专利摘要:
In a system for air-jet texturing yarn a yarn treating jet (37) is modified to locate a baffle (37a) at the outlet end of the jet. The baffle is positioned a fixed distance (A) above the central axis of the jet and away from the outlet end of the jet such that the yarn and air follow the lower surface of the baffle to a point where the yarn leaves the baffle to increase windup tension and provide a highly coherent textured yarn.
公开号:SU1764516A3
申请号:SU894613992
申请日:1989-04-06
公开日:1992-09-23
发明作者:Абдель-Монием Горрафа Адли
申请人:Е.И.Дюпон Де Немур Энд Компани (Фирма);
IPC主号:
专利说明:

one
(21) 4613992/12
(22) 04.06.89
(31) 178961; 302898
(32) 04/07/88 at 30/01/89
(33) US
(46) 09/23/92. Bul.M ° 35
(71) E.I.Dupon De Nemour and Company (US)
(72) Adly Abdel-Moniem Gorraf (US)
(56) US Patent
No. 4343071, CL D 02 G 1/16 1982.
(54) SYSTEM FOR TEXTURING
(57) SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION 1 a device for texturing a yarn contains yarn feed means with a feed roller. The yarn processing ejector is installed behind the feed roller and has inlet and outlet openings that are connected by a transport channel. At the exit of the latter, there is a deflector, a pick-up roller, a means for supplying gas and a means of winding. The surface of the deflector, or the least remote part of it, facing the outlet of the transport channel, is located at a distance of 0.1-2.0 of the minimum diameter of the channel of the end surface of the ejector. The surface of the deflector or the least distant part of it, facing the central axis of the channel, is raised above it by a distance of 0.1-3.0 times the minimum diameters of the transport channel 3 fcf, 8 ill.
This invention relates to a system for the preparation of a high degree of connectivity of a textured yarn, and more specifically, to a system for preparing such yarns with a pressurized fluid in an ejector having a diverting device at its outlet end.
It is known that it is necessary to provide an excessively large supply of one or more ends of continuous multi-filament threads to an ejector in which a pressurized fluid, such as air, acts on filamentary threads to splice them, twist them into loops having self-intersection points, entangle twisted loop the filaments into a knitted thread.
Processes associated with the use of a fluid jet are known for texturing or volumetric using both fixed and fixed deflectors located at different distances from the outlet ends of the ejector and, yod different angles to the path of the thread, in order to deflect The thread and fluid from the linear path when they leave the ejector.
In the process of obtaining a thread having loops with self-intersecting points, the texturizing structure must advance the thread provided with an excessively large feed under sufficient tension to keep the thread from rolling on the feed / feed rollers, and this tension is provided by the force of air deceleration under pressure which moves much faster than the thread This air
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fluffs the filament, winds the filament filaments, then entangles them together into a structure that can keep the loops under tension when they are stretched, which these filaments meet when fabricated from them. This tensile stress must be low at the exit of the ejector in order to accumulate loops and form an entangled structure. Immediately thereafter, it is desirable to obtain a higher tensile stress in order to tighten the entangled structure and stabilize it,
A deflector, with which air and a string collide, is often provided at the exit of the ejector in order to drastically change the direction of movement of the filament. Such deflectors are especially necessary at high texturing rates and high air pressures. However, with the known cylindrical designs of the baffles, the air is subdivided around the baffle and the part of the air that accompanies the thread continues to create tension under tension.
In the invention, the majority of the air mass or the total air mass follows the lower surface of the baffle, while the thread moves around the lower surface of the baffle.
The tension during winding represents a good criterion for the effectiveness of a texturing jet in transforming filamentally bulky, excessively large feeds into loops, which are well compacted and coalesce with each other into a bundle of strong, cohesive yarns. Good winding also results in tight, rather than soft / porous, packing of the textured yarn. Removing the yarn from such dense packages is easy and uniform, without tightening and interlacing associated with soft, porous packages.
Strong tensioning during the winding in the texturing process also results in a package with a thread that resists bulk dragging in subsequent high tensile stresses, such as base, nap, or casing. Poor sealing of the loop into a bundle of threads, which is proven by a low tension during winding, is also undesirable in the finished product or carpet product. Wearing on the surface of such products, during their use, will mainly result in loose filament yarns, excessive abrasion, scattering of fluffs and an unattractive appearance for a relatively short period of time. Filaments with well-compacted loops, combined into a compact bundle of filaments, generally resist excessive abrasion and scattering of fluffs for a longer time, when they are transformed into fabric or carpet products. Texturing tension
0 is measured after the ejector, and the tension during winding is measured before the formation of the packages. There is a parallel relationship between tension during texturing and tension during winding, despite the fact that the former is generally much smaller in magnitude than the latter. Threads with low tensions when texturing exhibit low tensions during winding, while threads
With high tension, texturing also exhibits tension during winding in the high range.
In the present invention, the tension when winding a textured yarn
5 is increased by an unexpected amount, reaching from 20 to 100% more than the tension during winding, under similar conditions with ejectors of a known level of development of technology in this field, such
0 as per US Pat. No. 4.157.605 - Agers.
The present invention provides a texturing system for one or more strands that includes a source of feed.
5 for the mentioned yarns, an ejector for texturing the yarn through which the yarn passes, located between the feeding means and the winding means for winding the textured yarn onto the package. The ejector includes a housing having inlet and outlet ends for the filament, connected by a central channel along the central axis, means for introducing compressed gas through the gas inlet to said
5, a channel between said ends (ends), in order to establish a state of contact with the thread passing through the ejector at a location in said channel, said thread and said gas, the following
0 on the way from the said discharge end of the said ejector. The deflector is located adjacent to the end with an outlet for the filament of this ejector, the deflector has a peripheral surface, the part of this surface closest to the said discharge end represents the distance from 0.1 to 2.0 minimum channel diameters downstream from the mentioned location where the compressed gas enters the ejector channel, and part
The surface of the deflector, closest to the center axis, represents a distance from 0.1 to 3.0 of the said minimum diameters of the aforementioned center axis.
The deflector may have a circular, curvilinear or polygonal cross section. The outlet end of the ejector may contain a curved - in the form of a socket configuration.
Fig. 1 shows one embodiment of the system according to the invention; Fig. 2 is a further embodiment of the system according to the invention; Fig. 3 is a perspective view of the ejector; figure 4 - section a - a in fig.Z; Figures 5 and 6 are partially taken pictures, similar to Figure 4, of an ejector according to the invention, with baffles having a square cross section, each oriented differently at the outlet end of the ejector; Fig.7 - deflector in the form of a rod with an ejector having an outlet in the form of a bell; in fig. 8 is a graph of the tension during winding in grams as a function of the position of the bottom surface of the deflector from the center line of the ejector, expressed in thousand of an inch above or below the center line, for two different paths for the thread leaving the ejector.
In the embodiment of FIG. 1, the feed yarns 10 from a plurality of packages 12 are passed along the screw thread, through the tensioner 14 and the feed roller 16 to the wetting bath 18 and to the inlet of the texturizing ejector 20. The ejector is supplied with compressed air from the air duct 22. Textured thread, outlet from the ejector 20 around the special deflector (not shown) installed at the exit of the ejector, is led to the gripping roller 24, through the transverse guide rod 26, to the winding package 28. The rotation speed of the feed roller 16 is made larger than the pick-up roller 24 to deliver an excessively large feed of the made volumetric thread in the order of from about 5 to about 200% or more. The winding speed is slightly faster than the rotational speed of the pick-up roller 24, in the order of 1 to 10%, or possibly more. The winding tension is measured by means of a suitable strain gauge at location 25 on the textured yarn 27 and the average reading is taken to avoid extreme tension values formed by passing the yarn to the winding package.
In core and shaped texturing, the ends of the threads of the shaped twist (not shown) are fed to a separate feed roller, before passing
through ejector 20, without getting wetted. The ends of the threads 10 from the feed packages 12, discharged to the feed roller 16, serve as the core. Core and shaped twist (surge, lane) ends
0 is textured together with ejector 20, but to various levels of excessively large feeds. A low level of extremely large feed is applied to the ends of the core thread 10 by the speed ratio of the rollers 16
5 and 24, for example, in the range from 1.03: 1.0 to 1.15: 1.0. A high level of excessively large feed is applied to the ends of the phono twist yarn by a ratio of the speeds of their respective feeding gripping rollers and rollers 24, for example, in the range of 1.1: 1.0 and 2.5: 1.0 or more.
An industrial machine of the type shown in FIG. 1 is an Eltex AT model manufactured by Hirsehburger
5 GMBH, mountains. Reutlingen, West Germany.
A more detailed system is shown in FIG. 2, in which the feed filament packs 30 (shown alone) serve
0 the ends 32 of the multifilament yarn to the feed rollers 35, which in turn provide an excessively large supply of the ends of the yarns 32 to the ejector 37, after passing through the water bath 36, both aggregates enclosed in compartment 37a, If the feeding filaments 32 are polymeric, such as polyester or polyamide, and being twisted without being fully oriented (known as industry as a POY-type yarn, i.e. represent a partially oriented Parteally Oriented Yarn-POY), it is usual to pull the feeding thread in the space between the rollers 33 and
5 with rollers 35. If the filament is a polyester filament of the POY type, it is customary to pull it around the hot metal finger 34 located between the rollers 33 and 35. After the filing of the filament to the ejector 37, the textured filament leaves the ejector, around a special baffle 38 to rollers 39. Moderate cold stretching, on the order of 1 to 15%, sometimes applied in the area between the rollers 39
5 and rollers 40, often referred to as a stabilization zone. High shrinkage of the yarn, either inherent in the feeding yarn or formed by the skimming operation between the rollers 33 and rollers 35, is sometimes reduced by the relaxation phase of the yarn between the rollers 40 and rollers 42, in which the thread passes through the heated tube 41. After leaving the rollers 42, the textured thread winding around the winding package 44. The winding tension is measured at location 43 as far upstream from the package 44 of the textured yarn as it may seem possible to lower peak stress values Formed filament distribution in the transverse direction during winding into a package. Berets mean tension value. Tension can also be measured in the stabilization zone between the rollers 39 and rollers 40, in order to evaluate the effectiveness of the texturizing ejector 37. With other indental ratios of speeds and conditions, the higher the tension in the stabilization zone, the more effective is the ejector 37 in converting a volumetric excessively large feed into a stable, highly-bonded, and volumetrically textured thread.
For core and shape-string texturing, the ends of the core 32 are fed through rollers 53 and rollers 55 for stretching on a hot finger 54 before guiding them around the stem 56 to the inlet hole of the texturizing ejector 37. Usually the core ends 32 are wetted in bath 36, but the shaped ends 52 are not wetted by passing around the bath. In other arrangements, the wetting of the core ends 32 is made by applying a dropwise liquid from a suitable nozzle (not shown) directly onto the thread.
A typical machine similar to the machine shown schematically in FIG. 2, represents the model FK6-T80 manufactured by Barmag Co, mountains. Remscheid, West Germany.
A texturizing ejector 37 with a special output deflector is described in connection with FIG. 3 and 4.
In the system according to this invention, the feeding filaments of the POY type are not specifically required by the need, however, if used, it is customary to first stretch the thread, with or without heat, before reaching the feed rollers located in front of the ejector. The stabilization zone is also not specifically required, but could be used. The thermal normalization zone shown between rollers 40 and 42 is also not specifically necessary, however, could be used to modify thermal properties.
textured yarn, for example shrinkage by evaporation.
The system according to the invention can be applied to all types of filaments.
yarns such as polyester, polyester of type POY, nylon, nylon type of POY, polypropylene, polyolefin, acetate, artificial fiber, fiberglass and aramid
0 nit m
The system according to the invention can also be applied to a yarn produced with loose ends forming broken elementary fibers protruding from a filament bundle, in which the loops formed by the texturizing ejector 37 are broken or abraded successively to separate filament yarns so that the resulting yarn resembles sde0 Lanyu from hair thread.
A closer look at the ejector 37 in FIG. 3-7 shows both the thread 10 and the combination of threads 32 and 52, generally indicated by the numeral 100, included in
5, an ejector through inlet 60. Compressed air or other compressed gas enters the ejector through a tube and collides with a thread in inlet 62 of pad 64 with an outlet for the thread. The thread and the air having a high flow velocity pass along the outlet end 66 of the ejector and pass around the deflector 37a, which is fixedly mounted to the console 68 fixed to the output end of the ejector.
5 The center axis of the deflector 37a lies in the plane that is perpendicular to the center axis of the ejector 37 and is located above the center axis of the ejector so that a portion of the surface of the deflector is located
The 0 closest to the center axis of this jet device is the distance A, having the order of from 0.1 to 3.0 minimum channel diameters downstream of the location where the compressed air comes to
5, the state of contact with the thread in this channel, More specifically, in the block 64 with the thread outlet, said diameter represents the diameter marked at location B. Preferably, the distance is
0A is between 0.5 and 1.5 times the minimum diameter. The deflector is also located at a fixed distance C from the outlet end 66 of the ejector outlet. Preferably, this distance C is in the range of from about 0.2 to about 1.2 minimum diameters, as discussed above. The size of the deflector 37a is selected so that the deflector is large enough to allow the filament emanating from the outlet
an ejector, extending from 3.0 to 10.0, preferably from 4.0 to 8.0, of minimum diameters around said deflector, before separating the filament from the gas flow.
In operation, the thread is passed through the ejector 37, where it is processed with compressed gas, then pushed by this gas from the outlet end of the ejector to the deflector 37a and passes, partially, around the bottom surface of the deflector and then leaves the deflector moving upwards. Since the deflector surface — closest to the center axis — lies above the center axis of the deflector, most of the gas is vented around the bottom surface of the deflector.
It should be understood that the definitions above and in the upward direction are implied in this context as the path of the thread in the up direction from the feed rollers 35 to the pick-up rollers 39, as can be seen in FIG. 2. In some machines, the path of the thread is descending into the flow. In this case, descriptive definitions above and in the up direction should mean below and in the down direction.
In a preferred embodiment of the ejector illustrated in FIG. 3 and 4, the deflector 37a is shown as a cylindrical rod with a circular cross section. FIG. 5 and 6 illustrate additional embodiments of a polygon-shaped baffle, in particular baffles 37a and 37a with square cross sections. FIG. 4 and 3, distances C and A are in the order of from 0.5 to 1.0, preferably from 0.5 to 0.9 minimum diameters, and from 0.5 to 2.0, preferably from 0.8 up to 1.6, minimum diameters, respectively.
FIG. 7 shows the relationship of the deflector 37a with the bell-shaped outlet end of the ejector device and the distances and represent distances of the order of 0.1 to 2.0, preferably 0.2 to 0.5 minimum diameters, and 0.1 to 3 , 0, preferably from 0.2 to 2.0 minimum diameters, respectively.
Example. The two ends of a 150 denier polyester yarn - 50 filament yarns are fed to the texture system using an air jet, similar to that shown in FIG. one.
An ejector of the type shown in FIG. 3 and 4, is used to texture the thread. The size of the minimum diameter B in FIG. 4 is 0.070 inches, and the needle has a size of 28V. Over feed
between rollers 16 and 24 in FIG. 1 is + 35%, and between rollers 16 and winding package 28 is + 24.5%. Distances A and C were 0.060 and 0.051 inches, respectively, and the bore diameter (37a) was 0.469 inches. The textured thread is wound onto the package at a speed of 339 meters per minute, and the air pressure at the inlet of the ejector 37 is 130 psi.
inch (9,139 kg per cm). Two different filament paths at the outlet end of the ejector were tested, and the winding tension, in each case, is measured at the same location between the pickup roller and
package wrapping. These paths represent — path 1 — in the upward direction between the deflector and the outlet end of the ejector to the pickup roller — path 2 — around the deflector, then to the pickup roller. Paths 1 and 2 are shown in FIG. 4. The effect of path 1 and path 2 when the deflector is moved relative to the center line of the ejector is shown in fig. 8. Tension during winding, measured when
The distance A above the center line, 0.060 inches, is: for path 1, tension 34 g, for path 2, tension 64 g | 88% more than for path 1).
At a certain level of development of technology
the use of an ejector described in connection with FIG. 4 with a deflector rod of the same size 0.468 inches as in FIG. 8, located at the dead point opposite the ejector outlet, the winding tension measurements are:
for path 1, a tension of 22.3 g; for path 2, a tension of 30.2 g. The special position of the deflector in the system according to this invention resulted in an almost threefold increase in tension from the texture of the usual prototype level of about 22, 3 to excellent 64 g.
Increased tension is used to produce a higher bundle of threads at the output, or to give a thread with the same general properties at the output, however, at a much higher and more cost-effective texturing speed.
权利要求:
Claims (4)
[1]
Claim 1. A system for texturing at least one yarn thread, comprising yarn feed means with a feed roller, a yarn processing ejector behind it with outlet and inlet ports connected by a conveying channel, installed at the exit from
a transport channel, a deflector, a pick-up roller, means for supplying compressed gas and winding means, characterized in that, in order to increase the tension of the thread during winding and to ensure a high degree of connectivity of the thread, the surface of the deflector or the least distant part facing the outlet of the transporting channel, removed from the end surface of the ejector by a distance of 0.1 - 2.0 times the minimum diameter of the transporting channel, and the surface of the deflector or the least remote part facing the center Flax axis of the conveying channel, is elevated above the latter at a distance of 0.1 - 3.0 than the minimum diameter of the conveying channel.
, one
[2]
2. The system of claim 1, wherein the deflector is made in the form of a rod of circular cross section.
[3]
3. The system under item 1, about tl and h and y and a
the fact that the deflector is made in the form of a rod of square cross section, one edge of which is oriented towards the end surface of the ejector, and the other towards the central axis of the transport channel.
[4]
4. The system according to claim 1, characterized in that the deflector is made in the form of a rod of square section, one of the planes of which surface is located parallel to the end surface of the ejector, and the other parallel to the longitudinal axis of the transport channel.
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类似技术:
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同族专利:
公开号 | 公开日
KR890016231A|1989-11-28|
PL278695A1|1989-11-27|
JPH01298236A|1989-12-01|
TR26742A|1994-07-07|
DK166389D0|1989-04-06|
AU3244989A|1989-10-12|
AU605457B2|1991-01-10|
EP0336757A3|1990-10-24|
CN1036806A|1989-11-01|
ES2055041T3|1994-08-16|
BR8901621A|1989-11-21|
CA1303835C|1992-06-23|
DE68916091T2|1994-11-24|
MX166326B|1992-12-29|
PL161087B1|1993-05-31|
JP2881747B2|1999-04-12|
DK166389A|1989-10-08|
DE68916091D1|1994-07-21|
CN1014729B|1991-11-13|
EP0336757A2|1989-10-11|
KR960013414B1|1996-10-05|
US4922593A|1990-05-08|
EP0336757B1|1994-06-15|
引用文献:
公开号 | 申请日 | 公开日 | 申请人 | 专利标题

CA697716A|1964-11-10|Richmond W. Bourne, Jr.|Bulky polyolefin yarn|
US3402446A|1966-08-03|1968-09-24|Owens Corning Fiberglass Corp|Apparatus for bulking yarn|
US3835510A|1972-12-15|1974-09-17|Du Pont|Baffle for texturing jet and method|
JPS571946B2|1973-06-21|1982-01-13|
US3892020A|1973-12-14|1975-07-01|Du Pont|Preparing a textured yarn package, for dyeing|
US3881231A|1974-06-21|1975-05-06|Enterprise Machine & Dev|Cylindrical baffle for yarn texturing air jet|
US4157605A|1975-07-24|1979-06-12|E. I. Du Pont De Nemours And Company|Fluid jet texturing apparatus|
SE415200B|1975-07-24|1980-09-15|Du Pont|BOTTLE NOZE FOR TEXTURIZING YARN|
DE2634460C2|1976-07-29|1982-07-01|Heberlein Maschinenfabrik AG, 9630 Wattwil|Apparatus for texturing yarns consisting of endless synthetic filaments|
US4104770A|1977-05-31|1978-08-08|E. I. Du Pont De Nemours And Company|Yarn treating jet moving a rotating baffle and deflector at its outlet and method of operation thereof|
JPS6039770B2|1977-06-24|1985-09-07|Toray Industries|
US4148116A|1978-02-06|1979-04-10|Enterprise Machine And Development Corporation|Yarn texturing air jet baffle|
DE3133406A1|1980-09-08|1982-04-22|Barmag Barmer Maschinenfabrik Ag, 5630 Remscheid|Process for the production of a textured yarn|
CH653383A5|1982-03-10|1985-12-31|Heberlein & Co Ag|DEVICE FOR TEXTURING AT LEAST ONE CONTINUOUS YARN consisting of a MULTIPLE NUMBER OF FILAMENTS.|KR0122465B1|1989-09-05|1997-11-27|요셉 스톡커 및 크리스챤 심멘|Device for blow-texturing at least one multi-filament yarn|
CH681989A5|1990-11-06|1993-06-30|Heberlein & Co Ag|
US5511295A|1995-03-15|1996-04-30|E. I. Du Pont De Nemours And Company|System for preparing highly coherent air jet textured yarn|
DE19605675C5|1996-02-15|2010-06-17|Oerlikon Heberlein Temco Wattwil Ag|Process for aerodynamic texturing and texturing nozzle|
US6138336A|1999-11-23|2000-10-31|Milliken & Company|Holographic air-jet textured yarn|
KR100441300B1|2001-09-20|2004-07-23|한국섬유개발연구원|Air textured yarns which are treated by alkali liguid and its manufacturing device|
法律状态:
优先权:
申请号 | 申请日 | 专利标题
US07/178,961|US5020199A|1988-04-07|1988-04-07|Air texturing jet|
US07/302,898|US4922593A|1988-04-07|1989-01-30|System for preparing highly coherent air jet textured yarn|
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