Affiliation:
1. Southern Regional Research Laboratory,1 New Orleans, Louisiana
Abstract
An improved technique is described for the quantitative determination of the degree of crystallite orientation of cellulose in cotton and related cellulosic fibers, using the X-ray diffraction spectrometer with potentiometer recording and a rotating specimen mount. The method is based on the angular dispersion of the 002 diffraction arc of cellulose but employs the somewhat more conveniently determined angle at half-maximum in tensity instead of the photographically determined "40% angle," used by Berkley. It is shown that the angle of half-maximum intensity (50% angle by analogy) is less than Berkley's "40% angle" by a constant value of 3.3°. The effects upon the precision of the results of sample preparation and instrumental variations are described. Under the conditions proposed, the precision of the half- maximum angle is about 0.65°. This compares with a precision of about 1.0° for results obtained by photographic recording and photometering of the X-ray patterns [2]. Using the improved X-ray spectrometer technique described, the dark room required for photographic determination of orientation, with its rigid processing control, can be dispensed with, and a determination can be made in about one-fourth of the time.
Subject
Polymers and Plastics,Chemical Engineering (miscellaneous)
Cited by
41 articles.
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