Abrasion and Wear
Abrasion and Wear
Abrasion and Wear
Unless directed otherwise the fabric sample should be conditioned in the standard
The type of instrument to be used depends upon which type of abrasive test is required
Direction of Abrasion:
The severity of abrasion will vary with the nature of abradant. e.g.
Steel, silicon carbide will give constant abrasive qualities. Second
piece of the tested fabric, a standard worsted o canvas fabric, emery
cloth of various grades can be used as abradants but there is risk of
changing abrasive properties of abradant.
Backing of Specimen:
The hardness of the backing material given for the specimen can
affect the results. In some tests hard backing used in some other a
felt or foam rubber backing is used.
Cleanliness of the Specimen and Instrument:
The region where abrasion takes place should be handled minimum. The
abrading region should be free from foreign matters such as the wax, graphite
etc. as they act as lubricants and end point will be affected. Also the blade of
flex abrasion tester must be free from spotlessly clean and free from grease.
Variation of the tension on the specimen will alter the result, hence the
standardized methods of mounting the specimen should be used.
The extent of abrasion will be affected by the pressure applied .High pressures
will reduce the time taken to reach the end point of the test but the
acceleration of the destruction of the fabric may lead to the false conclusions.
Hence suitable standards must be followed .
End Point of the Test:
often built into the tester so that motor is switched off as soon
The abradant used in the various accessories is made of special steel whose abrasive
characteristics remain constant and reproducible.
The results of tests on the machine can be analyzed and expressed numerically and the
fabric can be ranked in order of merit
FLEX TEST:
Flex Test:
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Flex test is related to behavior of fabric during motion and
coherence of fabric structure and ruggedness of individual
fibres.
Ball toughness:
Ball Toughness:
In this test a cover plate with a hardened steel strip is clipped on to the top of the
carriage. The strip is mounted over this steel plate and secured by stenter pins on
either side of the carriage. The abradant is 3/16 inch ball bearing in a special holder
which is attached to the head H. A load of 1 ½ lbs. is added to the spigot.
The sample dimensions are 5 inch x 1 inch. The short side represents whether warp
or weft way result is required so that the ball runs across the threads.
The carriage reciprocates beneath the ball by a motor and in time the ball
penetrates the fabric and contacts the hardened strip. When this happens a very
small current flows and triggers special circuit which stops the machine. The ball
toughness is related to the fabric structure and toughness or brittleness of the
individual fibres.
Flat Abrasion:
Flat Abrasion:
In this case the abradant is stainless steel gauge mounted in a special
holder which is fixed to the upper head by springs. The test specimen is
rubbing the steel gauge comes into contact with the resilient pad and
blended materials. The machine is used for both woven and knitted fabrics
Principle:
Two simple harmonic motions working at right angles. The instrument can be
Pressure of abrasion
The type of abrading material such as cloth to cloth, cloth to emery or any
hard surface.
The machine consists of a top plate supported by three pillars. On the top
of each pillar is a ball caster. These ball casters allow the plates to slide
and worm wheel driving three circular cam discs. On the cams, pins are
provided with bush bearings and the pins engage the slots in the plate. The
two outside pins work in two slots in the same line and the centre pin
End Point:
Geometric Aspects:
1. Area of Contact between fabric and abradant.
2. Local pressure or stress concentrations developing on specific
yarn points or areas. (true area of contact)
3. Threads per unit length.
4. Crown Height
5. Yarn Size
6. Fabric Thickness
Influence of Yarn and Fabric Geometry
on Abrasion Resistance
Geometric Aspects:
7. Yarn Crimp
8. Float Length
9. Yarn Cohesiveness
10. Compressional Resilience and backing of material.
11. Fabric Tightness
12. Cover Factor
Abrasion Aspects
Direction of Abrasion
Magnitude and Direction of tensions developed
during abrasive action.
Geometric Area of Contact Between Fabric and Abradant:
curvatures of the fibre ,the contour of its cross section and its
The intersection of warp and filling yarn will produce crown deviation of
one yarn over the other. The extent to which this causes the crown to be
displaced will depend upon the weave, yarn thickness, yarn crimp,
thread count and the interaction of these parameters between warp and
filling. these crowns will the burnt of abrasive action, the resulting
height and number of crowns. The greater the number of crowns the less
The higher is the thickness and yarn diameter the higher will be
Crimp distribution determines the relative vertical displacement of each set of yarns
above and below the fabric. Usually higher crimp will provide more resistance to
abrasion.
Float Length:
The longer the float length the less the restraints on the yarn system. Here yarns are
no longer restricted to alternating from one side of the fabric to the other but bend
sideways and allow for the closer packing characteristics of twill and sateen. The float
length is highest for sateen hence its abrasion resistance is the best followed by Oxford
depending upon the normal loads between the rubbing surfaces. Yarn twist
brings different fibres to the surfaces in any float length. The number of
filament fibres at any surface depends upon the float length, the turns per
at local protuberances.
Fabric Cover and Fabric Tightness:
The sateen weave fabric shows highest abrasion resistance while plain
shows least. The cover factor is the primary factor in determining the
by the fabric geometry. The fabric with high cover factor can pack
more yarns /unit area without increasing fabric tightness avoiding the
the high cover factor increases the abrasion resistance but tightness
Direction of Abrasion:
The abrasion performance of textile fabrics changes with the change in direction
of rubbing. In experiments where fabrics have been rubbed in warp and filling
direction a ration of 2:1 has been observed in the number of strokes required to
form a hole
Generally the yarns which project on the rubbing surface of the fabric will
suffer greatest damage when abrasion takes place in a direction perpendicular
to their float length. Here abrasion and tensile stresses occur in one direction. It
becomes desirable to increase the perpendicular set of yarns in terms of
frequency and diameter and bring them to surface to absorb the wear. Under
these conditions, the cross yarns will absorb maximum damage during a period
of rubbing and maximum resistance will be achieved.
Magnitude and Direction of Tensions Developed During Abrasive
Action:
rubbing.