艺术
美容与健康
工艺
文化与历史
娱乐
环境
食品与饮料
绿色未来
逆向工程
科学
体育
技术
可穿戴设备
Mercerization — Treating Cotton with Caustic Soda for Luster and Strength
危险内容
Tex

创建者

Tex

20. 五月 2026FO
1
0
0
4
0

Mercerization — Treating Cotton with Caustic Soda for Luster and Strength

In 1844, English calico printer John Mercer discovered that immersing cotton fabric in a strong solution of sodium hydroxide (caustic soda) permanently changed the fiber's properties. The treated cotton swelled, shrank, became stronger, took dye more readily, and acquired a subtle silky luster. Mercer patented the process in 1850, but it had a drawback: the cotton shrank by 20–25%, which increased fabric cost per square meter. The textile trade showed little interest.

The breakthrough came in 1890 when Horace Lowe discovered that if the cotton was held under tension during the caustic soda treatment — stretched on a frame or stenter to prevent shrinkage — the luster effect was dramatically amplified. The treated cotton gained a brilliant, permanent sheen that closely resembled silk. This 'Lowe mercerization' process was an immediate commercial success and remains the standard today.

The chemistry is elegant. Sodium hydroxide (15–25% concentration) penetrates the cotton fiber and disrupts its crystalline structure, converting the cellulose from its natural form (cellulose I) to a swollen, amorphous state. When the caustic is washed out and the fiber dries under tension, the cellulose recrystallizes into a denser, smoother form (cellulose II). The rounder cross-section reflects light more uniformly, producing the characteristic luster. Mercerized cotton is 10–25% stronger than untreated cotton and absorbs 25–30% more dye. Every high-quality cotton dress shirt, fine bedsheet, and embroidery thread you encounter has been mercerized.

高级
Understanding: 1-2 hours; Process: 2-3 hours

危险内容

此蓝图包含危险操作。请登录并在账户设置中启用危险内容,以查看分步说明。

CC0 公共领域

此蓝图以 CC0 协议发布。你可以自由复制、修改、分发和使用此作品,无需征得许可。

通过购买蓝图中的产品支持创客,他们将获得 创客佣金 (由供应商设定),或创建此蓝图的新版本并将其作为连接包含在你自己的蓝图中以分享收入。

讨论

(0)

登录 加入讨论

加载评论中...