Rayon

Rayon
Rayon, artificial textile material, composed of cellulose obtained from cotton linters or from the pulp of trees such as spruce.

Rayon can be made by either the viscose process or the cuprammonium process; both produce fiber classified by the U.S. Federal Trade Commission as rayon. In the viscose process purified cellulose is treated with sodium hydroxide, then with carbon disulfide, to form a viscous yellow liquid called viscose. In the cuprammonium process purified cellulose is treated with cuprammonium liquor, then with sodium hydroxide, to form viscose. The manufacture of rayon filaments—and all manufactured fibers—is done by means of an extrusion process called spinning. In this procedure the fiber-forming liquid is forced through tiny holes in a nozzle or spinneret into a liquid bath containing chemicals that produce filaments of pure cellulose, which can be spun into yarn. The filaments are drawn together to form both fibers and yarn in a single, continuous process.

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