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US3025199A - Puffed cellulosic product and method of manufacture - Google Patents

Puffed cellulosic product and method of manufacture
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US3025199A
US3025199AUS830783AUS83078359AUS3025199AUS 3025199 AUS3025199 AUS 3025199AUS 830783 AUS830783 AUS 830783AUS 83078359 AUS83078359 AUS 83078359AUS 3025199 AUS3025199 AUS 3025199A
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web
threads
fibers
puffed
articulated
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US830783A
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Kenneth J Harwood
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Kimberly Clark Corp
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Kimberly Clark Corp
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March 13, 1962 K. J. HARWOOD PUFF'ED CELLULOSIC PRODUC'I` AND METHOD OFMANUFACTURE 2 Sheets-Sheet 1 Original Filed June 13, 1956 jmp/Zw.'
March 13, 1962 K. J. HARWooD PUF'FED CELLULOSIC PRODUCT AND METHOD OF MANUFACTURE Original Filed June l5, 1956 2 Sheets-Sheet 2 m vm J 3,025,199 lUFFEi) CELLULOMC PRGDUCT AND METHGD F MANUFACTURE Kenneth l. Harwood, Neenah, Wis., assigner to linnbcrly-Clark Corporation, a corporation of Delaware Continuation of application Ser. No. 591,165, June. 13, 1956. This application July 31, 1959, Ser. No. 830,783 4 Claims. (Cl. 154-46) This invention relates to a cellulosic product and more particularly to an improvement in puffed webs which may comprise mainly cellulose fibers, although other materials may be used.
The puffed web herein contemplated may be made to exhibit a` number of characteristics in varying degrees to adapt the web to a wide variety of uses for which textile fabric is commonly used, and others. For example, the web may be made suitable for use as toweling and other wiping material, expendable garment material, packing material for packaging and similar purposes, acoustical sheeting, decorative sheeting comprising drapes, curtains and other forms, and for filtering and other purposes which will appear from time to time.
The main object of the present invention is to provide an improved puffed web product, having the` utility indicated, and a method by which the puffed web may be produced by commercially practicable and economical means.
Other objects and advantages of the invention will be understood by reference to the following specification and accompanying drawings (2 sheets),
In the drawings:
FIG. 1 is an elevation of a piece of material which embodies constructional details which adapt the material to the production of a web according to the present in- 9 vention;
FIG. 2 is an elevation of a piece of material according to the present invention.
FIGS. 3 and 4 are cross sections on the line 3-3 and 4-4 respectively of FIGS. 1 and 2 and illustrating the before and after treatment conditions of the material;
FIGS. 5 and 6 respectively represent modifications of the improved fabric;
FIGS. 7, 8, 9 and l0 are schematic representations of the action which occurs when the material shown in FIG. l is treated according to the treatment method of the present invention to convert the material into the fabric of FIGS. 2 and 4;
FIGS. l1, l2, 13 and 14 are schematic representations of another method of producing the improved fabric;
FIG. 15 is a schematic representation of yapparatus for practicing the method which is illustrated in FIGS. 7 to 10 inclusive.
The material shown in FIG. 1 embodies a base or reinforcing web 1 which comprises a plurality of spaced longitudinal or machinedirection textile threads 2 and a plurality of transversely extending longitudinally spacedtextile threads 3. Thesethreads 2 and 3 may be of conventional hard twist textile threads or they may be of low twist construction, and they may be of synthetic monofilarnent or multiple-filament construction For many purposes these threads are advantageously of continuous multiple-filament low twist construction. As indicated in FIG. l, thecross threads 3 vare not interwoven with themachine direction threads 2 but are cross laid thereon and thethreads 2 and 3 are adhesively bonded together at their intersections: by means of adhesive coatings carried by either or both sets of threads, or by thermoplastic or other adhesive fibers embodied in either or both of said sets of threads.
Non-wovenlayers 4 and 5 of fibers are attached to nited States Patent O icc the opposite sides of the reinforcing web i. by the adhesive coating or adhesive fibers such as themoplastic carried by either or both of said sets o-f threads. Intimate engagement of the reinforcing means and the fiber layers may be effected by calendexing the web, and if `thermoplastic adhesive or fiber is employed, the calender may be heated sufficiently to reactivate the thermoplastic material.
For certain purposes which will presently appear, it is generally preferred that both sets ofthreads 2 and 3 have adhesive material thereon or therein to effect interbonding of said thread sets and to effect very secure bonding of said non-woven layers of fiber to the opposite faces of the reinforcing material. However, for many purposes adhesive along the lengths of one of said sets of threads is suicient and coatings of adhesives, whether on one or on both sets of threads; may ybe continuous or discontinuous. If it is to be discontinuous it is preferable that the interruptions in the adhesive coatings be of relatively short length and irregularly or regularly so spaced as t0 maintain to a minimum, the number of thread intersections which fail to become bonded because of the absence of adhesive at said interruptions. The use of suc-h discontinuous adhesive coatings is advantageous in that the spaced adhesive-free short portions of the lengths of the threads will exhibit the full normal softness and ilexibility of the threads unaffected by an adhesive coating. Permanently flexible adhesives which tend to rem-ain surfaced on the threads rather than to penetrate the same are generally preferred `for the purpose of this invention, but other kinds of adhesive may be used if suitable to the end purpose of the fabric.
In the material represented in FIGS. l and 3, thenon-woven layers 4 and 5 of fiber each comprise two plies of crepe tissue paper having a weight within the range of about 20 grams to 40 grams per square yard and having a crepe ratio of about 1.25 to l. These layers of crepe tissue paper were adhesively bonded to the opposite sides of the carrier or base web 1 by means of polyvinyl acetate adhesive lapplied only to the machine direction threads at the rate of about one pound per 20,000 feet of thread. The base web consisted of low twist multifilament cross laid threads, thelongitudinal threads 2 comprising 30 filaments of 75 denier and thecross threads 3 comprising 40 filaments of 100 denier. The fabric was calendered to insure good adhesive bonding of the non-woven layers of fiber to the carrier web, and its thickness after calendering was about .052 inch.
The web represented in FIGS. l and 3 is subjected to a treatment whereby the fibers appear to be more or less extended intermediate points of attachment thereof to spaced portions of pairs of said reinforcing threads and the extended fibers caused to buckle out of the plane of the reinforcing threads which causes the surfaces of the web to have a pronounced puffed effect as indicated at 6 in FIGS. 2 and 4 whereby the thickness or bulk of the web is substantially increased. This puffed effect is accompanied by some separation of the fibers in saidlayers 4 and 5 from each other, whereby the porosity of the web is also substantially increased. In the material represented in FIGS. 2 and 4 the thickness was increased about twofold or somewhat more as compared with the thickness of the untreated starting sheet as represented in FIGS. l and 3.
Working of the material to cause the fibers to buckle and impart to the fabric the puffed surface and increased porosity indicated was effected by ythe action of a swing tenter as represented in FIG. l5. A swing tenter is a well known mechanism used in the textile industry for stretching fabrics to restore them to a predetermined normal width and to eliminate wrinkles after the fabric has been bleached or dyed or subjected to other wet treatments which cause them to wrinkle and shrink. A swing tenter comprises, among other things, opposite side rail mechanism 7 and 8 by which the side edges of the fabric are gripped. The gripping side rails 7 and 8 are suitably supported for longitudinal and transverse movement and they are interconnected by a plurality of links or arms one of which is indicated at 9. The arms 9 are pivotally mounted intermediate their ends as indicated at 10 and pivotally connected as indicated at 11 and 1-2 to the respective rails. By suitable mechanism the arms 9 are rocked about theirpivots 10 so as to cause the rails 7 and 8 to reciprocate simultaneously in opposite directions while remaining constantly in parallel relationship. The links 9 may be rocked through arcs of various extent depending upon the kind and requirements of fabric being treated and the results desired.
For the purpose of this invention the non-woven fiber web or sheet such as represented in FIGS. 1 and 3 is subjected to the simultaneous opposed reciprocation of the tenter gripping rails 7 and 8. Such working of the web causes the aforesaid puffing of the web as represented in FIGS. 2 and 4. This effect is explained by the action represented in FIGS. 7 to 10 inclusive.
In FIG. 7, the reinforcement 1 is represented by thenetwork forming lines 2 and 3 which correspond respectively to the machine andcross direction threads 2 and 3 in the reinforcement netting 1. In a crepe tissue paper web there is, of course, a normal machine direction fiber alignment of a portion of fibers in the webs but there is also a very substantial percentage of fibers which are haphazardly arranged in the web. A machine direction fiber is represented at -14 in FIG. 7 and a cross direction fiber at 15. Haphazardly arranged, angularly disposed fibers are represented at 16 and 17, these being fibers disposed in opposite angular positions and another angularly disposed fiber is indicated at 18. Thefiber 18 represents a simple continuous fiber which is in its natural crinkled or curly state and it also represents a crimped synthetic fiber. The fibers represented at 16 and 17 are articulated and each comprise sections a and b which have overlapping portions indicated at c, these overlapping portions being joined to each other as an incident to the intertwining of such fiber sections or their cohesive interattachment, or by adhesive which may be applied to the nonwoven fiber web to bond the fibers into a self-sustaining web.
When the spacedmachine direction threads 2 are moved longitudinally relative to each other by operation of the swing tentering mechanism to cause thecross threads 3 to assume the angles indicated in FIG. 8, the shifting of thethreads 2 relative to each other serves to elongate the distance between thepoints 19 and 20 of attachment of thefiber 17 to the spaced pair of adhesive bearingthreads 2 so that the twosection fiber 17 is extended incident, at least in part, to slippage between the joined portions of the fiber sections a and b so as to reduce the extent of overlap as indicated in FIG. 8. The connection between the fiber sections intermediate their points of attachment to threads of the base web should be weaker than the bonds between the fibers and the base web so that the interconnected or overlapping portions of the fibers may be moved relative to each other incident tothe working action without breaking the fiberto-base web bonds and without breaking the fibers.
When the base web 1 is restored to normal square condition as represented in FIG. 9, the distance between thepoints 19 and 20 is considerably shortened as compared with the distance between the said points in the distorted condition represented in lFIG. 8 so that thefiber 17 will be caused to buckle or gather on itself in fairly large wave forms.
During the working steps represented in FIGS. 7, 8 and 9, the machine direction andcross direction fibers 14 and 15 are subjected to movement but they are not subjected to tensioning so that upon return of the material to normal square condition thesefibers 14 and 15 are not significantly changed.
During the working steps represented in FIGS. 7, 8 and 9, the fibers 16 and 1S will have been shortened as represented in FIG. 8 and not tensioned so that when the material is restored to the square condition of FIG. 9 saidfibers 16 and 18 will also be restored substantially to their initial condition between points of attachment to the spaced base web strands as indicated at 2. However, on the next and oppositely directed reciprocation of the swing tenter rails 7 and 8, as shown in FIG. 10, the two Section fiber 16 attached at 21 and 2-2 to the reinforcing material, will be stretched in the same manner as above explained in respect of the two-section fiber 17 so that, upon the following return of the base web to its normal square condition, said fiber 16 will also be caused to buckle like theber 17 to thereby impart the puffed surface characteristic to the web or sheet.
Thefiber 18 attached at 23 and 24 to spaced portions of a pair of thebase web strands 2 will be tensioned as indicated in FIG. 10 so as to remove some of its curliness or crinkle so that such fiber will be somewhat elongated and accordingly caused to buckle upon restoration of the base web to square condition, even though said fiber embodies no connected portions which may slide relative to each other to elongate the fiber. Such elongation, i.e., by removal of some of the normal curl or' crinkle, also is probably effected in the two-section fibers together with the elongation effected by shortening the length of the inter-connected overlapping portions of the fiber sections.
In FIGS. 7 to 10 inclusive the explanation is based on a square fabric, that is to say a fabric in which the base web network has machine and cross section threads parallel and normal respectively to the length of the fabric. This is not a necessity as will appear from a consideration of FIGS. l1 to 14 inclusive wherein there is schematically represented the effect of working a fabric embodying a reinforcing web which has its strands arranged to form a diamond pattern in the fabric. Assuming that the machine direction and cross direction are identied by the arrowed lines respectively identified MD (machine direction) and CD (cross direction) in FIGS. 11 to 14 inclusive, the reinforcing network may be in the form of a diamond pattern embodying one set of parallel diagonally extendingstrands 26 and another set of diagonally extendingparallel strands 27, the latter extending crosswise of thestrands 26.
If a non-woven web of fibers reinforced by a diamond patterned network as above described is temporarily stretched crosswise, cross direction fibers such as indicated at 23 and 29 will be elongated as is evident from an inspection of FIG. 12 and will buckle on themselves when the fabric restored to its normal cross direction width as represented in FIG. 13. Similarly, if the fabric is stretched in its lengthwise direction as represented in FIG. 14, more or less longitudinal fibers, such as one indicated at 30, will be elongated and caused to buckle on themselves when the length of the fabric is restored to normal length. This diamond pattern reinforcing network may be stretched crosswise by suitable roll means 0r by appropriately guided conveyor chains equipped with means for gripping the side margins of the web. Lengthwise stretching may be effected by cooperative low and high speed roll pairs. The final stretch should be such that the web will be restored to its initial dimensions incident to the inherent capacity of the diamond pattern network, when stretched in one direction, to neck down in the transverse direction. This diamond pattern is especially useful when the sheet includes resilient threads in the reinforcing network or otherwise, or is otherwise made resilient, so that it tends to restore itself to a predetermined normal condition from which it is stretched either 0r both crosswise and lengthwise to produce the described fiber buckling.
The ber extending or elongating action of the described tentering and stretching operations may often be facilitated by moistening the fabric before the fabric is worked. Moistening of the fabric tends to soften the bers to permit removal of the curl or crinkle therein, and to weaken the bond between the overlapping ber portions in the areas represented at c so that the ber extending action is more easily accomplished. Water is generally a satisfactory agent for this purpose. In cases where adhesive is employed to bond the fibers together into a self-sustaining web, the sheet may be moistened with any solvent or other agent which softens the adhesive so as to weaken the bond between the bers without adversely affecting the bonds between the bers and the strands of the base webs. The adhesive applied to the threads of the carrier web should therefore be one which will resist dissolution or softening by whatever moistening agent is employed for the aforesaid purpose.
The puffing of non-woven sheeting in the manner described is not limited in its application to webs in which the face sheets are made of crepe tissue paper although it is especially useful in that connection in which it appears to produce the best results. lThe described pulling method may be applied to a web of the construction represented in FIG. 5 whereinlayers 35 and 36 of cotton or other ber are attached to a suitable woven carrier or reinforcing webs 37. The ber layers 35 and 36 may be carded, garnetted, air laid or otherwise formed and the bers may extend predominantly in the machine direction (as in a carded web) while nevertheless having a suficient quantity of fibers which extend angularly to cause ber buckling and web puing when the web is suitably worked or treated. The extent or degree of the pufng effect is of course dependent on the amount of ber which is so anchored and so arranged that the bers will be extended by the working operation employed.
The bers in thewebs 35 and 36 may be all cotton or any other kind of ber or blends of two or more kinds. Natural and synthetic fibers to form non-woven webs such as the cardedwebs 35 and 36 in FIG. 5 are normally considerably longer than the bers which are present in crepe tissue webs and this permits the strands of the carrying web to be spaced somewhat farther apart. To obtain the full benet of ber elongation by working action, the strands of the network 37 should be spaced apart a distance which is somewhat in excess of the average length of the bers so as to insure the presence of many articulated bers having connections which may yield for ber elongation purposes as explained above in connection with the crepe tissue faced fabric of FIGS. l to 4 inclusive.
FIGURE 6 represents sheeting embodying non-woven facing plies 41 and 42 of any suitable character carried by abase web 43 which comprises threads or other strands extending diagonally of the length of the sheeting so as to provide a diamond form carrier web. This web may be worked in the manner explained above in connection with FIGS. 11 to 14 inclusive.
Although in the foregoing, reference has been made to non-woven facing layers of ber on opposite sides of a carrying web, it should be understood that a non-woven facing layer embodying one or more plies may be applied to only one side of the base web or reinforcing means and the puffed effect obtained in such a single layer. The puffed effect in the case of a single ber layer will be noticeable to some extent on the base web or grid side of the fabric but more predominantly on the faced side.
For some purposes, the sheeting may be made with a puffed non-woven facing of bers on one side of the reinforcing element and a facing sheet of any other selected character on the other side. For example, a crepe tissue paper web may be carried by one side of a supporting grid or other reinforcing means and a highly carded web of rayon or other bers or a moisture resistant or other facing may be carried by the other side of the reinforcement. A highly carded ber web, having a negligible proportion of its fibers out of alignment with the machine direction of the web, will not be significantly affected by a swing tentering operation employed to effect puffing of the crepe tissue facing and will maintain its normal appearance for its side of the sheet.
In a product which is to be swing tentered, or similarly Worked, the best fabric puing results are obtained when the bers in the non-woven facing are haphazardly arranged and crepe tissue wadding having a high crepe ratio such as 2.4 to l gives excellent results.
The spacing of the reinforcing strands does not appear to be very critical. However, for products having facing sheets of crepe paper which embodies a major portion of bers of short length such as one-sixteenth of an inch and less, the reinforcing strands or elements ordinarily should be at a frequency of about 15 or less strands per inch in any direction. Products exhibiting excellent bulk and drape have been made with 6 machine direction threads per inch and 5.2 cross direction threads per inch with facings of crepe tissue paper. The base web is substantially inextensible 4both lengthwise and crosswise and this imparts dimensional stability to the finished sheeting; such stability is of considerable importance in most converting processes.
The puffed Web or sheet tends to resist creasing and cr-umbling and exhibits substantial resistance to rupture either by impact or by tension forces. The material, either before or after being worked to impart pufness to it, may be treated with materials to impart wet strength, re resistance, wrinkle resistance and other characteristics which are normally attainable in fiber products. The treating iluid may be applied for the dual purpose of imparting a selected characteristic to the material and also for weakening the ber-to-fber bonds to enable a web working or other ber elongating operation to effect elongation of the bers.
In a sheet of the material in which all of the threads or strands of the carrying web are adhesively coated, the ber buckling is contined in areas bounded by the threads and a pleasing pattern of square pillows is provided. In a web -in which only the longitudinal base web strands are adhesively coated, the puffing effect may extend uninterruptedly across the cross threads from one longitudinal thread to the next. In such fabric, when made by swing tentering, the puffed pattern gives the general appearance of a diagonally extending pattern in which the presence of the cross threads is less noticeable while the machine direction threads reveal their appearance by the interruption of the diagonal Waves of puffing.
In all of the described sheetings the non-woven web is adhesively bonded so as to permit movement of the fibers in the areas intermediate the bonds in the web so that, as tension is applied to the bers, their condition is altered and they are repositioned as an incident to buckling thereof and a puffed surface, increased bulk, and increased porosity are imparted to the sheet.
Other methods of working the material to cause puffing of the non-woven facings of ber may be employed and various modifications of the sheet structure may be made in accordance with the principles of the invention as described.
This application is a continuation of my co-pending application Serial No. 591,165, tiled June 13, 1956, now abandoned.
I claim:
1. A puffed web comprising a reinforcing open network of crossing threads including two sets of generally parallel threads which are disposed with the threads of one set extending across the threads of the other set and bonded thereto so as to provide dimensional stability to the web, and a non-woven facing including articulated, haphazardly arranged bers attached to said reinforcing network of threads, said articulated bers in said facing having spaced portions of their lengths bonded to correspondingly spaced portions of pairs of said threads and` having a -buckled configuration, said articulated fibers having been tensioned intermediate said positions of bonding to said threads and then buckled, without appreciably altering the dimensions of said web, whereby the fibers intermediate said positions of bonding are reoriented to thereby form a substantially permanently puffed surface on the dimensionally stable web.
2. A relatively lightweight and highly flexible puffed web comprising a reinforcing, non-woven open network of crossing threads including two sets of generally parallel threads which are disposed with the threads of one set extending across the threads of the other set and bonded thereto so as to provide dimensional stability to the web, and a non-woven facing of fibers attached to said reinforcing network of threads, said facing including articulated fibers arranged at an angle with respect to the machine and cross direction of the web and having spaced portions of their lengths bonded to correspondingly spaced portions of pairs of said threads with lapping portions of said articulated fibers disposed intermediate the positions of bonding with said threads and having a buckled configuration, said articulated fibers having been tensioned intermediate said positions of bonding to said threads to cause said lapping portions to become elongated and then adjusted so as to cause said lapping portions to buckle, without appreciably changing the dimensions of said web, so as to reorient the lapping portions of the fibers intermediate said positions of bonding to thereby provide said buckled configuration of said fibers to form a substantially permanently puffed surface on the dimensionally stable web.
3. The method of making a puffed web which cornprises the steps of providing an open network of threads, including two sets of generally parallel threads which are bonded together at their crossings to provide dimensional stability to the web, and a non-woven layer of fibers in which there are articulated, haphazardly arranged fibers which span the space between and are attached to spaced portions of pairs of said threads, subjecting the web to working by oppositely directed forces in the machine direction acting in the plane ofthe sheet to effect permanent reorientation of the portions of the articulated fibers disposed between said spaced-apart positions of attachment with said threads, said forces being effective to elongate said articulated fibers between the points of attachment thereof to said threads and to then buckle the elongated fibers to puff the web without appreciably changing the original dimensions of the web.
4. The method of making a non-woven puffed web which comprises the steps of providing an open network of threads, including two sets of generally parallel threads with one of said sets Wholly on one side of the other set and with the threads bonded together at their crossings to provide dimensional stability to the web, and a nonwoven layer of fibers in which there are articulated, haphazardly arranged fibers which span the space between and are attached to spaced portions of pairs of said threads and have lapping portions disposed intermediate the positions of bonding with said threads, subjecting the web to working by oppositely directed forces acting in the machine direction in the plane of the sheet and at opposite sides thereof, so as to elongate the articulated fibers between the points of attachment thereof to said threads through movement of said lapping portions and to buckle such elongated fibers to provide permanent reorientation of said fibers out of the plane of the web and provide a puffed surface on the dimensionally stable web without appreciably varying the original width and length of the web.
References Cited in the file of this patent UNITED STATES PATENTS 1,867,071 Collings et al. July l2, 1932 2,039,312 Goldman May 5, 1936 2,294,898 Fourness et al. Sept. 8, 1942 2,484,787 Grant Oct. 11, 1949 2,578,664 Berry et al. Dec. 18, 1951 2,697,678 Ness et al Dec. 21, 1954 2,705,692 Petterson Apr. 5, 1955 2,725,323 Chadwick et al. Nov. 29, 1955 FOREIGN PATENTS 549,254 Great Britain Nov. 12, 1942 500,020 Belgium Dec. 30, 1950 693,711 Great Britain July 8, 1953

Claims (1)

  1. 3. THE METHOD OF MAKING A PUFFED WEB WHICH COMPRISES THE STEPS OF PROVIDING AN OPEN NETWORK OF THREADS, INCLUDING TWO SETS OF GENERALLY PARALLEL THREADS WHICH ARE BONDED TOGETHER AT THEIR CROSSINGS TO PROVIDE DIMENSIONAL STABILITY TO THE WEB, AND A NON-WOVEN LAYER OF FIBERS IN WHICH THERE ARE ARTICULATED, HAPHAZARDLY ARRANGED FIBERS WHICH SPAN THE SPACE BETWEEN AND ARE ATTACHED TO SPACED PORTIONS OF PAIRS OF SAID THREADS, SUBJECTING THE WEB TO WORKING BY OPPOSITELY DIRECTED FORCES IN THE MACHINE DIRECTION ACTING IN THE PLANE OF THE SHEET TO EFFECT PERMANENT REORIENTATION OF THE PORTIONS OF THE ARTICULATED FIBERS DISPOSED BETWEEN SAID SPACED-APART POSITIONS OF ATTACHMENT WITH SAID THREADS, SAID FORCES BEING EFFECTIVE TO ELONGATE SAID ARTICULATED FIBERS BETWEEN THE POINTS OF ATTACHMENT THEREOF TO SAID THREADS AND TO THEN BUCKLE THE ELONGATED FIBERS TO PUFF THE WEB WITHOUT APPRECIABLY CHANGING THE ORIGINAL DIMENSIONS OF WEB.
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US3629047A (en)*1970-02-021971-12-21Hercules IncNonwoven fabric
US3629048A (en)*1970-02-271971-12-21Hercules IncReinforced paper sheeting
US3639199A (en)*1969-04-211972-02-01Cons Paper Bahamas LtdReinforced laminate product
US3673060A (en)*1970-01-121972-06-27Int Paper CoAdhesively laminated creped dinner napkin
FR2134031A1 (en)*1971-04-221972-12-01Millipore Corp
US3765997A (en)*1968-12-161973-10-16Kimberly Clark CoLaminate
US3881210A (en)*1972-03-241975-05-06Scott Paper CoFlushable, pre-moistened, sanitary wiper and method of manufacturing same
US3900632A (en)*1970-02-271975-08-19Kimberly Clark CoLaminate of tissue and random laid continuous filament web
US3925127A (en)*1973-07-091975-12-09Gomei Kaisha Touyo ShojiBulky paper and method of making same
DE2553812A1 (en)*1974-12-021976-06-10Buckeye Cellulose Corp SILENT STRONG, CLOTH-LIKE LAMINATE
US4001472A (en)*1971-09-031977-01-04Kimberly-Clark CorporationNonwoven reinforced cellulosic material and method of preparation
US4078958A (en)*1974-06-271978-03-14Cie Des Ets. De La Risle-Papeteries De Pont-AudemerManufacture of a wiping article having a paper base
USRE30061E (en)*1966-07-261979-07-31Johnson & JohnsonNonwoven fibrous product and method of making the same
US4637949A (en)*1984-07-031987-01-20James River CorporationScrim reinforced, flat cloth-like composite laminate and a method of making
WO1987000565A1 (en)*1985-07-151987-01-29Tefo Svenska TextilforskningsinstitutetPaper with improved properties
US4731276A (en)*1984-07-031988-03-15The James River CorporationScrim reinforced, quilted cloth-like composite laminate and a method of making
US4915993A (en)*1987-03-021990-04-10Vendor Holding B.V.Zigzag folded towel packet for use with towel dispensing apparatus
US5143679A (en)*1991-02-281992-09-01The Procter & Gamble CompanyMethod for sequentially stretching zero strain stretch laminate web to impart elasticity thereto without rupturing the web
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US5167897A (en)*1991-02-281992-12-01The Procter & Gamble CompanyMethod for incrementally stretching a zero strain stretch laminate web to impart elasticity thereto
EP0788873A1 (en)*1996-02-101997-08-13Corovin GmbHMethod for producing a multilayered elastic sheetlike product and multilayered elastic sheetlike product
WO1998056328A1 (en)1997-06-131998-12-17The Procter & Gamble CompanyAbsorbent article with adjustable waist feature
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WO2001001904A1 (en)1999-06-302001-01-11The Procter & Gamble CompanyDisposable, absorbent, pull-on pants
US6187696B1 (en)1997-12-032001-02-13E. I. Du Pont De Nemours And CompanyBreathable composite sheet structure
USD464202S1 (en)2000-09-252002-10-15The Procter & Gamble CompanyComposite fabric panel for a disposable article
US6561354B1 (en)1997-05-232003-05-13The Proctor & Gamble CompanyPackage of novel three dimensional structures useful as cleaning sheets
US20030114825A1 (en)*2001-12-192003-06-19Morman Michael TodMethod for making an absorbent article with elastic cuff areas and necked substrates
US20030171051A1 (en)*2002-03-082003-09-113M Innovative Properties CompanyWipe
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