Experiments with an Alkali Swelling-Centrifuge Test Applied to Cotton Fiber

Abstract
A quantitative technique has been developed in which a weighed sample of cotton fiber is swollen in sodium hydroxide, centrifuged to remove liquid from between the fibers, and re weighed to determine its percentage increase in weight, the latter quantity being designated here as the fiber's "alkali-centrifuge value." The results obtained have been found to be related to two types of causal factors—namely, (1) the prior action of deteriorative agencies on the fiber, apparently especially on the outer wall of the fiber, and (2) the wall thickness of the fiber (as reflected in arealometer air-flow measurements). The fiber-deteriorative agencies which have been shown to bring about changes in the alkali-centrifuge value of cotton fiber include micro-organisms, certain enzymatically active filtrates from microbial growth media, sodium hypochlorite, hydrochloric acid, heat, and weathering. The microbial and enzymatic effects have been studied in more detail than the others. The new test is simple, rapid, inexpensive, quite highly reproducible, involves only standard laboratory equipment, and is essentially free from safety hazards to the operator. Several aspects of the methodology of the test are reported.

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