Acrylic Fiber

Acrylic Fiber Struktur
CAS-Nr.
Englisch Name:
Acrylic Fiber
Synonyma:
AcrylicFiber
CBNumber:
CB41019014
Summenformel:
Molgewicht:
0
MOL-Datei:
Mol file

Acrylic Fiber Eigenschaften

Sicherheit

Acrylic Fiber Chemische Eigenschaften,Einsatz,Produktion Methoden

Beschreibung

Acrylic fibers are synthetic fibers made from a polymer (poly acrylo nitrile) with an average molecular weight of~100,000, about 1900 monomer units. To be called acrylic in the U.S, the polymer must contain at least 85% acrylonitrile monomer. Typical comonomers are vinyl acetate or methyl acrylate. The Dupont Corporation created the first acrylic fibers in 1941 and trademarked them under the name Orlon.

Verwenden

Acrylic is lightweight, soft, and warm, with a wool-like feel. It can also be made to mimic other fibers, such as cotton, when spun on short staple equipment. Some acrylic is extruded in colored or pigmented form; other is extruded in "ecru", otherwise known as "natural," "raw white," or "undyed." Pigmented fiber has highest lightfastness. Its fibers are very resilient compared to both other synthetics and natural fibers. Some acrylic is used in clothing as a less expensive alternative to cashmere, due to the similar feeling of the materials. Some acrylic fabrics may fuzz or pill easily. Other fibers and fabrics are designed to minimize pilling. Acrylic takes color well, is washable, and is generally hypoallergenic. End-uses include socks, hats, gloves, scarves, sweaters, home furnishing fabrics, and awnings.
Acrylic is resistant to moths, oils, chemicals, and is very resistant to deterioration from sunlight exposure. However, static and pilling can be a problem in certain fabrications.
Acrylic is the "workhorse" hand-crafting fiber for crafters who knit or crochet; acrylic yarn may be perceived as "cheap" because it is typically priced lower than its natural-fiber counterparts, and because it lacks some of their properties, including softness and the ability to felt or take acid dyes.
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Vorbereitung Methode

The polymer is formed by free - radical polymerization in aqueous suspension. The fiber is produced by dissolving the polymer in a solvent such as N,N-dimethyl formamide or aqueous sodium thiocyanate, metering it through a multi-hole spinnerette and coagulating the resultant filaments in an aqueous solution of the same solvent (wet spinning) or evaporating the solvent in a stream of heated inert gas (dry spinning). Washing, stretching, drying and crimping complete the processing. Acrylic fibers are produced in a range of deniers, typically from 0.9 to 15, as cut staple or as a 500,000 to 1 million filament tow. End uses include sweaters, hats, hand-knitting yarns, socks, rugs, awnings, boat covers, and upholstery; the fiber is also used as "PAN" precursor for carbon fiber. Production of acrylic fibers is centered in the Far East, Turkey, India, Mexico, and South America, though a number of European producers still continue to operate, including Dralon, Montefibre, and Fisipe. US producers have ended production, though acrylic tow and staple are still spun into yarns in the USA. Former U.S. brands of acrylic were Acrilan (Monsanto), Creslan (American Cyanamid), and Orlon (DuPont). Other brand names that are still in use include Dralon (Dralon GmbH).

Acrylic Fiber Upstream-Materialien And Downstream Produkte

Upstream-Materialien

Downstream Produkte


Acrylic Fiber Anbieter Lieferant Produzent Hersteller Vertrieb Händler.

Global( 2)Lieferanten
Firmenname Telefon E-Mail Land Produktkatalog Edge Rate
ecochem international chemical broker --
export@ecochem.dk Europe 6385 66
kemikalieimport --
Sales@kemikalieimport.dk Europe 6699 47

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