What is the scouring process? The scouring process of cotton, wool, and silk.

Scouring process

The scouring process is the process of removing natural materials such as oil, wax, fats, gum, etc. as well as added impurities during the fabrication process to produce hydrophilic and clean textile materials. It is a vital process of wet processing.

Objectives of Scouring

1. The main purpose of scouring is to remove impurities from textile materials.

2. To make the fabric highly hydrophilic.

3. To make the textile materials in a highly absorptive condition without undergoing chemical or physical damage significantly.

4. To produce clean material by adding alkali.

5. To remove non-cellulosic substances in the case of cotton.

6. To make the textile material suitable for subsequent bleaching operations.

Scouring process of cotton fabric

The scouring process of cotton fabric is a chemical washing process carried out on cotton fabric to remove natural wax and non-fibrous impurities from the fibers and any added soiling or dirt. The scouring process of cotton fabric is usually carried in iron vessels called kiers. The fabric is boiled in an alkali, which makes soap with free fatty acids. A kier is normally attached, so a solution of sodium hydroxide can be boiled under pressure by excluding oxygen which reduces the cellulose of the fiber. If appropriate reagents are used, scouring will also remove the shape from the fabric although desizing is often considered a separate process before scouring and is known as fabric preparation. Preparation and other finishing processes are mostly prerequisites. At this, stage even if very naturally white cotton fibers are yellow in color and bleaching, the next process is necessary.

Scouring-bleaching recipe for cotton fabric:

Detergent: 1 g/L

NaOH: 3 g/L

H2O2: 6 g/L

Peroxide stabilizer: 1 g/L

Sequestering agent: 1g/L

Temperature: 80-100°C

Time: 1 Hour

Fabric Weight: 80 Kg

M: L = 1:6

Scouring process of wool

When we directly collect wool from a sheep is known as raw wool, greasy wool, or wool in the grease. This wool contains a high level of valuable lanolin, sheep's dead skin, and sweat residue, and generally also contains pesticides and vegetable matter from the animal's environment. Before the wool can be used for commercial purposes, it must be scoured. The scouring process of wool may be as simple as a bath in warm water or as complicated as an industrial process using detergent and alkali in specialized equipment. Potash is used in the manufacture of soft soap for scouring locally produced white wool. In other processes, vegetable matter is often removed by chemical carbonization. In less processed wools, the vegetable matter may be removed by hand, and some of the lanolin is left intact through the use of gentler detergents. Lanolin transferred from wool is extensively used in cosmetic products such as hand creams.

Wool scouring recipe-

Detergent: 2 g/l

Soda Ash or Alkali: 1 g/l

pH: Around 10

Temperature: 55-60°C

Time: 30-45min

M: L-1:10

Scouring process of wool

Scouring process of silk

The scouring process of silk is very important for getting flexible, lustrous, and smooth silk. It is also called the degumming process of silk. Raw silk is white, golden yellow, or yellow-green, whereas wild silk is light to deep brown. Raw silk does not empower the luster and softness for which this fiber is known. The gummy substance called sericin covers the fibrous material and fibroin imparts a harsh handle and must be removed to bring out the flexible and lustrous qualities. Sericin and fibroin, the two components of raw silk, are both proteins, but the different amino acids and accessibility are relatively different from theirs. The process for the removal of sericin is known as degumming, boiling off, and, less commonly, scouring. Degumming also removes other substances like fats, oils, natural pigments, and mineral components. The main degumming agent is soap. Boiling off or degumming of silk is carried out just below a boil (90°C–95°C) in soap solution with or without alkali according to the quality of the fiber.
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