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News

DuPont of Wilmington, Delaware, USA, is to divest its global hydroentangled nonwovens business (Sontara), which specializes in fabrics for medical applications and wipes.
A US company is offering to share its expertise and facilities to help others develop pilot-scale production of nonwovens into full-scale commercial reality.
An Indian company claims to have developed and commercialized a technology (Flexsil) for permanently bonding silver to textile substrates in order to make them antibacterial and electrically conductiv
Ahlstrom of Helsinki, Finland, has added several fabrics to its range of sterile barrier systems (Ahlstrom Reliance Tandem).
Technical Fibre Products (TFP) Ltd of Burnside, UK, has added to its range of high-quality veils and mats made from recycled carbon fibre.
Tokyo, Japan-based JX Nippon Oil and Energy is commercializing a process to make polypropylene (PP) fibres with diameters in the range 300-500 nm.
An Australian company has launched two halogenfree flame-retardant (FR) treatments for upholstery and furnishings.
Researchers in China have made a lithium-ion battery by pairing two stretchable and bendable yarns and claim a 10-cm-long piece weighing just 0.08 g can power a string of light-emitting diodes (LEDs)
A high-density fabric with a structure designed to make breathable, waterproof and water-shedding outerwear is now available.
An apparel filling (Spherix) that contains phase-change material (PCM) to regulate the temperature of the wearer has been launched by Outlast Technologies of Boulder, Colorado, USA.
Scientists at MIT are developing hybrid materials that are a cross between living bacterial cells and non-living components such as gold nanoparticles or quantum dots.
A new self-healing system for composites has been developed by the Beckman Institute's Autonomous Materials Systems (AMS) Group at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
Bioglow, based in St Louis, Missouri, has developed the world's first autoluminescent (light producing) plants based on the work of molecular biologist Dr Alexander Krichevsky.
Single layer breathable nanowebs have been developed using an environmentally benign electrospinning process by a team of interdisciplinary researchers at Texas Tech University.
A lightweight, high-strength new nanomaterial inspired by the framework structure of bones and wood and the shell structure of bees' honeycombs could find applications in insulation and shock absorbin
Researchers from the National Institute for Materials Science (NIMS) in Ibaraki, Japan, have developed a nanofibre mesh that can remove toxins and waste from blood.
Stem cells have been shown to exhibit auxetic properties - the ability to expand when stretched - in work by scientists at the University of Cambridge.
A new stable porous membrane that consists of two layers of graphene and is thinner than a nanometre - 100,000 times thinner than the diameter of a human hair - could be groundbreaking in filtration a
By harnessing an electropolymerization process to produce aligned arrays of polymer nanofibres, a thermal interface material able to conduct heat 20 times better than the original polymer has been dev
Hagfish - an ancient group of bottom-dwelling creatures that have remained relatively unchanged for more than 300 million years - secrete a gelatinous slime containing mucus and tens of thousands of p
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