Method for measuring or investigation of fiber structure
This presentation discusses several methods for measuring fiber structure, including optical and X-ray diffraction, optical microscopy, electron microscopy, thermal analysis, and density measurements. It focuses on optical diffraction, X-ray diffraction, and electron diffraction techniques. These methods analyze fiber composition, length, thickness, and other properties by examining fiber diffraction patterns.
Fiber structurehelps to acquire knowledge about fiber
an its composition for improving use of fiber in textile.
Measuring of fiber structure manly introduce the fiber
composition, length, weight, thickness, fineness, flexi
bility, stability etc.
Methods for measuring of fiber structure:
Optical and X-ray diffraction
Optical microscopy
Electron microscopy and electron diffraction
Optical properties
Thermal analysis
Density
3.
When abeam of light is passed
through a photographic
slide, the light is scattered in
many directions.
By using a lens in the right
place, we can recombine this
scattered information about the
picture into an image on a
screen.
Example:There is a
characteristic diffraction pattern
from a single slit.The difference
between the image that must
be focused at a particular place
and the angular diffraction
pattern that can be intercepted
anywhere is shown in Fig.
4.
The useof polarized light in
either of the above two
techniques changes the pattern
and thus, in principle, increases
the available information about
structure if it can be interpreted.
A diffraction grating of regularly
spaced lines, illuminated
normally by parallel light, will
give a set of fringes, with the
maxima of the bright bands at
angles φ defined by the relation:
nλ = a sinφ
Where n is an integer, λ the
wavelength of light and a the
spacing of the lines in the grating.
5.
X-radiation (composedof X-
rays) is a form of
electromagnetic radiation.
X-rays have a wavelength in
the range of 0.01 to 10
nanometers, corresponding
to frequencies in the range 30
petahertz to 30 exahertz
(3×1016 Hz to 3×1019 Hz) and
energies in the range 100 eV
to 100 keV.
The wavelengths are shorter
than those of UV rays and
longer than those of gamma
rays.
6.
In Bragg’slaw, when x-rays are
scattered from a crystal
lattice, peaks of scattered intensity
are observed which correspond to
the following conditions:
The angle of incidence = angle of
scattering.
The path length difference is equal to
an integer number of wavelengths.
The condition for maximum
intensity contained in Bragg's law
above allow us to calculate details
about the crystal structure, or if the
crystal structure is known, to
determine the wavelength of the x-
rays incident upon the crystal.
n λ = 2d sin θ
7.
The conditionthat a
particular reflection
should occur is that the
layer of atoms should
make the required angle
with the X-ray beam.
This will happen for a
series of orientations of
the crystals distributed
around a cone.The X-
rays will be reflected
around a cone of twice
this angle, as shown in
Fig.
8.
Electron diffractionrefers to the wave nature of electrons.
However, from a technical or practical point of view, it may be
regarded as a technique used to study matter by firing electrons at
a sample and observing the resulting interference pattern.This
phenomenon is commonly known as the wave-particle duality,
which states that the behavior of a particle of matter can be
described by a wave.
Normal optical microscope we can find out up to 0.5 Å only.
By using of electron microscope we can able to find out up to 5 Å.
The rays from electron source are condensed on the specimen.
Here only dry sample can be examined.
Contrast in the image depends on the variation in scattering of the
electrons by parts of the specimen of differing density.
9.
Electron microscope
methodis better to
examining the surface of
the fiber
The main use of EM in
fiber science has been in
the range of medium to
high
magnification, which is
near or beyond the limit
of the microscope .