Man-made bio-based fibre products
- Introduction to man-made bio-based fibre products
- Man-made bio-based fibre products and their end-uses
- Textile fibres, processing and end-uses
- Key aspects of the down-stream conversion processes
- Production of bio-based fibres
- Dissolving pulp as a raw material
- Cellulose esters of organic acids
- Production of viscose fibres
- General description of carbamate processes
- Production of lyocell fibres
- Production of Cupro fibres
- Carbon fibres from regenerated cellulose
- Production of Alginate fibres
- Viscose and lyocell machinery developments
- Processing of silkworm and spider silk protein fibres
- Polylactide fibres
- Polyhydroxyalcohols PHA and poly(caprolactone)
- Scientific principles of polymer fibre forming
- Alternative and emerging processes for bio-based synthetic fibers
- Ionic liquid as direct solvents: Ioncell-F method
- Enzymatic activation of cellulose – Biocelsol method
- Cellulose carbamate process
- Direct spinning of cellulose composite fibre yarn
- Cellulose-lignin blend as carbon fibre raw material
- Bio-based polyolefines — emerging processes
- Bio-based polyesters — emerging processes
- Polyamides from ligno-cellulosics as raw materials
- Industrial development with silkworm and spider silk
Weaving and knitting Textile fabric is an assembly of fibres, yarns or combination of these. The most common fabrics are woven and knitted fabrics, and the manufacturing processes are called weaving and knitting. Other textile fabrics are, for example, braided fabrics, nonwovens, laces, or tufted fabrics. Weaving Weaving is the interlacing of warp and weft
Authors & references
Author:
Marja Rissanen
References:
- Adanur, S. 2001. Handbook of weaving. CRC Press.
- Hatch, K. L. 1993. Textile science. West Publishing Company.
- Spencer, D. J. 2001. Knitting technology, a comprehensive handbook and practical guide. 3. ed. Woodhead Publishing.
Videos
Exercises
This page has been updated 11.11.2020