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A new antifungal agent for the leather industry : S-Hexyl-S'-Chloromethyl-cyanodithiocarbimate (CHED) / Stephen D. Bryant in JOURNAL OF THE SOCIETY OF LEATHER TECHNOLOGISTS & CHEMISTS (JSLTC), Vol. 95, N° 1 (01-02/2011)
[article]
Titre : A new antifungal agent for the leather industry : S-Hexyl-S'-Chloromethyl-cyanodithiocarbimate (CHED) Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : Stephen D. Bryant, Auteur ; Elton L. Hurlow, Auteur ; Marilyn Whittemore, Auteur Année de publication : 2011 Article en page(s) : p. 7-10 Note générale : Bibliogr. Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : Antifongiques
Cuirs et peaux -- Conservation
CyanodithiocarbimatesIndex. décimale : 675 Technologie du cuir et de la fourrure Résumé : Raw hides are a rich source of fats and proteins that may serve as metabolic substrates for micro-organisms, especially bacteria and fungi. These micro-organisms that are capable of invading the hide for its nutrients are present on the fresh hide during harvest as well as from the surrounding environment during and after processing at the tanner. Fungal attack on tanned collagen changes the chemical composition of the pelt in the area of growth. These changes along with fungal pigmentation will usually cause discolouration or spots or various colours depending on the infesting organism. This fungal discolouration is difficult to correct and can spoil crust or finished leather. To protect tanned hides (such as wet-blues, vegetable-tanned, free-of-chrome, or oil-tanned lathers), a fungicide is added during the pickle or tanning process. The fungicide must survive the conditions of tannage and adhere to the surface of the tanned hide to protect the leather from the time the tanningprocess is complete until the tanned hide is processed further and finished into a dry leather product. In order to be effective for the leather industry the fungicide should be stable under acid conditions, reasonably stable to UV-light, relatively unreactive with other tanning process chemicals, andhave a high affinity for the hide or skin substrate.
Historically the leather industry made use of chemistries such as organomercurials and chlorophenates which are now banned because of high level dangers regarding environment and human exposure. In recent decades these have been replaced with effective and safer chemistries such as : 2-(thiocyanomethylthio)bentothiazole (TCMTB), 3-iodopropynylbutylcarbamate (IPCB), n-octylisothiazolinone (OIT), diiodomethyl-p-tolylsulfone (DIMTS), and some phenolics.
A needs exists in the leather industry for new compounds that not only are effective fungicides, but also survive the chemical environment of the tanning process. In addition, a valuable strategy for microorganism control is to combine two ormore microbicides to expand the spectrum of control as well as to exploit potential synergies in the biocidal actions This paper describes chemical, biological, and toxicological properties of a new antifungal compound in a class of chemistry known as cyanodithiocarbimates. A patent for the use of this chemistry as a fungicide in the lather industry has been granted.En ligne : https://drive.google.com/file/d/13WPPwLTSkbZpqPvi5mpRyBNX55JUWBD7/view?usp=drive [...] Format de la ressource électronique : Permalink : https://e-campus.itech.fr/pmb/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=10814
in JOURNAL OF THE SOCIETY OF LEATHER TECHNOLOGISTS & CHEMISTS (JSLTC) > Vol. 95, N° 1 (01-02/2011) . - p. 7-10[article]Réservation
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