Method of making a coated tampon applicator

Adhesive bonding and miscellaneous chemical manufacture – Methods – Surface bonding and/or assembly therefor

Reexamination Certificate

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Details

C156S218000, C156S466000, C264S512000, C427S179000, C427S293000, C427S002300, C604S015000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06171426

ABSTRACT:

FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to a method of making a tampon applicator having a polymeric coating and to tampon applicators made therefrom. In particular, the present invention discloses a method of making a longitudinally seamed tampon applicator from a substrate that is partially coated on its outwardly facing surface.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Tampon applicators are typically fabricated from either cardboard or plastic materials, with both capable of having laminates or coatings thereon. Plastic applicators are generally associated with easy and comfortable insertion into the body, especially on light flow days. However, the currently marketed plastic products are constructed from polyolefins, and these materials are not considered flushable or degradable. Thus, they are not generally considered to be safe for the environment. There has been considerable research performed on water-dispersible and degradable polymers to eliminate these deficiencies, but many of the approaches compromise the properties that make plastic applicators attractive to consumers, such as perceived surface smoothness. The degradable materials can also be significantly more expensive than traditional polyolefins, making them uneconomical. Herring, U.S. Pat. No. 5,002,526 discloses a water-soluble plastic applicator made from polyvinyl alcohol based compositions. Another approach using water-dispersible polyesters to improve flushability of applicators is disclosed in Keck, U.S. Pat. No. 5,389,068.
Conversely, cardboard applicators are generally considered to be more environmentally friendly and more easily and discreetly disposable, because they are generally flushable in standard toilets. However, some consumers do not believe that cardboard applicators are as easy and comfortable to insert as plastic applicators, due to the differences in their respective surfaces.
In an effort to provide the consumer with the attractive properties of both applicator types, products have been designed and marketed that contain thin polymeric films laminated to cardboard substrates. An example of this approach is disclosed in Campion et al., U.S. Pat. No. 5,346,468. This reference also describes spirally wound tubes. Other tampon applicators are formed of convolutely wound tubes as described in Whitehead, U.S. Pat. No. 4,508,531.
A third known method of fabricating a cardboard tube, is disclosed in Hinzmann, U.S. Pat. No. 4,755,164. This patent disclosed forming a cylindrical tube from a rectangular sheet of pre-cut material. The method requires overlapping a portion of the two longitudinal edges of the rectangular sheet, to form a longitudinal seam. While this fabrication method is useful in cardboard or paperboard applicators, it is more difficult to employ this method to form applicators having an outer layer of plastic. This is because the longitudinal seam is likely to be weaker if the plastic layer is present in the seam area. Thus, the seam adhesive would not be able to penetrate the cardboard structure by both mechanical and chemical bonding, in comparison to a simple cardboard material. Thus, the seam area should be free of the plastic layer to form as strong a seam as possible. This strength is required, because tampons contained within these applicators may be radially-expanding tampons that may exert a significant “hoop stress” on the seam prior to the expulsion of the tampon out of the applicator. If the hoop stress overcomes the seam bond strength, then the seam can open up and cause discomfort during insertion, or alternatively be unusable.
Therefore, what is needed is a method of forming an economical applicator for use with tampons that has a strong, longitudinal seam and a pleasingly smooth polymeric outer surface.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
A tampon applicator member can be made from a roll of sheet-like material. A rolled sheet-like material having a first surface and a second surface is unwound, and a flowable material is applied to the first surface of the sheet-like material to form a plurality of discrete coated zones. The flowable material can be transformed into a solid polymeric layer in the discrete coated zones. A plurality of individual, sheet-like webs of coated material can be slit from a master roll. A first surface of each individual web, corresponding to the first surface of the sheet-like material, has an uncoated portion adjacent a first side edge, and a coated portion. An individual web is then separated into a plurality of applicator blanks, having a longitudinal axis that is substantially greater than a transverse axis. A first surface of each blank, corresponding to the first surface of the individual sheet-like web, has an uncoated portion adjacent a first side edge, parallel to the longitudinal axis, and a coated portion. An adhesive is applied to the uncoated portion of the first surface of a blank, and the blank is formed around a forming mandrel that is oriented parallel to the longitudinal axis of the blank, leaving the first surface outwardly disposed. A second side edge of the blank, opposite the first side edge, is superposed over the first side edge to substantially overlap the uncoated portion of the first surface of the blank and to adhere the second surface of the blank, corresponding to the second surface of the sheet-like web, to the first surface of the blank to form a longitudinal seam, thereby forming the applicator member having an exposed, outwardly disposed surface.
The invention also relates to a longitudinally-seamed tampon applicator. The member has a tubular structural member having an outer surface that is substantially coated with a solid polymeric layer. The longitudinal seam has a first edge of the inner surface of the structural member superposed over and adhered to an uncoated opposite edge of the outer surface of the structural member.


REFERENCES:
patent: 2210436 (1940-08-01), Weingand et al.
patent: 3411542 (1968-11-01), Walsh et al.
patent: 3581744 (1971-06-01), Voss
patent: 4412833 (1983-11-01), Wiegner et al.
patent: 4508531 (1985-04-01), Whitehead
patent: 4622030 (1986-11-01), Sheldon
patent: 4755164 (1988-07-01), Hinzmann
patent: 5002526 (1991-03-01), Herring
patent: 5100496 (1992-03-01), Mitchell
patent: 5346468 (1994-09-01), Campion et al.
patent: 5389068 (1995-02-01), Keck
patent: 5547701 (1996-08-01), Nielsen et al.
patent: 5702553 (1997-12-01), Iskra et al.
patent: 5709652 (1998-01-01), Hagerty
patent: 5873971 (1999-02-01), Balzar

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