Abstract
AbstractThe thermal behaviour of natural wool and chemically modified wool fibres (oxidized, reduced, methylated and crosslinked) and their graft‐copolymers with methyl methacrylate were investigated by dynamic thermogravimetry in air and differential thermal analysis in nitrogen atmosphere. The relative thermal stability depended on the chemical modification and oxidized wool was found to be thermally more stable than natural wool. Grafting reduced the overall thermal stability of the fibres.
Published Version
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