US2115317A - Improvements in the dyeing of textiles - Google Patents

Improvements in the dyeing of textiles Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2115317A
US2115317A US35530A US3553035A US2115317A US 2115317 A US2115317 A US 2115317A US 35530 A US35530 A US 35530A US 3553035 A US3553035 A US 3553035A US 2115317 A US2115317 A US 2115317A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
dyeing
vat
hydroquinone
dyestufi
liable
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US35530A
Inventor
Ott Karl
Storb Otto
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
General Aniline Works Inc
Original Assignee
General Aniline Works Inc
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by General Aniline Works Inc filed Critical General Aniline Works Inc
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2115317A publication Critical patent/US2115317A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D06TREATMENT OF TEXTILES OR THE LIKE; LAUNDERING; FLEXIBLE MATERIALS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • D06PDYEING OR PRINTING TEXTILES; DYEING LEATHER, FURS OR SOLID MACROMOLECULAR SUBSTANCES IN ANY FORM
    • D06P1/00General processes of dyeing or printing textiles, or general processes of dyeing leather, furs, or solid macromolecular substances in any form, classified according to the dyes, pigments, or auxiliary substances employed
    • D06P1/22General processes of dyeing or printing textiles, or general processes of dyeing leather, furs, or solid macromolecular substances in any form, classified according to the dyes, pigments, or auxiliary substances employed using vat dyestuffs including indigo

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to a process for the dyeing of textiles.
  • vat dyestuffs particularly such of the anthraquinone series
  • the mechanical properties, i. e. strength and resistance, of the textile fibers are often impaired, especially, if during the dyeing process they are repeatedly exposed to reduction and oxidation by the change between vat and air. Damages of the kind described are often met with when dyeing delicate tissues of artificial silk or cotton fabrics for a prolonged time on the reel vat or of yarns on Sellers machine.
  • the dyeing is carried out at a temperature of 55 55 C. in the usual way and hydrosulfite an d lye are three hours on the reel with 20% of 2'3'6'7'-diphthaiicsubsequently added in the required amounts.
  • hydroquinone instead of hydroquinone also 2 gs. of phenanthrene quinone per liter may be used with the same good result; both agents may also have been incorporatedwith the dyestufi before.
  • the dye bath contains per liter 5 gs. oi the 10% paste of 1,2-dianthraquinonylamine, 8 gs. soda lye of 38 B. and 5 gs. of hydrosulflte'.
  • the tensile strength of the dyed material is reduced for about On adding 0.1 g. of hydroquinone per liter to the dye bath or using a dyestufi paste containing the respective amount of hydroquinone and dyeing in the same way, fabrics are obtained which show an unaltered tensile strength.
  • Example 4 Mercerized cotton yarn is dyed on Sellers machine with a dye bath according to Example 1, containing 0.5 g. of tannin per liter. The strength of the yarn is unimpaired, whilst without the addition of tannin it is diminished for about 15-35%.
  • composition of matter containing as esaction during the dyeing process.
  • composition 0! matter containing as essential ingredients a va't dyestufi' liable to damage celluloslc textile fibers during dyeing and hydroquinone.
  • composition of matter containing as essential ingredients 9. vat dyestufl liable to damage cellulosic textile fibers during dyeingand a quinone.
  • composition oi matter containing as essential ingredients a vat dyestufi liable to damage cellulosic textile fibers during dyeing. and tannin.

Description

Patented Apr. 26, 1938 IMPROVEMENTS IN THE DYEING 6F TEX- TILES Karl Ott, Pavolding, and Otto Storb, Leverkusen- I. G. Werk, Germany, assignors to General Aniline Works, Inc., New York, N. Y., a corporation of Delaware No Drawing. Application August 9, 1935, Serial No. 35,530. In GermanyAugust'25, 1934.
9 Claims.
The present invention relates to a process for the dyeing of textiles.
n dyeing delicate tissues with certain vat dyestuffs, particularly such of the anthraquinone series, the mechanical properties, i. e. strength and resistance, of the textile fibers are often impaired, especially, if during the dyeing process they are repeatedly exposed to reduction and oxidation by the change between vat and air. Damages of the kind described are often met with when dyeing delicate tissues of artificial silk or cotton fabrics for a prolonged time on the reel vat or of yarns on Sellers machine.
We have now found that the said fabrics can be excellently protected against this injurious action of certain vat dyestufis by carrying out the printing or dyeing process in the presence of antioxidizing agents. As such agents preferably phenolic products being easily converted into quinones as, for instance, hydroquinone, have proved to be satisfactory. Instead of antioxidizing agents also such compounds may be employed which, during dyeing or printing, are transformed into antioxidizing agents. In this respect, for instance, quinones of the benzene and naphthalene series have proved to be suitable; their protecting effect probably being due to the fact,
that they are reduced by means of the react-' ing agents employed in the preparation of the 39 vat and then behave like antioxidizing agents. Besides hydroquinone or benzene quinone also naphthalene quinone suifonic acid, tannin and like substances have proved to be suitable. In most cases already a very small quantity of the 5 said protecting agents which may be used also in mixture with each other. will be suflicient in order to obtain the desired efiect. The protecting agents may be separately added to the dye bath or they can be incorporated with the dyestufi also ready before its use.
The following examples illustrate the inven- Example 1 A cotton fabric (Setaline) is dyed for 4 gs. of the 10% dyestufl paste 20 com. soda lye (38 Be.) 5 gs. of hydrosulflte. I
The dyeing is carried out at a temperature of 55 55 C. in the usual way and hydrosulfite an d lye are three hours on the reel with 20% of 2'3'6'7'-diphthaiicsubsequently added in the required amounts.
During the dyeing the fabric loses more than 50% of its strength. j
On repeating this experiment by adding 0,2 g. of tannin per liter to the dye bath, fabrics are obtained which have lost only 3,8% of their strength.
The same good result'is obtained on adding instead of tannin '2 'gs. of 1,4-naphthoic quinone If a. Setaline fabric is dyed with 20% of a 10% paste of 2'36'7'-diphthalic-n-ethyl-carbazo1e (s. Schultz-Julius, '1. Edn. No. 1286) in the presence of 0,2 g. hydroquinone per liter for three hours on the reel as described in Example 1, its strength practically remains unaltered. In contradistinction to the loss of 56,8% without the addition of hydroquinone, the strength is diminished only for 0,3%.
Instead of hydroquinone also 2 gs. of phenanthrene quinone per liter may be used with the same good result; both agents may also have been incorporatedwith the dyestufi before.
Example 3 A cotton fabric is dyed on the reel for three hours at 252 C. with 20% of a 10% paste of 1',2= dianthraquinonylamine (s. Schultz-Julius, 'l. Edn. Vol. I, No. 1249) The dye bath contains per liter 5 gs. oi the 10% paste of 1,2-dianthraquinonylamine, 8 gs. soda lye of 38 B. and 5 gs. of hydrosulflte'. The tensile strength of the dyed material is reduced for about On adding 0.1 g. of hydroquinone per liter to the dye bath or using a dyestufi paste containing the respective amount of hydroquinone and dyeing in the same way, fabrics are obtained which show an unaltered tensile strength.
Example 4 Mercerized cotton yarn is dyed on Sellers machine with a dye bath according to Example 1, containing 0.5 g. of tannin per liter. The strength of the yarn is unimpaired, whilst without the addition of tannin it is diminished for about 15-35%.
We claim:
1. The composition of matter containing as esaction during the dyeing process.
3. The composition 0! matter containing as essential ingredients a va't dyestufi' liable to damage celluloslc textile fibers during dyeing and hydroquinone.
4. The composition of matter containing as essential ingredients 9. vat dyestufl liable to damage cellulosic textile fibers during dyeingand a quinone.
5. The composition 0! matter containing as essential ingredients a vat dyestufi liable to damage cellulosic textile fibers during dyeing and naphthalene quinone suli'onic acid.
6. The composition oi matter containing as essential ingredients a vat dyestufi liable to damage cellulosic textile fibers during dyeing. and tannin.
-'7. In the process of dyeing textile materialwith a vat dyestufi' liable to damagecellulosic textile fibers during dyeingythe step which comprises dyeing inthe presence of hydroquinone. 8. In the process oi dyeing textile material with a vat dyestufl. liable to damage. cellulosic textile fibers durihB' dyeinl. the step which comprises dyeing in the presence of a quinone.
9. In the process of dyeing textile material with a vat dyestufi' liable to damage cellulosic textile fibers during dyeing, the step which com prises dyeing in the presence 01 tannin.
o'rro .BTORB.
US35530A 1934-08-25 1935-08-09 Improvements in the dyeing of textiles Expired - Lifetime US2115317A (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
DE2115317X 1934-08-25

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2115317A true US2115317A (en) 1938-04-26

Family

ID=7985630

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US35530A Expired - Lifetime US2115317A (en) 1934-08-25 1935-08-09 Improvements in the dyeing of textiles

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2115317A (en)

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4424061A (en) 1981-02-27 1984-01-03 Dainippon Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd. Color fastness of dyed cotton textiles to chlorinated water and process for improving the color fastness of dyed cotton textiles to chlorinated water

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4424061A (en) 1981-02-27 1984-01-03 Dainippon Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd. Color fastness of dyed cotton textiles to chlorinated water and process for improving the color fastness of dyed cotton textiles to chlorinated water

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
DE2410824A1 (en) SURFACE-ACTIVE FABRIC BLEND AND PROCESS FOR REWASHING PRINTED TEXTILES MADE OF POLYESTER FIBERS AND MIXTURES CONTAINING POLYESTER FIBERS
US2115317A (en) Improvements in the dyeing of textiles
US2017119A (en) Treatment of textile and other materials
US2019124A (en) Stripping agent
US2424778A (en) Composition for and method of whitening textiles with a blue fluorescent material and ultramarine
US2359735A (en) Dyeing of polyvinyl halide-acetate copolymer fibers and fabrics
US2926060A (en) Process for the production of oxidation dyeings or prints, and compositions
US2155135A (en) Hydroxylated polyamines and their use in dyeing with vat and sulphur dyestuffs
US2003960A (en) Printing
US3097048A (en) Method and composition for dye-stripping
US2874022A (en) Composition and process for application and discharge printing
US2148655A (en) Coloration of textile materials
US2971812A (en) Vat dye dispersions containing polyvinylpyrrolidone
US3085848A (en) Dyeing polyacrylonitrile and cellulosic blends with vat and cationic dyes
US2202066A (en) Coloration of textile materials
US1870868A (en) Sizing of dyed yarn
US2081017A (en) Vat-dyestuff preparations
DE1001966C2 (en) Process for dyeing or printing textiles made from high-melting linear polyesters
US1990852A (en) Process of producing prints or dis
US2282724A (en) Process of dyeing with substantive colors
US2128599A (en) Printing preparation
US2052612A (en) Stripping dyed textiles
US2053821A (en)
US1716720A (en) Treatment of yarns and fabrics
US1968926A (en) Vat and s