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Protective bleaching of camel hair in a neutral ethanol–water system

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journal contribution
posted on 2018-07-01, 00:00 authored by Liangjun Xia, Chunhua Zhang, Wenfang Xu, Kundi Zhu, Aming Wang, Ye Tian, Yunli Wang, Weilin Xu
As conventional bleaching under alkaline conditions is chemically damaging to protein fibers, a three-stage protective bleaching process in neutral ethanol⁻water mixtures was proposed for camel hair using mordanting with ferrous salts, oxidative bleaching with hydrogen peroxide, and reductive bleaching with sodium hydrosulfite. The aim of this work was to improve the whiteness degree of camel hair without substantial tenacity loss. In addition, the roles of ethanol during the bleaching treatment were also examined by characterizing the fibers using scanning electron microscopy (SEM), transmission electron microscopy (TEM), Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy, and X-ray diffraction. The whiteness degree and mechanical properties of camel hair bleached in the neutral ethanol⁻water system were significantly superior to those of fibers bleached by a conventional method. SEM images showed no visible cracks on the scales of fibers bleached in the ethanol⁻water system, whereas large grooves were observed on fibers bleached in aqueous solution. TEM images confirmed the positive influence of ethanol on the mordanting process, and FTIR spectra suggested that ethanol reduced the breakage of hydrogen bonds in the fibers during the oxidative bleaching process. These findings indicate the potential of this protective bleaching method for application to a broad range of other natural protein fibers.

History

Journal

Polymers

Volume

10

Article number

730

Pagination

1-18

Location

Basel, Switzerland

Open access

  • Yes

eISSN

2073-4360

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2018, the authors

Issue

7

Publisher

MDPI

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