Names and description of the textile fibers [5]

elastodiene
elastic fiber made from natural or synthetic polyisoprene, or diene or more dienes polymerized vinyl monomer with one or with several vinyl monomers, or without, and when stretched to three times its length and released, recovers rapidly in substantially to its initial length
elastane
elastic fiber, which at least 85% (by mass) is segmented polyurethane, and when stretched to three times its length and released, recovers rapidly and substantially to its initial length
glass fiber
(laminate)
fiber made of glass
name corresponding to the material from which the fiber is composed
fibers obtained from miscellaneous or new materials, other than those mentioned above, for example, metal (copper, metallic), asbestos, paper, and including the word "thread" or "fiber" or without it
elastomultiester
fiber formed by interaction of two or more chemically distinct linear macromolecules containing ester groups as dominant functional unit (85%) in two or more distinct phases (not exceeding 85%) and which, after suitable treatment when stretched to one and half times its original length and released, recovers rapidly and substantially to its initial length
elastolefin
fiber composed of at least 95% (by mass) of macromolecules formed from ethylene and at least one other partially crosslinked olefin and which, when stretched to one and half times its original length and released, recovers rapidly and substantially to its initial length

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