Title of Invention

A SUPERABSORBENT POWDER

Abstract The invention relates to a superabsorbent powder consisting of polymer particles which have a core swelling in the presence of water and a superficially postcured shell, in which the powder is a screening fraction of such polymer particles which have not been crushed after the superficial postcure of their shell. This superabsorbent powder is especially suitable for the finishing of textile webs made of super-fine fibers or filaments with a diameter of less than 10 µm, in particular for the finishing of sanitary products. There is further proposed the use of a nanofiber nonwoven, finished with a superabsorbent for the absorption and retention of hydrophilic fluids, for the absorption and/or sustained release of at least one of the following fluids: body fluids, sweat of humans and animals, water, including cooling water, condensation water and water vapor, chemicals, including agrochemicals and pesticides, pharmaceuticals, biocides, germicides and fungicides, diagnostics, fire protection and fire extinguishing agents, cleaning agents, hydraulic fluids, heating and cooling fluids, sewage, including radioactively contaminated fluids, perfumes.
Full Text

SUPERABSORBENTS, NANOFIBER NONWOVENS FINISHED THEREWITH
AND USE THEREOF
The invention relates to a superabsorbent powder consisting of polymer
particles which have a core swelling in the presence of water and a superficially
postcured shell, its use for the finishing of textile webs made of super-fine fibers
or super-fine filaments having a diameter of less than 10 urn, as well as to the
use of a nanofiber nonwoven, finished with the superabsorbent for the absorption
and retention of hydrophilic fluids, for the absorption and/or release of one or
more fluids or mixtures of fluids.
„Superabsorbents" are to be understood as polymer materials which have the
ability of absorbing water or other fluids up to a thousand times their mass,
thereby swelling to form a gel. As the uptake and retention capability of the
superabsorbents is subject to a rapid and strong limitation due to the „gel
blocking" effect, the agglutinating of the superabsorbent particles which have
started to swell or are fully swollen up, various methods of a superficially
occurring postcure of the superabsorbent particles have already been suggested,
resulting in a gradient of the cross-linking degree of the particles which increases
inside out, i.e. a core having a lower cross-linking degree and a shell having a
higher cross-linking degree. Modified superabsorbents of this kind and methods
of their manufacture are known from Ullmanns Encyclopedia of Industrial
Chemistry, 6th Ed., Vol. 35, pp. 73 ff., 2003, just as their use for the finishing of
sanitary products such as diapers and other incontinence products, sanitary
napkins and wound dressings.
According to studies, approximately 15 million in Western Europe and about
the same number of people in the USA suffer from urinary incontinence. This
disturbance of health can be found with women 10 times more frequently than
with men. Approximately 25 % of the women at the age of 30 to 59 years are at
least temporarily incontinent. Even 10 to 20% of the younger women at the age of
about 20 years are affected, too. More than 5.2 billion pieces of incontinence
products such as diapers for adults are used in Western Europe every year. In
the USA the annual expenses for incontinence products are estimated at more

than 16.4 billion US dollars, about 35 % of which accruing in nursing homes. This
results in the big social and economic importance of the development of
improved superabsorbents specifically adapted to textile webs, in most cases
nonwovens, which are used for such incontinence products.
Incontinence products primarily have the function to take up urine, firmly
absorb and effectively bind it. At the same time, moisture is to be kept away from
the skin and developing odors are to be suppressed. This is achieved by a multi-
ply structure made up of a foil acting as a liquid barrier towards outside, various
nonwoven webs for controlling the fluid distribution, and superabsorbents for a
reliable fluid absorption.
Apart from this technical functionality, a certain wearing comfort, good fit,
discretion (channels of distribution, volume, crackling/rustling) and a hygienic
manageability are desired.
Already today, incontinence products make it possible for less affected
persons to live a mostly normal everyday life. Nevertheless, the mobility is limited
and the abidance is confined to an environment with sanitary infrastructure, which
in the end has an influence on the social and work-related situation, as well.
In the case of a more pronounced incontinence these impairments will
especially become evident, although it is possible to master technical problems
with the materials available today and with constructions of incontinence
products, but to the account of the wearing comfort, fit, discretion and handling.
As incontinence is a social taboo subject, the social/psychological component
of this disturbance of health has a special importance in particular for younger
women and may lead right up to isolation, loneliness and loss of self-confidence
and autonomy.
Materials of a new type for the use in novel incontinence products can
produce relief here, which especially account for the need for discretion by a
small volume, low thickness, reduced noise and a high wearing comfort.
From U.S. Patent 5,629,377 it is already known to use superabsorbent
powders made of superficially postcured polymer particles for the finishing of
diapers and other incontinence products. It has turned out, however, that

commercially available superabsorbent powders in combination with super-fine
fiber nonwovens, which are preferred because of a preferably dry skin surface of
the user of these products, are still not optimal. It was not possible to process
them in a problem-free manner, they were not properly integrated in the
nonwoven structure and oozed out of the nonwoven structure upon wetting.
„Nanofiber nonwovens" are supposed to be nonwovens made of textile fibers
having a diameter of less than 10 urn, preferably less than 1 urn. Nanofiber
nonwovens and methods for their manufacturing are known, for instance, from
the U.S. Patent 4,043,331 and the International Patent Application WO 01/27365.
The nanofiber nonwovens known from prior art are not finished with
superabsorbents, but for their part were used for the finishing of sanitary products
and wound dressings.
The invention is based on the object to provide a superabsorbent powder
which is especially suitable for combining it with super-fine fiber nonwovens,
while the use of such powder in the finishing of textile webs such as sanitary
products results in more economical production options, as well as to provide
application ways for the super-fine fiber nonwovens finished with the
superabsorbent for the absorption and retention of hydrophilic fluids, in which the
advantageous properties of the nanofiber nonwovens finished in this way
manifest particularly clearly in economical, ecological or technical terms.
This object is achieved according to the invention with a superabsorbent
powder of the type initially mentioned in that the powder is a screening fraction of
such polymer particles which have not been crushed after the superficial postcure
of their shell.
It has turned out surprisingly that the customary superabsorbent powders
failed even if they had in principle an optimum grain size and a suitable grain size
distribution for a particular super-fine fiber nonwoven, because they have been
crushed several times in the course of their manufacture, even after their
postcure, whereby the core/shell structure of the particles was damaged and the
gel blocking effect began anew. This is the reason why optimum water absorption
and water retention values could not be achieved with super-fine fiber
nonwovens, although acceptable results could be achieved with ..normal" or
coarser fiber nonwovens with the same customary superabsorbent powders.

Only when carefully screened, uncrushed particles as superabsorbent powders
were selected and used in combination with super-fine fiber nonwovens, the
desired optimum water absorption and water retention values appeared. This not
only applies to the absorption and retention of water, but also to the absorption
and retention of other hydrophilic fluids.
If the employed screening fraction shows a grain size distribution of d50 = 55
to 100 µm and d100 = 100 to 150 µm, the best results are achieved according to
the invention in combination with nanofiber nonwovens. The specification „d50 =
55 µm" means that 50 % by weight of the particles have a grain size of up to
55 µm, actually 55 µm or less, and „d100 = 100µm" means that 100 % by weight
of the particles have a grain size of up to 100 µm, i.e. no particle is larger than
100 µm.
It is preferred that the polymer, of which the superabsorbent particles are
consisting, is a (meth)acrylate or a (meth)acryl copolymer; it is particularly
preferred that the polymer is sodium polyacrylate.
According to the invention, the superabsorbent powder of the selected
screening fraction is used for the finishing of textile webs made of super-fine
fibers or super-fine filaments having a diameter of less than 10 µm. The fibers or
filaments preferably have a diameter of less than 1 µm. Such super-fine fibers
are referred to as microfibers or nanofibers.
The use of the superabsorbent powders for the finishing of nanofiber
nonwovens, in particular of those made of electrostatically spun nanofibers, has
turned out to be particularly advantageous, which will be explained in detail
below.
The fibers or filaments preferably consist of a thermoplastic and hydrophilic or
hydrophilized polymer which is melt-spinnable with polyurethane being
particularly preferred.
The superabsorbent powder according to the invention is preferably used for
the finishing of sanitary products which are made of textile webs. It is particularly
preferred that, according to the invention, diapers and other incontinence
products, sanitary napkins and wound dressings are finished so as to be fluid
absorbing.

Thus, a preferred result of the use according to the invention is an elastic,
superabsorbent nonwoven of nanofibers for the use in novel sanitary articles, in
particular in incontinence products with improved wearing comfort, safe odor
binding and enhanced discretion. The sanitary article consists of a nonwoven
fabric of thermoplastic polyurethane, in which the superabsorbent powder made
of polyacrylate having a specific grain size distribution and a specific postcure
treatment is mechanically integrated. The proportion of specific superabsorbent
may amount up to 85 % by weight of the total weight of the finished textile piece.
The nanofiber nonwoven finished with the superabsorbent according to the
invention for the absorption and retention of hydrophilic fluids is preferably used
for the absorption and/or sustained release of at least one of the following fluids:
body fluids, sweat of humans and animals, water, including cooling water,
condensation water and water vapor, chemicals, including agrochemicals and
pesticides, pharmaceuticals, biocides, germicides and fungicides, agents for use
in diagnostics, fire protection and fire extinguishing agents, cleaning agents,
hydraulic fluids, heating and cooling fluids, sewage, including radioactively
contaminated fluids, perfumes.
For the uptake and/or sustained release of body fluids the nanofiber
nonwoven according to the invention is preferably used as an incontinence
article, diaper, sanitary napkin, wound dressing, cooling compress, sanitary
tissue, cosmetic pad or bed inlay or as a part of the aforementioned goods.
For the uptake and/or sustained release of sweat of human or animal origin,
the nanofiber nonwoven according to the invention preferably is used as a sweat
absorbing padding material for shoes, garments, headgears, headbands, gloves,
upholstered furniture, vehicle seats, saddles, bed linen, bedspreads, horse
blankets, sports goods or pieces of sports equipment.
For the uptake and/or sustained release of water, including cooling water,
condensation water and water vapor, the nanofiber nonwoven according to the
invention preferably is used as a wipe, floor cloth, casualty protection mat,
camping mat, tarpaulin, wet cloth, drying cloth, polishing cloth, cleaning cloth or
washleather or as a part of the aforementioned goods.

In the field of construction the nanofiber nonwoven according to the invention
is used for the uptake and/or sustained release of water, including cooling water,
condensation water and water vapor, preferably as a floor covering or wall
covering, parquet underlay sheeting, roof underlay sheeting, fire protection mat,
leakage protection mat, mat for the lining of damp rooms, tents, vehicles, tanks or
containers or as a part of the aforementioned goods.
A further preferred use of the nanofiber nonwoven according to the invention
is possible as a filter material, packaging material, sheathing, insulating material
or sealing material or as a part of the aforementioned goods. Examples of
preferred uses are the packaging of dangerous goods, the sheathing of tubes
and conduits, of pipelines, of electric cables, including communication cables and
power supply cables, and of all objects in which fluids of the aforementioned type
are stored or transported, develop in the form of condensation water and water
vapor, or may escape in consequence of leakages or accidents.
For the uptake and/or sustained release of chemicals, including
agrochemicals and pesticides, the nanofiber nonwoven according to the invention
preferably is used as a geo web, drainage mat, agro web or as a nonwoven for
the sustained release of pharmaceuticals, chemicals, fertilizers or pesticides. In
this field of application, nonwovens may be involved which are spread out across
large areas in greenhouses or across the soil over fields, acres and plantations,
in order to either imbibe the cited agents or release them with some delay. An
important application field for the nanofiber nonwovens according to the invention
are ecological disasters in which large amounts of environmentally detrimental
fluids have escaped, for instance in consequence of traffic accidents.
In the application possibilities, proposed according to the invention, of the
nanofiber nonwovens finished with the superabsorbent, the high water and fluid
retention capability and the high speed of the water and fluid uptake with a
concurrent, particularly slow and retarded (re-)release of the absorbed fluid
amounts manifest at advantage. Due to this, even larger amounts of spilled fluids
can be taken up and eliminated in a very short time.
On the other hand, the nonwovens can be preventively employed throughout
those places where leakages are to be feared and where water, but also
poisonous, corrosive, acidic, alkaline or environmentally hazardous fluids may

escape from conduits, containers, packagings, tanks, vehicles, industrial plants
etc, the emerging fluids will immediately be taken up by the nonwovens with
which the conduits etc. have been sheathed or packed or lined, and are absorbed
due to a wicking effect which begins very rapidly.
The advantages of the invention will be explained in the following by example
of sanitary products based on textile webs, but are not construed to be limiting:
1. Improved Discretion
The reason for the thickness and bulkiness of incontinence products is
primarily due to the fact that superabsorbent powder (SAP) swells upon
contacting water and the particles agglutinate, whereby further absorption of
water is made more difficult or prevented (gel blocking). In order to avoid gel
blocking, it was common practice hitherto to use SAP always in a mixture
together with short cellulose fibers (pulp), which are supposed to keep the
particles apart. In doing so, the proportion of SAP may amount to 50 % at the
maximum. Pulp has a very low density, is therefore very bulky and considerably
blows up the volume of the amount of SAP/pulp which is needed for the uptake of
fluid.
In order to avoid these disadvantages and to be able to do without pulp, while
ensuring at the same time a large surface area as with SAP, there have been
made various attempts to use the superabsorbent not in the form of a powder,
but in another make-up, for instance as foam, fiber nonwoven or in the form of
fibers and nonwovens coated with superabsorbents. These constructs, however,
could not be used because of serious disadvantages such as a loss of strength
after wetting, brittleness/fragility in the dry state or a marked anisotropy of the
wetting behavior.
The novel approach of the material according to the invention now is to
incorporate the individual particles of the superabsorbent powder with a defined
grain size distribution in an elastic nonwoven structure in such a manner that the
particles are spatially separated from each other, that they are wetted all-over by
contact with water and are able to freely swell in all three dimensions. Due to the
elasticity of the nonwoven matrix gel blocking is being prevented, as the
nonwoven matrix yields in view of the increasing space requirements during

swelling of the superabsorbent, thereby the particles are being largely kept away
from each other.
2. Improved Wearing Comfort
Due to the elastic nonwoven structure with a high proportion of
superabsorbents, it is possible to replace bulky SAP/pulp mixtures which are
common at present and to avoid the disadvantages of customary incontinence
articles. The thickness is reduced to 1/10. It is due to the smoothness, elasticity
and the low thickness of the material according to the invention that the designer
of incontinence articles has all options to unite a clothing-like wearing comfort
with discretion and technical performance.
3. Simplified Manufacturing Process of the Sanitary Articles
Further, a simplification of the diaper manufacturing process is achieved, by
expensive conditioning plants for pulp and plants for mixing SAP with pulp
arranged upstream of a diaper machine are replaced with a placement of the
elastic, superabsorbent nonwovens in the form of webs, strips or coil goods. In
addition, any diaper construction is simplified, because one can. do without
construction elements such as tissue and corewrap. The diaper structure is
reduced to e.g. an elastic, breathing membrane, onto which the object according
to the invention (elastic and absorbing nonwoven) is applied during the
manufacturing process, and the covering with distributing and/or coating
nonwoven. It may happen already during the manufacturing process of the
material according to the invention that it is applied onto a membrane or foil as a
carrier material and covered in the subsequent process step with conventional
nonwovens. In the so obtained composite, the membrane or foil correlates to a
customary back sheet, the material according to the invention to a customary
absorbent core and the coating nonwoven to the distribution layer or top web, or
with both in case of a suitable construction.
4. Odor
Any conventional approaches for the odor binding assume that volatile,
mostly amine-type compounds as odor carriers are formed by the bacterial
decomposition of urine components. According to this, one tries to put a stop to
the propagation and activity of microorganisms by adjustment of the

neutralization level of the superabsorbents, and the use of pH buffers or
bacteriostatic agents. Here, the use of bacteriostatic agents or even bactericides
is highly controversial because of the associated risks to produce allergies.
Based on the fact that urinary odor substantially is the odor of gaseous
ammonia which is formed by the enzymatic decomposition of urea, and that the
active enzyme indeed is used by microorganisms for the metabolic digestion of
urea, but the effectiveness and the occurrence of the enzyme is not bound to
living cells, the novel approach for the solution of this problem with customary
incontinence articles is not to combat microorganisms, but to block the
effectiveness of ureolytic enzymes by specific enzyme blockers.
Substituting harmless enzyme blockers for customary allergy-producing
cytotoxins such as bactericides does not limit technologies for binding odor to
patients or cases where a corresponding balance of benefit/risk is available, but
allows a broad application to the improvement of the quality of life of incontinent
people.
The enzyme blockers may be added to the spinning mass during the
manufacture of the elastic nonwoven and be active at the surface of the fibers
after diffusion, or they may be subsequently applied on the fiber surface in the
form of an impregnation.
5. Textile Webs
From literature, for instance from U.S. Patent 4,043,331 it is known that
polymers from solution can be processed to nonwovens of endless filaments by
means of the electrospinning technology. Electrospinning is still a not very
widespread, predominantly experimental technology for the production of
nonwoven webs. Like no other nonwoven laying technology, however, it offers
the possibility to produce endless filaments from different polymers, also
elastomers, which have diameters in the nanometer range, and to lay down in the
form of a kind of spun nonwoven and to mechanically incorporate particles such
as grains or microcapsules (filled with active agents, aromatic substances et al.,
activatable by water or temperature) in the nonwoven structure during the
spinning process. In addition, there is the possibility to add active agents such as
enzymes, enzyme blockers, vitamins, detergents, wetting agents et al. to the

spinning solution, which due to diffusion to the surface of the spun fibers can
develop their activity there.
L. M. Hansen et. al. write in Journal of Applied Polymer Science, Vol. 95, pp.
427-434 (2005) about a nonwoven made of thermoplastic polyurethane and
produced by an electrospinning method, which is filled with a superabsorbent in
the form of modified starch from the company Grain Processing Corp.,
Muscatine, IA, with the trade name „Waterlock". This material already has
interesting properties which, however, do not fulfill the requirements in terms of
specific absorption, speed of the fluid uptake and the maximum filling level with
absorber as a substitute for an absorbent core in sanitary articles.
In expectation to be able to fulfill the requirements when the modified starch
(Waterlock) of the existent material is replaced with polyacrylates, as they are
commonly used as superabsorbents in sanitary articles, commercial
superabsorbent powder was crushed down to a grain size which appeared to be
needed for the incorporation in said nanofiber nonwoven; with this material, a
nano-nonwoven was produced which contained a superabsorbent. As expected,
an absorption behavior was observed which was improved compared to
nonwovens filled with modified starch (Waterlock), but filling levels of more than
50% could not render a measurable improvement of the specific absorption due
to gel blocking.
Surprisingly it was found that superabsorbent particles of sodium polyacrylate
with suitable grain size, which were not manufactured by crushing customary
superabsorbent powders, but obtained as a screening fraction of superficially
postcured particles, give the overall construct of preferably polyurethane
nonwoven and superabsorbent distinctly superior properties, despite a basically
sustained absorption in comparison with customary superabsorbent powder. Only
the use of superficially postcured superabsorbent powder of polyacrylate or
another suitable copolymer with intact core/shell structure and a suitable grain
size distribution allows a rapid uptake and distribution of the fluid and a high
specific absorption concomitantly with a high filling level of up to approx. 85% of
the superabsorbent nonwovens consisting of thermoplastic polyurethane and
superabsorbent powder with diameters of the individual filaments in the
nanometer to micrometer range.

The invention will be explained in more detail below according to examples:
Test Methods
A. Teabag Absorption Test (Tb)
The „teabag" absorption test gives information about the resistance-less fluid
absorption. A defined amount of a SAP sample is filled in a commercial teabag;
the teabag is immersed for 30 minutes in excessive 0,9 % solution of sodium
chloride and is taken out; after this the bag is left for 10 minutes in order to drip
off.
The Tb value in [g/g] is the ratio between the absorbed amount of water and
the original amount of SAP.
B. Water Retention Test
The test shows the water retention of the swollen SAP sample. The swollen
teabag from the Tb test is put into a centrifuge and is centrifuged for 3 minutes
with an acceleration of 250 g.
The CRC value in [g/g] is the ratio between the retained amount of water and
the original amount of SAP.
C. Vertical Wicking Effect
The test gives information on the speed and the preferential direction of the
spreading of the water absorption. An adhesive tape of the size of 10x1 cm with
an SAP sample sticking thereon is marked at equal distances of 1 cm and
perpendicularly immersed in a 0,9 % solution of NaCI as far as to the first 1 cm
mark; the fluid extension is compensated by adjusting the strip with respect to the
mark. The time is measured at which the run of 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 cm is reached by
the upward movement of the solution on the tape.
Results
Nonwovens of thermoplastic polyurethane and various absorbing materials
with different charge amounts were manufactured according to the
electrospinning method on a laboratory spinning facility or pilot spinning facility
and subjected to the above described tests.

In the experiments 3, 4, 6 and 7 according to the invention, superficially cross-
linked sodium polyacrylate powder with a core/shell structure with a grain size
distribution of the screening fraction of d50 approx. 100µ and d100 approx. 150µ,
Tb approx. 38 g/g and CRC approx. 22 g/g was used as superabsorbent (SAP).
Comparison experiment 5 was carried out with mechanically crushed (and
therefore not according to the invention) and subsequently screened
superabsorbent (SAP) with a grain size distribution of the screening fraction of
d50 approx. 55µ and d100 of 100µ, Tb approx. 38 g/g, CRC approx. 22 g/g.
Commercially available SAP, in grain size fractions as they are usual today in
customary sanitary articles, turned out to be too coarse. It was not possible to
process them in a trouble-free manner, they were not perfectly integrated in the
nonwoven structure and oozed out of the nonwoven structure upon wetting. This
is why first pilot experiments with commercial SAP types were ceased already.
The results of the experiments are summarized in Table 1.
It turned out that by the use of superficially cross-linked sodium polyacrylate
powder with a core/shell structure with filling levels of about 50% and a grain size
of d50 = 100µ, d100 = 150µ the speed of the water uptake could be lowered from
450 sec. to 80 sec. and the water uptake could be augmented from 29 g/g to 40
g/g and from 16 g/g to 22 g/g, respectively. With a filling level of 50 %, gel
blocking can still not be ascertained, the Tb and CRC values rather achieving the
theoretical values of pure SAP. A sample with the same composition which was
produced on a larger pilot spinning facility showed comparably good results and
confirms the reproducibility (experiment 6).
It further turned out in experiment 5 that any damage of the postcured shell of
the SAP particles by mechanical crushing and a concomitant increase of the
proportion of smaller grain sizes in the screening fraction of the SAP has a
detrimental effect on the speed of the fluid uptake and fluid distribution in the
nonwoven.
The experiments also demonstrated that only the combination of an elastic
nonwoven structure with superficially postcured SAP with intact core/shell
structure and suitable grain size results in the specifically desired markedness of
the essential quality features such as speed of the fluid uptake and fluid

distribution and absorption capability (Tb, CRC). It was surprisingly found that it is
not an especially fine powder which shows the best effect, as was expected
because of the fine nonwoven structure, but that an optimum of the particle size
exists, which is distinctly coarser than the dimensions of the nonwoven
structures.


WE CLAIM;
1. A superabsorbent powder consisting of polymer particles which
have a core swelling in the presence of water and a superficially postcured
shell, wherein the powder is a screening fraction of such polymer particles
which have not been crushed after the superficial postcure of their shell,
and wherein the screening fraction has a grain size distribution of d50 =
55 to 100 µm and d100 = 100 to 150 µm.
2. The superabsorbent powder as claimed in claim 1, wherein the
polymer is a (meth)acrylate or a (meth)acryl copolymer.
3. The superabsorbent powder as claimed in claim 3, wherein the
polymer is sodium polyacrylate.
4. A textile web made of super-fine fibers or super-fine filaments
having a diameter of less than 10 µm, wherein the textile web is finished
with the superabsorbent powder as claimed in any one of the claims 1 to 4.
5. The textile web as claimed in claim 4, wherein the fibers or
filaments have a diameter of less than 1 µm.
6. The textile web as claimed in claim 4 or 5, wherein the textile web
is a nanofiber nonwoven or a product made thereof.
7. The textile web as claimed in claim 6, wherein the nanofiber
nonwoven is made of electrostatically spun nanofibers.
8. The textile web as claimed in any one of the claims 4 to 7, wherein
the fibers or filaments consist of a thermoplastic and hydrophilic or
hydrophilized polymer which is melt-spinnable.
9. The textile web as claimed in claim 8, wherein the fibers or
filaments consist of polyurethane.
10. The textile web as claimed in any one of the claims 4 to 9 wherein
the textile web constitutes a sanitary product.

11. The textile web as claimed in claim 10, wherein the sanitary
product is an incontinence product, a sanitary napkin or a wound
dressing.
12. A nanofiber nonwoven finished with a superabsorbent as claimed in
any one of claims 1 to 3 for the absorption and retention of hydrophilic
fluids, the nanofiber nonwoven being adapted for the uptake and/or
sustained release of at least one of the following fluids:

- body fluids,
- sweat of humans and animals,
- water, including cooling water, condensation water and water
vapor,
- chemicals, including agrochemicals and pesticides,
- pharmaceuticals, biocides, germicides and fungicides,
- diagnostics,
- fire protection and fire extinguishing agents,
- cleaning agents,
- hydraulic fluids,
- heating and cooling fluids,
- sewage, including radioactively contaminated fluids,
- perfumes.

13. The nanofiber nonwoven as claimed in claim 12, adapted for use as
an incontinence article, diaper, sanitary napkin, wound dressing, cooling
compress, sanitary tissue, cosmetic pad or bed inlay or as a part of the
aforementioned goods.
14. The nanofiber nonwoven as claimed in claim 12, adapted for use as
an sweat absorbing padding material for shoes, garments, headgears,
headbands, gloves, upholstered furniture, vehicle seats, saddles, bed linen,
bedspreads, horse blankets, sports goods or pieces of sports equipment.
15. The nanofiber nonwoven as claimed in claim 12, adapted for use as
a wipe, floor cloth, casualty protection mat, camping mat, tarpaulin, wet
cloth, drying cloth, polishing cloth, cleaning cloth or washleather or as a
part of the aforementioned goods.

16. The nanofiber nonwoven as claimed in claim 12, adapted for use as
a floor covering or wall covering, parquet underlay sheeting, roof underlay
sheeting, fire protection mat, leakage protection mat, mat for the lining of
damp rooms, tents, vehicles, tanks or containers or as a part of the
aforementioned goods.
17. The nanofiber nonwoven as claimed in claim 12, adapted for use as
a filter material, packaging material, sheathing, insulating material or
sealing material or as a part of the aforementioned goods.
18. The nanofiber nonwoven as claimed in claim 12, adapted for use as
a geo web, drainage mat, agro web or nonwoven for the sustained release
of pharmaceuticals, chemicals, fertilizers or pesticides.
19. The nanofiber nonwoven as claimed in any one of the claims 12 to
18, wherein the nonwoven consists of super-fine fibers or filaments having
a diameter of less than 10 µm, preferably of less than 1 µm.
20. The nanofiber nonwoven as claimed in any one of the claims 12 to
19, wherein the nonwoven is manufactured of electrostatically spun
nanofibers.
21. The nanofiber nonwoven as claimed in any one of the claims 12 to
20, wherein the fibers or filaments of the nonwoven consist of a
thermoplastic and hydrophilic or hydrophilized polymer which is melt-
spinnable.
22. The nanofiber nonwoven as claimed in claim 21, wherein the fibers
or filaments consist of polyurethane.


Abstract

The invention relates to a superabsorbent powder consisting of polymer
particles which have a core swelling in the presence of water and a superficially
postcured shell, in which the powder is a screening fraction of such polymer
particles which have not been crushed after the superficial postcure of their shell.
This superabsorbent powder is especially suitable for the finishing of textile webs
made of super-fine fibers or filaments with a diameter of less than 10 µm, in
particular for the finishing of sanitary products. There is further proposed the use
of a nanofiber nonwoven, finished with a superabsorbent for the absorption and
retention of hydrophilic fluids, for the absorption and/or sustained release of at
least one of the following fluids: body fluids, sweat of humans and animals, water,
including cooling water, condensation water and water vapor, chemicals,
including agrochemicals and pesticides, pharmaceuticals, biocides, germicides
and fungicides, diagnostics, fire protection and fire extinguishing agents, cleaning
agents, hydraulic fluids, heating and cooling fluids, sewage, including
radioactively contaminated fluids, perfumes.

Documents:

945-KOLNP-2008-(06-08-2012)-ABSTRACT.pdf

945-KOLNP-2008-(06-08-2012)-AMANDED CLAIMS.pdf

945-KOLNP-2008-(06-08-2012)-ANNEXURE TO FORM 3.pdf

945-KOLNP-2008-(06-08-2012)-DESCRIPTION (COMPLETE).pdf

945-KOLNP-2008-(06-08-2012)-EXAMINATION REPORT REPLY RECEIVED.pdf

945-KOLNP-2008-(06-08-2012)-FORM 13.pdf

945-KOLNP-2008-(06-08-2012)-FORM-1.pdf

945-KOLNP-2008-(06-08-2012)-FORM-2.pdf

945-KOLNP-2008-(06-08-2012)-OTHERS.pdf

945-KOLNP-2008-(08-02-2013)-CLAIMS.pdf

945-KOLNP-2008-(08-02-2013)-CORRESPONDENCE.pdf

945-KOLNP-2008-CANCELLED PAGES.pdf

945-KOLNP-2008-CORRESPONDENCE 1.2.pdf

945-KOLNP-2008-CORRESPONDENCE 1.4.pdf

945-KOLNP-2008-CORRESPONDENCE 1.5.pdf

945-KOLNP-2008-CORRESPONDENCE OTHERS 1.1.pdf

945-KOLNP-2008-CORRESPONDENCE-1.3.pdf

945-KOLNP-2008-CORRESPONDENCE-1.4.pdf

945-KOLNP-2008-EXAMINATION REPORT 1.1.pdf

945-KOLNP-2008-EXAMINATION REPORT.pdf

945-KOLNP-2008-FORM 13 1.1.pdf

945-KOLNP-2008-FORM 13.pdf

945-KOLNP-2008-FORM 18 1.1.pdf

945-kolnp-2008-form 18.pdf

945-KOLNP-2008-FORM 26 1.1.pdf

945-KOLNP-2008-FORM 26.pdf

945-KOLNP-2008-FORM 5.pdf

945-KOLNP-2008-GRANTED-ABSTRACT.pdf

945-KOLNP-2008-GRANTED-CLAIMS.pdf

945-KOLNP-2008-GRANTED-DESCRIPTION (COMPLETE).pdf

945-KOLNP-2008-GRANTED-FORM 1.pdf

945-KOLNP-2008-GRANTED-FORM 2.pdf

945-KOLNP-2008-GRANTED-FORM 3.pdf

945-KOLNP-2008-GRANTED-FORM 5.pdf

945-KOLNP-2008-GRANTED-LETTER PATENT.pdf

945-KOLNP-2008-GRANTED-SPECIFICATION-COMPLETE.pdf

945-KOLNP-2008-HEARING NOTICE 2.pdf

945-KOLNP-2008-INTERNATIONAL EXM REPORT.pdf

945-KOLNP-2008-INTERNATIONAL PUBLICATION.pdf

945-KOLNP-2008-INTERNATIONAL SEARCH REPORT & OTHERS 1.1.pdf

945-KOLNP-2008-INTERNATIONAL SEARCH REPORT & OTHERS.pdf

945-KOLNP-2008-OTHERS 1.1.pdf

945-KOLNP-2008-OTHERS.pdf

945-KOLNP-2008-REPLY TO EXAMINATION REPORT 1.1.pdf

945-KOLNP-2008-REPLY TO EXAMINATION REPORT.pdf

945-KOLNP-2008-TRANSLATED COPY OF PRIORITY DOCUMENT 1.1.pdf

945-KOLNP-2008-TRANSLATED COPY OF PRIORITY DOCUMENT.pdf


Patent Number 255899
Indian Patent Application Number 945/KOLNP/2008
PG Journal Number 14/2013
Publication Date 05-Apr-2013
Grant Date 28-Mar-2013
Date of Filing 03-Mar-2008
Name of Patentee SCHILL + SEILACHER AKTIENGESELLSCHAFT
Applicant Address SCHONAICHER STRASSE 205, 71032 BOBLINGEN
Inventors:
# Inventor's Name Inventor's Address
1 RING, HORST OBERKIRCHERSTRASSE 19, 71034 BOEBLINGEN
2 HARBIG, ROLAND LEONBERGER STRASSE 15, 71063 SINDELFINGEN
PCT International Classification Number A61L 15/50,C08J 3/24
PCT International Application Number PCT/EP2005/014017
PCT International Filing date 2005-12-23
PCT Conventions:
# PCT Application Number Date of Convention Priority Country
1 10 2005 054 698.6 2005-11-16 Germany
2 10 2005 036 992.8 2005-08-05 Germany