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fiber |
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fiber, threadlike strand, usually pliable and capable of being spun into a yarn. Many different fibers are known to be usable; some 40 of these are of commercial importance, and others are of local or specialized use. Fibers may be classified as either natural or synthetic. The natural fibers may be further classed according to origin as animal, vegetable, or inorganic fibers.
Animal fibers are composed chiefly of proteins; they include silk Wild silk is the product of the tussah worm of India and China, which feeds on oaks. It is now semicultivated, as groves of dwarf trees are provided for its feeding. It spins a coarser, flatter, yellower filament than the Bombyx mori, Fibers are classified according to use as textile, cordage, brush, felt, filling, and plaiting fibers. The largest volume is used for textiles and cordage. The chief textile fibers used for clothing and domestic goods are cotton, wool, rayon, nylon, flax, and silk. Coarse-textured fibers (principally jute) are used for burlap, floor covering, sacks, and bagging materials. Cordage fibers include most of the long vegetable fibers and cotton. Brush fibers include istle, sisal, broomcorn, palmyra, and animal hairs. The chief felt fibers are rabbit and beaver hair. Filling fibers include horsehair, wool flock, kapok, cotton, and Spanish moss. Plaiting fibers are used for braided articles (e.g., hats, mats, and baskets) and include Manila hemp, sisal, rushes, and grasses. Flax, hemp, and wool have been used extensively from remote times; cotton, however, became the leading commercial fiber c.1800. The demand for fibers was greatly increased by the invention of spinning and weaving machinery during the Industrial Revolution. The artificial fibers (see synthetic textile fibers synthetic textile fibers have revolutionized the textile industry. Such artificial fibers are usually long-chain polymers , produced industrially by the condensation of many small units. fiberSee optical fiber and fiber optics glossary. fibre (US), fiber 1. a natural or synthetic filament that may be spun into yarn, such as cotton or nylon 2. cloth or other material made from such yarn 3. Botany a. a narrow elongated thick-walled cell: a constituent of sclerenchyma tissue b. such tissue extracted from flax, hemp, etc., used to make linen, rope, etc. c. a very small root or twig 4. Anatomy any thread-shaped structure, such as a nerve fibre fiber [′fī·bər] (botany) An elongate, thick-walled, tapering plant cell that lacks protoplasm and has a small lumen. A very slender root. (mathematics) The set of points in the total space of a bundle which are sent into the same element of the base of the bundle by the projection map. (metallurgy) The characteristic of wrought metal that indicates directional properties as revealed by etching or by fracture appearance. The pattern of preferred orientation of metal crystals after a deformation process, usually wiredrawing. (optics) A transparent threadlike object made of glass or clear plastic, used to conduct light along selected paths. (textiles) An extremely long, pliable, cohesive natural or manufactured threadlike object from which yarns are spun to be woven into textiles. How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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As "Dying to Live" concludes its final chapter, "The Anteroom," Midgley explains that he is in the process of experiencing motor neuron disease, a deterioration of the nerve fibers that help convey signals from the spinal cord and brain to the rest of the body. An NIM-Response facial nerve monitor was used to stimulate these fibers, and a strong response was elicited at a very low stimulus setting, confirming that these fibers were facial nerve fibers. Inhalants destroy nerve fibers throughout an inhalant abuser's brain, which can lead to muscle spasms and difficulty with basic activities like walking and talking. |
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