Dr.
Prithwiraj Mal,
FIBRES
Fibres are the primary materials from which the
textile products are made
Fibres are those materials that are either continuous
or discrete pieces and have high length to width
ratio, thus ensuring the flexibility required for
manufacturing and end use
Dr. Prithwiraj Mal,
FIBRES
Fibres are grouped and twisted together to form a
continuous strand known as “yarn” and the process is
known as “spinning”
Yarns are interlaced and inter-looped to form woven
and knitted fabric respectively
Dr. Prithwiraj Mal,
FIBRES
The process of interlacing
yarns to form woven fabric
is known as “weaving”
The process of inter-
looping yarns to form
knitted fabric is known as
“knitting”
Dr. Prithwiraj Mal,
Classification of
Textiles Fibres
Dr. Prithwiraj Mal,
Fibre
Natural Man-made
Synthetic Regenerated
Dr. Prithwiraj Mal,
Natural Fibre
Vegetable / Animal /
Mineral
Cellulosic Protein
Cotton Wool Asbestos
Jute Silk Glass
Linen Metal
Dr. Prithwiraj Mal,
Man-made Fibre
Regenerated Synthetic
Viscose Polyester
Acetate Nylon
Dr. Prithwiraj Mal,
Fibre
Staple fibre
Staple Filament
Cotton Silk
Dr. Prithwiraj Mal,
Dr. Prithwiraj Mal,
Properties and Performance of
Textile Materials
Aesthetic
Durability Comfort Safety
Properties
Flexibility
Hand
Abrasion
Lustre Absorbency
Resistance
Pilling Cover
Chemical Effects Flammability
Resiliency Environmental Elasticity
Specific Gravity Conditions Wicking
Static Electricity Strength
Thermoplasticity
Dr. Prithwiraj Mal,
Fibre Length
Fibre length varies from less than one inch to miles
of length
Fibres of short length are known as staple fibres
Fibres of longer length are known as filaments
Dr. Prithwiraj Mal,
Fibre Length
Dr. Prithwiraj Mal,
Fibre Diameter
Fibre diameter refers to the thickness of the
fibre
Thicker fibres are stiff whereas thinner fibres are
flexible
Micronaire, denier, tex are units for measurement of
thickness of fibres
Dr. Prithwiraj Mal,
Fibre Diameter
Micron & micronaire are used for the fineness
measurement of natural staple fibres like
cotton, wool
Denier is used for the fineness measurement
of manmade and filaments like polyester,
nylon, silk
Dr. Prithwiraj Mal,
Density & Specific Gravity
Density is the weight per unit volume
Specific gravity is the ration of density of
the fibre at 40C to the density of water at
40C
Dr. Prithwiraj Mal,
SHAPE AND CONTOUR
Shape of the fibres can be
examined both in cross section
and its longitudinal form
Cross section can be circular,
oval, triangular, U-shaped,
trilobal, multilobal
Fibre contours can be smooth,
rough or uneven
Dr. Prithwiraj Mal,
SHAPE AND CONTOUR
Difference in shape and contour contribute
to differences in fibre characteristics such
as lustre, covering power, appearance, hand
(or feel) and surface texture
Dr. Prithwiraj Mal,
SEM Images of cotton,
polyester and wool
Dr. Prithwiraj Mal,
Dr. Prithwiraj Mal,
SHAPE AND CONTOUR
Dr. Prithwiraj Mal,
CRIMP
Crimp refers to bend and waviness along the length of
the fibre
Crimp affects various performance properties like
resiliency, bulk, warmth, elongation, skin comfort
Dr. Prithwiraj Mal,
CRIMP
Greater crimp increases
Resiliency
Bulk
Warmth
Elongation
Skin comfort
Greater crimp decreases
Lustre
Hand
Dr. Prithwiraj Mal,
CRIMP
Wool has natural 3-dimensional crimp
Crimp can be added to manufactured fibre by
a process called “texturising”
Dr. Prithwiraj Mal,
STRENGTH
Strength
Ability to withstand stress
Fabric performance is determined by tensile strength, bursting
strength and tearing strength
Tensile strength and tearing strength are measured generally for
woven fabric
Bursting strength is measured generally for knitted fabric and in
some special woven fabric depending upon its end use (parachute
cloth)
Dr. Prithwiraj Mal,
ELONGATION
Elongation
Elongation is the amount of stretching of a fibre along
its length under a tensile force
It is expressed as a percentage of its original length
“Elongation at break” of fibre is mainly measured which
denotes the amount of stretch a fibre can withstand
before it breaks
Dr. Prithwiraj Mal,
ELASTIC RECOVERY
Elastic recovery
Elastic recovery is the ability to come back to its original
length after removal of the tensile force
Elongation makes a garment more comfortable as it takes
the shape / contour of the body and recovery helps
prevent bagginess from occurring at elbows or
knees and prevents the garment being loose fitting
Dr. Prithwiraj Mal,
RESILIENCY
Resiliency
Resiliency is the ability of a material to spring back to
its original shape after being creased, twisted or
distorted / compressed
Nylon, polyester has a very good resiliency whereas
cotton has poor resiliency
Dr. Prithwiraj Mal,
ABSORBENCY
Absorbency
It is the ability of the fibre to absorb moisture
The absorbency of a fibre is denoted by “Moisture
Regain”
Moisture regain is the amount of water a bone-dry fibre
absorbs from air under standard conditions of 200C and
65% RH
Dr. Prithwiraj Mal,
ABSORBENCY
Fibres able to absorb water easily are called
“hydrophilic”
Fibres that have difficulty absorbing water are called
“hydrophobic”
The absorbency affects on skin comfort, static build-
up, dimensional stability in water, stain removal
Dr. Prithwiraj Mal,
WICKING
Wicking
Wicking is the ability of fibre to transfer moisture
along its surface
This property is especially desirable in sportswear
where the body perspiration is transported by wicking
Dr. Prithwiraj Mal,
ABRASION RESISTANCE
Abrasion resistance
Abrasion resistance is the ability to resist wear from
rubbing that contributes the fabric durability
Garments made from fibres of high abrasion resistance
can used for a long period of time before sign of
physical wear appears
Dr. Prithwiraj Mal,
STATIC ELECTRICITY
Static electricity
Static electricity is the frictional electric charge
caused by rubbing of two similar or dissimilar materials
Dr. Prithwiraj Mal,
THERMOPLASTICITY
Thermoplastic and Thermo-set
Fibres that used to melt on exposure to heat are known as
thermoplastic
Fibres that decompose and turns into char on exposure to
heat are known as thermo-set
Polyester, nylon are thermoplastic whereas, cotton, wool, silk
are thermoset
Dr. Prithwiraj Mal,
THERMOPLASTICITY
Thermoplastic have a second transition temperature
at which the “glassy state” is converted into its
“rubbery state”
This secondary transition is known as “glass
transition” temperature and is very important in
context to dyeing. The temperature at which this
transition takes place is known as “glass transition
temperature”
Dr. Prithwiraj Mal,
PILLING
Pilling
Pilling is the formation of groups
of balls on the surface of the
fabric
Pilling makes a fabric undesirable
look
Hydrophobic fibres tends to pill
more than the hydrophilic fibres
Dr. Prithwiraj Mal,
FLAMMABILITY
Flammability
Flammability is the ability to ignite or burn
Fibres can be flammable, flame resistant or flameproof
Flammable: Relatively easy to ignite and sustain combustion
Flame resistant: Have slow rate of burning and may also be
self-extinguishing
Flameproof: Will not burn
Dr. Prithwiraj Mal,
BURNING & CHEMICAL TEST
Dr. Prithwiraj Mal,
It is not possible to identify fibres merely by
seeing or feeling
Burning and chemical tests need to be
performed to identify the fibres
Dr. Prithwiraj Mal,
Burning Test
Fibres Burns or Shrinks from Odour Residue
Melts Flame
Cellulosic Burns only No Burning paper Fine, feathery
(Cotton, Jute, gray ash
Flax, Rayon
etc.)
PROTEIN FIBRES
Wool Burns only Yes Very strong Black bead
odour of that crushes
burning hair easily to black
powder
Silk Burns only Yes Odour of Black bead
burning hair that crushes
but not so easily to black
strong. Smell powder
is more like
burning meat.
Dr. Prithwiraj Mal,
Burning Test
Fibres Burns or Melts Shrinks Odour Residue
from Flame
Manufactured Fibres
Acrylic Burns and melts Yes Broiled fish Hard, irregular
shaped black
bead
Glass Melts only at Very slowly No odour Hard, whitish
very high temp. bead
Nylon Burns and melts Yes Hard, cream
coloured bead; if
fibres are
overheated, bead
becomes dark
Dr. Prithwiraj Mal,
Burning Test
Fibres Burns or Shrinks Odour Residue
Melts from
Flame
Manufactured Fibres
Olefin Burns and Yes Chemical or Hard bead
melts paraffin – like
Polyester Burns and Yes Sweet Hard cream
melts chemical coloured bead;
if fibres are
overheated,
bead becomes
dark
Dr. Prithwiraj Mal,
Chemical Solubility Test
Solvents Fibre that will dissolve
Acetic acid, 100% conc., 200C, 5 Acetate
minutes
Hydrochloric acid; 20% conc, 200C, Nylon and vinal. Nylon dissolves in
10 minutes meta-cresol, 100% conc., at boil, 5
minutes, whereas vinal does not
Sodium hypochlorite or NaOH Silk & Wool. Differentiate visually
Meta-xylene, 100% conc. at boil for 5 Olefin
min.
DMF, 100% conc., boil, 10 minutes Acrylic and spandex and acetate.
Spandex is elastomeric and others are
not
Sulphuric acid, 70% conc., 400C, 20 Cotton, flax and rayon (also acetate,
minutes nylon and vinal)
Meta-cresol, 70% conc. At boil for 5 Polyester (also nylon)
minutes
Dr. Prithwiraj Mal,
What do you think????
State the fibre property that most affects the indicated
conditions
Pilling propensity
Producing permanent pleats
Improving insulation
Resistance to wear from rubbing
Static buildup
Determination of “hand”
Excessive wrinkling
Good drapability
Preventing clammy feeling on a hot day
Resisting pulling force
Degree of lustre
Dr. Prithwiraj Mal,