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SPINNING $ Types of Spinning
Spinning is manufacturing process
for creating polymer fibers. It is a specialized form of extrusion that
uses a spinneret to form multiple continuous filaments. There are four
types of spinning: wet, dry, melt, and gel spinning.
First, the polymer being spun must be converted into a fluid state. If
the polymer is a thermoplastic then it is just melted, if not then it
may be dissolved in a solvent or chemically treated to form soluble or
thermoplastic derivatives. The fluid polymer is then forced through the
spinneret, where the polymer cools to a rubbery state, and then a
solidified state.
Types of Spinning
There are different types of spinning. Such as:
1.Dry Spinning
2.Wet Spinning
3.Melt Spinning
4.Gel Spinning
Now they are descrived below:
1.Dry Spinning
Dry spinning is also used for fiber-forming substances in solution.
However, instead of precipitating the polymer by dilution or chemical
reaction, solidification is achieved by evaporating the solvent in a
stream of air or inert gas.
The filaments do not come in contact with a precipitating liquid,
eliminating the need for drying and easing solvent recovery. This
process may be used for the production of acetate, triacetate, acrylic, modacrylic, PBI, spandex, and vinyon.
2.Wet Spinning
Wet spinning is the oldest process. It is used for fiber-forming
substances that have been dissolved in a solvent. The spinnerets are
submerged in a chemical bath and as the filaments emerge they
precipitate from solution and solidify.
Because the solution is extruded directly into the precipitating liquid,
this process for making fibers is called wet spinning. Acrylic, rayon, aramid, modacrylic and spandex can be produced by this process.
3.Melt Spinning
In melt spinning, the fiber-forming substance is melted for extrusion
through the spinneret and then directly solidified by cooling. Nylon,
olefin, polyester, saran and sulfar are produced in this manner.
Melt spun fibers can be extruded from the spinneret in different
cross-sectional shapes (round, trilobal, pentagonal, octagonal, and
others). Trilobal-shaped fibers reflect more light and give an
attractive sparkle to textiles.
Pentagonal-shaped and hollow fibers, when used in carpet, show less soil
and dirt. Octagonal-shaped fibers offer glitter-free effects. Hollow
fibers trap air, creating insulation and provide loft characteristics
equal to, or better than, down.
4.Gel Spinning
Gel spinning is a special process used to obtain high strength or other
special fiber properties. The polymer is not in a true liquid state
during extrusion. Not completely separated, as they would be in a true
solution, the polymer chains are bound together at various points in
liquid crystal form.
This produces strong inter-chain forces in the resulting filaments that
can significantly increase the tensile strength of the fibers. In
addition, the liquid crystals are aligned along the fiber axis by the
shear forces during extrusion. The filaments emerge with an unusually
high degree of orientation relative to each other, further enhancing
strength. The process can also be described as dry-wet spinning, since
the filaments first pass through air and then are cooled further in a
liquid bath. Some high-strength polyethylene and aramid fibers are produced by gel spinning.
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