Abstract

In a study of the wetting properties of the fractions of unretted and frost-retted fibre straws a method to separate fibre, fine shive, and coarse shive from fibre plants is introduced and tested on bast fibre plants ( Linum usitatissimum L. and Cannabis sativa L.) The method consists of optional drying of stalks, cutting of straws, milling the straws with a hammer mill, separating fibres from shives with a drum separator, separating coarse shives from fine shives with a screen and a stream of air and finally cleaning of the fine shive with sieve vibrator. The described method works best for frost-retted plants and for unretted, green flax. The capillarity properties of these fractions were studied by measuring the amount of absorbed water as a function of time. The required time for the best-absorbing fibres of unretted and frost-retted hemp and unretted flax to absorb their own masses of water is less than 10 min compared with 2 h for the poorest-absorbing frost-retted flax. Overretting by frost retting seems to have an opposite effect on flax/linseed and hemp fibre capillarity. Both unretted and frost-retted coarse shive fractions behave quite similarly. If good absorption is needed, (over)retted hemp fibre should be used. If poor fibre absorption is desirable, (over)retted flax/linseed seems to have this feature.

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