Cotton Fibers
Cotton is a soft staple fibre that grown in a form known as a boll
around the seeds of the cotton plant, a shrub native to tropical and
subtropical regions.
Cotton today is the most used textile fiber in the world. Its current
market share is 56 percent for all fibers used for apparel and home
furnishings and sold in the U.S. Another contribution is attributed to
nonwoven textiles and personal care items. The earliest evidence of
using cotton is from India and the date assigned to this fabric is 3000
B.C. There were also excavations of cotton fabrics of comparable age in
Southern America. Cotton cultivation first spread from India to Egypt,
China, and the South Pacific.
Each cotton fiber is composed of concentric layers. The cuticle layer on
the fiber itself is separable from the fiber and consists of wax and
pectin materials.
Properties of Cotton
Cotton is a natural fiber that is grown in countries around the world.
It is a crop that requires adequate moisture and heat to mature and
produce quality fibers. Cotton growing tends to be in warmer climates.
Cotton is a true commodity in the world markets and supply and demand
truly affect prices of raw cotton.
Cotton fibers are mainly made up of cellulose. Cellulose does not form
unless temperatures are over 70 °F (21 °C). The cotton fibers are
attached to the seeds inside the boll of the plant. There are usually
six or seven seeds in a boll and up to 20,000 fibers attached to each
seed. The length of these fibers (also called staples) is the main
determining factor in the quality of the cotton. In general, the longer
the staple grows the higher the quality of the cotton. Staple lengths
are divided into short, medium, and long (and extra long, in some
cases):
- Short staple cotton is between 3/8” to 15/16” (.95cm to 2.4cm) in length
- Medium staple cotton is between 1” to 1-1/8” (2.54cm to 2.86cm) in length
- Long staple cotton is between 1-3/16” to 2-1/2” (3cm to 6.35cm) in length
Properties of Cotton Products
- Comfortable – there are no surface characteristics of cotton that make it irritating to human skin. Cotton feels good against skin; it has a soft hand.
- Hydrophilic – cotton has a natural affinity for water – it attracts moisture away from your body.
- Moisture passes freely through cotton – aiding in evaporation and cooling
- Good Heat Conductivity – Cotton allows heat to dissipate making it a wonderful fiber to maintain a comfortable sleeping temperature.
- Strong and abrasion resistance
- The unfavorable attributes of cotton include its lack of resiliency (cotton tends to wrinkle) and its lack of luster (colors are usually dull).
Properties of Cotton Fiber
- It has 8% moisture regain
- The cellulose is arranged in a way that gives cotton unique properties of strength, durability, and absorbency
- It is fresh, crisp, comfortable, absorbent, flexible, has no pilling problems and has good resistance to alkalis
- It has poor wrinkle resistance, shrinkage, poor acid resistance, less abrasion resistance, susceptible to damage by moths and mildew, needs lots of maintenance and stains are difficult to remove
- Its fiber length ranges from 0.5 inches to 2inches
- It has 10%increase in strength when wet.
- It has a flat twisted tube shape
Long Staple Cotton
In general, long staple cotton is needed to spin the yarns needed in the weaving of the finer down proof cotton fabrics.
Long staple cotton is considered to be finer quality because they can be
spun into finer yarns and those finer yarns can be woven into softer,
smoother, stronger, and more lustrous fabrics. Long staple cotton makes
stronger yarns, especially in fine yarns, as there are fewer fibers in a
given length of yarn and the longer fibers provide more points of
contact between the fibers when they are twisted together in the
spinning process.
Common areas that grow long staple cotton in the world would be Egypt,
Sudan, the United States (Pima cotton grown in the west and southwest
are long staple cotton), and Western China. The two most widely known
long-staple cottons are Egyptian cotton and Pima cotton. Pima cotton is
grown mainly in the United States, but also in Peru, Israel, and
Australia.
The fibers are sent to a textile mill where carding machines turn the
fibers into cotton yarn. The yarns are woven into cloth that is
comfortable and easy to wash but does wrinkle easily. Cotton fabric will
shrink about 3% when washed unless pre-treated to resist shrinking.
Harvesting
Cotton was once harvested by hand, often by slave labor or tenant
farmers. As recently as 1965, over a fourth of the U.S. cotton crop was
picked by hand. Today, harvesting cotton is highly mechanized.
Harvesting machines called strippers and pickers efficiently remove the
cotton while leaving the plants undisturbed. Spindle harvester, also
called a picker, has drums with spindles that pull the cotton from the
boll in one or two rows at a time. Even a one-row mechanical picker can
do the work formerly done by 40 hand pickers.
In stripper harvesting, the stripper moves along rows of plants, passing
them between revolving rollers or brushes that pull off the cotton.
Strippers also pull twigs and leaves with the cotton.
Cotton gins separate the fibers, called lint, from the seeds. After
ginning, the cotton goes to the bale press that packs it into 480-pound
bales about the size of a large refrigerator.
Classing Cotton
Cotton buyers judge cotton on the basis of samples cut from the bales.
Skilled cotton classers grade or “class” the cotton according to
standards established by the US Department of Agriculture such as
cleanliness, the degree of whiteness, length of the fiber, and fiber
strength.
The classes pull a sample. They discard most of the cotton until just a
pinch of well-aligned fibers remains. They measure the length of the
fibers, referred to as staple fibers. Longer staple fibers are
higher-grade cotton and are sold at higher prices. Long staples range
from 1.1 inches to 1.4 inches long
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