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What Is a Synthetic Polyester Fabric?

What Is a Synthetic Polyester Fabric?thumbnail
Polyester fabric has a bad cultural reputation, but is nearly indispensable in the modern world.

Polyester fabric is, by definition, synthetic: a fabric made by chemical synthesis rather than from natural materials (such as wool, cotton, linen, silk) or quasi-synthetic cellulose-based materials (rayon, acetate). First marketed in 1951, polyester is a petroleum-based product. When spun as a fiber, it is extremely strong, quick-drying, long-lasting and water-resistant. Polyester is used in nearly all categories of fabric production.

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    1. Chemical Makeup

      Manufacture

      • Synthetic fibers can be made to look and feel like organic fabrics. manufacture image by cem orter from Fotolia.com

        Petroleum-based acids and alcohols are placed in a high-temperature vacuum to create "condensation polymerization." The condensed polymer is formed into long chemical ribbons that are dried and cut into "chips." The chips are extruded into filaments, and these are spun on machines called "spinnerets" until the resulting fibers are as long, thin and flexible as organic or quasi-synthetic thread. The threads are textured and shaped to resemble the organic material the polyester is intended to duplicate.

      Evolution

      Environmental Effects

      • As the price of petroleum rises, so does the price of polyester manufacturing. crochet de grue image by JEAN-MARC MEDINA from Fotolia.com

        Because polyester is petroleum-based, it has a reputation for being environmentally unsound. However, many otherwise "natural" fibers are grown with harsh pesticides, and are unsustainably harvested, then transported, bleached, dyed and otherwise altered to such an extent that polyester may be more environmentally friendly by comparison. Polyester fiber can also be manufactured from recycled materials. As petroleum becomes more scarce, polyester may no longer be as inexpensive to make, forcing manufacturers to experiment with other, perhaps more earth-friendly, synthetic materials.

      Future Trends

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    • Photo Credit sewing spool image by AGphotographer from Fotolia.com gray fabric image by Dmitry Grishin from Fotolia.com manufacture image by cem orter from Fotolia.com lycra trousers image by weim from Fotolia.com crochet de grue image by JEAN-MARC MEDINA from Fotolia.com maillot de bain et lunettes 2 image by Nathalie P from Fotolia.com

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