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667.3 : Teinture et impression des tissus 667.1 Nettoyage
667.2 Colorants et pigments 667.4 Encres 667.5 Encres d'imprimerie 667.6 Peintures 667.7 Cires, laques, vernis 667.9 Revêtements et enduits |
Ouvrages de la bibliothèque en indexation 667.3
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Mechanism of photoprotection of wool with formaldehyde and thiol derivatives / Keith R. Millington in COLORATION TECHNOLOGY, Vol. 125, N° 2 (2009)
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Titre : Mechanism of photoprotection of wool with formaldehyde and thiol derivatives Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : Keith R. Millington, Auteur ; George Maurdev, Auteur ; Michael J. Jones, Auteur Année de publication : 2009 Article en page(s) : p. 117-122 Note générale : Bibliogr. Langues : Anglais (eng) Index. décimale : 667.3 Teinture et impression des tissus Résumé : The application of thiourea and formaldehyde offers significant reductions in photoyellowing for natural, bleached and fluorescent-brightened wools. We have examined the use of alternative thiol derivates to thiourea and shown that a mixture of N-acetylcysteine and formaldehyde is similarly effective. Photo-induced chemiluminescence studies on treated wool fabrics show that the intensity of chemiluminescence following a brief exposure to ultraviolet A radiation is reduced for wool treated with thiourea and formaldehyde, N-acetylcysteine–formaldehyde and thiourea dioxide–formaldehyde, but not for formaldehyde alone. This demonstrates that a lower population of free radicals is formed in irradiated thiol-derivative formaldehyde-treated wools because of free radical scavenging by the sulphur-containing species. This free radical scavenging results in reduced photoyellowing. The effect of thiourea and formaldehyde treatment on the intrinsic fluorescence of wool is significantly different to N-acetylcysteine–formaldehyde. Thiourea and formaldehyde quenches tryptophan fluorescence relative to untreated wool, whereas N-acetylcysteine–formaldehyde treatment results in an increase in intensity probably because of a reduction in disulphide quenching. DOI : 10.1111/j.1478-4408.2009.00183.x En ligne : http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1478-4408.2009.00183.x/pdf Format de la ressource électronique : Permalink : https://e-campus.itech.fr/pmb/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=4857
in COLORATION TECHNOLOGY > Vol. 125, N° 2 (2009) . - p. 117-122[article]Réservation
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Code-barres Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité 011226 - Périodique Bibliothèque principale Documentaires Disponible Metal mordanting in dyeing with natural colourants / Avinash P. Manian in COLORATION TECHNOLOGY, Vol. 132, N° 2 (04/2016)
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Titre : Metal mordanting in dyeing with natural colourants Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : Avinash P. Manian, Auteur ; Paul Roshan, Auteur ; Thomas Bechtold, Auteur Année de publication : 2016 Article en page(s) : p. 107-113 Note générale : Bibliogr. Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : Colorants végétaux
Mordançage (teinture)
Photostabilité
Sels métalliques
Teinture -- Fibres textilesIndex. décimale : 667.3 Teinture et impression des tissus Résumé : Metal mordanting, or the application of metal salts, is a common method of improving the light fastness in dyeing with natural colourants. This review presents the results from a survey of the literature on metal mordanting to assess what levels of correlation exist between mordant-induced effects (changes in colour and colour depth) and the changes in light fastness, what is known about the mechanisms of mordant-induced improvements of light fastness, and how the salt levels used in coloration processes compare with the limits on metal levels in wastewater and on the dyed substrates. No strong interrelationships are found between the mordant-induced effects and light fastness improvements. Knowledge about mechanisms of mordant effect on light fastness appears, in large part, to be derived from empirical correlations. However, as light fastness is affected by a multitude of factors, the correlations do not always hold true. It is found that residual metal contents in spent dye/mordanting liquors are generally not reported. However, with rough calculations, it is estimated that, with even the lowest reported salt concentrations, the metal contents in spent liquors exceed environmental release limits. The metal contents on dyed substrates are also not generally reported, but similar estimations show that the contents of heavy metal on dyed substrates (when copper and chromium salts are used as mordants) also exceed limits. On the basis of these observations, the authors make suggestions for elements to be included in investigations on furthering the use of natural colourants in textile dyeing. Note de contenu : - Colour depth changes and light fastness improvements
- Colour changes and light fastness improvements
- Photochemical quenching mechanisms
- Mordant levels used in dyeingDOI : 10.1111/cote.12199 En ligne : https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/cote.12199 Format de la ressource électronique : Permalink : https://e-campus.itech.fr/pmb/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=25853
in COLORATION TECHNOLOGY > Vol. 132, N° 2 (04/2016) . - p. 107-113[article]Réservation
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Code-barres Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité 18025 - Périodique Bibliothèque principale Documentaires Disponible
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Titre : Metal salt azo pigments Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : Robert M. Christie, Auteur ; Jennifer L. Mackay, Auteur Année de publication : 2009 Article en page(s) : p. 133-144 Note générale : Bibliogr. Langues : Anglais (eng) Index. décimale : 667.3 Teinture et impression des tissus Résumé : Historically, metal salt azo pigments have evolved from products referred to as 'lakes', which were prepared from established water-soluble textile dyes, rendered insoluble by precipitation on to colourless inorganic substrates. The first azo lake pigment, Lithol Red, was reported in 1899. The majority of the current range of industrial metal salt azo pigments no longer contains the insoluble substrate as an integral constituent. Structurally, they may be considered as being derived from sodium salts of anionic azo dyes containing sulphonate and/or carboxylate groups by replacement of the sodium cation, usually with a divalent cation of an alkaline earth (calcium, strontium or barium) or the transition metal manganese. This review provides an account of the historical development of metal salt azo pigments and an overview of the chemical structural types of the current range of commercially important products in relation to their properties and application performance. An overview of the patent literature associated with the development of the products is also given. Importantly, the structural investigations which have been reported on this group of pigments, using a variety of microscopic, spectroscopic and crystallographic techniques, are reviewed. DOI : 10.1111/j.1478-4408.2008.00133.x En ligne : http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1478-4408.2008.00133.x/pdf Format de la ressource électronique : Permalink : https://e-campus.itech.fr/pmb/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=3154
in COLORATION TECHNOLOGY > Vol. 124, N° 3 (2008) . - p. 133-144[article]Réservation
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Code-barres Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité 010963 - Périodique Bibliothèque principale Documentaires Disponible A method for dyeing cotton fabric with anthocyanin dyes extracted from mulberry (Morus rubra) fruits / Huayin Wang in COLORATION TECHNOLOGY, Vol. 132, N° 3 (06/2016)
[article]
Titre : A method for dyeing cotton fabric with anthocyanin dyes extracted from mulberry (Morus rubra) fruits Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : Huayin Wang, Auteur ; Zhirong Tang, Auteur ; Wenlong Zhou, Auteur Année de publication : 2016 Article en page(s) : p. 222-231 Note générale : Bibliogr. Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : Anthocyanes
Colorants végétaux
CotonLe coton est une fibre végétale qui entoure les graines des cotonniers "véritables"(Gossypium sp.), un arbuste de la famille des Malvacées. Cette fibre est généralement transformée en fil qui est tissé pour fabriquer des tissus. Le coton est la plus importante des fibres naturelles produites dans le monde. Depuis le XIXe siècle, il constitue, grâce aux progrès de l'industrialisation et de l'agronomie, la première fibre textile du monde (près de la moitié de la consommation mondiale de fibres textiles).
Evaluation
Extraction (chimie)
Fibres végétales
Fibres végétales -- Propriétés mécaniques
Murier et constituants
Succinique, AcideL'acide succinique est un diacide carboxylique aliphatique, dénommé également acide butane-1,4-dioïque et de formule semi-développée HOOC–CH2–CH2–COOH.
Il est présent dans tous les organismes vivants et intervient dans le métabolisme cellulaire, en particulier dans le métabolisme des lipides entre l'acide cétoglutarique et l'acide fumarique lors du cycle de Krebs dans la mitochondrie.
Teinture -- Fibres textiles
vision des couleursIndex. décimale : 667.3 Teinture et impression des tissus Résumé : For the first time, the natural anthocyanin dyes (mainly consisting of cyanidine 3-glycoside) extracted from mulberry (Morus rubra) fruits has been successfully used to dye cotton fabric, with a dyeing property performance good enough for potential commercial applications. In this study, succinic acid was firstly incorporated into cotton fabrics by esterification to the hydroxyl groups of cellulose, forming an anionic site for the dyes. The performance of the modified material was characterised by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy and tensile strength. Results showed that the tensile strength of cotton fabrics was mostly retained after modification. The anthocyanin extracts from mulberry fruits were used to study the dyeability of the control and modified cotton fabrics. Red and deep purple (aubergine) are two main shades of cotton fabrics dyed with mulberry fruit extracts. Most importantly, aubergine shade is rare in cotton fabrics dyed with natural dyes. Modification with succinic acid clearly increased the colour strength of the dyed cotton fabric. The colour strength of dyed cotton fabric was improved from 2.7 to 5.3 in the case of dyeing without mordants, and from 3.2 to 6.9 in the case of dyeing with tin mordanting. Meanwhile, the colour fastness was improved by 0.5–2 grades with increasing succinic acid concentration in the finish solution. The colour fastness to perspiration, crocking, light, and washing of fabric dyed with simultaneous tin mordanting and modified with 30 g l?1 of succinic acid was found to be acceptable, with a grey scale grade of at least 3. As for home laundering, neutral soapy solution was more acceptable than alkaline soapy solution. Note de contenu : - EXPERIMENTAL : Materials and reagents - Extraction of mulberry dyes - High-performance liquid chromatography/tandem mass spectrometry - Modification of cotton fabrics - Dyeing - Fourier transform infrared spectral analysis - Tensile strength - Colour evaluation - Colour durability
- RESULTS AND DISCUSSION : Mechanism - Fourier transform infrared analysis - Tensile strength - Main anthocyanins of fruit extracts - DyeingDOI : 10.1111/cote.12212 En ligne : https://drive.google.com/file/d/1NJBjgd8Y5Ovy5P5aAo_e0wtJS24jv9dQ/view?usp=drive [...] Format de la ressource électronique : Permalink : https://e-campus.itech.fr/pmb/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=26354
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Code-barres Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité 18101 - Périodique Bibliothèque principale Documentaires Disponible Method of extraction and resolubilisation of pigments from chlorociboria aeruginosa and scytalidium cuboideum, two prolific spalting fungi / Sara C. Robinson in COLORATION TECHNOLOGY, Vol. 130, N° 3 (06/2014)
[article]
Titre : Method of extraction and resolubilisation of pigments from chlorociboria aeruginosa and scytalidium cuboideum, two prolific spalting fungi Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : Sara C. Robinson, Auteur ; Eric Hinsch, Auteur ; Genevieve Weber, Auteur ; Shawn Freitas, Auteur Année de publication : 2014 Article en page(s) : p. 221-225 Note générale : Bibliogr. Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : Champignons et constituants
Colorants
DichlorométhaneLe dichlorométhane (DCM) ou chlorure de méthylène (dénommé R30 dans la liste des gaz fluorés et frigorigènes), est un composé chimique se présentant à température ambiante comme un liquide incolore et volatil émettant une odeur douceâtre relativement forte pouvant mettre certaines personnes mal à l'aise. Son odeur est perceptible dès 200–300 ppm (dès 25 ppm ou seulement vers 600 ppm selon d'autres sources).
Il est surtout utilisé comme solvant de composés organiques.
Caractéristiques chimiques : Caractéristiques chimiques
- Il est peu soluble dans l'eau (13 à 20 g·l-1 à 20 °C) ;
- Il est miscible avec la plupart des solvants organiques ;
- Solvant efficace sur de nombreux produits organiques (graisses, huiles, résines, etc.).
- Il réagit violemment (explosion possible en présence de certains catalyseurs courants ou d'autres solvants chlorés) avec des poudres métalliques (aluminium, magnésium), et réagit spontanément et fortement avec les métaux alcalins, les bases fortes et les oxydants puissants.
Extraction (chimie)
Extraction par solvantIndex. décimale : 667.3 Teinture et impression des tissus Résumé : Twelve solvents were tested for their ability to extract the pigments of Chlorociboria aeruginosa and Scytalidium cuboideum, two fungi used primarily for the spalting of decorative wood. Solvents were assessed on the basis of the saturation of pigment produced, their ability to diffuse through filter paper, and whether they reacted with the extracted pigments. Solvents that performed well in extraction testing were then tested to determine whether they could also dissolve the extracted pigment once dried. Of the solvents tested, only dichloromethane was capable of quick, non-reactive extraction with filter paper diffusion, as well as being able fully to redissolve dried pigment extracted from C. aeruginosa. The results of this study show dichloromethane to be an ideal solvent for extracting and applying fungal pigments that offers new possibilities for spalting in which fungi do not need to be grown directly on a substrate in order to produce pigmented wood. Note de contenu : - Growth
- Extraction
- Resolubilisation
- AnalysisDOI : 10.1111/cote.12080 En ligne : https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/cote.12080 Format de la ressource électronique : Permalink : https://e-campus.itech.fr/pmb/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=21464
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Code-barres Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité 16271 - Périodique Bibliothèque principale Documentaires Disponible A method to improve the performance of wide dye concentration measurement based on the multi-pathlength spectrophotometry / Venkatesh Bairabathina in COLORATION TECHNOLOGY, Vol. 138, N° 4 (08/2022)
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PermalinkMethods and impact of reducing salt in dyeing cellulose : a case study with CI Direct Blue 90 / Samuel M. Jasper in COLORATION TECHNOLOGY, Vol. 129, N° 5 (10/2013)
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PermalinkModification of polyester fabric by chemical/thermal treatment to improve dyeing ability / Wafaa M. Raslan in COLORATION TECHNOLOGY, Vol. 126, N° 4 (2010)
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PermalinkModification of silk with aminated polyepichlorohydrin to improve dyeability with reactive dyes / Xie Weiben in COLORATION TECHNOLOGY, Vol. 123, N° 2 (2007)
PermalinkModified 2,4-difluoro-5-chloro-pyrimidine dyes and their application in ink-jet printing on wool fabrics / M. Clark in COLORATION TECHNOLOGY, Vol. 125, N° 3 (2009)
PermalinkModified guar gum : An alternative source for printing of cotton fabric with reactive dye / Mohammad Khajeh Mehrizi in COLORATION TECHNOLOGY, Vol. 139, N° 4 (08/2023)
PermalinkMolecular electronic spectroscopy : from often neglected fundamental principles to limitations of state-of-the-art computational methods / Heinz Mustroph in COLORATION TECHNOLOGY, Vol. 131, N° 1 (02/2015)
PermalinkMolecular modelling of inclusion compounds from hydrophobic dyes and gamma-cyclodextrin / Ahmed El-Shafei in COLORATION TECHNOLOGY, Vol. 125, N° 4 (2009)
PermalinkPermalinkMordant dye application on cotton : optimisation and combination with natural dyes / Yi Ding in COLORATION TECHNOLOGY, Vol. 133, N° 5 (10/2017)
PermalinkA multispectral imaging approach to colour measurement and colour matching of single yarns without winding / Lin Luo in COLORATION TECHNOLOGY, Vol. 131, N° 4 (08/2015)
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PermalinkNanomaterials for textile processing and photonic applications / Timothy L. Dawson in COLORATION TECHNOLOGY, Vol. 124, N° 5 (2008)
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PermalinkNaphthoylenebenzimidazolone sensitisers for photo-oxidisable free radical polymerisation with the aid of pyridinium salts / Jolanta Kolinska in COLORATION TECHNOLOGY, Vol. 124, N° 6 (2008)
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PermalinkNatural dye–surfactant interactions: thermodynamic and surface parameters in COLORATION TECHNOLOGY, Vol. 128, N° 4 (2012)
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PermalinkLe noir d'aniline et ses applications à la teinture et à l'impression / E. Noelting / Paris : Revue générale des matières colorantes (1908)
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PermalinkOne-bath dyeing of polyester/cotton blends with disperse and bis-3-carboxypyridinium-s-triazine reactive dyes. / John A. Bone in COLORATION TECHNOLOGY, Vol. 124, N° 2 (2008)
PermalinkOne-bath dyeing of polyester/cotton with disperse and bis-3-carboxypyridinium-s-triazine reactive dyes. Part 1 : Factors limiting production of heavy shades / John A. Bone in COLORATION TECHNOLOGY, Vol. 123, N° 3 (2007)
PermalinkOne-bath union dyeing of a modified wool/acrylic blend with acid and reactive dyes / Reda M. El-Shishtawy in COLORATION TECHNOLOGY, Vol. 127, N° 1 (2011)
PermalinkOne-bath union dyeing of wool/polytrimethylene terephthalate blends / Jinhuan Zheng in COLORATION TECHNOLOGY, Vol. 124, N° 4 (2008)
PermalinkOne-pass process for the continuous dyeing of polyester/unmercerised cotton blends with disperse/reactive dyes / Arshad Mehmood in COLORATION TECHNOLOGY, Vol. 125, N° 1 (2009)
PermalinkOne-pass process for the continuous dyeing of polyester/unmercerised cotton blends with disperse/reactive dyes / Arshad Mehmood in COLORATION TECHNOLOGY, Vol. 125, N° 1 (2009)
PermalinkOne-step dyeing of polyethylene terephthalate fabric, combining pretreatment and dyeing using alkali-stable disperse dyes / Aiqin Hou in COLORATION TECHNOLOGY, Vol. 129, N° 6 (12/2013)
PermalinkOne-step mini-emulsion copolymerisation of waterborne polysiloxane-modified polyacrylate/pigment hybrid latex and its application in textile pigment printing / Fenping Wang in COLORATION TECHNOLOGY, Vol. 138, N° 3 (06/2022)
PermalinkOptical whitening of cationised cotton : effect on whiteness and whiteness tint / Mustafa Tutak in COLORATION TECHNOLOGY, Vol. 127, N° 5 (2011)
PermalinkOptimal eigenvectors of spectral datasets : sequential selection from one set vs a collection from two sets / Morteza Maali Amiri in COLORATION TECHNOLOGY, Vol. 132, N° 6 (12/2016)
PermalinkOptimal yarn colour combination for full-colour fabric design and mixed-colour chromaticity coordinates based on CIE chromaticity diagram analysis / Qizheng Li in COLORATION TECHNOLOGY, Vol. 130, N° 6 (12/2014)
PermalinkOptimisation of process parameters of Alpaca wool printing with Juglans regia natural dye / Martinia Glogar in COLORATION TECHNOLOGY, Vol. 136, N° 2 (04/2020)
PermalinkOptimising by response surface methodology the dyeing of polyester with a liposome-encapsulated disperse dye / Farahnaz Sadr Dadras in COLORATION TECHNOLOGY, Vol. 130, N° 2 (04/2014)
PermalinkOptimising the anionisation of cotton with 3-chloro-2-hydroxy-1-propanesulphonic acid sodium salt for dyeing with basic dyes / Sha Fu in COLORATION TECHNOLOGY, Vol. 133, N° 3 (06/2017)
PermalinkOrganoclay-assisted vat dyeing of polypropylene nanocomposite fabrics / Yehya A. Youssef in COLORATION TECHNOLOGY, Vol. 137, N° 6 (12/2021)
PermalinkOrganoclays assisted vat and disperse dyeing of poly(ethylene terephthalate) nanocomposite fabrics via melt spinning / Aballa A. Mousa in COLORATION TECHNOLOGY, Vol. 134, N° 2 (04/2018)
PermalinkOxidative decolorisation of Eriochrome Black T with Chloramine-T : kinetic, mechanistic, and spectrophotometric approaches / Adalegere S. Manjunatha in COLORATION TECHNOLOGY, Vol. 130, N° 5 (10/2014)
PermalinkOxygen plasma pretreatment improves dyeing and antimicrobial properties of wool fabric dyed with natural extract from pomegranate peel / Jelena Peran in COLORATION TECHNOLOGY, Vol. 136, N° 2 (04/2020)
PermalinkOzonation of the reactive dye intermediate 2-naphthylamine 3,6,8-trisulphonic acid (K-Acid) : kinetic assessment, ozonation products and ecotoxicity / Idil Arslan-Alaton in COLORATION TECHNOLOGY, Vol. 128, N° 5 (2012)
PermalinkOzone applications for after-clearing of disperse-dyed poly(lactic acid) fibres / Ozan Avinc in COLORATION TECHNOLOGY, Vol. 128, N° 6 (2012)
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