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Ageing of cotton fabric as determined from polymerization degree change
Flimelová, Miroslava ; Nasadil, Petr (referee) ; Kučerík, Jiří (advisor)
The degree of polymerization (DP) is the main factor which plays a role in cellulose aging. The adverse consequence of cellulose fibers aging is the deterioration of mechanical and optical properties. Viscometry is a technique which is frequently used for determination of degree of polymerization of cellulose fibers. The aim of the work was to determine the degree of polymerization of cotton fabrics and to investigate the dependence of DP on number of washing and dying. Next task was to investigate if there exists a corellation between DP and results from thermal and thermo-oxidative degradation studied by methods of thermal analysis. First, the traditional viscometry was employed to determine DP of cellulose fibers. It has been demonstrated that number of washing and dying decreases the DP. In the second part the differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and thermogravimetry (TG) were used. DSC provided values of combustion heat and TG allowed the detail evaluation of degradation steps; obtained results were further used for correlation with DP. Methods of thermal analysis revealed differences between cotton wool and treated fabrics. Combustion heat did not show any correlation with DP. In contrast, results from TG suggested some promising correlations which could be used for the prediction of cotton fabrics DP using thermal analysis in the future.
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The Story of Teamwork and the Birth of the FFP* (Filter Backpack)
Fraenkl, M. ; Krbal, M. ; Houdek, J. ; Zmrhalová, Z. ; Prokeš, B. ; Hejda, P. ; Slang, S. ; Přikryl, J. ; Ondráček, Jakub ; Makeš, Otakar ; Kostyk, Juraj ; Nasadil, P. ; Malčík, P. ; Ždímal, Vladimír ; Vlček, M.
Soon after the outbreak of the coronavirus crisis in the Czech Republic and the first lockdown (2020), we enthusiastically decided to fight the coronavirus with scientific \nmeans. Originally materials engineers, we decided to develop an effective protective respiratory device, which was in short supply at the time. We soon found out, that every textile material (handkerchief 10%) has a certain ability to catch an aerosol particle carrying the corona virus, the slower the aerosol particle (d<300 nm) passes through the filter, the greater the chance it has of being caught, with the thickness of the filter, the amount of passed particles decreases exponentially and breathing resistance increases linearly. On this basis, we decided to experiment with a large-area filter placed on the user's back (it wouldn't fit anywhere else) and commercially available textile filter material.
Plný tet: PDF
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Ageing of cotton fabric as determined from polymerization degree change
Flimelová, Miroslava ; Nasadil, Petr (referee) ; Kučerík, Jiří (advisor)
The degree of polymerization (DP) is the main factor which plays a role in cellulose aging. The adverse consequence of cellulose fibers aging is the deterioration of mechanical and optical properties. Viscometry is a technique which is frequently used for determination of degree of polymerization of cellulose fibers. The aim of the work was to determine the degree of polymerization of cotton fabrics and to investigate the dependence of DP on number of washing and dying. Next task was to investigate if there exists a corellation between DP and results from thermal and thermo-oxidative degradation studied by methods of thermal analysis. First, the traditional viscometry was employed to determine DP of cellulose fibers. It has been demonstrated that number of washing and dying decreases the DP. In the second part the differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and thermogravimetry (TG) were used. DSC provided values of combustion heat and TG allowed the detail evaluation of degradation steps; obtained results were further used for correlation with DP. Methods of thermal analysis revealed differences between cotton wool and treated fabrics. Combustion heat did not show any correlation with DP. In contrast, results from TG suggested some promising correlations which could be used for the prediction of cotton fabrics DP using thermal analysis in the future.
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Certified methodology for textile deposition
KUŽELOVÁ, Zdenka ; ŠEVČÍK, Richard ; PŘÍHODA, Jiří ; NASADIL, Petr
The methodology was created for the neeeds of museum workers handling and depositing textile artefacts. The methodology is focused on depositories where textile artefacts are stored. The content is focused on traditional folk clothing from Moravia originating from the period of 1850-1950 and the methodology is specific in this way. It is necessary to emphasize that the folk textile (clothing) was stored in its own way which has to be kept and which some attention should be paid to.
Fulltext: PDF
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