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CA2205459C - Solvent-spun cellulosic filaments - Google Patents

Solvent-spun cellulosic filaments Download PDF

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Publication number
CA2205459C
CA2205459C CA002205459A CA2205459A CA2205459C CA 2205459 C CA2205459 C CA 2205459C CA 002205459 A CA002205459 A CA 002205459A CA 2205459 A CA2205459 A CA 2205459A CA 2205459 C CA2205459 C CA 2205459C
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Prior art keywords
filaments
elongation
tex
cellulose
break
Prior art date
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Expired - Fee Related
Application number
CA002205459A
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French (fr)
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CA2205459A1 (en
Inventor
Derek Budgell
Hans-Jurgen Pitowski
Ulrich Wachsmann
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Cordenka GmbH and Co KG
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Cordenka GmbH and Co KG
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Priority claimed from DE4444140A external-priority patent/DE4444140A1/en
Application filed by Cordenka GmbH and Co KG filed Critical Cordenka GmbH and Co KG
Publication of CA2205459A1 publication Critical patent/CA2205459A1/en
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Publication of CA2205459C publication Critical patent/CA2205459C/en
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Abstract

Solvent-spun cellulose filaments from a solution of cellulose in a tertiary amine N-oxide and if necessary water with a strength of 50 to 80 cN/tex, an elongation at break of 6 to 25% and a specific breaking time of at least 300 s/tex. Solvent-spun cellulose filaments from a solution of cellulose in a tertiary amine N-oxide and if necessary water with a strength of 50 to 80 cN/tex and an elongation at break of 9 to 25%.

Description

Solvent-spun cellulose filaments Akzo Nobel nv, Arnhem Description:
The invention relates to solvent-spun cellulose filaments from a solution of cellulose in a tertiary amine N-oxide.
The publication "Spinning of cellulose from N-methylmorpho-line-N-oxide in the presence of additives~~ by H. Chanzy, M.
Paillet and R. Hagege (Polymer, 1990 Vol. 31, March, pages 400 to 405) discloses such filaments (fibers) which were manufactured from a solution of cellulose with a degree of polymerization (DP) of 600 or 5000 in the tertiary amine N-oxide N-methylmorpholine-N-oxide (NMMO). Based on the cel-lulose with a DP of 600, filaments were obtained having a strength of 0.5 GPa corresponding to 33.3 cN/tex and a 16~
elongation at break. When cellulose with a DP of 5000 was employed the strength amounted to 56.7 cN/tex (0.85 GPa) and a 4~ elongation at break.
By adding 2~ ammonium chloride (NHQC1) to the cellulose so-lution (DP 600) the strength of the filaments produced thereby increased to 60 cN/tex (0.9 GPa). The elongation at break of these filaments amounted to 8~. Likewise by adding ammonium chloride or calcium chloride to the solutions of the cellulose with a DP of 5000, filaments with high strength were obtained (up to 87 cN/tex), but whose elongation at break was below 5's. The salts added to the solutions (NH4C1 or CaCl2) were no longer detectable in the filaments. This effect was to b~~ attributed to the process steps which are typical for the production of these filaments: the passage through <~n aqueous coagulation bath in order to precipitate the cel:Lulose, subsequent to the spinning in an air gap and the washing baths which follow the coagulation bath. The NMMO ;solvent is removed from the filaments in these baths. Considering the statement in the above mentioned publication than the salts were no longer detectable in the filaments, it is to be assumed that the salts were washed out of the filaments during these treatment steps.
The solvent spinning process wit=h a tertiary amine N-oxide as a solvent for the cellulose is characterized by its pronounced environmental acceptability since the solvent washed out of the filaments can be nearly completely recovered and be used again in preparing the solution. In respect to an economical way of carrying out the process, the addition of salts to the spinning solution is therefore disadvantageous since the recovery of the tertiary amine N-oxide, which is achieved in general with ion exchangers, becomes considerably more difficult since the resins in the ion exchangers are saturated by the ions of the salts instead of the desired degradation products of the cellulose and the amine N-oxide, which are present in the wash water in addition to the tE~rtiary amine N-oxide.
Moreover chlorides lead to corrosion of installation parts made of steel.
Besides these process-related disadvantages of adding salts to the cellulose solution, the :resulting filaments also exhibit considerable disadvantages regardless of their high strength. As explained in the above mentioned publication, adding salts influences greatly the internal morphology of the filaments. In this case not only was a modification of the internal structure discovered, but also a reduction was found in the lateral cohesion compared to filaments which were produced without adding sa_Lts. Based on this fact each rubbing, bending or repetitive handling leads to a significant delamination of the filaments with a release of microfibrillar lint, which is a=Lso called fibrillation.
This extremely pronounced fibrillation was not observed with filaments produced without adding salts to the spinning solution. Based on thi:~ characteristic, filaments produced under the addition of :alts to the spinning solution are in general not suit=ed for a textile application.
The present invention was therei_ore based on the objective to provide other solvent-spun cellulose filaments from a solution of cellulose in a tert=_ary amine N-oxide; which moreover can be manufactured in an economical way. A
further objective of the present. invention was to provide solvent-spun cellulose filament: from a solution of cellulose in a tertiary amine N--oxide which are particularly suited for industrial usage.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
This objective is met by solvent:-spun cellulose filaments from a solution of cellulose in a tertiary amine N-oxide and, if necessary, water with a strength ranging between 50 and 80 cN/tex, a 6 to 25~ elongation at break and a specific breaking time of at least 300 s/tex.
In accordance with one aspect of the present invention there is a solvent-spun cellulose filaments from a solution of cellulose in a tertiary amine N-oxide and water with a strength of 50 to 80 cN/tex, an elongation at break of 6 to 25% and a specific breaking time of at least 300 s/tex, and wherein the solution is substantially free of salt BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 depicts a schematic of a set up used for measuring breaking time;
FIG. 2 is a perspective view of an ejector 10 of FIG. 1;
and FIG. 3 is a schematic drawing for the measurement of filament tension.

The strength of the filaments amounts preferably to 50 to 70 cN/tex, in particular 53 to E;6 CN/tex, and their elongation at break ranges between 6 and 20%, in particular 6 to 13%. Specific breaking times of 300 to 2000 s/tex, for example 300 to 1000 s/tex or 306 to 767 s/tex, can be obtained without problems. The cellulose which is dissolved in the tertiary amine N-oxide is preferably southern pine chemical wood pulp.
According to the prior art described by the aforementioned publication, filaments are known to exhibit a strength of 33.3 cN/tex and a 16% elongation at break (DP 600) or 56.7 cN/tex with a 4% elongation at x7reak (DP 5000). By adding NH4C1, filaments are obtained which demonstrate a strength of 60 cN/tex with an 8% elongation at break (DP 600) and which, due to the modification of the morphology, exhibit a very pronounced fibrillation.

i ~ i ., i - 4a -Surprisingly it was found that filaments also exist which demonstrate a high strength (50 to 80 cN/tex) and a 6 to 25~ elongation at break and whi~~h, compared to filaments with normal values of strength ~~nd elongation for textile applications, do not have a modified morphology and demonstrate therefore a fibrillation similar to that of filaments suited for textile ap~~lications, or their fibrillation is even less prono,.~nced than that of the latter filaments.
One measure of the fibrillation tendency is the specific breaking time represented as s/i~ex. The higher the value of this quantity, the less pronounced the fibrillation of the filament. For measuring the breaking time, as depicted in FIG. 1, a bundle 1 made up of 50 filaments and secured at one end with a thread clamp 2 i:~ guided through a thread guide 3. The bundle 1 is oriented with a Y piece 4 in rela-tion to an ejector 10. The ejector 10 is followed by a thread guide 5 by which a deflection of the bundle 1 takes, -place, the bundle being weighted at its other end with a weight 6 of 20 grams. The distance between the first thread guide 3 and the Y piece 4, as well as between the Y piece 4 and the entrance of the ejector, is approx. 3 cm. The dis-tance between ejector exit and the second thread guide 5 is approx. 11 cm. The ejector 10 is 22 mm long.
According to the perspective depicted in figure 2, the ejector 10 exhibits an entrance slit 11 for bundle 1 with a square cross-section. The width be and the height he of the entrance slit 11 are 1 mm. The thread channel 12, which ex-tends through the entire ejector 10, exhibits at a distance le of 8 mm from the entrance slit 11 in both side walls 13 and 13~ liquid feeding ducts 14 and 14' which are facing each other. Water at a temperature of approx. 25°C streams through these feeding ducts 14 and 14~ at an angle a of 15°
relative to the axis of the bundle 1. The water flows at a rate totaling 45 1/h into the thread channel 12 and exits the ejector 10 at exit slit 15. The width bz of the liquid feeding ducts 14 and 14~ is 0.6 mm and their height hZ is 1 mm. The length lZ of the feeding ducts 14 and 14 ~ is 6 mm.
The width of the thread channel 12 from the junction of the liquid feeding ducts 14 and 14~ up to the exit slit 15 is 1.2 mm. The height h is 1 mm. Feeding with water takes place via bores 16 and 16' with a diameter of 4 mm from the underside of the ejector 10. The ejector 10 is closed off from above by a cover, not depicted, resting flatly on the ejecfor.
To determine the breaking time, the filament bundle 1 is inserted into the apparatus according to figure 1 and the weight is applied. The conduction of water into the ejector represents the beginning of the time measurement. The time measurement ends when the weight falls, i.e. when the bundle tears. Ten individual measurements were carried out for each example, and the data stated for the breaking time represent the mean values of these 10 measurements. For standardization, the time measured is related to the fila-ment titer (specific breaking time in s/tex).
The strength and elongation were determined using the strength-elongation behavior of single filaments under cli-matized conditions (T= 21 +4/-2 °C), relative humidity (65t5~) with the Fafegraph test device (Textechno). The clamping length amounted to 20 mm and the test speed was 20 mm/min. based on an initial tension of 1 cN/tex. The Fafe-graph has pneumatic clamps made of hard rubber/Vulkollan with an area of approx. 4 mm x 6 mm.
Immediately before the elongation test, a fineness measure-ment was carried out on each filament using a Vibromat de-vice (Textechno), so that the tensile test data of a fila-ment were related to the fineness of this filament. For the Vibromat the fineness-related initial tension amounted also to 1 cN/tex.
The invention will be explained and described in the fol-lowing in further detail with reference to examples.

Solvent-spun cellulose filaments were manufactured using a solution of cellulose in the tertiary amine N-oxide NI~iO
and water, to which gallic acid propyl ester was added as a stabilizer and which was extruded through a spinneret disc plate with 50 nozzle bores.
In examples 1 to 9 the southern pine chemical wood pulp U1-tranier-J (ITT-Rayonier) with a degree of polymerization (DP) of 1360 was employed. For comparison, in example 10, which represents filaments known in common textile applica-tions, the chemical wood pulp Viscokraft VfIV (International Paper Company), a pre-hydrolysis kraft pulp from hardwoods with a DP of 1667, was employed.
After leaving the spinneret the filaments were cooled, in an air gap spanning 17.5 cm, by air flowing with a velocity of 0.8 m/s at a right angle to the filaments. The cellulose was precipitated in an aqueous coagulation bath 40 mm deep and directed through a washing zone to remove NL~iO. The ex-cess finishing agent (2~ K 7451 in water, distributed by Stockhausen GmbH, Krefeld, Germany), applied after the washing, was stripped off the filaments in a squeezing step between two rollers. Subsequently the filaments were dried and wound up.
After the filaments had exited the coagulation bath, the filament tension was determined at several positions. These positions are schematically depicted in figure 3:
position 21: between the coagulation bath 20 and the wash zone 25 - position 22: between the wash zone 25 and the application of finishing agent 26 - position 23: between the squeezing step 27 and the drying zone 28 - position 24: prior to being wound up 29.
The filament tension was measured with the Tensiomin meas-uring device Bn 135.205.2 and the measuring sensor 100 cN
type Bn 125.126.1 (Kurt Honigmann).
The further test conditions and properties of the filaments obtained according to examples 1 to 9 and the comparison example 10 are summarized in table I.

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~ ~o E~ , 3xG.rnwm C , In two further examples solvent-spun cellulose filaments were produced via a spinneret which only had a nozzle bore with a diameter of 130 um. The spinning temperature amounted to 100°C. The filaments were cooled in an air gap spanning 15 cm by means of immobile air at a temperature of 25°C. Subsequent to the coagulation bath maintained at 18°C, the filaments were washed, treated with a finishing agent (1~ Leomin in water, distributed by Hoechst AG), and dried. Between the spinneret and the winding up a drawing ratio of 1 . 13 was adjusted. The spinning speed amounted to 48 m/min. In order to determine the specific breaking time, bundles of 50 individual filaments were produced from the continuous filaments.
In example 11, as in examples 1 to 9, the chemical wood pulp Ultranier-J (DP 1360) was employed. The solution ex-hibited a cellulose concentration of 10 per cent by weight, 11.5 per cent water by weight and 78.4 per cent NN~IO by weight. The concentration of gallic propyl ester amounted to 0.1 per cent by weight.
For the production of filaments according to example 12 (comparison example) viscokraft 4.3 from the International Paper Company with a degree of polymerization of 650 in a concentration of 12.7 per cent by weight was employed as a chemical wood pulp. The water concentration amounted to 9.0 per cent by weight. 78.2 per cent NI~iO by weight and 0.1 per cent gallic acid propyl ester by weight were present.
The properties of the filaments produced according to exam-ple 11 and the comparison example 12 are shown in table II. ' T a b 1 a II
Example 11 12 Filament titer/dtex 1.2 1.8 Strength/(cN/tex) 52.8 36.4 Elongation at break/ 13.0 11.7 Specific breaking time/(s/tex) 1000 250 The tables I and II show clearly that the filaments exhibit according to the comparison examples 10 and 12 a specific breaking time of 257 and 250 s/tex, respectively. The strength of the filaments of 43.8 and 36.4 cN/tex and their elongation at break of 8.9 and 11.7, respectively, lie in a range which is normal for solvent-spun cellulose fila-ments for textile applications. Surprisingly, the filaments of the invention (examples 1 to 9 and 11) exhibit a high strength, with an elongation at break which is comparable to the one of the comparison examples 10 and 12. In par-ticular they do not exhibit the disadvantage of the very pronounced fibrillation observed in the prior art cited. On the contrary, the filaments of the invention exhibit a clearly reduced tendency toward fibrillation (up to a fac-tor of 4) compared to the filaments of the comparison exam-ples. The filaments of the invention therefore combine a high strength which is desired for industrial areas of ap-plication and a decreased tendency toward fibrillation, making those filaments also very suited for textile appli-cations.
Additionally, the filaments of the invention can be eco-nomically produced and the disadvantages for obtaining high strength in the prior art, such as the addition of salts to the cellulose solution, can be advantageously avoided. For the manufacture of the filaments of the invention the de-gree of polymerization of the cellulose employed in the production of the solution, and the concentration of the cellulose, is decisive on the one hand, as well as the winding speed of the filaments on the other hand. To pro-duce filaments of the invention, the degree of polymeriza-tion DP, the cellulose concentration c in ~, and the wind-ing speed w in m/min are adjusted so that the size K, which depends on these three values and whose value is calculated according to the following equation:
K= D P°.5 ~ C . w.o.a,s exceeds 259. The values of K are stated for examples 1 to in table I. For the example 11 of the invention this value is 276, whereas its value is only 229 for the com-parison example 12.
Furthermore for the manufacture of the filaments of the in-vention the following process parameters are also impor-tant. In order to obtain the highest strength possible, the chemical wood pulp employed in the production of the solu-tion should contain a percentage of a-cellulose as high as possible, such as the chemical wood pulp of southern pine employed in examples 1 to 9 and 11. For example, during the manufacture of filaments according to example 10, using a chemical wood pulp with a higher DP than the DP of southern pine chemical wood pulp, the desired strength could not be obtained.
Besides these influencing quantities, the temperature of the coagulation bath and the filament tension at position 23, i.e. in the drying zone 28, likewise influence the strength.
It was found that the temperature of the coagulation bath should be as low as possible to obtain high strength. In examples 5, 6 and 7, where the coagulation bath temperature amounted to 30°C, the resulting strengths were 53.3, 52.7 and 53.9 cN/tex respectively. In example 3, despite a lower cellulose concentration, the resulting strength amounted to 58.6 cN/tex with a coagulation bath temperature of 12°C.
By increasing the filament tension at position 23 an in-crease in the strength can likewise be obtained. As the ex-amples 2 and 3 illustrate, the strength of the filaments can be raised via the increase of filament tension at posi-tion 23 while all other test conditions are approximately comparable. High strength filaments can also be obtained if a low temperature of the coagulation bath is chosen and a high filament tension is applied at position 23 as the ex-amples 3, 4 and 9 show. In contrast, in example 6 where a filament tension on the same order as in examples 3, 4 and 9 was likewise applied, but with a significantly higher co-agulation bath temperature, the resulting strength of the filaments was low.
The elongation at break, conversely, decreases due to the increase of the filament tension at position 23. Addition-ally it was found that an increase in the elongation at break can be obtained by reducing the filament tension in the area of the washing zone and prior to the application of the finishing agent (position 22). According to example 1 the elongation at break of the filaments amounts to 13~, whereby the filament tension was 12 cN at position 22, and cN at position 23. In contrast to that, example 8 re-sulted in an 8.2~ elongation at break. At position 22 the filament tension was however only 10 cN, but at position 23 a filament tension of 79 cN was applied.

Claims (7)

CLAIMS:
1. Solvent-spun cellulose filaments from a solution of cellulose in a tertiary amine N-oxide and water with a strength of 50 to 80 cN/tex, an elongation at break of 6 to 25% and a specific breaking time of at least 300 s/tex, and wherein the solution is substantially free of salt.
2. Filaments according to claim 1, characterized in that their elongation at break amounts to 6 to 20%.
3. Filaments according to claim 1 or 2, characterized in that their strength amounts to 53 to 66 cN/tex and their elongation at break to 6 to 13%.
4. Filaments according to one of claims 1 to 3, characterized in that their elongation at break is 6 to 9.7%.
5. Filaments according to one of claims 1 to 4, characterized in that their elongation at break is 6 to 9.5%.
6. Filaments according to one of claims 1 to 5, characterized in that their elongation at break is 6 to 9%.
7. Filaments according to one of claims 1 to 6, characterized in that the cellulose is a southern pine chemical wood pulp.
CA002205459A 1994-12-12 1995-12-07 Solvent-spun cellulosic filaments Expired - Fee Related CA2205459C (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (3)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
DE4444140A DE4444140A1 (en) 1994-12-12 1994-12-12 Solvent-spun cellulosic filaments
DEP4444140.1 1994-12-12
PCT/EP1995/004808 WO1996018760A1 (en) 1994-12-12 1995-12-07 Solvent-spun cellulosic filaments

Publications (2)

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CA2205459A1 CA2205459A1 (en) 1996-06-20
CA2205459C true CA2205459C (en) 2006-02-07

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AT511638B1 (en) * 2011-06-21 2016-06-15 Glanzstoff Bohemia Sro HIGHLY CELLULOSIC FILAMENT, ITS USE AND METHOD FOR THE PRODUCTION THEREOF

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