Aqueous gel cleaning composition for lipophilic stain removal from vehicle surfaces
US-2022064570-A1 · Mar 3, 2022 · US
US9758751B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-9758751-B2 |
| Application number | US-201314395090-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Apr 12, 2013 |
| Priority date | Apr 24, 2012 |
| Publication date | Sep 12, 2017 |
| Grant date | Sep 12, 2017 |
A practical reading order for non-experts. Skip the full description unless you need deep technical detail.
What the patent document calls the invention.
A short plain-language summary of the technical disclosure.
Who owns or filed the patent and who is credited as inventor.
Filing, priority, publication, and grant dates set the timeline.
The legal scope of protection — read this for what is actually claimed.
Technology tags used to group this patent with similar filings.
Prior art links and similar publications in this corpus.
Official abstract text for this publication.
Aqueous hard surface cleaner compositions useful for removing permanent ink are disclosed. The compositions comprise 75 to 99 wt. % of water; 0.1 to 5 wt. % of a monoterpene; 0.1 to 5 wt. % of a C10-C17 fatty acid derivative; and 0.1 to 5 wt. % of one or more surfactants. The fatty acid derivative is selected from N,N-dialkyl amides, N,N-dialkyl esteramines, and N,N-dialkyl amidoamines. Preferably, a base such as sodium carbonate or monoethanolamine is also included. The invention includes concentrates comprising the non-aqueous components recited above, as well as other applications for the cleaners and concentrates such as graffiti removers and permanent ink erasers. The combination of a monoterpene and certain fatty acid derivatives, especially fatty N,N-dialkyl amides, unexpectedly enables even dilute aqueous compositions to rapidly decolorize black permanent marker from hard, non-porous surfaces.
Opening claim text (preview).
We claim: 1. An aqueous hard surface cleaner consisting of: (a) 75 to 99 wt. % of water; (b) 0.1 to 5 wt. % of lemon oil or pine oil, (c) 0.1 to 5 wt. % of a monounsaturated C 10 -C 14 N,N-dimethyl amide; and (d) 0.1 to 5 wt. % of one or more surfactants selected from the group consisting of anionic, cationic, nonionic, and amphoteric surfactants; wherein the anionic surfactant is selected from the group consisting of alkyl sulfates, alkyl ether sulfates, olefin sulfonates, α-sulfonated alkyl esters, α-sulfonated alkyl carboxylates, alkyl aryl sulfonates, sulfoacetates, sulfosuccinates, alkane sulfonates, and alkylphenol alkoxylate sulfates, and mixtures thereof; (e) 0.1 to 5 wt. % of an alkali metal carbonate; (f) optionally, 0.5 to 25 wt. % of a water-soluble organic solvent; and (g) optionally, one or more additives selected from the group consisting of builders, buffers, abrasives, electrolytes, bleaching agents, dyes, foaming control agents, antimicrobial agents, thickeners, pigments, gloss enhancers, enzymes, silicones, and hydrotropes. 2. The cleaner of claim 1 wherein the surfactant is a mixture of an anionic surfactant and a nonionic surfactant. 3. The cleaner of claim 1 wherein the alkali metal carbonate is sodium carbonate. 4. The cleaner of claim 1 wherein the monounsaturated C 10 -C 14 N,N-dimethyl amide has at least 1 mole % of trans-Δ 9 unsaturation. 5. The cleaner of claim 1 wherein the monounsaturated C 10 -C 14 N,N-dimethyl amide is a monounsaturated C 10 -C 12 N,N-dimethyl amide. 6. The cleaner of claim 1 wherein the amide has the structure: 7. A method for removing permanent ink from a hard surface, comprising applying to the hard surface the cleaner composition of claim 1 and removing the used cleaner composition from the cleaned hard surface. 8. A dilutable hard-surface cleaner concentrate comprising: (a) 1 to 50 wt. % of lemon oil or pine oil; (b) 1 to 50 wt. % of a monounsaturated C 10 -C 14 N,N-dimethyl amide; and (c) 1 to 50 wt. % of one or more surfactants selected from the group consisting of anionic, cationic, nonionic, and amphoteric surfactants wherein the anionic surfactant is selected from the group consisting of alkyl sulfates, alkyl ether sulfates, olefin sulfonates, α-sulfonated alkyl esters, α-sulfonated alkyl carboxylates, alkyl aryl sulfonates, sulfoacetates, sulfosuccinates, alkane sulfonates, and alkylphenol alkoxylate sulfates, and mixtures thereof; (d) 0.1 to 5 wt. % of an alkali metal carbonate; (e) optionally, 0.5 to 25 wt. % of a water-soluble organic solvent; and (f) optionally, one or more additives selected from the group consisting of builders, buffers, abrasives, electrolytes, bleaching agents, dyes, foaming control agents, antimicrobial agents, thickeners, pigments, gloss enhancers, enzymes, silicones, and hydrotropes. 9. The concentrate of claim 8 wherein the monounsaturated C 10 -C 14 N,N-dimethyl amide is a monounsaturated C 10 -C 12 N,N-dimethyl amide. 10. The concentrate of claim 8 wherein the amide has the structure: 11. The cleaner of claim 1 wherein the cleaner is used as a graffiti remover. 12. A graffiti remover comprising the concentrate of claim 8 . 13. A permanent marker having an attached eraser that incorporates the cleaner of claim 1 . 14. A permanent marker having an attached eraser that incorporates the concentrate of claim 8 . 15. A correction pen having a fluid reservoir incorporating the cleaner of claim 1 . 16. A correction pen having a fluid reservoir containing the concentrate of claim 8 . 17. The cleaner of claim 1 wherein the cleaner is used as a correction fluid. 18. A correction fluid comprising the concentrate of claim 8 .
Mixtures with anionic, cationic or non-ionic compounds · CPC title
Mixtures of compounds all of which are cationic · CPC title
Amines; Substituted amines {; Quaternized amines} · CPC title
Carboxylic amides (R1-CO-NR2R3), where at least one of the chains R1, R2 or R3 is interrupted by a functional group, e.g. a -NH-, -NR-, -CO-, or -CON- group (ethers C11D1/526) · CPC title
Amides; Substituted amides · CPC title
Related publications grouped by family.
Answers are generated from the same data shown on this page.