By the 1950s, synthetic fabrics - often wrinkle resistant and flame retardant - began to overtake cotton as the dominant U.S. textile fiber. To reverse this trend chemists and chemical engineers at the Southern Regional Research Center initiated research to modify cotton chemically. Their efforts in developing agents that crosslinked the cellulose fibers and in establishing crosslinking mechanisms led to improved durable press fabrics. SRRC studies also developed new agents that improved the durability of flame retardant cotton to laundering.
U.S. Department of Agriculture ARS Southern Regional Research Center
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YearAdded:
Image Credit:
Photo courtesy National Archives and Records Administration. (CC BY 2.0)
Image Caption:
The Southern Regional Research Center in New Orleans, Louisiana in August 1985.
Era_date_from:
2004
Innovations
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By the 1950s, synthetic fabrics - often wrinkle resistant and flame retardant - began to overtake cotton as the dominant U.S. textile fiber. To reverse this trend chemists and chemical engineers at the Southern Regional Research Center initiated research to modify cotton chemically. Their…
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