Partially Carboxymethylated Cotton as an Intermediate for Further Chemical Modification
- 1 October 1959
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Textile Research Journal
- Vol. 29 (10), 802-810
- https://doi.org/10.1177/004051755902901005
Abstract
Cotton can be etherified by treatment with chloroacetic acid and sodium hydroxide solution. The product, a partially carboxymethylated cotton, which retains the original fibrous nature of the cotton, has a number of properties valuable for textile and other uses. In addition, the etherified cotton bears two reactive functional groups—hydroxyl and carboxyl—capable of further chemical modification. The rate and extent of many reactions with the etherified cotton are greater than with native cotton similarly treated. Further modifications of this cotton derivative are discussed. Among these are salt formation for the preparation of bactericidal and fungistatic finishes, reactions for the introduction of cyanoethyl, carboxyethyl, and graft polyester groups, reaction with epoxy and aziridinyl compounds, and oxidation for the preparation of alkali-soluble textile products.Keywords
This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Producing Alkali-Soluble Textile Materials. Oxidizing Partially Etherified CottonsIndustrial & Engineering Chemistry, 1958
- Rapid Estimation of Dialdehyde Content of Periodate Oxystarch through Quantitative Alkali ConsumptionAnalytical Chemistry, 1955
- Preparation of Soluble Yarns by the Carboxymethylation of CottonTextile Research Journal, 1953
- Chemical and Physical Properties of Aminized CottonTextile Research Journal, 1953
- Studies on the Partial Carboxymethylation of CottonTextile Research Journal, 1952
- OXIDATION OF CELLULOSEIndustrial & Engineering Chemistry, 1949
- The Partial Carboxymethylation of Cotton to Obtain Swellable Fibers, IITextile Research Journal, 1948
- The Partial Carboxymethylation of Cotton to Obtain Swellable Fibers, ITextile Research Journal, 1947
- The Formation and Properties of Oxidized CellulosesTextile Research Journal, 1946
- Proceedings of Local Branches of the Society of American BacteriologistsJournal of Bacteriology, 1944