
Spandex (Lycra) — The Elastic Fiber That Revolutionized Fit
In 1958, Joseph Clements Shivers Jr. at DuPont's Benger Laboratory in Waynesboro, Virginia, synthesized the first commercially viable elastane fiber — a segmented polyurethane that could stretch to 500–600% of its original length and snap back completely. DuPont trademarked it as Lycra in 1959 and began commercial production in 1962. The generic name 'spandex' (an anagram of 'expands') became the international standard; in Europe it is called 'elastane.'
Spandex is not a single polymer — it is a block copolymer consisting of alternating 'hard' and 'soft' segments. The soft segments are long, flexible polyether or polyester chains that coil and uncoil like springs, providing the stretch. The hard segments are short, rigid polyurethane blocks that aggregate through hydrogen bonding into physical crosslinks — tiny crystalline domains that act as anchors, preventing the soft segments from sliding past each other permanently. When you stretch spandex, the soft segments straighten; when you release, the hard-segment anchors pull them back.
Before spandex, the only elastic textile material was natural rubber thread, which was heavy, degraded in contact with body oils and chlorine, could not be dyed, and had to be wrapped in fabric for comfort. Spandex is lighter, more durable, dyeable, resistant to body oils and perspiration, and can be blended with virtually any other fiber. It transformed swimwear, activewear, underwear, hosiery, and eventually everyday clothing — the stretchy comfort of modern jeans, yoga pants, and fitted shirts depends entirely on a small percentage (2–20%) of spandex blended into the fabric.
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