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Title:
INSULATING ELEMENT AND METHOD AND PLANT FOR PRODUCING AND PACKAGING
Document Type and Number:
WIPO Patent Application WO/1995/020708
Kind Code:
A1
Abstract:
A mineral fiber plate product is produced by producing a first non-woven mineral fiber web containing mineral fibers predominantly arranged in a first longitudinal direction and segments of the first mineral fiber web are arranged in a partly mutually overlapping relationship for producing a second non-woven mineral fiber web, which contains mineral fibers generally transversaly relative to one another. The second mineral fiber web is folded transversely for producing a third non-woven mineral fiber web. The third non-woven mineral fiber web is cured for producing a cured non-woven mineral fiber web from which a mineral fiber plate, or alternatively, a tubular insulating element is cut. In packaging, the volume of the mineral fiber plate may be reduced to 40 % - 60 %.

Inventors:
NOERGAARD LUIS JOERGEN (DK)
BRANDT KIM (DK)
CRIDLAND IAN (DK)
Application Number:
PCT/DK1995/000041
Publication Date:
August 03, 1995
Filing Date:
January 27, 1995
Export Citation:
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Assignee:
ROCKWOOL INT (DK)
NOERGAARD LUIS JOERGEN (DK)
BRANDT KIM (DK)
CRIDLAND IAN (DK)
International Classes:
B28B1/52; B32B1/08; B65B27/12; D04H1/4209; D04H1/4218; D04H1/4226; D04H1/76; D04H1/58; D04H1/593; D04H1/70; D04H1/732; D04H1/736; D04H1/74; D04H13/00; E04B1/76; E04B1/78; E04C2/16; F16L59/02; F16L59/05; F16L59/14; (IPC1-7): E04B1/78
Domestic Patent References:
WO1988000265A11988-01-14
WO1992010602A11992-06-25
WO1992010602A11992-06-25
Foreign References:
DK128526B1974-05-20
FR1276096A1961-11-17
EP0277500A21988-08-10
FR1309929A1962-11-23
DE2501045A11976-07-15
DE3501897A11986-07-24
US4552793A1985-11-12
US4128678A1978-12-05
Other References:
See also references of EP 0741827A1
Download PDF:
Claims:
PATENT CLAIMS
1. A method of producing a cured nonwoven mineral fiber web comprising the following steps: a) producing a first nonwoven mineral fiber web defining a first longitudinal direction parallel with said first mineral fiber web and a first transversal direction parallel with said first mineral fiber web, said first mineral fiber web containing mineral fibers predominantly ar¬ ranged generally in said first longitudinal direction thereof and inclu ding a first curable bonding agent, b) moving said first mineral fiber web in said first longitudinal direction, c) arranging segments of said first mineral fiber web in partly mu¬ tually overlapping relationship and transversely relative to said first longitudinal direction and said first transversal direction so as to produce a second nonwoven mineral fiber web, said second mineral fiber web defining a second longitudinal direction and a second transversal direction and containing ine al fibers predominantly arranged generally transversely relative to said second longitudinal direction and said se cond transversal direction and generally transversely relative to one another, d) moving said second mineral fiber web in said second longitudinal direction, e) folding said second mineral fiber web transversely relative to said second longitudinal direction and parallel with said second trans¬ versal direction so as to produce a third nonwoven mineral fiber web, said third mineral fiber web containing mineral fibers predominantly ar¬ ranged generally transversely relative to one another and generally transversely relative to said second longitudinal direction and said se cond transversal direction, f) moving said third nonwoven mineral fiber web in said second longitudinal direction, and g) curing said first curable bonding agent so as to cause said mi¬ neral fibers of said third mineral fiber web to bond to one another, thereby forming said cured nonwoven mineral fiber web.
2. The method according to Claim 1, said arranging of said seg¬ ments of said first mineral fiber web in partly mutually overlapping re lationship of step c) comprising the initial step of cutting said first mineral fiber web into said segments.
3. The method according to Claim 1, said arranging of said seg ments of said first mineral fiber web in partly mutually overlapping re¬ lationship of step c) comprising folding said segments of said first mi¬ neral fiber web transversely relative to said first longitudinal direc¬ tion and said first transversal direction.
4. The method according to any of the Claims 13, said arranging of said segments of said first mineral fiber web in partly mutually overlapping relationship of step c) being performed so as to position said segments of said first mineral fiber web along a direction defining an angle larger than 0° and smaller than 90° relative to said second transversal direction, such as an angle of the order of 1060°, prefera¬ bly of the order of 2050°.
5. The method according to any of the Claims 14, said folding of said second mineral fiber web of step e) being performed as a transverse folding relative to said second longitudinal direction.
6. The method according to any of the Claims 15, said first mi¬ neral fiber web being a mineral fiber web of a low area weight, such as 2 2 an area weight of 0.11.0 kg/m , preferably 0.20.6 kg/m .
7. The method according to any of the Claims 16, said second mi¬ neral fiber web being a mineral fiber web of an area weight of the order of 0.33.0 kg/m2, preferably 0.52.0 kg/m2.
8. The method according to any of the Claims 17, further compri¬ sing the additional step of height compressing said second mineral fiber web produced in step c).
9. The method according to any of the Claims 18, further compri sing the additional step of longitudinally compressing said second mine¬ ral fiber web produced in step c).
10. The method according to any of the Claims 19, further compri sing the additional step of transversally compressing said second mine¬ ral fiber web produced in step c).
11. The method according to any of the Claims 110, further co prising the additional step of height compressing said third mineral fi ber web produced in step e).
12. The method according to any of the Claims 111, further com¬ prising the additional step of longitudinally compressing said third mi neral fiber web produced in step e).
13. The method according to any of the Claims 112, further com¬ prising the additional step of transversally compressing said third mi¬ neral fiber web produced in step e).
14. The method according to any of the Claims 113, said folding of said second mineral fiber web of step e) comprising the step of pro¬ ducing undulations extending perpendicular to said second longitudinal direction and parallel with said second transversal direction.
15. The method according to any of the Claims 114, further com¬ prising the following steps substituting step g): h) producing a fourth nonwoven mineral fiber web defining a third longitudinal direction parallel with said fourth mineral fiber web, said fourth mineral fiber web containing mineral fibers and including a se¬ cond curable bonding agent, said fourth mineral fiber web being a mine¬ ral fiber web of a higher compactness as compared to said third mineral fiber web, i) adjoining said fourth mineral fiber web to said third mineral fiber web in facial contact therewith for producing a fifth composite mineral fiber web, and j) curing said first and second curable bonding agents so as to cause said mineral fibers of said fifth composite mineral fiber web to bond to one another, thereby forming said cured nonwoven mineral fiber web.
16. The method according to Claim 15, said fourth mineral fiber web being produced by separating a separate layer of said first mineral fiber web therefrom and by compacting said separate layer for producing said fourth mineral fiber web.
17. The method according to Claim 15, said fourth mineral fiber web being produced by separating a separate layer of said second mineral fiber web therefrom and by compacting said separate layer for producing said fourth mineral fiber web.
18. The method according to Claim 15, said fourth mineral fiber web being produced by separating a separate layer of said third mineral fiber web therefrom and by compacting said separate layer for producing said fourth mineral fiber web.
19. The method according to Claim 16, said compacting of said se parate layer comprising the step of folding said separate layer so as to produce said fourth mineral fiber web containing mineral fibers predomi¬ nantly arranged generally transversely relative to said third longitudi¬ nal direction of said fourth mineral fiber web.
20. ".
21. The method according to any of the Claims 1519, comprising the additional step similar to the step h) of producing a sixth nonwo¬ ven mineral fiber web similar to said fourth mineral fiber web, and the step of adjoining in step i) said sixth mineral fiber web to said third mineral fiber web in facial contact therewith so as to sandwich said third mineral fiber web between said fourth and sixth mineral fiber webs in said fifth composite mineral fiber web.
22. The method according to any of the Claims 1520, said third longitudinal direction being perpendicular to said second longitudinal direction.
23. The method according to any of the Claims 1520, said third longitudinal direction being identical to said second longitudinal di¬ rection.
24. The method according to any of the Claims 1522, comprising the additional step of compressing said fifth composite mineral fiber web prior to curing said fifth composite mineral fiber web in step j).
25. The method according to any of the Claims 123, further com¬ prising the following steps prior to step e): k) producing a seventh nonwoven mineral fiber web defining a fourth longitudinal direction parallel with said seventh mineral fiber web, said seventh mineral fiber web containing mineral fibers and inclu¬ ding a third curable bonding agent, said seventh mineral fiber web being a mineral fiber web of a higher compactness as compared to said second mineral fiber web, and 1) adjoining said seventh mineral fiber web to said second mineral fiber web produced in step c) in facial contact therewith, prior to step e), for producing an eighth composite mineral fiber web to be folded in step e) for producing said third nonwoven mineral fiber web, and step g) also including curing said third curable bonding agent.
26. The method according to Claim 24, said seventh mineral fiber web being produced by separating a separate layer of said first mineral fiber web therefrom and by compacting said separate layer for producing said seventh mineral fiber web.
27. The method according to Claim 24, said seventh mineral fiber web being produced by separating a separate layer of said second mineral fiber web therefrom and by compacting said separate layer for producing said seventh mineral fiber web.
28. The method according to Claim 25, said compacting of said se¬ parate layer comprising the step of folding said separate layer so as to produce said seventh mineral fiber web containing mineral fibers predo¬ minantly arranged generally transversely relative to said fourth longi tudinal direction of said seventh mineral fiber web.
29. The method according to any of the Claims 127, further com¬ prising the step of applying a covering to a side surface or both side surfaces of said third mineral fiber web.
30. The method according to any of the Claims 128, further com¬ prising the step of applying a covering to a side surface or both side surfaces of said fifth composite mineral fiber web.
31. The method according to any of the Claims 129, said curing being performed by means of a curing oven.
32. The method according to any of the Claims 130, further com¬ prising the step of cutting said cured nonwoven mineral fiber web into plate segments.
33. A plant for producing a cured nonwoven mineral fiber web comprising: a) first means for producing a first nonwoven mineral fiber web defining a first longitudinal direction parallel with said first mineral fiber web and a first transversal direction parallel with said first mi¬ neral fiber web, said first mineral fiber web containing mineral fibers predominantly arranged generally in said first longitudinal direction thereof and including a first curable bonding agent, b) second means for moving said first mineral fiber web in said first longitudinal direction, c) third means for arranging segments of said first mineral fiber web in partly mutually overlapping relationship transversely relative to said first longitudinal direction and said first transversal direction so as to produce a second nonwoven mineral fiber web, said second mine¬ ral fiber web defining a second longitudinal direction and a second transversal direction and containing mineral fibers predominantly ar ranged generally transversely relative to said second longitudinal di¬ rection and said second transversal direction and generally transversely relative to one another, d) fourth means for moving said second mineral fiber web in said second longitudinal direction, e) fifth means for folding said second mineral fiber web trans¬ versely relative to said second longitudinal direction and parallel with said second transversal direction so as to produce a third nonwoven mi¬ neral fiber web, said third mineral fiber web containing mineral fibers predominantly arranged generally transversely relative to one another and generally transversely relative to said second longitudinal direc¬ tion and said second transversal direction, f) sixth means for moving said third nonwoven mineral fiber web in said second longitudinal direction, and g) seventh means for curing said first curable bonding agent so as to cause said mineral fibers of said third mineral fiber web to bond to one another, thereby forming said cured nonwoven mineral fiber web.
34. The plant according to Claim 32, said third means for arran¬ ging said segments of said first mineral fiber web in partly mutually overlapping relationship being adapted to perform the initial step of cutting said first mineral fiber web into said segments.
35. The plant according to Claim 32, said third means for arran¬ ging said segments of said first mineral fiber web in partly mutually overlapping relationship being adapted to fold said segments of said first mineral fiber web transversely relative to said first longitudinal direction and said first transversal direction.
36. The plant according to any of tha Claims 3234, said third means for arranging said segments of said first mineral fiber web in partly mutually overlapping relationship being adapted to performed said arranging so as to position said segments of said first mineral fiber web in partly mutually overlapping relationship along a direction defi¬ ning an angle larger than 0° and smaller than 90° relative to said first longitudinal direction, such as an angle of the order of 1060°, prefe¬ rably of the order of 2050°.
37. The plant according to any of the Claims 3235, said fifth means for folding said second mineral fiber web being adapted to perform said folding as a transverse folding relative to said second longitudi¬ nal direction.
38. The plant according to any of the Claims 3236, said first mi¬ neral fiber web being a mineral fiber web of a low area weight, such as an area weight of 0.11.0 kg/m 2, preferably 0.20.6 kg/m2.
39. The plant according to any of the Claims 3237, said second mineral fiber web being a mineral fiber web of a low area weight, such as an area weight of 0.33.0 kg/m 2, preferaply 0.52.0 kg/m2.
40. The plant according to any of the Claims 3238, further com prising eighth means for height compressing said second mineral fiber web produced by said third means.
41. The plant according to any of the Claims 3239, further com prising ninth means for longitudinally compressing said second mineral fiber web produced by said third means.
42. The plant according to any of the Claims 3240, further com¬ prising tenth means for transversally compressing said second mineral fiber web produced by said third mean.
43. The plant according to any of the Claims 3241, further com¬ prising eleventh means for height compressing said third mineral fiber web produced by said fifth means.
44. The plant according to any of the Claims 3242, further com¬ prising twenth means for longitudinally compressing said third mineral fiber web produced by said fifth means.
45. The plant according to any of the Claims 3243, further com¬ prising thirteenth means for transversally compressing said third mine¬ ral fiber web produced by said fifth means.
46. The plant according to any of the Claims 3244, said fifth means for folding said second mineral fiber web being adapted to produce undulations extending perpendicular to said second longitudinal direction and parallel with said second transversal direction.
47. The plant according to any of the Claims 3245, further com prising the additionally means for substituting said seventh means and comprising: g) fourteenth means for producing a fourth nonwoven mineral fiber web defining a third longitudinal direction parallel with said fourth mineral fiber web, said fourth mineral fiber web containing mineral fi bers and including a second curable bonding agent, said fourth mineral fiber web being a mineral fiber web of a higher compactness as compared to said third mineral fiber web, i) fifteenth means for adjoining said fourth mineral fiber web to said third mineral fiber web in facial contact therewith for producing a fifth composit mineral fiber web, and j) said seventh means being adapted to cure said first and second curable bonding agents so as to cause said mineral fibers of said fifth composite mineral fiber web to bond to one another, thereby forming said cured nonwoven mineral fiber web.
48. The plant according to Claim 46, said fourth mineral fiber web being produced by means of sixteenth means for separating a separate layer of said first mineral fiber web therefrom and by compacting said separate layer for producing said fourth mineral fiber web.
49. The plant according to Claim 46, said fourth mineral fiber web being produced by means of seventeeth means for separating a separate layer of said second mineral fiber web therefrom and by compacting said separate layer for producing said fourth mineral fiber web.
50. The plant according to Claim 46, said fourth mineral fiber web being produced by means of eighteenth means for separating a separate. layer of said third mineral fiber web therefrom and by compacting said separate layer for producing said fourth mineral fiber web.
51. The plant according to Claim 47, said compacting of said sepa¬ rate layer being performed by means of nineteenth means for folding said separate layer so as to produce said fourth mineral fiber web containing mineral fibers predominantly arranged generally transversely relative to said third longitudinal direction of said fourth mineral fiber web.
52. The plant according to any of the Claims 4650, further com prising twentieth means similar to said fourteenth means for producing a sixth nonwoven mineral fiber web similar to said fourth mineral fiber web, and twentyfirst means similar to said fifteenth means for adjoin¬ ing said sixth mineral fiber web to said third mineral fiber web in fa¬ cial contact therewith so as to sandwich said third mineral fiber web between said fourth and sixth mineral fiber webs in said fifth composite mineral fiber web.
53. The plant according to any of the Claims 4651, said third longitudinal direction being perpendicular to said second longitudinal direction.
54. The plant according to any of the Claims 4651, said third longitudinal direction being identical to said second longitudinal di¬ rection.
55. The plant according to any of the Claims 4653, further com¬ prising twentysecond means for compressing said fifth composite mineral fiber web prior to curing said fifth composite mineral fiber web by means of said sixth means.
56. The plant according to any of the Claims 3254, further com¬ prising the following means in advance of said fifth means: k) twentythird means for producing a seventh nonwoven mineral fi¬ ber web defining a fourth longitudinal direction parallel with said se¬ venth mineral fiber web, said seventh mineral fiber web containing mine¬ ral fibers and including a third curable bonding agent, said seventh mi¬ neral fiber web being a mineral fiber web of a higher compactness as compared to said second mineral fiber web, and twentyfourth means for adjoining said seventh mineral fiber web to said second mineral fiber web produced by said third means in facial contact therewith, prior to folding said second mineral fiber web by means of said fifth means, for producing an eighth composite mineral fi ber web to be folded by means of said fifth means for producing said third nonwoven mineral fiber web, and said seventh means also being adapted to cure said third curable bonding agent.
57. The plant according to Claim 55, said seventh mineral fiber web being produced by separating a separate layer of said first mineral fiber web therefrom and by compacting said separate layer for producing said seventh mineral fiber web.
58. The plant according to Claim 55, said seventh mineral fiber web being produced by separating a separate layer of said second mineral fiber web therefrom and by compacting said separate layer for producing said seventh mineral fiber web.
59. The plant according to Claim 56, said compacting of said sepa¬ rate layer being performed by means of twentyfifth means for folding said separate layer so as to produce said seventh mineral fiber web con taining mineral fibers predominantly arranged generally transversely re¬ lative to said fourth longitudinal direction of said seventh mineral fi¬ ber web.
60. The plant according to any of the Claims 3258, further com prising twentysixth means for applying a covering to a side surface or both side surfaces of said third mineral fiber web.
61. The plant according to any of the Claims 4659, further com¬ prising twentyseventh means for applying a covering to a side surface or both side surfaces of said fifth composite mineral fiber web.
62. The plant according to any of the Claims 3260, further com¬ prising twentyeighth means for cutting said cured third mineral fiber web into plate segments.
63. The plant according to any of the Claims 4661, further com¬ prising twentyninth means for cutting said cured fifth composite mine¬ ral fiber web into plate segments.
64. The plant according to any of the Claims 3262, said seventh means being constituted by a curing oven.
65. A mineral fiber plate defining a first direction and compris¬ ing: first and second lamellae arranged transversely relative to said first direction, said first and second lamellae containing mineral fi¬ bers predominantly arranged transversely relative to said first direc¬ tion and transversely relative to one another, and said fibers of said first and second lamellae being bonded together in an integral structure solely through hardened bonding agents hardened in a single hardening process and initially present in uncured, nonwo¬ ven mineral fiber webs from which said first and second lamellae are produced.
66. The mineral fiber plate according to Claim 64, said first and second lamellae being bonded together through hardened bonding agents in a single hardening process and initially present in uncured, nonwoven mineral fiber webs from which said first and second lamellae are pro¬ duced.
67. The mineral fiber plate according to any of the Claims 6465, comprising a surface layer applied to one side of said first and second lamellae or opposite surface layers of similar structure, sandwiching said first and second lamellae in said integral structure.
68. The mineral fiber plate according to any of the Claims 6466, said first and second lamellae being interconnected through mineral fi ber layers of a higher mineral fiber compactness as compared to said la¬ mellae.
69. The mineral fiber plate according to any of the Claims 6467, * said plate being produced in accordance with the method according to any of the Claims 131 and/or by means of the plant according to any of the Claims 3263.
70. A method of packaging a mineral fiber plate in a package, comprising the following steps: providing said mineral fiber plate defining a first direction and being co pactable along said first direction, providing said package, arranging said mineral fiber plate within said package, compacting said mineral fiber plate along said first direction thereof for substantially reducing the overall volume of said mineral fiber plate, e.g. to 3095%, such as 3085%, preferably 4060%, of the overall volume of said noncompacted mineral fiber plates, and sealing said package for providing a sealed package within which said mineral fiber plate is kept in a compacted state in which the over all volume of said mineral fiber plate constitutes 30100%, such as 50 90%, preferably 6080% of the overall volume of said noncompacted mine¬ ral fiber plate.
71. The method according Claim 69, comprising packaging a plurali¬ ty of mineral fiber plates each defining a respective first direction, and said step of arranging said mineral fiber plate within said package including arranging said plurality of mineral fiber plates within said package so as to arrange said mineral fiber plates of said plurality in mutually parallel relationship and having said respective first direc¬ tions of said mineral fiber plates positioned parallel to one another.
72. The method according to any of the Claims 69 or 70, said package being constituted by a sealable, preferably a heat sealable thermoplastic foil to be wrapped around and sealed around said compacted mineral fiber plate or plates after said compacting of said mineral fi¬ ber plates.
73. The method according to any of the Claims 6971, said mineral fiber plate or plates having any of the characteristics of the mineral fiber plate according to any of the Claims 6468.
74. A package containing a mineral fiber plate, comprising: said mineral fiber plate defining a first direction and being com pactable along said first .direction, said package constituting a sealed package within which said mine¬ ral fiber plate is confined, and said mineral fiber plate being kept in a compacted state within said sealed package in which state the overall volume of said mineral fiber plate is substantially reduced, e.g. to 30100%, such as 5090%, preferably 6080% of the overall volume of said noncompacted mineral fiber plate through compacting said mineral fiber plate along said first direction thereof.
75. The package according to Claim 73, said package including a plurality of mineral fiber plates.
76. The package according to any of the Claims 7374, said package being produced in accordance with the method according to any of the Claims 6972.
77. A method of producing a tubular insulating element, comprising the following steps: a) providing a nonwoven mineral fiber web defining a first longi¬ tudinal direction parallel with said nonwoven mineral fiber web, a first transversal direction parallel with said nonwoven mineral fiber web, and a second transversal direction perpendicular to said first lon¬ gitudinal and transversal directions, and b) cutting said tubular insulating element from said nonwoven mi¬ neral fiber web defining a second longitudinal direction, said second longitudinal direction being parallel with said first longitudinal di rection, said first transversal direction, or said second transversal direction or defining a specific angular relationship with said first longitudinal direction, said first transversal direction or said second transversal direction.
78. The method according to claim 76, said nonwoven mineral fiber web constituting a nonwoven mineral fiber web assembly composed of a plurality of individual nonwoven mineral fiber web segments.
79. The method according to any of the claims 76 or 77, said non woven mineral fiber web being produced in accordance with the method ac¬ cording to any of the claims 131.
80. The method according to any of the claims 76 or 77, said non woven mineral fiber web being produced from a basic, uncured nonwoven mineral fiber web and being exposed to compression along said first lon¬ gitudinal direction and/or along said first transversal direction and/or said second transversal direction prior to and/or after curing said un¬ cured nonwoven mineral fiber web.
81. The method according to any of the claims 7679, further com¬ prising the step: c) applying an outer surface coating to the tubular insulating ele¬ ment, the outer surface coating being constituted by a plastics foil, a woven or nonwoven plastics fiber foil, an aluminum foil, an aluminum foil reinforced plastics foil, a fiber reinforced plastics foil, a crepe paper covering, a glassfiber reinforced foil or a combination thereof.
82. A tubular insulating element comprising a body containing mine ral fibers bonded together in an integral structure through hardened bonding agents and being produced from a mineral fiber plate defining a first longitudinal direction parallel with said nonwoven mineral fiber web, a first transverse direction parallel with said nonwoven mineral fiber web, and a second transversal direction perpendicular to said first longitudinal and transversal directions by cutting said tubular insulating element from said nonwoven mineral fiber web defining a se¬ cond longitudinal direction, said second longitudinal direction being parallel with said first longitudinal direction, said first transversal direction, or said second transversal direction or defining a specific angular relationship with said first longitudinal direction, said first transversal direction or said second transversal direction.
83. The tubular insulating element according to Claim 81, said mi neral fibers being bonded together in said integral structure solely through said hardened bonding agents hardened in a single hardening pro¬ cess and initially present in uncured nonwoven mineral fiber webs from which said mineral fiber plate is produced.
84. The tubular insulating element according to any of the Claims 81 or 82, said mineral fiber plate constituting a mineral fiber plate assembly composed of a plurality of individual mineral fiber plate seg¬ ments.
85. The tubular insulating element according to any of the Claims 8183, said mineral fiber plate or said mineral fiber plate segments having any of the characteristics of the mineral fiber plate according to any of the Claims 6468.
86. The tubular insulating element according to any of the Claims 8183, said mineral fiber plate or said mineral fiber plate segments be¬ ing produced from a basic, uncured nonwoven mineral fiber web and being exposed to compression along said first longitudinal direction and/or along said first transversal direction and/or said second transversal direction prior to and/or after curing said uncured nonwoven mineral fiber web.
87. The tubular insulating element according to any of the Claims 8185, further comprising an outer surface coating applied to said tubu¬ lar insulating element, said outer surface coating being constituted by a plastics foil, a woven or nonwoven plastics fiber foil, an aluminum foil, an aluminum foil reinforced plastics foil, a fiber reinforced plastics foil, a creape paper covering, a glassfiber reinforced foil or a combination thereof.
Description:
INSULATING ELEMENT AND METHOD AND PLANT FOR PRODUCING AND PACKAGING

The present invention generally relates to the technical field of pro¬ ducing mineral fiber plates. Mineral fibers generally comprise fibers such as rockwool fibers, glass fibers, etc. More precisely, the present invention relates to a novel technique of producing a mineral fiber-in¬ sulating web from which e.g. mineral fiber-insulating plates or products are cut. The mineral fiber plates or products produced from the non-wo¬ ven mineral fiber web produced in accordance with the present invention exhibit advantageous characteristics as to mechanical performance, such as modulus of elasticity and strength, low weight, reduced content of bonding agents, and good thermal-insulating property.

Non-woven mineral fiber webs ' are normally hitherto produced as homoge¬ neous webs, i.e. webs in which the mineral fibers of which the mineral fiber web is composed, are generally orientated in a single predominant orientation which is determined by the orientation of the production line on which the mineral fiber web is produced and transmitted during the process of producing the mineral fiber web. The product made from a homogeneous mineral fiber web exhibits characteristics which are deter- mined by the integrity of the mineral fiber web and which are to a high degree determined by the binding of the mineral fibers within the mine¬ ral fiber plate produced from the mineral fiber web, and further to a high degree determined by the density of the mineral fibers of the mine¬ ral fiber plate.

The advantageous characteristics of mineral fiber plates of a different structure has to some extent already been realized as techniques for the production of mineral fiber plates in which the mineral fibers are o- rientated in an overall orientation different from the orientation de- termined by the production line, has been devised, vide Published Inter¬ national Patent Application, International Application No. PCT/DK91/00383, International Publication No. W092/10602 and US patent No. 4,950,355. Reference is made to the above patent application and pa-

tent, and the above US patent is hereby incorporated in the present spe¬ cification by reference.

An object of the present invention is to provide a novel method of pro¬ ducing a mineral fiber web from which mineral fiber plates may be cut which method renders it possible in an online production plant to pro¬ duce mineral fiber plates which are of a composite structure providing distinct advantages as compared to the prior art mineral fiber-contain¬ ing plates.

A further object of the present invention is to provide a novel method of producing a tubular insulating element which method renders it pos¬ sible to produce tubular insulating elements exhibiting specific cha¬ racteristics in terms of mechanical characteristics, including flexibi- lity and mechanical strength, and thermal insulating properties.

A particular advantage of the present invention relates to the novel mi¬ neral fiber plate according to the present invention and produced in ac¬ cordance with the method according to the present invention which as compared to prior art mineral fiber plates contains less mineral fibers and is consequently less costly than the prior art mineral fiber plates, still exhibiting advantages as compared to the prior art mineral fiber plates relating to mechanical strength and thermal-insulating pro¬ perties.

A particular feature of the present invention relates to the fact that the novel mineral fiber plate according to the present invention and produced in accordance with the method according to the present in¬ vention is produceable from less mineral fibers or less material as com- pared to the prior art mineral fiber plate still providing the same pro¬ perties as the prior art mineral fiber plate regarding mechanical strength and thermal-insulating properties, thus, providing a more lightweight and less voluminous mineral fiber plate product as compared to the prior art mineral fiber plate product reducing transport, storage and handling costs.

A further advantage of the present invention relates to the fact that the novel mineral fiber plate according to the present invention and

produced in accordance with the method according to the present in¬ vention is a mineral fiber plate product exhibiting on the one hand cha¬ racter! * stcs as to mechanical strength substantially equal to the best prior art high strength non-woven mineral fiber plate products of the same or substantially the same overall dimensions and on the other hand characteristics as to thermal insulating properties equal to the best prior art high-insulating mineral fiber plate products of the same or substantially the same overall dimensions.

A further advantage of the present invention relates to the fact that the novel tubular insulating element according to the present invention and produced in accordance with the method according to the present in¬ vention may constitute a tubular insulating element which is easily adapted to specific geometric application requirements as the tubular insulating element is easily compressable and deformable due to a high flexibility of the tubular insulating element along the longitudinal di¬ rection thereof or any arbitrary direction relative to the longitudinal direction of the tubular insulating element, however, still exhibiting excellent characteristics as to mechanical strength and insulating pro- perties.

A further feature of the present invention relates to the fact that the novel mineral fiber plate according to the present invention and pro¬ duced in accordance with the method according to the present invention may constitute an insulating plate which is easily adapted to specific geometric application requirements as the insulating plate is easily compressible and deformable, however, still exhibiting excellent charac¬ teristics as to mechanical strength and insulating properties.

A further feature of the present invention relates to the novel mineral fiber plate according to the present invention which exhibits high com¬ pressibility and high compactability and further exhibits the capability of substantially recovering perfectly after the mineral fiber plate has been compacted for an elongated period of time.

A further feature of the present invention relates to the novel mineral fiber plate according to the present invention which exhibits excellent characteristics as to mechanical strength, allowing the mineral fiber

plate to be confined within a packaging foil without causing any part of the mineral fiber plate, such as the outer edges or corners of the mine¬ ral fiber plate, to be permanently deformed or damaged through the me¬ chanical impact produced by the packaging foil.

The above objects, the above advantages and the above features together with numerous other objects, advantages and features which will be evi¬ dent from the below detailed description of present preferred embodi¬ ments of the invention are obtained by a method according to the present invention comprising the following steps: a) producing a first non-woven mineral fiber web defining a first longitudinal direction parallel with the first mineral fiber web and a first transversal direction parallel with the first mineral fiber web, the first mineral fiber web containing mineral fibers predominantly ar- ranged generally in the first longitudinal direction thereof and inclu¬ ding a first curable bonding agent, b) moving the first mineral fiber web in the first longitudinal di¬ rection, c) arranging segments of the first mineral fiber web in partly mu- tually overlapping relationship and transversely relative to the first longitudinal direction and the first transversal direction so as to pro¬ duce a second non-woven mineral fiber web, the second mineral fiber web defining a second longitudinal direction and a second transversal direc¬ tion and containing mineral fibers predominantly arranged generally transversely relative to the second longitudinal direction and the se¬ cond transversal direction and generally transversely relative to one another, d) moving the second mineral fiber web in the second longitudinal direction, e) folding the second mineral fiber web transversely relative to the second longitudinal direction and parallel with the second trans¬ versal direction so as to produce a third non-woven mineral fiber web, the third mineral fiber web containing mineral fibers predominantly ar¬ ranged generally transversely relative to one another and generally transversely relative to the second longitudinal direction and the se¬ cond transversal direction, f) moving the third non-woven mineral fiber web in the second lon¬ gitudinal direction, and

g) curing the first curable bonding agent so as to cause the mine¬ ral fibers of the third mineral fiber web to bond to one another, there¬ by forming the cured non-woven mineral fiber web.

In the present context, a direction defined as a direction being trans¬ versely relative to a specific reference direction defines an angular relationship between the direction in question and the reference di¬ rection. More specifically, in the present context, a transverse rela¬ tionship between any two directions means that an angle is defined be- tween the directions in question, the angle being larger than 0° and smaller than 90°. Thus, in the present context, a transverse direction means a direction different from a longitudinal or transversal direc¬ tion, i.e. an intermediate direction relative to the longitudinal or transversal direction constituting the reference direction in question.

In accordance with the method according to the present invention, the mineral fibers of the third mineral fiber web which is cured for the formation of the cured non-woven mineral fiber web are arranged or posi¬ tioned predominantly providing internal crossings of mineral fibers within the third mineral fiber web which crossings on the one hand pro¬ vide final mineral fiber products exhibiting mechanical characteristics in terms of modulus of elasticity and strength equal to the mechanical characteristics of conventional high strength mineral fiber products such as the products known from the above-mentioned published interna- tional patent application and which crossings on the other hand provide final mineral fiber products exhibiting characteristics in terms of in¬ sulating properties equal to the insulating properties of conventional high insulating mineral fiber products.

The step of producing the second non-woven mineral fiber web from the first non-woven mineral fiber web, i.e. the above-described step c) may be carried out in any appropriate way fulfilling the intentional purpose of transforming the first mineral fiber web containing mineral fibers predominantly arranged or orientated along the first longitudinal direc- tion defined by the first mineral fiber web and constituting the overall direction of transportation or motion of the first mineral fiber web in¬ to the second mineral finer web containing mineral fibers predominantly arranged or orientated transversely relative to one another and trans-

versely relative to the second longitudinal direction defined by the se¬ cond mineral fiber web and constituting the overall direction of trans¬ portation or motion of the second mineral fiber web.

According to a first embodiment of the method according to the present invention, the arranging of the segments of the first mineral fiber web in partly mutually overlapping relationship of step c) comprises the i- nitial step of cutting the first mineral fiber web into the segments.

According to a second and presently preferred embodiment of the method according to the present invention, the arranging of the segments of the first mineral fiber web in partly mutually overlapping relationship of step c) comprises folding the segments of the first mineral fiber web transversely relative to the first longitudinal direction and the first transversal direction.

The angular position of the segments relative to the second longitudinal direction and relative to the speed of transportation or motion of the second mineral fiber web determines the arranging of the segments of the first mineral fiber web in partly mutually overlapping relationship in the step of producing the second mineral fiber web. For providing a se¬ cond mineral fiber web containing mineral fibers producing an adequate internal crossing of the mineral fibers of the second mineral fiber web, the arranging of the segments of the first mineral fiber web in partly mutually overlapping relationship of step c) being performed so as to position the segments of the first mineral fiber web along a direction defining an angle larger than 0 β and smaller than 90° relative to the second transversal direction, such as an angle of the order of 10-60°, preferably of the order of 20-50°.

The second mineral fiber web may be folded in any appropriate angle re¬ lative to the second longitudinal direction for providing a specific an¬ gular relation between the segments of the second mineral fiber web and the second longitudinal direction and consequently between the mineral fibers of the third mineral fiber web and the longitudinal direction thereof. However, the folding of the second mineral fiber web of step e) is performed preferably as a transverse folding relative to the second longitudinal direction so as to produce the third mineral fiber web

including the segments originating from the first mineral fiber web ar¬ ranged or positioned substantially perpendicular relative to the longi¬ tudinal direction of the third mineral fiber web, i.e. the second longi¬ tudinal direction.

The product or products produced in accordance with the method according to the present invention are preferably products including a fairly small amount of mineral fibers as compared to conventional products ex¬ hibiting similar characteristics as the product according to the present invention in terms of mechanical strength and insulating properties.

Thus, the first mineral fiber web is preferably a mineral fiber web of a

2 low area weight, such as an area weight of 0.1-1.0 kg/m , preferably

2 0.2-0.6 kg/m . Similarly, the second mineral fiber web is preferably a

2 mineral fiber web of an area weight of the order of 0.3-3.0 kg/m , pref- erably 0.5-2.0 kg/m 2 .

In accordance with the technique described in the above-mentioned pub¬ lished international patent application, application No. PCT/DK91/00383, publication No. W092/10602, the second and third mineral fiber webs are preferably exposed to compacting and compression in order to provide more compact and more homogeneous mineral fiber webs. The compacting and compression may include heigt compression, longitudinal compression, transversal compression and combinations thereof. Thus, the method ac¬ cording to the present invention preferably further comprises the addi- tional step of height compressing the second mineral fiber web produced in step c) by arranging the segments of the first mineral fiber web in partly mutually overlapping relationship and transversely relative to the first longitudinal direction of the first mineral fiber web.

Further preferably, the method according to the present invention com¬ prises the additional step of longitudinally compressing the second mi¬ neral fiber web produced in step c) and additionally or alternatively the additional step of transversally compressing the second mineral fi¬ ber web produced in step c).

The compacting and compression may further or alternatively comprise the additional step of height compressing the third mineral fiber web pro¬ duced in step e) .

Furthermore, the method according to the present invention may comprise the additional step of longitudinally compressing the third mineral fi¬ ber web produced in step e) and additionally or alternatively the addi- tional step of transversally compressing the third mineral fiber web produced in step e).

By performing one or more of the above-described compression steps, the mineral fiber web exposed to the compression step or steps is made more homogeneous, resulting in an overall improvement of the mechanical per¬ formance as compared to a non-compressed mineral fiber web.

According to the presently preferred embodiment of the method according to the present invention, the folding of the second mineral fiber web of step e) advantageously comprises the step of producing undulations ex¬ tending perpendicular to the second longitudinal direction and parallel with the second transversal direction. As the second mineral fiber web is folded in accordance with the teachings of the present invention, the segments of the second mineral fiber web are arranged generally perpen- dicular to the second longitudinal direction and generally parallel with the second transversal direction. Consequently, the mineral fibers of the second mineral fiber web are predominantly arranged in a pattern of crossings providing on the one hand a final mineral fiber plate of high mechanical strength and on the other hand a final mineral fiber plate of high insulating capability.

According to a further, additional or alternative embodiment of the me¬ thod according to the present invention, the method further comprises the following steps substituting step g): h) producing a fourth non-woven mineral fiber web defining a third longitudinal direction parallel with the fourth mineral fiber web, the fourth mineral fiber web containing mineral fibers and including a se¬ cond curable bonding agent, the fourth mineral fiber web being a mineral fiber web of a higher compactness as compared to the third mineral fiber web, i) adjoining the fourth mineral fiber web to the third mineral fi¬ ber web in facial contact therewith for producing a fifth composite mi¬ neral fiber web, and

j) curing the first and second curable bonding agents so as to cause the mineral fibers of the fifth composite mineral fiber web to bond to one another, thereby forming the cured non-woven mineral fiber web.

The fourth non-woven mineral fiber web which is adjoined to the third mineral fiber web in step c) may constitute a separate mineral fiber web. Thus, the third and the fourth mineral fiber webs may be produced by separate production lines which are joined together in step i).

In accordance with a first embodiment of the method according to the present invention, the fourth mineral fiber web is produced by sepa¬ rating a separate layer of the first mineral fiber web therefrom and by compacting the separate layer for producing the fourth mineral fiber web.

In accordance with a second embodiment of the method according to the present invention, the fourth mineral fiber web is produced by sepa¬ rating a separate layer of the second mineral fiber web therefrom and ** by compacting the separate layer for producing the fourth mineral fiber web.

In accordance with a third embodiment of the method according to the present invention the fourth mineral fiber web is produced by separating a separate layer of the third mineral fiber web therefrom and by com¬ pacting the separate layer for producing the fourth mineral fiber web.

The separate layer from which the fourth non-woven mineral fiber web is produced may irrespective of the origin of the separate layer be sepa- rated from the mineral fiber web being the first, the second or the third mineral fiber web from which the separate layer is separated as a surface layer or a side segment layer. Furthermore, provided the sepa¬ rate layer constitute a surface layer, the surface layer may be produced as a top or a bottom surface layer separated from the mineral fiber web from which the separate layer is separated.

The fourth mineral fiber web may additionally be produced by compacting the separate layer comprising the step of folding the separate layer so

as to produce the fourth mineral fiber web containing mineral fibers predominantly arranged generally transversely relative to the third lon¬ gitudinal direction of the fourth mineral fiber web.

The method according to the present invention preferably further com¬ prises the additional step similar to the step h) of producing a sixth non-woven mineral fiber web similar to the fourth mineral fiber web, and the step of adjoining in step i) the sixth mineral fiber web to the third mineral fiber web in facial contact therewith and so as to sand- wich the third mineral fiber web between the fourth and sixth mineral fiber web in the fifth composite mineral fiber web. By producing a sixth non-woven mineral fiber web an integral composite mineral fiber struc¬ ture of the fourth mineral fiber web is accomplished in which structure, the central body originating from the second mineral fiber web is sand- wiched between opposite compacted surface layers constituted by the fourth and the sixth mineral fiber webs.

• The third longitudinal direction defined by the fourth non-woven mineral fiber web may in accordance with alternative embodiments be perpendicϋ- lar to the second longitudinal direction or identical to the second lon¬ gitudinal direction. Furthermore, the third longitudinal direction de¬ fined by the fourth non-woven mineral fiber web may constitue a direc¬ tion diverging from the above directions and constitute a direction which is transverse relative to the second longitudinal direction.

The method according to the present invention may further preferably comprise the additional step of compressing the fifth composite mineral fiber web prior to curing the fifth composite mineral fiber web in step j). The compression of the fifth composite mineral fiber web may co - prise height compression, longitudinal compression and/or transversal compression. By compressing the fifth composite mineral fiber web, the homogeneity of the final product is believed to be improved as the com¬ pressing of the fifth composite mineral fiber web produces a homogeni¬ zing effect on the third non-woven mineral fiber web constituting a cen- tral body of the fifth composite mineral fiber web.

According to a particular, relevant embodiment of the method according to the present invention, the method further comprises the following

steps prior to step e): k) producing a seventh non-woven mineral fiber web defining a fourth longitudinal direction parallel with the seventh mineral fiber web, the seventh mineral fiber web containing mineral fibers and inclu- ding a third curable bonding agent, the seventh mineral fiber web being a mineral fiber web of a higher compactness as compared to the second mineral fiber web, and

1) adjoining the seventh mineral fiber web to the second mineral fiber web produced in step c) in facial contact therewith, prior to step e), for producing an eighth composite mineral fiber web to be folded in step e) for producing the third non-woven mineral fiber web, and step g) also including curing the third curable bonding agent.

According to the above-defined embodiment of the method according to the present invention, an integral composite product is produced as the se¬ venth mineral fiber web is adjoined to the second mineral fiber web pri¬ or to the processing of the eighth composite mineral fiber web in step e) for producing the third non-woven mineral fiber web containing mine¬ ral fibers predominantly arranged or orientated in the crossing struc- ture characteristic of the present invention.

The seventh non-woven mineral fiber web, which is adjoined to the second mineral fiber web in step 1), may constitute a separate mineral fiber web. Thus the second and seventh mineral fiber webs may be produced on separate production lines which are joined together in step 1).

In accordance with a further embodiment of the method according to the present invention, the seventh non-woven mineral fiber web is produced by separating a separate layer of the first mineral fiber web therefrom and by compacting the separate layer for producing the seventh mineral fiber web.

In accordance with an alternative embodiment of the method according to the present invention, the seventh mineral fiber web is produced by se- parating a separate layer of the second mineral fiber web therefrom and by compacting the separate layer for producing the seventh mineral fiber web.

Like the above-described fourth non-woven mineral fiber web, the seventh non-woven mineral fiber web may, provided the seventh non-woven mineral fiber web is produced by separating a separate layer from the first or second mineral fiber web, be produced as a surface layer or a side seg- ment layer. Furthermore the surface layer may, provided the separate layer from which the seventh mineral fiber web is produced is provided as a surface layer of the first or second mineral fiber web, be produced as a top or bottom surface layer separated from the mineral fiber web from which the separate layer is separated.

The compacting of the separate layer from which the seventh mineral fi¬ ber web is produced may, according to a further embodiment of the method according to the present invention, comprise the step of folding the se¬ parate layers so as to produce the seventh mineral fiber web containing mineral fibers predominantly arranged generally transversely relative to the fourth longitudinal direction of the seventh mineral fiber web.

The method according to the present invention may further preferably and advantageously comprise the step of applying a covering to a side sur- face or both side surfaces of the third mineral fiber web and/or apply¬ ing a covering to a side surface or both side surfaces of the fifth com¬ posite mineral fiber web. Furthermore, a covering may be applied to the seventh non-woven mineral fiber web prior to the step 1) of adjoining the seventh mineral fiber web to the second mineral fiber web, providing a composite eighth mineral fiber web including a covering applied to a top or a bottom surface thereof or interlayered between the seventh and second mineral fiber webs of the eighth composite mineral fiber web. The covering constituting an integral component of the eighth composite mi¬ neral fiber web is, of course, also folded in step e) and produces interlayered coverings within the structure of the third non-woven mine¬ ral fiber web. The covering may be a foil of a plastics material, such as a continuous foil, a woven or non-woven mesh, or alternatively a foil of a non-plastics material, such as a paper or cloth material, a metal sheet, a metal plate, a metal foil, or a mesh of metal wire or wires. The mineral fiber-insulating web produced in accordance with the method according to the present invention may, as discussed above, be provided with two oppositely arranged mineral fiber webs sandwiching a central body of the composite mineral fiber-insulating web. Provided the mineral

fiber-insulating web is produced as a three-layer assembly, one or both outer side surfaces may be provided with similar or identical surface coverings.

The step g) of curing the first curable bonding agent and optionally the second and third curable bonding agents as well may, dependent on the nature of the curable bonding agent or agents, be carried out in nu¬ merous diffent ways, e.g. by simply exposing the curable bonding agent or agents to a curing gas or a curing atmosphere, such as the atmos- phere, by exposing the curable bonding agent or agents to radiation, such as UV radiation or IR radiation. Provided the curable bonding agent or agents are a heat-curable bonding agents, such as conventional resin- based bonding agents normally used within the mineral fiber industry, the process of curing the curable bonding agent or agents includes the step of introducing the mineral fiber web to be cured into a curing oven. Consequently, the curing process is performed by means of a curing oven. Further alternative curing appliances .may comprise IR radiators, microwave radiators, etc.

From the cured mineral fiber-insulating web, plate segments are prefe¬ rably cut by cutting the cured non-woven third or fifth composite mi¬ neral fiber web into plate segment in a separate production step.

The above objects, the above advantages and the above features together with numerous other objects, advantages and features is furthermore ob¬ tained by means of a plant for producing a cured non-woven mineral fiber web, comprising: a) first means for producing a first non-woven mineral fiber web defining a first longitudinal direction parallel with the first mineral fiber web and a first transversal direction parallel with the first mi¬ neral fiber web, the first mineral fiber web containing mineral fibers predominantly arranged generally in the first longitudinal direction thereof and including a first curable bonding agent, b) second means for moving the first mineral fiber web in the first longitudinal direction, c) third means for arranging segments of the first mineral fiber web in partly mutually overlapping relationship transversely relative to the first longitudinal direction and the first transversal direction so

as to produce a second non-woven mineral fiber web, the second mineral fiber web defining a second longitudinal direction and a second trans¬ versal direction and containing mineral fibers predominantly arranged generally transversely relative to the second longitudinal direction and the second transversal direction and generally transversely relative to one another, d) fourth means for moving the second mineral fiber web in the se¬ cond longitudinal direction, e) fifth means for folding the second mineral fiber web transverse- ly relative to the second longitudinal direction and parallel with the second transversal direction so as to produce a third non-woven mineral fiber web, the third mineral fiber web containing mineral fibers predo¬ minantly arranged generally transversely relative to one another and ge¬ nerally transversely relative to the second longitudinal direction and the second transversal direction, f) sixth means for moving the third non-woven mineral fiber web in the second longitudinal direction, and g) seventh means for curing the first curable bonding agent so as to cause the mineral fibers of the third mineral fiber web to bond to one another, thereby forming the cured non-woven mineral fiber web.

The plant according to the present invention may advantageously comprise any of the above characteristics of the method according to the present invention.

The above objects, the above advantages and the above features together with numerous other objects, advantages and features is furthermore ob¬ tained by means of a mineral fiber plate according to the present inven¬ tion, which mineral fiber defines a first direction and comprises: first and second lamellae arranged transversely relative to the first direction, the first and second lamellae containing mineral fibers predominantly arranged transversely relative to the first direction and transversely relative to one another, and the fibers of the first and second lamellae being bonded together in an integral structure solely through hardened bonding agents hardened in a single hardening process and initially present in uncured, non-wo¬ ven mineral fiber webs from which the first and second lamellae are pro¬ duced.

The first and second lamellae of the mineral fiber plate according to the present invention may be bonded together through an adhesive which is applied to the outer surfaces of the first and second lamellae after the curing and hardening of the bonding agents bonding the mineral fi¬ bers of the first and second lamellae together and after cutting the first and second lamellae from a cured mineral fiber web produced in ac¬ cordance with the teachings of the present invention. The first and se¬ cond lamellae of the mineral fiber web according to the present inven- tion may alternatively be linked together through other elements such as different mineral fiber products, foils, films or the like.

According to the presently preferred embodiment of the mineral fiber plate according to the present invention, the first and second lamellae are bonded together through hardened bonding agents hardened in a single hardening process and initially present in uncured, non-woven mineral fiber,webs from which the first and second lamellae are produced.

According to the presently preferred embodiment .of the mineral fiber plate according to the present invention described above, the mineral fiber plate is as a unitary structure hardened in.a single hardening process through one or more bonding agents present in the mineral fiber webs from which the lamellae of the mineral fiber plate are composed and further optionally applied to surfaces of a adjacent lamellae which sur- faces are adjoined one another prior to the curing or hardening process.

According to a particular, advantageous embodiment of the mineral fiber plate according to the present invention, the first and second lamellae are interconnected through mineral fiber layers of a higher mineral fi- ber compactness as compared to the lamellae. The mineral fiber layers of higher mineral fiber compactness may include mineral fibers arranged or orientated predominantly along any arbitrary direction independent of the crossing-structure arrangement of the mineral fibers of the first and second lamellae.

According to a further embodiment of the mineral fiber plate according to the present invention, a surface layer is applied to one side of the first and second lamellae or opposite surface layers of a similar

structure, sandwiching the first and second lamellae in the integral structure.

The mineral fiber plate according to the present invention may ad- vantageously comprise any of the above characteristics of the method ac¬ cording to the present invention and also any characteristics of the plant according to the present invention.

The above objects, the above advantages and the above features together with numerous other objects, advantages and features is furthermore ob¬ tained by means of a method of packaging a mineral fiber plate in a package, comprising the following steps: providing the mineral fiber plate defining a first direction and being compactable along the first direction, providing the package, arranging the mineral fiber plate within the package, .compacting the mineral fiber plate along the first direction there¬ of for substantially reducing the overall volume of the mineral fiber plate, e.g. to 30-95%, such as 30-85%, preferably 40-60%, of the overall volume of the non-compacted mineral fiber plates, and sealing the package for providing a sealed package within which the mineral fiber plate is kept in a compacted state in which the overall volume of the mineral fiber plate constitutes 30-100%, such as 50-90%, preferably 60-80% of the overall volume of the non-compacted mineral fi- ber plate.

The high compressibility and compactability of the mineral fiber plate according to the present invention and further the capability of the mi¬ neral fiber plate according to the present invention to recover to sub- stantially 100% after the mineral fiber plate has been compacted for even an elongated period of time renders it possible to package the mi¬ neral fiber plate exhibiting compressibility and compactability along a specific direction defined as the first direction of the mineral fiber plates for reducing the overall volume of the mineral fiber plate in- eluded in the package.

The mineral fiber plate to be packed in accordance with the method of packaging a mineral fiber plate in accordance with the present invention

may constitute any mineral fiber plate exhibiting the characteristic property of being compactable along the first direction of the mineral fiber plate which first direction may constitute the longitudinal direc¬ tion of the mineral fiber plate or the transversal direction of the mi- neral fiber plate, i.e. the transversal direction defining together with the longitudinal direction the major surface of the mineral fiber plate. It is to be understood that the compressability and compactability of the mineral fiber plate is a substantially uniform characteristic allow¬ ing any volume of the mineral fiber plate along the first direction to be compacted. Examples of mineral fiber plates exhibiting the above cha¬ racteristic, i.e. exhibiting compressibility and compactability along a specific direction defined as the first direction of the mineral fiber plate are mineral fiber plates produced in accordance with the method according to the present invention of producing a cured non-woven mine- ral fiber web, mineral fiber plates produced in accordance with the technique described in Applicant's published international patent appli¬ cations, application No. PCT/DK94/00027, publication No. W094/16162; ap¬ plication No. PCT/DK94/00028, publication No. W094/16163; and applica¬ tion No, PCT/DK94/00029, publication No. W094/16164, to which reference is made, mineral fiber plates produced from mineral fiber webs which have been exposed to longitudinal compression and produced from an ini¬ tial uncured non-woven mineral fiber web or from an uncured non-woven mineral fiber web which is produced from the initial uncured, non-woven mineral fiber web through positioning the initial uncured non-woven mi- neral fiber web in overlaying relationship.

According to the presently preferred embodiment of the method of packa¬ ging a mineral fiber plate, a plurality of mineral fiber plates are packed together, and the method comprises packaging a plurality of mine- ral fiber plates each defining a respective first direction, and the step of arranging the mineral fiber plate within the package including arranging the plurality of mineral fiber plates within the package so as to arrange the mineral fiber plates of the plurality in mutually paral¬ lel relationship and having the respective first directions of the mine- ral fiber plates positioned parallel to one another.

The package within which the compacted mineral fiber plate or plates are contained may be constituted by any appropriate package such as a card-

board package, or preferably a light weight package constituted by a co¬ vering of a plastic foil which is sealable, preferably heat sealable and which is wrapped around the compacted mineral fiber plate or plates and sealed in the wrapped-around-state providing the package within which the mineral fiber plate or plates are enclosed or sealed.

The number of mineral fiber plates within the plurality of mineral fiber plates contained within the package may vary from a very few numbers such as 2-4 to a fairly large number such as 20-30 or even more mineral fiber plates. The mineral fiber plate which is sealed within the package according to the method of packaging a mineral fiber plate preferably constitutes a mineral fiber plate having any of the characteristics of the mineral fiber plate according to the present invention.

The above objects, the above advantages and the above features together with numerous other objects, advantages and features is furthermore ob¬ tained by means of a package containing a mineral fiber plate, compri¬ sing: t β mineral fiber plate defining a first direction and being com- pactable along the first direction, the package constituting a sealed package within which the mineral fiber plate is confined, and the mineral fiber plate being kept in a compacted state within the sealed package in which state the overall volume of the mineral fiber plate is substantially reduced, e.g. to 30-100%, such as 50-90%, prefe¬ rably 60-80% of the overall volume of the non-compacted mineral fiber plate through compacting the mineral fiber plate along the first direc¬ tion thereof.

The package according to the present invention is preferably produced in accordance with the method of packaging a mineral fiber plate and further preferably comprises a mineral fiber plate exhibiting any of the characteristics of the mineral fiber plate according to the present in¬ vention.

The above objects, the above advantages and the above features together with numerous other objects, advantages and features is further obtained by means of a method of producing a tubular insulating element, compri-

sing the following steps: a) providing a non-woven mineral fiber web defining a first longi¬ tudinal direction parallel with the non-woven mineral fiber web, a first transversal direction parallel with the non-woven mineral fiber web, ahd a second transversal direction perpendicular to the first longitudinal and transversal directions, and b) cutting the tubular insulating element from the non-woven mine¬ ral fiber web defining a second longitudinal direction, the second lon¬ gitudinal direction being parallel with the first longitudinal direc- tion, the first transversal direction, or the second transversal direc¬ tion or defining a specific angular relationship with the first longitu¬ dinal direction, the first transversal direction or the second transver¬ sal direction.

According to the method of producing a tubular insulating element ac¬ cording to the present invention, the inherent characteristics of the basic non-woven mineral fiber web from which the tubular insulating ele- ment is produced may be transferred to the tubular insulating element. More particularly, a tubular insulating element may be produced exhibit- ing a specific characteristic along a specific direction of the tubular insulating element such as exhibiting compressibility and compactability along a specific direction as the tubular insulating element is produced from a non-woven mineral fiber web exhibiting the characteristic in question, e.g. the compressability and compactability along a specific direction of the non-woven mineral fiber web which specific direction is orientated along the intentional specific direction of the tubular insu¬ lating element. The specific direction of the non-woven mineral fiber web may constitute the first longitudinal direction, the first transver¬ sal direction or the second transversal direction or may diverge from any of these directions.

The non-woven mineral fiber web from which the tubular insulating ele¬ ment is produced may in accordance with the teachings of the present in¬ vention constitute a single non-woven mineral fiber web or alternatively a non-woven mineral fiber web assembly composed of a plurality of indi¬ vidual non-woven mineral fiber web segments each exhibiting specific characteristics which are transferred to the tubular insulating element.

Preferably, and advantageously, the non-woven mineral fiber web from which the tubular insulating element is produced in accordance with the method according to the present invention is produced in accordance with the method of producing a cured non-woven mineral fiber web according to the present invention. Alternatively, the non-woven mineral fiber web from which the tubular insulating element is produced may be produced from a basic, uncured non-woven mineral fiber web and being exposed to compression along the first longitudinal direction and/or along the first transversal direction and/or the second transversal direction pri- or to and/or after curing the uncured non-woven mineral fiber web. For producing a tubular insulating element having an outer surface coating, the method of producing the tubular insulating element according to the present invention preferably also comprises the step: c) applying an outer surface coating to the tubular insulating ele- ment, the outer surface coating being constituted by a plastics foil, a woven or non-woven plastics fiber foil, an aluminum foil, an aluminum foil reinforced plastics foil, a fiber reinforced plastics foil, a creape paper covering, a glassfiber reinforced foil or a combination thereof.

The outer surface coating may in accordance with alternative techniques be applied as a contiguous surface coating or as a segmentary outer sur¬ face coating. Further alternatively, the outer surface coating may be fixated to, e.g. adhered to, the outer surface of the tubular insulating element in a continuous surface adhesion or as a spot or blind contact adhesion.

The above objects, the above advantages and the above features together with numerous other objects, advantages and features is further obtained by means of a tubular insulating element comprising a body containing mineral fibers bonded together in an integral structure through hardened bonding agents and being produced from a mineral fiber plate defining a first longitudinal direction parallel with the non-woven mineral fiber web, a first transverse direction parallel with the non-woven mineral fiber web, and a second transversal direction perpendicular to the first longitudinal and transversal directions by cutting the tubular insula¬ ting element from the non-woven mineral fiber web defining a second lon¬ gitudinal direction, the second longitudinal direction being parallel

with the first longitudinal direction, the first transversal direction, or the second transversal direction or defining a specific angular rela¬ tionship with the first longitudinal direction, the first transversal direction or the second transversal direction. The tubular insulating element according to the present invention is preferably produced in ac¬ cordance with the method of producing a tubular insulating element and further preferably comprises any of the characteristics of the mineral fiber plate according to the present invention and any of the above dis¬ cussed characteristics obtained by the method of producing a tubular in- sulating element in accordance with the teachings of the present inven¬ tion.

The present invention will now be further described with reference to the drawings, in which

Fig. 1 is a schematic and perspective view illustrating a production plant for the production of a mineral fiber web according to the present invention,

Fig. 2 is a schematic and perspective view illustrating in greater de¬ tails a production step of the production of the mineral fiber web also illustrated in Fig. 1,

Fig. 3 is a schematic and perspective view similar to the view of Fig. 2 illustrating an additional production step of the production of the mi¬ neral fiber web shown in Figs. 1 and 2,

Fig. 4a is a schematic and perspective view illustrating a first em¬ bodiment of a process of separating a part of the mineral fiber web therefrom and further of processing the part of the mineral fiber web,

Fig. 4b is a schematic and perspective view illustrating a second or al¬ ternative embodiment of the process also shown in Fig. 4a of separating and processing a part of the mineral fiber web,

Fig. 5 is a schematic and perspective view illustrating production steps of combining separate surface layers produced in accordance with one of the production steps shown i Figs. 4a and 4b and a central mineral fiber

web produced in accordance with the production process shown in Fig. 1, of curing the combined mineral fiber web and of separating the cured mi¬ neral fiber web into plate segments,

Fig. 6 is a schematic and perspective view illustrating an initial pro¬ duction step of producing a combined mineral fiber web of two layers of different compactness to be processed in the production plant shown in Fig. 1 in accordance with the teachings of the present invention,

Fig. 7 is a schematic and perspective view illustrating alternative pro¬ duction steps of separating the cured mineral fiber web into a total of four separate mineral fiber webs to be further processed through the ap¬ plication of surface layers to the outer surfaces of the four separate mineral fiber webs,

Fig. 8 is a schematic, sectional and perspective view of a first embodi¬ ment of a mineral fiber plate segment produced in accordance with the teachings of the present invention,

Fig. 9 is a schematic, sectional and perspective view of a second embo¬ diment of a mineral fiber product produced in accordance with the teach¬ ings of the present invention,

Fig. 10 is a schematic, sectional and perspective view of a third embo- diment of a mineral fiber product produced in accordance with the teach¬ ings of the present invention,

Fig. 11 is a schematic, sectional and perspective view of a fourth embo¬ diment of a mineral fiber product produced in accordance with the teach- ings of the present invention,

Fig. 12 is a schematic, sectional and perspective view of a fifth embo¬ diment of a mineral fiber product produced in accordance with the teach¬ ings of the present invention and of a structure similar to the struc- ture of the fourth embodiment shown in Fig. 11,

Fig. 13 is a schematic, sectional and perspective view of a sixth embo¬ diment of a mineral fiber product constituting a mineral fiber plate

segment,

Fig. 14 is a schematic, sectional and perspective view of a seventh em¬ bodiment of a mineral fiber plate segment produced in accordance with the teachings of the present invention,

Fig. 15 is a schematic, sectional and perspective view illustrating an advantageous property of the mineral fiber product constituting a mi¬ neral fiber plate segment produced in accordance with the teachings of the present invention,

Fig. 16 is a schematic, sectional and perspective view of an eighth em¬ bodiment of a mineral fiber product produced in accordance with the teachings of the present invention,

Figs. 17a and 17b are diagrammatic views illustrating the fire resist¬ ance characteristics of mineral fiber plate products produced in accord¬ ance with the teachings of the present invention as compared to conven¬ tional mineral fiber plate products, and

Figs. 18a and 18b are schematic and perspective views illustrating a technique of packaging mineral fiber plates according to the present in¬ vention in a highly compressed and compacted state,

Fig. 19 is a schematic and perspective view illustrating a packaging plant for the packaging of mineral fiber plates according to the present invention in a highly compressed and compacted state,

Fig. 20 is a schematic and perspective view similar to the view of Fig. 18b illustrating a package containing mineral fiber plates produced in accordance with the technique illustrated in Fig. 19,

Fig. 21 is a schematic and a perspective view of a set of mineral fiber plates according to the present inventinon from which tubular insulating elements are produced of various configurations and exhibiting a high degree of flexible capability,

Fig. 22 is a schematic and perspective view of a tubular insulating ele-

ment produced in accordance with the technique disclosed in Fig. 21 and illustrating the high flexibility of the tubular insulating element,

Fig. 23 is a schematic and perspective view similar to the view of Fig. 21 of a set of mineral fiber plates from which tubular insulating ele¬ ments are produced in various configurations, and

Fig. 24 is a schematic and perspective view similar to the view of Fig. 22 illustrating a tubular insulating element produced in accordance with the technique illustrated in Fig. 23.

In the upper left hand part of Fig. 1, a first station for carrying out a first step of producing a mineral fiber web is disclosed. The first step involves the formation of mineral fibers from a mineral fiber form- ing melt which is produced in a furnace 10 and which is supplied to a spout 12 of the furnace 10 to one or more rapidly rotating spinning wheels 14 to which the mineral fiber forming web is supplied as a mine¬ ral fiber forming melt stream 16. As a mineral fiber forming melt stream 16 is supplied to the spinning wheel or wheels 14 in a radial direction relative thereto, a cooling gas stream is simultaneously supplied to the rapidly rotating spinning wheel or wheels 14 in the axial direction thereof causing the formation of individual mineral fibers which are ex¬ pelled or sprayed from the rotating spinning wheel or wheels 14 as indi¬ cated by the reference numeral 18. The mineral fiber spray 18 is col- lected on a continuously operated first conveyor belt 22 and forms a primary mineral fiber web 20 which is transferred from the first convey¬ or belt 22 to a second conveyor belt 24. A heat hardening or heat cur¬ able bonding agent is also added to the primary mineral fiber web 20 either directly thereto or at the stage of expelling the mineral fibers from the spinning wheel or wheels 14, i.e. at the stage of forming the individual mineral fibers 18. The first conveyor belt 22 is sloping re¬ lative to the horizontal direction and relative to the second conveyor belt 24 which is arranged substantially horizontally. The first conveyor belt 22 constitutes a collector conveyor belt, whereas the second con- veyor belt 24 constitutes a transport conveyor belt.

From the second conveyor belt 24, the primary mineral fiber web 20 is transferred to a second station designated the reference numeral 26 in

its entirety. The station 26 constitutes a station in which the overall direction of transportation of the primary mineral fiber web 20 is transformed from the longitudinal direction defined by the first and se¬ cond conveyor belts 22 and 24, respectively, to a longitudinal direction determined by a mineral fiber web 30. The mineral fiber web 30 consti¬ tutes a mineral fiber web from which the mineral fiber products are pro¬ duced in accordance with the teachings of the present invention as will be evident from the below description. The mineral fiber web 30 is a mi¬ neral fiber web originating from a directly collected primary mineral fiber web 20 and consequently contains mineral fibers predominantly ar¬ ranged or orientated in the longitudinal direction of the mineral fiber web 30. Thus, the mineral fiber web 30 defines a first longitudinal di¬ rection and a first transversal direction, the first longitudinal direc¬ tion being the direction along which the mineral fibers of the mineral fiber web 30 is predominantly arranged or orientated.

The mineral fiber web 30 is transferred from the station 26 by means of conveyor belts, not shown in Fig. 1, to a roller 28 which serves the purpose of shifting the direction of transportation of the mineral fiber web 30 from a substantially horizontal direction to a substantially ver¬ tical direction as indicated by an arrow 36 for the transfer of the mi¬ neral fiber web 30 to a further station in which the mineral fiber web 30 is transformed into a segmentary mineral fiber web 50 by arranging segments of the mineral fiber web 30 in partly mutually overlapping re- lationship and transversely relative to the longitudinal direction and the transversal direction of the segmentary mineral fiber web 50 for the formation of the segmentary mineral fiber web 50. The transformation of the mineral fiber web 30 into the segmentary mineral fiber web 50 is ac¬ complished by means of two pendulum or oscillating conveyor belts 32 and 34 having upper input ends to which the mineral fiber web 30 is input and lower horizontally oscillating output ends from which the mineral fiber web 30 is output constituting segments which are arranged in the above-described partly overlapping relationship for the formation of the segmentary mineral fiber web 50.

In Fig. 1, two segments designated the reference numerals 38 and 40, re¬ spectively, are shown constituting segments of which the segmentary mi¬ neral fiber web 50 is composed. The segment 40 is defined by opposite

folds 44 and 46 connecting the segment 40 to a previously produced seg¬ ment and to the segment 38, respectively. The segment 38 is further de¬ fined by a fold 48 through which the segment is connected to the mineral fiber web 30 extending substantially vertically to the pendulum convey- ors 32 and 34. The segmentary mineral fiber web 50 is moved from a posi¬ tion below the pendulum conveyor belts 32 and 34 to the right in Fig. 1 towards a further processing station 56 comprising two height compress¬ ing or compacting conveyor belts 52 and 54 which serve the purpose of compacting and homogenizing the segmentary mineral fiber web 50. In Fig. 1, the reference numeral 42 designates a front edge of the segment 38 which front edge constitutes a boundary line between the segments 38 and 40 of the segmentary mineral fiber web 50.

It is to be realized that the segmentary mineral fiber web 50 is com- posed of segments originating from the mineral fiber web 30 in which the mineral fibers are predominantly arranged or orientated along the longi¬ tudinal direction of the mineral fiber web 30 and the mineral fibers of the segmentary mineral fiber web 50 is consequently predominantly ar¬ ranged or orientated in directions determined by the position of the in- dividual segments of the segmentary mineral fiber web 50 such as the segments 38 and 40. Thus, the segments 38 and 40 contain mineral fibers which are predominantly arranged tranversely relative to the longitudi¬ nal direction of the segmentary mineral fiber web 50 and transversely relative to one another. The transverse directions along which the mine- ral fibers of the segmentary mineral fiber web 50 are arranged is basi¬ cally defined by the ratio between the speed of transportation of the mineral fiber web 30 and the speed of transportation of the segmentary mineral fiber web 50, i.e. the ratio between the speed of transportation of the conveyor belt by means of which the mineral fiber web 30 is fed to the pendulum conveyors 32 and 34 and the speed of transportation of the conveyor belt by means of which the segmentary mineral fiber web is transferred from the pendulum conveyor belts 32 and 34 towards the sta¬ tion 56. Through the alternation of the ration between the above de¬ scribed speeds of transportation of the mineral fiber 30 and the seg- entary mineral fiber web 50, the partly mutually overlapping relation¬ ship of the segments of the segmentary mineral fiber web 50 is adjust¬ able and also the overall orientation of the mineral fibers of the seg¬ mentary mineral fiber web 50 along the transverse directions along which

the mineral fibers of the segmentary mineral fiber web 50 are predomi¬ nantly arranged or orientated.

The conveyor belts 52 and 54 of the height compressing or compacting station 56 are of a wedge-shaped configuration providing a compression of the segmentary mineral fiber web 50 at least at the output end of the compacting station 56 and are operated so as to cause a vertical pendu¬ lum motion of the segmentary mineral fiber web 50 at the output end of the compacting station 56. Consequently, the compacting station 56 causes an overall homogenization through rearrangement of mineral fibers producing a homogene mineral fiber web which is output from the compact¬ ing station 56 in a vertical pendulum motion to a further processing station 64 in which the mineral fiber web is further processed for the formation of a folded mineral fiber web.

In the processing station 64, the mineral fiber web output from the com¬ pacting station 56 is folded for the formation of a mineral fiber web in which the mineral fiber web output from the compacting station 56 is folded vertically and consequently transversally or perpendicularly re- lative to the longitudinal direction of the mineral fiber web and pa¬ rallel with the transversal direction of the mineral fiber web. The folded mineral fiber web is produced by means of two conveyor belts 58 and 62 sandwiching the mineral fiber web and providing a further decele¬ ration of the rate of transportation of the mineral fiber web into the compacting station and consequently a vertical folding of the mineral fiber web.

From the station 64, the vertically folded mineral fiber web is input to a further station 72 comprising two conveyor belts 66 and 68 which further decelerates the speed of transportation of the folded mineral fiber web 60 for the formation of a compacted and homogenized folded mi¬ neral fiber web 70. The mineral fiber web 70 constitutes a final product which may further be processed as will be described below for the forma¬ tion of the specific mineral fiber products such as insulating plates or composite products.

In Fig. 2, the segmentary mineral fiber web 50 is shown in greater de¬ tails illustrating the segments 38 and 40 and further the edges 46 and

48. Fig. 2 further illustrates in greater details the predominant ar¬ rangement or orientation of the mineral fibers of the individual seg¬ ments of which the segmentary mineral fiber web 50 is composed.

In Fig. 3, the folded mineral fiber web 60 and further the compacted and homogenized folded mineral fiber web 70 are shown illustrating the structure of the webs. In the lower right hand part of Fig. 3, two la¬ mellae or segments of the mineral fiber web 70 are shown designated the reference numerals 74 and 80. The lamella or segment 74 further dis- closes two subsegments 76 and 78 which are interconnected through a line of separation designated the reference numeral 77. The line 77 ori¬ ginates from an edge such as the edge 42 shown in Figs. 1 and 2 of the arrangement of the segments such as the segments 38 and 40 of which the segmentary mineral fiber web 50 are composed in the partly mutually overlapping relationship in which the segments are positioned. Thus, in Fig. 3, the subsegments 76 and 78 contain mineral fibers which are pre¬ dominantly arranged or orientated in transverse directions relative to the longitudinal and transversal directions of the mineral fiber web 70 and further relative to one another. In Fig. 3, the reference numeral 84 designates an arrow representing the longitudinal direction of the mine¬ ral fiber web 70. Similarly, the reference numerals 83 and 85 designate arrows representing the transversal direction and the elevational direc¬ tion, respectively, of the mineral fiber web 70. In the below descrip¬ tion, the expression "the longitudinal direction" refers to the direc- tion indicated by the arrow 84 in Fig. 3 rather than a specific orienta¬ tion or direction of a product relating to the geometrical relations of the product. Thus, the expression "the longitudinal direction" refers to any direction coinciding with the direction indicated by the arrow 84 shown in Fig. 3 and referring to the direction perpendicular to the di- rection of folding the web and further perpendicular to the folds of the folded product. Similarly, in the below description, the expression "the transversal direction" refers to a direction along the folds of the pro¬ duct and the expression "the elevational direction" refers to a direc¬ tion perpendicular to the longitudinal direction and the transversal di- rection rather than a vertical direction in relation to the gravitatio¬ nal field. Thus, the elevational direction refers to the direction along which the folds of the product are produced. It is to be emphasized that the above three directions, i.e. the longitudinal direction, the trans-

versa! direction and the elevational direction of any product according to the present invention refer to the geometrical relations of the folds of the products rather than the orientation relative to horizontal and vertical directions as referring to the gravitational field.

Fig. 3 further illustrates a specific characteristic of the mineral fi¬ ber web 70 as the line 77 separating the subsegments 76 and 78 from one another are shifted from the segment 78 to the segment 80 and further to the adjacent segments basically determined by the ratio of overlapping ratio of the segmentary mineral fiber web 50 such as the segments 38 and 40 and the height of the foldings of the folded and compacted mineral fiber web 70 such as the segments 74 and 80. It is to be realized that the indication of the predominant orientation of the mineral fibers of the mineral fiber webs described above is somewhat exaggerated for il- lustrative purposes exclusively. In a specific product, the predominant orientation of the mineral fibers of the segments of the product may be less distinct as compared to the views of the drawings.

In Figs. 4a and 4b, additional or supplementary processing steps are disclosed. In Fig. 4a, the mineral fiber web 30 is shown in the upper part of Fig. 4a and is transported towards a rotating circular knife 86 by means of which a segment layer 88 is separated from the mineral fiber web 30. The segment layer is moved past a propeller roller and along two sloping conveyor belts 92 and 94 serving the purpose of arranging seg- ments of the segment layer 88 in partly mutually overlapping relation¬ ship for the formation of a transversely folded mineral fiber web 100 similar to the web 50 described above with reference to Fig. 1. In Fig. 4a, a segment of the transversely folded mineral fiber web 100 is de¬ fined between two outer folds 96 and 98 of the mineral fiber web. The segmentary mineral fiber web 100 is input to a compacting and homogeni¬ zing station 102 which differs from the compacting station 56 described below as the compacting station 102 comprises a plurality of rollers which serve the purpose of height compressing the mineral fiber web which is moved through the compacting and homogenizing station 102. From the compacting and homogenizing station 102, a compact and homogenized mineral fiber web 104 is output and moved into contact with a further circular rotating knife 106 which separates the mineral fiber web 104 into two substantially identical mineral fiber webs designated the ref-

erence numeral 108 and 110 which are moved past additional rollers 112 and 114 for transferring the mineral fiber webs 108 and 110 to a further processing station to be described below with reference to Fig. 5.

In Fig. 5, the folded and compacted mineral fiber web 70 produced as described above with reference to Fig. 1, is brought into contact with the mineral feber webs 108 and 110 which are produced as described above with reference to Fig. 4a. The mineral fiber webs 108 and 110 are ap¬ plied to opposite side surfaces of the folded and compacted mineral fi- ber web 70 by means of two pressure rollers 134 and 136 which force the mineral fiber webs 108, 70 and 110 into intimate contact with one an¬ other optionally through the application of additional adhesive material such as additional bonding or curing agents which are applied to the surfaces of the mineral fiber webs 108 and 110 and/or the outer side surfaces of the folded and compacted mineral fiber web 70 which are brought into contact with one another. Through the contacting of the mi¬ neral fiber webs 108 and 110 to the folded and compacted mineral fiber web 70, a composite mineral fiber web 140 is produced which is thereupon introduced into a curing oven section 141 shown in the central part of Fig. 5 and comprising two curing oven parts 142 and 143 which are posi¬ tioned above and below the composite mineral fiber web 140, respective¬ ly.

From the curing oven section 141, a cured composite mineral fiber web 150 is output and moved to a further station in which a cutting knife 144 separates the cured composite mineral fiber web 100 into separate mineral plate segments which are thereupon moved from the production plant for storage, further processing or packaging. In Fig. 5, a mineral fiber plate product produced by separating the product from the cured composite segmentary mineral fiber webs 50 is designated the reference numeral 146. The composite mineral fiber plate product 146 comprises a central core 148 and opposite surface layers 147 and 149 and is to be described in greater details below with reference to Fig. 8. It is to be realized that the technique of applying a top and bottom layer to the folded and compacted mineral fiber web 70 may be amended by deleting one of the layers such as the top layer or alternatively the bottom layer constituted by the web 108 and 110, respectively, or by applying e.g. a foil or foils to one or both sides of the folded and compacted mineral

fiber web 70.

In Fig. 4b, an alternative technique of producing a separate mineral fi¬ ber web to be used for the formation of a top or bottom layer of the fi- nal composite mineral fiber product is disclosed differing from the technique disclosed in Fig. 4a in that a top surface layer 118 is sepa¬ rated from the initial mineral fiber web 20 which is transported in its longitudinal direction thereof and which is input to a horizontally and transversally operated cutting belt or knife 121. The initial mineral fiber web 20 is transported to the belt or knife 121 by means of a con¬ veyor belt 121. The belt or knife 121 divides the input mineral fiber web 20 into a top layer 118 and a major part from which the mineral fi¬ ber web 30 is produced. The top layer is moved from the belt or knife 121 by means of a conveyor belt 118 and input to two sandwiching convey- or belts 128 and 132 which serve the purpose of compacting or homogeni¬ zing the mineral fiber web which is output from the sandwiching conveyor belts 128 and 132 and which is designated the reference numeral 130.

The mineral fiber web 130 may constitute a web which is further proces- sed as described above with reference to Fig. 4a and consequently sepa¬ rated into two parts for the formation of top and bottom layers of the final composite mineral fiber product or alternatively be folded, further compacted or homogenized for producing a high strength top and or bottom layer of the final composite mineral fiber product. The mine- ral fiber web 30 produced from the initial mineral fiber web 20 by the separation of the top layer 118 therefrom is moved from the belt or knife 121 by means of two conveyor belts 122 and 124 and has its direc¬ tion of transportation shifted e.g. as shown in Fig. 1 by means of the station 26 prior to the step of inputting the mineral fiber web 30 into the pendulum conveyor belts serving the purpose of arranging segments of the mineral fiber web 30 in partly mutually overlapping relationship as described above with reference to Fig. 1. In Fig. 4b, the pendulum con¬ veyor belt 34 is also shown.

In Fig. 6, a further processing station is shown in which a mineral fi¬ ber web 50' originating from the mineral fiber web 50 shown in Fig. 1, however, optionally partly compressed is transferred along a conveyor belt 153 to a separation station in which a separating assembly 154

comprising a movable cutting belt 156 divides the mineral fiber web into two separate mineral fiber webs or parts designated the reference nume¬ rals 158 and 160. The part 160 is moved through two sets of sandwiching conveyor belts comprising a first set 162 and 164 and a second set 166 and 168 to a collector conveyor belt 170. The first and second sets of conveyor belts 162, 164 and 166, 168, respectively, may produce a com¬ pacting and homogenization of the mineral fiber web 160 as described above. The mineral fiber web 158 is also input to two sandwiching con¬ veyor belts 172 and 174 and further into a compacting and homogenizing station 176 similar to the station 102 described above with reference to Fig. 4a for producing a compacted mineral fiber web 178 which is trans¬ ferred from the compacting station 176 to the mineral fiber web trans¬ ferred along the conveyor belt 170 by means of a further conveyor belt 180. By means of the conveyor belt 180, the compacted and homogenized mineral fiber web 178 is positioned on top of the mineral fiber web ori¬ ginating from the mineral fiber web 160 and optionally partly compacted and homogenized as stated above producing a composite mineral fiber web 182 comprising " of a high compacted top layer and a somewhat less com¬ pacted bottom layer. The top and bottom layers may be adhered to one another by means of heat curable or hardenable bonding agents originally present in the mineral fiber web 30 or alternatively by means of a heat curable or hardenable bonding agent constituting an adhesive which is applied to the top and/or bottom layers prior to the step of contacting the top and bottom layers with one another together defining the compo- site mineral fiber web 182. In Fig. 6, the separating assembly 154 may be shifted from the positioned shown in Fig. 6 towards the conveyor belt 162 by means of a drive motor not shown in the drawings in order to al¬ ter the thickness of the mineral fiber web 158 as compared to the thick¬ ness of the mineral fiber web 160. In its extreme position the separa- ting assembly 154 is prevented from separating the mineral fiber web 50' into the mineral fiber webs 158 and 160 as the mineral fiber web 130 is in its entirety forced into contact with the sandwiching conveyor belts 162 and 164.

In the left hand part of Fig. 7, the above-described curing oven section 141 comprising the top and bottom curing oven sections 142 and 143 is shown. In Fig. 7, the mineral fiber web which is output from the curing oven sections 141 is designated the reference numeral 150' as the mine-

ral fiber web 150' differs from the cured composite mineral fiber web 150 described above with reference to Fig. 5 in that the mineral fiber web 150' is produced solely from the folded and compacted mineral fiber web 70 without the addition of the top and bottom layers produced from the mineral fiber webs 108 and 110. The cured mineral fiber web 150' is input to a wire or belt separator comprising a wire or belt 184 which is journalled on two rotatable wheels 186 and 188 which cause the wire or belt 184 to be moved horizontally and transversally relative to the mi¬ neral fiber web 150' causing a separation of the minernal fiber web 150' into two parts 192 and 194.

By means of a rotating circular knife 196 similar to the above-described rotating circular knives 86 and 106, the parts 192 and 194 are further divided into a total of four webs 198, 200, 202 and 204. From two rol- lers 208 and 210 positioned above the top mineral fiber webs 198 and 200, two foils 209 and 211 are applied to the upper surfaces of the top webs 198 and 200, respectively, and fixated to the top surfaces thereof by means of a sewing mechanism or alternatively by means of an adhesive as illustrated schematically at 216. After the adhesion of the foils 209 and 211 to the top webs 198 and 200, two top surface covered webs 220 and 222 are produced which are wound in a spiral configuration as shown schematically in the upper right hand part of Fig. 7.

Similarly, two foils are applied to the lower sides of the bottom webs 202 and 204 which foils are supplied from two rolls 212 and 214, re¬ spectively, providing two foils one of which is designated the reference numeral 215. The foil 215 is applied to the lower side of the web 204, whereas the foil applied to the lower side of the web 202 is not visible in Fig. 7. In a station 218 similar to the station 216 described above, the foils supplied from the rolls 212 and 214 are fixated to the lower sides of the webs 202 and 204 for the formation of composite bottom sur¬ face covered webs 224 and 226 similar to the above-described composite webs 220 and 222.

In Fig. 8, a fragmentary and perspective view of the first embodiment of a mineral fiber plate assembly 146 is shown produced from the mineral fiber web 150 shown in Fig. 5. The mineral fiber plate assembly 146 comprising the central core or body 148 is produced from the mineral fi-

ber web 70 shown in Figs. 1 and 5. The central core or body 148 is pro¬ duced from the compacted mineral fiber webs 108 and 110 as described above with reference to Fig. 5. The central core or body 148 is as de¬ scribed above with reference to Figs. 1-3 composed of a plurality of transversely positioned segments 228, 230 and 236 which are produced from the mineral fiber web 30 shown in Fig. 1 through the arranging of the segments such as the segments 38 and 40 of the mineral fiber web 30 in partly mutually overlapping relationship through folding of the mine¬ ral fiber web 30 along a direction transversely relative to the longitu- dinal and transversal directions of the segmentary mineral fiber web 50 produced through the folding process. The segments 228 and 230 consti¬ tute segments which are arranged perpendicular to the opposite surface layers 146 and 147 and are connected through a connection segment 232. In Fig. 8, a further segment of the central core or body 148 is desig- nated the reference numeral 236 and is positioned adjacent to the seg¬ ment 232 and connected thereto through a connector segment 234 similar to the segment 232. The segment 228 further discloses, as is evident from Fig. 8, a structure similar to the structure of the segments 78 and 80 shown in Fig. 3 and comprises two subsegments 237 and 239 which are interconnected through a segment 238 originating from a line similar to the line 77 shown in Fig. 3. The subsections 237 and 239 each comprise mineral fibers predominantly arranged or positioned along respective di¬ rections which are positioned transversely relative to the longitudinal and transversal directions defined by the mineral fiber assembly 146 and further relative to one another.

The segments 230 and 236 like the other segments of the structure shown in Fig. 3 also includes mineral fibers which in varying subsegments of the individual segments include mineral fibers predominantly arranged or positioned along the above-described transverse directions. The overall structure of the central core or body 148 of the mineral fiber plate as¬ sembly 146 provides through the arrangement or positioning of the mine¬ ral fibers of the individual subsegments such as the subsections 237 and 239 a mineral fiber structure comprising mineral fiber structure predo- minantly comprising mineral fibers arranged transversely relative to the main directions, i.e. the longitudinal and transveral directions of the mineral fiber plate assembly 146 further providing internal mineral fi¬ ber crossings within the structure providing on the one hand excellent

mechanical characteristics as to mechanical strength and bending proper¬ ties and on the other hand excellent insulating properties as compared to conventional high strength and high insulating mineral fiber plate assemblies, respectively.

In Fig. 9, a second embodiment of a mineral fiber product is shown com¬ prising the above-described central core or body 148 which is provided with a top surface covering constituted by a covering of a continuous foil or a mesh 246 made from a plastics material or alternatively a me- tal mesh material. The central core or body 148 may apart from the top surface covering 246 be provided with a bottom surface covering not shown in Fig. 9. The top surface covering 246 may be applied to the cen¬ tral core or body 248 before or after the curing station 141 shown in Fig. 5. depending on the properties of the material of the top surface covering and the ability of the material of the top surface covering to adhere to the central core or body 148 through melting, adhesion, sewing etc.

In Fig. 10, a third embodiment of a mineral fiber product 240 is shown comprising the central core or body 148 described above with reference to Fig. 8. The central core or body 148 is at opposite side surfaces thereof provided with two surface coverings 242 and 244 which may con¬ stitute water and air impermeable sealings or alternatively reinforcing films or foils or further alternatively IR reflecting foils such as alu- minu foils.

In Fig. 11, a fourth embodiment of a mineral fiber product 250 is shown comprising lamellae 255, 256 and 257 which are produced from the mineral fiber web 70 shown in Fig. 1 and, as discussed above with reference to Fig. 5, cut into individual plate segments which are thereupon turned 90° in accordance with the technique described in international patent application, international application No. PCT/DK91/00383, international publication No. W092/10602. The lamellae 255, 256 and 257 are thereupon adhered to intermediate compacted mineral fiber layers 251, 252, 253 and 254 for providing a three lamella composite structure shown in Fig. 11. Along cutting lines 258 and 259, the composite structure composed of the lamellae 255, 256 and 257 and the compacted surface layers 251, 252, 253 and 254 is divided into separate mineral fiber plates.

In an alternative process of producing the assembly shown in Fig. 11, the lamellae 255, 256 and 257 are adhered to the compacted surface lay¬ ers 251, 252, 253 and 254 prior to the curing of the bonding agent pre- sent within the webs from which the lamellae 255, 256 and 257 are pro¬ duced. In this alternative process, the surface layers 251, 252, 253 and 254 are also preferably constituted by uncured compacted mineral fiber containing components which are adhered through an additional heat cur¬ able or hardenable bonding material to the uncured lamellae 255, 256 and 257 or alternatively through the uncured bonding agents of the lamellae 255, 256 and 257 and the intermediate uncured mineral fiber components 251, 252, 253 and 254. Further alternatively, the assembly shown in Fig. 11 may be produced from uncured lamellae and previously cured surface components or alternatively cured lamellae and uncured surface compo- nents which are thereupon introduced into the curing oven for curing the uncured mineral fiber bonding agents and any heat curable or hardenable bonding material used for adhering the lamellae and the surface layers together.

In Fig. 12, a slightly modified embodiment of the composite structure of Fig. 11 is shown constituting a fifth embodiment 260 of the mineral fi¬ ber product according to the present invention. The fifth embodiment or mineral fiber plate assembly 260 comprises lamellae 262 similar to the lamellae 255, 256 and 257 described above with reference to Fig. 11. The lamellae 262 are positioned having one of its segments similar to the segments 228, 230 and 236 of the central core or body 148 positioned in facial contact with a foil 244 which may constitute a supporting foil or a water and air impermeable membrane. Between the lamellae 262, com¬ pacted mineral fiber elements 264 and 266 are interposed constituting reinforcing elements similar to the above-described compacted surface layers 251, 252, 253 and 254 of the assembly 250 described above with reference to Fig. 11. The assembly 260 shown in Fig. 12 may be divided into separate mineral fiber plate products comprising a single lamella 262 or a plurality of lamellae 262.

In Fig. 13, the central core or body 148 of the composite mineral fiber plate product 146 shown in Figs. 5 and 8 is disclosed in greater de¬ tails. In Fig. 13, the fiber structure of the lamella or segment 228 is

shown clearly illustrating that the subsections 237 and 239 comprise mi¬ neral fibers which are predominantly arranged along a single transverse direction relative to the longitudinal, transversal and vertical direc¬ tion defined by the central core or body 148 whereas the segment 238 originating from a line of separation corresponding to the line 77 shown i Fig. 3 comprises mineral fibers arranged or orientated transversely relative to one another.

In Fig. 14, a seventh embodiment of a mineral fiber plate segment is shown designated the reference numeral 270 in its entirety. The segment 270 is composed of a central core or body 274 and a top layer 272. The top layer 272 is basically of a structure similar to the structure of the bottom and top layers 147 and 149, respectively, of the composite mineral fiber plate 146 shown in Fig. 8. The central core 274 of the mi- neral fiber plate segment 270 is produced from the composite mineral fi¬ ber web 182 described above with reference to Fig. 6 and includes a cen¬ tral filling out designated the reference numeral 276 which is a high compactness central filling out produced from the compacted and homoge¬ nized mineral fiber web 178 of the composite mineral fiber web 182. The part 276 may alternatively be produced from a different basic web inclu¬ ding mineral fibers arranged or positioned in any appropriate orienta¬ tion and of any appropriate compactness higher or lower than the com¬ pactness of the remaining part of the central core or body 274 which re¬ maining part is produced from the web 160 in accordance with the teach- ings of the present invention and consequently comprises segments simi¬ lar to the segments of the central core or body 148 described above, i.e. the segments 228, 232 and 236. Thus, the central core or body 274 presents two subsegments 278 and 280 corresponding to the subsegments 237 and 239, respectively, of the lamella or segment 228 described above with reference to Figs. 8 and 13 and further a narrow segment 279 cor¬ responding to the segment 238 of the lamella or segment 228 shown in Figs. 8 and 13.

In Fig. 15, a highly advantageous characteristic of a mineral fiber plate produced in accordance with the teachings of the present invention is shown. In the left hand part of Fig. 15, a folded mineral fiber plate is shown designated the reference numeral 284. The plate 284 comprises lamellae or segments one of which constituting the top segment is desig-

nated the reference numeral 286. The plate 284 defines in its relaxed position shown in the left hand part of Fig. 15 an overall heigth of h,. Provided the plate 284 is exposed to a pressure force or pressure im¬ pact, the height of the mineral fiber plate is reduced from the height h, to the height h-, indicated in the right hand part of Fig. 15 which also discloses the somewhat compressed mineral fiber plate designated the reference numeral 284' including the top segment or layer which in the compacted plate 284' is designated the reference numeral 286'.

It is to be emphasized that the pressure or force impact which causes a reduction of the height of the mineral fiber plate 284 from h, equal to 60 cm to h„ equal to 30 cm is merely of the order of 12-18 kPa. Whereas the mineral fiber plate 284 may be compressed in the vertical direction as shown in Fig. 15, the plate is extremely strong and basically inco - pressible in directions along the horizontal and transversal directions defined by the lamellae or segments of the composite plate structure. The mineral plate product 284 is consequently highly advantageous in connection with insulating building structures which often require ad¬ justment of one of the dimensions of an insulating plate in accordance with the specific dimensions of the building structure in question. In¬ stead of reducing the size of a insulating plate to be used in a build¬ ing structure, the mineral fiber plate product 284 is easily adapted to specific dimensional requirements as the product along one direction which may constitute the length or the width of the plate may be reduced up till a factor 50% by simple compressing the plate product. The pro¬ perty disclosed in Fig. 15 is further advantageous from a packagning and transportion point of view as the mineral fiber plate product 284 may be stored, packaged and transported in a reduced volume as compared to the unrelaxed volume allowing a reduced packaging and transportation cost per plate unit.

The composite mineral fiber product produced in accordance with the technique described above with reference to Fig. 7 may constitute an in¬ sulating convering to be used in connection with boilers, vessels, pipes, tubings, tubes or the like in which heated water or steam are conducted. The insulating covering shown in Fig. 16 is in its entirety designated the reference numeral 290 and comprises a plurality of lamel¬ la one of which is designated the reference numeral 294 originating from

the lamella or segments of the mineral fiber web 70 described above with reference to Fig. 1 and as is evident from Fig. 16 include mineral fi¬ bers orientated along transverse directions relative to the longitudinal direction of the lamella in question and also relative to one another. The insulating covering is provided with an outer foil 292.

Mineral fiber plate products produced in accordance with the teachings of the present invention and constituting implementations of the mineral fiber plate according to the present invention exhibit improved fire re- sistance characteristics as compared to similar conventional products. Figs. 17a and 17b illustrate test conditions of a test which was carried out by the applicant for comparing a prototype embodiment of the mineral fiber plate according to the present invention and conventional mineral fiber plate products. Mineral fiber plates measuring 600 mm x 900 mm and having a thickness of 120 mm were produced in accordance with the embo¬ diment shown in Figs. 13 and 15 and from the conventional fiber plate product in which the mineral fibers are predominantly arranged along a direction coinciding with the longitudinal or transversal direction de¬ fined by the major surfaces of the plate product. One sample of the mi- neral fiber plate according to the present invention and one sample of the conventional mineral fiber plate product were suspended horizontally within a furnace and exposed to elevated temperatures as the furnace was heated as illustrated in Fig. 17b in which four curves E, F, G and H are shown. Along the abscissa axis, the period of time since the initiation of the experiment of test is indicated, and along the ordinate axis the temperature is indicated. The curve E represents the control curve, i.e. the temperature response to which the samples were to be exposed within the furnace. The curves F, G and H represent the temperature measured within the furnace and at specific locations thereof. The samples con- stituted by the mineral fiber plate according to the present invention and the conventional mineral fiber plate product were visually monitored while suspended within the furnace. After 105 min, the experiment or test were terminated since the conventional mineral fiber plate product was deflected approximately 120 mm from the overall horizontal plane and was about to fall down, whereas the samples of the mineral fiber plate according to the present invention was merely deflected approximately 30 mm. During the experiment, the temperature at the sides of the samples opposite to the sides which were facing the furnace were monitored. The

measuring results are shown in Fig. 17a, in which the abscissa repre¬ sents the same time scale as shown in Fig. 17b and in which the ordinate axis represents the temperature at the sides of the samples opposite to the sides facing the furnace. Four curves, A, B, C and D are shown in Fig. 17a. The curves A and B represent the measuring results of the sam¬ ple of the mineral fiber plate according to the present invention, and the curves C and D represent the measuring results of the conventional mineral fiber plate product.

The mineral fiber plates according to the present invention and the con¬ ventional mineral fiber plate products were analyzed. The mineral fiber plates according to the present invention contained 0.77 kg/ bonding agent and oil, and the conventional mineral fiber plate product con- tained 0.81 kg/m bonding agent and oil

Conclusion:

The reduced deflection of the mineral fiber plate according to the pre- sent invention as compared to the conventional mineral fiber plate pro¬ ducts provides radically improved fire resistance characteristics or properties since the reduced reflection at extreme, elevated tempera¬ tures reduces the risk of the plate being deflected to such an extent that the plate firstly produces slots at the junction to adjacent mine- ral fiber plate and secondly falls down from the suspended state due to extreme deformation or collapse of the plate structure.

Although the analysis of the chemical composition of the constituents of the mineral fiber plate according to the present invention as compared to the conventional mineral fiber plate product revealed a slightly in¬ creased content of FeO, 8.3% as compared to 6.3%, the difference in content of FeO, however, itself is not large enough to explain the im¬ proved integrity of the mineral fiber plates according to the present invention as compared to the conventional mineral fiber plate products.

Figs. 18a and 18b illustrate an advantageous technique of packaging mi¬ neral fiber plates according to the present invention in compacted state. According to the packaging technique illustrated in Figs. 18a and

18b, the characteristic of the mineral fiber plate 284 shown in Fig. 15 is employed. In Fig. 18a, a total of four mineral fiber plates 284 are positioned vertically or standing on a first packaging foil 285 as the plates 284 are positioned having their longitudinal directions orien- tated vertically. On top of the plates 284, a second packaging foil 287 is positioned. A pressure plate 291 is lowered from a position above the second packaging foil 287 and the mineral fiber plates 284 causing a compression of the mineral fiber plates reducing the overall volume of the mineral fiber plates to approximately 40-60% of the initial volume of the mineral fiber plates. After the compression and compacting of the mineral fiber plates 284 producing compacted or compressed mineral fiber plates 284 similar to the plate shown in Fig. 15, the first and second packaging foils 285 and 287 are joined and sealed together in a heat sealing process or any equivalent sealing proces, e.g. a gluing process or a combined gluing and heat sealing process, so as to produce a sealed packaging foil 285 enclosing the compacted mineral fiber plates 284 within the sealed packaging foil producing a highly compact mineral fi¬ ber plates package 289 shown in Fig. 18b and having a volume constitu- ting approximately 60-80% of the overall volume of the non-compacted and non-compressed mineral fiber plates.

The package 289, thus, comprises the compressed or compacted mineral fi¬ ber plates designated the reference numeral 284 and first and second package foil segments 285' and 287' which are joined together through two transversal seals 295 and 296 constituting front and rear seals, re¬ spectively. The mineral fiber plate according to the present invention constitute a product which may be packed within a sealing or enclosure such as a foil through the application of a compression ratio during the process of compacting the mineral fiber plate of approximately 50% pro- viding a compression ratio of approximately 20% of the final compacted or compressed mineral fiber plate. The mineral fiber plate maintains its integrity due to its high compressive strength in its transversal and elevational directions. The mineral fiber plate further exhibits a re¬ duced tendency as compared to conventional mineral fiber plate products to be deformed through the compacting or compressing process. Conven¬ tional mineral fiber plate products are often deformed through an in¬ creasing length and width provided the thickness of the product is re¬ duced through compacting or compression. Therefore, conventional mineral

fiber plate products are to some extent damaged and deformed through the compacting and compressing process. Furthermore, the damage and deforma¬ tion of conventional mineral fiber plate products through the applica¬ tion of compacting or compression in the process of packaging the mine- ral fiber plate may reduce the elasticity of compression of the plate along the direction of compacting and compressing the plate. The possi¬ bility of packaging mineral fiber plates in a reduced volume occupying merely 60-80% of the initial volume of the mineral fiber plates or even less renders it possible to ship more mineral fiber plates in a single shipment as compared to non-compacted and non-compressed mineral fiber plates. The mineral fiber plates according to the present invention may recover to approximatly 100% of the original volume after the mineral fiber plates have been compacted to 60-80% of the initial volume or even less for an extended period of time.

The mineral fiber plate according to the present invention further exhi¬ bits a distinct advantage as compared to most conventional mineral fiber plate products which are stored in a non-compacted and non-compressed state within a packaging enclosure, such as a packaging foil of the type shown in Fig. 18b, or contained within a complete encapsulating foil si¬ milar to a foil to be described below with reference to Fig. 20, as those edges or corners of the conventionel mineral fiber plate products which are positioned at the outer edges and corners, respectively, of the package, are permanently deformed and consequently damaged by the packaging foil which is positioned encircling the mineral fiber plate products confining the mineral fiber plate products within a sealed package. Contrary to the conventional mineral fiber plate products, the mineral fiber plate according to the present invention exhibits a high integrity and mechanical strength which ensures that no part of the mi- neral fiber plates which are confined within a package, such as the package 289 shown in Fig. 18b, is permanently deformed or damaged. Thus, no part of the mineral fiber plates of the package 289 shown in Fig. 18b is permanently deformed or damaged by the process of sealing the mineral fiber plates within the foil of the package 289. Even those parts of the mineral fiber plates contained within the package 289 which are posi¬ tioned at the outer edges or corners of the package 289 are not, contra¬ ry to conventional mineral fiber plate products, permanently deformed or damaged.

It is to be understood that the orientation of the mineral fiber plates 284 during the process of packaging the mineral fiber plates is arbitra¬ ry since the mineral fiber plates 284 which are positioned vertically in Fig. 18a may be positioned in any arbitrary orientation such as a hori¬ zontal position and piled on top of one another rather than positioned adjacent to one another as shown in Fig. 18a. Provided the mineral fiber plates 284 are positioned piled on top of one another in a substantially horizontal position, the pressure plate 291 or any equivalent compres- sion or compacting means or tool is reciprocated horizontally for com¬ pacting the mineral fiber plate 284 along the longitudinal directions thereof employing the extreme compressibility of the mineral fiber plates according to the present invention along the longitudinal direc¬ tion of the mineral fiber plates.

In Fig. 19, a presently preferred embodiment of a plant for the produc¬ tion of packages containing mineral fiber plates according to the pre¬ sent invention is shown. The plant is an on-line production plant in which a plurality of cured mineral fiber webs, such as four cured mine- TV v ral fiber webs 150", 150'", 150 and 150 or any other number of cured mineral fiber webs, are processed for producing mineral fiber plates contained within packages containing a total of four mineral fiber plates each or any other number of mineral fiber plates. The cured mine¬ ral fiber webs 150", 150'", 150 IV , 150 V are moved forward on con- tinuously operated rollers 300', 300", 300'" and 300 . Provided the cured mineral fiber webs 150", 150'", 150 IV, and 150V are to be stop¬ ped, a finned plate element 301 is lifted by means of a motor 302 cau¬ sing the cured mineral fiber webs to be lifted from the rollers 300', 300", 300'", and 300 IV . The cured mineral fiber webs 150", 150'", 150 IV and 150 V are transferred from the rollers 300', 300", 300'" and

IV 300 to a conveyor belt 304 which is supported on a drive roller 306 which is powered by a motor 308 and an idler roller 310. The cured mine¬ ral fiber webs 150", 150"', 150 IV and 150 V are as is illustrated in Fig. 19 positioned on the edges allowing that the cured mineral fiber webs may be compressed vertically as will be further discussed below.

IV V The cured mineral fiber webs 150", 150'", 150 and 150 are received and supported between opposite conveyor belts 312 and 314 which are ope¬ rated in syncronism with the conveyor belt 304 and serve the purpose of

supporting the cured mineral fiber webs as the mineral fiber webs are introduced into a cutting machine 316.

The cutting machine 316 basically comprises a yoke-like support struc- ture 318 which supports upper and lower runners 320 and 322 on which ro¬ tating wheels 324 and 326, respectively, are supported. The rotating wheels 324 and 326 are powered by a motor, not shown on the drawings, and supports a closed loop cutting string 328 which constitutes the cut¬ ting tool or cutting element of the cutting machine 316. As the cured mineral fiber webs 150", 150'", 150 and 150 are moved passed the cutting machine 316 through the yoke-like frame 318 of the cutting ma¬ chine to a predetermined distance beyond the cutting machine, the run¬ ners 320 and 322 are activated causing the runners to move towards the cured mineral fiber webs 150", 150'", 150 and 150 causing the cut- ting string 328 to be forced through the cured mineral fiber webs and separating four mineral fiber plate segments from the cured mineral fi-

TV v ber webs 150", 150'", 150 1 and 150 v . The cured mineral fiber plate segments separated from the cured mineral fiber webs are received on a conveyor belt 330 which is supported by two rollers 332 and 334 and are further supported by opposite, vertical conveyor belts 336 and 338 basi¬ cally serving the same purpose as the above described conveyor belts 312 and 314, respectively, with the purpose of supporting the cured mineral fiber plate segments as the cured mineral fiber plate segments are pro¬ pelled by the conveyor belt 330.

The mineral fiber plate segments are further advanced on a plurality of rollers one of which is designated the reference numeral 340 and are compressed by means of opposite, vertical conveyor belts 342, 344 and 346, 348. Provided the mineral plate segments are to be stopped, a fin- ned plate segment 349 similar to the above described finned plate seg¬ ment 301 is activated by means of a motor 350.

From the rollers comprising the roller 340, the mineral fiber plate seg¬ ments which have been positioned and compressed for registering the in- dividual mineral fiber plate segments properly are introduced into a packaging section 360 of the plant shown in Fig. 19. The packaging sec¬ tion 360 is shown in the lower part of Fig. 19 and comprises a horizon¬ tal lower conveyor belt 362 which is supported on rollers 364 and 366

and further includes a plurality of supporting rollers one of which is designated the reference numeral 368. Opposite the horizontal conveyor belt 362, a pressure applying conveying belt 370 is positioned which includes a first sloping section 372 and a second horizontal section 374. The conveyor belt 370 includes a plurality of rollers 376, 378, 380 and 382 serving the purpose of guiding the conveyor belt for producing the sloping section 372 and the horizontal section 374. The conveyor belt 370 further includes a plurality of support or pressure rollers 386 similar to the rollers 368 of the conveyor belt 362.

TV

On the conveyor belt 362, a total of four sets 384', 384'" and 384 1 are supported, each including four mineral fiber plate segments origina¬ ting from the cured mineral fiber webs 150", 150"', 150 and 150 .

TV Between the lower sides of the sets 384', 384", 384'" and 384 and the upper side of the conveyor belt 362, a lower packaging foil 388 is confined which foil is supplied from a packaging foil supply roll 390. Similarly, an upper packaging foil 392 is confined between the upper si¬ des of the sets 384', 384", 384'" and 384 IV and the lower side of the sloping section 372 of the upper conveyor belt 370 which upper packaging foil is supplied from a packaging foil supply roll 394. As the sets

TV

384', 384", 384'" and 384 are advanced from left to right by means of the lower conveyor belt 362 and also the upper conveyor belt 370, which are moved in synchromism, the sloping section 372 of the upper conveyor belt 370 causes the sets to be compressed in a compressing pro- cess similar to the process described above with reference to Figs. 15 and also Fig. 18a. During the process of compressing the sets 384', 384", 384'" and 384 , the packaging foils 388 and 392 are also ad¬ vanced along with the individual sets and are introduced into a finali¬ zing section of the packaging section comprising the horizontal section 374 of the upper conveyor belt 370 in which finalizing section the packaging foils 388 and 390 are joined together as will be readily de¬ scribed below. For initiating the process of joining the foils 388 and 392 together, opposite, vertical guiding plates 395 and 396 are provided which serve the purpose of folding the outer edges of the foil 388 up- wardly allowing the outer longitudinal edges of the foils 388 and 392 to be joined together. For positioning the outer longitudinal edges of the foils 388 and 392 properly, a first set of rollers 398', 398" and 398'" is provided which serves the purpose of catching the outer longi-

tudinal edge of the foil 388 and maintaining the outer longitudinal edge of the foil 388 in a stretched, downwardly bent position relative to the guide 396. Similarly, a second set of rollers 400', 400" and 400'" are provided, each comprising two individual rollers serving the purpose of catching the outer longitudinal edge of the upper packaging foil 392 for stretching the upper packaging foil 392 and for positioning the outer longitudinal edge of the upper foil 392 in proper overlying relationship relative to the downwardly bent outer longitudinal edge of the lower packaging foil 388. After the outer longitudinal edges of the upper and lower packaging foils 392 and 388, respectively, are properly positioned in overlapping relationship, the upper and lower packaging foils 392 and 388 are exposed to an air stream generated by a blower outlet 402 which serves the purpose of blowing away any excessive material from the outer side surfaces of the packaging foils and of stretching the packaging foils before the packaging foils are introduced into a sealing assembly 404 in which the upper and lower packaging foils 392 and 388 are heat sealed together by exposure to heat. After the heat sealing process, the heat sealed outer longitudinal edges of the packaging foils 392 and 388 are cooled by the supply of cooling air provided from a cooling air out- let 406. It is to be understood that elements similar to the first and second sets of rollers 398' etc. and 400' etc, respectively, the air outlet 402, the heat sealing assembly 404 and the cooling air outlet 406 are provided at the opposite side of the packaging machine at the guide 395.

From the upper and lower conveyor belts 362 and 370, the sets 384',

TV 384", 384'" and 384 are transferred to a heat sealing section 410 which comprises two opposite vertically reciprocating sealing claws comprising an upper clamp and a lower clamp 414 by means of which the upper and lower packaging foil 392 and 388, respectively, are joined to¬ gether along the transversal, horizontal front and rear edges of the sets 384' etc. As the heat sealing clamps 412 and 414 are moved towards one another, causing the upper and lower packaging foils 392 and 388 to be jammed between the heat sealing clamps, a rearmost horizontal seal of a set of compressed and compacted mineral fiber plate segments is pro¬ duced which set is already sealed along the front edge and the side edges thereof. Thus, a hermetically sealed set contained within a sealed package is produced. At the same time, a front horizontal seal is pro-

duced at the succeeding set. The clamps 412 and 414 preferably also includes a cutter serving the purpose of separating the preceeding fi¬ nished package from the continuous upper and lower packaging foils 392 and 388, respectively, which package is received between opposite lower and upper conveyor belts 416 and 418. The lower conveyor belt 416 con¬ stitutes a horizontal conveyor belt, whereas the upper conveyor belt 418 includes a horizontal first section and a diverging and upwardly sloping second section. The first section serves the purpose of maintaining the finished package including a total of four mineral fiber plate segments in the compressed and compacted state whereas the diverging and upwardly sloping second sections serves the purpose of allowing the compacted and compressed mineral fiber plate segments to expand to a small degree for producing a complete stretching of the material of the package wihtin which the mineral fiber plate segments are contained.

In Fig. 20, a package 389 produced in the packaging plant described a- bove with reference to Fig. 19 is shown. The package 389 provides a complete and hermetic encasing of the mineral fiber plate segments con¬ tained within the sealing packaging foils. Like the above described package 289, the mineral fiber plate segments are compacted to 60-80% of the initial volume, or even less, such as 40-50% of the initial volume, providing a package which occupies far less space as compared to non- compacted mineral fiber plate segments. The mineral fiber plate segments produced in accordance with the teachings of the present invention may recover to approximately 100% of the original or initial volume after the mineral fiber plate segments have been compacted to the above per¬ centage for an extended period of time. In Fig. 20, the flaps produced from the upper and lower packaging foils 392 and 388, respectively, de¬ scribed above with reference to Fig. 19, are also illustrated. Thus, the reference numeral 420 refers to the upper packaging foil part produced as the outer longitudinal packaging foil segments are sealed together by means of the sealing assembly 404 as described above with reference to Fig. 19. The reference numerals 422 and 424 designate the flaps produced at the front edge of the package as the clamps 412 and 414 are moved to- wards one another for producing the rearmost sealing of the preceding package corresponding to the flaps 422' and 424' shown in Fig. 20 and for separating the preceding package from the upper and lower packaging foils 492 and 488, respectively. The reference numeral 426 designates

the front seal established by means of the heated clamps 412 and 414. Similar seals are, as will be evident from the above description, e- stablished circu ferentially encircling the mineral fiber plate segments contained within the package 389.

In Figs. 21, 22, 23, and 24, a particular aspect of the present inven¬ tion is illustrated, viz. an aspect relating to a particular technique of producing tubular insulating elements. In Fig. 21, an assembly 430 is shown which is composed of three mineral fiber plate segments 150",

IV 150'", and 150 produced in accordance with the teachings of the pre¬ sent invention as described above with reference to Figs. 1-5. The mine¬ ral fiber plate segments 150", 150'", and 150 are glued together, producing an integral assembly. By means of a cutting string or a saw blade 432, tubular insulating elements are cut from the assembly 430, producing tubular insulating elements of different configurations. The reference numeral 434 designates a large diameter tubular insulating element which is produced from all three mineral fiber plate segments

IV 150", 150'", and 150 . The reference numeral 436 designates a single smaller diameter tubular insulating element which is produced from a .. single mineral fiber plate segment, viz. the mineral fiber plate segment

1 15500 IV .. TThhrreeee aadddd : itional, identical tubular insulating elements are also shown in Fig. 21.

The reference numeral 438 designates a tubular insulating element of a configuration somewhat different from the configuration of the larger diameter tubular insulating element 434 and the smaller diameter tubular insulating element 436. Whereas the tubular insulating elements 434 and 436 constitute tubular insulating elements having circular cylindrical outer and inner walls of concentric configuration, the tubular insula- ting element 438 constitutes an insulating element having a circular cy- lindric outer wall and an inner wall providing a flexible inner side which is adaptable to varying applications. The tubular insulating ele¬ ments 434, 436, and 438 exhibit a highly advantageous capability, as the tubular insulating elements are flexible, allowing the tubular insula- ting elements to be bent for adapting the tubular insulating element to a specific configuration. In Fig. 22, the tubular insulating element 434 is shown in a bent configuration, allowing the tubular insulating ele¬ ment to be used in connection with a curved pipe or the like. The outer

surface of the tubular insulating element 434 is covered by a coating 440 which may constitute a thin plastic foil or a reinforcing aluminum foil. Examples of foils are plastics foils, e.g. woven or non-woven po¬ lypropylene foils, such as spun-bound foils, aluminum-reinforced plas- tics foils or paper, crepe paper or combinations thereof. Fiber-rein¬ forced materials may also be applied, e.g. glass fiber-reinforced plas¬ tic material or combinations thereof. The coating 440 may be adhered to the outer surface of the tubular insulating element 434 in numerous ways through a complete surface adhesion or adhesion in individual spots or along specific lines of adhesion extending circumferentially relative to the tubular insulating element, parallel to the longitudinal axis of the tubular insulating element or in a different orientation relative to the circumferential and longitudinal directions of the circular cylindrical insulating element 434. It is to be realized that the elastic capability of the mineral fiber plate segments 150", 150'", and 150 shown in Fig. 21 may be utilized in different ways by producing the tubular insu¬ lating elements in a different orientation relative to the orientation of the mineral fiber plate segment 150", etc., providing an insulating element such as a tubular insulating element exhibiting a characteristic capability of allowing the insulating element to be compacted in a spe¬ cific direction determined by the direction determined by the mineral fiber plate segments 150", etc. along which direction the mineral fiber plate segments are compactable.

In Fig. 23, the above characteristic property is illustrated as a total of four mineral fiber plate segments 444', 444", 444'", and 444 IV are positioned in mutually parallel relationship defining an assembly 442.

By means of the above described cutting wire or saw blade 432, tubular insulating elements 434' and 438' of configurations similar to the above described tubular insulating elements 434 and 438, respectively, are produced. Contrary to the tubular insulating elements described above with reference to Fig. 21, the tubular insulating elements 434' and 438' shown in Fig. 23 extend perpendicularly to the outer surfaces of the in¬ dividual mineral fiber plate segments 444', etc. Dependent on the cha- racteristic properties of the mineral fiber plate segments 444', 444", and 444'", and 444 , the tubular insulating elements 434' and 438' produced therefrom exhibit characteristics as to compactness or flexibi¬ lity. In Fig. 24, the tubular insulating element 434' is shown provided

with an outer coating 440'. The coating 440' may be produced from any of the materials discussed above with reference to Fig. 22..

Table 1 below illustrates measuring results relating to thermal insula¬ ting properties and compression properties of mineral fiber plates ac¬ cording to the present invention and produced with varying height com¬ pression ratio, and a conventional board or plate. The density of all

3 boards or plates were 80 kg/m . The signature λ refers to the coeffi- cient of heat transmission as expressed in mW/mK, the signature 8 refers to the compressive strength as expressed in kPa, and the signature E re¬ fers to the elasticity of compression as expressed in kPa. The indices e, t and 1 indicates the direction of measurement of the property in question relating to the above defined directions e: elevational direc- tion, t: transversal direction and 1: longitudinal direction.

Table 1

Plates according to the present invention Conventional board or plate

Height compression ratio

1:1 1.2:1 1.37:1 2.3:1

λe 36.3 35.5 35.0 33.0 32.5

δ e 24 20 17 11 8

E e 350 350 280 110 110

λ t 39.5 39.0 40.0 39.3 38.0

46 46 46 46 60

E t 2400 .2400 1750 1250 3400

λ l 33.0 34.5 35.0 36.0

δ l 8.5 15.5 15.5 19.0

E l 120 220 250 330

From Table 1, the following conclusions may be made:

The values of λ of the plates according to the present invention are of the order of 35-36 mW/mK and consequently better than the value of λ t of conventional boards or plates being of the order of 38 mW/mK, however, somewhat larger than the λ of the conventional boards or plates being

of the order of 32.5 mW/mK.

The application of height compression during the process of producing the mineral fiber plates according to the present invention renders it possible to improve the value of λ by reducing the value from 35-36 mW/mK as indicated in Table 1 above to approximately 33 mW/mK.

The compressive strength δ of the plates according to the present in¬ vention is of the order of 17-24 kPa and consequently far better than the value of S of the conventional board or plate being of the order of 8 kPa. As is evident from Table 1, the value of δ of the plates accord¬ ing to the present invention is dependent on the application of height compression and in particular the height compression ratio. The value of E of the plates according to the present invention is of the order of 280-350 kPa provided a fairly low height compression ratio is applied. Consequently, the elasticity of compression of the mineral fiber plates according to the present invention is consequently substantially better than the elasticity of compression of the conventional board or plate along the elevational direction of the boards or plates, i.e. perpendi- cular to the longitudinal and transversal directions of the boards or plates.

The product produced as described above with reference to Fig. 7 consti¬ tutes a so-called wired insulating mat for insulating e.g. boilers, ves- sels, pipes, tubings, tubes or the like. It is comtemplated that the ap¬ plication of height compression during the process of producing the pro¬ duct reduces the difference in thermal insulating property between any two products. It is, however, to be realized that the application of height compression above a certain limit may overall improve the thermal insulating property of the final product as the improved compression properties may reduce the number of supports of an external facing so that the number of thermal bridges are completely or to a certain extent eliminated.

Experiments have revealed that the so-called wired mat is far more easy to handle and mount as compared to similar conventional products.

Below, four tables illustrates measuring results of comparable products

and products according to the present invention. Table 2 illustrates re¬ sults of a mineral fiber plate according to the present invention and of the type shown in Fig. 10 (identified by T) as compared to conventional boards or plates constituted by a board produced by the company Scan Glasuld A/S (identified by U), and boards produced by the applicant's Danish division and German division (identified by V and W, respective¬ ly). All boards or plates had a thickness of 30 mm.

Table 2

Name Density Deforma¬ Bending Contrac¬ λ kg/m" 3 tion , Resistance tion (mm) (mW/mK) at 3kN/M * ^ (g)

T 42 2,7 1100 3,3 41

U 25 4,6 1200 1,9 43

V 37 2,8 1400 2,9 43

W 42 5,0 1000 5,5 41

Table 3 similarly illustrates the properties of Table 2 converted into a score ranging from 1 to 10.

Table 3

Name Density Deforma¬ Bending Contrac¬ λ tion 9 Resistance tion at 3kN/M^

T 8 10 8 10 9

U 10 5 9 9 7

V 9 8 8 7 7

W 8 5 10 4 9

Table 4 illustrates the properties of the flexible mineral fiber plate shown in Fig. 15 according to the present invention (identified by X) as compared to conventional so-called FLEXI A-BATTS™ plates or boards manu¬ factured by the applicant (identified by Y) and products produced by the competitor, the Danish company Scan Glasuld A/S (identified by Z). The table clearly illustrates the advantageous combination of high thermal insulating capability, high flexibility and high compression stiffness.

Table 4

PRODUCT λ Flexi¬ Density Compression value bility stiffness mW/mK (0-10) (kg/m 3 ) (0-10)

X 37 8 32 10

Y 36 4 32 4 z 36 3 17 2

Table 5 illustrates the properties of the above described wired mat pro¬ duced as above with reference to Fig. 7 (identified by XX) and a similar conventional wired product manufactured by the applicant (identified by YY). Score ranging from 1 to 10.

Table 5

PRODUCT λ Installation Thickness tolerances (0-10) (0-10) (0-10)

XX 7 7 10

YY 10 3 4

Experiments have revealed that the flexible property of the mineral fi¬ ber plates according to the present invention as illustrated in Fig. 15 renders it possible to provide more reliable and perfect insulation as compared to the application of comparable conventional products which are flexible.

Tests were made for comparing a so-called FLEXI A-BATTS™ manufactured by the applicant and a mineral fiber plate product as shown in Fig. 15. Both products were mounted in an aperture of a width of 880 mm. Both products had a width exceeding the width of the aperture by 40 mm.

Results:

Conventional boards or plates of the type FLEXI A-BATTS™ of a thickness

3 of 100 mm and a density of 32 kg/m were mounted without the application of physical impact. During the compression of the flexible part of the boards or plates, the boards or plates were folded at the center of the boards or plates. After the mounting, only minor insulating faults were observed. Overall homogeneous surfaces were produced.

Mineral fiber plates according to the present invention of a thickness

3 of 100 mm and a density of 39 kg/m were easily mounted producing a per¬ fect filling out. The plates were folded during the process of producing the plates to a width of 120 mm and were compressed within the curing furnace to an overall width of 100 mm.

Due to the folded structure of the mineral fiber plate according to the present invention, the plate is very easily compressible still providing

3 a density of the order of approximately 40 kg/m . It is contemplated

that the application of height compression during the process of produ¬ cing the mineral fiber plate according to the present invention may im¬ prove the integrity of the final product. However, it has been proved that height compression may to some extent reduce the flexibility of the product.

As compared to conventional boards or plates, the mineral fiber plate according to the present invention provides an increased compressive strength and increased elasticity of compression of the order of 2-2.5 times. Consequently, the mineral fiber plate according to the present invention may be exposed to larger pressure impact as compared to the conventional boards or plates without producing insulation faults. As verified above the improved flexibility is believed to provide a more adequate integration or junction to the existing structure which is to be insulated.

On the basis of the measurements discussed above, it has been proved that the mineral fiber plate according to the present invention may pro¬ vide a flexibility of the order of 60 mm at a load of 2 kPa in the lon- gitudinal direction. Provided the flexibility is transformed into modu¬ lus of elasticity, a modulus of elasticity of no more than 20 kPa is provided at a width of 600 mm of the plate and similarly a modulus of elasticity of no more than 30 kPa at a length of 900 mm. A conventional

3 mineral fiber board or plate of a density of 35 kg/m exhibits a modulus of elasticity of the order of 130-225 kPa, however, to some extent de¬ pending on the predominant orientation of the mineral fibers of the board or plate. It is to be realized that the optimum flexible mineral fiber plate exhibits a modulus of elasticity varying between 20 and 30 kPa, provided the length of the plate is between 600 and 900 mm, re- spectively. The mineral fiber plate according to the present invention and of the type disclosed in Fig. 13 exhibits a modulus of elasticity of approximately 20 kPa, provided the mineral fiber plate has been exposed to height compression such as a ration of 1:1 during the process of pro¬ ducing the mineral fiber plate and similarly a modulus of elasticity of approximately 30 kPa provided the mineral fiber plate has been exposed to height compression during the process of producing the mineral fiber plate of such as a ratio of 1.33:1. In the transversal direction, the mineral fiber plate according to the present invention exhibits a modu-

lus of elasticity which is comparable with the modulus of elasticity of the conventional mineral fiber board or plate such as a. modulus of e- lasticity of approximately 200 kPa.