WO2010151447A1 - Functionalized nonwoven article - Google Patents

Functionalized nonwoven article Download PDF

Info

Publication number
WO2010151447A1
WO2010151447A1 PCT/US2010/038488 US2010038488W WO2010151447A1 WO 2010151447 A1 WO2010151447 A1 WO 2010151447A1 US 2010038488 W US2010038488 W US 2010038488W WO 2010151447 A1 WO2010151447 A1 WO 2010151447A1
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
nonwoven substrate
filter
grafted
monomers
media
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/US2010/038488
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Clinton P. Jr. Waller
Douglas E. Weiss
Catherine A. Bothof
Kannan Seshadri
Original Assignee
3M Innovative Properties Company
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by 3M Innovative Properties Company filed Critical 3M Innovative Properties Company
Priority to EP10727308.8A priority Critical patent/EP2446077B1/en
Priority to BRPI1011747A priority patent/BRPI1011747A2/en
Priority to CN2010800363062A priority patent/CN102803593A/en
Priority to JP2012517572A priority patent/JP2012531531A/en
Publication of WO2010151447A1 publication Critical patent/WO2010151447A1/en

Links

Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01DSEPARATION
    • B01D67/00Processes specially adapted for manufacturing semi-permeable membranes for separation processes or apparatus
    • B01D67/0081After-treatment of organic or inorganic membranes
    • B01D67/0093Chemical modification
    • B01D67/00931Chemical modification by introduction of specific groups after membrane formation, e.g. by grafting
    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D04BRAIDING; LACE-MAKING; KNITTING; TRIMMINGS; NON-WOVEN FABRICS
    • D04HMAKING TEXTILE FABRICS, e.g. FROM FIBRES OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL; FABRICS MADE BY SUCH PROCESSES OR APPARATUS, e.g. FELTS, NON-WOVEN FABRICS; COTTON-WOOL; WADDING ; NON-WOVEN FABRICS FROM STAPLE FIBRES, FILAMENTS OR YARNS, BONDED WITH AT LEAST ONE WEB-LIKE MATERIAL DURING THEIR CONSOLIDATION
    • D04H1/00Non-woven fabrics formed wholly or mainly of staple fibres or like relatively short fibres
    • D04H1/40Non-woven fabrics formed wholly or mainly of staple fibres or like relatively short fibres from fleeces or layers composed of fibres without existing or potential cohesive properties
    • D04H1/42Non-woven fabrics formed wholly or mainly of staple fibres or like relatively short fibres from fleeces or layers composed of fibres without existing or potential cohesive properties characterised by the use of certain kinds of fibres insofar as this use has no preponderant influence on the consolidation of the fleece
    • D04H1/4382Stretched reticular film fibres; Composite fibres; Mixed fibres; Ultrafine fibres; Fibres for artificial leather
    • D04H1/43838Ultrafine fibres, e.g. microfibres
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01DSEPARATION
    • B01D39/00Filtering material for liquid or gaseous fluids
    • B01D39/14Other self-supporting filtering material ; Other filtering material
    • B01D39/16Other self-supporting filtering material ; Other filtering material of organic material, e.g. synthetic fibres
    • B01D39/1607Other self-supporting filtering material ; Other filtering material of organic material, e.g. synthetic fibres the material being fibrous
    • B01D39/1623Other self-supporting filtering material ; Other filtering material of organic material, e.g. synthetic fibres the material being fibrous of synthetic origin
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01DSEPARATION
    • B01D39/00Filtering material for liquid or gaseous fluids
    • B01D39/14Other self-supporting filtering material ; Other filtering material
    • B01D39/16Other self-supporting filtering material ; Other filtering material of organic material, e.g. synthetic fibres
    • B01D39/1692Other shaped material, e.g. perforated or porous sheets
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01DSEPARATION
    • B01D63/00Apparatus in general for separation processes using semi-permeable membranes
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01DSEPARATION
    • B01D63/00Apparatus in general for separation processes using semi-permeable membranes
    • B01D63/10Spiral-wound membrane modules
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01DSEPARATION
    • B01D63/00Apparatus in general for separation processes using semi-permeable membranes
    • B01D63/14Pleat-type membrane modules
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01DSEPARATION
    • B01D67/00Processes specially adapted for manufacturing semi-permeable membranes for separation processes or apparatus
    • B01D67/0081After-treatment of organic or inorganic membranes
    • B01D67/009After-treatment of organic or inorganic membranes with wave-energy, particle-radiation or plasma
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01DSEPARATION
    • B01D69/00Semi-permeable membranes for separation processes or apparatus characterised by their form, structure or properties; Manufacturing processes specially adapted therefor
    • B01D69/10Supported membranes; Membrane supports
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01DSEPARATION
    • B01D69/00Semi-permeable membranes for separation processes or apparatus characterised by their form, structure or properties; Manufacturing processes specially adapted therefor
    • B01D69/10Supported membranes; Membrane supports
    • B01D69/105Support pretreatment
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01DSEPARATION
    • B01D69/00Semi-permeable membranes for separation processes or apparatus characterised by their form, structure or properties; Manufacturing processes specially adapted therefor
    • B01D69/10Supported membranes; Membrane supports
    • B01D69/107Organic support material
    • B01D69/1071Woven, non-woven or net mesh
    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D04BRAIDING; LACE-MAKING; KNITTING; TRIMMINGS; NON-WOVEN FABRICS
    • D04HMAKING TEXTILE FABRICS, e.g. FROM FIBRES OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL; FABRICS MADE BY SUCH PROCESSES OR APPARATUS, e.g. FELTS, NON-WOVEN FABRICS; COTTON-WOOL; WADDING ; NON-WOVEN FABRICS FROM STAPLE FIBRES, FILAMENTS OR YARNS, BONDED WITH AT LEAST ONE WEB-LIKE MATERIAL DURING THEIR CONSOLIDATION
    • D04H1/00Non-woven fabrics formed wholly or mainly of staple fibres or like relatively short fibres
    • D04H1/40Non-woven fabrics formed wholly or mainly of staple fibres or like relatively short fibres from fleeces or layers composed of fibres without existing or potential cohesive properties
    • D04H1/42Non-woven fabrics formed wholly or mainly of staple fibres or like relatively short fibres from fleeces or layers composed of fibres without existing or potential cohesive properties characterised by the use of certain kinds of fibres insofar as this use has no preponderant influence on the consolidation of the fleece
    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D04BRAIDING; LACE-MAKING; KNITTING; TRIMMINGS; NON-WOVEN FABRICS
    • D04HMAKING TEXTILE FABRICS, e.g. FROM FIBRES OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL; FABRICS MADE BY SUCH PROCESSES OR APPARATUS, e.g. FELTS, NON-WOVEN FABRICS; COTTON-WOOL; WADDING ; NON-WOVEN FABRICS FROM STAPLE FIBRES, FILAMENTS OR YARNS, BONDED WITH AT LEAST ONE WEB-LIKE MATERIAL DURING THEIR CONSOLIDATION
    • D04H1/00Non-woven fabrics formed wholly or mainly of staple fibres or like relatively short fibres
    • D04H1/40Non-woven fabrics formed wholly or mainly of staple fibres or like relatively short fibres from fleeces or layers composed of fibres without existing or potential cohesive properties
    • D04H1/42Non-woven fabrics formed wholly or mainly of staple fibres or like relatively short fibres from fleeces or layers composed of fibres without existing or potential cohesive properties characterised by the use of certain kinds of fibres insofar as this use has no preponderant influence on the consolidation of the fleece
    • D04H1/4326Condensation or reaction polymers
    • D04H1/4334Polyamides
    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D04BRAIDING; LACE-MAKING; KNITTING; TRIMMINGS; NON-WOVEN FABRICS
    • D04HMAKING TEXTILE FABRICS, e.g. FROM FIBRES OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL; FABRICS MADE BY SUCH PROCESSES OR APPARATUS, e.g. FELTS, NON-WOVEN FABRICS; COTTON-WOOL; WADDING ; NON-WOVEN FABRICS FROM STAPLE FIBRES, FILAMENTS OR YARNS, BONDED WITH AT LEAST ONE WEB-LIKE MATERIAL DURING THEIR CONSOLIDATION
    • D04H1/00Non-woven fabrics formed wholly or mainly of staple fibres or like relatively short fibres
    • D04H1/40Non-woven fabrics formed wholly or mainly of staple fibres or like relatively short fibres from fleeces or layers composed of fibres without existing or potential cohesive properties
    • D04H1/54Non-woven fabrics formed wholly or mainly of staple fibres or like relatively short fibres from fleeces or layers composed of fibres without existing or potential cohesive properties by welding together the fibres, e.g. by partially melting or dissolving
    • D04H1/56Non-woven fabrics formed wholly or mainly of staple fibres or like relatively short fibres from fleeces or layers composed of fibres without existing or potential cohesive properties by welding together the fibres, e.g. by partially melting or dissolving in association with fibre formation, e.g. immediately following extrusion of staple fibres
    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D06TREATMENT OF TEXTILES OR THE LIKE; LAUNDERING; FLEXIBLE MATERIALS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • D06MTREATMENT, NOT PROVIDED FOR ELSEWHERE IN CLASS D06, OF FIBRES, THREADS, YARNS, FABRICS, FEATHERS OR FIBROUS GOODS MADE FROM SUCH MATERIALS
    • D06M14/00Graft polymerisation of monomers containing carbon-to-carbon unsaturated bonds on to fibres, threads, yarns, fabrics, or fibrous goods made from such materials
    • D06M14/18Graft polymerisation of monomers containing carbon-to-carbon unsaturated bonds on to fibres, threads, yarns, fabrics, or fibrous goods made from such materials using wave energy or particle radiation
    • D06M14/26Graft polymerisation of monomers containing carbon-to-carbon unsaturated bonds on to fibres, threads, yarns, fabrics, or fibrous goods made from such materials using wave energy or particle radiation on to materials of synthetic origin
    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D06TREATMENT OF TEXTILES OR THE LIKE; LAUNDERING; FLEXIBLE MATERIALS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • D06MTREATMENT, NOT PROVIDED FOR ELSEWHERE IN CLASS D06, OF FIBRES, THREADS, YARNS, FABRICS, FEATHERS OR FIBROUS GOODS MADE FROM SUCH MATERIALS
    • D06M14/00Graft polymerisation of monomers containing carbon-to-carbon unsaturated bonds on to fibres, threads, yarns, fabrics, or fibrous goods made from such materials
    • D06M14/18Graft polymerisation of monomers containing carbon-to-carbon unsaturated bonds on to fibres, threads, yarns, fabrics, or fibrous goods made from such materials using wave energy or particle radiation
    • D06M14/26Graft polymerisation of monomers containing carbon-to-carbon unsaturated bonds on to fibres, threads, yarns, fabrics, or fibrous goods made from such materials using wave energy or particle radiation on to materials of synthetic origin
    • D06M14/28Graft polymerisation of monomers containing carbon-to-carbon unsaturated bonds on to fibres, threads, yarns, fabrics, or fibrous goods made from such materials using wave energy or particle radiation on to materials of synthetic origin of macromolecular compounds obtained by reactions only involving carbon-to-carbon unsaturated bonds
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01DSEPARATION
    • B01D2239/00Aspects relating to filtering material for liquid or gaseous fluids
    • B01D2239/04Additives and treatments of the filtering material
    • B01D2239/0414Surface modifiers, e.g. comprising ion exchange groups
    • B01D2239/0421Rendering the filter material hydrophilic
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01DSEPARATION
    • B01D2239/00Aspects relating to filtering material for liquid or gaseous fluids
    • B01D2239/04Additives and treatments of the filtering material
    • B01D2239/0464Impregnants
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01DSEPARATION
    • B01D2239/00Aspects relating to filtering material for liquid or gaseous fluids
    • B01D2239/06Filter cloth, e.g. knitted, woven non-woven; self-supported material
    • B01D2239/065More than one layer present in the filtering material
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01DSEPARATION
    • B01D2239/00Aspects relating to filtering material for liquid or gaseous fluids
    • B01D2239/06Filter cloth, e.g. knitted, woven non-woven; self-supported material
    • B01D2239/069Special geometry of layers
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01DSEPARATION
    • B01D2239/00Aspects relating to filtering material for liquid or gaseous fluids
    • B01D2239/10Filtering material manufacturing
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01DSEPARATION
    • B01D2239/00Aspects relating to filtering material for liquid or gaseous fluids
    • B01D2239/12Special parameters characterising the filtering material
    • B01D2239/1216Pore size
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01DSEPARATION
    • B01D2239/00Aspects relating to filtering material for liquid or gaseous fluids
    • B01D2239/12Special parameters characterising the filtering material
    • B01D2239/1225Fibre length
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01DSEPARATION
    • B01D2239/00Aspects relating to filtering material for liquid or gaseous fluids
    • B01D2239/12Special parameters characterising the filtering material
    • B01D2239/1266Solidity
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01DSEPARATION
    • B01D2239/00Aspects relating to filtering material for liquid or gaseous fluids
    • B01D2239/12Special parameters characterising the filtering material
    • B01D2239/1291Other parameters
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01DSEPARATION
    • B01D2323/00Details relating to membrane preparation
    • B01D2323/38Graft polymerization
    • B01D2323/385Graft polymerization involving radiation
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T442/00Fabric [woven, knitted, or nonwoven textile or cloth, etc.]
    • Y10T442/20Coated or impregnated woven, knit, or nonwoven fabric which is not [a] associated with another preformed layer or fiber layer or, [b] with respect to woven and knit, characterized, respectively, by a particular or differential weave or knit, wherein the coating or impregnation is neither a foamed material nor a free metal or alloy layer
    • Y10T442/2008Fabric composed of a fiber or strand which is of specific structural definition

Definitions

  • the present disclosure relates to functionalized nonwoven substrates, and methods for preparing the same.
  • the present disclosure further relates to a filter using the functionalized nonwoven substrate and a method of filtering a fluid.
  • the functionalized substrates are useful in selectively filtering and removing biological materials, such as biocontaminates, from biological samples.
  • Detection, quantification, isolation and purification of target biomaterials such as viruses and biomacromolecules (including constituents or products of living cells, for example, proteins, carbohydrates, lipids, and nucleic acids) have long been objectives of investigators. Detection and quantification are important diagnostically, for example, as indicators of various physiological conditions such as diseases. Isolation and purification of biomacromolecules, such as monoclonal antibodies, produced from cell cultures are important for therapeutic and in biomedical research.
  • Biomacromolecules such as enzymes have been isolated, purified, and then utilized for the production of sweeteners, antibiotics, and a variety of organic compounds such as ethanol, acetic acid, lysine, aspartic acid, and biologically useful products such as antibodies and steroids.
  • Chromatographic separation and purification operations can be performed on biological product mixtures, based on the interchange of a solute between a moving phase, which can be a gas or liquid, and a stationary phase. Separation of various solutes of the solution mixture is accomplished because of varying binding interactions of each solute with the stationary phase; stronger binding interactions generally result in longer retention times when subjected to the dissociation or displacement effects of a mobile phase compared to solutes which interact less strongly and, in this fashion, separation and purification can be effected.
  • polymeric resins are widely used for the separation and purification of various target compounds.
  • polymeric resins can be used to purify or separate a target compound based on the presence of an ionic group, based on the size of the target compound, based on a hydrophobic interaction, based on an affinity interaction, or based on the formation of a covalent bond.
  • the present disclosure provides an article comprising a nonwoven substrate having average fiber sizes of 0.7 to 15 microns, and a void volume of 50 to 95%, and a polymer comprising anionic monomer units, such as 2-acrylamido-2-methylpropanesulphonic acid, grafted to the surface of the nonwoven substrate.
  • the article may be used as a filter element to purify or separate target materials, such as host cell proteins, DNA fragments, viruses, and cell debris, oligonucleotides or therapeutic proteins such as monoclonal antibodies (MAb), from a fluid mixture, such as those fluids produced by common cell product harvesting techniques.
  • target materials such as host cell proteins, DNA fragments, viruses, and cell debris, oligonucleotides or therapeutic proteins such as monoclonal antibodies (MAb)
  • target material refers to one or more chemical species for which the grafted nonwoven substrate is designed to separate from a liquid feed stream or solution mixture feed stream.
  • Target molecules can include, for example, pharmaceutical species; biomacromolecules such as, proteins and antibodies (monoclonal or polyclonal), DNA, and RNA, expressed by bacterial, yeast, mammalian, plant, or insect cells; minerals; and manmade chemical species such as, for example, synthetic small organic molecules, peptides and polypeptides, oligosaccharides, and sugar modified proteins.
  • the target molecule can be one or more impurities or waste products, including proteins; inorganic species such as metals, metal ions, or ions such as carbonates, sulfates, oxides, phosphates, bicarbonates, and other ions commonly found in industrial, residential and biological feed streams; small organic molecules such as those that comprise, but are not limited to, dyes, pesticides, fertilizers, additives, and stabilizers; process byproducts and pollutants; DNA, RNA, phospholipids, viruses, or other cell debris from a bioprocess.
  • leached ligands such as, for example, protein A from an upstream affinity separation process could also be a target molecule.
  • the article described herein could be used to remove various chemical or biological species from a waste or drinking water stream.
  • One of more layers of the article of this disclosure may be used in depth-type filtration applications, each of which layers may have the same, or different average fiber size, void volume, degree of polymer grafting, monomer composition of grafted polymer, porosity, loft, tensile strength and surface area.
  • the functionalized substrate may further be used in combination with conventional filtration elements such as porous or microporous membranes.
  • This disclosure further provides a method of making the article comprising the steps of providing a nonwoven substrate, exposing the nonwoven substrate to ionizing radiation in an inert atmosphere, and subsequently imbibing the exposed substrate with a solution comprising grafting anionic monomers to graft polymerize said monomers to the surface of the nonwoven substrate.
  • FIG. 1 is a perspective view of an exemplary embodiment of a filter media according to the present disclosure formed into a plurality of pleats;
  • FIG. 2 is a cross-sectional view of an exemplary filter device provided in lenticular form and comprising a filter media according to the present disclosure
  • FIG. 3 is a perspective and partial cutaway view of an exemplary filter device provided in encapsulated form and comprising a filter media according to the present disclosure
  • FIG. 4 is a cross-sectional view taken at 9-9 of FIG. 3 of an exemplary filter device provided in encapsulated form and comprising a first pleated media cylinder and a second pleated media cylinder according to the present disclosure;
  • FIG. 5 is a cross-sectional view taken at 9-9 of FIG. 3 of an exemplary filter device provided in encapsulated form and comprising a core wherein a filter media according to the present disclosure is spirally wound about the core;
  • FIG. 6 plots the IgG breakthrough curves for Example 1-7.
  • the present disclosure provides an article comprising a nonwoven substrate having average fiber sizes of 0.7 to 15 microns, and a void volume of 50 to 95%, and a polymer comprising anionic monomer units grafted to the surface of the nonwoven substrate.
  • the polymer functionalized article may be described as a discontinuous, uncrosslinked hydrogel polymer, initiated from free radicals formed on a nonwoven substrate by ionizing radiation and the subsequent graft-polymerization of the monomers in an aqueous or aqueous/organic solvent solution.
  • a "hydrogel” is a water-containing gel; polymer chains that are hydrophilic and will absorb water, yet is insoluble in water. The term hydrogel is used regardless of the state of hydration.
  • the nonwoven substrate is a nonwoven web which may include nonwoven webs manufactured by any of the commonly known processes for producing nonwoven webs.
  • nonwoven web refers to a fabric that has a structure of individual fibers or filaments which are randomly and/or unidirectionally interlaid in a mat-like fashion.
  • the fibrous nonwoven web can be made by carded, air laid, wet laid, spunlaced, spunbonding, electrospinning or melt-blowing techniques, such as melt-spun or melt-blown, or combinations thereof.
  • Spunbonded fibers are typically small diameter fibers that are formed by extruding molten thermoplastic polymer as filaments from a plurality of fine, usually circular capillaries of a spinneret with the diameter of the extruded fibers being rapidly reduced.
  • meltblown fibers are typically formed by extruding the molten thermoplastic material through a plurality of fine, usually circular, die capillaries as molten threads or filaments into a high velocity, usually heated gas (e.g., air) stream which attenuates the filaments of molten thermoplastic material to reduce their diameter. Thereafter, the meltblown fibers are carried by the high velocity gas stream and are deposited on a collecting surface to from a web of randomly disbursed meltblown fibers. Any of the non- woven webs may be made from a single type of fiber or two or more fibers that differ in the type of thermoplastic polymer and/or thickness.
  • heated gas e.g., air
  • Staple fibers may also be present in the web.
  • the presence of staple fibers generally provides a loftier, less dense web than a web of only melt blown microf ⁇ bers.
  • no more than about 20 weight percent staple fibers are present, more preferably no more than about 10 weight percent.
  • Such webs containing staple fiber are disclosed in U.S. 4,118,531 (Hauser) which is incorporated herein by reference.
  • the nonwoven article may optionally further comprise one or more layers of scrim.
  • either or both major surfaces may each optionally further comprise a scrim layer.
  • the scrim which is typically a woven or nonwoven reinforcement made from fibers, is included to provide strength to the nonwoven article. Suitable scrim materials include, but are not limited to, nylon, polyester, fiberglass, and the like.
  • the average thickness of the scrim can vary. Typically, the average thickness of the scrim ranges from about 25 to about 100 micrometers, preferably about 25 to about 50 micrometers.
  • the layer of the scrim may optionally be bonded to the nonwoven article. A variety of adhesive materials can be used to bond the scrim to the polymeric material. Alternatively, the scrim may be heat-bonded to the nonwoven.
  • the micro fibers of the nonwoven substrate typically have an effective fiber diameter of from about 0.5 to 15 micrometers preferably from about 1 to 6 micrometers, as calculated according to the method set forth in Davies, C. N., "The Separation of Airborne Dust and Particles," Institution of Mechanical Engineers, London, Proceedings IB, 1952.
  • the nonwoven substrate preferably has a basis weight in the range of about 10 to 400 g/m 2 , more preferably about 10 to 100 g/m 2 .
  • the average thickness of the nonwoven substrate is preferably about .1 to 10 mm, more preferably about 0.25 to 5 mm for the non- functionalized, uncalendared substrate.
  • the minimum tensile strength of the nonwoven web is about 4.0 Newtons. It is generally recognized that the tensile strength of nonwovens is lower in the machine direction than in the cross-web direction due to better fiber bonding and entanglement in the latter.
  • Nonwoven web loft is measured by solidity, a parameter that defines the solids fraction in a volume of web. Lower solidity values are indicative of greater web loft.
  • J- ⁇ nonwoven is the nonwoven thickness. Solidity is used herein to refer to the nonwoven substrate itself and not to the functionalized nonwoven. When a nonwoven substrate contains mixtures of two or more kinds of fibers, the individual solidities are determined for each kind of fiber using the same L nonwoven and these individual solidities are added together to obtain the web's solidity, ⁇ .
  • the nonwoven substrate before calendering or grafting preferably has an average pore size of 14 ⁇ m, calculated from a thickness of .34 mm, effective fiber diameter of 4.2 um and solidity of 13%. After calendering the nonwoven web will have a thickness of .24 mm and solidity of 18% with an average pore size of 8 ⁇ m.
  • average pore size (also known as average pore diameter) is related to the arithmetic median fiber diameter and web solidity and can be determined by the following formula: where D is the average pore size, df is arithmetic median fiber diameter, and ⁇ is the web solidity.
  • the nonwoven substrate preferably has a mean pore size of 1-40 microns, preferably 2-20 microns.
  • Mean pore size may be measured according to ASTM F 316-03 "Standard Test Methods for Pore Size Characteristics of Membrane Filters by Bubble Point and Mean Flow Pore Test Method B" using Freon TFTM as the test fluid.
  • the nonwoven substrate may be formed from any suitable thermoplastic polymeric material.
  • Suitable polymeric materials include, but are not limited to, polyolefms, poly(isoprenes), poly(butadienes), fluorinated polymers, chlorinated polymers, polyamides, polyimides, polyethers, poly(ether sulfones), poly(sulfones), poly( vinyl acetates), copolymers of vinyl acetate, such as poly(ethylene) -co- poly( vinyl alcohol),, poly(phosphazenes), poly(vinyl esters), poly(vinyl ethers), poly( vinyl alcohols), and poly(carbonates).
  • Suitable polyolefms include, but are not limited to, poly(ethylene), poly(propylene), poly(l-butene), copolymers of ethylene and propylene, alpha olefin copolymers (such as copolymers of ethylene or propylene with 1-butene, 1-hexene, 1- octene, and 1-decene), poly(ethylene -co- 1-butene) and poly(ethylene-co-l-butene-co- 1-hexene).
  • Suitable fluorinated polymers include, but are not limited to, poly( vinyl fluoride), poly(vinylidene fluoride), copolymers of vinylidene fluoride (such as poly(vinylidene fluoride-co-hexafluoropropylene), and copolymers of chlorotrifluoroethylene (such as poly(ethylene-co-chlorotrifluoroethylene).
  • Suitable polyamides include, but are not limited to, nylon 6, nylon 6,6, nylon 6, 12 poly(iminoadipoyliminohexamethylene), poly(iminoadipoyliminodecamethylene), and polycaprolactam.
  • Suitable polyimides include poly(pyromellitimide).
  • Suitable poly(ether sulfones) include, but are not limited to, poly(diphenylether sulfone) and poly(diphenylsulfone-co-diphenylene oxide sulfone).
  • Suitable copolymers of vinyl acetate include, but are not limited to, poly(ethylene -co-vinyl acetate) and such copolymers in which at least some of the acetate groups have been hydrolyzed to afford various poly( vinyl alcohols) including , poly(ethylene -co-vinyl alcohol).
  • Preferred polymers are inherently hydrophilic and are readily grafted by ionizing radiation, such as by exposure to e-beam or gamma radiation.
  • Preferred polymers include of polyamides and ethylene vinyl alcohol polymers and copolymers.
  • Useful nylon nonwoven substrates having 1 micron or smaller effective fiber diameters are also commercially available as HMTTM 16434 and HMTTM 16435 hybrid membrane technology membranes from DuPont, Wilmington, DE.
  • non-woven webs of this invention may be found in Wente, Superfine Thermoplastic Fibers, 48 Indus. Eng. Chem. 1342(1956), or in Wente et al., Manufacture Of Superfine Organic Fibers, (Naval Research Laboratories Report No. 4364, 1954).
  • Useful methods of preparing the nonwoven substrates are described in U.S. RE 39,399 (Allen), U.S. 3,849,241 (Butin et al.), U.S. 7,374,416 (Cook et al.), U.S. 4,936,934 (Buehning), and U.S. 6,230,776 (Choi), each incorporated herein by reference.
  • the nonwoven substrate is calendared using a smooth roll that is nipped against another smooth roll.
  • a calendared or compressed nonwoven web provides for a more uniform substrate and dimensional stability in later washing steps to remove unreacted monomers.
  • the nonwoven substrate according to the present invention are thermally calendared with a smooth roll and a solid back-up roll (e.g., a metal, rubber, or cotton cloth covered metal) in addition to pattern embossing, described above. During calendering, it is important to closely control the temperature and the pressure of the smooth rolls.
  • the fibers are minimally thermally fused at the points of contact, without imparting undesirable characteristics to the nonwoven substrate such as forming a film or skin on the surface thereof.
  • the temperature of the smooth roll when using nylon nonwoven substrates, it is preferred to maintain the temperature of the smooth roll between about 40 0 C and 100 0 C, more preferably between about 50 0 C and 75 0 C.
  • the smooth roll should contact the fibrous web at a pressure of from about 10 kilogram- force/cm to about 50 kilogram-force/cm, more preferably from about 15 kilogram- force/cm to about 30 kilogram- force/cm.
  • the average thickness of the calendared nonwoven substrate is preferably about 2/3 the thickness of the starting nonwoven.
  • the functionalized article may be described as a discontinuous, uncrosslinked hydrogel polymer, initiated from free radicals formed on a non-woven substrate by ionizing radiation and the subsequent graft-polymerization of the anionic monomers in an imbibing solution.
  • a hydrogel is a water-containing gel: a polymer that is hydrophilic and will absorb water, yet is insoluble in water. The term hydrogel is used regardless of the state of hydration.
  • the grafted polymer comprises polymer tendrils that are initiated from, and supported by, the nonwoven substrate, the polymer chains (tendrils) extending into the interstitial spaces of the nonwoven substrate.
  • the grafted polymer chains have pendent anionic groups, and optional pendent poly(alkylene oxide) groups and other functional groups.
  • the hydrogel reaches a state of maximum hydration and volume.
  • the grafted nonwoven article may have a large flow response to very low quantities of stimulus.
  • conventional hydrogels comprise individual polymer strands or tendrils that are crosslinked through multiple crosslinking sites. Due to the crosslinking the molecular weight of the polymer is infinite and the "gel” refers to the swollen polymer network, the properties of which are controlled through polymer concentration, polymer molecular weight and crosslinking density.
  • the hydrogel polymer can completely fill the interstitial spaces of the nonwoven substrate thereby providing a barrier which effectively blocks the flow of pure water through the functionalized nonwoven article resulting in the higher backpressure at a given flux rate (constant rate) or very low flux at a given pressure (constant pressure). It is believed that in pure water the negatively charged anionic groups, such as sulfonic acid salts, electrostatically repulse one another causing maximum extension of the grafted polymer chains and consequently maximum hydration of the hydrogel.
  • the negatively charged anionic groups such as sulfonic acid salts
  • the hydrogel When used in filtration, the hydrogel can reversibly expand in response to a very small amount of a “trigger” such as a salt, buffer, organic solvent, temperature, pH, contaminate, or a biomolecule, consequently contracting allowing for higher flux at lower pressure through the hydrogel network.
  • a "trigger” such as a salt, buffer, organic solvent, temperature, pH, contaminate, or a biomolecule
  • the grafted hydrogel network does not lose it's filterability in a "triggered” state.
  • the fully expanded hydrogel network can offer resistance to water flux.
  • the hydrogel In the state of maximum hydration, the hydrogel is constrained only by the nonwoven substrate, most significantly in the x and y axes (coplanar with the nonwoven substrate) and less so in the z axis, normal to the plane of the nonwoven substrate.
  • the gel is less constrained on the z axis.
  • the gel may swell up to 800 percent or more on the z axis, but the x and y axes desirably swell less than 100 %, more preferably less than 50%, constrained by the nonwoven substrate.
  • conditions can be adjusted to maximize the resiliency in the z direction (normal to the plane of the nonwoven by (a) adjusting the die and collector for proper fiber lay-down (b) adjusting melt temp and air temp to prevent fibers from over- fusing and forming fiber- fiber bonds, (c) minimize asymmetry caused by the collector being too close in proximity to the die.
  • nonwoven fibers are below the polymer melt temperature before impinging on the collector to reduce the degree of fiber-fiber links.
  • the nonwoven may expand maximally in "z" direction (normal to the plane of the nonwoven) to allow for expansion of the hydrogel.
  • the hydrogel reversibly contracts and allows water to flow (flux) through the resulting interstices in the presence of dissolved species, such as neutral compounds, salts, buffers and positively charged ions. It is believed the dissolved species such as dissolved ions more effectively charge-couple to the negatively charged anionic groups in the graft polymer so that the electrostatic repulsion between the anionic groups is reduced and the hydrogel constricts or collapses. Alternatively the dissolved species may displace the hydration sphere of the water (and possibly solvent) molecules with the result that the hydrogel collapses around the non-woven substrate. Therefore the article exhibits a stimulus-response hydrogel (“responsive hydrogel”) that is discontinuous in nature - able to reversibly open and close the pores or interstices of the hydrogel.
  • responsive hydrogel a stimulus-response hydrogel
  • the nonwoven substrate has a polymer comprising anionic monomer units grafted to the surface of the nonwoven substrate.
  • the polymer is grafted to the surface(s) of the nonwoven substrate by ionization initiated polymerization of grafting monomers, which are negatively charged.
  • the negatively charged anionic monomer has at least one ethylenically unsaturated group capable of undergoing free radical polymerization, and an additional anionic functional group.
  • the ethylenically unsaturated group is a
  • the anionic monomer can be a weak acid, a strong acid, a salt of a weak acid, a salt of a strong acid, or combinations thereof. That is, the negatively charged ionic monomer can be in a neutral state but capable of being charged if the pH is adjusted. When the pH is suitably adjusted, the resulting cation exchange resins have negatively charged groups capable of interacting with positively charged materials
  • anionic monomer used to prepare a cation exchange resin includes a salt of a weak acid or a salt of a strong acid
  • the counter ions of these salts can be, but are not limited to, alkali metals, alkaline earth metals, ammonium ions, or tetraalkylammonium ions.
  • the anionic monomers may have the general formula:
  • R 1 is H or CH 3 ;
  • X is -O- or -NR 1 -
  • Y is a straight or branched chain alkylene, generally from 1 to 10 carbon atoms
  • Z is an anionic group, which may be selected from sulphonic acids groups, phosphonic acid groups, and carboxylic acid groups, and salts thereof.
  • Some exemplary anionic monomers include (meth)acrylamidosulfonic acids of Formula (II) or salts thereof: ere
  • R 1 is H or CH3, and Y is a straight or branched alkylene having 1 to 10 carbon atoms.
  • Exemplary ionic monomers according to Formula (II) include, but are not limited to, N- acrylamidomethanesulfonic acid, 2-acrylamidoethanesulfonic acid, 2-acrylamido-2- methylpropanesulfonic acid, and 2-methacrylamido-2-methylpropanesulfonic acid. Salts of these acidic monomers can also be used, examples being (3-sulfopropyl)-methacrylic acid potassium salt and 2-(methacryloyloxy)ethylsulfonic acid sodium salt.
  • Suitable anionic monomers for the graft polymer include sulfonic acids such as vinylsulfonic acid and 4-styrenesulfonic acid; (meth)acrylamidophosphonic acids such as (meth)acrylamidoalkylphosphonic acids (e.g., 2-acrylamidoethylphosphonic acid and 3- methacrylamidopropylphosphonic acid); acrylic acid and methacrylic acid; and carboxyalkyl(meth)acrylates such as 2-carboxyethylacrylate, 2-carboxyethylmethacrylate, 3-carboxypropylacrylate, and 3-carboxypropylmethacrylate.
  • sulfonic acids such as vinylsulfonic acid and 4-styrenesulfonic acid
  • (meth)acrylamidophosphonic acids such as (meth)acrylamidoalkylphosphonic acids (e.g., 2-acrylamidoethylphosphonic acid and 3- methacrylamidopropy
  • Still other suitable acidic monomers include (meth)acryloylamino acids, such as those described in U.S. 4,157,418 (Heilmann), incorporated herein by reference.
  • Exemplary (meth)acryloylamino acids include, but are not limited to, N-acryloylglycine, N-acryloylaspartic acid, N-acryloyl- ⁇ - alanine, 2-acrylamidoglycolic acid, 3-acrylamido-3-methylbutyric acid. Salts of any of these acidic monomers can also be used.
  • the grafted polymer optionally contains monofunctional ethylenically-unsaturated grafting monomer units having a poly(alkylene oxide) group.
  • These monomers copolymerize with the grafting anionic monomers to form a grafted copolymer chain on the surface of the nonwoven substrate.
  • these monomers are used in amounts of 2 to 20 wt.%, more preferably 5 to 10 wt.%, relative to the total monomer weight.
  • the monomer units having a poly (alkylene oxide) group is of the formula:
  • Z is a polymerizable ethylenically unsaturated moiety
  • R is a H or CH 3
  • R is a H, a C 1 to C 4 alkyl group, aryl group, or combinations thereof and m is from 2 to 100
  • Q is a divalent linking group selected from -O-, -NR - , -CO - and
  • the poly(alkylene oxide) group is a poly(ethylene oxide) (co)polymer.
  • the pendent poly(alkylene oxide) group is a poly(ethylene oxide-co-propylene oxide) copolymer.
  • Such copolymers may be block copolymers, random copolymers, or gradient copolymers.
  • Useful ethylenically unsaturated moiety, Z, of the monomer may include:
  • the monomer having a poly(alkylene oxide) group can be prepared, for example, by reacting mono- or di-functional alkylene oxide (co)polymers (which are typically commercially available) with reactive ethylenically unsaturated compounds (e.g., acrylates).
  • the functional groups terminating the poly(alkylene oxide) may include hydroxy groups, amine groups and carboxyl groups.
  • a variety of reactive ethylenically unsaturated compounds such as acrylate derivatives can be used including, but not limited to, (meth)acrylic acid, (meth)acryloyl chloride, (meth)acrylic anhydride, and 2- isocyanatoethyl (meth)acrylate.
  • the monomer is prepared by reacting the mono- or di-functional alkylene oxide (co)polymer with (meth)acrylic anhydride.
  • the monofunctional alkylene oxide (co)polymer such as a monohydroxy terminated alkylene oxide (co)polymer
  • Suitable monofunctional poly(alkylene oxide) monomers include poly(ethylene oxide) (meth)acrylate, poly(propylene oxide) (meth)acrylate, poly(ethylene oxide-propylene oxide) (meth)acrylate, and combinations thereof.
  • Such monomers preferably include one nonreactive end group such as (C 1 -C 4 ) alkoxy, aryloxy (e.g., phenoxy), and (C 1 -C 4 ) alkaryloxy. These groups can be linear or branched.
  • These monomers can be of a wide range of molecular weights and are commercially available from sources such as Sartomer Company, Exton, PA; Shinnakamura Chemical Co., Ltd., Tokyo, Japan; Aldrich, Milwaukee, WI; and Osaka Organic Chemical Ind., Ltd., Osaka, Japan.
  • the grafted polymer optionally contains other ethylenically-unsaturated hydrophilic grafting monomer units; "second hydrophilic monomers”.
  • second hydrophilic monomers are those polymerizable monomers having a water miscibility (water in monomer) of at least 1 wt.%, preferably at least 5 weight % without reaching a cloud point, are exclusive of poly(alkylene oxide) monomers and contain no groups that would retard the grafting polymerization.
  • the grafted copolymer may comprise 0 to 10 wt.% of such monomer units. When present, the polymer generally comprises 1 to 10 wt.% of such of such monomer units.
  • suitable second hydrophilic monomers include 2- hydroxyethyl(meth)acrylate (HEMA), 2-hydroxypropyl(meth)acrylate, 3- hydroxypropyl(meth)acrylate, 2, 3-dihydroxypropyl (meth)acrylate, 4- hydroxybutyl(meth)acrylate, N-vinyl caprolactam, N-vinyl acetamide, N-vinyl pyrrolidone, acrylonitrile, tetrahydrofurfuryl acrylate, acrylamide, mono- or di-N-alkyl substituted acrylamide, glycerol methacrylate, and combinations thereof.
  • HEMA 2- hydroxyethyl(meth)acrylate
  • 2-hydroxypropyl(meth)acrylate 2-hydroxypropyl(meth)acrylate
  • 3- hydroxypropyl(meth)acrylate 2, 3-dihydroxypropyl (meth)acrylate
  • 4- hydroxybutyl(meth)acrylate N-vinyl caprol
  • Preferred polar monomers include 2-hydroxyethyl(meth)acrylate (HEMA), N-vinyl pyrrolidone, N-vinyl acetamide, methylacrylamide, and mixtures thereof.
  • HEMA 2-hydroxyethyl(meth)acrylate
  • N-vinyl pyrrolidone N-vinyl pyrrolidone
  • N-vinyl acetamide N-vinyl acetamide
  • methylacrylamide and mixtures thereof.
  • the imbibing solution containing the monomer mixture contains no polyethylenically unsaturated monomers; i.e., no crosslinkers.
  • the grafted (co)polymer comprises: a) 70 to 100 wt.% of anionic monomers, preferably at least 80 wt.%, more preferable 80 to 98 wt.%; b) 0 to 20 wt.%, preferably 2 to 20 wt.%, more preferably 5 to 10 wt.% of grafting poly (alky lene oxide) monomers; and c) 0 to 10 wt.% of second hydrophilic monomers, each weight percentage relative to the weight of total monomer content.
  • the b) and/or c) monomers are especially useful for enhancing the hydrophilicity of normally hydrophobic nonwoven substrates With such hydrophobic substrates, it is preferred that the monomers are non-zero amounts in the imbibing solution.
  • the total grafted monomer content may be from 0.5 to 5 times the weight of the nonwoven substrate. It is desirable to fill the interstitial spaces of the nonwoven substrate but not have the polymer chains bridge to link separate fibers of the nonwoven with grafted polymer strands, as this will restrict expansion of the nonwoven substrate and impede flux.
  • One way to reduce this fiber-fiber bridging by the grafted polymer is to lower the monomer concentration for a given fiber size. It has been determined that the amount of grafted polymer may be maximized by adding a water miscible organic solvent to the grafting imbibing solution to maximize the molecular weight of the grafted hydrogel polymer tendrils and reduce bridging of the tendrils.
  • the flux pressure buildup resulting from packed hydrogel tendrils in the interstitial spaces of the nonwoven is simply relieved by the ionic trigger or the biological product itself.
  • the benefit from packing the interstitial spaces with hydrogel strands is effectively extending the surface area of the nonwoven to include polymer strands in the void volume where the contamination can displace the water of the hydrogel.
  • the unexpected net effect of nonwovens with grafted hydrogel polymer tendrils in the packed configuration is the ability to hold significantly greater amounts of soluble and insoluble biological contaminants without fouling and the multiple long flexible hydrogel tendrils are capable of multiple bond or hydrogen bonding sites allowing for affinity absorption with greatly improved salt tolerance.
  • the nonwoven substrate may be considered a scaffold for the grafted polymer, rather than a surface coated substrate.
  • the monomers that are grafted to the surface of the nonwoven substrates usually have either an acrylate or other non-acrylate polymerizable functional group for grafting by e-beam irradiation.
  • Acrylamide or methacrylate groups are preferred for grafting of the monomer to the nonwoven substrate surface (using the process described herein) due to the slower, more uniform reactivity and durability of such methacrylates or acrylamido moieties to nonwovens that have been exposed to e-beam irradiation.
  • functionalized substrates of the present invention may be prepared using above-described monomers to provide a grafted polymer on the surface of a porous nonwoven base substrate.
  • the monomers may be grafted onto the nonwoven base substrate in a single reaction step (i.e., exposure to an ionizing radiation) followed by imbibing with all grafting monomers present or in sequential reaction steps (i.e., a first exposure to ionizing radiation followed by imbibing with one or more grafting monomer, then a second exposure to an ionizing radiation and a second imbibing after the second exposure to the ionizing radiation).
  • the grafting process will yield a radical species on the surface of the nonwoven substrate.
  • polymerization will initiate with the formation of a radical on the carbon alpha to the carbonyl of the anionic monomer of Formulas I or II, that may further polymerize with one of more additional anionic monomers such as the aminoalkyl (meth)acryloyl monomers of Formula II, one of more optional PEG monomers of Formula III, and one or more optional second hydrophilic monomers, resulting in a grafted polymers having these groups pendent from the polymer chain as simply illustrated below.
  • the -(M PEG ) X represents the polymerized monomer of Formula III having "x" polymerized monomer units, where x may be zero and is preferably at least one
  • - (M c )y represents the polymerized second hydrophilic monomers, having y polymerized monomer units, where y may be zero and is preferably at least 1.
  • the polymer may be random or block.
  • the polymer may be directly grafted via the residue of the aminoalkyl (meth)acryloyl monomer, as shown, or may be directly grafted via the -(M PEG )- monomers or the hydrophilic monomers, as described herein.
  • the values of the subscripts w, x and y may be an integral or non-integral value and correspond to the amount of each monomer in the imbibing solution previous described.
  • the value of the subscript "w" will correspond to an amount of 70 to 100 wt.% of anionic monomers in the imbibing solution
  • the value of subscript x will correspond to 0 to 20 wt.%, preferably 2 to 20 wt.% of the monomers of Formula III
  • the value of subscript y will correspond to 0 to 10 wt.% of second hydrophilic monomers.
  • the process of preparing the grafted nonwoven substrate comprises the steps of providing a nonwoven substrate, exposing the nonwoven substrate to ionizing radiation in an inert atmosphere, and subsequently imbibing the exposed substrate with a solution comprising anionic monomers (and optionally other monomers, as described) to graft polymerize said monomers to the surface of the nonwoven substrate.
  • the nonwoven substrate is exposed to ionizing radiation, such as e-beam radiation, in an inert atmosphere.
  • ionizing radiation such as e-beam radiation
  • the chamber comprises an inert atmosphere such as nitrogen, carbon dioxide, helium, argon, etc., with a minimal amount of oxygen (less than 100 ppm), which is known to inhibit free-radical polymerization.
  • the irradiation step comprises the ionizing irradiation of nonwoven substrate surfaces, preferably with ionizing e-beam or gamma radiation to prepare free radical reaction sites on such surfaces upon which the monomers are subsequently grafted.
  • "Ionizing irradiation” means radiation of a sufficient dosage and energy to cause the formation of free radical reaction sites on the surface(s) of the base substrate. Ionizing radiation may include gamma, electron-beam, x-ray and other forms of electromagnetic radiation.
  • corona radiation can be sufficiently high energy radiation.
  • the radiation is sufficiently high energy, that when absorbed by the surfaces of the base substrate, sufficient energy is transferred to that support to result in the cleavage of chemical bonds in that support and the resultant formation of free radical sites on the nonwoven substrate.
  • One or more layers of nonwoven substrates may be subjected to the ionizing radiation.
  • High energy radiation dosages are measured in units of kilogray (kGy).
  • Doses can be administered in a single dose of the desired level or in multiple doses which accumulate to the desired level. Dosages can range cumulatively from about 1 kGy to about 200 kGy. The dose can be delivered all at once such as from an E-beam source or accumulated from a slow dose rate over several hours such as dosage delivered from a gamma source. Preferably, the cumulative dosage exceeds 20 kGy (2 Mrads) for substrates resistant to radiation damage.
  • Electron beam is one preferred method of grafting due to the ready-availability of commercial sources.
  • Electron beam generators are commercially available from a variety of sources, including the ESI "ELECTROCURE” EB SYSTEM from Energy Sciences, Inc. (Wilmington, MA), and the BROADBEAM EB PROCESSOR from PCT Engineered Systems, LLC (Davenport, IA).
  • the dosage delivered can be measured in accordance with ASTM E- 1275 entitled "Practice for Use of a Radiochromic Film Dosimetry System.”
  • ASTM E- 1275 entitled "Practice for Use of a Radiochromic Film Dosimetry System.”
  • the nonwoven substrate is exposed to a sufficient quantity of ionizing radiation, so as to form free radicals on the surfaces of the nonwoven substrate.
  • the chamber may contain at least one device capable of providing a sufficient dose of radiation.
  • a single device is capable of providing a sufficient dose of radiation, although two or more devices, and/or multiple passes through a single device, may be used especially for relatively thick nonwoven substrates.
  • the environment containing the nonwoven substrate comprises an inert atmosphere such as nitrogen, carbon dioxide, helium, argon, etc., with a minimal amount of oxygen, which is known to inhibit free-radical polymerization.
  • Dose is the total amount of energy absorbed per mass unit. Dose is commonly expressed in units of kiloGray (kGy). A gray is defined as the amount of radiation required to supply 1 joule of energy per kilogram of mass.
  • the total dose received by the substrate depends on a number of parameters including source activity, residence time (i.e., the total time the sample is irradiated), the distance from the source, and attenuation by the intervening cross- section of materials between the source and sample. Dose is typically regulated by controlling residence time, distance to the source, or both.
  • a dose rate can be selected based on desired properties for a specified composition.
  • the dose rate is typically in the range of 0.0005 kGy/sec (gamma) to 200 kGy/sec (E-beam).
  • Electron beams are generally produced by applying high voltage to tungsten wire filaments retained between a repeller plate and an extractor grid within a vacuum chamber maintained at about 10 "6 Torr. The filaments are heated at high current to produce electrons. The electrons are guided and accelerated by the repeller plate and extractor grid towards a thin window of metal foil.
  • the accelerated electrons traveling at speeds in excess of 10 7 meters/second (m/sec) and possessing about 100 to 300 kilo- electron volts (keV), pass out of the vacuum chamber through the foil window and penetrate whatever material is positioned immediately beyond the foil window.
  • the quantity of electrons generated is directly related to the current.
  • extractor grid voltage is increased, the acceleration or speed of electrons drawn from the tungsten wire filaments increase.
  • E-beam processing can be extremely precise when under computer control, such that an exact dose and dose rate of electrons can be directed against the nonwoven substrate.
  • the temperature within the chamber is desirably maintained at an ambient temperature by conventional means. Without intending to be limited to any particular mechanism, it is believed that the exposure of the nonwoven substrate to an electron beam results in free radical sites on the substrate surface which can then subsequently react with the grafting monomers in the imbibing step.
  • the total dose received by the nonwoven substrate primarily affects the number of radical sites formed on the surface thereof and subsequently the extent to which the grafting monomers are grafted onto the nonwoven substrate.
  • Dose is dependent upon a number of processing parameters, including voltage, web- or line- speed and beam current.
  • Dose can be conveniently regulated by controlling line speed (i.e., the speed with which the nonwoven substrate passes under the irradiation device), and the current supplied to the extractor grid.
  • a target dose e.g., ⁇ 10 kGy
  • the nonwoven substrate is subjected to a controlled amount of dosage ranging from a minimum dosage of about 1 kilogray (kGy) to a practical maximum dosage of less than about 200 kGy, depending on the particular polymer.
  • the amount typically ranges from a minimum dosage of about 1 kilogray (kGy) to a maximum dosage of less than about 10 kGy.
  • the total controlled amount of dosage ranges from less than about 9 kGy to about 7 kGy for propylene polymers to avoid degradation.
  • suitable gamma ray sources emit gamma rays having energies of 400 keV or greater.
  • suitable gamma ray sources emit gamma rays having energies in the range of 500 keV to 5 MeV.
  • suitable gamma ray sources include cobalt-60 isotope (which emits photons with energies of approximately 1.17 and 1.33 MeV in nearly equal proportions) and cesium- 137 isotope (which emits photons with energies of approximately 0.662 MeV).
  • the distance from the source can be fixed or made variable by changing the position of the target or the source.
  • the flux of gamma rays emitted from the source generally decays with the square of the distance from the source and duration of time as governed by the half- life of the isotope.
  • the irradiated substrate having free radical sites on the surface of the nonwoven substrate, are imbibed with the monomer solution subsequent to and not concurrent with, the irradiation step.
  • the free radical sites generated on the surface of the nonwoven substrate have average lifetimes ranging from several minutes to several hours and progressively decay to a low concentration within about ten hours at room temperature. Lower temperatures, such as dry ice temperatures, promote longer radical lifetimes.
  • humidification and nitrous oxide can increase the rate of substrate radical formation via generation of hydroxyl radicals.
  • the effective binding absorption capacity of the grafted nonwoven from the graft polymerization process is little changed after a reaction time of about 12 hours, when kept under inert conditions.
  • the irradiated nonwoven substrate is imbibed with the monomer solution immediately after the irradiation step.
  • the irradiated substrate is imbibed within an hour, preferably within ten minutes.
  • the substrate should be imbibed immediately after irradiation since irradiation residence time will be long. It has been observed that if the substrate is irradiated by ionizing radiation in the presence of the grafting monomers, the filtration performance of the grafted nonwoven substrate is inferior to that article prepared by the instant method.
  • the nonwoven substrate is contacted with the imbibing solution containing one or more grafting monomers and in amounts previously described.
  • Suitable methods of imbibing include, but are not limited to, a spray coating, flood coating, knife coating, Meyer bar coating, dip coating, and gravure coating.
  • the imbibing solution remains in contact with the nonwoven substrate for a time sufficient for the radical sites to initiate polymerization with the grafting monomers.
  • grafting reactions are mostly completed after 12 hours exposure; generally resulting in about 50+ percent conversion of monomers to grafted polymer.
  • the nonwoven substrate comprises grafted polymers and/or copolymers attached to the interstitial and outer surfaces of the nonwoven substrate.
  • the imbibing solution may comprise one or more grafting monomers suitable for grafting onto surfaces of the nonwoven substrate. Any of the exemplary grafting monomers described above can be included in the imbibing solution.
  • the imbibing solution can contain other materials such as, for example, one or more other non-grafting monomers for UV curing, surfactants, dyes, pigments and solvents.
  • concentration of each grafting monomer in the imbibing solution may vary depending on a number of factors including, but not limited to, the grafting monomer or monomers in the imbibing solution, the extent of grafting desired, the reactivity of the grafting monomer(s), and the solvent used.
  • the total concentration of the monomers in the imbibing solution ranges from about 1 wt% to about 100 wt%, desirably, from about 5 wt% to about 30 wt%, and more desirably from about 15 wt% to about 25 wt% based on a total weight of the imbibing solution.
  • the imbibing solution further comprises an aqueous blend of a water miscible organic solvent and the grafting monomer(s). It has been found that the solvent blend influences the morphology of the grafted polymer and the resulting flux rate when used in separation applications.
  • the ratio of water to organic solvent can vary widely, but is typically greater than 1 : 1 (v/v) water to organic solvent, preferably greater than 5:1, and more preferably greater than 7:1. The ratios are generally adjusted so that the resulting grafted nonwoven substrate produces pressure and flux responses maximizing the binding capacity for the targeted bioseparation application.
  • the concentration of the organic solvent in water may be optimized with respect to the fiber size of the nonwoven substrate. In general, the optimum concentration of organic solvent increases as the fiber size decreases.
  • a nonwoven with a 4 ⁇ m effective fiber diameter optimally uses 15% or less organic solvent in water.
  • a 15% 2-Acrylamido-2-methylpropanesulfonic acid, ammonium or sodium salts monomer imbibing solution for a 1 ⁇ m effective fiber diameter nonwoven web optimally uses more than 15 % organic solvent in water.
  • any such water miscible organic solvent preferably has no tertiary hydrogen atoms, or other groups that would retard the graft polymerization.
  • the water miscible solvents are protic group containing organic liquids such as the lower alcohols having 1 to 4 carbon atoms, lower glycols having 2 to 6 carbon atoms, and most preferably lower glycol ethers having 3 to 6 carbon atoms and 1 to 2 ether linkages. In some embodiments higher glycols such as poly(ethylene glycol) may be used.
  • methanol ethanol, n-butanol, t-butyl alcohol, ethylene glycol, methoxyethanol, ethoxyethanol, propoxyethanol, butoxyethanol, methyl carbitol, ethyl carbitol, and mixtures thereof.
  • non-protic water miscible organic solvents that can also be used such as aliphatic esters and ketones and sulfoxides such as ethyl acetate, propyl acetate, butyl acetate, methoxyethyl acetate, ethoxyethyl acetate, propoxyethyl acetate, butoxyethyl acetate, triethyl phosphate, acetone, methyl ethyl ketone, methyl propyl ketone and dimethyl sulfoxide.
  • aliphatic esters and ketones and sulfoxides such as ethyl acetate, propyl acetate, butyl acetate, methoxyethyl acetate, ethoxyethyl acetate, propoxyethyl acetate, butoxyethyl acetate, triethyl phosphate, acetone, methyl ethyl ketone, methyl prop
  • the nonwoven substrate bearing grafted polymer groups may be optionally rinsed to remove residual monomer and/or dried.
  • the functionalized nonwoven substrate is washed or rinsed one or more times to remove any unreacted monomers, solvent or other reaction byproducts.
  • the functionalized substrate is washed or rinsed up to three times using a water rinse, an alcohol rinse, a combination of water and alcohol rinses, and/or a solvent rinse (e.g., acetone, methyl ethyl ketone, etc).
  • the rinse may include one or more alcohols including, but not limited to, isopropanol, methanol, ethanol, or any other alcohol that is practical to use and an effective solvent for any residual monomer.
  • the functionalized substrate may pass through a rinse bath or a rinse spray.
  • the rinse may comprise an ionic buffer solution that would reduce swelling of the hydrogel, the amount of retained water, and also avoiding weakening the non- woven substrate during this rinse step.
  • the functionalized substrate is dried to remove any rinse solution.
  • the functionalized substrate is dried in oven having a relatively low oven temperature for a desired period of time (referred to herein as "oven dwell time").
  • Oven temperatures typically range from about 60 0 C to about 120 0 C
  • oven dwell times typically range from about 120 to about 600 seconds. Any conventional oven may be used in the optional drying step.
  • the drying step can proceed before the rinsing step to eliminate volatile components before extraction of non-grafted residue.
  • the dried functionalized substrate can be taken up in roll form to be stored for future use
  • the functionalized nonwoven substrates are particularly suited as filter media, such as the filter media found in water filtration devices.
  • the filter media is durable.
  • the hydrophilic porous substrate described herein can be cleaned or flushed and retain the hydrophilic properties as evidenced by the surface energy and wettability.
  • one or more layers of the functionalized substrate may be used, each of which layers may have the same, or different average fiber size, void volume, degree of polymer grafting, monomer composition of grafted polymer, porosity, tensile strength and surface area.
  • each subsequent layer may have a smaller effective pore size or smaller average fiber size so that finer contaminants may be filtered.
  • the grafted nonwoven substrate may be configured as planar or lenticular disks.
  • the nonwoven substrate may be pleated.
  • Pleated grafted nonwoven filter elements may be combined as multiple concentric pleated elements.
  • the grafted nonwoven substrate may be wound spirally.
  • FIG. 1 depicts an exemplary filter media 120 according to the present disclosure.
  • filter media 120 comprises a plurality of pleats 126.
  • pleated filter media 120 may be incorporated into a filter device or other filter device. Examples of pleating configurations and filter devices comprising pleated media may be found, for example, in U.S. 6,521,011 to Sundet et al., the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety. It is also envisioned that the plurality of pleats
  • filter media 120 comprises a grafted nonwoven substrate 122 together with a microporous membrane layer 124.
  • microporous membrane layer 124 is positioned downstream of grafted nonwoven substrate 122.
  • Microporous membrane layer 124 may comprise one or more microporous membranes as described throughout the present disclosure. In some embodiments, microporous membrane layer 124 comprises a single zone having a symmetrically distributed pore size.
  • microporous membrane layer 124 comprises a single zone comprising an asymmetrically distributed pore size. In still other embodiments, microporous membrane layer 124 comprises multiple discrete zones. In such embodiments, each discrete zone may comprise symmetrically or asymmetrically distributed pore sizes.
  • one or more zones of microporous membrane layer 124 may be functionalized to include, for example, enhanced hydrophilic properties. Methods for providing a functionalized microporous membrane are described, for example, elsewhere in the present disclosure.
  • microporous membrane layer 124 may comprise multiple layers of microporous membrane, wherein each layer may comprise a single zone or multiple discrete zones. Each zone may comprise symmetrically or asymmetrically distributed pore sizes, and each layer of microporous membrane may be functionalized or non-functionalized as desired for a specific application.
  • microporous membrane layer 124 may comprise three layers of microporous membrane, wherein each layer comprises three discrete zones.
  • Grafted nonwoven substrate 122 may comprise one or more nonwoven substrates as described throughout the present disclosure.
  • grafted nonwoven substrate 122 comprises a single layer of nonwoven.
  • grafted nonwoven substrate 122 may include additional layers of nonwoven material having the same or different construction.
  • grafted nonwoven substrate 122 may comprise a non-grafted nonwoven layer positioned upstream of a grafted nonwoven layer.
  • the more upstream layer may be provided, for example, with a lower density, or increased porosity, relative to the more downstream layer.
  • FIG. 2 depicts an exemplary filter device 100 according to the present disclosure.
  • filter device 100 comprises a filter media 120 provided in the form of a lenticular filter cartridge.
  • lenticular filter cartridges and methods of making lenticular filter cartridges may be found, for example, in U.S. 6,464,084; 6,939,466; 7,178,676; and 6,712,966 to Pulek et al, the disclosures of which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety.
  • filter device 100 comprises a separator element 140 having a central core 142 in fluid communication with a fluid outlet 116.
  • separator element 140 comprises a first side 144 and a second side 146 upon which filter media 120 may be disposed.
  • First side 144 and second side 146 are typically not provide filtering functionality, but are provided with a network of apertures through which fluid may freely flow.
  • filter media 120 is provided as a first filter media disk 150 positioned on first side 144 and a second filter media disk 154 positioned on second side 146.
  • First and second filter media disks 150 and 154 each respectively comprise an outer circumferential edge 151, 155 and an inner circumferential edge 152, 156.
  • an edge seal 150 connects the outer circumferential edges 151 and 155 of first and second filter media disks 150 and 154.
  • inner circumferential edges 152 and 156 are connected to central core 142 of separator element 140.
  • filter media 120 comprises grafted non woven substrate 122.
  • filter media 120 comprises a grafted nonwoven substrate 122 together with a microporous membrane layer 124.
  • microporous membrane layer 124 is positioned downstream of grafted nonwoven substrate 122.
  • an exemplary filter device 100 comprising a filter capsule 110 and a filter cap 112 connected to filter capsule 110.
  • filter cap 112 comprises a fluid inlet 114 and a fluid outlet 116.
  • Filter media 120 is encapsulated in filter capsule 110 and fluidly connects fluid inlet 114 and fluid outlet 116.
  • filter media 120 is formed into a first media cylinder 130 comprising a plurality of pleats 126. Examples or filter devices and methods of making filter devices may be found, for example, in U.S. 6,458,269 to Bassett et al., the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
  • filter media formed into cylinders comprising a plurality of pleats may be found, for example, in U.S. 6,315,130 to Olsen, the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
  • the present disclosure provides a filter cartridge comprising a filter capsule; and a filter cap connected to the filter capsule; wherein the filter cap comprises the fluid inlet and the fluid outlet, and wherein the filter media is encapsulated in the filter capsule.
  • filter cap of the filter device comprises the fluid inlet and the fluid outlet, and wherein the filter media is encapsulated in the filter capsule.
  • the filter media further comprises a microporous membrane layer positioned downstream of the grafted nonwoven substrate.
  • the present disclosure provides a filter device comprising a fluid inlet; a fluid outlet; and a filter media fluidly connecting the fluid inlet and the fluid outlet; wherein the filter media comprises the grafted nonwoven substrate.
  • a filter device further comprising a separator element (140); and an edge seal (150); the separator element comprising a central core (142) in fluid communication with the fluid inlet; a first side (144); and a second side (146); the filter media comprising a first media disk (150) positioned on the first side of the separator element and having an outer circumferential edge (151) and an inner circumferential edge
  • FIG. 4 depicts a cross-sectional view of one embodiment of filter device 100 shown in FIG. 3, wherein filter media 120 is formed into first media cylinder 130 comprising a plurality of pleats 126.
  • filter media 120 comprises a grafted nonwoven substrate 122 together with a microporous membrane layer 124.
  • microporous membrane layer 124 is positioned downstream of grafted nonwoven substrate 122.
  • filter device 100 optionally comprises a second media cylinder 132 positioned within first media cylinder 130.
  • second media cylinder 132 may comprise a plurality of pleats.
  • the present disclosure provides a filter device of wherein the filter media further comprises one or more microporous membrane layers positioned downstream of the grafted nonwoven substrate. In some embodiments the present disclosure provides a filter device wherein the filter media comprises a plurality of pleats.
  • FIG. 5 depicts a cross-sectional view of an alternative embodiment of a filter device 100 as shown in FIG. 3, wherein filter device further comprises a core 160, and wherein the filter media 120 is spirally wound about core 160.
  • Core 160 typically does not provide filtering functionality, but is provided with a network of apertures through which fluid may freely flow. Examples of spirally wound filter cartridges and methods of making spirally wound filter cartridges may be found, for example, in U.S. 6,391,200 to Pulek et al., the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
  • filter media 120 comprises a grafted nonwoven substrate 122 together with a microporous membrane layer 124. Typically, microporous membrane layer 124 is positioned downstream of grafted nonwoven substrate 122.
  • a drainage layer may be further provided to help facilitate fluid flow between adjacent layers of spirally- wrapped filter media 120.
  • the present disclosure provides a filter device comprising a core (160), wherein the filter media is spirally wound about the core.
  • the functionalized nonwoven substrate may be combined with conventional filter elements, such as microporous membranes.
  • a filter comprising one or more layers of the instant functionalized nonwoven substrate can serve as a filter for removing contaminants downstream of a Protein A column.
  • a microporous membrane with an absolute pore size rating used in conjunction beneath the media is desirable because the functionalized nonwoven substrate will protect the microporous membrane, thereby extending the useful life of the microporous membrane, and in turn, the membrane will capture any breakthrough contamination from the open hydrogel network permitting a longer useful life of the grafted nonwoven (as measured by turbidity reduction of the filtrate).
  • a fluid containing a biological sample of interest and contaminants can be passed through the responsive functionalized nonwoven article separating the two.
  • contaminates will be retained in the grafted polymer hydrogel network and the biological sample of interest will pass.
  • biological product will be retained in the grafted polymer hydrogel network and contaminates will pass.
  • the interstitial pores or voids of the grafted polymer hydrogel may be changed in response to the biological contamination of the fluid or the presence of a "trigger", (e.g., ionic strength, polar organic or inorganic species, molasses, salt, buffer, proteins, cell debris, viruses, etc). It is observed that the clean water flux (with no trigger) is low with high back pressure. Increased hydraulic pressure causes the hydrogel to collapse or compress further reducing flux. This collapse or compression further shortens the dwell time by decreasing the z direction mean flow path and reducing the retaining volume for accumulating biocontaminants. Therefore, the grafted nonwoven works better at low pressures thereby reducing shear to any shear sensitive proteins during the early filtration steps.
  • a "trigger” e.g., ionic strength, polar organic or inorganic species, molasses, salt, buffer, proteins, cell debris, viruses, etc.
  • the polymer grafted nonwoven article described herein is capable of retaining particles and insoluble contaminates from a biological fluid phase throughout its expanded matrix.
  • polar "trigger” When some small amount of polar "trigger" is present the hydraulic pressure is rapidly relieved. It is believed that each anionic monomer unit serves as a point charge in the grafted polymer chain, and is surrounded by an ionic electric double layer entirely composed of water, the hydration layer. This forms a "radius of shear” resisting water flux and serves to compress the nonwoven hydrogel network from the hydraulic pressure. Small ionic differences cause disruption of the inner and outer shell of the double layer allowing increased flux.
  • the nonwoven structure can expand back because of the lack of hydraulic pressure.
  • the instant polymer- functionalized nonwoven article will load contamination without undue pressure build-up over the lifetime of the article.
  • a normal fouling mechanism in filter media is when the media sifts particles out of a mobile phase; the particles can cake in the pores or on the major surface of the media. Flux is then reduced and pressure builds up and this can be exacerbated if the cake layer can be compressed.
  • the instant polymer- functionalized nonwoven article allows contamination to impinge on the discontinuous hydrogel matrix where the contamination easily is diffused into the matrix resisting fouling from caking or compression. As contamination is added, more room is obtained in the interstitial spaces of the nonwoven from the loading and adsorption of contamination on the hydrogel polymer tendrils.
  • filtration is conducted in either a constant rate or constant pressure mode.
  • constant rate mode a set volume of fluid is delivered from a pump and the pressure in a filter is allowed to increase as the filter fouls and the filtering process is stopped at a nominal pressure value to keep the target protein intact; usually to no more than about 30 psi.
  • constant pressure mode a set pressure is applied to a fluid and allowed to flow until the delivery rate ceases or becomes to low to be practical and the filtration process is stopped.
  • Typical flow rates used in affinity chromatography from low to high are about 50 to 600 LMH (Iiters/(meter 2 -hour), or a frontal fluid velocity of .08 to 1 ml/(min-cm 2 ).
  • test housings have about 13 cm 2 of usable surface area so a rate of 13 ml/min is equivalent performance to the stated high 600 LMH used in commercial procedures.
  • the clean water flux of this invention has been observed as high as 75 psi at 1 ml/(min-cm 2 ) (13 ml/min).
  • the introduction of a polar trigger will cause this pressure to be reduced to less than 1 psi. Flushing out the buffer (serving as a trigger) with clean water results in returning of the higher pressures.
  • the polymer grafted nonwoven substrate described herein may be combined with microporous membranes, including symmetric or asymmetric microporous membranes (having a gradient porosity), and single or multiple layers of such membranes.
  • microporous membranes include those made from nylon, polyether sulfone, polyvinylidine fluoride, polypropylene, ethylene -trichlorofluoroethylene, with single layer, multiple layers, and the like.
  • these membranes are hydrophilic.
  • the microporous membranes may have symmetric pore size ranges of 0.01 to 150 ⁇ m, preferably 0.1 to 100 ⁇ m and thicknesses of 25 to 500 ⁇ m.
  • the grafted nonwoven substrate may be combined with asymmetric microporous membranes having gradient average pore sizes of O.Olto 150 ⁇ m.
  • multiple layers of microporous membranes may be used in combination, with each layer having successively finer porosity, such from 15 to 0.02 ⁇ m, preferably 10 to 0.8 ⁇ m and total thicknesses of 75 to 1200 ⁇ m. Multiple layers of microporous membranes having both symmetric and gradient porosities may be used in combination.
  • the microporous membranes may be polymer grafted to alter the surface characteristics thereof, such as hydrophilicity, hydrophobicity or charge binding capacity.
  • one or more layers of the grafted nonwoven substrate may be combined with one of more layers of a microporous membrane.
  • one to six layers of grafted nonwoven substrate may be combined with the microporous layer(s).
  • Each layer of the grafted nonwoven substrate may be the same or different.
  • the layers may be the same, or may differ in terms of the particular nonwoven substrate, thickness of the nonwoven substrate, polymer used therein, fiber size, porosity, void volume, loft, tensile strength, surface area, grafting weight or density, degree of polymer grafting, and/or monomer concentration in the grafting polymer.
  • useful commercial membrane examples include LifeAssureTM or SterAssureTM cast nylon microporous membranes available from CUNO Inc., Meriden, CN.
  • Useful microporous membranes are disclosed in U.S. 6,413,070, 6,513,666, 6,776,940, 6,056,529 and 6,264,044 (Meyering et al.,), U.S. 5,006,247 (Dennison et al), U.S. 3,876,738 (Marinaccio et al), U.S. 4,707,265, (Barnes et al), and U.S. 4,473,474 (Ostreicher et al), each incorporated by reference.
  • graft polymer functionalized microporous membranes are disclosed in PCT/US2008/088106, filed December 23, 2008, and incorporated herein by reference.
  • the combination of the microporous membranes with the grafted nonwoven will protect the microf ⁇ ltration membrane thereby extending its useful life and the membrane will capture any breakthrough contamination that passes through the open hydrogel network improving the efficiency of the grafted nonwoven.
  • Contaminants may be measured using techniques known in the art including turbidity reduction, UV, DNA quantitation and ELISA methods.
  • the article provides a high media packing density in an adsorptive depth-type filter module which provides improved filtration efficiency.
  • the article further provides increased surface area for a given media mass in an adsorptive depth-type filter module which provides higher flow rate (flux).
  • flow rate Typically there is a trade-off between achieving these desirable filter characteristics of high efficiency and high flux.
  • the present functionalized nonwoven substrate provides a depth-type filter module that has high media packing density without sacrificing flux.
  • the polymer functionalized nonwoven substrate functions predominately by adsorption, diffusion, and impingement mechanisms and is therefore different from conventional membrane filters which operate by a combination of size exclusion, trapping and adsorption.
  • the advantage of the instant grafted nonwoven as a pre-layer is that the pre-layer is fully utilized throughout it's depth with a range of contaminant species.
  • a conventional filter, which operates by trapping and size exclusion, will inevitably plug and lacks the depth of the media and contaminate holding network to prevent or delay fouling.
  • Preparation 1 Nylon Nonwoven Substrate A. B-24KTM nylon-6 polymer (BASF Corporation Engineering Plastics Wyandotte,
  • MI meltblown nonwoven substrate
  • the melt temperature was 295 0 C with a mass flow rate of 0.25 grams/hole/minute on a standard meltblowing drilled orifice die.
  • SCFM cubic feet per minute
  • CMM cubic meters per minute
  • the fibers with a face velocity at impact of 1200 meters per minute (m/min) were collected 0.30 meters from the die on a foraminous stainless steel belt and were bonded under 200 0 C air drawn through the web at a face velocity of 137 m/min for 0.14 seconds, followed by cooling air at 29 0 C, at the same face velocity, for 0.8 seconds.
  • the collected web basis weight was 48 grams per square meter and had an effective fiber diameter of 4.1 ⁇ m.
  • the collected web had a thickness of 0.4 mm before calendaring between two 25 cm diameter smooth steel rolls set at 82 0 C, running at 1.5 m/min with a nip pressure of 170 Newtons per lineal centimeter of web (N/lcm).
  • the resulting web thickness was 0.25 mm.
  • Preparation 2 Nylon Microporous Membranes.
  • a nine zone, reinforced asymmetric microporous nylon membrane was prepared using the process described in U.S. 6,776,940 (Meyering et al). As described, a single base polymer dope formulation was split into three parts and applied to a three-way thermal manipulation apparatus. The dope formulation was heated to three different temperatures to achieve three distinct zones. Each of the temperatures used was selected to produce pore sizes in each zone for forming an asymmetric microporous membrane. The first zone (upper zone) had the largest pore size, the second (middle) zone had an intermediate pore size and the third zone (lower zone) had the smallest pore size. The membrane was a single layer having three consecutive progressively smaller pore size exclusion zones.
  • the nine -zone asymmetric microporous membrane was prepared by laminating three three-zone asymmetric microporous membranes.
  • a first microporous membrane top layer having an average pore size for the three zones of approximately 5.0; 2.4; and 1.2 ⁇ m
  • was laminated a second intermediate layer having an average pore size for the three zones of approximately 1.0; 0.8; and 0.65 ⁇ m
  • was laminated to a third, bottom layer having an average pore size for the three zones of approximately 5.0; 2.4; and 1.2 ⁇ m).
  • the Marinaccio reference method comprises casting a polymer dope in a thin layer, quenching the dope in a solvent bath to form a continuous microporous membrane, and rinsing the membrane in a water bath to remove residual solvent.
  • a 30 cm by 43 cm sample of Nylon Nonwoven Substrate A of Preparation 1 was purged of air under a nitrogen atmosphere in a glove box and inserted into a ZIPLOCTM plastic bag and sealed.
  • the sealed bag was then removed from the glove box and irradiated to a dose level of 40 kGy by passing it through the electron beam set with an accelerating voltage of 300 kV and a web speed of 20 feet/minute.
  • the irradiated nonwoven substrate was removed and placed inside a non-irradiated, nitrogen purged, ZIPLOCTM bag.
  • the freshly prepared nonwoven sample was imbibed with 100 grams of the nitrogen purged imbibing solution comprising the mixture shown in Table 1, and the bag resealed after expelling most of the nitrogen. During this step the oxygen level within the glove box was generally maintained below 40 parts per million (ppm).
  • the sample was maintained flat in the bag and evenly saturated for 12 hours.
  • the resulting grafted nylon nonwoven substrate was removed from the bag and carefully washed by soaking it for 10 minutes in a tray containing 2 liters of fresh deionized water.
  • the substrate was removed from the tray, compressed between multiple layers of paper towels and the washing process repeated two more times with fresh deionized water and air dried.
  • Preparation 4 Graft Functionalization of Microporous Membrane
  • the microporous membranes of Preparation 2 were functionalized by imbibing the membrane with a grafting solution consisting of 20% 2-Acrylamido-2- methylpropanesulfonic acid, ammonium salt monomer, 15% methanol, 65% water by weight.
  • the membrane was sandwiched between two 4 mil.
  • IgG Human Immunoglobulin G from Equitech Bio (Kerrville, TX)
  • challenge solution was prepared in 50 mM acetate buffer with 40 mM NaCl, at pH 4.5 .
  • Human Immunoglobulin G (Equitech Bio, Kerrville, TX) was prepared as a challenge solution of concentration 4 mg/ml in 50 mM acetate buffer with 40 mM NaCl at pH 4.5.
  • the absorbance at 280 nm of the challenge solution was determined experimentally, and is denoted as the absorbance maximum.
  • the membranes were analyzed for dynamic binding by running the challenge solution through a 4-layer stack of discs (from Preparation 3 and 4) placed in a 25 mm diameter holder attached to an AKTA chromatography system (GE Healthcare, NY).
  • the flow rate was 1 ml/min and the UV detector was set to monitor at a wavelength of 280 nm.
  • the IgG breakthrough curves were used to determine the challenge volume corresponding to 5 and 10% of the absorbance maximum.
  • the dynamic binding capacity (DBC) of the membrane at 5 and 10% breakthrough is calculated by the following equation
  • Example 1 either an ungrafted microporous membrane (from Preparation 2), or a grafted microporous membrane (from Preparation 4) was placed downstream of the 3 -layer stack of grafted nonwoven substrates, as indicated in Table 3.
  • the 4-layer stack of grafted nonwoven substrates were replaced by 3 layers of grafted microporous membrane "D" from Preparation 4, followed by a downstream layer of ungrafted microporous membrane from Preparation 2.
  • Table 3 and Figure 6 The results are shown in Table 3 and Figure 6.

Abstract

A grafted nonwoven substrate is disclosed having average fiber sizes of 0.7 to 15 microns, and a void volume of 50 to 95%, and a polymer comprising anionic monomer units grafted to the surface of the nonwoven substrate. The article may be used as a filter element to purify or separate target materials, such as monoclonal antibodies (MAb), from a fluid mixture.

Description

FUNCTIONALIZED NONWOVEN ARTICLE
The present disclosure relates to functionalized nonwoven substrates, and methods for preparing the same. The present disclosure further relates to a filter using the functionalized nonwoven substrate and a method of filtering a fluid. The functionalized substrates are useful in selectively filtering and removing biological materials, such as biocontaminates, from biological samples.
Cross Reference To Related Application
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/219497, filed June 23, 2009, the disclosure of which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
Background
Detection, quantification, isolation and purification of target biomaterials, such as viruses and biomacromolecules (including constituents or products of living cells, for example, proteins, carbohydrates, lipids, and nucleic acids) have long been objectives of investigators. Detection and quantification are important diagnostically, for example, as indicators of various physiological conditions such as diseases. Isolation and purification of biomacromolecules, such as monoclonal antibodies, produced from cell cultures are important for therapeutic and in biomedical research. Biomacromolecules such as enzymes have been isolated, purified, and then utilized for the production of sweeteners, antibiotics, and a variety of organic compounds such as ethanol, acetic acid, lysine, aspartic acid, and biologically useful products such as antibodies and steroids.
Chromatographic separation and purification operations can be performed on biological product mixtures, based on the interchange of a solute between a moving phase, which can be a gas or liquid, and a stationary phase. Separation of various solutes of the solution mixture is accomplished because of varying binding interactions of each solute with the stationary phase; stronger binding interactions generally result in longer retention times when subjected to the dissociation or displacement effects of a mobile phase compared to solutes which interact less strongly and, in this fashion, separation and purification can be effected.
Most current capture or purification chromatography is done via conventional column techniques. These techniques have severe bottlenecking issues in downstream purification, as the throughput using chromatography is low. Attempts to alleviate these issues include increasing the diameter of the chromatography column, but this in turn creates challenges due to difficulties of packing the columns effectively and reproducibly. Larger column diameters also increase the occurrence of problematic channeling. Also, in a conventional chromatographic column, the absorption operation is conducted until a pre- determined loading of the resin with the binding chemical species, so as to not have breakthrough of the species; this is done either to prevent loss of valuable product, or to prevent contaminants from continuing to remain in the flow-through). This causes the dynamic or effective capacity of the adsorption media to be significantly less than the overall or static capacity. When using a selective Protein A column, small amounts of contamination remaining after the primary capture steps will bind to the Protein A resin in the column. This contamination, albeit at a low concentration, will be released during product elution. The product fluid stream will need to be "polished" to remove the trace impurities such as host cell proteins and viruses to make a safe viable pharmaceutical or biological product. Polymeric resins are widely used for the separation and purification of various target compounds. For example, polymeric resins can be used to purify or separate a target compound based on the presence of an ionic group, based on the size of the target compound, based on a hydrophobic interaction, based on an affinity interaction, or based on the formation of a covalent bond. There is a need in the art for functionalized membranes that overcome limitations in diffusion and binding, and that may be operated at high throughput and at lower pressure drops. There is a need in the art for polymeric substrates having enhanced affinity for selective removal of biocontaminates, such host cell proteins, cell debris, DNA fragments, viruses and cell debris from biological feed- streams in the production of monoclonal antibodies. There is also the need to have functionalized structures that overcome diffusion and productivity limitations in bind-and- elute operations, wherein the valuable antibody product is bound to a ligand so as to allow clearance of impurities such as leached Protein A, to be eluted after a predetermined loading of the antibody is reached.
Summary The present disclosure provides an article comprising a nonwoven substrate having average fiber sizes of 0.7 to 15 microns, and a void volume of 50 to 95%, and a polymer comprising anionic monomer units, such as 2-acrylamido-2-methylpropanesulphonic acid, grafted to the surface of the nonwoven substrate. The article may be used as a filter element to purify or separate target materials, such as host cell proteins, DNA fragments, viruses, and cell debris, oligonucleotides or therapeutic proteins such as monoclonal antibodies (MAb), from a fluid mixture, such as those fluids produced by common cell product harvesting techniques.
The term "target material" refers to one or more chemical species for which the grafted nonwoven substrate is designed to separate from a liquid feed stream or solution mixture feed stream. Target molecules can include, for example, pharmaceutical species; biomacromolecules such as, proteins and antibodies (monoclonal or polyclonal), DNA, and RNA, expressed by bacterial, yeast, mammalian, plant, or insect cells; minerals; and manmade chemical species such as, for example, synthetic small organic molecules, peptides and polypeptides, oligosaccharides, and sugar modified proteins. In some embodiments, the target molecule can be one or more impurities or waste products, including proteins; inorganic species such as metals, metal ions, or ions such as carbonates, sulfates, oxides, phosphates, bicarbonates, and other ions commonly found in industrial, residential and biological feed streams; small organic molecules such as those that comprise, but are not limited to, dyes, pesticides, fertilizers, additives, and stabilizers; process byproducts and pollutants; DNA, RNA, phospholipids, viruses, or other cell debris from a bioprocess. In still a further embodiment, leached ligands such as, for example, protein A from an upstream affinity separation process could also be a target molecule. In other embodiments, the article described herein could be used to remove various chemical or biological species from a waste or drinking water stream. One of more layers of the article of this disclosure may be used in depth-type filtration applications, each of which layers may have the same, or different average fiber size, void volume, degree of polymer grafting, monomer composition of grafted polymer, porosity, loft, tensile strength and surface area. The functionalized substrate may further be used in combination with conventional filtration elements such as porous or microporous membranes.
This disclosure further provides a method of making the article comprising the steps of providing a nonwoven substrate, exposing the nonwoven substrate to ionizing radiation in an inert atmosphere, and subsequently imbibing the exposed substrate with a solution comprising grafting anionic monomers to graft polymerize said monomers to the surface of the nonwoven substrate.
Brief Description of the Figures
FIG. 1 is a perspective view of an exemplary embodiment of a filter media according to the present disclosure formed into a plurality of pleats;
FIG. 2 is a cross-sectional view of an exemplary filter device provided in lenticular form and comprising a filter media according to the present disclosure; FIG. 3 is a perspective and partial cutaway view of an exemplary filter device provided in encapsulated form and comprising a filter media according to the present disclosure;
FIG. 4 is a cross-sectional view taken at 9-9 of FIG. 3 of an exemplary filter device provided in encapsulated form and comprising a first pleated media cylinder and a second pleated media cylinder according to the present disclosure;
FIG. 5 is a cross-sectional view taken at 9-9 of FIG. 3 of an exemplary filter device provided in encapsulated form and comprising a core wherein a filter media according to the present disclosure is spirally wound about the core; and
FIG. 6 plots the IgG breakthrough curves for Example 1-7.
Detailed Description
The present disclosure provides an article comprising a nonwoven substrate having average fiber sizes of 0.7 to 15 microns, and a void volume of 50 to 95%, and a polymer comprising anionic monomer units grafted to the surface of the nonwoven substrate. The polymer functionalized article may be described as a discontinuous, uncrosslinked hydrogel polymer, initiated from free radicals formed on a nonwoven substrate by ionizing radiation and the subsequent graft-polymerization of the monomers in an aqueous or aqueous/organic solvent solution. As used herein, a "hydrogel" is a water-containing gel; polymer chains that are hydrophilic and will absorb water, yet is insoluble in water. The term hydrogel is used regardless of the state of hydration.
The nonwoven substrate is a nonwoven web which may include nonwoven webs manufactured by any of the commonly known processes for producing nonwoven webs. As used herein, the term "nonwoven web" refers to a fabric that has a structure of individual fibers or filaments which are randomly and/or unidirectionally interlaid in a mat-like fashion.
For example, the fibrous nonwoven web can be made by carded, air laid, wet laid, spunlaced, spunbonding, electrospinning or melt-blowing techniques, such as melt-spun or melt-blown, or combinations thereof. Spunbonded fibers are typically small diameter fibers that are formed by extruding molten thermoplastic polymer as filaments from a plurality of fine, usually circular capillaries of a spinneret with the diameter of the extruded fibers being rapidly reduced. Meltblown fibers are typically formed by extruding the molten thermoplastic material through a plurality of fine, usually circular, die capillaries as molten threads or filaments into a high velocity, usually heated gas (e.g., air) stream which attenuates the filaments of molten thermoplastic material to reduce their diameter. Thereafter, the meltblown fibers are carried by the high velocity gas stream and are deposited on a collecting surface to from a web of randomly disbursed meltblown fibers. Any of the non- woven webs may be made from a single type of fiber or two or more fibers that differ in the type of thermoplastic polymer and/or thickness.
Staple fibers may also be present in the web. The presence of staple fibers generally provides a loftier, less dense web than a web of only melt blown microfϊbers. Preferably, no more than about 20 weight percent staple fibers are present, more preferably no more than about 10 weight percent. Such webs containing staple fiber are disclosed in U.S. 4,118,531 (Hauser) which is incorporated herein by reference.
The nonwoven article may optionally further comprise one or more layers of scrim. For example, either or both major surfaces may each optionally further comprise a scrim layer. The scrim, which is typically a woven or nonwoven reinforcement made from fibers, is included to provide strength to the nonwoven article. Suitable scrim materials include, but are not limited to, nylon, polyester, fiberglass, and the like. The average thickness of the scrim can vary. Typically, the average thickness of the scrim ranges from about 25 to about 100 micrometers, preferably about 25 to about 50 micrometers. The layer of the scrim may optionally be bonded to the nonwoven article. A variety of adhesive materials can be used to bond the scrim to the polymeric material. Alternatively, the scrim may be heat-bonded to the nonwoven. The micro fibers of the nonwoven substrate typically have an effective fiber diameter of from about 0.5 to 15 micrometers preferably from about 1 to 6 micrometers, as calculated according to the method set forth in Davies, C. N., "The Separation of Airborne Dust and Particles," Institution of Mechanical Engineers, London, Proceedings IB, 1952. The nonwoven substrate preferably has a basis weight in the range of about 10 to 400 g/m2, more preferably about 10 to 100 g/m2. The average thickness of the nonwoven substrate is preferably about .1 to 10 mm, more preferably about 0.25 to 5 mm for the non- functionalized, uncalendared substrate. The minimum tensile strength of the nonwoven web is about 4.0 Newtons. It is generally recognized that the tensile strength of nonwovens is lower in the machine direction than in the cross-web direction due to better fiber bonding and entanglement in the latter.
Nonwoven web loft is measured by solidity, a parameter that defines the solids fraction in a volume of web. Lower solidity values are indicative of greater web loft. Useful nonwoven substrates have a solidity of less than 20%, preferably less than 15%. Solidity is a unitless fraction typically represented by α: α = mf ÷ pf x Lnonwoven where mf is the fiber mass per sample surface area, which pf is the fiber density; and
J-^nonwoven is the nonwoven thickness. Solidity is used herein to refer to the nonwoven substrate itself and not to the functionalized nonwoven. When a nonwoven substrate contains mixtures of two or more kinds of fibers, the individual solidities are determined for each kind of fiber using the same Lnonwoven and these individual solidities are added together to obtain the web's solidity, α.
As an example, the nonwoven substrate before calendering or grafting preferably has an average pore size of 14 μm, calculated from a thickness of .34 mm, effective fiber diameter of 4.2 um and solidity of 13%. After calendering the nonwoven web will have a thickness of .24 mm and solidity of 18% with an average pore size of 8 μm. The term "average pore size" (also known as average pore diameter) is related to the arithmetic median fiber diameter and web solidity and can be determined by the following formula: where D is the average pore size, df is arithmetic median fiber diameter, and α is the web solidity.
Figure imgf000009_0001
The nonwoven substrate preferably has a mean pore size of 1-40 microns, preferably 2-20 microns. Mean pore size may be measured according to ASTM F 316-03 "Standard Test Methods for Pore Size Characteristics of Membrane Filters by Bubble Point and Mean Flow Pore Test Method B" using Freon TF™ as the test fluid. The nonwoven substrate may be formed from any suitable thermoplastic polymeric material. Suitable polymeric materials include, but are not limited to, polyolefms, poly(isoprenes), poly(butadienes), fluorinated polymers, chlorinated polymers, polyamides, polyimides, polyethers, poly(ether sulfones), poly(sulfones), poly( vinyl acetates), copolymers of vinyl acetate, such as poly(ethylene) -co- poly( vinyl alcohol),, poly(phosphazenes), poly(vinyl esters), poly(vinyl ethers), poly( vinyl alcohols), and poly(carbonates).
Suitable polyolefms include, but are not limited to, poly(ethylene), poly(propylene), poly(l-butene), copolymers of ethylene and propylene, alpha olefin copolymers (such as copolymers of ethylene or propylene with 1-butene, 1-hexene, 1- octene, and 1-decene), poly(ethylene -co- 1-butene) and poly(ethylene-co-l-butene-co- 1-hexene).
Suitable fluorinated polymers include, but are not limited to, poly( vinyl fluoride), poly(vinylidene fluoride), copolymers of vinylidene fluoride (such as poly(vinylidene fluoride-co-hexafluoropropylene), and copolymers of chlorotrifluoroethylene (such as poly(ethylene-co-chlorotrifluoroethylene).
Suitable polyamides include, but are not limited to, nylon 6, nylon 6,6, nylon 6, 12 poly(iminoadipoyliminohexamethylene), poly(iminoadipoyliminodecamethylene), and polycaprolactam. Suitable polyimides include poly(pyromellitimide). Suitable poly(ether sulfones) include, but are not limited to, poly(diphenylether sulfone) and poly(diphenylsulfone-co-diphenylene oxide sulfone).
Suitable copolymers of vinyl acetate include, but are not limited to, poly(ethylene -co-vinyl acetate) and such copolymers in which at least some of the acetate groups have been hydrolyzed to afford various poly( vinyl alcohols) including , poly(ethylene -co-vinyl alcohol).
Preferred polymers are inherently hydrophilic and are readily grafted by ionizing radiation, such as by exposure to e-beam or gamma radiation. Preferred polymers include of polyamides and ethylene vinyl alcohol polymers and copolymers. Nylon nonwoven substrates having 1 micron or smaller effective fiber diameters may be chosen from those described in U.S. 7,170,739 (Arora et al), U.S. 7,112,389(Arora et al), U.S. 7,235,122, (Bryner et al.) and U.S. 20040116026 (=WO 04/02714), incorporated herein by reference. Useful nylon nonwoven substrates having 1 micron or smaller effective fiber diameters are also commercially available as HMT™ 16434 and HMT™ 16435 hybrid membrane technology membranes from DuPont, Wilmington, DE.
Further details on the manufacturing method of non- woven webs of this invention may be found in Wente, Superfine Thermoplastic Fibers, 48 Indus. Eng. Chem. 1342(1956), or in Wente et al., Manufacture Of Superfine Organic Fibers, (Naval Research Laboratories Report No. 4364, 1954). Useful methods of preparing the nonwoven substrates are described in U.S. RE 39,399 (Allen), U.S. 3,849,241 (Butin et al.), U.S. 7,374,416 (Cook et al.), U.S. 4,936,934 (Buehning), and U.S. 6,230,776 (Choi), each incorporated herein by reference.
In some embodiments, the nonwoven substrate is calendared using a smooth roll that is nipped against another smooth roll. A calendared or compressed nonwoven web provides for a more uniform substrate and dimensional stability in later washing steps to remove unreacted monomers. Thus, in a preferred embodiment, the nonwoven substrate according to the present invention are thermally calendared with a smooth roll and a solid back-up roll (e.g., a metal, rubber, or cotton cloth covered metal) in addition to pattern embossing, described above. During calendering, it is important to closely control the temperature and the pressure of the smooth rolls. In general, the fibers are minimally thermally fused at the points of contact, without imparting undesirable characteristics to the nonwoven substrate such as forming a film or skin on the surface thereof. For example, when using nylon nonwoven substrates, it is preferred to maintain the temperature of the smooth roll between about 40 0C and 100 0C, more preferably between about 50 0C and 75 0C. In addition, the smooth roll should contact the fibrous web at a pressure of from about 10 kilogram- force/cm to about 50 kilogram-force/cm, more preferably from about 15 kilogram- force/cm to about 30 kilogram- force/cm. The average thickness of the calendared nonwoven substrate is preferably about 2/3 the thickness of the starting nonwoven.
The functionalized article may be described as a discontinuous, uncrosslinked hydrogel polymer, initiated from free radicals formed on a non-woven substrate by ionizing radiation and the subsequent graft-polymerization of the anionic monomers in an imbibing solution. As used herein, a hydrogel is a water-containing gel: a polymer that is hydrophilic and will absorb water, yet is insoluble in water. The term hydrogel is used regardless of the state of hydration.
The grafted polymer comprises polymer tendrils that are initiated from, and supported by, the nonwoven substrate, the polymer chains (tendrils) extending into the interstitial spaces of the nonwoven substrate. The grafted polymer chains have pendent anionic groups, and optional pendent poly(alkylene oxide) groups and other functional groups. In the presence of pure water, the hydrogel reaches a state of maximum hydration and volume. As the polymer tendrils do not bridge and are free to move independently, the grafted nonwoven article may have a large flow response to very low quantities of stimulus.
In contrast to the instant uncrosslinked grafted hydrogel polymer, conventional hydrogels comprise individual polymer strands or tendrils that are crosslinked through multiple crosslinking sites. Due to the crosslinking the molecular weight of the polymer is infinite and the "gel" refers to the swollen polymer network, the properties of which are controlled through polymer concentration, polymer molecular weight and crosslinking density.
Depending on the degree of substitution of the nonwoven substrate and the weight of polymer grafted to the surface thereof, the hydrogel polymer can completely fill the interstitial spaces of the nonwoven substrate thereby providing a barrier which effectively blocks the flow of pure water through the functionalized nonwoven article resulting in the higher backpressure at a given flux rate (constant rate) or very low flux at a given pressure (constant pressure). It is believed that in pure water the negatively charged anionic groups, such as sulfonic acid salts, electrostatically repulse one another causing maximum extension of the grafted polymer chains and consequently maximum hydration of the hydrogel. When used in filtration, the hydrogel can reversibly expand in response to a very small amount of a "trigger" such as a salt, buffer, organic solvent, temperature, pH, contaminate, or a biomolecule, consequently contracting allowing for higher flux at lower pressure through the hydrogel network. Surprisingly, the grafted hydrogel network does not lose it's filterability in a "triggered" state. In the absence of such a "trigger", the fully expanded hydrogel network can offer resistance to water flux.
In the state of maximum hydration, the hydrogel is constrained only by the nonwoven substrate, most significantly in the x and y axes (coplanar with the nonwoven substrate) and less so in the z axis, normal to the plane of the nonwoven substrate. The gel is less constrained on the z axis. The gel may swell up to 800 percent or more on the z axis, but the x and y axes desirably swell less than 100 %, more preferably less than 50%, constrained by the nonwoven substrate.
In the preparation of melt-blown non- woven webs, conditions can be adjusted to maximize the resiliency in the z direction (normal to the plane of the nonwoven by (a) adjusting the die and collector for proper fiber lay-down (b) adjusting melt temp and air temp to prevent fibers from over- fusing and forming fiber- fiber bonds, (c) minimize asymmetry caused by the collector being too close in proximity to the die. It is preferred that nonwoven fibers are below the polymer melt temperature before impinging on the collector to reduce the degree of fiber-fiber links. Desirably, the nonwoven may expand maximally in "z" direction (normal to the plane of the nonwoven) to allow for expansion of the hydrogel.
The hydrogel reversibly contracts and allows water to flow (flux) through the resulting interstices in the presence of dissolved species, such as neutral compounds, salts, buffers and positively charged ions. It is believed the dissolved species such as dissolved ions more effectively charge-couple to the negatively charged anionic groups in the graft polymer so that the electrostatic repulsion between the anionic groups is reduced and the hydrogel constricts or collapses. Alternatively the dissolved species may displace the hydration sphere of the water (and possibly solvent) molecules with the result that the hydrogel collapses around the non-woven substrate. Therefore the article exhibits a stimulus-response hydrogel ("responsive hydrogel") that is discontinuous in nature - able to reversibly open and close the pores or interstices of the hydrogel.
The nonwoven substrate has a polymer comprising anionic monomer units grafted to the surface of the nonwoven substrate. The polymer is grafted to the surface(s) of the nonwoven substrate by ionization initiated polymerization of grafting monomers, which are negatively charged.
The negatively charged anionic monomer has at least one ethylenically unsaturated group capable of undergoing free radical polymerization, and an additional anionic functional group. In some embodiments, the ethylenically unsaturated group is a
(meth)acryloyl group or a vinyl group. The anionic monomer can be a weak acid, a strong acid, a salt of a weak acid, a salt of a strong acid, or combinations thereof. That is, the negatively charged ionic monomer can be in a neutral state but capable of being charged if the pH is adjusted. When the pH is suitably adjusted, the resulting cation exchange resins have negatively charged groups capable of interacting with positively charged materials
(i.e., cations). If the anionic monomer used to prepare a cation exchange resin includes a salt of a weak acid or a salt of a strong acid, the counter ions of these salts can be, but are not limited to, alkali metals, alkaline earth metals, ammonium ions, or tetraalkylammonium ions. The anionic monomers may have the general formula:
Figure imgf000013_0001
where
R1 is H or CH3;
X is -O- or -NR1-, Y is a straight or branched chain alkylene, generally from 1 to 10 carbon atoms; and
Z is an anionic group, which may be selected from sulphonic acids groups, phosphonic acid groups, and carboxylic acid groups, and salts thereof.
Some exemplary anionic monomers include (meth)acrylamidosulfonic acids of Formula (II) or salts thereof:
Figure imgf000014_0001
ere
II
R1 is H or CH3, and Y is a straight or branched alkylene having 1 to 10 carbon atoms.. Exemplary ionic monomers according to Formula (II) include, but are not limited to, N- acrylamidomethanesulfonic acid, 2-acrylamidoethanesulfonic acid, 2-acrylamido-2- methylpropanesulfonic acid, and 2-methacrylamido-2-methylpropanesulfonic acid. Salts of these acidic monomers can also be used, examples being (3-sulfopropyl)-methacrylic acid potassium salt and 2-(methacryloyloxy)ethylsulfonic acid sodium salt.
Other suitable anionic monomers for the graft polymer include sulfonic acids such as vinylsulfonic acid and 4-styrenesulfonic acid; (meth)acrylamidophosphonic acids such as (meth)acrylamidoalkylphosphonic acids (e.g., 2-acrylamidoethylphosphonic acid and 3- methacrylamidopropylphosphonic acid); acrylic acid and methacrylic acid; and carboxyalkyl(meth)acrylates such as 2-carboxyethylacrylate, 2-carboxyethylmethacrylate, 3-carboxypropylacrylate, and 3-carboxypropylmethacrylate. Still other suitable acidic monomers include (meth)acryloylamino acids, such as those described in U.S. 4,157,418 (Heilmann), incorporated herein by reference. Exemplary (meth)acryloylamino acids include, but are not limited to, N-acryloylglycine, N-acryloylaspartic acid, N-acryloyl-β- alanine, 2-acrylamidoglycolic acid, 3-acrylamido-3-methylbutyric acid. Salts of any of these acidic monomers can also be used. The grafted polymer optionally contains monofunctional ethylenically-unsaturated grafting monomer units having a poly(alkylene oxide) group. These monomers copolymerize with the grafting anionic monomers to form a grafted copolymer chain on the surface of the nonwoven substrate. When present, these monomers are used in amounts of 2 to 20 wt.%, more preferably 5 to 10 wt.%, relative to the total monomer weight.
The monomer units having a poly (alkylene oxide) group is of the formula:
Z-Q-(CH(R1 )-CH -Q) - R4,
2 m
III
1 4 wherein Z is a polymerizable ethylenically unsaturated moiety, R is a H or CH3, R is a H, a C 1 to C 4 alkyl group, aryl group, or combinations thereof and m is from 2 to 100,
1 preferably 5 to 20, and Q is a divalent linking group selected from -O-, -NR - , -CO - and
-CONR .
In one embodiment, the poly(alkylene oxide) group is a poly(ethylene oxide) (co)polymer. In another embodiment, the pendent poly(alkylene oxide) group is a poly(ethylene oxide-co-propylene oxide) copolymer. Such copolymers may be block copolymers, random copolymers, or gradient copolymers.
Useful ethylenically unsaturated moiety, Z, of the monomer may include:
R1 R1
O O O
CH2=C- CH2=C — U_NH_CrH2r
R1 -CH=CH2, and
O O
-C H -CH=CH
CH2= C— u— NH- CrH2r-NR- r 2r 2
wherein R is H or Me and r = 1-10.
The monomer having a poly(alkylene oxide) group can be prepared, for example, by reacting mono- or di-functional alkylene oxide (co)polymers (which are typically commercially available) with reactive ethylenically unsaturated compounds (e.g., acrylates). The functional groups terminating the poly(alkylene oxide) may include hydroxy groups, amine groups and carboxyl groups. A variety of reactive ethylenically unsaturated compounds such as acrylate derivatives can be used including, but not limited to, (meth)acrylic acid, (meth)acryloyl chloride, (meth)acrylic anhydride, and 2- isocyanatoethyl (meth)acrylate. Preferably, the monomer is prepared by reacting the mono- or di-functional alkylene oxide (co)polymer with (meth)acrylic anhydride. Typically, if a stoichiometric amount of the ethylenically unsaturated reactant is combined with the monofunctional alkylene oxide (co)polymer (such as a monohydroxy terminated alkylene oxide (co)polymer), 100% conversion to the monosubstituted product is obtained.
Examples of suitable monofunctional poly(alkylene oxide) monomers include poly(ethylene oxide) (meth)acrylate, poly(propylene oxide) (meth)acrylate, poly(ethylene oxide-propylene oxide) (meth)acrylate, and combinations thereof. Such monomers preferably include one nonreactive end group such as (C1-C4) alkoxy, aryloxy (e.g., phenoxy), and (C1-C4) alkaryloxy. These groups can be linear or branched. These monomers can be of a wide range of molecular weights and are commercially available from sources such as Sartomer Company, Exton, PA; Shinnakamura Chemical Co., Ltd., Tokyo, Japan; Aldrich, Milwaukee, WI; and Osaka Organic Chemical Ind., Ltd., Osaka, Japan.
The grafted polymer optionally contains other ethylenically-unsaturated hydrophilic grafting monomer units; "second hydrophilic monomers". As used herein "second hydrophilic monomers" are those polymerizable monomers having a water miscibility (water in monomer) of at least 1 wt.%, preferably at least 5 weight % without reaching a cloud point, are exclusive of poly(alkylene oxide) monomers and contain no groups that would retard the grafting polymerization. The grafted copolymer may comprise 0 to 10 wt.% of such monomer units. When present, the polymer generally comprises 1 to 10 wt.% of such of such monomer units.
Examples of suitable second hydrophilic monomers include 2- hydroxyethyl(meth)acrylate (HEMA), 2-hydroxypropyl(meth)acrylate, 3- hydroxypropyl(meth)acrylate, 2, 3-dihydroxypropyl (meth)acrylate, 4- hydroxybutyl(meth)acrylate, N-vinyl caprolactam, N-vinyl acetamide, N-vinyl pyrrolidone, acrylonitrile, tetrahydrofurfuryl acrylate, acrylamide, mono- or di-N-alkyl substituted acrylamide, glycerol methacrylate, and combinations thereof. Preferred polar monomers include 2-hydroxyethyl(meth)acrylate (HEMA), N-vinyl pyrrolidone, N-vinyl acetamide, methylacrylamide, and mixtures thereof. As the polymer is uncrosslinked, the imbibing solution containing the monomer mixture contains no polyethylenically unsaturated monomers; i.e., no crosslinkers. In general, the grafted (co)polymer comprises: a) 70 to 100 wt.% of anionic monomers, preferably at least 80 wt.%, more preferable 80 to 98 wt.%; b) 0 to 20 wt.%, preferably 2 to 20 wt.%, more preferably 5 to 10 wt.% of grafting poly (alky lene oxide) monomers; and c) 0 to 10 wt.% of second hydrophilic monomers, each weight percentage relative to the weight of total monomer content.
Inclusion of the b) and/or c) monomers are especially useful for enhancing the hydrophilicity of normally hydrophobic nonwoven substrates With such hydrophobic substrates, it is preferred that the monomers are non-zero amounts in the imbibing solution.
Generally, the total grafted monomer content may be from 0.5 to 5 times the weight of the nonwoven substrate. It is desirable to fill the interstitial spaces of the nonwoven substrate but not have the polymer chains bridge to link separate fibers of the nonwoven with grafted polymer strands, as this will restrict expansion of the nonwoven substrate and impede flux. One way to reduce this fiber-fiber bridging by the grafted polymer is to lower the monomer concentration for a given fiber size. It has been determined that the amount of grafted polymer may be maximized by adding a water miscible organic solvent to the grafting imbibing solution to maximize the molecular weight of the grafted hydrogel polymer tendrils and reduce bridging of the tendrils. The flux pressure buildup resulting from packed hydrogel tendrils in the interstitial spaces of the nonwoven is simply relieved by the ionic trigger or the biological product itself. The benefit from packing the interstitial spaces with hydrogel strands is effectively extending the surface area of the nonwoven to include polymer strands in the void volume where the contamination can displace the water of the hydrogel. The unexpected net effect of nonwovens with grafted hydrogel polymer tendrils in the packed configuration is the ability to hold significantly greater amounts of soluble and insoluble biological contaminants without fouling and the multiple long flexible hydrogel tendrils are capable of multiple bond or hydrogen bonding sites allowing for affinity absorption with greatly improved salt tolerance. In contrast to other microporous substrates, the nonwoven substrate may be considered a scaffold for the grafted polymer, rather than a surface coated substrate.
With regard to the grafting monomers supra, the monomers that are grafted to the surface of the nonwoven substrates usually have either an acrylate or other non-acrylate polymerizable functional group for grafting by e-beam irradiation. Acrylamide or methacrylate groups are preferred for grafting of the monomer to the nonwoven substrate surface (using the process described herein) due to the slower, more uniform reactivity and durability of such methacrylates or acrylamido moieties to nonwovens that have been exposed to e-beam irradiation.
As described in further detail below, functionalized substrates of the present invention may be prepared using above-described monomers to provide a grafted polymer on the surface of a porous nonwoven base substrate. When two or more of the above- described grafting monomers are used, the monomers may be grafted onto the nonwoven base substrate in a single reaction step (i.e., exposure to an ionizing radiation) followed by imbibing with all grafting monomers present or in sequential reaction steps (i.e., a first exposure to ionizing radiation followed by imbibing with one or more grafting monomer, then a second exposure to an ionizing radiation and a second imbibing after the second exposure to the ionizing radiation).
It will be further understood that the grafting process will yield a radical species on the surface of the nonwoven substrate. After imbibing with the monomer solution, polymerization will initiate with the formation of a radical on the carbon alpha to the carbonyl of the anionic monomer of Formulas I or II, that may further polymerize with one of more additional anionic monomers such as the aminoalkyl (meth)acryloyl monomers of Formula II, one of more optional PEG monomers of Formula III, and one or more optional second hydrophilic monomers, resulting in a grafted polymers having these groups pendent from the polymer chain as simply illustrated below. Substrate-(Maniomc)w-(MPEG)x-(Mc)y
In the formula, the -(Mamonic)w-represent the residue of the grafted anionic monomers of Formulas I and II having "w" polymerized monomer units where w is at least 2, the -(MPEG)X represents the polymerized monomer of Formula III having "x" polymerized monomer units, where x may be zero and is preferably at least one, - (Mc)y represents the polymerized second hydrophilic monomers, having y polymerized monomer units, where y may be zero and is preferably at least 1. The polymer may be random or block. The polymer may be directly grafted via the residue of the aminoalkyl (meth)acryloyl monomer, as shown, or may be directly grafted via the -(MPEG)- monomers or the hydrophilic monomers, as described herein. The values of the subscripts w, x and y may be an integral or non-integral value and correspond to the amount of each monomer in the imbibing solution previous described. For example, the value of the subscript "w" will correspond to an amount of 70 to 100 wt.% of anionic monomers in the imbibing solution, the value of subscript x will correspond to 0 to 20 wt.%, preferably 2 to 20 wt.% of the monomers of Formula III and the value of subscript y will correspond to 0 to 10 wt.% of second hydrophilic monomers. The process of preparing the grafted nonwoven substrate comprises the steps of providing a nonwoven substrate, exposing the nonwoven substrate to ionizing radiation in an inert atmosphere, and subsequently imbibing the exposed substrate with a solution comprising anionic monomers (and optionally other monomers, as described) to graft polymerize said monomers to the surface of the nonwoven substrate. In the first step the nonwoven substrate is exposed to ionizing radiation, such as e-beam radiation, in an inert atmosphere. Generally, the substrate is placed in a chamber purged of oxygen. Typically, the chamber comprises an inert atmosphere such as nitrogen, carbon dioxide, helium, argon, etc., with a minimal amount of oxygen (less than 100 ppm), which is known to inhibit free-radical polymerization. The irradiation step comprises the ionizing irradiation of nonwoven substrate surfaces, preferably with ionizing e-beam or gamma radiation to prepare free radical reaction sites on such surfaces upon which the monomers are subsequently grafted. "Ionizing irradiation" means radiation of a sufficient dosage and energy to cause the formation of free radical reaction sites on the surface(s) of the base substrate. Ionizing radiation may include gamma, electron-beam, x-ray and other forms of electromagnetic radiation. In some instances, corona radiation can be sufficiently high energy radiation. The radiation is sufficiently high energy, that when absorbed by the surfaces of the base substrate, sufficient energy is transferred to that support to result in the cleavage of chemical bonds in that support and the resultant formation of free radical sites on the nonwoven substrate. One or more layers of nonwoven substrates may be subjected to the ionizing radiation.
High energy radiation dosages are measured in units of kilogray (kGy). Doses can be administered in a single dose of the desired level or in multiple doses which accumulate to the desired level. Dosages can range cumulatively from about 1 kGy to about 200 kGy. The dose can be delivered all at once such as from an E-beam source or accumulated from a slow dose rate over several hours such as dosage delivered from a gamma source. Preferably, the cumulative dosage exceeds 20 kGy (2 Mrads) for substrates resistant to radiation damage.
Electron beam is one preferred method of grafting due to the ready-availability of commercial sources. Electron beam generators are commercially available from a variety of sources, including the ESI "ELECTROCURE" EB SYSTEM from Energy Sciences, Inc. (Wilmington, MA), and the BROADBEAM EB PROCESSOR from PCT Engineered Systems, LLC (Davenport, IA). For any given piece of equipment and irradiation sample location, the dosage delivered can be measured in accordance with ASTM E- 1275 entitled "Practice for Use of a Radiochromic Film Dosimetry System." By altering extractor grid voltage, beam diameter and/or distance to the source, various dose rates can be obtained.
In the irradiation step the nonwoven substrate is exposed to a sufficient quantity of ionizing radiation, so as to form free radicals on the surfaces of the nonwoven substrate. The chamber may contain at least one device capable of providing a sufficient dose of radiation. A single device is capable of providing a sufficient dose of radiation, although two or more devices, and/or multiple passes through a single device, may be used especially for relatively thick nonwoven substrates. The environment containing the nonwoven substrate comprises an inert atmosphere such as nitrogen, carbon dioxide, helium, argon, etc., with a minimal amount of oxygen, which is known to inhibit free-radical polymerization.
Dose is the total amount of energy absorbed per mass unit. Dose is commonly expressed in units of kiloGray (kGy). A gray is defined as the amount of radiation required to supply 1 joule of energy per kilogram of mass. The total dose received by the substrate depends on a number of parameters including source activity, residence time (i.e., the total time the sample is irradiated), the distance from the source, and attenuation by the intervening cross- section of materials between the source and sample. Dose is typically regulated by controlling residence time, distance to the source, or both.
Generally, it was found that doses in the range of about 20 to 40 kGy were suitable for generating the grafted hydrogel polymer. Total dose requirement for any given composition will vary as a function of desired grafting objectives, monomer selected, substrate used and the dose rate. Thus, a dose rate can be selected based on desired properties for a specified composition. The dose rate is typically in the range of 0.0005 kGy/sec (gamma) to 200 kGy/sec (E-beam).
Other sources of irradiation may be used with equal grafting performance; a desirable source of ionizing radiation comprises an electron beam source because the electron beam can produce high and fast dose delivery rates. Electron beams (e- beams) are generally produced by applying high voltage to tungsten wire filaments retained between a repeller plate and an extractor grid within a vacuum chamber maintained at about 10"6 Torr. The filaments are heated at high current to produce electrons. The electrons are guided and accelerated by the repeller plate and extractor grid towards a thin window of metal foil. The accelerated electrons, traveling at speeds in excess of 107 meters/second (m/sec) and possessing about 100 to 300 kilo- electron volts (keV), pass out of the vacuum chamber through the foil window and penetrate whatever material is positioned immediately beyond the foil window. The quantity of electrons generated is directly related to the current. As extractor grid voltage is increased, the acceleration or speed of electrons drawn from the tungsten wire filaments increase. E-beam processing can be extremely precise when under computer control, such that an exact dose and dose rate of electrons can be directed against the nonwoven substrate.
The temperature within the chamber is desirably maintained at an ambient temperature by conventional means. Without intending to be limited to any particular mechanism, it is believed that the exposure of the nonwoven substrate to an electron beam results in free radical sites on the substrate surface which can then subsequently react with the grafting monomers in the imbibing step.
The total dose received by the nonwoven substrate primarily affects the number of radical sites formed on the surface thereof and subsequently the extent to which the grafting monomers are grafted onto the nonwoven substrate. Dose is dependent upon a number of processing parameters, including voltage, web- or line- speed and beam current. Dose can be conveniently regulated by controlling line speed (i.e., the speed with which the nonwoven substrate passes under the irradiation device), and the current supplied to the extractor grid. A target dose (e.g., < 10 kGy) can be conveniently calculated by multiplying an experimentally measured coefficient (a machine constant) by the beam current and dividing by the web speed to determine the exposure. The machine constant varies as a function of beam voltage.
While the controlled amount of electron beam radiation exposure is dependent upon the residence time, the nonwoven substrate is subjected to a controlled amount of dosage ranging from a minimum dosage of about 1 kilogray (kGy) to a practical maximum dosage of less than about 200 kGy, depending on the particular polymer. For radiation sensitive polymers such as propylene polymers the amount typically ranges from a minimum dosage of about 1 kilogray (kGy) to a maximum dosage of less than about 10 kGy. Typically, the total controlled amount of dosage ranges from less than about 9 kGy to about 7 kGy for propylene polymers to avoid degradation.
Less radiation sensitive polymers such as nylons or PVDF may be subjected to higher dosages, typically 10 to 70 kGy. Generally, suitable gamma ray sources emit gamma rays having energies of 400 keV or greater. Typically, suitable gamma ray sources emit gamma rays having energies in the range of 500 keV to 5 MeV. Examples of suitable gamma ray sources include cobalt-60 isotope (which emits photons with energies of approximately 1.17 and 1.33 MeV in nearly equal proportions) and cesium- 137 isotope (which emits photons with energies of approximately 0.662 MeV). The distance from the source can be fixed or made variable by changing the position of the target or the source. The flux of gamma rays emitted from the source generally decays with the square of the distance from the source and duration of time as governed by the half- life of the isotope.
In the instant method, the irradiated substrate, having free radical sites on the surface of the nonwoven substrate, are imbibed with the monomer solution subsequent to and not concurrent with, the irradiation step. The free radical sites generated on the surface of the nonwoven substrate have average lifetimes ranging from several minutes to several hours and progressively decay to a low concentration within about ten hours at room temperature. Lower temperatures, such as dry ice temperatures, promote longer radical lifetimes. Alternatively, humidification and nitrous oxide can increase the rate of substrate radical formation via generation of hydroxyl radicals. The effective binding absorption capacity of the grafted nonwoven from the graft polymerization process is little changed after a reaction time of about 12 hours, when kept under inert conditions. It has been observed that keeping the graft polymerization process inert for 72 hours results in an increase of about 10 to 20% more binding capacity (as described in the Example) than the performance of a sample quenched after 12 hours (by exposure to air) at room temperature, presumably due to an increase in grafted polymer.
Generally, the irradiated nonwoven substrate is imbibed with the monomer solution immediately after the irradiation step. Generally when using E-beam the irradiated substrate is imbibed within an hour, preferably within ten minutes. Generally, when using gamma as a source, the substrate should be imbibed immediately after irradiation since irradiation residence time will be long. It has been observed that if the substrate is irradiated by ionizing radiation in the presence of the grafting monomers, the filtration performance of the grafted nonwoven substrate is inferior to that article prepared by the instant method.
In the imbibing step, the nonwoven substrate is contacted with the imbibing solution containing one or more grafting monomers and in amounts previously described. Suitable methods of imbibing include, but are not limited to, a spray coating, flood coating, knife coating, Meyer bar coating, dip coating, and gravure coating.
The imbibing solution remains in contact with the nonwoven substrate for a time sufficient for the radical sites to initiate polymerization with the grafting monomers. When imbibed with a solution of monomers, grafting reactions are mostly completed after 12 hours exposure; generally resulting in about 50+ percent conversion of monomers to grafted polymer. As a result, the nonwoven substrate comprises grafted polymers and/or copolymers attached to the interstitial and outer surfaces of the nonwoven substrate.
As discussed above, the imbibing solution may comprise one or more grafting monomers suitable for grafting onto surfaces of the nonwoven substrate. Any of the exemplary grafting monomers described above can be included in the imbibing solution. In addition to the described grafting monomers, the imbibing solution can contain other materials such as, for example, one or more other non-grafting monomers for UV curing, surfactants, dyes, pigments and solvents. The concentration of each grafting monomer in the imbibing solution may vary depending on a number of factors including, but not limited to, the grafting monomer or monomers in the imbibing solution, the extent of grafting desired, the reactivity of the grafting monomer(s), and the solvent used. Typically, the total concentration of the monomers in the imbibing solution ranges from about 1 wt% to about 100 wt%, desirably, from about 5 wt% to about 30 wt%, and more desirably from about 15 wt% to about 25 wt% based on a total weight of the imbibing solution.
The imbibing solution further comprises an aqueous blend of a water miscible organic solvent and the grafting monomer(s). It has been found that the solvent blend influences the morphology of the grafted polymer and the resulting flux rate when used in separation applications. The ratio of water to organic solvent can vary widely, but is typically greater than 1 : 1 (v/v) water to organic solvent, preferably greater than 5:1, and more preferably greater than 7:1. The ratios are generally adjusted so that the resulting grafted nonwoven substrate produces pressure and flux responses maximizing the binding capacity for the targeted bioseparation application.
The concentration of the organic solvent in water may be optimized with respect to the fiber size of the nonwoven substrate. In general, the optimum concentration of organic solvent increases as the fiber size decreases. Using a 20% 2-Acrylamido-2- methylpropanesulfonic acid, ammonium or sodium salts (AMPS) monomer imbibing solution, a nonwoven with a 4 μm effective fiber diameter optimally uses 15% or less organic solvent in water. A 15% 2-Acrylamido-2-methylpropanesulfonic acid, ammonium or sodium salts monomer imbibing solution for a 1 μm effective fiber diameter nonwoven web optimally uses more than 15 % organic solvent in water.
It is believed that by adjusting the amount of water miscible organic solvent in the imbibing solution a greater amount of monomer is grafted to the nonwoven substrate without bridging the fibers of the substrate and closing the voids. If the web voids are bridged, the nonwoven dries to a translucent appearance, and has decreased flux and reduced ability to expand on hydration. The smaller the fibers the less monomer it takes to bridge the pores of the nonwoven. Adding more water-miscible organic solvent reduces the bridging, allows for increased grafted polymer content (as a function of weight percent of the nonwoven substrate) and allows for freer expansion of the article. Any such water miscible organic solvent preferably has no tertiary hydrogen atoms, or other groups that would retard the graft polymerization. In some embodiments, the water miscible solvents are protic group containing organic liquids such as the lower alcohols having 1 to 4 carbon atoms, lower glycols having 2 to 6 carbon atoms, and most preferably lower glycol ethers having 3 to 6 carbon atoms and 1 to 2 ether linkages. In some embodiments higher glycols such as poly(ethylene glycol) may be used. Specific examples are methanol, ethanol, n-butanol, t-butyl alcohol, ethylene glycol, methoxyethanol, ethoxyethanol, propoxyethanol, butoxyethanol, methyl carbitol, ethyl carbitol, and mixtures thereof.
In other embodiments, non-protic water miscible organic solvents that can also be used such as aliphatic esters and ketones and sulfoxides such as ethyl acetate, propyl acetate, butyl acetate, methoxyethyl acetate, ethoxyethyl acetate, propoxyethyl acetate, butoxyethyl acetate, triethyl phosphate, acetone, methyl ethyl ketone, methyl propyl ketone and dimethyl sulfoxide.
Once the nonwoven substrate has been imbibed for a desired period of time, the nonwoven substrate bearing grafted polymer groups may be optionally rinsed to remove residual monomer and/or dried. In the optional rinsing step, the functionalized nonwoven substrate is washed or rinsed one or more times to remove any unreacted monomers, solvent or other reaction byproducts. Typically, the functionalized substrate is washed or rinsed up to three times using a water rinse, an alcohol rinse, a combination of water and alcohol rinses, and/or a solvent rinse (e.g., acetone, methyl ethyl ketone, etc). When an alcohol rinse is used, the rinse may include one or more alcohols including, but not limited to, isopropanol, methanol, ethanol, or any other alcohol that is practical to use and an effective solvent for any residual monomer. In each rinse step, the functionalized substrate may pass through a rinse bath or a rinse spray. In some embodiments, the rinse may comprise an ionic buffer solution that would reduce swelling of the hydrogel, the amount of retained water, and also avoiding weakening the non- woven substrate during this rinse step.
In the optional drying step, the functionalized substrate is dried to remove any rinse solution. Typically, the functionalized substrate is dried in oven having a relatively low oven temperature for a desired period of time (referred to herein as "oven dwell time"). Oven temperatures typically range from about 60 0C to about 120 0C, while oven dwell times typically range from about 120 to about 600 seconds. Any conventional oven may be used in the optional drying step. It should also be noted that in other embodiments the drying step can proceed before the rinsing step to eliminate volatile components before extraction of non-grafted residue. Following the optional drying step, the dried functionalized substrate can be taken up in roll form to be stored for future use
The functionalized nonwoven substrates are particularly suited as filter media, such as the filter media found in water filtration devices. As the polymer is grafted to render it hydrophilic, the filter media is durable. The hydrophilic porous substrate described herein, can be cleaned or flushed and retain the hydrophilic properties as evidenced by the surface energy and wettability.
When used in a filtration application, one or more layers of the functionalized substrate may be used, each of which layers may have the same, or different average fiber size, void volume, degree of polymer grafting, monomer composition of grafted polymer, porosity, tensile strength and surface area. In some embodiments, each subsequent layer may have a smaller effective pore size or smaller average fiber size so that finer contaminants may be filtered. The grafted nonwoven substrate may be configured as planar or lenticular disks. In some embodiments the nonwoven substrate may be pleated. Pleated grafted nonwoven filter elements may be combined as multiple concentric pleated elements. The grafted nonwoven substrate may be wound spirally. Further, the grafted nonwoven substrate may be encapsulated with a porous web to provide support and aid in handling. In filtration applications, the nonwoven may be disposed either vertically, or horizontally. FIG. 1 depicts an exemplary filter media 120 according to the present disclosure.
As shown, filter media 120 comprises a plurality of pleats 126. In some embodiments, pleated filter media 120 may be incorporated into a filter device or other filter device. Examples of pleating configurations and filter devices comprising pleated media may be found, for example, in U.S. 6,521,011 to Sundet et al., the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety. It is also envisioned that the plurality of pleats
126 could comprise planarly disposed pleats, as described in U.S. Pat. App. No. 61/016149 to Lucas (PCT App. No. US08/86923), the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety. In the embodiment shown, filter media 120 comprises a grafted nonwoven substrate 122 together with a microporous membrane layer 124. Typically, microporous membrane layer 124 is positioned downstream of grafted nonwoven substrate 122. Microporous membrane layer 124 may comprise one or more microporous membranes as described throughout the present disclosure. In some embodiments, microporous membrane layer 124 comprises a single zone having a symmetrically distributed pore size. In other embodiments, microporous membrane layer 124 comprises a single zone comprising an asymmetrically distributed pore size. In still other embodiments, microporous membrane layer 124 comprises multiple discrete zones. In such embodiments, each discrete zone may comprise symmetrically or asymmetrically distributed pore sizes.
In some embodiments, one or more zones of microporous membrane layer 124 may be functionalized to include, for example, enhanced hydrophilic properties. Methods for providing a functionalized microporous membrane are described, for example, elsewhere in the present disclosure.
It is also envisioned that microporous membrane layer 124 may comprise multiple layers of microporous membrane, wherein each layer may comprise a single zone or multiple discrete zones. Each zone may comprise symmetrically or asymmetrically distributed pore sizes, and each layer of microporous membrane may be functionalized or non-functionalized as desired for a specific application. In one embodiment, as described below in the section entitled "Nylon Microporous Membranes D1-D6", microporous membrane layer 124 may comprise three layers of microporous membrane, wherein each layer comprises three discrete zones.
Grafted nonwoven substrate 122 may comprise one or more nonwoven substrates as described throughout the present disclosure. In some embodiments, grafted nonwoven substrate 122 comprises a single layer of nonwoven. In other embodiments, grafted nonwoven substrate 122 may include additional layers of nonwoven material having the same or different construction. For example, it is envisioned that grafted nonwoven substrate 122 may comprise a non-grafted nonwoven layer positioned upstream of a grafted nonwoven layer. In such an embodiment, the more upstream layer may be provided, for example, with a lower density, or increased porosity, relative to the more downstream layer. FIG. 2 depicts an exemplary filter device 100 according to the present disclosure.
As shown, filter device 100 comprises a filter media 120 provided in the form of a lenticular filter cartridge. Examples of lenticular filter cartridges and methods of making lenticular filter cartridges may be found, for example, in U.S. 6,464,084; 6,939,466; 7,178,676; and 6,712,966 to Pulek et al, the disclosures of which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety.
As shown, filter device 100 comprises a separator element 140 having a central core 142 in fluid communication with a fluid outlet 116. Typically, separator element 140 comprises a first side 144 and a second side 146 upon which filter media 120 may be disposed. First side 144 and second side 146 are typically not provide filtering functionality, but are provided with a network of apertures through which fluid may freely flow. As depicted, filter media 120 is provided as a first filter media disk 150 positioned on first side 144 and a second filter media disk 154 positioned on second side 146. First and second filter media disks 150 and 154 each respectively comprise an outer circumferential edge 151, 155 and an inner circumferential edge 152, 156. In some embodiments, an edge seal 150 connects the outer circumferential edges 151 and 155 of first and second filter media disks 150 and 154. Typically, inner circumferential edges 152 and 156 are connected to central core 142 of separator element 140.
In a typical application, the downstream surface of filter media 120 is positioned proximal to separator element 140. Filter media 120 comprises grafted non woven substrate 122. In the embodiment shown, filter media 120 comprises a grafted nonwoven substrate 122 together with a microporous membrane layer 124. Typically, microporous membrane layer 124 is positioned downstream of grafted nonwoven substrate 122.
With regard to FIG. 3, an exemplary filter device 100 is shown comprising a filter capsule 110 and a filter cap 112 connected to filter capsule 110. As shown, filter cap 112 comprises a fluid inlet 114 and a fluid outlet 116. Filter media 120 is encapsulated in filter capsule 110 and fluidly connects fluid inlet 114 and fluid outlet 116. As seen through the cutaway in FIG. 8, filter media 120 is formed into a first media cylinder 130 comprising a plurality of pleats 126. Examples or filter devices and methods of making filter devices may be found, for example, in U.S. 6,458,269 to Bassett et al., the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety. Examples of filter media formed into cylinders comprising a plurality of pleats may be found, for example, in U.S. 6,315,130 to Olsen, the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety. In some embodiments the present disclosure provides a filter cartridge comprising a filter capsule; and a filter cap connected to the filter capsule; wherein the filter cap comprises the fluid inlet and the fluid outlet, and wherein the filter media is encapsulated in the filter capsule. In some embodiments filter cap of the filter device comprises the fluid inlet and the fluid outlet, and wherein the filter media is encapsulated in the filter capsule. In some embodiments the filter media further comprises a microporous membrane layer positioned downstream of the grafted nonwoven substrate.
Therefore the present disclosure provides a filter device comprising a fluid inlet; a fluid outlet; and a filter media fluidly connecting the fluid inlet and the fluid outlet; wherein the filter media comprises the grafted nonwoven substrate. In some embodiments the present disclosure provides a filter device further comprising a separator element (140); and an edge seal (150); the separator element comprising a central core (142) in fluid communication with the fluid inlet; a first side (144); and a second side (146); the filter media comprising a first media disk (150) positioned on the first side of the separator element and having an outer circumferential edge (151) and an inner circumferential edge
(152); and a second media disk (154) positioned on the second side of the separator element and having an outer circumferential edge (155) and an inner circumferential edge (156); wherein the outer circumferential edges of the first and second media disks are connected by the edge seal and the inner circumferential edges of the first and second media disks are connected to the central core
FIG. 4 depicts a cross-sectional view of one embodiment of filter device 100 shown in FIG. 3, wherein filter media 120 is formed into first media cylinder 130 comprising a plurality of pleats 126. In the embodiment shown, filter media 120 comprises a grafted nonwoven substrate 122 together with a microporous membrane layer 124. Typically, microporous membrane layer 124 is positioned downstream of grafted nonwoven substrate 122. As shown in FIG. 4, filter device 100 optionally comprises a second media cylinder 132 positioned within first media cylinder 130. In such embodiments, second media cylinder 132 may comprise a plurality of pleats. Examples of filter modules comprising inner and outer media cylinders comprising a plurality of pleats may be found, for example, in U.S. Pat. Pub. No. U.S. 2009/0020472 Al to Lucas et al, the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety. Therefore in some embodiments, the present disclosure provides a filter device of wherein the filter media further comprises one or more microporous membrane layers positioned downstream of the grafted nonwoven substrate. In some embodiments the present disclosure provides a filter device wherein the filter media comprises a plurality of pleats.
FIG. 5 depicts a cross-sectional view of an alternative embodiment of a filter device 100 as shown in FIG. 3, wherein filter device further comprises a core 160, and wherein the filter media 120 is spirally wound about core 160. Core 160 typically does not provide filtering functionality, but is provided with a network of apertures through which fluid may freely flow. Examples of spirally wound filter cartridges and methods of making spirally wound filter cartridges may be found, for example, in U.S. 6,391,200 to Pulek et al., the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety. In the embodiment shown, filter media 120 comprises a grafted nonwoven substrate 122 together with a microporous membrane layer 124. Typically, microporous membrane layer 124 is positioned downstream of grafted nonwoven substrate 122. In some embodiments, a drainage layer may be further provided to help facilitate fluid flow between adjacent layers of spirally- wrapped filter media 120.
In some embodiments the present disclosure provides a filter device comprising a core (160), wherein the filter media is spirally wound about the core. In some embodiments the functionalized nonwoven substrate may be combined with conventional filter elements, such as microporous membranes. In particular, a filter comprising one or more layers of the instant functionalized nonwoven substrate can serve as a filter for removing contaminants downstream of a Protein A column.
A microporous membrane with an absolute pore size rating used in conjunction beneath the media is desirable because the functionalized nonwoven substrate will protect the microporous membrane, thereby extending the useful life of the microporous membrane, and in turn, the membrane will capture any breakthrough contamination from the open hydrogel network permitting a longer useful life of the grafted nonwoven (as measured by turbidity reduction of the filtrate). When used in filtration, a fluid containing a biological sample of interest and contaminants can be passed through the responsive functionalized nonwoven article separating the two. In some embodiments contaminates will be retained in the grafted polymer hydrogel network and the biological sample of interest will pass. In other embodiments biological product will be retained in the grafted polymer hydrogel network and contaminates will pass. The interstitial pores or voids of the grafted polymer hydrogel may be changed in response to the biological contamination of the fluid or the presence of a "trigger", (e.g., ionic strength, polar organic or inorganic species, molasses, salt, buffer, proteins, cell debris, viruses, etc). It is observed that the clean water flux (with no trigger) is low with high back pressure. Increased hydraulic pressure causes the hydrogel to collapse or compress further reducing flux. This collapse or compression further shortens the dwell time by decreasing the z direction mean flow path and reducing the retaining volume for accumulating biocontaminants. Therefore, the grafted nonwoven works better at low pressures thereby reducing shear to any shear sensitive proteins during the early filtration steps.
The polymer grafted nonwoven article described herein is capable of retaining particles and insoluble contaminates from a biological fluid phase throughout its expanded matrix. When some small amount of polar "trigger" is present the hydraulic pressure is rapidly relieved. It is believed that each anionic monomer unit serves as a point charge in the grafted polymer chain, and is surrounded by an ionic electric double layer entirely composed of water, the hydration layer. This forms a "radius of shear" resisting water flux and serves to compress the nonwoven hydrogel network from the hydraulic pressure. Small ionic differences cause disruption of the inner and outer shell of the double layer allowing increased flux. During filtration when the back pressure is relieved after exposure to a "trigger", the nonwoven structure can expand back because of the lack of hydraulic pressure.
In filtration applications, naturally occurring macromolecules such as proteins acquire a charge when dispersed in water - due to the pKa of the protein and the pH of the buffered solution and the filter can be run in either capture or flow through modes. For example, positively charged cell debris or host cell proteins are bound by charge-affinity to the negatively charged hydrogel, allowing passage of such entities as neutrally charged monoclonal antibodies (mAb). Adjusting the pH below the isoelectric point (pi) of the desired protein it will take a positive charge and be retained in the hydrogel network. As more and more material is progressively passed through the depth of the filter, the discontinuous gel collapses as positively charged contaminates or product is captured and negatively charged materials are passed. This continues until the dynamic capacity of the filter element is reached.
In biofiltration applications, high filtration pressure is undesirable because it could result in the shearing and subsequent denaturing of the proteins. Excessive pressure generated from pumping clean water can cause the expanded nonwoven to collapse under hydraulic pressure making flow even more restrictive and undesirable because it shortens affinity dwell time by decreasing the z direction mean flow path and reduces the retaining volume for accumulating biocontamination. Hence, the article of this invention becomes capable of retaining particles and insoluble contaminates from a mobile phase throughout its expanded matrix at lower filtration pressures.
The instant polymer- functionalized nonwoven article will load contamination without undue pressure build-up over the lifetime of the article. A normal fouling mechanism in filter media is when the media sifts particles out of a mobile phase; the particles can cake in the pores or on the major surface of the media. Flux is then reduced and pressure builds up and this can be exacerbated if the cake layer can be compressed.
The instant polymer- functionalized nonwoven article allows contamination to impinge on the discontinuous hydrogel matrix where the contamination easily is diffused into the matrix resisting fouling from caking or compression. As contamination is added, more room is obtained in the interstitial spaces of the nonwoven from the loading and adsorption of contamination on the hydrogel polymer tendrils.
In bioseparation applications, generally "normal flow" filtration is conducted in either a constant rate or constant pressure mode. In constant rate mode, a set volume of fluid is delivered from a pump and the pressure in a filter is allowed to increase as the filter fouls and the filtering process is stopped at a nominal pressure value to keep the target protein intact; usually to no more than about 30 psi. In constant pressure mode a set pressure is applied to a fluid and allowed to flow until the delivery rate ceases or becomes to low to be practical and the filtration process is stopped. Typical flow rates used in affinity chromatography from low to high are about 50 to 600 LMH (Iiters/(meter2-hour), or a frontal fluid velocity of .08 to 1 ml/(min-cm2). 47 mm test housings have about 13 cm2 of usable surface area so a rate of 13 ml/min is equivalent performance to the stated high 600 LMH used in commercial procedures. Depending on the number of layers, thickness of each layer, fiber size and amount of grafting, the clean water flux of this invention has been observed as high as 75 psi at 1 ml/(min-cm2 ) (13 ml/min). The introduction of a polar trigger will cause this pressure to be reduced to less than 1 psi. Flushing out the buffer (serving as a trigger) with clean water results in returning of the higher pressures. The polymer grafted nonwoven substrate described herein may be combined with microporous membranes, including symmetric or asymmetric microporous membranes (having a gradient porosity), and single or multiple layers of such membranes. Useful microporous membranes include those made from nylon, polyether sulfone, polyvinylidine fluoride, polypropylene, ethylene -trichlorofluoroethylene, with single layer, multiple layers, and the like. Preferably, these membranes are hydrophilic. The microporous membranes may have symmetric pore size ranges of 0.01 to 150 μm, preferably 0.1 to 100 μm and thicknesses of 25 to 500 μm. In another embodiment the grafted nonwoven substrate may be combined with asymmetric microporous membranes having gradient average pore sizes of O.Olto 150 μm. In other embodiments, multiple layers of microporous membranes may be used in combination, with each layer having successively finer porosity, such from 15 to 0.02 μm, preferably 10 to 0.8 μm and total thicknesses of 75 to 1200 μm. Multiple layers of microporous membranes having both symmetric and gradient porosities may be used in combination. Further, the microporous membranes may be polymer grafted to alter the surface characteristics thereof, such as hydrophilicity, hydrophobicity or charge binding capacity.
Further, one or more layers of the grafted nonwoven substrate may be combined with one of more layers of a microporous membrane. For example one to six layers of grafted nonwoven substrate may be combined with the microporous layer(s). Each layer of the grafted nonwoven substrate may be the same or different. In some embodiments the layers may be the same, or may differ in terms of the particular nonwoven substrate, thickness of the nonwoven substrate, polymer used therein, fiber size, porosity, void volume, loft, tensile strength, surface area, grafting weight or density, degree of polymer grafting, and/or monomer concentration in the grafting polymer.
Examples of useful commercial membrane include LifeAssure™ or SterAssure™ cast nylon microporous membranes available from CUNO Inc., Meriden, CN. Useful microporous membranes are disclosed in U.S. 6,413,070, 6,513,666, 6,776,940, 6,056,529 and 6,264,044 (Meyering et al.,), U.S. 5,006,247 (Dennison et al), U.S. 3,876,738 (Marinaccio et al), U.S. 4,707,265, (Barnes et al), and U.S. 4,473,474 (Ostreicher et al), each incorporated by reference. Useful graft polymer functionalized microporous membranes are disclosed in PCT/US2008/088106, filed December 23, 2008, and incorporated herein by reference. The combination of the microporous membranes with the grafted nonwoven will protect the microfϊltration membrane thereby extending its useful life and the membrane will capture any breakthrough contamination that passes through the open hydrogel network improving the efficiency of the grafted nonwoven. Contaminants may be measured using techniques known in the art including turbidity reduction, UV, DNA quantitation and ELISA methods.
The article provides a high media packing density in an adsorptive depth-type filter module which provides improved filtration efficiency. The article further provides increased surface area for a given media mass in an adsorptive depth-type filter module which provides higher flow rate (flux). Typically there is a trade-off between achieving these desirable filter characteristics of high efficiency and high flux. However the present functionalized nonwoven substrate provides a depth-type filter module that has high media packing density without sacrificing flux.
It is believed that the polymer functionalized nonwoven substrate functions predominately by adsorption, diffusion, and impingement mechanisms and is therefore different from conventional membrane filters which operate by a combination of size exclusion, trapping and adsorption. The advantage of the instant grafted nonwoven as a pre-layer is that the pre-layer is fully utilized throughout it's depth with a range of contaminant species. A conventional filter, which operates by trapping and size exclusion, will inevitably plug and lacks the depth of the media and contaminate holding network to prevent or delay fouling.
Examples
Unless otherwise noted, all parts, percentages, ratios, etc., in the examples and the rest of the specification are by weight, and all reagents used in the examples were obtained, or are available, from general chemical suppliers such as, for example, Sigma- Aldrich Company, Saint Louis, MO, or may be synthesized by conventional methods. The following preparations, solutions and test procedures were used to evaluate polymer grafted nonwoven substrates.
Preparation 1 : Nylon Nonwoven Substrate A. B-24K™ nylon-6 polymer (BASF Corporation Engineering Plastics Wyandotte,
MI) was used to produce meltblown nonwoven substrate. The melt temperature was 295 0C with a mass flow rate of 0.25 grams/hole/minute on a standard meltblowing drilled orifice die. Hot air at 350 0C and 975 cubic feet per minute (SCFM) (27.8 cubic meters per minute (CMM)), per meter of die width, was used to attenuate the fibers. The fibers with a face velocity at impact of 1200 meters per minute (m/min) were collected 0.30 meters from the die on a foraminous stainless steel belt and were bonded under 200 0C air drawn through the web at a face velocity of 137 m/min for 0.14 seconds, followed by cooling air at 29 0C, at the same face velocity, for 0.8 seconds. The collected web basis weight was 48 grams per square meter and had an effective fiber diameter of 4.1 μm. The collected web had a thickness of 0.4 mm before calendaring between two 25 cm diameter smooth steel rolls set at 82 0C, running at 1.5 m/min with a nip pressure of 170 Newtons per lineal centimeter of web (N/lcm). The resulting web thickness was 0.25 mm.
Preparation 2: Nylon Microporous Membranes. A nine zone, reinforced asymmetric microporous nylon membrane was prepared using the process described in U.S. 6,776,940 (Meyering et al). As described, a single base polymer dope formulation was split into three parts and applied to a three-way thermal manipulation apparatus. The dope formulation was heated to three different temperatures to achieve three distinct zones. Each of the temperatures used was selected to produce pore sizes in each zone for forming an asymmetric microporous membrane. The first zone (upper zone) had the largest pore size, the second (middle) zone had an intermediate pore size and the third zone (lower zone) had the smallest pore size. The membrane was a single layer having three consecutive progressively smaller pore size exclusion zones. The nine -zone asymmetric microporous membrane was prepared by laminating three three-zone asymmetric microporous membranes. A first microporous membrane (top layer having an average pore size for the three zones of approximately 5.0; 2.4; and 1.2 μm) was laminated a second intermediate layer (having an average pore size for the three zones of approximately 1.0; 0.8; and 0.65 μm), which in turn, was laminated to a third, bottom layer (having an average pore size for the three zones of approximately 5.0; 2.4; and 1.2 μm).
The result was nine independent porous zones with the top surface having the largest pore size progressively extending to smaller pore sizes in the bottom layer. The average pore size for the nine sequential zones were approximately 5.0; 2.4; 1.2; 1.0; 0.8; 0.65; 0.45; 0.30; and 0.20 μm. The lamination methods generally described in U.S. 3,876,738 (Marinaccio et al.) and the processes generally described in Defensive Publication T-103,601(Repetti). Briefly, the Marinaccio reference method comprises casting a polymer dope in a thin layer, quenching the dope in a solvent bath to form a continuous microporous membrane, and rinsing the membrane in a water bath to remove residual solvent. This is the wet-as- cast membrane, before it has an opportunity to dry. Wet-as-cast layers of Marinaccio membranes have the ability to form strong physical bonding between individual layers when laminated in the manner described in Defensive Publication T-103,601(Repetti). Briefly, the individual layers (individual three zone membranes) were wet laminated wherein membranes that have been cast and quenched but not dried are joined under mild pressure and then dried together.
Preparation 3: Graft functionalization of nylon nonwoven substrate A
A 30 cm by 43 cm sample of Nylon Nonwoven Substrate A of Preparation 1 was purged of air under a nitrogen atmosphere in a glove box and inserted into a ZIPLOC™ plastic bag and sealed. The sealed bag was then removed from the glove box and irradiated to a dose level of 40 kGy by passing it through the electron beam set with an accelerating voltage of 300 kV and a web speed of 20 feet/minute. After returning the sealed bag to the nitrogen atmosphere-controlled glove box, the irradiated nonwoven substrate was removed and placed inside a non-irradiated, nitrogen purged, ZIPLOC™ bag. The freshly prepared nonwoven sample was imbibed with 100 grams of the nitrogen purged imbibing solution comprising the mixture shown in Table 1, and the bag resealed after expelling most of the nitrogen. During this step the oxygen level within the glove box was generally maintained below 40 parts per million (ppm).
The sample was maintained flat in the bag and evenly saturated for 12 hours. The resulting grafted nylon nonwoven substrate was removed from the bag and carefully washed by soaking it for 10 minutes in a tray containing 2 liters of fresh deionized water. The substrate was removed from the tray, compressed between multiple layers of paper towels and the washing process repeated two more times with fresh deionized water and air dried.
Table 1 :
Figure imgf000037_0001
Preparation 4: Graft Functionalization of Microporous Membrane The microporous membranes of Preparation 2 were functionalized by imbibing the membrane with a grafting solution consisting of 20% 2-Acrylamido-2- methylpropanesulfonic acid, ammonium salt monomer, 15% methanol, 65% water by weight. The membrane was sandwiched between two 4 mil. (101.6 μm) polyethylene terephthalate (PET) liners, rolled with a rubber roller to remove air and excess solution and irradiated directly by passing through an electron beam at a web speed of 20 feet per minute (fpm) (6.1 m/min) and receiving a dosage of approximately 40 kilograys (kGy) at an accelerating voltage of 300 kilovolts with the large pore size surface facing up to the beam. The membranes were washed three times by rinsing in deionized water and then air dried.
Static Binding Capacity Test
A -0.6 mg/mL IgG (Human Immunoglobulin G from Equitech Bio (Kerrville, TX)) challenge solution was prepared in 50 mM acetate buffer with 40 mM NaCl, at pH 4.5 .
25 mm diameter discs of the functionalized substrates A, B and C from Preparation 3 were punched out using a die-cut punch. The sample prepared with the asymmetric nylon microporous membrane of Preparation 4 is designated "D".
15 and 50-ml polypropylene Falcon tubes were provided with 1 and 2 discs as shown in Table 2. The 15 ml tubes were filled with 5 ml of the IgG challenge solution . The 50 ml tubes were filled with 40 ml of the same challenge solution. The tubes were rocked overnight at room temperature. The concentration of unbound IgG remaining in the solution was determined by measuring the UV absorbance at 280 nm. The static binding capacity of the membranes was calculated by using the equation:
(challenge volume* initial concentration) — (challenge volume* final concentration)
Static capacity = web volume
The results are shown in Table 2. "Web volume refers to the measured volume of web that is being challenged by the IgG solution, determined from measurement of the frontal area of the disc stack and the stack thickness. Table 2:
Figure imgf000039_0002
Dynamic binding capacity
Human Immunoglobulin G (Equitech Bio, Kerrville, TX) was prepared as a challenge solution of concentration 4 mg/ml in 50 mM acetate buffer with 40 mM NaCl at pH 4.5. The absorbance at 280 nm of the challenge solution was determined experimentally, and is denoted as the absorbance maximum. The membranes were analyzed for dynamic binding by running the challenge solution through a 4-layer stack of discs (from Preparation 3 and 4) placed in a 25 mm diameter holder attached to an AKTA chromatography system (GE Healthcare, NY).
The flow rate was 1 ml/min and the UV detector was set to monitor at a wavelength of 280 nm. The IgG breakthrough curves were used to determine the challenge volume corresponding to 5 and 10% of the absorbance maximum. The dynamic binding capacity (DBC) of the membrane at 5 and 10% breakthrough is calculated by the following equation
Challenge volume x concentration
Figure imgf000039_0001
web volume
The DBC results are shown in Table 3 and Figure 6. In Examples 1 to 6, either an ungrafted microporous membrane (from Preparation 2), or a grafted microporous membrane (from Preparation 4) was placed downstream of the 3 -layer stack of grafted nonwoven substrates, as indicated in Table 3. For purposes of comparison, the 4-layer stack of grafted nonwoven substrates were replaced by 3 layers of grafted microporous membrane "D" from Preparation 4, followed by a downstream layer of ungrafted microporous membrane from Preparation 2. The results are shown in Table 3 and Figure 6.
Table 3:
Figure imgf000040_0001

Claims

What is claimed is:
1. An article comprising: a) a nonwoven substrate having average fiber sizes of 0.7 to 15 microns, and a void volume of 50 to 95%, and a polymer comprising anionic monomer units grafted to the surface of the nonwoven substrate.
2. The article of claim 1 wherein the nonwoven substrate has a tensile strength of at least 4.0 Newtons prior to grafting.
3. The article of claim 1 wherein the nonwoven substrate has a surface area of 15 to 50 m2 per square meter of nonwoven substrate.
4. The article of claim 1 wherein the nonwoven substrate has a mean pore size of 1- 40 microns according to ASTM F 316-03 5.
5. The article of claim 1 wherein the nonwoven substrates have a solidity of less than 20%
6. The article of claim 1 wherein the nonwoven substrate is a spunlaid, spunlaced, hydroentangled, wet-laid electrospun or a meltblown nonwoven substrate.
7. The article of claim 1 wherein the weight of the grafted polymer is 0.5 to 5 times the weight of the nonwoven substrate.
8. The article of claim 1 wherein the nonwoven substrate is prepared from a hydrophilic thermoplastic polymer.
9. The article of claim 1 wherein the grafted copolymer comprises polymerized monomer units of: a) 80 to 98 wt. % of grafting anionic monomers; b) 2 to 20 wt.% of grafting poly(alkylene oxide) monomers; b) 0 to 10 wt. % of second hydrophilic monomers.
10. The article of claim 9 wherein the graft copolymer is of the formula
-(M™c)w-(MPEG)x-(Mc)y wherein
-(Maniomc)w- represent the residue of the grafted anionic monomer having w polymerized monomer units where w is at least 2,
-(MPEG)X represents the polymerized poly(alkylene oxide) monomer having x polymerized monomer units, where x may be zero; -(Mc)y represents the polymerized hydrophilic monomer "c)", having y polymerized monomer units, where y may be zero.
11. The article of claim 10 wherein the copolymer is a random or block copolymer.
12. The article of claim 1 wherein the grafted brush polymer is uncrosslinked.
13. The article of claim 1 wherein the nonwoven substrate has a basis weight of 10 to 400 g/m2.
14. The article of claim 1 wherein the nonwoven substrate is a nylon nonwoven substrate having an average effective fiber diameter of 1 micrometer or less.
15. A method of making the article of any of claims 1 to 14 comprising: a. providing a nonwoven substrate, b. exposing the nonwoven substrate to ionizing radiation in an inert atmosphere, and c. imbibing the exposed substrate with a solution comprising grafting anionic monomers to graft polymerize said monomers to the surface of the nonwoven substrate.
16. The method of claim 15 wherein the imbibing solution further comprises a second hydrophilic grafting monomer.
17. The method of claim 16 wherein the imbibing solution comprises: a) 80 to 98 wt. % of grafting anionic monomers; b) 2 to 20 wt.% of grafting poly(alkylene oxide) monomers; b) 0 to 10 wt.% of second hydrophilic monomers.
18. The method of claim 15 wherein the imbibing solution comprises an aqueous/water-soluble organic solvent solution, wherein said organic solvent contains no tertiary hydrogen atoms.
19. The method of claim 15 wherein the nonwoven substrate is exposed to 1 to 200 kGys of ionizing radiation.
20. The method of claim 15 wherein the imbibing solution comprises no polyethylenically unsaturated monomers.
21. The method of claim 15 wherein exposure to e-beam energy generates free radical sites on the surfaces of the nonwoven substrate, and initiating graft polymerization of said monomers.
22. The method of claim 15 comprising the further step of removing the excess monomer solution, and drying.
23. The method of claim 15 wherein the grafting anionic monomers have the general formula:
Figure imgf000043_0001
ere
R1 is H or CH3; X is -O- or -NR1-, Y is a straight or branched chain alkylene, and Z is an anionic group.
24. The method of claim 17 wherein the grafting poly (alkylene oxide) monomers are of the formula:
Z-Q-(CH(R1 )-CH -Q) - R , III
2 m
1 4 wherein Z is a polymerizable ethylenically unsaturated moiety, R is a H or CH3, R is a
H, a C 1 to C 4 alkyl group, aryl group, or combinations thereof, m is from 2 to 100, and Q
1 1 is a divalent linking group selected from -O-, -NR - , -CO - and -CONR .
25. The method of claim 15 wherein the weight of the grafting monomers of the imbibing solution is 0.5 to 5 times the weight of the nonwoven substrate.
26. The method of claim 15 wherein the weight of the grafting monomers in the imbibing solution is 5 wt% to 30 wt%, based on a total weight of the imbibing solution.
27. A filter device comprising: a fluid inlet; a fluid outlet; and a filter media fluidly connecting the fluid inlet and the fluid outlet; wherein the filter media comprises the grafted nonwoven substrate of any of claims 1 to 15.
28. The filter device of claim 27 wherein the filter media further comprises a microporous membrane layer positioned downstream of the grafted nonwoven substrate.
29. The filter device of claim 27 wherein the filter media comprises a plurality of pleats .
30. The filter device of claim 29 wherein the filter media comprises a plurality of pleats.
31. The filter device of claim 27 further comprising: a filter capsule; and a filter cap connected to the filter capsule; wherein the filter cap comprises the fluid inlet and the fluid outlet, and wherein the filter media is encapsulated in the filter capsule.
32. The filter device of claim 31 wherein the filter media further comprises a microporous membrane layer positioned downstream of the grafted nonwoven substrate.
33. The filter device of claim 31 wherein the filter media is formed into a first media cylinder comprising a plurality of pleats.
34. The filter device of claim 33 further comprising a second media cylinder positioned within the first media cylinder, the second media cylinder comprising a second filter media comprising a plurality of pleats.
35. The filter device of claim 31 further comprising a second media cylinder positioned within the first media cylinder, the second media cylinder comprising a second filter media comprising a plurality of pleats.
36. The filter device of claim 27 further comprising a core, wherein the filter media is spirally wound about the core.
37. The filter device of claim 27 further comprising: a separator element; and an edge seal; the separator element comprising: a central core in fluid communication with the fluid inlet; a first side; and a second side; the filter media comprising: a first media disk positioned on the first side of the separator element and having an outer circumferential edge and an inner circumferential edge; and a second media disk positioned on the second side of the separator element and having an outer circumferential edge and an inner circumferential edge; wherein the outer circumferential edges of the first and second media disks are connected by the edge seal and the inner circumferential edges of the first and second media disks are connected to the central core.
38. The filter device of claim 37 wherein the first and second media disks further comprise a microporous membrane layer positioned downstream of the grafted nonwoven substrate.
PCT/US2010/038488 2009-06-23 2010-06-14 Functionalized nonwoven article WO2010151447A1 (en)

Priority Applications (4)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
EP10727308.8A EP2446077B1 (en) 2009-06-23 2010-06-14 Functionalized nonwoven article
BRPI1011747A BRPI1011747A2 (en) 2009-06-23 2010-06-14 functionalized nonwoven article.
CN2010800363062A CN102803593A (en) 2009-06-23 2010-06-14 Functionalized nonwoven article
JP2012517572A JP2012531531A (en) 2009-06-23 2010-06-14 Functionalized non-woven articles

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US21949709P 2009-06-23 2009-06-23
US61/219,497 2009-06-23

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
WO2010151447A1 true WO2010151447A1 (en) 2010-12-29

Family

ID=42697511

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
PCT/US2010/038488 WO2010151447A1 (en) 2009-06-23 2010-06-14 Functionalized nonwoven article

Country Status (6)

Country Link
US (2) US8329034B2 (en)
EP (1) EP2446077B1 (en)
JP (1) JP2012531531A (en)
CN (1) CN102803593A (en)
BR (1) BRPI1011747A2 (en)
WO (1) WO2010151447A1 (en)

Cited By (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO2012143464A1 (en) 2011-04-19 2012-10-26 Ar Metallizing N.V. Antimicrobial nonwoven fabric
WO2014024618A1 (en) * 2012-08-09 2014-02-13 住友電気工業株式会社 Liquid filter device and ballast water treatment device using same
JP2014523247A (en) * 2011-07-08 2014-09-11 イー・エム・デイー・ミリポア・コーポレイシヨン Improved depth filter for disposable biotechnology methods
US8906645B2 (en) 2010-12-29 2014-12-09 3M Innovative Properties Company Microbial detection article having a water-absorbent filter assembly
JP2015520026A (en) * 2012-06-06 2015-07-16 イー・エム・デイー・ミリポア・コーポレイシヨン Low organic extract depth filter media processed by solvent extraction method
EP2670959B1 (en) 2011-02-03 2016-09-14 Mahle International GmbH Urea filter material
US9907702B2 (en) 2011-08-17 2018-03-06 3M Innovative Properties Company Monomer-grafted fibers and uses thereof
US11439933B2 (en) 2013-08-30 2022-09-13 Emd Millipore Corporation High capacity composite depth filter media with low extractables

Families Citing this family (37)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
JP2011523965A (en) 2008-05-30 2011-08-25 スリーエム イノベイティブ プロパティズ カンパニー Ligand functionalized substrate
EP2522692B1 (en) 2008-05-30 2014-06-18 3M Innovative Properties Company Ligand monomers and copolymers made therewith
CN102803593A (en) * 2009-06-23 2012-11-28 3M创新有限公司 Functionalized nonwoven article
US8377672B2 (en) 2010-02-18 2013-02-19 3M Innovative Properties Company Ligand functionalized polymers
EP2889625B1 (en) 2010-03-03 2016-09-14 3M Innovative Properties Company Ligand guanidinyl functionalized polymers
US10155186B2 (en) * 2010-12-17 2018-12-18 Hollingsworth & Vose Company Fine fiber filter media and processes
WO2013162695A1 (en) 2012-04-24 2013-10-31 3M Innovative Properties Company Nonwoven article gafter with copolymer
RU2015114330A (en) 2012-09-17 2016-11-10 У.Р. Грейс Энд Ко.-Конн. CHROMATOGRAPHIC MEDIA AND DEVICES
JP2014065022A (en) * 2012-09-27 2014-04-17 Toshiba Corp Desalination treatment membrane
CN104936671B (en) * 2012-12-10 2018-01-02 Emd密理博公司 Super porous nanofiber mat and application thereof
CN103071339B (en) * 2013-01-31 2015-07-01 孙熙 Fabrication method of needling/spunlace and electrostatic spinning compound filtering material
JP5752775B2 (en) * 2013-03-04 2015-07-22 株式会社finetrack Long fiber nonwoven fabric and laminated fabric having the long fiber nonwoven fabric
WO2015034799A1 (en) * 2013-09-03 2015-03-12 3M Innovative Properties Company Melt-spinning process, melt-spun nonwoven fibrous webs and related filtration media
US11229896B2 (en) 2014-01-16 2022-01-25 W.R. Grace & Co.—Conn. Affinity chromatography media and chromatography devices
CN107847907A (en) 2014-05-02 2018-03-27 格雷斯公司 Functionalised supports' material and preparation and the method using functionalised supports' material
CN111668430A (en) 2014-05-13 2020-09-15 赛尔格有限责任公司 Functionalized porous membranes and methods of making and using the same
US20170296952A1 (en) * 2014-05-19 2017-10-19 Mycropore Corporation Ltd. Method for pre-wetting pp filter for filtering slurry and pp filter package
US9737855B2 (en) * 2014-06-17 2017-08-22 W. L. Gore & Associates, Inc. Filtration article containing a filtration material containing fibrous layers having different lengths
JP2016068040A (en) * 2014-09-30 2016-05-09 スリーエム イノベイティブ プロパティズ カンパニー Charging filter
JP6470031B2 (en) * 2014-12-19 2019-02-13 国立大学法人福井大学 Method for producing grafted polymer substrate
JP6709799B2 (en) 2015-03-24 2020-06-17 スリーエム イノベイティブ プロパティズ カンパニー Method for purifying biological composition and article therefor
ES2896897T3 (en) 2015-06-05 2022-02-28 Grace W R & Co Clarifying agents for the bioprocessing of adsorbents and methods for producing and using the same
US10561972B2 (en) 2015-09-18 2020-02-18 Hollingsworth & Vose Company Filter media including a waved filtration layer
US10449474B2 (en) * 2015-09-18 2019-10-22 Hollingsworth & Vose Company Filter media including a waved filtration layer
EP3365095A1 (en) * 2015-10-23 2018-08-29 3M Innovative Properties Company Filtration medium sequence for biomaterial purification
US20170298092A1 (en) * 2016-04-19 2017-10-19 Clarcor Inc. Fine fiber web with chemically functional species
US10676614B2 (en) 2016-04-20 2020-06-09 Clarcor Inc. High molecular and low molecular weight fine fibers and TPU fine fibers
DE102016212056A1 (en) * 2016-07-01 2018-01-04 Mahle International Gmbh Filter medium and method for producing such a filter medium
US10814261B2 (en) 2017-02-21 2020-10-27 Hollingsworth & Vose Company Electret-containing filter media
US11077394B2 (en) 2017-02-21 2021-08-03 Hollingsworth & Vose Company Electret-containing filter media
JP6811647B2 (en) * 2017-03-03 2021-01-13 住友化学株式会社 Non-woven
US10322562B2 (en) * 2017-07-27 2019-06-18 Hollingsworth & Vose Company Medical protective clothing materials
DE102018004521A1 (en) 2018-06-07 2019-12-12 Sartorius Stedim Biotech Gmbh Serial arrangement with multiple layers of asymmetric filter media, manufacturing process, filtration unit, use of the array, and characterization procedures
US11420143B2 (en) 2018-11-05 2022-08-23 Hollingsworth & Vose Company Filter media with irregular structure and/or reversibly stretchable layers
US11433332B2 (en) 2018-11-05 2022-09-06 Hollingsworth & Vose Company Filter media with irregular structure
US11801477B2 (en) 2020-09-08 2023-10-31 Sunflower Therapeutics, Pbc Cell retention device
CN112495191A (en) * 2020-10-31 2021-03-16 上海师范大学 Three-dimensional modified polymer filter membrane material and preparation method and application thereof

Citations (30)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3849241A (en) 1968-12-23 1974-11-19 Exxon Research Engineering Co Non-woven mats by melt blowing
US3876738A (en) 1973-07-18 1975-04-08 Amf Inc Process for producing microporous films and products
US4118531A (en) 1976-08-02 1978-10-03 Minnesota Mining And Manufacturing Company Web of blended microfibers and crimped bulking fibers
US4157418A (en) 1978-02-08 1979-06-05 Minnesota Mining And Manufacturing Company Acrylic functional aminocarboxylic acids and derivatives as components of pressure sensitive adhesives
US4473474A (en) 1980-10-27 1984-09-25 Amf Inc. Charge modified microporous membrane, process for charge modifying said membrane and process for filtration of fluid
US4707265A (en) 1981-12-18 1987-11-17 Cuno Incorporated Reinforced microporous membrane
US4936934A (en) 1988-08-08 1990-06-26 Accurate Products Co. Process and apparatus for collecting nonwoven web
US5006247A (en) 1989-08-15 1991-04-09 Minnesota Mining And Manufacturing Company Asymmetric porous polyamide membranes
JPH05111607A (en) * 1991-10-23 1993-05-07 Japan Atom Energy Res Inst Air filter for automobile
US5648400A (en) * 1992-08-04 1997-07-15 Japan Atomic Energy Research Inst. Process for producing polymeric electrolyte complex and ion-exchange resin
US6056529A (en) 1998-02-11 2000-05-02 Cuno, Inc. Systems for producing a plurality of different microporous phase inversion membrane each having any one of a plurality of different pore sizes from a single master dope batch
US6230776B1 (en) 1998-10-21 2001-05-15 Aaf International, Inc. Apparatus for forming fibrous filter media
US6264044B1 (en) 1997-04-11 2001-07-24 Cuno, Inc. Reinforced, three zone microporous membrane
US6315130B1 (en) 1999-01-07 2001-11-13 Cuno Incorporated Pleated filter element
US6391200B2 (en) 1998-10-05 2002-05-21 Cuno Incorporated Filter and method of filtering a fluid
US6413070B1 (en) 1997-04-11 2002-07-02 Cuno Incorporated System for manufacturing reinforced three-zone microporous membrane
US6458269B1 (en) 2000-04-20 2002-10-01 Cuno Incorporated Keyed filter assembly
US6464084B2 (en) 1998-08-17 2002-10-15 Cuno Incorporated Edge seal for filter cartridge
US6521011B1 (en) 1999-07-15 2003-02-18 3M Innovative Properties Company Self-supporting pleated filter and method of making same
WO2004002714A1 (en) 2002-06-28 2004-01-08 Contitech Luftfedersysteme Gmbh Device and method for the continuous production of tubular structures that are reinforced with a strengthening support
US6712966B1 (en) 1999-02-04 2004-03-30 Cuno Incorporated Graded particle-size retention filter medium for cell-type filter unit
US20040116026A1 (en) 2002-12-05 2004-06-17 Filter Materials, Inc. Charged synthetic nonwoven filtration media and method for producing same
US6939466B2 (en) 1998-08-17 2005-09-06 Cuno Incorporated Graded particle-size retention filter medium for fluid filtration unit with improved edge seal
US7112389B1 (en) 2005-09-30 2006-09-26 E. I. Du Pont De Nemours And Company Batteries including improved fine fiber separators
USRE39399E1 (en) 1998-03-13 2006-11-14 Nordson Corporation Segmented die for applying hot melt adhesives or other polymer melts
US7170739B1 (en) 2005-09-30 2007-01-30 E.I. Du Pont De Nemours And Company Electrochemical double layer capacitors including improved nanofiber separators
US7235122B2 (en) 2004-11-08 2007-06-26 E. I. Du Pont De Nemours And Company Filtration media for filtering particulate material from gas streams
US20070154651A1 (en) * 2005-12-30 2007-07-05 3M Innovative Properties Company Method of making functionalized substrates
US7374416B2 (en) 2003-11-21 2008-05-20 Kimberly-Clark Worldwide, Inc. Apparatus and method for controlled width extrusion of filamentary curtain
US20090020472A1 (en) 2007-07-19 2009-01-22 3M Innovative Properties Company Pleated filter

Family Cites Families (156)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1529256A (en) 1924-11-11 1925-03-10 Bethlehem Foundry & Machine Co Rabble and rabble arm for metallurgical furnaces
US3088791A (en) * 1959-02-06 1963-05-07 Du Pont Graft polymerization of a vinyl monomer to a polymeric substrate by low temperature irradiation
US3170892A (en) * 1960-04-29 1965-02-23 Du Pont Graft polymers with polysulfone grafts and their preparation
US3352424A (en) 1964-02-07 1967-11-14 Dow Chemical Co Coated filter aids
US3565780A (en) * 1966-09-12 1971-02-23 Du Pont Process for the preparation of graft copolymers using repetitive irradiation and contacting steps
US3711389A (en) * 1969-07-15 1973-01-16 Moleculon Res Corp Process for treating polymeric substrates with high-energy radiation
US3606993A (en) * 1969-07-18 1971-09-21 Us Agriculture Durable press cotton textile products produced conducting graft copolymerization process followed by cross-linking with dmdheu
US4346142A (en) 1979-09-04 1982-08-24 Celanese Corporation Hydrophilic monomer treated microporous films and process
US5075342A (en) 1980-08-08 1991-12-24 Japan Atomic Energy Research Institute Process for producing an ion exchange membrane by grafting non ion-selective monomers onto a ion exchange
US4339473A (en) 1980-08-28 1982-07-13 Rai Research Corporation Gamma radiation grafting process for preparing separator membranes for electrochemical cells
US4340057A (en) 1980-12-24 1982-07-20 S. C. Johnson & Son, Inc. Radiation induced graft polymerization
US4734208A (en) 1981-10-19 1988-03-29 Pall Corporation Charge-modified microfiber filter sheets
DE3146913C2 (en) 1981-11-26 1983-10-06 C.A. Weidmueller Gmbh & Co, 4930 Detmold Cross connector
UST103601I4 (en) 1981-12-28 1983-11-01 Process for preparation of microporous membranes of controlled flow characteristics
US4539256A (en) 1982-09-09 1985-09-03 Minnesota Mining And Manufacturing Co. Microporous sheet material, method of making and articles made therewith
US4451619A (en) 1982-09-30 1984-05-29 Minnesota Mining And Manufacturing Company Method of hydrophilizing or hydrophobizing polymers
US4563388A (en) 1983-03-28 1986-01-07 Minnesota Mining And Manufacturing Company Polyolefin substrate coated with acrylic-type normally tacky and pressure-sensitive adhesive and a method of making same
US4618533A (en) 1984-11-30 1986-10-21 Millipore Corporation Porous membrane having hydrophilic surface and process
US4985298A (en) 1984-12-31 1991-01-15 Minnesota Mining And Manufacturing Company Absorbent nonwoven webs
US4810567A (en) * 1985-08-21 1989-03-07 Uop Antimicrobial fabrics utilizing graft copolymers
JPS62298405A (en) 1986-06-17 1987-12-25 Asahi Chem Ind Co Ltd Microporous membrane made of graft polymer
US4726989A (en) 1986-12-11 1988-02-23 Minnesota Mining And Manufacturing Microporous materials incorporating a nucleating agent and methods for making same
JPS63240902A (en) 1987-03-30 1988-10-06 Asahi Chem Ind Co Ltd Treating method
US6387379B1 (en) 1987-04-10 2002-05-14 University Of Florida Biofunctional surface modified ocular implants, surgical instruments, medical devices, prostheses, contact lenses and the like
US4773903A (en) 1987-06-02 1988-09-27 The Procter & Gamble Co. Composite absorbent structures
US4837067A (en) 1987-06-08 1989-06-06 Minnesota Mining And Manufacturing Company Nonwoven thermal insulating batts
JPH0829234B2 (en) 1987-07-27 1996-03-27 旭化成工業株式会社 Hydrophilic microporous membrane
US4867881A (en) 1987-09-14 1989-09-19 Minnesota Minning And Manufacturing Company Orientied microporous film
US4769273A (en) 1987-12-28 1988-09-06 E. I. Du Pont De Nemours And Company Bicomponent moisture barrier poly(etherimide) ester films
JPH03503379A (en) 1988-03-23 1991-08-01 イー・アイ・デユポン・デ・ニモアス・アンド・カンパニー Low friction coefficient surface
CA1314666C (en) 1988-06-13 1993-03-23 Kazuo Toyomoto Selectively ion-adsorptive, porous membrane
DE3829766A1 (en) 1988-09-01 1990-03-22 Akzo Gmbh METHOD FOR PRODUCING MEMBRANES
JP2749094B2 (en) 1989-01-13 1998-05-13 日本原子力研究所 Method for producing multifunctional filtration membrane having iminodiacetic acid group
US5202025A (en) 1989-04-12 1993-04-13 Terumo Kabushiki Kaisha Porous membrane and method for preparing the same
CA2014203C (en) * 1989-05-08 2000-03-21 Margaret Gwyn Latimer Absorbent structure having improved fluid surge management and product incorporating same
US4981730A (en) 1989-05-19 1991-01-01 Man-Gill Chemical Company Low VOC aqueous coating compositions and coated substrates
US5061751A (en) 1989-06-02 1991-10-29 Exxon Chemical Patents Inc. Vinylpyrrolidone grafted polyolefins in polymer blends and composites
JP2874029B2 (en) 1989-06-21 1999-03-24 テルモ株式会社 Medical material, method for producing the same, and medical instrument using the same
US5180492A (en) 1989-07-21 1993-01-19 Terumo Kabushiki Kaisha Hydrophilic porous material sterilizable with gamma-ray
US4944879A (en) 1989-07-27 1990-07-31 Millipore Corporation Membrane having hydrophilic surface
US5133878A (en) 1989-11-17 1992-07-28 Pall Corporation Polymeric microfiber filter medium
US5120594A (en) 1989-11-20 1992-06-09 Minnesota Mining And Manufacturing Company Microporous polyolefin shaped articles with patterned surface areas of different porosity
US5160627A (en) 1990-10-17 1992-11-03 Hoechst Celanese Corporation Process for making microporous membranes having gel-filled pores, and separations methods using such membranes
US5804263A (en) 1990-10-24 1998-09-08 University Of Florida Research Foundation, Inc. Combined plasma and gamma radiation polymerization method for modifying surfaces
US5443727A (en) 1990-10-30 1995-08-22 Minnesota Mining And Manufacturing Company Articles having a polymeric shell and method for preparing same
US5214117A (en) 1990-12-20 1993-05-25 Phillips Petroleum Company Grafted copolymers highly absorbent to aqueous electrolyte solutions
US5206326A (en) 1991-03-07 1993-04-27 Phillips Petroleum Company Grafted copolymers highly absorbent to aqueous electrolyte solutions
US5217798A (en) 1991-05-07 1993-06-08 National Starch And Chemical Investment Holding Corporation Water sensitive hot melt adhesives for nonwoven applications
US6743878B2 (en) 1991-07-05 2004-06-01 Biocompatibles Uk Limited Polymeric surface coatings
GB9118597D0 (en) 1991-08-30 1991-10-16 Biocompatibles Ltd Polymer treatments
US5260360A (en) 1991-10-18 1993-11-09 Minnesota Mining And Manufacturing Company Oil, water and sweat repellent microporous membrane materials
US5209849A (en) 1992-04-24 1993-05-11 Gelman Sciences Inc. Hydrophilic microporous polyolefin membrane
US5344701A (en) 1992-06-09 1994-09-06 Minnesota Mining And Manufacturing Company Porous supports having azlactone-functional surfaces
US5906734A (en) 1992-06-19 1999-05-25 Biosepra Inc. Passivated porous polymer supports and methods for the preparation and use of same
US5547576A (en) 1992-07-06 1996-08-20 Terumo Kabushiki Kaisha Pathogenic substance removing material and a blood filter containing the material
FR2694842B1 (en) 1992-08-11 1994-09-30 Accumulateurs Fixes Grafted microporous separator for an electrochemical generator and its manufacturing process.
JP3466610B2 (en) 1992-10-13 2003-11-17 エセックス スペシャルティ プロダクツ インコーポレーテッド Polyurethane sealant composition
US5308641A (en) 1993-01-19 1994-05-03 Medtronic, Inc. Biocompatibility of solid surfaces
US5229172A (en) 1993-01-19 1993-07-20 Medtronic, Inc. Modification of polymeric surface by graft polymerization
CZ4294A3 (en) 1993-01-21 1994-11-16 Minnesota Mining & Mfg Crosslinkable polymer carrier with isocyanate functional groups, process of its preparation, a supported catalyst based thereon and method of its use
CA2153319C (en) 1993-01-29 2003-11-11 Bert J. Exsted Thermally induced phase separated azlactone membrane
US5282971A (en) 1993-05-11 1994-02-01 Pall Corporation Positively charged polyvinylidene fluoride membrane
US5350805A (en) 1993-06-10 1994-09-27 Koch Membrane Systems, Inc. Epoxide-direct grafted halogenated vinyl polymers
US5627217A (en) 1993-06-29 1997-05-06 Minnesota Mining And Manufacturing Company Interfacial polymerization in a porous substrate and substrates functionalized with photochemical groups
US5506279A (en) 1993-10-13 1996-04-09 Minnesota Mining And Manufacturing Company Acrylamido functional disubstituted acetyl aryl ketone photoinitiators
CA2128296A1 (en) 1993-12-22 1995-06-23 Peter John Degen Polyvinylidene fluoride membrane
US5531900A (en) 1994-07-07 1996-07-02 University Of Arizona Modification of polyvinylidene fluoride membrane and method of filtering
US5582907A (en) 1994-07-28 1996-12-10 Pall Corporation Melt-blown fibrous web
WO1996004346A1 (en) 1994-07-29 1996-02-15 Minnesota Mining And Manufacturing Company Acrylic syrup curable to a crosslinked viscoelastomeric material
JPH08290066A (en) 1995-04-24 1996-11-05 Nisshin Flour Milling Co Ltd Functional membrane and manufacture thereof
US5607475A (en) 1995-08-22 1997-03-04 Medtronic, Inc. Biocompatible medical article and method
US5912274A (en) 1995-09-22 1999-06-15 Colgate-Palmolive Company Antiplaque oral composition and method
US6509098B1 (en) 1995-11-17 2003-01-21 Massachusetts Institute Of Technology Poly(ethylene oxide) coated surfaces
US5962544A (en) 1995-12-07 1999-10-05 3M Microporous materials of ethylene-vinyl alcohol copolymer and methods for making same
US6033719A (en) 1996-04-25 2000-03-07 Medtronic, Inc. Method for covalent attachment of biomolecules to surfaces of medical devices
US5925552A (en) 1996-04-25 1999-07-20 Medtronic, Inc. Method for attachment of biomolecules to medical devices surfaces
US5914182A (en) 1996-06-03 1999-06-22 Gore Hybrid Technologies, Inc. Materials and methods for the immobilization of bioactive species onto polymeric substrates
EP0814116A1 (en) 1996-06-19 1997-12-29 Hüls Aktiengesellschaft Hydrophilic coating of polymeric substrate surfaces
JPH1085572A (en) 1996-09-13 1998-04-07 Toto Ltd Filter membrane and its manufacture
US6258276B1 (en) 1996-10-18 2001-07-10 Mcmaster University Microporous membranes and uses thereof
JP3485234B2 (en) 1997-04-04 2004-01-13 株式会社荏原製作所 Anion exchanger, method for producing the same, and chemical filter
DE19727554A1 (en) 1997-06-28 1999-01-07 Huels Chemische Werke Ag Process for hydrophilizing the surface of polymeric substrates using a macroinitiator as a primer
US6039872A (en) 1997-10-27 2000-03-21 Pall Corporation Hydrophilic membrane
GB9814394D0 (en) 1998-07-03 1998-09-02 Scimat Ltd A gas filter element
JP3787596B2 (en) * 1998-08-12 2006-06-21 株式会社荏原製作所 Radiation graft polymerization substrate and filter material
US6287730B1 (en) 1998-08-14 2001-09-11 Celgard Inc. Hydrophilic polyolefin having a coating containing a surfactant and an EVOH copolymer
US6632518B1 (en) 1998-10-14 2003-10-14 E. I. Du Pont De Nemours And Company Fluoropolymer film structures and laminates produced therefrom
WO2000054866A1 (en) 1999-03-17 2000-09-21 Foster-Miller, Inc. Responsive gels and methods of use thereof
JP2001224928A (en) * 1999-06-03 2001-08-21 Fuji Photo Film Co Ltd Filter cartridge for precision filtration
US6280853B1 (en) 1999-06-10 2001-08-28 The Dow Chemical Company Composite membrane with polyalkylene oxide modified polyamide surface
SG87814A1 (en) 1999-06-29 2002-04-16 Univ Singapore Method for low temperature lamination of metals to polyimides
EP1131167B1 (en) 1999-09-22 2004-07-07 SurModics, Inc. Water-soluble coating agents bearing initiator groups and coating process
EP1228756A4 (en) 1999-10-06 2004-06-09 Kurokawa Kiyoshi Agents for relieving carbonyl stress
JP4064046B2 (en) 1999-10-21 2008-03-19 株式会社荏原製作所 Organic polymer material, method for producing the same, and heavy metal ion removing agent composed thereof
JP3708398B2 (en) 1999-10-21 2005-10-19 株式会社荏原製作所 Functional separation material
WO2001040448A1 (en) 1999-12-02 2001-06-07 The General Hospital Corporation Methods for removal, purification, and concentration of viruses, and methods of therapy based thereupon
EP1279697A4 (en) 1999-12-10 2006-06-28 Yupo Corp Porous resin film
US6660376B1 (en) 2000-06-06 2003-12-09 H. B. Fuller Licensing & Financing Inc. Method of bonding permeable substrates with hot melt moisture cure adhesive having low viscosity and high green strength
JP2002001886A (en) 2000-06-09 2002-01-08 Three M Innovative Properties Co Fluoroplastic material sheet made possible to be adhered, adhesive fluoroplastic material sheet, and adhesion method and adhesion structure of fluoroplastic material sheet
US6448301B1 (en) 2000-09-08 2002-09-10 3M Innovative Properties Company Crosslinkable polymeric compositions and use thereof
EP1325062B1 (en) 2000-10-05 2006-12-27 Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Uv-assisted grafting of pes membranes
CA2428280A1 (en) 2000-11-13 2002-05-16 Mcmaster University Gas separation device
US7048855B2 (en) 2000-12-22 2006-05-23 Ge Osmonics, Inc. Cross flow filtration materials and cartridges
US6632470B2 (en) 2001-01-31 2003-10-14 Percardia Methods for surface modification
WO2002064654A1 (en) 2001-02-09 2002-08-22 Reika Kogyo Kabushiki Kaisha Functional particle and method for preparation thereof and method of plasma treatment
US6596167B2 (en) 2001-03-26 2003-07-22 Koch Membrane Systems, Inc. Hydrophilic hollow fiber ultrafiltration membranes that include a hydrophobic polymer and a method of making these membranes
WO2003008011A1 (en) 2001-04-27 2003-01-30 Millipore Corporation Crosslinked multipolymer coating
JP2002371471A (en) 2001-06-11 2002-12-26 Showa Denko Kk Porous base material made of hydrophilicity-given polyolefin resin and method for producing the same
DE60212637T2 (en) 2001-07-20 2007-05-24 Mcmaster University, Hamilton ASYMMETRIC FILLED MICROPOROUS MEMBRANES
US6506847B1 (en) 2001-08-08 2003-01-14 Basell Poliolefine Italia S.P.A. Controlling the molecular weight of graft copolymers using polymerizable chain transfer agents
US7094469B2 (en) 2001-08-28 2006-08-22 Mykrolis Corporation Porous or non-porous substrate coated with an immobilized polymeric composition having sulfonyl groups and hydrophilic functional groups and process
US6878419B2 (en) 2001-12-14 2005-04-12 3M Innovative Properties Co. Plasma treatment of porous materials
US7204997B2 (en) 2002-01-29 2007-04-17 Supratek Pharma Inc. Responsive microgel and methods related thereto
JP4020247B2 (en) 2002-04-11 2007-12-12 財団法人理工学振興会 Polymer graft substrate manufacturing method
AU2003232536A1 (en) 2002-05-07 2003-11-11 Mcmaster University Microcapsules containing biomedical materials
US7073671B2 (en) 2002-06-07 2006-07-11 Millipore Corporation Microporous membrane substrate having caustic stable, low protein binding surface
JP2004073943A (en) 2002-08-13 2004-03-11 Asahi Kasei Chemicals Corp Enzyme immobilized film
CA2497530C (en) 2002-09-03 2011-04-12 Whatman Plc Porous composite membrane and method for making the same
KR101049667B1 (en) 2002-09-17 2011-07-14 이 아이 듀폰 디 네모아 앤드 캄파니 Highly liquid barrier fabric
US6828386B2 (en) 2002-09-20 2004-12-07 Ballard Power Systems Inc. Process for preparing graft copolymers and membranes formed therefrom
CA2502577C (en) 2002-10-18 2008-11-04 Asahi Kasei Pharma Corporation Hydrophilic microporous membrane
JP5189286B2 (en) 2003-02-19 2013-04-24 ナトリックス セパレイションズ インコーポレーテッド COMPOSITE MATERIAL COMPRISING SUPPORTED POROUS GEL
US20070042015A1 (en) 2003-02-20 2007-02-22 Berry Leslie R Coating composition for polymeric surfaces comprising serpin or serpin derivatives
US7067058B2 (en) 2003-04-01 2006-06-27 3M Innovative Properties Company Hydrophilic membrane and process for making the same
JP2004330056A (en) 2003-05-07 2004-11-25 Ebara Corp Filter cartridge for electronic element substrate surface treatment liquid
US7338692B2 (en) 2003-09-12 2008-03-04 3M Innovative Properties Company Microporous PVDF films
US7361767B2 (en) 2003-11-14 2008-04-22 3M Innovative Properties Company N-sulfonyldicarboximide containing tethering compounds
US7169933B2 (en) 2003-11-14 2007-01-30 3M Innovative Properties Company N-sulfonylaminocarbonyl containing compounds
US20050147824A1 (en) * 2003-12-30 2005-07-07 Kimberly-Clark Worldwide, Inc. Surface initiated graft polymerization
US7402678B2 (en) 2004-12-17 2008-07-22 3M Innovative Properties Company Multifunctional amine capture agents
KR20060113747A (en) 2003-12-30 2006-11-02 쓰리엠 이노베이티브 프로퍼티즈 컴파니 Substrates and compounds bonded thereto
US7658994B2 (en) 2003-12-30 2010-02-09 3M Innovative Properties Company Substrates and compounds bonded thereto
US7074839B2 (en) * 2004-03-01 2006-07-11 3M Innovative Properties Company Crosslinkable hydrophilic materials from reactive oligomers having pendent photoinitiator groups
AU2005231532B2 (en) 2004-04-08 2010-01-07 Merck Millipore Ltd. Membrane stacks
US7604746B2 (en) 2004-04-27 2009-10-20 Mcmaster University Pervaporation composite membranes
CA2564413C (en) 2004-06-07 2013-10-01 Mcmaster University Stable composite material comprising supported porous gels
TWI323462B (en) 2004-07-02 2010-04-11 Koltek Inc Operating method for dynamic random access memory
BRPI0514294B8 (en) 2004-08-13 2018-12-11 Univ Mcmaster composite material, process for preparing it, and method for removing a material from an aqueous solution
JP4805939B2 (en) * 2004-09-30 2011-11-02 マクマスター ユニバーシティー Composite material comprising a multilayered hydrophilic coating layer
JP2008515668A (en) 2004-10-06 2008-05-15 ザ リサーチ ファウンデーション オブ ステイト ユニバーシティー オブ ニューヨーク High flow rate and low adhesion filtration media
JP2008516753A (en) 2004-10-15 2008-05-22 スリーエム イノベーティブ プロパティーズ カンパニー Pleated multilayer filter media and cartridge
US20060108277A1 (en) * 2004-11-19 2006-05-25 Fall Brian L Circumferentially pleated filter assembly and method of forming the same
DE102005005852A1 (en) 2005-02-08 2006-08-10 Carl Freudenberg Kg Nonwoven fabric, fiber and electrochemical cell
US7727434B2 (en) 2005-08-16 2010-06-01 General Electric Company Membranes and methods of treating membranes
US7441667B2 (en) * 2005-12-15 2008-10-28 E.I. Du Pont De Nemours And Company Composite membranes for liquid filtration having improved uniformity and adhesion of substrate to membrane
CN101405224B (en) 2006-03-22 2013-06-19 3M创新有限公司 Filter media
JP5082038B2 (en) 2007-03-23 2012-11-28 独立行政法人日本原子力研究開発機構 Graft-polymerized functional nonwoven fabric filter and method for producing the same
EP2036930A1 (en) 2007-09-12 2009-03-18 Institut National De La Recherche Agronomique (Inra) Copolymer-grafted polyolefin substrate having antimicrobial properties and method for grafting
US20090098359A1 (en) * 2007-10-11 2009-04-16 Waller Jr Clinton P Hydrophilic porous substrates
EP2231300B1 (en) 2007-12-21 2013-12-11 3M Innovative Properties Company Filter device
JP5670743B2 (en) 2007-12-27 2015-02-18 スリーエム イノベイティブ プロパティズ カンパニー Method for making functionalized films
US7917368B2 (en) 2008-02-25 2011-03-29 Mitsubishi Electric Research Laboratories, Inc. Method for interacting with users of speech recognition systems
DE102008055821A1 (en) 2008-04-14 2009-10-15 Sartorius Stedim Biotech Gmbh Cellulose hydrate membrane, process for its preparation and use thereof
BRPI0923565A2 (en) * 2008-12-23 2016-01-26 3M Innovative Properties Co functionalized nonwoven article
CN102803593A (en) * 2009-06-23 2012-11-28 3M创新有限公司 Functionalized nonwoven article
US8906645B2 (en) * 2010-12-29 2014-12-09 3M Innovative Properties Company Microbial detection article having a water-absorbent filter assembly

Patent Citations (33)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3849241A (en) 1968-12-23 1974-11-19 Exxon Research Engineering Co Non-woven mats by melt blowing
US3876738A (en) 1973-07-18 1975-04-08 Amf Inc Process for producing microporous films and products
US4118531A (en) 1976-08-02 1978-10-03 Minnesota Mining And Manufacturing Company Web of blended microfibers and crimped bulking fibers
US4157418A (en) 1978-02-08 1979-06-05 Minnesota Mining And Manufacturing Company Acrylic functional aminocarboxylic acids and derivatives as components of pressure sensitive adhesives
US4473474A (en) 1980-10-27 1984-09-25 Amf Inc. Charge modified microporous membrane, process for charge modifying said membrane and process for filtration of fluid
US4707265A (en) 1981-12-18 1987-11-17 Cuno Incorporated Reinforced microporous membrane
US4936934A (en) 1988-08-08 1990-06-26 Accurate Products Co. Process and apparatus for collecting nonwoven web
US5006247A (en) 1989-08-15 1991-04-09 Minnesota Mining And Manufacturing Company Asymmetric porous polyamide membranes
JPH05111607A (en) * 1991-10-23 1993-05-07 Japan Atom Energy Res Inst Air filter for automobile
US5648400A (en) * 1992-08-04 1997-07-15 Japan Atomic Energy Research Inst. Process for producing polymeric electrolyte complex and ion-exchange resin
US6264044B1 (en) 1997-04-11 2001-07-24 Cuno, Inc. Reinforced, three zone microporous membrane
US6513666B2 (en) 1997-04-11 2003-02-04 Cuno Incorporated Reinforced, three zone microporous membrane
US6776940B2 (en) 1997-04-11 2004-08-17 Cuno Incorporated Process for making a three-zone microporous membrane
US6413070B1 (en) 1997-04-11 2002-07-02 Cuno Incorporated System for manufacturing reinforced three-zone microporous membrane
US6056529A (en) 1998-02-11 2000-05-02 Cuno, Inc. Systems for producing a plurality of different microporous phase inversion membrane each having any one of a plurality of different pore sizes from a single master dope batch
USRE39399E1 (en) 1998-03-13 2006-11-14 Nordson Corporation Segmented die for applying hot melt adhesives or other polymer melts
US6939466B2 (en) 1998-08-17 2005-09-06 Cuno Incorporated Graded particle-size retention filter medium for fluid filtration unit with improved edge seal
US7178676B2 (en) 1998-08-17 2007-02-20 3M Innovative Properties Company Graded particle-size retention filter medium for fluid filtration unit with improved edge seal
US6464084B2 (en) 1998-08-17 2002-10-15 Cuno Incorporated Edge seal for filter cartridge
US6391200B2 (en) 1998-10-05 2002-05-21 Cuno Incorporated Filter and method of filtering a fluid
US6230776B1 (en) 1998-10-21 2001-05-15 Aaf International, Inc. Apparatus for forming fibrous filter media
US6315130B1 (en) 1999-01-07 2001-11-13 Cuno Incorporated Pleated filter element
US6712966B1 (en) 1999-02-04 2004-03-30 Cuno Incorporated Graded particle-size retention filter medium for cell-type filter unit
US6521011B1 (en) 1999-07-15 2003-02-18 3M Innovative Properties Company Self-supporting pleated filter and method of making same
US6458269B1 (en) 2000-04-20 2002-10-01 Cuno Incorporated Keyed filter assembly
WO2004002714A1 (en) 2002-06-28 2004-01-08 Contitech Luftfedersysteme Gmbh Device and method for the continuous production of tubular structures that are reinforced with a strengthening support
US20040116026A1 (en) 2002-12-05 2004-06-17 Filter Materials, Inc. Charged synthetic nonwoven filtration media and method for producing same
US7374416B2 (en) 2003-11-21 2008-05-20 Kimberly-Clark Worldwide, Inc. Apparatus and method for controlled width extrusion of filamentary curtain
US7235122B2 (en) 2004-11-08 2007-06-26 E. I. Du Pont De Nemours And Company Filtration media for filtering particulate material from gas streams
US7170739B1 (en) 2005-09-30 2007-01-30 E.I. Du Pont De Nemours And Company Electrochemical double layer capacitors including improved nanofiber separators
US7112389B1 (en) 2005-09-30 2006-09-26 E. I. Du Pont De Nemours And Company Batteries including improved fine fiber separators
US20070154651A1 (en) * 2005-12-30 2007-07-05 3M Innovative Properties Company Method of making functionalized substrates
US20090020472A1 (en) 2007-07-19 2009-01-22 3M Innovative Properties Company Pleated filter

Non-Patent Citations (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Title
WENTE: "Superfine Thermoplastic Fibers", INDUS. ENG. CHEM., vol. 48, 1956, pages 1342

Cited By (14)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US8906645B2 (en) 2010-12-29 2014-12-09 3M Innovative Properties Company Microbial detection article having a water-absorbent filter assembly
EP2670959B1 (en) 2011-02-03 2016-09-14 Mahle International GmbH Urea filter material
WO2012143464A1 (en) 2011-04-19 2012-10-26 Ar Metallizing N.V. Antimicrobial nonwoven fabric
EP2699726A1 (en) * 2011-04-19 2014-02-26 AR Metallizing N.V. Antimicrobial nonwoven fabric
US10786754B2 (en) 2011-07-08 2020-09-29 Emd Millipore Corporation Depth filters for disposable biotechnological processes
JP2014523247A (en) * 2011-07-08 2014-09-11 イー・エム・デイー・ミリポア・コーポレイシヨン Improved depth filter for disposable biotechnology methods
US11504646B2 (en) 2011-07-08 2022-11-22 Emd Millipore Corporation Depth filters for disposable biotechnological processes
US9907702B2 (en) 2011-08-17 2018-03-06 3M Innovative Properties Company Monomer-grafted fibers and uses thereof
JP2015520026A (en) * 2012-06-06 2015-07-16 イー・エム・デイー・ミリポア・コーポレイシヨン Low organic extract depth filter media processed by solvent extraction method
JP2014034002A (en) * 2012-08-09 2014-02-24 Sumitomo Electric Ind Ltd Liquid filtration apparatus and ballast water treatment apparatus using the same
WO2014024618A1 (en) * 2012-08-09 2014-02-13 住友電気工業株式会社 Liquid filter device and ballast water treatment device using same
US11439933B2 (en) 2013-08-30 2022-09-13 Emd Millipore Corporation High capacity composite depth filter media with low extractables
US11660555B2 (en) 2013-08-30 2023-05-30 Emd Millipore Corporation High capacity composite depth filter media with low extractables
US11772020B2 (en) 2013-08-30 2023-10-03 Emd Millipore Corporation High capacity composite depth filter media with low extractables

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
US20130122215A1 (en) 2013-05-16
JP2012531531A (en) 2012-12-10
CN102803593A (en) 2012-11-28
BRPI1011747A2 (en) 2018-02-27
US20100320138A1 (en) 2010-12-23
EP2446077A1 (en) 2012-05-02
US9259689B2 (en) 2016-02-16
US8329034B2 (en) 2012-12-11
EP2446077B1 (en) 2016-05-18

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US9259689B2 (en) Functionalized nonwoven article
US8328023B2 (en) Functionalized nonwoven article
US10017461B2 (en) Method of making ligand functionalized substrates
US8586338B2 (en) Ligand functionalized substrates
KR102043249B1 (en) Nonwoven article grafted with copolymer
He et al. 11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 ll uii lli

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 201080036306.2

Country of ref document: CN

121 Ep: the epo has been informed by wipo that ep was designated in this application

Ref document number: 10727308

Country of ref document: EP

Kind code of ref document: A1

DPE1 Request for preliminary examination filed after expiration of 19th month from priority date (pct application filed from 20040101)
WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 2012517572

Country of ref document: JP

NENP Non-entry into the national phase

Ref country code: DE

WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 9735/CHENP/2011

Country of ref document: IN

WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 2010727308

Country of ref document: EP

REG Reference to national code

Ref country code: BR

Ref legal event code: B01A

Ref document number: PI1011747

Country of ref document: BR

ENP Entry into the national phase

Ref document number: PI1011747

Country of ref document: BR

Kind code of ref document: A2

Effective date: 20111223