Abstract

A study of the migration of fibres in open-end-spun yarns is reported. Samples of viscose rayon yarns were produced by the drum and air-vortex methods, and the results obtained on them were compared with those for a ring-spun yarn made from the same fibre. Migration was studied by determining three parameters: the helix profile, the mean fibre position, and the r.m.s. deviation, i.e., the root-mean-square value of the radial deviation of the helix profile from the mean fibre position. The geometry of fibre-packing in the yarn cross-section and the fibre extent were also studied. It is shown that open-end-spun yarns are somewhat different in character from ring-spun yarns and that the most basic structural differences are found in the fibre extent, fibre migration, and fibre-packing density. The fibre migration in an open-end-spun yarn is shown to be as little as one-sixth of that in a typical ring-spun yam, and the difference in structure is important in that it can affect the yarn properties. It is concluded that the observed low strength of most open-end-spun yarns can be attributed to the poor fibre extent and inferior fibre migration within the yarn body and that their relatively high elongation can be explained in terms of the folded and entangled nature of the fibres. An examination of the fibre geometry in the yarn shows that the design features of drum spinners are important with regard to the determination of the fibre extent, a tangential feed being preferable to an axial one. The yarn cross-sections demonstrate that open-end spun yarns generally have a lower fibre-packing density than ring-spun yarns, which tends to give the yarn a more bulky nature; this is consistent with what might be expected from an assembly of tangled fibres.

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