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Textile technologies

Textile sizing Textile technology Textile treatment... [Pg.980]

Institute of Textile Technology Reuters Limited Thomas Publishing Co. [Pg.117]

Textile technology is used to mechanically or aerodynamicaHy arrange textile fibers into preferentially oriented webs. Fabrics produced by these systems are referred to as dry-laid nonwovens. Dry-laid nonwovens are manufactured with machinery associated with staple fiber processing, such as cards and gametts, which are designed to manipulate preformed fibers in the dry state. Also included in this category are nonwovens made from filaments in the form of tow, and fabrics composed of staple fibers and stitching filaments or yams, ie, stitchbonded nonwovens. [Pg.146]

Dictionay of Fiber Textile Technology, Hoechst Celanese Corp., Chadotte, N.C., IZ 503. [Pg.91]

Apollo Chemical Corp.2 Applied Textile Technologies Inc. [Pg.268]

A fine wire or thread. In textile technology the fine thread formed at the spinnerettes in the manufacture of synthetic and man-made fibres. See Continuous Filament. [Pg.28]

A fabric made by uniting a mass of staple fibres into a continuous sheet by using the adhesive properties of a bonding agent, usually rubber latex, either natural or synthetic. In textile technology the term is applied to fabrics which are not woven, such as felted fabrics. Non-woven fabrics are now being termed bonded fabrics. [Pg.43]

In textile technology, a weft thread also termed a filling thread or shot. [Pg.47]

In textile technology that direction of twisting yams or threads which runs from left to right downwards, as the centre part of a letter S, when the yam is held vertically. [Pg.62]

T3 Technical Textile Technology 3, No.4, Dec.2004, p. 18/20. This issue is published within International Fibre Journal, Vol.19, No.6, Dec.2004... [Pg.29]

Department of Chemistry, Utkal University, Bhubaneswar 751 004, India 2Present Address Institute of Textile Technology, Choudwar 754 025, Orissa, India department of Neurology, Medical University of South Carolina, 96 Jonathan Lucas Str., Charleston, SC 29425, USA... [Pg.127]

Related titles from Woodhead s textile technology list ... [Pg.347]

Details of these books and a complete list of Woodhead s textile technology titles can be obtained by ... [Pg.347]

A. K. Sarkar Fluorescent Whitening Agents in J. G. Cook (ed.) Textile Technology, Merrow Publishing Co., Watford, England, 1971. [Pg.617]

Biocol A process for removing dyes from aqueous effluents using a microorganism immobilized on activated carbon. The microorganism, Schewanella putrifaciens, was first isolated and characterized at the University of Leeds. The process was developed in Queens University, Belfast, in conjunction with British Textile Technology Group. Piloted from April 2001 at a dyeworks in County Antrim. [Pg.43]

A more rapid test method, developed by the British Textile Technology Group in the late 1980s, is based on adenosine triphosphate (ATP) luminescence. The growth of microorganisms is assessed by firefly bioluminescent detection and ATP analysis. ... [Pg.171]

C. W. Aurich, Recovery by Filtration, AATCC Symposium, Textile Technology/Ecology Interface, Charlotte, N. C, May 1975. [Pg.393]

Volume 8 Needle Punching Textile Technology by V. Mrstina anc/F. Fejgl Volume 9 Industrial Textiles edited by J. Svedova Volume 10 Modified Polyester Fibres byJ. Militky etal. [Pg.501]

Professor of Textile Chemistry College of Textile Technology Serampore, Hooghly, West Bengal India... [Pg.502]


See other pages where Textile technologies is mentioned: [Pg.117]    [Pg.147]    [Pg.148]    [Pg.449]    [Pg.21]    [Pg.62]    [Pg.23]    [Pg.59]    [Pg.39]    [Pg.449]    [Pg.831]    [Pg.117]    [Pg.288]    [Pg.168]    [Pg.21]    [Pg.322]    [Pg.47]    [Pg.9]    [Pg.711]    [Pg.107]    [Pg.47]    [Pg.145]    [Pg.335]    [Pg.25]   


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