Logo image
Influence of laundering on durable flame retarded cotton fabrics — Part 1. Effect of oxidant concentration and detergent type
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Influence of laundering on durable flame retarded cotton fabrics — Part 1. Effect of oxidant concentration and detergent type

Richard Horrocks, J. Allen, S. Ojinnaka and Dennis Price
Journal of Fire Sciences, Vol.10(4), pp.335-351
1992

Abstract

Cotton fabrics flame retarded with tetrakis (hydroxymethyl phosphonium chloride (THPC)-urea-ammonia polycondensate (Proban CC, Albright and Wilson Ltd., U.K.) have been subjected to up to 50 simulated hos pital wash cycles. Laundering variables include sodium perborate oxidant con centration, detergent type (liquid with no oxidant, powder with zeolite and sodium perborate and powder with polyphosphate and carbonate and per borate) and water hardness. The flame retardant system resisted all laundering systems in terms of the constancy of burning behaviour assessed by vertical strip (BS 5438) and limiting oxygen index (LOI) measurements. However, increased perborate con centration changed the thermogravimetric (TGA) response of laundered fabrics. Soft water washing promoted cotton fibre fibrillation independent of deter gent type; increased oxidant concentration promoted secondary wall damage. Hard water washing severely damaged fibre secondary walls and significant depositions of calcium ions often as phosphate occurred on fabric. Presence of the flame retardant was observed to have a stabilising fibrillar binding effect which was offset by a secondary wall crack promoting character.
url
Link to Published VersionView
Published (Version of record)Publisher sites may require subscription to read content

Metrics

21 Record Views
8 Times Cited - Scopus

Details

Logo image

Usage Policy