Sugarman, Nathan2014-03-142014-03-141942-05-01etd-07132007-104908http://hdl.handle.net/10919/28282Crease-resistance is a very greatly desirable property in textile fibers. Of the natural fibers, wool exhibits this property to the greatest degree, followed by silk, cotton, and flax, which has a very low crease-resistance. The artificial cellulose fibers fall considerably below wool and silk in this respect. The improvement of the crease-resistance of rayon and other fibers has been sought in various after-treatment processes, in which substances are either deposited within the fiber, or react with it. There are numerous patents (22) for such methods of imparting crease-resistance. It would be highly desirable if the crease-resisting powers could be achieved "by a modification of the intrinsic properties of a fiber, that is, by producing a fiber which already is crease-resistant. The purpose of the work reported here was to attempt to produce a viscose rayon fiber with better crease-resisting properties, and to study the effect of a variation in the cellulose chain length distribution in the rayon upon this property. This work was done under a Fellowship of the Behr-Manning Corporation, Troy, New York.55, 18 leavesBTDapplication/pdfenIn CopyrightLD5655.V856 1942.S842Creasing of textilesRayonA study of the crease-resistance of viscose rayonDissertationhttp://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-07132007-104908/