Source: www.textilefabric.com
Textile products play a vital role in meeting mans basic
needs. We often only consider textiles to be the clothes we wear. Obviously,
the clothing industry is where the majority of textiles are produced and used. However, textiles are also important in all aspects of our lives from birth
to death. The use of textiles has been traced back over 8500 years. The
technological advances of textiles in various industries do not always get
recognized as they do in the clothing industry. The following paragraphs
describe some important roles that textiles play in other industries.
Food Industry:
Farmers wear protective clothing to spray their crops with pesticides. Textiles
are used to cover plants and wrap trees for protection from weather and
insects. Coffee filters and tea bags are made of a non-woven textile. The
annual production of tea bag string would stretch around the equator 67 times.
Building Materials:
Textiles are used in our homes to insulate them from heat and cold. The
furniture, on which we sit and sleep, is composed of various types of textile products. . Textiles are used in roofing materials, wire coverings, wall coverings, blinds, air
ducts and window screens.
Transportation:
The transportation industry relies on textiles to line the
beds of the roads before they are paved. A tire gets seventy five percent of
its strength from textiles. Kevlar aramid is often used to strengthen radial
tires because it is lightweight and five times stronger than steel. The
interiors of all types of transportation vehicles are covered with textiles.
Textiles are also used in the brake linings, gaskets, seals, seat belts, air
bags and filters of vehicles. The Lear Fan Jet airplane body is composed of 100
percent carbon fiber composite material. This carbon material is half the
weight of aluminum and as strong as steel. The heat shields on spacecraft are
composed of a fiber that will withstand 20,000 degrees Fahrenheit.
Health Industry:
Textiles are used as life saving devices in the healthcare industry. The
artificial kidney used in dialysis is made of 7,000 hollow fibers and is only
two inches in diameter. The Jarvik-7 artificial heart is composed of over fifty
percent textiles and has Velcro fittings. Over 150,000 people in the United States have artificial arteries made of knitted polyester, which aids in preventing clotting and rejection. The invention of disposable clothing helps prevent the spread of bacteria. Sutures for wounds are now made of a dissolvable textile fiber.
Casts for broken bones, surgical masks, bandages and gloves are other examples
of textiles used in the healthcare industry.
Protective Textiles:
Bulletproof vests are made of 7 layers of Kevlar 29 aramid, which can protect a person from a knife slash and stop a .38-caliber bullet fired at a range of 10 feet.
Firefighters and race-car drivers wear apparel made of Nomex aramid to protect them from the extreme heat they encounter in their professions. Astronauts wear $100,000
suits made of Nomex aramid that protect them from the elements of space.
Sports players wear protective helmets and pads made of textiles.