Introduction To Textiles
Introduction To Textiles
Textile is very close to us or we can say that the textile products are an
integral part of our day to day life. They provide the basis for the clothing
industry, home furnishings industry and various other industries.
The basic ingredient for the development of a fabric is the fiber. From a
fiber yarns are made and then these yarns are woven or knitted to form
fabric.
A fiber is therefore a building block of all the textiles. They may be drawn
from natural or chemical methods i.e. they can be natural or manmade.
The natural fibers are: cotton, wool, silk, jute etc and the man made
fibers are: nylon, polyester, acrylic, spandex, rayon etc.
Definition of Fibers.
A morphological term for substances characterized by their flexibility,
fineness and high ratio of length to cross sectional area.
fibres.
2) Strength
3) Elasticity
4) Uniformity
5) Spinnability
II Secondary Properties
Filament: Long continuous fibre strands of indefinite length measured in yards or
meters.
1. Abrasion resistance: It is the ability of a fibre to withstand.
2. Absorbency or Moisture Regain: It is the amount of water a bone dry fibre will absorb
from the air under standard conditions of temperature (70F) and moisture (65% relative
humidity).
3. Flexibility: It is the ability of a fibre to blend easily.
4. Chemical reactivity: It is the effect of acids, alkali, oxidizing agents, and solvents.
5. Cohesiveness: It is the ability of fibres to cling together during spinning. Not important in
continuous filament.
6. Dyeability: It is the fibres receptivity to coloration by dyes.
Classification of fibers:
Classification of Fibre by Source
According to the source from which textile fibres are obtained,
fibres are broadly classified in two:
1. Natural
2. Manmade.
1. Natural Fibre
The textile industry uses many fibres as its raw materials. Textile
fibres are classified according to the source and the length of the
fibres.Natural fibers include those produced by plants, animals, and
geological processes. They are biodegradable over time. They can be
classified according to their origin:
a) Vegetable fibers There are generally based on arrangements of
cellulose, often with lignin. Examples include cotton, hemp, jute, flax,
ramie, and sisal etc. Plant fibers are employed in the manufacture of
paper and textile (cloth). All cellulosic fibres and cotton, in particular,
are water loving or hydrophilic. Hence, cellulosic fibres are often used
in towels, sportswear and medical dressings.
b) Animal fibers These consist largely of particular proteins. Instances
are spider silk, sinew, catgut, wool and hair such as cashmere,
mohair and angora, fur such as sheepskin, rabbit, mink, fox, beaver,
etc. Animal fibres, or protein fibres, are those found in the hair of
animals. Again, only certain animals have hair of sufficient quality and
quantity to be commercially viable for production. Due to its enormous
flexibility in manufacture and its important qualities as a textile, sheep
wool is the main protein-based fibre used by most societies.
In Australia, wool production has been,and still is,an enormously
successful venture: Australia is one of the worlds leading wool
producers.Other animal fibres, such as camel, cashmere, mohair,
angora and silk, are mainly regarded as specialty fibres Their
production is too expensive and their properties too specific to yield
main-stream market success. Furs and leathers, although not
generally used as fibres for yarn production, are also important
protein-based textile materials and are used in many applications
across the world.
c) Mineral fibers comprise asbestos. Asbestos is the only naturally
occurring long mineral fiber. Short, fiber-like minerals include
wollastonite, attapulgite and halloysite.
Many cottons are also blended with other natural fibers, such as linen,
for particular properties.
Cotton is a soft fiber that grows around the seeds of the cotton plant.
Cool, soft and comfortable, cotton is presently the world's most used
fiber. Every part of the cotton plant is useful and we see its application in
industries such as apparel, home furnishings, medical and surgical,
automobile, etc.
Flax (Linen) (Tisi)
Linen is a textile made from the fibers of the flax plant. Linen is laborintensive to manufacture, but when it is made into garments, it is valued
for its exceptional coolness and freshness in hot weather. Linen textiles
appear to be some of the oldest in the world: their history goes back
many thousands of years.
Flax is the fiber name; linen is the fabric name,Worlds oldest textile
fiber,Cellulosic fiber from stem of flax plant,Stiff, wrinkles (folds)
easily,Absorbent (leaky), cool to wear in heat,
Pipe coverings, brake linings, ceiling tiles, floor tiles, fireresistant work clothes, shingles, siding, insulation
When its broken, fibers shatter into tiny fragments that
become airborne. If inhaled, they cut the lungs and scar
tissue may become cancerous.
Fiber Classification
Synthetic (artificially produced) Fibers
Until the nineteenth century only plant and animal fibers were used
to make clothes and textiles.
Half the products produced today are artificially produced.
Regenerated fibers or Polymers
Polymers are monomers joined together
Artificially produced fibers include rayon, acetate, nylon,
acrylics, and polyesters.
Regenerated Fibers (derived from cellulose):
Rayon is the most common of this type of fiber. It can imitate
(duplicate) natural fibers, but it is stronger.
Celenese is cellulose chemically combined with acetate and is
often found in carpets.
Polyamide nylon is cellulose combined with three acetate units, is
breathable, lightweight, and used in performance clothing.
Synthetic Polymer Fibers:
Petroleum is the basis for these fibers, and they have very different
characteristics from other fibers.
Non-cellulose
Monomers in large vats are joined together to form polymers. The
fibers produced are spun together into yarns.
They have no internal structures, and under magnification they show
regular diameters
nylon
Examples of synthetic polymer fibers: