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Dehairing Australian alpaca fibres with a cashmere dehairing machine

journal contribution
posted on 2008-12-01, 00:00 authored by Lijing Wang, Avtar Singh, Xungai Wang
Many classes of alpaca fibres contain a certain amount of coarse fibres, which are strong and stiff, and cause discomfort to the end users of the alpaca fibre products. It is therefore desirable to separate the coarse fibres from the fine alpaca fibres. This paper reports trial results on alpaca dehairing using a cashmere dehairing machine. The diameters of alpaca fleece, dehaired alpaca fibres and removed alpaca fibres were analysed, and the fibre lengths before and after dehairing have been compared. The results indicate that it is feasible to dehair alpaca fibres using a cashmere dehairing facility. The dehaired alpaca fibres are cleaner, bulkier and softer, with around 1.5 μm reduction in average fibre diameter, but the dehairing process shortens the dehaired fibre length considerably. The dehairing effectiveness of coarse fibre removal using the cashmere dehairing technology has also been discussed in this paper.

History

Journal

Journal of the Textile Institute

Volume

99

Issue

6

Pagination

539 - 544

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Location

Manchester, England

ISSN

0040-5000

eISSN

1754-2340

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2008, Taylor & Francis