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Teijin Aramid

TEIJIN ARAMID
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  • Brands
    • Twaron
    • Technora
    • Teijinconex
    • Sulfron
    • Endumax
  • Products
    • What is aramid?
    • Filament Yarn
    • Staple Fiber
    • Pulp
    • Paper
    • Short-Cut Fiber
    • Fabrics & Laminates
    • Powder
    • Tape
    • Jet-Spun Products
  • Applications
    • Civil engineering products
    • Composites
    • Conveyor belts
    • Cut-protection products
    • Elastomer reinforcements
    • Engineering plastics
    • Flexible flowlines and umbilicals
    • Friction products
    • Hard ballistics
    • Heat- and flame-resistant garments
    • Helmets
    • Optical fiber cables
    • Reinforced thermoplastic pipes
    • Ropes and cables
    • Sealing materials
    • Soft ballistics
    • Specialty paper
    • Tires
  • Innovation
    • Research & Development
    • Solutions 2.0
    • Application Competence Center
    • Technical Center Asia
  • Careers
    • Vacancies
    • Teijin for students
    • Our employees
    • Our organization
    • Why Teijin Aramid?
  • About us
    • History
    • Our locations
    • News & events
    • Sustainability
      • HSE Report 2016
      • Environment, Energy & Safety
      • Eco-efficiency
      • Certificates & statements
      • Recycling
      • Governance
      • Community engagement
    • Education
    • Suppliers
    • Life Saving Rules
    • Magazine: Aramid Vision
  • Contact
Home › What is aramid?
  • what-is-aramid-header

What is aramid?

Aramid fibers are man-made high-performance fibers, with molecules that are characterized by relatively rigid polymer chains. These molecules are linked by strong hydrogen bonds that transfer mechanical stress very efficiently, making it possible to use chains of relatively low molecular weight.

The term “aramid” is short for “aromatic polyamide”. Aromatic polyamides were first applied commercially as meta-aramid fibers in the early 1960s, with para-aramid fibers being developed in the 1960s and 1970s.

Aramid fibers share some general characteristics that distinguish them from other synthetic fibers:

  • High strength
  • Good resistance to abrasion
  • Good resistance to organic solvents
  • Non-conductive
  • No melting point
  • Low flammability
  • Good fabric integrity at elevated temperatures

These unique characteristics derive from the combination of having stiff polymer molecules with a strong crystal orientation as well as close interaction between the polymer chains due to the hydrogen bonds.

Production process

Production-processTwaron filament yarns are prepared by dry-jet wet-spinning a liquid crystalline solution of PPTA polymer in concentrated sulfuric acid. After extrusion through spinning holes, the liquid filaments pass through an air gap and enter a coagulation bath containing water. The filaments are subsequently washed, neutralized, dried and wound onto bobbins.

In the spinning solution, the stiff aramid molecules form liquid crystalline domains in which the polymer molecules are well aligned. During the spinning process itself, the elongational stretching of these domains in the air gap induces the domains and the orientation of the polymer molecules to align with the direction of flow.

Would you like to read more about our aramids? Click here for an overview.

Events

  • Technical Speech on Workwear and Glove @ 96th CIOSH Exhibition11 Apr - 13 Apr 2018
  • The Safety Summit 201825 Apr 2018 | Schelle
  • Eurobrake 201822 May - 24 May 2018

Downloads

  • Technical product brochure: Twaron
  • Leaflet: Properties of Twaron
  • Ballistics Material Handbook

Contact

  • Head Office
    Velperweg 76, 6824 BM Arnhem
    P.O. Box 5153, 6802 ED Arnhem,
    The Netherlands
    Tel: +31 88 268 88 88



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