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Man-made bio-based fibre products

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Textile and clothing applications

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Man-made bio-based fibre products

  • Introduction to man-made bio-based fibre products
    • Production statistics of textiles
    • Production of man-made fibres
      • Fibre fineness and application areas
      • Physical and chemical Peculiarity of fibre strucure
    • Natural textile fibres
    • Introduction to technical textiles
      • Fibres for apparel and technical applications
      • Classification of high technology and super fibres
    • Environmental issues of textiles and fibres
    • Bio-based plastics and fibres
  • Man-made bio-based fibre products and their end-uses
    • Introduction to cellulose as a raw material
      • Cellulose derivatives – a general approach to their production
    • Regenerated cellulose fibers
      • Viscose, modal and polynosic fibers
      • Lyocell fibers
      • Cupro fibres
      • Cellulose carbamate fibres
      • Yarns and fibres from paper
      • Bacterial cellulose
    • Chemical cellulose derivatives
    • Other regenerated bio-based fibres – Alginate and Chitosan
    • Regenerated protein fibres
    • Man-made bio-based synthetic fibres
      • Bio-based synthetic polyesters PLA and alkanoates
      • Bio-based polyesters from terephthalic acid
      • Polyester based on (biobased) ethylene diol and furane dicarboxylic acid PEF
      • Biochemical recycling of polyester
      • Bio-based polyolefines
    • Carbon fibers from biobased raw materials
      • Prospects for carbon fibers made from lignin
      • Bio-based acryl nitrile for carbon fibres
  • Textile fibres, processing and end-uses
    • High performance and speciality fibres (synthetics, carbon fibers from cellulose)
    • Technologies for clothing production: capital vs. labour intensive production
    • Interior and household textiles
    • Textile composites
    • Testing and evaluation of textiles
    • Overview of textile standards
  • Key aspects of the down-stream conversion processes
    • Clothing design and manufacture
    • Future demands of sustainable clothing production
    • Fibre and yarn spinning
    • Weaving and knitting
    • Advanced mechanical processes in weaving and 3D structures
    • Nonwoven technology
    • Fibrous reinforcements and composites
    • Chemical processing of textiles
      • Coloration of textiles
      • Dyeing of textiles
      • Theories and mechanisms of dyeing
      • Dye classes and pigments
      • Conventional dyeing and printing of textiles
      • Printing of textiles
      • Finishing and aftertreatment
  • Production of bio-based fibres
    • Dissolving pulp as a raw material
    • Cellulose esters of organic acids
    • Production of viscose fibres
      • Production of modal and polynosic fibres
      • Production and properties of cellulose-silica hybrid 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
    • General elementary theory for polymer fibre forming
    • Linear polymer behaviour
    • General theories of fibre spinning
    • Phase separation in solution spinning
    • Multicomponent, micro- and nanofibres
    • Degradation mechanisms of fibre polymers
    • Cellulose ethers
    • Specific cellulose products
  • 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

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This page has been updated 30.10.2020
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