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US1850895A - Paper-like material - Google Patents

Paper-like material
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Publication number
US1850895A
US1850895AUS490774AUS49077430AUS1850895AUS 1850895 AUS1850895 AUS 1850895AUS 490774 AUS490774 AUS 490774AUS 49077430 AUS49077430 AUS 49077430AUS 1850895 AUS1850895 AUS 1850895A
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United States
Prior art keywords
paper
cellulose
layer
cotton
backing
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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
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US490774A
Inventor
Robinson Victor Owen
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.)
Robinson and Sons Ltd
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Robinson and Sons Ltd
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Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Robinson and Sons LtdfiledCriticalRobinson and Sons Ltd
Application grantedgrantedCritical
Publication of US1850895ApublicationCriticalpatent/US1850895A/en
Anticipated expirationlegal-statusCritical
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PAPER LIKE MATERIAL Filed Oct. 23, 1950 Patented Mar. 22,1932
UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE VICTOR OWEN ROBINSON, OF CHANDEB HILL, CHESTERFIELD, ENGLAND, ASSIGNOR TO ROBINSON & SONS, LIMITED, OF CHESTERFIELD, ENGLAND, A COMPANY OF GREAT BRITAIN PAPER-LIKE MATERIAL Application led October 23, 1930, Serial No. 490,774, and in Great Britain February 28, 1930.
This invention relates to improvements in the manufacture of paper or paper-like material. The kind of paper concerned is a composite paper comprising cellulose Wad! ding or the like which is compressed and carried by a comparatively tough backing of nonabsorbent or comparatively non-absorbent material such as Waterproof paper by means of a layer of relatively long fibres adhered to the backing along various lines preferably forming a pattern.
According to the present invention the paper comprises a relatively tough and Waterproof backing to which is caused to adhere a pad of soft fibrous material which is s o constructed and patterned that a substantlal degree of rubbing will not disintegrate the surface even when the latter is moist.
Preferably the paper has a surface layer of fibrous materia-l which is more coherent, e. g. has longer fibres, than the cellulose wadding interposed between it and the Waterproof backing.
The preferred material for the surface layer is carded cotton, and the impressed pattern is so chosen that, generally speaking, each cotton fibre will be pressed down into the cellulose Wadding or the like and adhered to a backing at at least two separated places. It is found that the improved product will Withstand considerable rubbing even When moistened Without disintegrating and breaking away. Such is not, the case when cellulose Wadding is used Without a covering or more coherent material and backing for the fibres are so short that no impressed pat-tern, which leaves suicient areas in relief to maintain the required softness, will bind the material so as to prevent disintegration.
Such a paper is particularly suitable for toilet purposes although it can be used for various other purposes such as wrapping and packing pastry.
The invention is illustrated in the accompanying drawing in which Figure l shows Figure 2 is a plan view y ure 4 is an enlarged view of a portion of the paper shown in Figure 2. Figure 5 shows a roll of paper according to the invention and Wlth one end split up to show its constituents whilst Figure 6 is a section on theline 6 6, Figure 1 of the paper after it has been passed through embossing rollers.
The process of manufacture of a roll of paper according to the invention will now be described with reference to Figure 1 of the accompanying drawings.
A single layer of cellulose tissue of the necessarywidth, for example 30, is taken from a paper machine and Wrapped in continuous lengths into a roll of the required size, by a suitable device. As many of such rolls 1 as may be required, say sixteen, are placed in position on the cellulose wrapping machine, and a single layer 2 from each roll superimposed on the others making asheet 3 sixteen layers thick, the same length as the rolls one layer thick.
Thesheet 3, sixteen layers thick is taken beneath a cotton carding machine 4, specially raised up' from the ground for the purpose and alayer 5 of carded cotton is superimposed on the cellulose; immediately afterwards a layer of Water-proof paper 6 which has first passed under acontainer 6 from which an adhesive is applied to the top side or other suitable material is fed on the underside of the cellulose. The Whole sheet comprising one layer of carded cotton, sixteen lai/'ers of cellulose and one sheet of Waterproof material is then passed through two embossing rollers 7 and embossed with a pattern. This has the effect of making the waterproof material adhere to the cellulose, of combining the sixteenlayers of cellulose and yet on the Whole leaving the soft nature of this material unchanged, and of combining the cotton wool layer to the cellulose.
The average length of the cotton libre is 5%, and the embossing pattern is so chosen that cach cotton'tibre 5 will be attached to thecellulose 3 and this latter to the waterproof backing so that if the finished product is rubbed the protecting layer of cotton Wool 5 will not distintegrate and come away in small pieces. After embossing, the whole combined sheet is taken to a slitter 8 andwinding machine 9, as usually employed for the manufacture of toilet rolls, and there made into rolls of the required width and length.
The pattern impressed upon the combined sheet is of such character that the distance between adjacent lines of the pattern is less than the length of the cotton fibres forming the top layer of the pad.
The order of performing the operations may be varied or carried out on separate machines. v
Figure 2 shows a strip of the finished paper on which the pattern comprises lines or grooves l() forming polygonals having central squares at the apexes of which radiate arms.
Figure 3 shows the layer ofwaterproof paper 6, the sixteen layers ofcellulose tissues 3 and thesuperimposed layer 5 of carded cotton in the form in which it is passed to the embossing rollers 7 In Figure 4 which as stated above is an enlarged View of a portion of the paper illustrated in Figure 2, the paper has been assed under the embossing rollers 7. It will e seen that thefibres 5 of the carded cotton run substantially longitudinally throughout the paper and that they pass under and are gripped by the lines orgrooves 10 of the pattern so that the layer of carded cotton will not distintegrate when rubbed.
Figure 6 shows a section through the paper Y on the same scale as that shown in Figure 4.
Thefibres 5 are depressed at thegrooves 10 so that each fibre becomes attached to the cellulose wadding (aided by the action of the adhesive applied to the waterproof backing) and on rubbing the fibres are held bv these grooves so that they do not split up and come away in small pieces.
Although the invention as above described is applied particularly to composite paper comprising cellulose wadding it is not intended that there shall be excluded from the scope of the invention a modification which merely consists in replacing cellulose wadding wholly or in part by other fibrous maferial such forexample as cotton fibre.
1. A paper comprising a relatively tough and water proof backing and a pad of soft fibrous material adhering thereto, the main body of the pad being composed of relatively
US490774A1930-02-281930-10-23Paper-like materialExpired - LifetimeUS1850895A (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application NumberPriority DateFiling DateTitle
GB6731/30AGB349139A (en)1930-02-281930-02-28Improvements in the manufacture of paper or paper-like material

Publications (1)

Publication NumberPublication Date
US1850895Atrue US1850895A (en)1932-03-22

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Family Applications (1)

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US490774AExpired - LifetimeUS1850895A (en)1930-02-281930-10-23Paper-like material

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GB (1)GB349139A (en)

Cited By (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication numberPriority datePublication dateAssigneeTitle
US2707289A (en)*1952-02-051955-05-03Gen Cellulose Company IncBed pad
US2834703A (en)*1950-09-161958-05-13Personal Products CorpTissue-faced cotton squares
US2955641A (en)*1956-08-161960-10-11Personal Products CorpMethod of manufacturing an absorbent product
US3017304A (en)*1956-05-241962-01-16Personal Products CorpAbsorbent fibrous structure and method of production
US3164282A (en)*1962-06-081965-01-05Wise Pak CorpPacking mat
USD838998S1 (en)*2016-04-202019-01-29Curver Luxembourg SarlSheet material

Families Citing this family (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication numberPriority datePublication dateAssigneeTitle
US10118750B2 (en)2016-08-302018-11-06Talal T. Al-HousseinyPouring device for a container with an inner bag and method of using same

Cited By (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication numberPriority datePublication dateAssigneeTitle
US2834703A (en)*1950-09-161958-05-13Personal Products CorpTissue-faced cotton squares
US2707289A (en)*1952-02-051955-05-03Gen Cellulose Company IncBed pad
US3017304A (en)*1956-05-241962-01-16Personal Products CorpAbsorbent fibrous structure and method of production
US2955641A (en)*1956-08-161960-10-11Personal Products CorpMethod of manufacturing an absorbent product
US3164282A (en)*1962-06-081965-01-05Wise Pak CorpPacking mat
USD838998S1 (en)*2016-04-202019-01-29Curver Luxembourg SarlSheet material

Also Published As

Publication numberPublication date
GB349139A (en)1931-05-28

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