Volume 80, Issue 7 pp. 1058-1062

Dyeing transition temperature of wools treated with low temperature plasma, liquid ammonia, and high-pressure steam in dyeing with acid and disperse dyes

Muncheul Lee

Muncheul Lee

Department of Textile Engineering, Pusan National University, Pusan 609-735, Korea

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Tomiji Wakida

Corresponding Author

Tomiji Wakida

Department of Home Economics, Gifu Women's University, Taromaru, Gifu 501-2592, Japan

Department of Home Economics, Gifu Women's University, Taromaru, Gifu 501-2592, Japan===Search for more papers by this author
Myung Sun Lee

Myung Sun Lee

Department of Textile Engineering, Pusan National University, Pusan 609-735, Korea

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Pyong Ki Pak

Pyong Ki Pak

Department of Textile Engineering, Chonbuk National University, Chonju 561-756, Korea

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Jierong Chen

Jierong Chen

Environmental & Chemical Engineering Institute, Xi'an Jiaotong University, Xi'an 710049, People's Republic of China

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First published: 02 March 2001
Citations: 22

Abstract

Wool fibers treated with oxygen low-temperature plasma, liquid ammonia (NH3), and high-pressure (HP) steam were dyed with two acid and three disperse dyes. Rate of dyeing, saturation dye uptake, and dyeing transition temperature were measured. Rate of dyeing of the O2 plasma, NH3, and HP steam-treated wools increased with acid dyes, whereas it did not increase with disperse dyes. Although dyeing transition temperature for acid dyes was decreased by the plasma, NH3, and HP steam treatments, the temperature for disperse dyes was not changed by the treatments. Therefore, it seems that acid dyes penetrate by the intercellular diffusion through the interscale Cell Membrane Complex (CMC) of wool, whereas disperse dyes penetrate by the intracellular diffusion through the intrascale cuticle surface independently with CMC relaxation by the treatments. © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Appl Polym Sci 80: 1058–1062, 2001

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