Apparatus for stretching stable fibers

Textiles: spinning – twisting – and twining – Apparatus and processes – With stretching

Patent

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Details

28240, 28246, 57328, 57344, 57345, D01H 1304, D02G 102

Patent

active

053657292

DESCRIPTION:

BRIEF SUMMARY
TECHNICAL FIELD

This invention relates to the stretching of staple fibres and has particular, although not exclusive application to the stretching of wool fibres to reduce their diameter, increase their length and modify their degree of lustre.


BACKGROUND ART

In order to increase the market demand for wool during the Spring through Summer season, it would be desirable to increase the availability of products made from fine yarns and also to introduce some modification to their surface appearance, such as degree of lustre. Traditionally it has been necessary to use very fine wools of diameter less than 18 microns to enable fine yarns to be spun, and modification of surface appearance has required additional chemical treatment to that normally used. The chemical methods used to modify the surface appearance are degradative and result in loss of material. Some thinning of the fibre can be achieved in this way but typically a 5% change in diameter, say one micron, requires a 10% loss of material.
An alternative approach, at least in theory, is to stretch fibres so that their diameter is reduced to less than 18 microns. However, this approach has remained in the realm of theory and a successful commercial process is yet to be devised.
Attempts to stretch the fibres in an untwisted assembly such as a sliver, have to date required uneconomic and complex machinery: the fibres must be gripped substantially continuously or at intervals of about 50 to 70 mm over a substantial distance in order to achieve a residence time adequate to ensure setting of the stretch.
An example of this approach is described in British patent 1,189,994. The untwisted assembly is passed through an array of alternately oppositely laterally moving fibre grip devices. However, grip devices are required at 50 to 70 mm intervals and a treatment machine some 30 to 40 m long would be required to achieve an adequate residence time. Another technique has been described by Kim et al in Textile Research Journal, May 1984 at 325 and June 1984 at 370, in connection with the stretch mercerization of cotton fibres in roving form. This apparatus consists of a series of closely spaced drive rollers gradually increasing in diameter. Idler rollers were placed on top of the drive rollers and the roving was passed successively under the bottom rollers and over the top rollers. This arrangement could be adapted to treat a wool roving but a very large number of rollers would be required to achieve an adequate residence time if productivity at a commercial level is to be achieved.
British patent 1,196,419 proposes inserting twist into a sliver of staple fibres and then stretching the sliver. The twist increases the frictional engagement between the fibres to ensure that stretching of the fibres and not drafting of the sliver occurs. The method and apparatus described in this British patent require a device for inserting real twist upstream of a stretching arrangement comprising two longitudinally extending pairs of rollers about which the twisted sliver is wrapped and an untwisting device downstream of the stretching arrangement. In the apparatus of this patent the input twist insertion and output twist removal rates will be different and thus complex mechanical arrangements will be required to correlate the twist insertion and twist removal rates. If the twist removal is not exact, some residual twist will remain which will cause difficulties in further processing the sliver. Furthermore the insertion of real twist limits the apparatus to a batch mode of operation because the supply ball or wound assembly of sliver at the input end of the apparatus must itself be rotated to insert the twist. Productivity is therefore limited by the need to load a fresh supply ball or wound assembly of the sliver ready for the next run after the previous ball or assembly has been unwound. Although automation of such a batch system of processing to provide a continuous throughput system is conceivable, it would require further complex machinery at the input end thereby detract

REFERENCES:
patent: 1960426 (1934-05-01), Zundorf
patent: 3152436 (1964-10-01), Dudzik et al.
patent: 3778991 (1973-12-01), Brummer
patent: 3854177 (1974-12-01), Breen et al.
patent: 4112668 (1978-09-01), Spiller
patent: 4961307 (1990-10-01), Cook
patent: 5092117 (1992-03-01), Paivinen et al.

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