A Study of the Mechanical Properties of Woven Silk Fabrics. Part I: Fabric Mechanical Properties and Handle Characterizing Woven Silk Fabrics
- 1 January 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in The Journal of the Textile Institute
- Vol. 79 (3) , 458-475
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00405008808658280
Abstract
In order to investigate the soft handle of woven silk fabrics, their basic tensile, bending, shearing, compressional, and surface properties were measured on the KESF system. Fabric shear, compressional, and tensile properties distinguish continuous-filament silk fabrics from fabrics of other fibres. Shear stiffness and hysteresis in shear force are very small, and these fabrics are very deformable in their compressional and tensile properties at small strain levels. High values of FUKURAMI are a characteristic of continuous-filament woven silk fabrics.Keywords
This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
- A Study of the Mechanical Properties of Woven Silk Fabrics. Part III: A Study of the Extensibility of Continuous-filament Woven Silk Fabrics in the Small-load RegionThe Journal of the Textile Institute, 1988
- A Study of the Mechanical Properties of Woven Silk Fabrics. Part II: Analysis of the Shearing Properties of Woven Silk FabricsThe Journal of the Textile Institute, 1988
- Measurements of Mechanical Properties of Thin Dress Fabrics for Hand EvaluationSen'i Kikai Gakkaishi (Journal of the Textile Machinery Society of Japan), 1984
- Improvement in the Objective Evaluation of Fabric Hand for Thin Dress FabricsSen'i Kikai Gakkaishi (Journal of the Textile Machinery Society of Japan), 1984
- Characterization Method of the Physical Propperty of Fabrics and the Measuring System for Hand-Feeling EvaluationSen'i Kikai Gakkaishi (Journal of the Textile Machinery Society of Japan), 1973
- Some amino acid sequences in the amorphous fraction of the fibroin of Bombyx moriBiochemical Journal, 1962
- An investigation of the structure of silk fibroinBiochimica et Biophysica Acta, 1955