Thursday, 10 April 2025

Treatment of Textiles via Plasma Afterglow | Chapter 27 | Plasmas Afterglows with N2 for Surface Treatments synthesis 2024

The use of textiles for technical applications in plasma processes can be of significant interest. Plasma treatment is an environmentally friendly process for sustainable surface modification of textiles. In this work, three different uses which are complementary and allow to explain basic surface phenomena related to the action of cold plasmas in the afterglow on the textile fibers are compiled.

 

In particular, this chapter reproduces the results obtained on chosen fabrics treated in N2 and O2 afterglows where the N and O-atoms are the dominant active species employed to develop process indicators and membranes for sterilisation processes. In this sense, wool fabrics are employed to verify the transmission of N atoms with regard to the modification of materials contained within sterilisation pouches. The hydrophilicity of the wool was found to change from hydrophobic to hydrophilic after 2 minutes of N2 afterglow treatment at 4 Torr, 1 slpm, 100 watts as described in [1]. By comparing plasma and afterglow treatment, it has been remarked that, in N2 afterglows, only the active atoms as N-atoms (and O-atoms in impurity) treated the wool. In the development of sterilisation indicators, cotton yarns knitted with copper wire, and containing a thermocromic dye, revealed a clear colour change from white to magenta after being treated in the same afterglow conditions for 40 minutes.

 

In the last part of this work, wool fabrics have been used to investigate the effects of N and O atoms from N2 and O2 afterglows on conferring them with shrink-resistant properties.

 

Author (s) Details

 

Cristina Canal
Biomaterials, Biomechanics and Tissue Engineering Group, Department of Materials Science and Engineering (CEM), Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya (UPC- BarcelonaTECH), c/ Eduard Maristany 14, 08019 Barcelona, Spain and Research Center in Biomedical Engineering (CREB), UPC, Spain.

 

André Ricard
LAPLACE, Université de Toulouse, CNRS, INPT, UPS, 118 route de Narbonne, 31062 Toulouse Cedex 9, France.

 

 

Please see the book here:- https://doi.org/10.9734/bpi/mono/978-93-49473-93-5/CH27

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