claim 13 in which the noncellulosic filler material is present in an amount in the range of about 1-30% based on the combined weight of filler material and cellulose.
21. The method of claim 20 in which the noncellulosic filler material is present in an amount in the range of about 3-20% based on the combined weight of filler material and cellulose.
22. The method of claim 13 in which the product has a basis weight of at least about 550 kg/m2.
23. The method of claim 13 in which the product has a Kamas fiberization energy less than about 90 kJ/kg and the product in fluffed form has a water wicking rate by a standard FAQ test greater than about 25 mm/sec.
24. The method of claim 13 which comprises refining the pulp prior to bonding the noncellulosic filler material to the fiber.
25. A readily defibered wet laid cellulose fluff pulp product having a basis weight of at least about 250 g/ m2 and characterized by low static generation upon subsequent defibering in which interfiber hydrogen bonds between cellulose fibers are substantially interrupted by an effective amount of fine mineral filler particles attached to said fiber surfaces before wet forming the product, the mineral filler particles being selected from the group consisting of clays, calcium carbonate, titanium dioxide, talc, and mixtures thereof, the product having a Kamas fiberization energy less than about 140 kJ/kg.
26. The cellulose pulp product of claim 25 in which the basis weight is in excess of about 550 g/m2.
27. The cellulose pulp product of claim 25 in which the mineral filler particles are kaolin clays.
28. The cellulose pulp product of claim 25 in which the mineral filler particles are present in an amount of about 1-30% based on the combined weight of particles and cellulose.
29. The cellulose product of claim 28 in which the mineral filler particles are present in an amount of about 5-20% based on the combined weight of particles and cellulose.
30. The cellulose pulp product of claim 25 in which the mineral filler particles are bonded to the cellulose fibers by a filler retention aid.
31. The cellulose pulp product of claim 25 which has a Kamas fiberization energy less than about 90 kJ/kg.
32. The cellulose pulp product of claim 25 which in fluffed form has a water wicking rate by a standard FAQ test greater than about 25 nm/sec.
33. The cellulose pulp product of claim 25 in which the fibers are essentially unrefined.
34. The cellulose pulp product of claim 25 in which the fibers are refined to a Canadian Standard Freeness less than about 350.
35. The cellulose pulp products of claims 33 or 34 in admixture with 10-90% by weight of other fibers selected from the group consisting of cellulosic, chemically modified cellulose, and noncellulosic fibers.
36. The cellulose pulp product of claim 35 in which the other fiber is a crosslinked cellulose fiber.
37. A refined cellulose pulp product comprising cellulose fibers in admixture with 10-90% of fibers selected from the group consisting of other cellulose fibers, chemically modified cellulose fibers, and noncellulosic fibers in which interfiber hydrogen bonds are minimized by an effective amount of fine mineral filler particles attached to said fiber surfaces, the mineral filler particles being being selected form the group consisting of clays, calcium carbonate, titanium dioxide, talc, and mixtures thereof, the product having a Kamas fiberization energy less than about 140 kJ/kg.
38. A refined wet-laid cellulose pulp product having a basis weight of at least about 250 g/m2 comprising cellulose fibers in an admixture with 10-90%
of fibers selected from the group consisting of other cellulose fibers, chemically modified cellulose fibers, and noncellulosic fibers in which interfiber hydrogen bonds are minimized by an effective amount of fine mineral filler particles attached to said fiber surfaces before wet forming the product, the mineral filler particles being being selected form the group consisting of clays, calcium carbonate, titanium dioxide, talc, and mixtures thereof, the product having a Kamas fiberization energy less than about 140 kJ/kg.
39. The cellulose pulp product of claim 38 in which the cellulose pulp is refined to a Canadian Standard Freeness less than about 350 prior to attaching the noncellulosic particles.
40. The cellulose pulp product of claim 38 in which the other fiber in admixture is a crosslinked cellulose fiber.
41. A disposable absorbent product having an absorbent core portion comprising a readily debonded cellulose product as described in claim 1.
42. The disposable absorbent product of claim 41 comprising an absorbent core portion formed of fluff made by defiberizing and air laying into pad form the product of claim 1.
43. The disposable absorbent product of claim 41 comprising an absorbent core portion of which at least a portion is formed from the product of claim 1 in sheeted form.
44. A disposable absorbent product having an absorbent core portion comprising a readily debonded cellulose product as described in claim 9.
45. The disposable absorbent product of claim 44 comprising an absorbent core portion formed of fluff made by defiberizing and air laying into pad form the product of claim 1.
46. The disposable absorbent product of claim 44 comprising an absorbent core portion of which at least a portion is formed from the product of claim 1 in sheeted form.
47. A disposable absorbent product of claims 41 in which the absorbent core is further in admixture with a superabsorbent polymer.
48. A disposable absorbent product of claims 44 in which the absorbent core is further in admixture with a superabsorbent polymer.
49. The disposable absorbent product of any one of claims 41 to 48 in which the product is a diaper.
50. The disposable absorbent product of any one of claims 41 to 48 in which the product is a sanitary napkin.
51. A disposable absorbent product having an absorbent core portion comprising a readily debonded cellulose product as described in claim 1 in which said readily debonded product is in admixture with 10-90% by weight of other fibers selected from the group consisting of cellulosic fibers, chemically modified cellulose fibers and noncellulosic fibers.
52. The disposable absorbent product of claim 51 comprising an absorbent core portion formed of fluff made by defiberizing and air laying into pad form the product of claim 1.
53. The disposable absorbent product of claim 51 comprising an absorbent core portion of which at least a portion is formed from the product of claim 1 in sheeted form.
54. A disposable absorbent product having an absorbent core portion comprising a readily debonded cellulose product as described in claim 9 in which said readily debonded product is in admixture with 10-90% by weight of other fibers selected from the group consisting of cellulosic fibers, chemically modified cellulose fibers and noncellulosic fibers.
55. The disposable absorbent product of claim 54 comprising an absorbent core portion formed of fluff made by defiberizing and air laying into pad form the product of claim 9.
56. The disposable absorbent product of claim 54 comprising an absorbent core portion of which at least a portion is formed from the product of claim 9 in sheeted form.
57. A disposable absorbent product of claims 53 in which the absorbent core is further in admixture with a superabsorbent polymer.
58. A disposable absorbent product of claims 54 in which the absorbent core is further in admixture with a superabsorbent polymer.
59. The disposable absorbent product of any one of claims 51 to 58 in which the product is a diaper.
60. The disposable absorbent product of any one of claims 51 to 58 in which the product is a sanitary napkin.
CA002267530A 1996-10-23 1997-10-06 Readily defibered pulp products and method of their manufacture Expired - Fee Related CA2267530C (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (5)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US2973996P 1996-10-23 1996-10-23
US60/029,739 1996-10-23
US08/920,689 US6074524A (en) 1996-10-23 1997-08-29 Readily defibered pulp products
US08/920,689 1997-08-29
PCT/US1997/018081 WO1998017856A1 (en) 1996-10-23 1997-10-06 Readily defibered pulp products and method of their manufacture

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
CA2267530A1 CA2267530A1 (en) 1998-04-30
CA2267530C true CA2267530C (en) 2005-08-23

Family

ID=26705280

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
CA002267530A Expired - Fee Related CA2267530C (en) 1996-10-23 1997-10-06 Readily defibered pulp products and method of their manufacture

Country Status (7)

Country Link
US (2) US6074524A (en)
EP (1) EP0934441B1 (en)
AT (1) ATE235594T1 (en)
CA (1) CA2267530C (en)
DE (1) DE69720236T2 (en)
ES (1) ES2196314T3 (en)
WO (1) WO1998017856A1 (en)

Families Citing this family (79)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US6159335A (en) * 1997-02-21 2000-12-12 Buckeye Technologies Inc. Method for treating pulp to reduce disintegration energy
US6059924A (en) * 1998-01-02 2000-05-09 Georgia-Pacific Corporation Fluffed pulp and method of production
US6630054B1 (en) * 1998-03-19 2003-10-07 Weyerhaeuser Company Methods for forming a fluted composite
TR200000382T1 (en) * 1998-06-12 2000-11-21 Fort James Corporation A method of making a paper network with a high secondary void volume and the product made with this process
US6562192B1 (en) * 1998-10-02 2003-05-13 Kimberly-Clark Worldwide, Inc. Absorbent articles with absorbent free-flowing particles and methods for producing the same
US6649099B2 (en) 1998-10-30 2003-11-18 Kimberly-Clark Worldwide, Inc. Method of incorporating fluid treatment agents into absorbent composites
US6562743B1 (en) 1998-12-24 2003-05-13 Bki Holding Corporation Absorbent structures of chemically treated cellulose fibers
AU4206300A (en) * 1999-04-07 2000-10-23 Kimberly-Clark Worldwide, Inc. Creping adhesive and products and process incorporating same
SE515690C2 (en) * 1999-04-16 2001-09-24 Korsnaes Ab Methods of preparing fluff pulp, fluff pulp for absorption products, absorption products and use of fluff pulp or absorption products in hygiene products
FI119562B (en) * 2000-02-07 2008-12-31 Upm Kymmene Corp Fluff, process for making fluff, using fluff, and product made from fluff
US6379498B1 (en) * 2000-02-28 2002-04-30 Kimberly-Clark Worldwide, Inc. Method for adding an adsorbable chemical additive to pulp during the pulp processing and products made by said method
EP1158088A3 (en) * 2000-05-26 2003-01-22 Voith Paper Patent GmbH Process and device for treating a fibrous suspension
MXPA03003972A (en) * 2000-11-06 2004-09-10 Georgia Tech Res Inst Fiber reinforced mineral-based materials and methods of making the same.
CN1476337A (en) * 2000-12-07 2004-02-18 韦尔豪泽公司 Distribution layer having improved liquid transfer to storage layer
US20040158214A1 (en) * 2003-02-10 2004-08-12 The Procter & Gamble Company Disposable absorbent article comprising a durable hydrophilic topsheet
US20040158213A1 (en) * 2003-02-10 2004-08-12 The Procter & Gamble Company Disposable absorbent article comprising a durable hydrophilic acquisition layer
US20040158212A1 (en) * 2003-02-10 2004-08-12 The Procter & Gamble Company Disposable absorbent article comprising a durable hydrophilic core wrap
US7749356B2 (en) 2001-03-07 2010-07-06 Kimberly-Clark Worldwide, Inc. Method for using water insoluble chemical additives with pulp and products made by said method
US6582560B2 (en) 2001-03-07 2003-06-24 Kimberly-Clark Worldwide, Inc. Method for using water insoluble chemical additives with pulp and products made by said method
FI117715B (en) * 2001-10-25 2007-01-31 M Real Oyj A method for improving the economy of manufacture and use of a filler
US7018508B2 (en) * 2001-10-30 2006-03-28 Weyerhaeuser Company Process for producing dried singulated crosslinked cellulose pulp fibers
US6862819B2 (en) 2001-10-30 2005-03-08 Weyerhaeuser Company System for producing dried singulated cellulose pulp fibers using a jet drier and injected steam
US6769199B2 (en) 2001-10-30 2004-08-03 Weyerhaeuser Company Process for producing dried singulated cellulose pulp fibers using a jet drier and injected steam and the product resulting therefrom
US6748671B1 (en) 2001-10-30 2004-06-15 Weyerhaeuser Company Process to produce dried singulated cellulose pulp fibers
US7334347B2 (en) * 2001-10-30 2008-02-26 Weyerhaeuser Company Process for producing dried, singulated fibers using steam and heated air
US6782637B2 (en) 2001-10-30 2004-08-31 Weyerhaeuser Company System for making dried singulated crosslinked cellulose pulp fibers
JP3647797B2 (en) * 2001-11-28 2005-05-18 コナミ株式会社 Image display program, image display method, and video game apparatus
US6758943B2 (en) * 2001-12-27 2004-07-06 Kimberly-Clark Worldwide, Inc. Method of making a high utility tissue
US6942726B2 (en) * 2002-08-23 2005-09-13 Bki Holding Corporation Cementitious material reinforced with chemically treated cellulose fiber
US7399377B2 (en) * 2003-01-02 2008-07-15 Weyerhaeuser Co. Process for singulating cellulose fibers from a wet pulp sheet
US7175741B2 (en) * 2003-07-16 2007-02-13 Weyerhaeuser, Co. Reducing odor in absorbent products
JP4716989B2 (en) * 2003-08-29 2011-07-06 ビーケイアイ・ホールディング・コーポレーション Fiber foam for feeding into concrete
US20050079361A1 (en) * 2003-10-14 2005-04-14 Hamed Othman A. Materials useful in making cellulosic acquisition fibers in sheet form
WO2005063309A2 (en) 2003-12-19 2005-07-14 Bki Holding Corporation Fibers of variable wettability and materials containing the fibers
US7223303B2 (en) * 2004-08-26 2007-05-29 Mitsubishi Materials Corporation Silicon cleaning method for semiconductor materials and polycrystalline silicon chunk
US7541396B2 (en) * 2004-12-29 2009-06-02 Weyerhaeuser Nr Company Method for making carboxyalkyl cellulose
US20070295659A1 (en) * 2005-09-29 2007-12-27 Sellars Absorbent Materials, Inc. Filters and methods of manufacturing the same
JP4863828B2 (en) * 2006-09-29 2012-01-25 イビデン株式会社 Sheet material, method for manufacturing the same, and exhaust gas treatment apparatus
US8318062B2 (en) 2006-10-04 2012-11-27 Sellars Absorbent Materials, Inc. Industrial absorbents and methods of manufacturing the same
WO2008042781A2 (en) * 2006-10-04 2008-04-10 Sellars Absorbent Materials, Inc. Filters and methods of manufacturing the same
US8118177B2 (en) 2006-10-04 2012-02-21 Sellars Absorbent Materials, Inc. Non-woven webs and methods of manufacturing the same
DE102007059736A1 (en) * 2007-12-12 2009-06-18 Omya Development Ag Surface mineralized organic fibers
US20100163200A1 (en) * 2008-12-31 2010-07-01 Weyerhaeuser Company Method for making readily defibered pulp product
US20100163199A1 (en) * 2008-12-31 2010-07-01 Weyerhaeuser Company Readily defibered pulp product
EP4105380A1 (en) 2009-03-30 2022-12-21 FiberLean Technologies Limited Process for the production of nanofibrillar cellulose suspensions
HUE035151T2 (en) 2009-03-30 2018-05-02 Fiberlean Tech Ltd Process for the production of nano-fibrillar cellulose gels
GB0908401D0 (en) 2009-05-15 2009-06-24 Imerys Minerals Ltd Paper filler composition
MY162376A (en) 2009-08-05 2017-06-15 Shell Int Research Method for monitoring a well
RU2610240C2 (en) 2009-08-05 2017-02-08 Интернэшнл Пэйпа Кампани Method of applying composition containing cationic trivalent metal and loosener and sheet of loose cellulose made therefrom
EP2462276B1 (en) 2009-08-05 2014-11-05 International Paper Company Dry fluff pulp sheet additive
ES2467694T3 (en) * 2010-04-27 2014-06-12 Omya Development Ag Process for manufacturing structured materials using nanofibrillar cellulose gels
PL2386683T3 (en) 2010-04-27 2014-08-29 Omya Int Ag Process for the production of gel-based composite materials
US8465624B2 (en) 2010-07-20 2013-06-18 International Paper Company Composition containing a multivalent cationic metal and amine-containing anti-static agent and methods of making and using
EP2596167B1 (en) 2010-07-22 2017-03-22 International Paper Company Process for preparing fluff pulp sheet with cationic dye and debonder surfactant and fluff pulp sheet made from same
US9067357B2 (en) 2010-09-10 2015-06-30 The Procter & Gamble Company Method for deforming a web
US9220638B2 (en) 2010-09-10 2015-12-29 The Procter & Gamble Company Deformed web materials
GB201019288D0 (en) 2010-11-15 2010-12-29 Imerys Minerals Ltd Compositions
US20120277706A1 (en) 2011-04-26 2012-11-01 Luigi Marinelli Methods of Making Absorbent Members Having Density Profile
US10011953B2 (en) 2011-04-26 2018-07-03 The Procter & Gamble Company Bulked absorbent members
US9452093B2 (en) 2011-04-26 2016-09-27 The Procter & Gamble Company Absorbent members having density profile
US9440394B2 (en) 2011-04-26 2016-09-13 The Procter & Gamble Company Methods of mechanically deforming materials
BR112013025715A2 (en) 2011-04-26 2017-03-01 Procter & Gamble methods for the mechanical deformation of materials.
US9452089B2 (en) 2011-04-26 2016-09-27 The Procter & Gamble Company Methods of making absorbent members having density profile
US9452094B2 (en) 2011-04-26 2016-09-27 The Procter & Gamble Company Absorbent members having density profile
US20120277705A1 (en) 2011-04-26 2012-11-01 Luigi Marinelli Absorbent Members Having Skewed Density Profile
US9028652B2 (en) 2011-04-26 2015-05-12 The Procter & Gamble Company Methods of making bulked absorbent members
US8657596B2 (en) 2011-04-26 2014-02-25 The Procter & Gamble Company Method and apparatus for deforming a web
US9534325B2 (en) 2011-04-26 2017-01-03 The Procter & Gamble Company Methods of making absorbent members having skewed density profile
US9439815B2 (en) 2011-04-26 2016-09-13 The Procter & Gamble Company Absorbent members having skewed density profile
WO2013081955A1 (en) * 2011-12-01 2013-06-06 Buckman Laboratories International, Inc. Method and system for producing market pulp and products thereof
US8871059B2 (en) 2012-02-16 2014-10-28 International Paper Company Methods and apparatus for forming fluff pulp sheets
JP6234394B2 (en) * 2015-03-04 2017-11-22 大王製紙株式会社 Method for manufacturing absorbent article
BR112018007115B1 (en) 2015-10-14 2022-06-14 Fiberlean Technologies Limited 3D-FORMABLE SHEET MATERIAL, PROCESSES FOR PREPARING A 3D-FORMED ARTICLE, ITS USES AND 3D-FORMED ARTICLE
US11846072B2 (en) 2016-04-05 2023-12-19 Fiberlean Technologies Limited Process of making paper and paperboard products
DK3828339T3 (en) 2016-04-05 2024-01-02 Fiberlean Tech Ltd PAPER AND CARDBOARD PRODUCTS
KR102255179B1 (en) 2016-04-22 2021-05-24 파이버린 테크놀로지스 리미티드 Compositions comprising microfibrilated cellulose and polymers and methods of manufacturing fibres and nonwoven materials therefrom
US10487452B1 (en) * 2017-01-26 2019-11-26 Kimberly-Clark Worldwide, Inc. Treated fibers and fibrous structures comprising the same
JP2021532945A (en) 2018-08-22 2021-12-02 ザ プロクター アンド ギャンブル カンパニーThe Procter & Gamble Company Disposable absorbent goods
US20210095419A1 (en) * 2019-09-27 2021-04-01 Frederick Dombrow, JR. Method of Binding Mineral Particles to Fibers

Family Cites Families (10)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3998690A (en) * 1972-10-02 1976-12-21 The Procter & Gamble Company Fibrous assemblies from cationically and anionically charged fibers
US3935363A (en) * 1974-09-16 1976-01-27 The Dow Chemical Company Absorbent product containing flocculated clay mineral aggregates
US4469746A (en) * 1982-06-01 1984-09-04 The Procter & Gamble Company Silica coated absorbent fibers
US5294299A (en) * 1988-11-07 1994-03-15 Manfred Zeuner Paper, cardboard or paperboard-like material and a process for its production
SE462918B (en) * 1989-01-25 1990-09-17 Stora Kopparbergs Bergslags Ab Method for production of fluff pulp
US5432000A (en) * 1989-03-20 1995-07-11 Weyerhaeuser Company Binder coated discontinuous fibers with adhered particulate materials
US4952278A (en) * 1989-06-02 1990-08-28 The Procter & Gamble Cellulose Company High opacity paper containing expanded fiber and mineral pigment
SE8903180D0 (en) * 1989-09-27 1989-09-27 Sca Development Ab SETTLE TO TREAT CELLULOSIC MATERIAL FIBERS
DE69602436D1 (en) * 1995-04-04 1999-06-17 Minnesota Mining & Mfg BOOK WITH REMOVABLE, REORDERABLE LEAVES
US5611890A (en) * 1995-04-07 1997-03-18 The Proctor & Gamble Company Tissue paper containing a fine particulate filler

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
DE69720236D1 (en) 2003-04-30
EP0934441A1 (en) 1999-08-11
WO1998017856A1 (en) 1998-04-30
CA2267530A1 (en) 1998-04-30
US6296737B1 (en) 2001-10-02
ATE235594T1 (en) 2003-04-15
EP0934441B1 (en) 2003-03-26
ES2196314T3 (en) 2003-12-16
DE69720236T2 (en) 2004-01-08
US6074524A (en) 2000-06-13

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
CA2267530C (en) Readily defibered pulp products and method of their manufacture
US4853086A (en) Hydrophilic cellulose product and method of its manufacture
US6306251B1 (en) Multi-ply cellulosic products using high-bulk cellulosic fibers
US10415190B2 (en) Dry fluff pulp sheet additive
US6159335A (en) Method for treating pulp to reduce disintegration energy
US11041272B2 (en) Fluff pulp and high SAP loaded core
RU2182198C2 (en) Process of preparation of pulp, process of production of absorbent material and pulp used in absorbent products
WO1999049905A2 (en) Improved process to make a wet-laid absorbent structure
JPH11503495A (en) Tissue paper containing fine particulate filler
EP0577590A1 (en) Aluminium-salt impregnated fibres, a method for their manufacture, fluff consisting of such fibres, and the use of the fibres as absorption material.
KR20040047913A (en) Non-rewetting multi-fiber hand towel and methods of making same
US20140041818A1 (en) Fluff pulp and high sap loaded core
WO2000066833A9 (en) Fluff pulp for absorption products
EP0889993B1 (en) Absorbent cellulosic material and production thereof
US20100163200A1 (en) Method for making readily defibered pulp product
US5938894A (en) Absorbent cellulosic material and production thereof
MXPA99003765A (en) Readily defibered pulp products and method of their manufacture
RU2182616C2 (en) Method for producing cellulose mass, cellulose mass for use in absorbing products and absorbing product
US20100163199A1 (en) Readily defibered pulp product

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
EEER Examination request
MKLA Lapsed