US2765247A - Non-woven sheet material - Google Patents

Non-woven sheet material Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2765247A
US2765247A US348815A US34881553A US2765247A US 2765247 A US2765247 A US 2765247A US 348815 A US348815 A US 348815A US 34881553 A US34881553 A US 34881553A US 2765247 A US2765247 A US 2765247A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
fibers
sheet material
binder
structural
fine
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 - Lifetime
Application number
US348815A
Inventor
Graham Boynton
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.)
EIDP Inc
Original Assignee
EI Du Pont de Nemours and 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 EI Du Pont de Nemours and Co filed Critical EI Du Pont de Nemours and Co
Priority to US348815A priority Critical patent/US2765247A/en
Priority to DEP11763A priority patent/DE1104925B/en
Priority to GB11078/54A priority patent/GB763605A/en
Priority to FR1144245D priority patent/FR1144245A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2765247A publication Critical patent/US2765247A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D04BRAIDING; LACE-MAKING; KNITTING; TRIMMINGS; NON-WOVEN FABRICS
    • D04HMAKING TEXTILE FABRICS, e.g. FROM FIBRES OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL; FABRICS MADE BY SUCH PROCESSES OR APPARATUS, e.g. FELTS, NON-WOVEN FABRICS; COTTON-WOOL; WADDING ; NON-WOVEN FABRICS FROM STAPLE FIBRES, FILAMENTS OR YARNS, BONDED WITH AT LEAST ONE WEB-LIKE MATERIAL DURING THEIR CONSOLIDATION
    • D04H1/00Non-woven fabrics formed wholly or mainly of staple fibres or like relatively short fibres
    • D04H1/40Non-woven fabrics formed wholly or mainly of staple fibres or like relatively short fibres from fleeces or layers composed of fibres without existing or potential cohesive properties
    • D04H1/58Non-woven fabrics formed wholly or mainly of staple fibres or like relatively short fibres from fleeces or layers composed of fibres without existing or potential cohesive properties by applying, incorporating or activating chemical or thermoplastic bonding agents, e.g. adhesives
    • D04H1/64Non-woven fabrics formed wholly or mainly of staple fibres or like relatively short fibres from fleeces or layers composed of fibres without existing or potential cohesive properties by applying, incorporating or activating chemical or thermoplastic bonding agents, e.g. adhesives the bonding agent being applied in wet state, e.g. chemical agents in dispersions or solutions
    • 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
    • Y10T428/24Structurally defined web or sheet [e.g., overall dimension, etc.]
    • Y10T428/24942Structurally defined web or sheet [e.g., overall dimension, etc.] including components having same physical characteristic in differing degree
    • 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
    • Y10T428/249921Web or sheet containing structurally defined element or component
    • Y10T428/249924Noninterengaged fiber-containing paper-free web or sheet which is not of specified porosity
    • Y10T428/24994Fiber embedded in or on the surface of a polymeric matrix
    • 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
    • Y10T428/26Web or sheet containing structurally defined element or component, the element or component having a specified physical dimension
    • Y10T428/263Coating layer not in excess of 5 mils thick or equivalent
    • 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
    • Y10T428/26Web or sheet containing structurally defined element or component, the element or component having a specified physical dimension
    • Y10T428/268Monolayer with structurally defined element

Definitions

  • This invention relates to non-woven sheet material and, more particularly, to such material wherein matted, structural fibers are bound together by an extensible polymeric binder.
  • An object of the present invention is to provide a new sheet material of the type in which matted, structural fibers are held together by an extensible polymeric binder.
  • a further object is to provide such a material having much greater scuff resistance than possessed by heretofore known sheet materials of this type.
  • a still further object is to provide a new sheet material having great scufi resistance combined with satisfactory tear and tensile strengths, flex-life, uniform extensibility, and uniformity of properties as a function of direction.
  • sheet material comprising, by weight, 20% to 85% of non-woven, matted structural fibers and 80% to of an extensible polymeric binder binding the fibers together, the sheet having a surface layer wherein the fibers are substantially all less than 0.2 denier/filament, and, preferably, less than 0.01 denier/filament, and a base layer wherein the fibers are substantially all greater than 1.0 denier/filament or greater.
  • sheet material as characterized above not only has completely satisfactory tear and tensile strengths, flex-life, and uniform extensibility but possesses scuff resistance .to a notable and unexpected degree. This latter attribute persists in the sheet material through the widest variations in the composition of the polymeric binder or the type of material used for the structural fibers and seemingly is accounted for by the combination of the extremely fine structural fibers at and near the surface of the sheet and the coarse fibers forming a base layer. If desired, sheet material highly scufli resistant on both sides can be obtained simply by providing a layer of fine fibers bound together with the polymeric binder on both sides of the so-called base layer "ice of coarse structural fibers bound together with the polymeric binder.
  • the structural fibers com prise 30% to 70% by weight of the sheet material and the polymeric binder 70% to 30%, and the structural fibers are fibers of a synthetic linear condensation poly mer.
  • the sheet material of this invention can be prepared in many difierent ways, using techniques well known in the art.
  • the structural fibers in non-Woven, matted form, i. e., in the form of webs, mats, or felts, are brought into intimate contact with the extensible polymeric binder by' any suitable means such as impregnation from a solution or dispersion of the binder, or simple mixing where the polymeric binder is used in fibrous or particulate form.
  • the mats can be prepared in a number of ways as by paper-making techniques, wool-carding, or deposition from an air stream.
  • mixtures of fibers of various types can .he used and the fibers can be of different lengths and diameters, always providing the structural fibers in the mat which is .to form the base layer, are substantially all greater than 1.0 denier/filament and those in the mat which are to form the surface layer, are substantially all less than 0.2 denier/filament and, preferably, less than 0.01 denier/filament.
  • mixtures of binders can be used.
  • the present invention comprises both impermeable and permeable sheet material which latter may be a leather-like product of the type disclosed in the aforementioned U. S. application :Serial No. 326,360.
  • the type of product depends on the degree .of consolidation achieved in the step wherein the matted structural fibers and binder are consolidated. If complete consolidation is achieved by either solvent .or thermal means, the latter usually with pressure, an impermeable material results. :On the other hand, where incomplete consolidation is achieved by thermal means, a permeable material will be obtained. Conveniently, pressure is used in the partial consolidation and spacers or shims are employed to prevent complete consolidation.
  • Permeable sheet material can also be prepared in several different ways even though the structural fiber/ binder mixture is completely consolidated. This can be :done, for example, by incorporating a pore-forming fibrous or particulate component in the mixture and then, after consolidation of the fiber/binder by either solvent or thermal means, with or without pressure, .extracting this pore-forming component by means of a preferential solvent therefor which is a non-solvent for the structural fibers and binder.
  • This method of preparing a permeable product is more fully disclosed and claimed in Piccard and Graham U. S. application .Serial 'No. 301, 603, .filed July 29, 1952.
  • Another method is to prepare consolidated sheet material of relatively nonextensible fibers thoroughly impregnated with a relatively extensible binder, and then stretching and finally relaxing the sheet material.
  • This procedure is more particularly described and claimed in V. L. Sirnril U. S. application Serial No. 318,732, filed November 4, 1952.
  • Such material can also be prepared from consolidated sheet material of liquid swellable structural fibers and a binder therefor, by swelling the structural fibers, setting the binder while the fibers remain swollen, and finally drying to shrink the fibers.
  • This procedure is more fully disclosed andclaimed in .T. C. Richards U. S. application Serial No. 325,689, filed December 12, 1952, now abandoned.
  • the polymeric binder can be used in filmform except in the instance where permeable sheet material is being prepared by incomplete consolidation. Plies of the fine and coarse structural fiber mats and the binder in film-form are simply consolidated using solvent or thermal techniques with or without applied pressure.
  • the permeable sheet material constitutes a preferred embodiment of this invention since such material is of particular utility in the important leather replacement field where its superior wearing comfort, good tensile strength, and high scuif resistance makes it of particular significance.
  • the'permeable sheet material will contain preferably, on a total weight basis, 30% to 70% of structural fibers and 70% to 30% of binder and will have a volume percent of interconnecting void space uniformly distributed throughout which is at least equal to 3000 (weight percent fiber) 30 and no greater than 70%.
  • Such sheet material is of outstanding utility in the leather replacement field.
  • a particularly preferred form of permeable sheet material which possesses the properties of genuine leather to an extraordinary degree and, hence, is useful in the extremely demanding leather garment field, is that containing, on a total weight basis, 40% to 60%, and especially about 50%, of structural fibers and 60% to 40%, and especially about 50%, of binder and having a volume percent of interconnecting void space uniformly distributed throughout which is equal to 3000 '(weight percent fiber)- -(25i5).
  • the impermeable sheet material having little or no interconnecting void space is outstanding for uses where toughness, impermeability, and high scufi resistance are at a premium, such as in luggage, womens handbags, tarpaulin substitutes, beltings, shoe soles, and the like.
  • the permeable sheet material containing the above described uniformly distributed interconnecting void space is outstanding for those uses where its ability to. breathe is critical, 'e. g., protective clothing such as gloves, jackets, and especially shoe uppers.
  • the sheet material of this invention can vary in thick ness from the thinnest material it is possible to make up to any thickness at all. However, it would be unusual to exceed a thickness range of from 1 mil to 500 mils and generally the sheet material will be considerably in excess of'25 mils in thickness.
  • the so-called surface layer containing the fine fibers usually will range from 3 to 15 mils in thickness.
  • the permeable sheet material it will conventionally be of such thickness asto weigh between 5 and 20 oz./sq. yd. with the preferred material ranging in weight from 8 to 12 oz./ sq. yd.
  • the surface layer of the permeable material will usually range from 3 to 15 mils in thickness and, preferably, will be of the order of 6 mils in thickness.
  • the dividing line between layers may not be sharp and, more usually, the sheet material will comprise a surface layer of fine fibers and binder, a base layer of coarse fibers and binder, and between the two a narrow zone wherein coarse and fine fibers in mixture are distributed through the binder .with the fine fibers predominating On the side adjacent the surface layer and the izoarse fibers predominating on the side adjacent the base ayer.
  • Fig. l is an enlarged cross section of an assembly of mats of coarse and fine fibers, separated from one another;
  • Fig. 2 is an enlarged cross section of the final sheet material showing the combined mats with a narrow zone indicated wherein the coarse and fine fibers are somewhat intermingled.
  • the sheet material illustrated in the drawing is specific to that embodiment of the invention where both the upper and lower surfaces of the sheet material have a layer of fine fibers.
  • the invention is equally applicable to sheet material wherein only one of the two surfaces has a layer of fine fibers, that surface being the one exhibiting the improved scuff resistance.
  • the relative amounts of fine and coarse structural fibers can vary greatly in the instant sheet material and clearly will vary depending upon the relative thickness of the base and surface layers. In general, the fine structural fibers will be in the decided minority, e. g., from 5% to 30% of the total weight of structural fibers.
  • the sheet material of this invention whether permeable or non-permeable, can be prepared so as to exhibit uniform strength and extensibility in all directions or not, as desired, depending on the randomness or degree of order of the fiber components.
  • sheet material wherein the structural fibers are random in their distribution with respect to each other will exhibit essentially uniform strength and extensibility in all directions.
  • the structural fibers bear ordered relationships space-wise to each other, the sheet material will exhibit non-uniform extensibility and strength with the maximum amount of the former occurring in the direction in which the structural fibers are least ordered and vice versa for the latter.
  • Elongation values are reported as percentage of the original length and are obtained during the same test and represent .themaximum elongation incurred in the strip sample being tested.
  • Modulus values which are also obtained with the same type tester in accordance with ASTM test procedure 13-63 8-461, are expressed in units of lb./sq. in. and actually represent the modulus of elasticity in tension, e. g., the stiffness. A higher modulus indicates a stiffer membrane.
  • Example I A dispersion of 4.1 parts of 19.3 micron diameter (three denier/filament), half-inch long, p-olyhexamethyleneadipamide fiber in l6,000 parts of water is formed into a mat by deposition on a Wire screen according to paper-- making techniques, the screen dimensions being such as to give adry weightof the mat of about 6 oz./sq'.- yd. After drying, at similar mat was likewise prepared from a dispersion of one part of 0.1 micron diameter (0.00008 denier/filament) polyhexamethyleneadipamide fibers about A inch long in 3,900 parts of water.
  • the two mats were then plied to give a single compound mat which was then plied with a similar compound mat to obtain a final composite mat made up' of two" inside coarse structural fiber layers with two fine structural fiber layers on the outside.
  • the fine structural fibers constituted 19.6% of the total fiber weight.
  • the composite mat was impregnated with an equal weight of a 100/60 blend of polyvinyl chloride/di-Z-ethylhexylphthalate dispersed at 10% concentration in a 98/2 tetrahydrofuran/dimethylformamide blend.
  • the freshly impre nated mat was then coagulated by submerging in water, dried, and finally pressed for 10 minutes at 160 C. and 156 lb./sq. in.
  • the permeable leatherlike sheet material which was about 30 mils thick and weighed 13.1 oz./sq. yd., was found to exhibit a tensile strength of 3136 lb./sq. in., an elongation of 24%, a modulus of 21,778, lb./sq. in., a tongue-tear strength of 4.0 lb. and to resist about 350,000 Schildknecht flexes before breakdown. It exhibited excellent scuff resistance and was greatly superior in this respect to similar products made without use of the low denier fiber topcoats.
  • the mats after impregnation in the binder dispersion, were immersed in a 50/ 50 weight percent mixture of methanol and acetic acid to coagulate the binder.
  • the scuff or abrasion resistance i. e., resistance to surface fuzzing upon repeated abrasions, referred to in the following examples was determined in a simple test instrument comprising a non-rotatable, 6-inch diameter, l-inch wide wheel on the periphery of which was placed a sample of the sheet material to be tested and a 4-inch diameter, l-inch thick felt disc mounted so as to rotate about an off-center axis resulting therefor in an eccentric motion and so arranged that at its maximum displacement the felt wheel abraded strongly against the sample mounted on the larger non-rotatable wheel.
  • a single rotation of the off-center wheel is referred to as a scuff.
  • non-permeable sheet materials which in the same apparatus exhibited excessive fuzzing after only aboutv 25 scufis. These various sheet materials exhibit on' the average a Schiltknecht flex-like of at least one million flexes before noticeable surface failure.
  • Example II Three plied non-woven carded mats of 2% inch long, 3 denier-filament polyhexamethyleneadipamide fibers were topcoated on one surface with a non-woven mat of fine denier (less than 0.01 denier/filament) polyhexamethyleneadipamide fibers, the fine diameter filaments constituting 17% of the total structural fibers by weight.
  • the resultant plied mat was treated with the abovedescribed wetting agent composition, dried, and impregnated with the above-described polychloroprene binder composition to a 62% weight level based on the total impregnated plied mat.
  • Example IV Three non-woven fibrous mats of 2% inch long, 3 denier/filament polyhexamethyleneadipamide fibers were prepared, plied, treated with the above-described wetting solution, dried and then impregnated with a polychloroprene impregnating dispersion similar to that described The thus impregnated plied mat was then plied with a non-woven mat of the line denier polyhexamethyleneadipamide fibers which constituted 21% by weight of the total structural fibers, and the thus plied mat again impregnated with the 25% solids, polychloroprene impregnating dispersion.
  • the total amount of the polychloroprene binder was 62.4% of the total impregnated plied mat. By this technique the total percentage of the binder in the surface layer was decreased but the strength of the base structure was maintained. The end product exhibited excellent scuff resistance.
  • Example V Three non-woven fibrous mats of 2% inch long, 3 denier/filament polyhexamethyleneadipamide fibers were plied and a surface layer of non-woven polyethylene terephthalate fibers less than 0.01 denier/filament was applied thereto, the latter constituting 20% by weight of the total structural fiber components.
  • the thus plied mat was treated with the above referred to wetting agent solution, dried, and impregnated with the polychloroprene dispersion of Example II. After drying, it was found that the binder component represented 56.6% of the total composition. After pressing as before and stretching 40% in both dimensions of the plane of the plied mat there was obtained a permeable sheet material exhibiting excellent scuff resistance.
  • Example VI A non-woven fibrous mat of 2% inch long, 3- denier/filament polyhexamethyleneadipamide fibers was plied with another such mat prepared from l /z-inch long fibers and the two plied mats finally plied with 2 mats of polyethylene terephthalate fibers less than 1.01 denier/ filament, the latter constituting 47% by weight of the total structural fiber components.
  • the thus plied mats were treated with the Wetting agent, dried, and then impregnated with the polychloroprene dispersion of Example II to give 59.4% binder component by weight of the total product. After drying, pressing, and stretching 40% in each of the dimensions of the plane of the sheet, there was thus obtained a permeable sheet material exhibiting excellent scufi resistance.
  • Example VII Three non-woven fibrous mats of 2 /2 inch long, 3 denier/filament polyhexamethyleneadipamide fibers were plied and impregnated with the polychloroprene disper sion of Example 11.
  • a non-woven fibrous mat of the fine diameter (less than 0.01 denier/filament) polyethylene terephthalate fibers was similarly impregnated in a solids dispersion of the same type.
  • the plied impregnated three-layer bottom mat and the impregnated surface mat were then combined, wrung together, set up, washed and dried. After pressing as before and stretching in each of the two dimensions of the plane of the sheet product, there was obtained a permeable sheet material exhibiting excellent scuff resistance.
  • the fine diameter surface layer fibers constitute 11.5% of the total structural fiber components and the end product contains 52.5% binder.
  • Example VIII Three non-woven fibrous mats of 2 /2 inch long, 3 denier/filament polyhexamethyleneadipamide fibers were plied and impregnated with the polychloroprene dispersion of Example II, set up, washed and dried. A nonwoven mat of less than 0.01 denier/filament polyethylene terephthalate fibers (20.9% of the total fibers) was then placed over the base and the whole plied mat again impregnatedto give a total of 80% binder in the end product. After drying and pressing as before and stretching 40% in each of the two dimensions of the plied mat, there was obtained a sheet material exhibiting excellent scufi resistance.
  • Example IX Three non-woven fibrous mats of 2 /2 inch long, 3 denier/filament polyhexamethyleneadipamide fibers were plied and a surface ply of non-woven polyhexamethyleneadipamide fibers of less than 0.01 denier/filament was applied thereto, the fine fibers constituting 30% by weight of the total structural fiber component.
  • the thus plied mat was impregnated as before with the polychloroprene impregnating dispersion of Example ii containing an added dispersed color pigment.
  • the resulting impregnated mat was dried and pressed at 135 C. for 15 minutes using 150 mil shims.
  • the pigment and binder amount to 57% by Weight of the total sheet product which is penmeable and exhibits excellent scuff resistance.
  • the same results were obtained using varying proportions of the fine diameter structural fibers and pigments and binder composition with various size shims.
  • the sheet materials ranging from 53.3% to 63% pigment and binder and having from 12% to 18.3% of the fine diameter structural fibers, all exhibited excellent scuff resistance and varied in thickness from 80-150 mils. It is to be noted that a decrease in the thickness of the shims used in pressing lowers the permeability of the end sheet material appreciably with that obtained using 80 mil shims being essentially impermeable.
  • Example X Two mats prepared as described in Example IX were placed back to back after impregnation and pressed under various pressures. They were then delarninated, i. e., split at the junction, to give .two mats each having a smooth topside containing the fine denier fibers (31.4
  • Example XI Fibrous non-Woven mats of 2 /2 inch long, 3 denier/ filament polyhexamethyleneadiparnide fibers were plied and a similar mat of less than 0.01 denier/filament fibers applied to the top thereof. These fine diameter fibers constituted 11.6% of the total structural fiber component.
  • the thus plied mat was impregnated with a binder' solu- 1 tion of 7.8 parts of a commercially available high molecular weight polyvinyl chloride and 5.2 parts of dioctyl phthalate in about 180 parts of a 2/98 dimethylformamide/.tetrahydrofuran mixture to give 46.1% binder 'by weight of the whole,
  • the binder was coagulated by immersing the impregnated mat in water.
  • the dried impregnated mat was pressed at 500 lb./sq. in. and 140 C. for 2 minutes and then cooled under pressure to below 90 C.
  • the mat after pressing, was swelled, swelled and stretched, and stretched to give a permeable sheet material exhibiting excellent scuff resistance and a flex-life of about 3 /2 million Schiltknecht fiexes.
  • binder component ranging from 45.1% to 48% by weight of the total with the fine diameter polyhexamethyleneadiparnide fibers constituting from 16.5 to 18% of the total structural fiber component.
  • Example XII Three mats of non-woven fibrous polyhexarnethyleneadiparnide fibers 2 /2 inches long and 3 denier/filament terial similarly prepared having 46.4% polyvinyl chloride/dioctyl ph-thalate binder wherein the fine diameter polyethylene terephthalate fibers comprises 11.8% of the total structural fiber component.
  • the present invention broadly resides in sheet material comp-rising, by weight, 20% to 85% of mat-ted structural fibers and to 15% of an extensible polymeric binder binding the fibers together, the sheet material having a surface layer wherein the fibers are substantially all less than 0.2 denier/filament and a base layer wherein the fibers are substantially greater than 1.0 denier/filament.
  • the structural fibers used in the sheet material of this invention can be of the widest variety, the only important limitation being that some fibers are not available for use as the fine structural fibers simply because they cannot be obtained in thicknesses of 0.2 denier/filament or less.
  • Suitable fibers include fibers both of natural origin and synthetic origin, including rayon-type fibers, i. e., shaped cellulose derivative or regenerated cellulose fibers, and fibers from both the synthetic addition and condensation-type polymers, whether oriented or not. Blends of the various types of fibers can be used.
  • the most outstanding sheet material is that wherein all the structural fibers are synthetic linear condensation polymers.
  • the structural fibers should not be soluble in the solvent used to efifect consolidation of the binder/fiber mixtures although it is permissible that the fibers be partially swollen by the solvent.
  • the structural fibers and the polymeric binder should not be solubl in the solvent used to extract the pre-mixed fibrous or particulate component of the blend which is to be removed to form the requisite pores.
  • the structural fibers should preferably not rnelt or deform below about 50 F., and most preferably about 200 F., above the flow temperature of the polymeric binder. It is preferred that both the coarse and fine structural fibers be of the same type to simplify problems in selection of the binder.
  • the pore forming components be of the same type in both the mats forming the surface layer and the base layer of the sheet material. Because of undue adhesion caused by surface effects arising in the fine structural fibers, it is preferred not to use the thermal partial consolidation procedure for forming pores in the surface layer of the permeable type sheet material but rather to use the solvent extraction procedure for the surface layer with the base layer being prepared by either procedure.
  • Fibers of addition polymers suitable for use in this invention include the polymer of ethylene, polymers and copolymers of the alpha-methylenecarboxylic "acids and derivatives and precursors thereof, including copolymers with other addition polymerizable monomers, e. g., acrylonitrile polymers and copolymers. Because of their generally better fiber properties, e. g., higher strength, and the resultant superior properties of the mats prepared therefrom, the preferred structural fibers are the synthetic linear condensation polymers, whether oriented or unoriented but orientable, e.
  • the polyamides, polyesters, polyesteramides, or mixtures or blends thereof such as the dibasic aeid/diamine or amino acid polyamides, the dibasic acid/diol or 'hydroxy acid/polyesters, or the intermixed polyester/polyamide products by now well known in the art and described in greater detail in U. S. Patents 2,071,250, -251, -253, 2,130,948, 2,224,037, 2,572,844, and the like.
  • a particularly suitable class of such synthetic linear and condensation polymers because of good colddrawability and the readier availability of intermediates necessary thereto, are the polyamides prepared from the dibasic carboxylic acids, or amide-forming derivatives thereof, and essentially equimolar proportionsof amino compounds having two amino hydrogen-bearing amine groups separated by divalent organic radicals, free of active hydrogen and preferably solely hydrocarbonun nature.
  • Specific examples of such linear condensation polymers include polytetramethylenesebacamide, polyethyleneterephthalamide, and polydodecamethyleneadrpamide, including the especially preferred polyhexamethyleneadipamide.
  • Specific examples of such polyamides include poly-D- or L or DL-alanine, poly-D-, L- or DL-leucine, and the especially preferred poly-epsilon-aminocaproic acid.
  • Aiiother similarly suitable group of synthenc hnear, orientable, condensation polymers are the polyesters, i. e., those polymers containing a plurality of recurringmtrachain ester or acyloxy linkages, particularly those containing a plurality of recurring intra-ch-ain carboxyester linkages.
  • Specific examples of such polymers which can be prepared, for instance, by the intermolecular condensation between essentially equimolar proportions of dib'asic acids and dihydroxy-hydrogen-bearing polyols, particularly those Which apart from the carboxyl and hydroxyl groups are solely hydrocarbon, include polydodecamethylene adipate, polyethylene sebacate, and polyhexamethylene oxalate. 7
  • linear condensation polyesters are those prepared from the alcoholic hydroxyl hydrogen-bearing carboxylic acids, preferably those wherein the alcoholic hydrogen-bearing hydroxyl group is on the terminal carbon of the carboxylic acid chain, e. g., the alpha-hydroxyca'rboxylic acids, the epsilonhydroxycarboxylic acids, and the like.
  • Specific examples of such polyesters include poly-D-, or L-, or DL- lactic acid, polyD-, or L-, or 'DL-mandelic acid, and polyepsilon-hydroxycaproic acid.
  • the length of the fibers is not critical and they can vary from as little as 0.01 inch (10 mils) up to 8 inches in length or greater.
  • the fiber length is determined as much by the method of preparing the matted layers of fibers and the length of fiber conveniently available as by any differences in properties that can be elfected in the resulting sheet material through the use of fibers of any particular length.
  • papermaking techniques which are the most preferable from the standpoint of quickness, convenience, high rate of production, and cheapness, are only applicable to fibers no longer than 0.5 inch.
  • air-blowing techniques also both convenient and reasonably cheap, are usually limited to the use of fibers no greater than 1.5 inches in length.
  • Fibers of greater length necessitate preparation of the non-woven mats by wool-carding techniques which are somewhat more costly and less convenient since this process can only produce non-woven mats of limited weight per pass.
  • the relatively longer fibers i. e., those of at least 1.5 inches in length are the preferred coarse structural fibers because they give non-Woven mats having greater form stability which is advantageous during the preparation of the sheet material and because they give tougher sheet material.
  • these fine fibers are generally formed by extruding and air-blowing on a screen target and unless conditions are carefully adjusted the fiber lengths will not be uniform. It is possible to form a surface layer of these fine structural fibers directly by using a non-Woven mat of coarse structural fibers as the target instead of the conventional screen target.
  • coarse structural fibers ranging from 0.5 to 4 inches long, more particularly, from 2.0 to 2.5 inches long, the fibers exceeding 1.0 denier/filament but being less than 60 denier/filament. F or ease of handling and the greater pliability and toughness of the sheet material prepared therefrom, it is preferred to use coarse structural fibers of from one to nine denier/filament. Fine structural fibers in the approximate range of 0.05 inch up to 1.5 inches are preferred.
  • the polymeric binder is preferably chemically dissimilar to the structural fibers being used and also is preferably strong and pliable, especially the latter.
  • the polymeric binder can be and often preferably is a polycomponent structure, e. g., copolymers, frequently preferably plasticized. Because of the greater ease in handling, tensile strength and wear resistance arising from their use, it is preferred to use as the polymeric binder those synthetic polymers which are chemically dissimilar to the structural fibers; which flow at least 50 F., and preferably at least 200 F., below the deformation temperature of the structural fibers; and which in film form 11 exhibit tensile strengths of at least 500, and preferably at least 1000 lb./sq.
  • elongations of at least 100%, and preferably at least 200%, and moduli no greater than 25,000, and preferably no more than 5,000 lb./ sq. in. with the product of said tensile strength and elongation being-at least 100,000.
  • the polymeric binder will be a synthetic linear addition polymer of the above given set of properties and the structural fibers will be formed from a synthetic linear condensation polymer.
  • the binder will contain one or more modifiers, in particular plasticizers for the type binder component polymer being used.
  • Other modifying agents equally well known in the art may also be present in the binder component, such as dyes, pigments, fillers, and the like. 7
  • the chemically dissimilar polymers useful as possible binder components include broadly synthetic addition polymers, synthetic condensation polymers which are not chemically similar to the fiber polymer, and natural and modified natural products, e. g., cellulose acetate, cyanoethyl cellulose, and the like. Because of their readier availability, better properties, and appreciably greater ease of handling, the addition polymers are preferred. A particularly outstanding group are the addition polymers containing in combined form the ethylenically unsaturated monomers including both the monoand dienetype monomers.
  • Suitable examples of such polymers include the lower monoene and diene solely hydrocarbon polymers such as polybutene-2, and the like; tetrafiuoroethylene/ ethylene, tetrafluoroethylene/chlorotrifluoroethylene, and the like.
  • addition polymeric binders are the vinylidene polymers and copolymers, including both the monoene and diene types.
  • polymers include the various vinylidene hydrocarbon polymers such as butadiene/ styrene, polyethylene, isobutylene, polyisoprene, both synthetic and natural; the various negatively substituted polymers such as the vinylidene halide including vinyl halide polymers, e. g., polyvinylidene chloride, polyvinyl chloride, and polyvinylfiuoride; derivatives of such polymers such as the halogenated vinyl and vinylidene polymers, e.
  • vinylidene hydrocarbon polymers such as butadiene/ styrene, polyethylene, isobutylene, polyisoprene, both synthetic and natural
  • the various negatively substituted polymers such as the vinylidene halide including vinyl halide polymers, e. g., polyvinylidene chloride, polyvinyl chloride, and polyvinylfiuoride
  • derivatives of such polymers such as the halogenated vinyl and vinyl
  • chlorinated polyethylene and chlorinated polyvinyl chloride
  • various vinylidene polymers wherein one or both of the indicated free valences of the Z-carbon of the vinylidene group are bonded directly to carboxyl groups or groups hydrolyzable to carboxyl groups either directly to the acyl carbon or the oxy oxygen thereof, such as polymers of the various vinylidene esters, including vinyl acetate and ethylidene diacetate; the vinylidene carboxylic acids and their derivatives such as acrylic acid, methyl methacrylate, acrylonitrile, and methacrylamide.
  • the various copolymers of such vinylidene monomers including specifically the various monoene/diene copolymers of this class such as the 2,3-dichlorobutadiene-1,3/2-chlorobutadiene1,3 copolymers; the various monoene/vinylidene copolymers such as the commercially important vinyl and vinylidene chloride copolymers, e. g., vinyl chloride/vinyl acetate, vinyl chloride/vinylidene chloride, and vinyl chloride/vinyl acetate/acrylonitrile copolymers; the various vinylidene hydrocarbon negatively sub- 12 stituted vinylidene copolymers, e.
  • the various monoene/diene copolymers of this class such as the 2,3-dichlorobutadiene-1,3/2-chlorobutadiene1,3 copolymers
  • the various monoene/vinylidene copolymers such as the commercially important vinyl and vinylidene
  • plasticizers now well known in the art, for the binder polymers.
  • Suitable examples of these include the higher molecular weight monoor dicarboxylic acid/alcohol or/polyolesters such as glycerol monooleate, glycerol sebacate, and ethylene octanoate; or the lower molecular weight polyesters and polyethers such as the polyalkylene oxides and their esters, e. g., polyethylene oxide, methoxypolyethyleneglycol; and the lower molecular weight condensation polyesters such as polyethyleneglycol adipate.
  • the higher molecular weight monoor dicarboxylic acid/alcohol or/polyolesters such as glycerol monooleate, glycerol sebacate, and ethylene octanoate
  • polyesters and polyethers such as the polyalkylene oxides and their esters, e. g., polyethylene oxide, methoxypolyethyleneglycol
  • the lower molecular weight condensation polyesters such as polyethyleneglycol adip
  • the critical factor in the choice of a preferred polymeric binder is the fact that is should not be chemically similar to the structural fiber. This is quite important since it has been found that where the polymeric binder is chemically similar to the structural fiber, the resulting sheet material, while occasionally adequate in tensile strength, is generally deficient in drape, hand, and flex-life and more importantly, is usually particularly deficient in tear strength.
  • a convenient rule for characterizing the chemically dissimilar polymeric binders is that they be incompatible in the melt with the structural fibers.
  • the sheet material of this invention has been described as comprising a surface layer of fine fibers and a base layer of coarse fibers. Where high scufi' resistance is desired on both sides of the base layer, which is not usually the case, then a surface layer of fine fibers is provided on both sides of the base layer of coarse fibers. Manifestly, the present invention is equally applicable to sheet material regardless of whether it has the surface layer of fine fibers on one or both sides of thebase layer.
  • Color can be imparted to the sheet material of this invention by incorporating dyes or pigments in the polymeric binder, as previously mentioned, or by dyeing after finishing or using pre-dyed or pre-pigmented structural fibers.
  • colored sheet material is prepared by the use of dyed or pigmented structural fibers or by incorporating the coloring material in the polymeric binder, particularly in the case of the permeable, leatherlike. sheet material, since the sheet material is then uniformly colored throughout and thus, unlike colored natu- 13 ral leather, will not exhibit any marked or undesirable color change if scuffed or abraded.
  • An advantage of this invention is that it provides sheet material having great scufi resistance combined with satisfactory tear and tensile strengths, flex-life, and uniform extensibility.
  • a particularly advantageous form of the invention is that wherein the sheet material exhibits leather-like properties, the great scufi resistance of the sheet material making it outstanding, particularly, for use in shoe uppers.
  • Sheet material comprising, by weight 20% to 85% of matted structural fibers of synthetic linear condensation polymer bound together by 80% to 15% of an eX- tensible polymeric binder of synthetic addition polymer which flows at least 50 F. below the deformation temperature of the structural fibers, from to 50% by weight of said structural fibers being of fine size from less than 0.01 up to 0.2 denier per filament and the other structural fibers being of a coarse size from 1 to 60 denier per filament, said sheet having a surface layer of at least 3 mils in thickness wherein the fibers are sub- 14 stantially all of said fine size and a base layer wherein the fibers are substantially all of said coarse size.
  • Sheet material as set forth in claim 1 which contains a volume percent of interconnecting void space distributed therethrough at least equal to 3000 (Weight percent fiber)* and not greater than 70%.

Description

Oct. 2, 1956 B. GRAHAM NON-WOVEN SHEET MATERIAL Filed April 14. 1953 FISI.
FINE FIBERS S R E B F E S R A O C ONE OFINTERMINGLED FINE ND COARSE FIBERS LAYER OF COARSE FIBERS ZONE OF INTERMINGLED FINE AND COARSE FIBERS SURFACE LAYER OF FINE FIBERS INVENTOR BOYNTON GRAHAM w.xm1h% ATTORNEY United States Patent NON-WOVEN SHEET MATERIAL Boynton Graham, Wilmington, Del., assignor to E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Company, Wilmington, Del., a corporation of Delaware Application April 14, 1953, Serial No. 348,815
Claims. (Cl. 154-46) This invention relates to non-woven sheet material and, more particularly, to such material wherein matted, structural fibers are bound together by an extensible polymeric binder.
Certain types of sheet material possessing outstanding properties have been prepared in which matted, structural fibers are held together by a polymeric binder. One type of such material which is disclosed and claimed in Graham and Piccard U. S. application Serial No. 326,359, filed December 16, 1952, now Patent No. 2,715,591, uses undrawn but orientable fibers of synthetic linear polymers as the structural fibers. It possesses exceptionally high permanent elongation or extensibility with essentially no retractive tendencies, as well as great impact toughness. Another type of such material which is disclosed and claimed in Graham and Piccard U. S. application Serial No. 326,360, also filed December 16, 1952, now Patent No. 2,715,588, is permeable and has a certain amount of interconnecting void space distributed through itand combines the essential properties of genuine leather to a deree heretofore unattained in a synthetic product.
An object of the present invention is to provide a new sheet material of the type in which matted, structural fibers are held together by an extensible polymeric binder. A further object is to provide such a material having much greater scuff resistance than possessed by heretofore known sheet materials of this type. A still further object is to provide a new sheet material having great scufi resistance combined with satisfactory tear and tensile strengths, flex-life, uniform extensibility, and uniformity of properties as a function of direction. Other objects will be apparent from the description of the invention given hereinafter.
The above objects are accomplished according to the present invention by forming sheet material comprising, by weight, 20% to 85% of non-woven, matted structural fibers and 80% to of an extensible polymeric binder binding the fibers together, the sheet having a surface layer wherein the fibers are substantially all less than 0.2 denier/filament, and, preferably, less than 0.01 denier/filament, and a base layer wherein the fibers are substantially all greater than 1.0 denier/filament or greater.
It has been found that sheet material as characterized above not only has completely satisfactory tear and tensile strengths, flex-life, and uniform extensibility but possesses scuff resistance .to a notable and unexpected degree. This latter attribute persists in the sheet material through the widest variations in the composition of the polymeric binder or the type of material used for the structural fibers and seemingly is accounted for by the combination of the extremely fine structural fibers at and near the surface of the sheet and the coarse fibers forming a base layer. If desired, sheet material highly scufli resistant on both sides can be obtained simply by providing a layer of fine fibers bound together with the polymeric binder on both sides of the so-called base layer "ice of coarse structural fibers bound together with the polymeric binder.
In a preferred embodiment, the structural fibers com prise 30% to 70% by weight of the sheet material and the polymeric binder 70% to 30%, and the structural fibers are fibers of a synthetic linear condensation poly mer.
The sheet material of this invention can be prepared in many difierent ways, using techniques well known in the art. The structural fibers in non-Woven, matted form, i. e., in the form of webs, mats, or felts, are brought into intimate contact with the extensible polymeric binder by' any suitable means such as impregnation from a solution or dispersion of the binder, or simple mixing where the polymeric binder is used in fibrous or particulate form. The mats can be prepared in a number of ways as by paper-making techniques, wool-carding, or deposition from an air stream. Usually, it is more convenient to prepare mats of the coarse fibers and fine fibers separately and then, either before or after impregnation with the binder, to ply them. Particularly, with respect to the mats of coarse structural fibers, several such mats can be prepared and plied to give a thicker, heavier, and stronger mat, and, subsequently, a thicker and stronger sheet material. An alternate procedure is to prepare the mat of coarse fibers and then form a layer or mat of fine fibers directly on the coarse fiber mat.
In the preparation of the mats, mixtures of fibers of various types can .he used and the fibers can be of different lengths and diameters, always providing the structural fibers in the mat which is .to form the base layer, are substantially all greater than 1.0 denier/filament and those in the mat which are to form the surface layer, are substantially all less than 0.2 denier/filament and, preferably, less than 0.01 denier/filament. Similarly, mixtures of binders can be used.
The present invention comprises both impermeable and permeable sheet material which latter may be a leather-like product of the type disclosed in the aforementioned U. S. application :Serial No. 326,360. The type of product depends on the degree .of consolidation achieved in the step wherein the matted structural fibers and binder are consolidated. If complete consolidation is achieved by either solvent .or thermal means, the latter usually with pressure, an impermeable material results. :On the other hand, where incomplete consolidation is achieved by thermal means, a permeable material will be obtained. Conveniently, pressure is used in the partial consolidation and spacers or shims are employed to prevent complete consolidation.
Permeable sheet material can also be prepared in several different ways even though the structural fiber/ binder mixture is completely consolidated. This can be :done, for example, by incorporating a pore-forming fibrous or particulate component in the mixture and then, after consolidation of the fiber/binder by either solvent or thermal means, with or without pressure, .extracting this pore-forming component by means of a preferential solvent therefor which is a non-solvent for the structural fibers and binder. This method of preparing a permeable product is more fully disclosed and claimed in Piccard and Graham U. S. application .Serial 'No. 301, 603, .filed July 29, 1952. Another method is to prepare consolidated sheet material of relatively nonextensible fibers thoroughly impregnated with a relatively extensible binder, and then stretching and finally relaxing the sheet material. This procedure is more particularly described and claimed in V. L. Sirnril U. S. application Serial No. 318,732, filed November 4, 1952. Such material can also be prepared from consolidated sheet material of liquid swellable structural fibers and a binder therefor, by swelling the structural fibers, setting the binder while the fibers remain swollen, and finally drying to shrink the fibers. This procedure is more fully disclosed andclaimed in .T. C. Richards U. S. application Serial No. 325,689, filed December 12, 1952, now abandoned.
Although a solution or dispersion of polymeric binder or the polymeric binder in fibrous or particulate form will generally be used in preparing the sheet material of this invention, the polymeric binder can be used in filmform except in the instance where permeable sheet material is being prepared by incomplete consolidation. Plies of the fine and coarse structural fiber mats and the binder in film-form are simply consolidated using solvent or thermal techniques with or without applied pressure.
The permeable sheet material, no matter how achieved, constitutes a preferred embodiment of this invention since such material is of particular utility in the important leather replacement field where its superior wearing comfort, good tensile strength, and high scuif resistance makes it of particular significance. Because of the improved leather-like' properties, especially the ability to breathe, the'permeable sheet material will contain preferably, on a total weight basis, 30% to 70% of structural fibers and 70% to 30% of binder and will have a volume percent of interconnecting void space uniformly distributed throughout which is at least equal to 3000 (weight percent fiber) 30 and no greater than 70%. Such sheet material is of outstanding utility in the leather replacement field. A particularly preferred form of permeable sheet material which possesses the properties of genuine leather to an extraordinary degree and, hence, is useful in the extremely demanding leather garment field, is that containing, on a total weight basis, 40% to 60%, and especially about 50%, of structural fibers and 60% to 40%, and especially about 50%, of binder and having a volume percent of interconnecting void space uniformly distributed throughout which is equal to 3000 '(weight percent fiber)- -(25i5).
The impermeable sheet material having little or no interconnecting void space is outstanding for uses where toughness, impermeability, and high scufi resistance are at a premium, such as in luggage, womens handbags, tarpaulin substitutes, beltings, shoe soles, and the like. The permeable sheet material containing the above described uniformly distributed interconnecting void space is outstanding for those uses where its ability to. breathe is critical, 'e. g., protective clothing such as gloves, jackets, and especially shoe uppers.
The sheet material of this invention can vary in thick ness from the thinnest material it is possible to make up to any thickness at all. However, it would be unusual to exceed a thickness range of from 1 mil to 500 mils and generally the sheet material will be considerably in excess of'25 mils in thickness. The so-called surface layer containing the fine fibers usually will range from 3 to 15 mils in thickness. In the case of the permeable sheet material, it will conventionally be of such thickness asto weigh between 5 and 20 oz./sq. yd. with the preferred material ranging in weight from 8 to 12 oz./ sq. yd. The surface layer of the permeable material will usually range from 3 to 15 mils in thickness and, preferably, will be of the order of 6 mils in thickness.
While it is convenient to refer to base layer? and surface layer in describing the herein considered sheet material, such layers are hardly visually noticeable in the finished material. Further, in the plying of mats of coarse and fine fibers or in otherwise preparing the matted structural fibers, a certain intermingling of coarse and'fine fibers is practically inevitable. Thus, in discussing thicknesses of layers above, it will be understood that the dividing line between layers may not be sharp and, more usually, the sheet material will comprise a surface layer of fine fibers and binder, a base layer of coarse fibers and binder, and between the two a narrow zone wherein coarse and fine fibers in mixture are distributed through the binder .with the fine fibers predominating On the side adjacent the surface layer and the izoarse fibers predominating on the side adjacent the base ayer.
In the accompanying drawing there is illustrated more or less diagrammatically sheet material according to the present invention.
Fig. l is an enlarged cross section of an assembly of mats of coarse and fine fibers, separated from one another;
Fig. 2 is an enlarged cross section of the final sheet material showing the combined mats with a narrow zone indicated wherein the coarse and fine fibers are somewhat intermingled.
The sheet material illustrated in the drawing is specific to that embodiment of the invention where both the upper and lower surfaces of the sheet material have a layer of fine fibers. The invention is equally applicable to sheet material wherein only one of the two surfaces has a layer of fine fibers, that surface being the one exhibiting the improved scuff resistance.
The relative amounts of fine and coarse structural fibers can vary greatly in the instant sheet material and clearly will vary depending upon the relative thickness of the base and surface layers. In general, the fine structural fibers will be in the decided minority, e. g., from 5% to 30% of the total weight of structural fibers.
The sheet material of this invention whether permeable or non-permeable, can be prepared so as to exhibit uniform strength and extensibility in all directions or not, as desired, depending on the randomness or degree of order of the fiber components. Thus, sheet material wherein the structural fibers are random in their distribution with respect to each other will exhibit essentially uniform strength and extensibility in all directions. if, on the other hand, the structural fibers bear ordered relationships space-wise to each other, the sheet material will exhibit non-uniform extensibility and strength with the maximum amount of the former occurring in the direction in which the structural fibers are least ordered and vice versa for the latter.
The following examples in which all parts are by Weight unless otherwise stated, ilustrate specific embodiments of the invention. The Schiltknecht flexlife values mentioned in the examples are the number of flexes a sample of the sheet material undergoes before surface cracking in the Schiltknecht flex machine, which is de-: scribed in detail in Bulletin of Alfred Suter Co., 200 Fifth Avenue, New York, N. Y. Tongue-tear strength is reported in pounds and is a measure of the force necessary to continue an existing tear in the sheet material being tested. The values given are average values obtained in the manner of A'S'FM procedure D-39-39, using the Model TTB tester, manufactured by the Instron Engineering Corporation. Tensile strength is reported in units of lbs/sq. in. and represents the maximum load undergone by the sample under test when subjected to linear stress .in the plane of the sample strip in the same type tester. Elongation values are reported as percentage of the original length and are obtained during the same test and represent .themaximum elongation incurred in the strip sample being tested. Modulus values, which are also obtained with the same type tester in accordance with ASTM test procedure 13-63 8-461, are expressed in units of lb./sq. in. and actually represent the modulus of elasticity in tension, e. g., the stiffness. A higher modulus indicates a stiffer membrane.
Example I A dispersion of 4.1 parts of 19.3 micron diameter (three denier/filament), half-inch long, p-olyhexamethyleneadipamide fiber in l6,000 parts of water is formed into a mat by deposition on a Wire screen according to paper-- making techniques, the screen dimensions being such as to give adry weightof the mat of about 6 oz./sq'.- yd. After drying, at similar mat was likewise prepared from a dispersion of one part of 0.1 micron diameter (0.00008 denier/filament) polyhexamethyleneadipamide fibers about A inch long in 3,900 parts of water. The two mats were then plied to give a single compound mat which was then plied with a similar compound mat to obtain a final composite mat made up' of two" inside coarse structural fiber layers with two fine structural fiber layers on the outside. The fine structural fibers constituted 19.6% of the total fiber weight. The composite mat was impregnated with an equal weight of a 100/60 blend of polyvinyl chloride/di-Z-ethylhexylphthalate dispersed at 10% concentration in a 98/2 tetrahydrofuran/dimethylformamide blend. The freshly impre nated mat was then coagulated by submerging in water, dried, and finally pressed for 10 minutes at 160 C. and 156 lb./sq. in. using 70 mil shims. After splitting down the center the permeable leatherlike sheet material which was about 30 mils thick and weighed 13.1 oz./sq. yd., was found to exhibit a tensile strength of 3136 lb./sq. in., an elongation of 24%, a modulus of 21,778, lb./sq. in., a tongue-tear strength of 4.0 lb. and to resist about 350,000 Schildknecht flexes before breakdown. It exhibited excellent scuff resistance and was greatly superior in this respect to similar products made without use of the low denier fiber topcoats.
In Examples 11 to X, inclusive, below the nonwoven mats of structural fibers, prior to impregnation with the binder, were immersed in an aqueous solution containing 2% each of an octyl sodium sulfosuccinate and a sodium salt of an alkylbenzene sulfonic acid, both being commercially available wetting agents. After drying, the thus treated nonwoven mats were impregnated to the indicated weight loadings with a binder dispersion consisting of about: 1100 parts of a 50% aqueous alkaline dispersion of polychloroprene prepared in accordance with the process of U. S. 2,264,173; 70 parts of a commercially available vulcanizing dispersion containing about 25 parts of zinc oxide, 10 parts of hydroquinone monobenzylether, 1.4 parts of the sodium salt of a polyalkylnaphthylenesulfonic acid, and 33.6 parts of water; 150 parts of a commercially available stiffening agent believed to contain about 98% selected mineral oils, 1.6% sulfonated petroleum products, and 0.4% n-butyl alcohol; and about 35 parts of a satu= rated, aqueous solution of sodium silicate. The mats, after impregnation in the binder dispersion, were immersed in a 50/ 50 weight percent mixture of methanol and acetic acid to coagulate the binder. The pressing conditions used in Examples H to VIII, inclusive, were 135 C. for 15 minutes at pressures varying between 500 and 750 lb./ sq. in. After the pressure/heating cycle, the mats were allowed to cool under pressure to below 90 C.
The scuff or abrasion resistance, i. e., resistance to surface fuzzing upon repeated abrasions, referred to in the following examples was determined in a simple test instrument comprising a non-rotatable, 6-inch diameter, l-inch wide wheel on the periphery of which was placed a sample of the sheet material to be tested and a 4-inch diameter, l-inch thick felt disc mounted so as to rotate about an off-center axis resulting therefor in an eccentric motion and so arranged that at its maximum displacement the felt wheel abraded strongly against the sample mounted on the larger non-rotatable wheel. A single rotation of the off-center wheel is referred to as a scuff. All of the sheet materials described in the following examples wherein the fiber component of the surface layer consisted essentially of fine structural fibers, exhibited no apparent surface fuzzing after 100,000 scufi's in this apparatus. On the other hand, sheet materials sinilarly prepared from non-woven mats of polyhexamethyleneadipamide or polyethylene terephthalate 2% inch long, 3 deniers/filament fibers using the same type polymeric binder components resulted in permeable and swee en previously but containing 25% solids.
non-permeable sheet materials which in the same apparatus exhibited excessive fuzzing after only aboutv 25 scufis. These various sheet materials exhibit on' the average a Schiltknecht flex-like of at least one million flexes before noticeable surface failure.
Example II Three plied non-woven carded mats of 2% inch long, 3 denier-filament polyhexamethyleneadipamide fibers were topcoated on one surface with a non-woven mat of fine denier (less than 0.01 denier/filament) polyhexamethyleneadipamide fibers, the fine diameter filaments constituting 17% of the total structural fibers by weight. The resultant plied mat was treated with the abovedescribed wetting agent composition, dried, and impregnated with the above-described polychloroprene binder composition to a 62% weight level based on the total impregnated plied mat. After coagulation of the binder and drying, the impregnated plied mat was pressed and cooled as given above and finally stretched 40% in both dimensions of the plane of the mat. There was thus obtained a permeable sheet material exhibiting excellent scufi resistance.
Example HI Sheet materials similarly prepared in which the fine diameter polyhexamethyleneadipamide fibers of the surface layer constituted 22% and 23% by weight of the total structural fibers and the polychloroprene binder composition constituted, respectively, 63% and 51% by weight of the total impregnated plied mats likewise exhibited excellent scuff resistance,- but were less permeable than the material of Example II. After needle punching, respectively, 400 and 200 holes per square inch, the permeability of the sheet materials was found to be increased by, respectively, 200300% and while the scuff resistance remained essentially unchanged.
Example IV Three non-woven fibrous mats of 2% inch long, 3 denier/filament polyhexamethyleneadipamide fibers were prepared, plied, treated with the above-described wetting solution, dried and then impregnated with a polychloroprene impregnating dispersion similar to that described The thus impregnated plied mat was then plied with a non-woven mat of the line denier polyhexamethyleneadipamide fibers which constituted 21% by weight of the total structural fibers, and the thus plied mat again impregnated with the 25% solids, polychloroprene impregnating dispersion. The total amount of the polychloroprene binder was 62.4% of the total impregnated plied mat. By this technique the total percentage of the binder in the surface layer was decreased but the strength of the base structure was maintained. The end product exhibited excellent scuff resistance.
Example V Three non-woven fibrous mats of 2% inch long, 3 denier/filament polyhexamethyleneadipamide fibers were plied and a surface layer of non-woven polyethylene terephthalate fibers less than 0.01 denier/filament was applied thereto, the latter constituting 20% by weight of the total structural fiber components. The thus plied mat was treated with the above referred to wetting agent solution, dried, and impregnated with the polychloroprene dispersion of Example II. After drying, it was found that the binder component represented 56.6% of the total composition. After pressing as before and stretching 40% in both dimensions of the plane of the plied mat there was obtained a permeable sheet material exhibiting excellent scuff resistance.
Example VI A non-woven fibrous mat of 2% inch long, 3- denier/filament polyhexamethyleneadipamide fibers was plied with another such mat prepared from l /z-inch long fibers and the two plied mats finally plied with 2 mats of polyethylene terephthalate fibers less than 1.01 denier/ filament, the latter constituting 47% by weight of the total structural fiber components. The thus plied mats were treated with the Wetting agent, dried, and then impregnated with the polychloroprene dispersion of Example II to give 59.4% binder component by weight of the total product. After drying, pressing, and stretching 40% in each of the dimensions of the plane of the sheet, there was thus obtained a permeable sheet material exhibiting excellent scufi resistance.
Example VII Three non-woven fibrous mats of 2 /2 inch long, 3 denier/filament polyhexamethyleneadipamide fibers were plied and impregnated with the polychloroprene disper sion of Example 11. A non-woven fibrous mat of the fine diameter (less than 0.01 denier/filament) polyethylene terephthalate fibers was similarly impregnated in a solids dispersion of the same type. The plied impregnated three-layer bottom mat and the impregnated surface mat were then combined, wrung together, set up, washed and dried. After pressing as before and stretching in each of the two dimensions of the plane of the sheet product, there was obtained a permeable sheet material exhibiting excellent scuff resistance. The fine diameter surface layer fibers constitute 11.5% of the total structural fiber components and the end product contains 52.5% binder.
Example VIII Three non-woven fibrous mats of 2 /2 inch long, 3 denier/filament polyhexamethyleneadipamide fibers were plied and impregnated with the polychloroprene dispersion of Example II, set up, washed and dried. A nonwoven mat of less than 0.01 denier/filament polyethylene terephthalate fibers (20.9% of the total fibers) was then placed over the base and the whole plied mat again impregnatedto give a total of 80% binder in the end product. After drying and pressing as before and stretching 40% in each of the two dimensions of the plied mat, there was obtained a sheet material exhibiting excellent scufi resistance.
Example IX Three non-woven fibrous mats of 2 /2 inch long, 3 denier/filament polyhexamethyleneadipamide fibers were plied and a surface ply of non-woven polyhexamethyleneadipamide fibers of less than 0.01 denier/filament was applied thereto, the fine fibers constituting 30% by weight of the total structural fiber component. The thus plied mat was impregnated as before with the polychloroprene impregnating dispersion of Example ii containing an added dispersed color pigment. The resulting impregnated mat was dried and pressed at 135 C. for 15 minutes using 150 mil shims. The pigment and binder amount to 57% by Weight of the total sheet product which is penmeable and exhibits excellent scuff resistance. The same results were obtained using varying proportions of the fine diameter structural fibers and pigments and binder composition with various size shims. The sheet materials ranging from 53.3% to 63% pigment and binder and having from 12% to 18.3% of the fine diameter structural fibers, all exhibited excellent scuff resistance and varied in thickness from 80-150 mils. It is to be noted that a decrease in the thickness of the shims used in pressing lowers the permeability of the end sheet material appreciably with that obtained using 80 mil shims being essentially impermeable.
Example X Two mats prepared as described in Example IX were placed back to back after impregnation and pressed under various pressures. They were then delarninated, i. e., split at the junction, to give .two mats each having a smooth topside containing the fine denier fibers (31.4
34.9% of the total fiber component) and a fuzzy backside containing the large denier fibers. The materials which contained 52.550.2% pigment/binder exhibited excellent 'scufi resistance and varied in permeability depending upon the pressure used.
Example XI Fibrous non-Woven mats of 2 /2 inch long, 3 denier/ filament polyhexamethyleneadiparnide fibers were plied and a similar mat of less than 0.01 denier/filament fibers applied to the top thereof. These fine diameter fibers constituted 11.6% of the total structural fiber component. The thus plied mat was impregnated with a binder' solu- 1 tion of 7.8 parts of a commercially available high molecular weight polyvinyl chloride and 5.2 parts of dioctyl phthalate in about 180 parts of a 2/98 dimethylformamide/.tetrahydrofuran mixture to give 46.1% binder 'by weight of the whole, After impregnation, the binder was coagulated by immersing the impregnated mat in water. The dried impregnated mat was pressed at 500 lb./sq. in. and 140 C. for 2 minutes and then cooled under pressure to below 90 C. The mat, after pressing, was swelled, swelled and stretched, and stretched to give a permeable sheet material exhibiting excellent scuff resistance and a flex-life of about 3 /2 million Schiltknecht fiexes. Essentially the same results were obtained using other mats and varying amounts of binder component, ranging from 45.1% to 48% by weight of the total with the fine diameter polyhexamethyleneadiparnide fibers constituting from 16.5 to 18% of the total structural fiber component.
Example XII Three mats of non-woven fibrous polyhexarnethyleneadiparnide fibers 2 /2 inches long and 3 denier/filament terial similarly prepared having 46.4% polyvinyl chloride/dioctyl ph-thalate binder wherein the fine diameter polyethylene terephthalate fibers comprises 11.8% of the total structural fiber component.
It will be understood that the above examples are merely illustrative and that the present invention broadly resides in sheet material comp-rising, by weight, 20% to 85% of mat-ted structural fibers and to 15% of an extensible polymeric binder binding the fibers together, the sheet material having a surface layer wherein the fibers are substantially all less than 0.2 denier/filament and a base layer wherein the fibers are substantially greater than 1.0 denier/filament.
The structural fibers used in the sheet material of this invention can be of the widest variety, the only important limitation being that some fibers are not available for use as the fine structural fibers simply because they cannot be obtained in thicknesses of 0.2 denier/filament or less. Suitable fibers include fibers both of natural origin and synthetic origin, including rayon-type fibers, i. e., shaped cellulose derivative or regenerated cellulose fibers, and fibers from both the synthetic addition and condensation-type polymers, whether oriented or not. Blends of the various types of fibers can be used. The most outstanding sheet material is that wherein all the structural fibers are synthetic linear condensation polymers.
An obvious qualification as to the structural fibers used is that they must be so selected with relation to the polymeric binder and the processing by which the sheet material is formed, that they will retain their entity in the final sheet material.
In the case of sheet material prepared by solvent techniques, this means that the structural fibers should not be soluble in the solvent used to efifect consolidation of the binder/fiber mixtures although it is permissible that the fibers be partially swollen by the solvent. Also, in the preparation of permeable sheet material by solvent means, the structural fibers and the polymeric binder should not be solubl in the solvent used to extract the pre-mixed fibrous or particulate component of the blend which is to be removed to form the requisite pores.
Where the sheet material is being made by thermal and/or pressure means, the structural fibers should preferably not rnelt or deform below about 50 F., and most preferably about 200 F., above the flow temperature of the polymeric binder. It is preferred that both the coarse and fine structural fibers be of the same type to simplify problems in selection of the binder.
Also, where permeable sheet material is to be prepared by solvent means, it is preferred the pore forming components be of the same type in both the mats forming the surface layer and the base layer of the sheet material. Because of undue adhesion caused by surface effects arising in the fine structural fibers, it is preferred not to use the thermal partial consolidation procedure for forming pores in the surface layer of the permeable type sheet material but rather to use the solvent extraction procedure for the surface layer with the base layer being prepared by either procedure.
Fibers of addition polymers suitable for use in this invention include the polymer of ethylene, polymers and copolymers of the alpha-methylenecarboxylic "acids and derivatives and precursors thereof, including copolymers with other addition polymerizable monomers, e. g., acrylonitrile polymers and copolymers. Because of their generally better fiber properties, e. g., higher strength, and the resultant superior properties of the mats prepared therefrom, the preferred structural fibers are the synthetic linear condensation polymers, whether oriented or unoriented but orientable, e. g., the polyamides, polyesters, polyesteramides, or mixtures or blends thereof, such as the dibasic aeid/diamine or amino acid polyamides, the dibasic acid/diol or 'hydroxy acid/polyesters, or the intermixed polyester/polyamide products by now well known in the art and described in greater detail in U. S. Patents 2,071,250, -251, -253, 2,130,948, 2,224,037, 2,572,844, and the like.
A particularly suitable class of such synthetic linear and condensation polymers, because of good colddrawability and the readier availability of intermediates necessary thereto, are the polyamides prepared from the dibasic carboxylic acids, or amide-forming derivatives thereof, and essentially equimolar proportionsof amino compounds having two amino hydrogen-bearing amine groups separated by divalent organic radicals, free of active hydrogen and preferably solely hydrocarbonun nature. Specific examples of such linear condensation polymers include polytetramethylenesebacamide, polyethyleneterephthalamide, and polydodecamethyleneadrpamide, including the especially preferred polyhexamethyleneadipamide. Also included are those polymers prepared from the amino hydrogen-bearing ammo sub st1- tuted carboxylic acids or amide-forming derlvatrves thereof, preferably those wherein the hydrogen-bearing amine group is on the terminal carbon of the carboxylrc acid chain, e. g., the alpha-aminocarboxylic acids, the epsilon-aminocarboxylic acids, and the like. Specific examples of such polyamides include poly-D- or L or DL-alanine, poly-D-, L- or DL-leucine, and the especially preferred poly-epsilon-aminocaproic acid.
Aiiother similarly suitable group of synthenc hnear, orientable, condensation polymers are the polyesters, i. e., those polymers containing a plurality of recurringmtrachain ester or acyloxy linkages, particularly those containing a plurality of recurring intra-ch-ain carboxyester linkages. Specific examples of such polymers which can be prepared, for instance, by the intermolecular condensation between essentially equimolar proportions of dib'asic acids and dihydroxy-hydrogen-bearing polyols, particularly those Which apart from the carboxyl and hydroxyl groups are solely hydrocarbon, include polydodecamethylene adipate, polyethylene sebacate, and polyhexamethylene oxalate. 7
Also included in this group of the linear condensation polyesters are those prepared from the alcoholic hydroxyl hydrogen-bearing carboxylic acids, preferably those wherein the alcoholic hydrogen-bearing hydroxyl group is on the terminal carbon of the carboxylic acid chain, e. g., the alpha-hydroxyca'rboxylic acids, the epsilonhydroxycarboxylic acids, and the like. Specific examples of such polyesters include poly-D-, or L-, or DL- lactic acid, polyD-, or L-, or 'DL-mandelic acid, and polyepsilon-hydroxycaproic acid.
While the relative thickness of the coarse and fine structural fibers goes to the heart of this invention, the length of the fibers is not critical and they can vary from as little as 0.01 inch (10 mils) up to 8 inches in length or greater. The fiber length is determined as much by the method of preparing the matted layers of fibers and the length of fiber conveniently available as by any differences in properties that can be elfected in the resulting sheet material through the use of fibers of any particular length. For instance, papermaking techniques, which are the most preferable from the standpoint of quickness, convenience, high rate of production, and cheapness, are only applicable to fibers no longer than 0.5 inch. Similarly, air-blowing techniques, also both convenient and reasonably cheap, are usually limited to the use of fibers no greater than 1.5 inches in length. Fibers of greater length necessitate preparation of the non-woven mats by wool-carding techniques which are somewhat more costly and less convenient since this process can only produce non-woven mats of limited weight per pass. Despite this, the relatively longer fibers, i. e., those of at least 1.5 inches in length are the preferred coarse structural fibers because they give non-Woven mats having greater form stability which is advantageous during the preparation of the sheet material and because they give tougher sheet material.
Further, as to the non-Woven mats of fine structural fibers forming the surface layer of the sheet material, these fine fibers are generally formed by extruding and air-blowing on a screen target and unless conditions are carefully adjusted the fiber lengths will not be uniform. It is possible to form a surface layer of these fine structural fibers directly by using a non-Woven mat of coarse structural fibers as the target instead of the conventional screen target.
All factors considered, including tensile strength and degree of extensibility of the finished sheet material, it is preferred to use coarse structural fibers ranging from 0.5 to 4 inches long, more particularly, from 2.0 to 2.5 inches long, the fibers exceeding 1.0 denier/filament but being less than 60 denier/filament. F or ease of handling and the greater pliability and toughness of the sheet material prepared therefrom, it is preferred to use coarse structural fibers of from one to nine denier/filament. Fine structural fibers in the approximate range of 0.05 inch up to 1.5 inches are preferred.
The polymeric binder is preferably chemically dissimilar to the structural fibers being used and also is preferably strong and pliable, especially the latter. The polymeric binder can be and often preferably is a polycomponent structure, e. g., copolymers, frequently preferably plasticized. Because of the greater ease in handling, tensile strength and wear resistance arising from their use, it is preferred to use as the polymeric binder those synthetic polymers which are chemically dissimilar to the structural fibers; which flow at least 50 F., and preferably at least 200 F., below the deformation temperature of the structural fibers; and which in film form 11 exhibit tensile strengths of at least 500, and preferably at least 1000 lb./sq. in., elongations of at least 100%, and preferably at least 200%, and moduli no greater than 25,000, and preferably no more than 5,000 lb./ sq. in. with the product of said tensile strength and elongation being-at least 100,000.
In the most preferred sheet material of this invention, because of greater strength, flex-life, and ease of handling, the polymeric binder will be a synthetic linear addition polymer of the above given set of properties and the structural fibers will be formed from a synthetic linear condensation polymer. Frequently, when sheet material of higher pliabilities are desired, the binder will contain one or more modifiers, in particular plasticizers for the type binder component polymer being used. Other modifying agents equally well known in the art may also be present in the binder component, such as dyes, pigments, fillers, and the like. 7
The chemically dissimilar polymers useful as possible binder components include broadly synthetic addition polymers, synthetic condensation polymers which are not chemically similar to the fiber polymer, and natural and modified natural products, e. g., cellulose acetate, cyanoethyl cellulose, and the like. Because of their readier availability, better properties, and appreciably greater ease of handling, the addition polymers are preferred. A particularly outstanding group are the addition polymers containing in combined form the ethylenically unsaturated monomers including both the monoand dienetype monomers. Suitable examples of such polymers include the lower monoene and diene solely hydrocarbon polymers such as polybutene-2, and the like; tetrafiuoroethylene/ ethylene, tetrafluoroethylene/chlorotrifluoroethylene, and the like.
Because of their readier availability and particularly their lower cost and more desirable polymer properties, the most outstanding group of these addition polymeric binders are the vinylidene polymers and copolymers, including both the monoene and diene types. This class of polymers is characterized by having in each polymerizable monomer therein involved as the only polymerizable ethylenic unsaturation, terminal ethylenie roups wherein the terminal carbon is a methylene carbon, i. (2., those containing one or more vinylidene (CH2=C groups. Included in this most preferred class are the great majority of commercially available addition poly mers. Specific examples of such polymers include the various vinylidene hydrocarbon polymers such as butadiene/ styrene, polyethylene, isobutylene, polyisoprene, both synthetic and natural; the various negatively substituted polymers such as the vinylidene halide including vinyl halide polymers, e. g., polyvinylidene chloride, polyvinyl chloride, and polyvinylfiuoride; derivatives of such polymers such as the halogenated vinyl and vinylidene polymers, e. g., chlorinated polyethylene, and chlorinated polyvinyl chloride; the various vinylidene polymers wherein one or both of the indicated free valences of the Z-carbon of the vinylidene group are bonded directly to carboxyl groups or groups hydrolyzable to carboxyl groups either directly to the acyl carbon or the oxy oxygen thereof, such as polymers of the various vinylidene esters, including vinyl acetate and ethylidene diacetate; the vinylidene carboxylic acids and their derivatives such as acrylic acid, methyl methacrylate, acrylonitrile, and methacrylamide.
Also included in this most preferred group are the various copolymers of such vinylidene monomers, including specifically the various monoene/diene copolymers of this class such as the 2,3-dichlorobutadiene-1,3/2-chlorobutadiene1,3 copolymers; the various monoene/vinylidene copolymers such as the commercially important vinyl and vinylidene chloride copolymers, e. g., vinyl chloride/vinyl acetate, vinyl chloride/vinylidene chloride, and vinyl chloride/vinyl acetate/acrylonitrile copolymers; the various vinylidene hydrocarbon negatively sub- 12 stituted vinylidene copolymers, e. g., ethylene/vinyl acetate and the hydrolyzed products therefrom; ethylene/ vinyl chloride, and butadiene/acrylonitrile copolymers. In the case of those binder components containing in combined form appreciable proportions of diene monomers, particularly the vinylidene diene monomers, it is frequently desirable to have present in the solution, dispersion, or bulk treating material, whichever is used, suitable amounts of chemical agents for effecting under controlled conditions, after the fiber has been impregnated with the binder and the whole mat suitably partially consolidated, the cross linking of the diene copolymer component. These chemical systems for effecting such controllable crosslinking are well known in the rubber art and in the case of the diene hydrocarbon polymers and copolymers, normally function through a disulfide formed crosslink arising from the presence of mercaptans and/ or sulfur in the diene polymer composition, and in the case of the negatively substituted diene polymers and copolymers, such as the 2-chlorobutadiene-1,3 (chloroprene) polymers and copolymers, normally function through halogen removal as effected by the presence in the diene polymer composition of appreciable quantities of metallic oxides such as zinc or magnesium oxides.
In many instances it is desirable to have present in the binder composition appreciable proportions of plasticizers, now well known in the art, for the binder polymers. This is particularly important in the case of the vinylidene resins, to prevent formation of products of too great stilfness, especially with the higher molecular weight, negatively substituted vinylidene polymers and copolymers, such as the vinyl chloride/vinylidene chloride and vinyl chloride/vinyl acetate copolymers, so as to produce leather-like products of good drape and high pliability. Suitable examples of these include the higher molecular weight monoor dicarboxylic acid/alcohol or/polyolesters such as glycerol monooleate, glycerol sebacate, and ethylene octanoate; or the lower molecular weight polyesters and polyethers such as the polyalkylene oxides and their esters, e. g., polyethylene oxide, methoxypolyethyleneglycol; and the lower molecular weight condensation polyesters such as polyethyleneglycol adipate.
As pointed out previously, the critical factor in the choice of a preferred polymeric binder is the fact that is should not be chemically similar to the structural fiber. This is quite important since it has been found that where the polymeric binder is chemically similar to the structural fiber, the resulting sheet material, while occasionally adequate in tensile strength, is generally deficient in drape, hand, and flex-life and more importantly, is usually particularly deficient in tear strength. A convenient rule for characterizing the chemically dissimilar polymeric binders is that they be incompatible in the melt with the structural fibers.
The sheet material of this invention has been described as comprising a surface layer of fine fibers and a base layer of coarse fibers. Where high scufi' resistance is desired on both sides of the base layer, which is not usually the case, then a surface layer of fine fibers is provided on both sides of the base layer of coarse fibers. Manifestly, the present invention is equally applicable to sheet material regardless of whether it has the surface layer of fine fibers on one or both sides of thebase layer.
Color can be imparted to the sheet material of this invention by incorporating dyes or pigments in the polymeric binder, as previously mentioned, or by dyeing after finishing or using pre-dyed or pre-pigmented structural fibers. Preferably, colored sheet material is prepared by the use of dyed or pigmented structural fibers or by incorporating the coloring material in the polymeric binder, particularly in the case of the permeable, leatherlike. sheet material, since the sheet material is then uniformly colored throughout and thus, unlike colored natu- 13 ral leather, will not exhibit any marked or undesirable color change if scuffed or abraded.
An advantage of this invention is that it provides sheet material having great scufi resistance combined with satisfactory tear and tensile strengths, flex-life, and uniform extensibility. A particularly advantageous form of the invention is that wherein the sheet material exhibits leather-like properties, the great scufi resistance of the sheet material making it outstanding, particularly, for use in shoe uppers.
As many apparently widely different embodiments of this invention may be made without departing from the spirit and scope thereof, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited to the specific embodiments thereof except as defined in the appended claims.
The invention claimed is:
1. Sheet material comprising, by weight 20% to 85% of matted structural fibers of synthetic linear condensation polymer bound together by 80% to 15% of an eX- tensible polymeric binder of synthetic addition polymer which flows at least 50 F. below the deformation temperature of the structural fibers, from to 50% by weight of said structural fibers being of fine size from less than 0.01 up to 0.2 denier per filament and the other structural fibers being of a coarse size from 1 to 60 denier per filament, said sheet having a surface layer of at least 3 mils in thickness wherein the fibers are sub- 14 stantially all of said fine size and a base layer wherein the fibers are substantially all of said coarse size.
2. Sheet material as set forth in claim 1 wherein said structural fibers of fine size are all less than 0.01 denier per filament.
3. Sheet material as set forth in claim 1 wherein said extensible polymeric binder is incompatible in the melt with the structural fibers.
4. Sheet material as set forth in claim 1 which contains a volume percent of interconnecting void space distributed therethrough at least equal to 3000 (Weight percent fiber)* and not greater than 70%.
5. Sheet material as set forth in claim 4 wherein the structural fibers comprise to by weight of the sheet and the polymeric binder comprises 60% to 40% by weight of the sheet.
References Cited in the file of this patent UNITED STATES PATENTS 2,270,223 Schlack Jan. 13, 1942 2,336,797 Maxwell Dec. 14, 1943 2,482,062 Hanson Sept. 13, 1949 2,530,441 Reinhardt Nov. 21, 1950 2,543,101 Francis Feb. 27, 1951 2,552,124 Tallman May 8, 1951 2,626,214 Osborne Jan. 20, 1953

Claims (1)

1. SHEET MATERIAL COMPRISING, BY WEIGHT 20% TO 85% OF MATTED STRUCTURAL FIBERS OF SYNTHETIC LINEAR CONDENSATION POLYMER BOUND TOGETHER BY 80% TO 15% OF AN EXTENSIBLE POLYMERIC BINDER OF SYNTHETIC ADDITION POLYMER WHICH FLOWS AT LEAST 50* F. BELOW THE DEFORMATION TEMPERATURE OF THE STRUCTURAL FIBERS, FROM 5% TO 50% BY WEIGHT OF SAID STRUCTURAL FIBERS BEING OF FINE SIZE FROM LESS THAN 0.01 UP TO 0.2 DENIER PER FILAMENT AND THE OTHER STRUCTURAL FIBERS BEING OF A COARSE SIZE FROM 1 TO 60 DENIER PER FILAMENT, SAID SHEET HAVING A SURFACE LAYER OF AT LEAST 3 MILS IN THICKNESS WHEREIN THE FIBERS ARE SUBSTANTIALLY ALL OF SAID FINE SIZE AND A BASE LAYER WHEREIN THE FIBERS ARE SUBSTANTIALLY ALL OF SAID COARSE SIZE.
US348815A 1953-04-14 1953-04-14 Non-woven sheet material Expired - Lifetime US2765247A (en)

Priority Applications (4)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US348815A US2765247A (en) 1953-04-14 1953-04-14 Non-woven sheet material
DEP11763A DE1104925B (en) 1953-04-14 1954-04-13 Non-woven, sheet-like, possibly permeable, fiber-containing synthetic leather composed of mats, canvas substitutes, belts, etc. like
GB11078/54A GB763605A (en) 1953-04-14 1954-04-14 Improvements in or relating to non woven sheet materials, having fibres bonded by a polymeric binder
FR1144245D FR1144245A (en) 1953-04-14 1955-12-16 Non-woven sheet material formed of entangled structural fibers, bound together by a stretchable polymeric binder

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US348815A US2765247A (en) 1953-04-14 1953-04-14 Non-woven sheet material

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2765247A true US2765247A (en) 1956-10-02

Family

ID=23369665

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US348815A Expired - Lifetime US2765247A (en) 1953-04-14 1953-04-14 Non-woven sheet material

Country Status (4)

Country Link
US (1) US2765247A (en)
DE (1) DE1104925B (en)
FR (1) FR1144245A (en)
GB (1) GB763605A (en)

Cited By (27)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3016599A (en) * 1954-06-01 1962-01-16 Du Pont Microfiber and staple fiber batt
US3024149A (en) * 1957-07-05 1962-03-06 Fred W Manning Nonwoven fabrics
US3026229A (en) * 1958-11-14 1962-03-20 Du Pont Method of laminating layers of different polymers
US3049466A (en) * 1957-04-23 1962-08-14 Reeves Bros Inc Method of bonding fibrous structures made from fibers or filaments of polyolefine polymers
US3081207A (en) * 1963-03-12 Fibrous mat and method of manufacture
US3099067A (en) * 1957-09-13 1963-07-30 Union Carbide Corp Plastic fibers
US3117056A (en) * 1960-05-09 1964-01-07 Du Pont Conformable bulkable non-woven web
DE1179276B (en) * 1958-11-26 1964-10-08 Licentia Gmbh Process for the insulation of electrical elements with fibrous, absorbent materials
US3232821A (en) * 1964-12-11 1966-02-01 Ferro Corp Felted fibrous mat and apparatus for manufacturing same
US3246064A (en) * 1964-12-11 1966-04-12 Ferro Corp Method of manufacturing a felted fibrous mat
US3245822A (en) * 1961-06-12 1966-04-12 Wood Marc Sa Method for manufacturing thin sheet filter media
DE1220040B (en) * 1959-02-23 1966-06-30 Hydrawerk Ag Process for the production of electrical capacitors soaked with synthetic resin
US3259539A (en) * 1963-10-28 1966-07-05 Du Pont Preparation of a conformable nonwoven web
US3442751A (en) * 1963-12-05 1969-05-06 Owens Corning Fiberglass Corp Fibrous bodies including strands and methods of producing such bodies
US3455772A (en) * 1964-08-18 1969-07-15 Ludlow Corp Non-woven reinforced blown rubber underpad
DE1635682B1 (en) * 1963-07-04 1973-12-06 Schickedanz Ver Papierwerk METHOD OF MANUFACTURING MULTI-LAYER STRUCTURES
US3860472A (en) * 1970-07-07 1975-01-14 Cursel Method for manufacturing a synthetic leather base
US3903343A (en) * 1972-06-20 1975-09-02 Rohm & Haas Method for reducing sink marks in molded glass fiber reinforced unsaturated polyester compositions, and molded articles thereby produced
US3928699A (en) * 1971-07-13 1975-12-23 Huyck Corp Papermakers felts
US3952124A (en) * 1973-07-09 1976-04-20 Johnson & Johnson Back-to-back transition web and method of making said
US4145464A (en) * 1976-10-15 1979-03-20 Scott Paper Company Absorbent articles
US4162344A (en) * 1978-07-27 1979-07-24 American Manufacturing Company Porous resin impregnated stratified fiber flexible sheet backed mat and process of forming the same
DE3137052A1 (en) * 1980-09-20 1982-04-15 Uni-Charm Corp., Kawanoe, Ehime "FIBER FLEECE AND METHOD FOR THE PRODUCTION THEREOF"
DE3213951A1 (en) * 1982-04-16 1983-10-20 Fima Industriebeheizungen GmbH, 5820 Gevelsberg Two-layered body of ceramic fibre insulating material and process for its production
US4507358A (en) * 1980-04-01 1985-03-26 The Fujikura Cable Works, Limited Insulating paper sheet of synthetic resin flakes and natural fibers
US4612087A (en) * 1982-02-12 1986-09-16 Kennecott Corporation Method of producing seamless ceramic fiber composite articles
US5194462A (en) * 1989-04-27 1993-03-16 Nkk Corporation Fiber reinforced plastic sheet and producing the same

Citations (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2270223A (en) * 1938-11-26 1942-01-13 Du Pont Felted product
US2336797A (en) * 1939-06-19 1943-12-14 Du Pont Felted product
US2482062A (en) * 1945-01-19 1949-09-13 Dow Chemical Co Storage battery separator of polystyrene fiber
US2530441A (en) * 1945-08-03 1950-11-21 Bigelow Sanford Carpet Co Inc Leather substitute
US2543101A (en) * 1944-07-20 1951-02-27 American Viscose Corp Composite fibrous products and method of making them
US2552114A (en) * 1949-05-07 1951-05-08 Walter J Reinhard Carpet joining device and method
US2626214A (en) * 1949-06-14 1953-01-20 C H Dexter & Sons Inc Paper from long synthetic fibers and partially water soluble sodium carboxymethylcellulose and method

Family Cites Families (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1836021A (en) * 1930-11-03 1931-12-15 Naugatuck Chem Co Water dispersion of polymerized styrol and product made therefrom
DE751173C (en) * 1937-01-07 1952-01-31 Freudenberg Carl Fa Process for the production of leather substitutes
BE482967A (en) * 1947-06-10

Patent Citations (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2270223A (en) * 1938-11-26 1942-01-13 Du Pont Felted product
US2336797A (en) * 1939-06-19 1943-12-14 Du Pont Felted product
US2543101A (en) * 1944-07-20 1951-02-27 American Viscose Corp Composite fibrous products and method of making them
US2482062A (en) * 1945-01-19 1949-09-13 Dow Chemical Co Storage battery separator of polystyrene fiber
US2530441A (en) * 1945-08-03 1950-11-21 Bigelow Sanford Carpet Co Inc Leather substitute
US2552114A (en) * 1949-05-07 1951-05-08 Walter J Reinhard Carpet joining device and method
US2626214A (en) * 1949-06-14 1953-01-20 C H Dexter & Sons Inc Paper from long synthetic fibers and partially water soluble sodium carboxymethylcellulose and method

Cited By (27)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3081207A (en) * 1963-03-12 Fibrous mat and method of manufacture
US3016599A (en) * 1954-06-01 1962-01-16 Du Pont Microfiber and staple fiber batt
US3049466A (en) * 1957-04-23 1962-08-14 Reeves Bros Inc Method of bonding fibrous structures made from fibers or filaments of polyolefine polymers
US3024149A (en) * 1957-07-05 1962-03-06 Fred W Manning Nonwoven fabrics
US3099067A (en) * 1957-09-13 1963-07-30 Union Carbide Corp Plastic fibers
US3026229A (en) * 1958-11-14 1962-03-20 Du Pont Method of laminating layers of different polymers
DE1179276B (en) * 1958-11-26 1964-10-08 Licentia Gmbh Process for the insulation of electrical elements with fibrous, absorbent materials
DE1220040B (en) * 1959-02-23 1966-06-30 Hydrawerk Ag Process for the production of electrical capacitors soaked with synthetic resin
US3117056A (en) * 1960-05-09 1964-01-07 Du Pont Conformable bulkable non-woven web
US3245822A (en) * 1961-06-12 1966-04-12 Wood Marc Sa Method for manufacturing thin sheet filter media
DE1635682B1 (en) * 1963-07-04 1973-12-06 Schickedanz Ver Papierwerk METHOD OF MANUFACTURING MULTI-LAYER STRUCTURES
US3259539A (en) * 1963-10-28 1966-07-05 Du Pont Preparation of a conformable nonwoven web
US3442751A (en) * 1963-12-05 1969-05-06 Owens Corning Fiberglass Corp Fibrous bodies including strands and methods of producing such bodies
US3455772A (en) * 1964-08-18 1969-07-15 Ludlow Corp Non-woven reinforced blown rubber underpad
US3246064A (en) * 1964-12-11 1966-04-12 Ferro Corp Method of manufacturing a felted fibrous mat
US3232821A (en) * 1964-12-11 1966-02-01 Ferro Corp Felted fibrous mat and apparatus for manufacturing same
US3860472A (en) * 1970-07-07 1975-01-14 Cursel Method for manufacturing a synthetic leather base
US3928699A (en) * 1971-07-13 1975-12-23 Huyck Corp Papermakers felts
US3903343A (en) * 1972-06-20 1975-09-02 Rohm & Haas Method for reducing sink marks in molded glass fiber reinforced unsaturated polyester compositions, and molded articles thereby produced
US3952124A (en) * 1973-07-09 1976-04-20 Johnson & Johnson Back-to-back transition web and method of making said
US4145464A (en) * 1976-10-15 1979-03-20 Scott Paper Company Absorbent articles
US4162344A (en) * 1978-07-27 1979-07-24 American Manufacturing Company Porous resin impregnated stratified fiber flexible sheet backed mat and process of forming the same
US4507358A (en) * 1980-04-01 1985-03-26 The Fujikura Cable Works, Limited Insulating paper sheet of synthetic resin flakes and natural fibers
DE3137052A1 (en) * 1980-09-20 1982-04-15 Uni-Charm Corp., Kawanoe, Ehime "FIBER FLEECE AND METHOD FOR THE PRODUCTION THEREOF"
US4612087A (en) * 1982-02-12 1986-09-16 Kennecott Corporation Method of producing seamless ceramic fiber composite articles
DE3213951A1 (en) * 1982-04-16 1983-10-20 Fima Industriebeheizungen GmbH, 5820 Gevelsberg Two-layered body of ceramic fibre insulating material and process for its production
US5194462A (en) * 1989-04-27 1993-03-16 Nkk Corporation Fiber reinforced plastic sheet and producing the same

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
DE1104925B (en) 1961-04-20
GB763605A (en) 1956-12-12
FR1144245A (en) 1957-10-10

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2765247A (en) Non-woven sheet material
US3869310A (en) Flexible sheet materials
US3914501A (en) Porous products and processes therefor
US3067482A (en) Sheet material and process of making same
US2723935A (en) Sheet material
US3616149A (en) Dimensionally-stable fabric and method of manufacture
US2464301A (en) Textile fibrous product
US2676128A (en) Process of preparing nonwoven fabric and product
US2430868A (en) Process for treating fibrous materials
US3238055A (en) Poromeric material and method of making same
US3067483A (en) Sheet material and process of making same
US2994617A (en) Leather substitute
EP0125494A2 (en) Entangled fibrous mat having good elasticity and production thereof
US2772995A (en) Leather replacement compositions and process
US2939200A (en) Fabric woven from coated yarns
US2795524A (en) Process of preparing a compacted nonwoven fibrous web embedded in a copolymer of butadiene and acrylonitrile and product
US2715591A (en) Sheet material
US3418198A (en) Non-roughening microporous laminate and process for producing the same
US2444094A (en) Resin coated fiber base and process of making
US2757100A (en) Process for forming permeable sheet material
US2725309A (en) Coated non-woven fabric and method of making
US3706613A (en) Method for producing composite sheets composed of polymeric fibers and elastic material
US2773286A (en) Process of forming non-woven porous fibrous synthetic leather sheet
US3317335A (en) Fibrous, non-woven sheet materials and the production thereof
US3510344A (en) Vapour permeable sheet materials