Toray Industries has created a new nylon textile using the textile manufacturer’s NanoDesign technology. Despite using a DWR treatment (with lower environmental cost), the latest innovation from the giant delivers high water repellency.
How? The textile’s structure has microscopic slits running lengthwise on the yarn. Water-repelling treatments fill these slits below the outside diameter of the yarn, also making the treatment more abrasion-resistant.
The result offers two benefits. First, the construction enables the textile to use C6 water repellents, which are normally insufficient for outdoor sports and Second, the textile provides more resistance to abrasion, which is a leading contributor to diminishing DWR performance.
Despite the slits, the textile has the strength and abrasion-resistance of other yarns and is processed the same way.
Fluorine-based water repellents used in the past do not easily decompose naturally because of their stable chemical structure. They also contain Perfluorooctanoic Acid, PFOA, also known as C8, which could accumulate in the body and also remain in the environment. With growing concerns on these two factors and a need for materials using water repellants with low environmental harm, the use of C6 offers this and does not contain PFOA.
Toray’s textile innovation will be market-ready Fall 2020 as a material variation of the existing textile brands Airtastic®, ENTRANT® and Dermizax® and marketed to manufacturers in the active lifestyle, ski and athleisure space for the textile’s high water repellant properties. In North America, Toray International America, Inc. will provide the latest textile technology.
Courtesy: SGB Media
Eastman introduced Naia™ Lyte, a new cellulose acetate filament yarn, at the Intertextile Shanghai Apparel Fabrics Spring/Summer 2026 exhibition.
Ecco, Spinnova have introduced the Ecco BIOM 720 shoe. This product is unique as it uses leather by-products that are…
Xefco has deployed its Ausora system, marking the first time a waterless plasma textile dyeing machine has been deployed at…
trinamiX is helping manufacturers, recyclers, sorters, and brands improve material identification through its mobile near-infrared spectroscopy technology.
The Bezos Earth Fund has announced an investment of $34 million to support the development of new materials for the…
STCH is working on a system called “fabric GPT.” This tool is trained on large amounts of data related to…