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Volume 5, No.3/2005
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THE TENSILE BEHAVIOUR
OF SPIDER SILK
E. Van Nimmen, K. Gellynck, L. Van Langenhove
Department of Textiles, Ghent University,
Technologiepark 907, B-9052 Zwijnaarde, Belgium
Spider silk has attracted the interest of several researchers in
recent years because it displays a unique combination of high
tensile strength, high breaking strain and an ultra-low weight.
Hitherto, the focus has always been on dragline and viscid silk,
whereas research on spider cocoon silk is limited. In order to
explain the structure-property relationship of spider silk, the
stress-strain behaviour of cocoon and dragline silk is compared in
this study. It is shown that both fibres have completely different
stress-strain behaviours.In addition, the influence of the testing
speed is investigated. For cocoon silk, lower testing speeds
result in lower strength, stiffness and higher post-modulus. When
the stress-strain curve is simulated by an extended Maxwell model,
as testing speed increases, the level of the hardening region is
higher, the yield region moves to higher strains and the hardening
region in the stress-strain curve becomes more horizontal.
However, a speed of 20 mm/min can be considered as a saturation
point where the effect of the speed decreases. The influence of
the testing speed on dragline silk is clearly less pronounced than
for cocoon silk. However, a more detailed study of the
stress-strain curves of dragline revealed different possible
shapes for the stress-strain behaviour of dragline silk.
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REDUCING YARN HAIRINESS IN
WINDING BY MEANS OF JETS: OPTIMISATION OF JET PARAMETERS, YARN
LINEAR DENSITY AND WINDING SPEED
R. S. Rengasamy*, V. K.
Kothari*, Asis Patnaik*, Anindya Ghosh*, H. Punekar**
Department of Textile
Technology, Indian Institute of Technology, New Delhi 110016,
India*, Fluent India Private Limited, Pune 411057, India**
Reducing yarn hairiness during
yarn winding by the use of air jets is a new approach, since the
production rate of winding is very high and the process itself
increases yarn hairiness. The Box & Behnken factorial design
approach has been used to optimise the jet angle, the jet
diameter, yarn linear density and the winding speed in order to
reduce the yarn hairiness. A jet angle of 450, a jet diameter of
2.2 mm, 10 tex yarn and a winding speed of 800 m/min give the
optimal results in terms of reducing the hairiness. A CFD
(computational fluid dynamics) model has been developed to
simulate the airflow pattern inside the jets with the use of
Fluent 6.1 software. The air velocity around the core of the jet
is the influencing factor in wrapping the hairs on the yarn body.
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A STUDY ON FRICTIONAL CHARACTERISTICS
OF WOVEN FABRICS
Apurba Das, V. K. Kothari
and Nagaraju Vandana
Department of Textile Technology, Indian Institute of Technology,
New Delhi-110 016, India
We have examined the
fabric-to-metal surface and fabric-to-fabric frictional
characteristics (in both warp and weft directions) of a series of
fabrics containing 100% polyester, 100% viscose, and P/C & P/V
blends with different blend proportions. It has been observed that
the normal load and the frictional force follow a logarithmic
relationship for all the fabrics. The nature of fabric friction is
characterised by different parameters such as the F/N ratio, and
the values of n, k and k/n. Fabric-to-metal friction is found to
be less sensitive to fabric morphology and rubbing direction,
whereas fabric-to-fabric friction is highly sensitive to these
factors. Fabric friction has been affected by many factors such as
the type of fibre, type of blend, blend proportion, yarn
structure, fabric structure, crimp and crimp height,
compressibility, etc. In P/C and P/V blended fabrics, the
frictional force increases as the cellulose fibre component
increases.
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A STUDY OF THE DEGREE OF BREAKAGE OF GLASS FILAMENT YARNS DURING
THE WEFT KNITTING PROCESS
Hong Hu and Mei Zhu
College of Textiles, Donghua
University,
1882 West Yan-An Road, Shanghai 200051, P.R. China
In this
paper, the degree of breakage of glass filament yarns during the
weft knitting process is studied. A quantitative method used for
assessing the degree of glass filament breakage is proposed, and
the effects of different factors such as cam setting, knitted
structures and yarn parameters are analysed. The experimental
results show that an optimum cam setting exists at which the
degree of filament breakage is minimum.
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EXPERIMENTAL DETERMINATION OF THE TENSILE FORCE IN EMBROIDERY
THREADS KNITTING
Peter Hadzhidobrev, Andreas
Charalambus
College in Sliven
Bourgassko shausee 59, 8800 Sliven, Bulgaria
In this work, a method for
indirectly determining the tensile force in yarn of twisted units
is propounded on a tensile force-elongation diagram. The
elongation occurs in the change of the screw line step of the
twisted units. The screw-line step is calculated after multiple
measurements of short-length areas in the work zone of the
knitting needles. The measuring is possible for knitting in
producing conditions and in real time.
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GAS FLOW AROUND AND THROUGH TEXTILE STRUCTURES DURING PLASMA
TREATMENT
J. Verschuren, P.
Kiekens
Department of Textiles, Ghent
University, Technologiepark 907, B-9052 Gent
An experimental plasma reactor
has been developed that enables the study of aspects related to
the flow of a gas around and into textile structures while they
are treated in a plasma at reduced pressure. A selection of
experiments draws attention to the fact that even at reduced
pressure a textile forms a barrier for a gas containing
plasma-created species, resulting in an ‘edge effect’. It is also
shown how basic variations in the structure of a textile influence
the penetration of the treatment effect. The ratio of textile
thickness to its porosity is proposed as a simple rule of thumb
for assessing the effect of penetration and etching efficiency.
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THE INFLUENCE OF ACID DYES UPON SOME STRUCTURAL AND PHYSICO-MECHANICAL
INDICES OF POLYAMIDE FIBRES
Milena Nedkova, Pavel
Pavlov, Dimitar Pishev
University of Chemical Technology and Metallurgy
Textile and Leather Department
Kliment Ohridski 8
Sofia 1756, Bulgaria
The influence of three acid
dyes upon some physico-mechanical indices of polyamide
multifilament yarn has been studied as a consequence of the
structure modifications which occur during the dyeing process. It
has been established that, irrespective of the differences in the
chemical composition of the dyes, the modifications in the
properties of the samples used are quite similar. Some structural
characteristics, tenacity and elongation at break, crease
resistance and the critical time of dissolution, have been
determined. The dependencies of the indices listed on the dye
concentration are of a complex character, which reflects the
gradual penetration of the dye molecules into the inter-fibrillar
and intra-fibrillar amorphous areas of the structure which are
different in solidity. The fluctuations in the course of the
dependencies in the area of the lowest concentrations are the
result of the combined influence of the processes of improvement
of the crystal phase and the relaxation phenomena, occurring in
the most accessible amorphous areas of the fibrous structure. With
the increase in the dye concentration, the so-called
‘cross-linking effect’ starts to appear, as a result of the
formation of inter-molecular links of the polymer-dye-polymer
type, which influence the properties under investigation in a
characteristic way. The increase in the dye presence in the
substrate provokes the repeated alternation of the above-mentioned
phenomena in the thicker amorphous areas of the samples, with a
pronounced influence of the ‘cross-linking effect’ in the highest
concentrations.
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