Abstract

This paper presents a study of hybrid effect on mechanical properties of tencel blended ring-, rotor- and Murata jet spinning yarns. The tensile strength, breaking elongation, flexural rigidity and abrasion resistance of tencel-polyester and tencel-cotton blended yarns are examined and compared with the value predicted using linear and quadratic rule of mixture (ROM). It is observed that there is no significant hybrid effect on abrasion resistance of tencel-polyester mix yarns and tenacity and breaking extension of tencel-cotton mix yarns; hence, a linear ROM is found better in predicting the yarn properties. Further, for all yarn types, there is a significant hybrid effect on tenacity, breaking extension and flexural rigidity of tencel-polyester mixes and flexural rigidity and abrasion resistance of tencel-cotton mixes. A quadratic ROM model suits well for these yarns. Overall, it is found that there is a negative hybrid effect on tenacity and breaking extension whereas there is a positive hybrid effect on flexural rigidity for all the yarn samples irrespective of fibre and yarn type. The abrasion resistance has a mixed trend. Further, tencel-polyester yarns yield more satisfactory results than the tencel-cotton yarns in terms of strength and breaking extension but behave poorly during abrasion test for 200 cycles. Increasing tencel content both in tencel-polyester and tencel-cotton fibre-mix produces a rigid yarn with reduced abrasion resistance.

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