Microscopical Studies of Cottons Reacted in Vapor Phase
- 1 December 1970
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Textile Research Journal
- Vol. 40 (12) , 1087-1095
- https://doi.org/10.1177/004051757004001207
Abstract
Morphological effects of the modification of cotton by vapor-phase treatments were studied by light and electron microscopy. Observations were made of etherified, grafted, and cross-linked cottons. The uniformity of reaction was followed by swelling whole fibers in cupriethylenediamine hydroxide (Cuene) solution and observing the swelling and dissolution along the length of the fiber. In addition, ultrathin sections were prepared and dissolution characteristics of the sections, after immersion in Cuene, were observed with the electron microscope. Observations of cotton cross-linked with methanol hemiformal in the presence of SO2, in an open constant-volume reactor, gave indications that little reaction had occurred; reacted areas observed were at the periphery of the fiber. Samples of cotton cross-linked with vapors of paraformaldehyde, with formic acid as catalyst, appeared to be cross-linked throughout the fine structure of the fiber; when HCl or SO2 was used as the catalyst in this reaction, peripheral crosslinking was observed. When fabrics were treated for long periods of time with formalin in the presence of SO2, the reaction seemed to penetrate the entire structure of the fiber; after short periods of treatment it was peripheral. Large amounts of HCl with formalin resulted in some limited cross-linking of the fiber. When cotton was treated in a closed, constant-pressure reactor with formalin in the presence of SO2, the cellulose was reacted throughout the fiber. Observations of a series of cottons impregnated with 2-hydroxyethyl carbamate exposed to butanol hemiformal vapor indicated that the degree of penetration of the cross-linking agent was dependent upon the length of time the samples were exposed to the cross-linking agent in the vapor phase. Examination of sections from cotton grafted with acrylic acid revealed that the material remaining after solution in Cuene was not fibrillar, but rather one of spongy character. Hydroxyethylation made the fiber sensitive to a dimethylolethylene urea (DMEU) cross-linking treatment.Keywords
This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Microscopical Evaluation of Cellulose Esters with Low Degrees of SubstitutionTextile Research Journal, 1968
- Location of some typical vinyl polymers within radiation‐grafted cotton fibers: An electron microscopical surveyJournal of Applied Polymer Science, 1968
- Vapor Phase Reactions on CottonTextile Research Journal, 1966
- Investigation of the catalyst in the cellulose–DMEU reaction. Part II. Physicochemical studies of the reactionJournal of Applied Polymer Science, 1963
- Structure and Properties of Chemically Modified CottonTextile Research Journal, 1963
- Cross-Linking Cotton in the Peripheral Regions of the FiberTextile Research Journal, 1962