upload
Celanese Acetate LLC
Industry: Textiles
Number of terms: 9358
Number of blossaries: 0
Company Profile:
Celanese Corporation is a Fortune 500 global technology and specialty materials company with its headquarters in Dallas, Texas, United States.
The term applied to fibers whose luster has not been reduced by physical or chemical means; the opposite of dull or matte.
Industry:Textiles
The tensile stress at rupture of a specimen (fiber, filament, yarn, cord, or similar structure) expressed as newtons per tex, grams-force per tex, or gram-force per denier. The breaking tenacity is calculated from the breaking load and linear density of the unstrained specimen, or obtained directly from tensile testing machines which can be suitably adjusted to indicate tenacity instead of breaking load for specimens of known linear density. Breaking tenacity expressed in grams-force per tex is numerically equal to breaking length expressed in kilometers.
Industry:Textiles
The process of gases or liquids being taken up into the pores of a fiber, yarn, or fabric. (Also see ADSORPTION.)
Industry:Textiles
The temperature at which a polymer no longer exhibits viscoelastic properties.
Industry:Textiles
The speed at which a fabric burns. It can be expressed as the amount of fabric affected per unit time, in terms of distance or area traveled by the flame, afterglow, or char.
Industry:Textiles
The removal of bark from wood prior to pulping.
Industry:Textiles
The ratio of change in stress to change in strain between two points on a stress-strain diagram, particularly the points of zero stress and breaking stress.
Industry:Textiles
The property of withstanding contact or treatment with any acids normally encountered in use. The type of acid should be stated (i.e., organic or inorganic).
Industry:Textiles
The properties of textile materials whereby they resist deposition of dirt and stains.
Industry:Textiles
The process of binding thermoplastic fibers into a nonwoven fabric by applying heat and pressure so that a discrete pattern of fiber bonds is formed. Also called spot bonding.
Industry:Textiles
© 2024 CSOFT International, Ltd.