Textile Industries CHE 432 Industrial Process
Textile Industries CHE 432 Industrial Process
Textile Industries CHE 432 Industrial Process
CHE 432
INDUSTRIAL PROCESS
History
Fibers originally from wool, silk, cotton, flax and similar
materials
1883: 1st man-made fibers by Swan when he squirted
a solution of cellulose nitrate in acetic acid through
holes
1885: 1st commercial fibers from cellulose nitrate by
Chardonnet
1892: viscose production patented
1900: cuprammonium rayon fiber made
1921: cellulose acetate fiber
1940: 1st synthetic fiber nylon (polyamide)
discovered by Carothers, commercialised by DuPont
Mid 1950s: polyesters, acrylics, polyolefins produced
as well
Properties Of Fibers
General properties: length, crimp & denier
Either continuous filament or short fibers, uniform in length,
spun into thread
Short fibers cotton & wool called staple
Continuous filaments infinite length, most synthetic fibers &
natural silk
Synthetic staple fibers prepared by cutting continuous filaments
to short, uniform lengths usu. betw. 3.5-15 cm
Crimp curl or waviness placed in synthetic fibers by chemical
or mechanical action
Denier measure of weight of fibers per unit length & defined
as weight in grams of 9000 m, another unit is tex weight of
1000 m
1st synthetic fibers were circulate, but special characteristics
imparted by manufacturing fibers with non-round cross section
Most fiber in the market have filaments whose cross section are
not uniformly round
Synthetic Fibers
Classification:
- Manufacture begins with preparation of polymer
consisting of very long, chain-like molecules
- Polymer spun and results in weak useless fiber
until it is stretched to orient molecules and set up
crystalline lattices
- By controlling within limits degree of orientation,
crystallinity, and average chain length, single
polymer can be used to make a no. of fibers with
widely differing mechanical properties ranging
from weak and stretchy to strong and stiff
- 2 important factors to determine mechanical
properties of polymer: 1) attractive forces betw.
molecules and 2) flexibility & length of molecular
chains
Spinning procedures:
Polyamides
Nylon 6,6 : 1st synthetic fiber made
commercially
Used for home furnishing carpets
Polymerization reaction of adipic acid and
hexamethylene diamine
Fig 35.3 - flow chart for nylon yarn using
batch process
Polyesters
Polymers of ester formed from dimethyl
terephthalate and ethylene glycol
Polymerization is a two stage process:
- 1st stage : monomer prepared either by ester
interchange between dimethyl terepthalate and
EG or by direct esterificaiton of terepthalic acid
- 2nd stage : polymerization of monomer
Fig 35.5 flowchart for polyester fibers production
Cellulosic Fibers
Rayon and acetate
Carbon fibers
High-modulus carbon fibers prepared from
rayon, polyacrylonitrile or pitch
Rayon fibers are charred at 200 350oC
& carbonized at 1000 2000oC