Method of modifying a nonwoven fibrous web for use as...

Plastic and nonmetallic article shaping or treating: processes – With severing – removing material from preform mechanically,... – Making hole or aperture in article

Reexamination Certificate

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C156S229000, C156S324000, C264S171130, C264S288800, C264S290200

Reexamination Certificate

active

06383431

ABSTRACT:

FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to disposable absorbent articles. More particularly, the invention relates to an economical method for advantageously modifying the physical properties of a nonwoven fibrous web for use as a component of a disposable absorbent article, and to disposable articles incorporating such modified nonwoven webs.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Disposable, wearable articles having an inner, body-facing, absorbent, liquid-retaining component and an outer, garment-facing, liquid-impervious component are well known. Articles of that type are commonly available in the form of disposable diapers, disposable underwear, pull-on diapers and training pants, incontinence pads, incontinence briefs, sanitary napkins, and the like. Such articles generally include a flexible, liquid-impervious backsheet that is adapted to be positioned between an absorbent component of the article and the clothing of the wearer, to prevent wetting or soiling of the wearer's clothing when the article is in use.
In addition to imperviousness to liquids, the backsheet also preferably includes a cloth-like outer surface, which provides a softer feel, and also a more appealing visual appearance, as compared with the outer surface of a smooth, flat plastic film. Two-ply backsheets that provide a desirable, more cloth-like appearance for such disposable, wearable articles are also known. In that regard, U.S. Pat. No. 5,151,092, entitled “Absorbent Article with Dynamic Elastic Waist Feature Having a Predisposed Resilient Flexural Hinge,” which issued on Sep. 29, 1992, to Kenneth B. Buell, et al., discloses a disposable diaper backsheet formed either from a woven or a nonwoven material, a polymeric film, or a composite material in the form of a film-coated, nonwoven material. That patent also discloses the step of embossing of a plastic film backsheet to provide a more cloth-like visual appearance to a plastic film.
Also known to those skilled in the art are methods for imparting stretchability to an otherwise substantially inelastic material, which may be employed as a backsheet. For example, the use of corrugating rolls to laterally or longitudinally stretch and to simultaneously provide a corrugated form to thin plastic films is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 4,116,892, entitled “Process for Stretching Incremental Portions of an Orientable Thermoplastic Substrate and Product Thereof,” which issued on Sep. 26, 1978, to Eckhard C. A. Schwarz; U.S. Pat. No. 4,834,741, entitled “Diaper With Waistband Elastic,” which issued on May 30, 1989, to Reinhardt N. Sabee; U.S. Pat. No. 5,156,793, entitled “Method for Incrementally Stretching Zero Strain Stretch Laminate Sheet In A Non-Uniform manner To Impart A Varying Degree Of Elasticity Thereto,” which issued on Oct. 20, 1992, to Kenneth B. Buell et al.; U.S. Pat. No. 5,167,897, entitled “Method for Incrementally Stretching A Zero Strain Stretch Laminate Sheet To Impart Elasticity Thereto,” which issued on Dec. 1, 1992 to Gerald M. Sheeter et al.; and U.S. Pat. No. 5,422,172, entitled “Elastic Laminated Sheet of An Incrementally Stretched Nonwoven Fibrous Sheet and Elastomeric Film and Method,” which issued on Jun. 6, 1995, to Pai-Chuan Wu. The corrugating rolls disclosed in each of those patents are employed in carrying out a process sometimes referred to as “ring-rolling,” to locally stretch and form corrugations in the material, in order to impart a greater degree of stretchability to selected portions of a sheet or web that may serve as a backsheet for disposable absorbent articles. Such backsheets can include both a polymeric film and an overlying and contacting layer of nonwoven, fibrous material.
In addition to incorporation into backsheets, nonwoven materials can also be incorporated into and form a part of a liquid-pervious topsheet, as well as in leg cuffs that are provided to minimize leakage from the article. Other structural members of disposable absorbent articles can also include nonwoven elements, particularly where stretchability of the material is a desirable attribute for providing improved fit of the article.
In order to provide improved comfort to the wearer of disposable absorbent articles, certain components of the articles, such as a backsheet, in addition to providing imperviousness to liquids, desirably permit the passage therethrough of moisture vapor and also preferably air, to help maintain dryness and to reduce the humidity adjacent the wearer's body. An impervious polymeric film to which breathability has been imparted to allow air and moisture vapor transmission through the film is disclosed U.S. Pat. No. 3,156,342, entitled “Flexible Absorbent Sheet,” which issued on Nov. 10, 1964, to G. A. Crowe, Jr.; U.S. Pat. No. 3,881,489, entitled “Breathable, Liquid Impervious Backsheet for Absorbent Devices,” which issued on May 6, 1975 to Edward Wallace Hartwell, et al.; U.S. Pat. No. 3,989,867, entitled “Absorbent Devices Having Porous Backsheet,” which issued on Nov. 2, 1976, to James Bryant Sisson; U.S. Pat. No. 4,153,751, entitled “Process for Stretching an Impregnated Film of Material and The Microporous Product Produced Thereby,” which issued on May 8, 1979, to Eckhard C. A. Schwarz; and U.S. Pat. No. 4,539,256, entitled “Microporous Sheet Material, Method of Making and Articles Made Therewith,” which issued on Sep. 3, 1985, to Gene H. Shipman.
Although there have been significant product improvements in recent years that have resulted in improved functioning and increased consumer acceptance of disposable absorbent articles, it is still desirable to provide an economical way to form for use in such articles a stretchable nonwoven material having optimal physical properties, which may for example be employed in a backsheet that is impervious to liquids, that is pervious to moisture vapor and also preferably air, and that additionally has a soft, cloth-like outer surface.
Accordingly, it is an object of the present invention to provide an economical method for advantageously modifying a pre-formed, nonwoven fibrous web to have desirable properties which can be used as a component or an extensible component of a disposable absorbent article.
It is another object of the present invention to provide a method for making a relatively inexpensive, flexible composite material which can be used in a disposable absorbent article, wherein the composite material may include the attribute of liquid-imperviousness, and the desirable attribute of perviousness to moisture vapor and also preferably air, as well as the desirable attribute of a soft, cloth-like feel on at least one of its surfaces.
It is a further object of the present invention to provide a method for economically modifying a pre-formed, nonwoven fibrous web and joining it to an elastic component to create a composite material which can be advatageously used as a elastically stretchable, and if desired breathable, component of a disposable absorbent article.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
Briefly stated, in accordance with one aspect of the present invention, an economical method is provided for advantageously modifying the physical characteristics of a pre-formed, nonwoven fibrous web. The method includes feeding in a web movement direction to a pair of opposed forming rolls a substantially untensioned, nonwoven fibrous web having an initial width, thickness, basis weight, low-elongation cross-web extensibility expressed as an initial load to achieve 10% cross-web elongation, intermediate-elongation cross-web extensibility expressed as an initial load to achieve 30% cross-web elongation, cross-web strength, and elongation capability. The web is gripped between the forming rolls at a nip defined by the forming rolls. Each forming roll includes a plurality of axially spaced, circumferentially extending, alternating radial teeth and intervening grooves that are in interengaged condition, with the teeth of each roll extending into the grooves of the opposed roll.
The gripped nonwoven web is subjected to incremental lateral stretching by passing the web betwe

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