Physics, asked by mahammedakberqurashi, 1 month ago

what are the properties of nylon???​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
1

Explanation:

Tensile Strength (Tenacity) Excellent

Heat Resistance Fair

Wrinkle Resistance Good - Excellent

Resistance to Sunlight Poor

Elasticity Excellent

Answered by Anonymous
1

Answer:

INDEX

COMMODITY FIBERS

Acetate

Acrylics

Modacrylic

Olefin

Polyester

Rayon

BACK TO INDEX

FIBER & TEXTILE

ASSOCIATIONS

NCTO

SYFA

IFAI

JCFA

OTHER

Synthetic Carpet Fibers

The World's Strongest Fibers

Fiber & Textile Manufacturers

POLYAMIDE FIBERS (NYLON)

PROPERTIES

Nylon is a generic name for a family of synthetic polymers, more specifically, aliphatic or semi-aromatic polyamides in which at least 85% by weight of the amide-linkages (-CO-NH-) are attached directly to aliphatic or cycloaliphatic units. They can be melt-processed into fibers, films or any other shape.

The first Nylon fiber was Nylon 6,6, produced in 1935 by Wallace Carothers at DuPont's research facility. The main fiber forming substance is any long chain synthetic polyamide having recurring amide groups in the polymer backbone. Nylon was originally not a generic name for polyamide but the brand name of DuPonts hexamethylene diamine – adipic acid condensation product, called Nylon 6,6. Another important polyamide fiber is Nylon 6 or polycaprolactam. This polymer was developed by Paul Schlack at IG Farben to reproduce Nylon 6,6 without violating DuPont's patent. Nylon 6 is made from caprolactam which self-polymerizes. Other important (specialty) nylons include Nylon 4, Nylon 11, and Nylon 6,10. These fibers are sold under numerous trade names.

Nylon fibers are exceptionally strong and elastic and stronger than polyester fibers. The fibers have excellent toughness, abrasion resistance, and are easy to wash, and to dye in a wide range of colors. The filament yarns provide a smooth, soft, and lightweight fabric of high resilience.

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