Optical and Electron Microscopic Studies of Cotton Fiber Structure
- 1 April 1954
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Textile Research Journal
- Vol. 24 (4), 345-357
- https://doi.org/10.1177/004051755402400407
Abstract
The appearance, growth, and structure of a cotton fiber are described, and photomicrographs and electron micrographs are used to illustrate both gross and fine features of the cell wall morphology. Heretofore, microscopy of the fiber has been limited to the use of dispersion, swelling and staining methods, in plain and polarized light. The development during the present study of methods for isolation of individual components of the cell wall for purposes of electron microscopy has permitted interesting observations with the light microscope. Quantitative measurements of shrinkage in the isolated primary wall of the cotton fiber during mercerization confirm its restrictive influence on the fiber during swelling in various agents. Electron microscope studies have been made on isolated primary wall fragments which have been purified by removal of noncellulosic constituents by extraction. These have revealed that the cellulosic portion of the membrane is a network of fibrils interlaced in a sort of fabric in which the general system of orientation is axial on the outer surface and transverse on the inner surface. The cellulose framework is impregnated with a complex of waxes, pectinaceous, and proteinaceous substances. The first layer of secondary thickening, called the "winding layer," has been isolated from 17-day old cotton fibers and photographed with both optical and electron microscopes. It is revealed to be a continuous sheet or layer made up of alternating bands of fibril bundles which spiral about the fiber at an angle. The wider bands have a closely packed parallel arrangement of fibrils while the narrower bands which connect them consist of two systems of fibrils at right angles to one another in an open-weave pattern. Electron micrographs of fragments of the main body of the secondary wall show an entirely different pattern of fibril arrangement from either the primary wall or the winding layer.Keywords
This publication has 11 references indexed in Scilit:
- Stains for the Primary Wall of the Cotton FiberStain Technology, 1953
- Morphology and Chemical Composition of Certain Components of Cotton Fiber Cell WallAnalytical Chemistry, 1952
- THE STRUCTURE AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE COTTON FIBREBiological Reviews, 1950
- Electron micrographs of plant fibersBiochimica et Biophysica Acta, 1949
- The Outer Wall of the Cotton Fiber and Its Influence on Fiber PropertiesTextile Research Journal, 1946
- Microscopic structure of the cotton fiberJournal of Research of the National Bureau of Standards, 1941
- Growth and Structure of Cotton FiberIndustrial & Engineering Chemistry, 1938
- Micro-Analysis of Textile FibresTextile Research, 1935
- 24—STUDIES IN THE SAMPLING OF COTTON FOR THE DETERMINATION OF FIBRE-PROPERTIES. PART I—INTRODUCTORY AND EXPERIMENTAL. PART II—FREQUENCY-CURVES FOR VARIOUS FIBRE-PROPERTIESJournal of the Textile Institute Transactions, 1930
- The determiners of cellulose structure as seen in the cell-wall of cotton hairsProceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Containing Papers of a Biological Character, 1923