Direct Dye:
Direct Dye is a class of dyestuffs that
are applied directly to the substrate in a neutral or alkaline bath.
They produce full shades on cotton and linen without mordanting and can
also be applied to rayon, silk, and wool. Direct dyes give bright shades
but exhibit poor wash fastness. Various after treatments are used to
improve the wash fastness of direct dyes, and such dyes are referred to
as “after treated direct colors.”Direct Dyes are molecules that adhere
to the fabric molecules without help from other chemicals. Direct dyes
are defined as anionic dyes with substantively for cellulosic fibres,
normally applied from an aqueous dye bath containing an electrolyte,
either sodium chloride (NaCl) or sodium sulphate (Na2SO4).
Direct Dyes
The dyeing process with direct dyes is
very simple, Direct dyeing is normally carried out in a neutral or
slight alkaline dye bath, at or near boiling point , but a separate
after treatment such as cationic dye fixing , to enhance wet fastness
has been necessary for most direct dyeing .
Direct dyes are used on cotton, paper, leather, wool, silk and nylon.
· Chemicals Nature of Direct Dyes: Chemically they are salts of complex sulfonic acids.
· Structure : More than 75% of all direct dyes are un-metallised azo structures, great majority of them are disazo or polyazo types.
· Ionic Nature: Anionic.
· Solubility : Soluble in water .
Affinity:-They have an affinity for a
wide variety of fibers such as cotton ,viscose, silk jute ,linen etc..
They do not make any permanent chemical bond with the cellulosic fibers
but are attached to it via very week hydrogen bonding as well as vander
waals forces. Their flat shape and their length enable them to lie
along-side cellulose fibers and maximize the Van-der-Waals, dipole and
hydrogen bonds.
Types of Direct Dyes:
The SDC classification of direct dyes is follows
(1) Class A – dyes that are self-levelling, i.e. dyes of good migration or leveling properties.
(2) Class B – dyes that are not
self-levelling, but which can be controlled by addition of salt to give
level results; they are described as salt-controllable.
(3) Class C – dyes that are not
self-levelling and which are highly sensitive to salt, the exhaustion of
these dyes cannot adequately be controlled by addition of salt alone
and they require additional control by temperature; they are described
as temperature-controllable.
Application of Direct Dyes
Direct dyes are usually applied with the
addition of electrolyte at or near the boil in the machines capable of
running at atmospheric pressure .But in HTHP dyeing machines it is
carried out at temperatures above the boil in case of pure as well as
blended yarns.
An addition of alkali, usually sodium
carbonate, may be made with acid-sensitive direct dyes and with hard
water as well as to enhance the dye solubilisation. When cellulose is
immersed in a solution of a direct dye it absorbs dye from the solution
until equilibrium is attained, and at this stage most of the dye is
taken up by the fibre. The rate of absorption and equilibrium exhaustion
vary from dye to dye. The substantivity of the dye for cellulose is the
proportion of the dye absorbed by the fibre compared with that
remaining in the dye bath.
Dye bath variables which must be considered for level dyeing,
Ø Temperature of Dyeing and rate of heating
Ø Electrolyte concentration and addition
Ø Time
Ø Dye solubility
Ø Use of leveling agent
After Treatment of Direct Dyed Material
The wet fastness properties
(particularly washing, water and perspiration) of virtually all dyeing
of direct dyes are inadequate for many end uses but notable improvements
can be brought about by after treatments.
Ø Diazotisation and development
Ø Metal salt treatments
Ø Cationic fixing agents
Ø Formaldehyde treatment
Ø Cross linking agents and resin treatments
Stripping:- Most direct dyes can
be stripped of the use of stripping salts (Sodium Hydrosulphite) and/or
by using a chlorine bleaching agent such as sodium hypochlorite, without
harmful effects on the fibres.
Ø Color fastness properties of Direct Dyed material: Generally these dyes are used where high wash fastness is not required.
Ø Wash Fastness: Poor unless treated with suitable dye fixing agent and/or fastness improving finishing agent.
Ø Light Fastness:-Good
Ø Rubbing Fastness: Moderate to Good
Ø Chemical Wash Fastness:- Poor
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