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Thin, flat textile roofing offers negligible heat insulation. In warm areas, such roofing membranes are therefore equipped with metallized surfaces to reflect solar heat radiation, thus reducing the warming inside a textile building. Heat reflection effects achieved by metallic coatings are always accompanied by shading effects as the metals are non-transparent for visible light (VIS). Transparent conductive oxides (TCOs) are transparent for VIS and are able to reflect heat radiation in the infrared. TCOs are, e.g., widely used in the display industry. To achieve the perfect coatings needed for electronic devices, these are commonly applied using costly vacuum processes at high temperatures. Vacuum processes, on account of the high costs involved and high processing temperatures, are obstructive for an application involving textiles. Accepting that heat-reflecting textile membranes demand less perfect coatings, a wet chemical approach has been followed here when producing transparent heat-reflecting coatings. Commercially available TCOs were employed as colloidal dispersions or nanopowders to prepare sol-gel-based coating systems. Such coatings were applied to textile membranes as used for architectural textiles using simple coating techniques and at moderate curing temperatures not exceeding 130 °C. The coatings achieved about 90% transmission in the VIS spectrum and reduced near-infrared transmission (at about 2.5 µm) to nearly zero while reflecting up to 25% of that radiation. Up to 35% reflection has been realized in the far infrared, and emissivity values down to ε = 0.5777 have been measured.
Flame-retardant finishing of cotton fabrics using DOPO functionalized alkoxy- and amido alkoxysilane
(2023)
In the present study, DOPO-based alkoxysilane (DOPO-ETES) and amido alkoxysilane (DOPO-AmdPTES) were synthesized by one-step and without by-products as halogen-free flame retardants. The flame retardants were applied on cotton fabric utilizing sol–gel method and pad-dry-cure finishing process. The flame retardancy, the thermal stability and the combustion ehaviour of treated cotton were evaluated by surface and bottom edge ignition flame test (according to EN ISO 15025), thermogravimetric analysis (TGA) and micro-scale combustion calorimeter (MCC). Unlike CO/DOPO-ETES sample, cotton treated with DOPO-AmdPTES nanosols exhibits self-extinguishing ehaviour with high char residue, an improvement of the LOI value and a significant reduction of the PHRR, HRC and THR compared to pristine cotton. Cotton finished with DOPO-AmdPTES reveals a semi-durability after ten laundering cycles keeping the flame-retardant properties unchanged. According to the results obtained from TGA-FTIR, Py-GC/MS and XPS, the major activity of flame retardant occurs in the condensed phase via catalytic induced char formation as physical barrier along with the activity in the gas phase derived mainly from the dilution effect. The early degradation of CO/DOPO-AmdPTES compared to CO/DOPO-ETES, triggered by the cleavage of the weak bond between P and C=O, as the DFT study indicated, provides the beneficial effect of this flame retardant on the fire resistance of cellulose.
Protective welding clothing must meet various requirements. Among other things, it must be flame-resistant, protect against splashes of metal or sparks and also ensure protection against radiant heat and UV light caused by exposure to the welding arc. The protection against molten metal splashes is directly related to the fabric weight per unit area of the protective welding clothing and the level of protection is normally determined by the number of molten metal droplets that fall on the fabric. The higher the weight per unit area, the greater the protection against welding spatter. However, increasing the fabric weight per unit area also leads to psychologically uncomfortable wearing and thus increasing the physical strain on the wearer. The required basis weight per unit area of protective welding clothing can be reduced by applying nanoparticles as a protective layer while preserving other indispensable properties.
The requirements for textiles differ greatly depending on the area of application, whereby it often does not remain with only one required functionality. For example, in the field of functional clothing or protective clothing/PPE, it is necessary to protect the textile’s wearers from UV radiation. At the same time, self-cleaning effects offer certain advantages in that field. In addition, an antimicrobial effect in functional clothing can reduce the formation of unpleasant odors, and in PPE – especially in the healthcare sector – can contribute to the interruption of the chain of infection. One way to achieve these 3 desired functions in just one finishing step is to immobilize titanium dioxide (TiO2). However, TiO2 is viewed critically for application in the textile sector due to a REACH listing. Another disadvantage is that it only takes effect under UV radiation and is therefore not suitable for indoor use. Alternatively, photocatalysts such as doped zinc oxides (ZnO) can be used, which also exhibit catalytic activity through activation by visible light, which can lead to the killing of microorganisms and the degradation of organic soiling.
Die Anforderungen an Textilien unterscheiden sich je nach Anwendungsbereich stark, wobei es häufig nicht bei nur einer benötigten Funktionalität bleibt. Im Bereich der Funktions- oder Schutzkleidung bzw. PSA ist es z.B. nötig, die Träger der Kleidung vor UV-Strahlung zu schützen. Gleichzeitig bieten hier selbstreinigende Effekte gewisse Vorteile. Zudem kann eine antimikrobielle Wirkung im Bereich der Funktionskleidung die Bildung unangenehmer Gerüche vermindern, sowie im Bereich der PSA – besonders im Gesundheitswesen – zur Unterbrechung von Infektionsketten beitragen. Eine Möglichkeit, diese 3 gewünschten Funktionen in nur einem Ausrüstungsschritt zu erzielen, ist die Immobilisierung von Titandioxid (TiO2). Dieses wird aber aufgrund einer REACH-Listung kritisch für die Anwendung im textilen Sektor gesehen. Nachteilig ist zudem, dass es seine Wirkung nur unter UV-Einstrahlung entfaltet und damit nicht für den Innenbereich geeignet ist. Alternativ können Photokatalysatoren wie dotierte Zinkoxide (ZnO) verwendet werden, die auch durch Einstrahlung im Bereich des sichtbaren Lichts eine katalytische Aktivität aufweisen, die zur Abtötung von Mikroorganismen und zum Abbau organischer Verschmutzungen führen kann.
Schweißerschutzkleidung muss unterschiedlichen Anforderungen genügen. Sie muss u.a. flammfest sein, den Schweißer vor Metallspritzern schützen, die beim Schweißen entstehen, und auch einen Schutz vor UV-Licht sicherstellen, das im Schweißbogen entsteht. Besonders der Schutz vor Metallspritzern wird durch das Flächengewicht der Textilien bestimmt. Der entsprechende Schutzfaktor wird durch Tropfen flüssigen Eisens bestimmt, die auf ein Gewebe fallen. Dabei gilt: je höher das Flächengewicht, desto höher der Schutz vor Schweißspritzern. Jedoch gilt auch: je höher das Flächengewicht, desto schlechter ist der Tragekomfort und desto wärmender ist die Kleidung und damit die körperliche Belastung des Trägers. Durch die Applikation von Nanopartikeln ist es möglich, das benötigte Flächengewicht der Kleidung zu reduzieren.