Process for applying a softening or emollient lotion to a...

Drug – bio-affecting and body treating compositions – Preparations characterized by special physical form – Wearing apparel – fabric – or cloth

Reexamination Certificate

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C424S400000, C424S401000, C162S158000, C162S179000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06740329

ABSTRACT:

The present invention relates to a process for depositing, at room temperature, a softening lotion on an absorbent paper product.
The invention relates more particularly to a process for depositing, at room temperature, a softening or emollient lotion, which is in the liquid state at room temperature, on a product made of cellulose wadding.
The term “absorbent paper” is understood to mean the cellulose wadding obtained by a wet route or the so-called “air-laid” paper obtained by a dry route and consisting of paper fibres bound by a thermoplastic binder such as a latex.
The lotion to be deposited is of the type comprising one or more emollient active substances as a dispersion or as an emulsion in a volatile liquid vehicle, especially in water.
In general, it is desirable to be able to apply, to at least one surface of the paper product, an emollient lotion which gives the paper a soft, slippery feel.
Advantageously, the lotion can be transferred from the paper to the user's skin.
The application of the invention is in the manufacture of paper products such as papers for household or sanitary use. Mention may more particularly be made of papers whose use involves direct contact with the skin and repeated rubbing of the latter, such as disposable paper handkerchiefs, toilet paper or any other paper product intended for wiping the skin, flannels for removing make-up, dry wipes, etc.
The invention also relates to a paper product obtained according to the process.
Documents WO-A-97/30216 and WO-A-97/30217 have described examples of such aqueous compositions.
Apart from the actual composition of such an aqueous lotion, the conditions under which it is deposited on the surface of the absorbent product together with the quantity and physical state of the active substances present on the surface of the product are key factors in determining user satisfaction.
It is in fact desirable that the process used for depositing the lotion moisten the paper product, which is by nature absorbent, as little as possible so as especially to prevent the loss of mechanical properties of the product when rewinding it during the production cycle after the step of depositing the lotion and also to avoid damaging the product when storing it after it has been produced.
In order for the emollient or softening character of the product to be clearly discernible, it is desirable that the lotion and the active substances be distributed as homogeneously and as uniformly as possible over the surface of the product.
In order for the manufacturing process to be economic, it is necessary not to lose lotion, that is to say to prevent, during deposition, some lotion, and therefore some active substances, from penetrating too deeply into the paper product so as to remain in the fibrous structure and thus be “lost” from the standpoint of the emollient effect discerned by the user.
One of the other qualities of a paper product on which an emollient lotion has been deposited is the ability of the lotion present on the product, and especially the active substances that it contains, to be completely or partly transferred to the user's skin, this being so even when a small quantity of active substances has been applied to the surface of the product, something which is, moreover, desirable for the above-mentioned economic reasons, especially when this quantity is less than 3 g/m
2
of area of the product.
Good transferability is obtained when a process for applying a lotion which is in the solid state at room temperature, of the type mentioned in documents WO-A95/35411 or WO-A-96/24722, is used.
In all cases, it is necessary to provide means for heating the solution so that it passes from its solid state to a liquid state in which it can be applied, for example by low-pressure spraying, by coating, preferably by flexographic printing, by rotogravure or else by extrusion or by a combination of a spraying of the lotion on to a roll for transferring a film of lotion, which is then applied to the surface of the product by calendering.
Document WO-A-99/08555 cites other examples of the use of a lotion which is solid at room temperature by preheating it to above its melting point, applying it, for example, by rotogravure as spaced-apart deposits on the surface of the product and then by resolidifying the deposits of molten lotion.
In the case of an aqueous lotion which is in the liquid state at room temperature, one technique that is used is spraying by rotors.
In general, the known examples of industrial use of an aqueous lotion which is liquid at room temperature have the abovementioned drawbacks and especially the loss of product within the fibrous structure and the excessive moistening of the latter.
Document WO-A-99/19081 relates to the spray application of a composition to a material in sheet form. With regard to paper products, that document mentions (page 8, line 2 to page 9, line 8) all the problems and difficulties inherent in the absorbent nature of the paper substrate and proposes, as a solution, the rejection of the technique of spraying by atomization, making use of the prior pressurization of a mixture containing a compressed fluid.
Despite these difficulties and prejudices, the invention provides a process for depositing, at room temperature, a softening or emollient lotion on an absorbent paper product, especially cellulose wadding, which lotion is a liquid at room temperature and is of the type comprising one or more emollient active substances as a dispersion or as an emulsion in a volatile liquid vehicle, especially in water, characterized in that it consists in spraying the lotion by means of a stream of gas under pressure so as to remove at least part of the volatile liquid vehicle in order to form and spray fine droplets of lotion, having a low proportion of volatile liquid vehicle, which are deposited on at least one face of the paper product.
The technique of spraying by atomization by means of a gas under pressure, which is preferably compressed air, is used within the context of the invention in a process which is different from, or indeed contradictory to, those normally used for example in the industrial application of paints.
This is because, in the latter case, a purpose of spraying by means of a vaporizer or atomizer is to disperse the paint, which is a colour prepared with a liquid vehicle, in fine droplets which are deposited on the surface to be painted, but without drying the paint, the presence of almost all of the liquid vehicle on the surface of the product to be painted being necessary in order to obtain a homogeneous coat of paint, especially in terms of thickness, this homogeneity and the final appearance of the paint resulting from the formation of a film which stiffens by the evaporation of the liquid vehicle as the paint dries.
According to the invention, most of the liquid vehicle, especially water, is removed by vaporization.
The volatile liquid vehicle is partly extracted during the spraying step.
Preferably, an extraction booth is used so as to extract some of the vaporized liquid vehicle (water) and to remove the external contaminants.
According to the invention, the pressure of the spraying gas is greater than 2 bar and preferably greater than 4 bar.
The proportion by weight of active substance(s) in the lotion is between 1% and 50%, preferably between 20% and 50% and more particularly equal to about 30%.
The active substances are solid or semi-solid emollients, especially of the type of those described in documents WO-A-97/30216 or WO-A-97/30217.
The liquid vehicle is preferably water, but it may also be another volatile liquid vehicle such as, for example, an alcohol (methanol or ethanol), a glycol ether, etc.
Technical control of the process consists especially in optimizing the various operating parameters of a spraying plant, especially the choice of the spray nozzle, the pressure of the air and the air/lotion ratio, depending on the composition of the solution. It is also important to adjust the position and orientation of the nozzle with respect to the paper and t

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