4.7 Article

Reactive Flame-Retardant Cotton Fabric Coating: Combustion Behavior, Durability, and Enhanced Retardant Mechanism with Ion Transfer

Journal

NANOMATERIALS
Volume 12, Issue 22, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nano12224048

Keywords

cotton; flame retardant; thermal stability; DTPMPA; group synergistic

Funding

  1. Natural Science Foundation of China [21905203, 52272303, 52073212]
  2. Natural Science Foundation of Tianjin City [18JCQNJC73500, 17JCYBJC22700, 17JCYBJC17000]
  3. China Scholarship Council [201908120027, 201709345012, 201706255009]

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In recent years, indoor fires caused by the flammable properties of cotton have become increasingly common, emphasizing the importance of flame-retardant cotton. Researchers have successfully developed a new flame retardant that forms stable chemical and coordination bonds on the surface of cotton fibers through a simple finishing process. This flame retardant exhibits excellent durable flame retardancy and does not significantly affect the physical properties of cotton fabric.
In recent years, we have witnessed numerous indoor fires caused by the flammable properties of cotton. Flame-retardant cotton deserves our attention. A novel boric acid and diethylenetriaminepenta (methylene-phosphonic acid) (DTPMPA) ammonium salt-based chelating coordination flame retardant (BDA) was successfully prepared for cotton fabrics, and a related retardant mechanism with ion transfer was investigated. BDA can form a stable chemical and coordination bond on the surface of cotton fibers by a simple three-curing finishing process. The limiting oxygen index (LOI) value of BDA-90 increased to 36.1%, and the LOI value of cotton fabric became 30.3% after 50 laundering cycles (LCs) and exhibited excellent durable flame retardancy. Fourier-transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), and scanning electron microscopy (SEM) methods were used to observe the bonding mode and morphology of BDA on cotton fibers. A synergistic flame-retardant mechanism of condensed and gas phases was concluded from thermogravimetry (TG), cone calorimeter tests, and TG-FTIR. The test results of whiteness and tensile strength showed that the physical properties of BDA-treated cotton fabric were well maintained.

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