The substances responsible for the yellowing of wool treated with nitric acid are two amino acid constituents of the fibre: tryptophan and tyrosine. Nitric acid penetrates the fibres and carries out electrophilic aromatic substitution on the two above-mentioned amino acid residues, producing different colour yields. The intensity of yellowing depends in various ways on the treatment conditions (time, temperature, nitric acid concentration, agitation, and liquor ratio). Yellowing evaluation shows abnormal yellowing depending on acid concentration in the range 5.6-5.9 M. Working in this region makes it possible to use the chromatic reaction in order to show the damage done to wool fibres by the oxidising agents utilised in normal antifelting treatments. Wool damage by the oxidants is usually evaluated by dyeing methods based on different affinity of damaged fibres. By contrast, the xanthoproteic reaction yields chromogens as a function of the accessibility of tryptophan and tyrosine residues for the action of nitric acid on damaged fibres, and can be used for assessing the degree of antifelting treatment and its possible unevenness through the development on the treated wool of a yellow coloration more intense than on untreated wool.

Xanthoproteic reaction for the evaluation of wool antifelting treatments

C Tonin
2014

Abstract

The substances responsible for the yellowing of wool treated with nitric acid are two amino acid constituents of the fibre: tryptophan and tyrosine. Nitric acid penetrates the fibres and carries out electrophilic aromatic substitution on the two above-mentioned amino acid residues, producing different colour yields. The intensity of yellowing depends in various ways on the treatment conditions (time, temperature, nitric acid concentration, agitation, and liquor ratio). Yellowing evaluation shows abnormal yellowing depending on acid concentration in the range 5.6-5.9 M. Working in this region makes it possible to use the chromatic reaction in order to show the damage done to wool fibres by the oxidising agents utilised in normal antifelting treatments. Wool damage by the oxidants is usually evaluated by dyeing methods based on different affinity of damaged fibres. By contrast, the xanthoproteic reaction yields chromogens as a function of the accessibility of tryptophan and tyrosine residues for the action of nitric acid on damaged fibres, and can be used for assessing the degree of antifelting treatment and its possible unevenness through the development on the treated wool of a yellow coloration more intense than on untreated wool.
2014
Istituto per lo Studio delle Macromolecole - ISMAC - Sede Milano
Inglese
130
319
326
8
Sì, ma tipo non specificato
Editor-in-Chief's recommendation: Uniformity and reproducibility generally go hand in hand with successful textile processing. This Feature article presents a novel way of achieving such goals. It is one of two papers appearing in this issue of Coloration Technology that describe work performed by members of Professor Franco Ferrero's group from Turin. Both concern the chemistry of wool fibre's outermost structure: the cuticle. Here they report a new technique to visualise the application of oxidative treatments to shrinkproof wool. Ways of doing so using colorants already exist. Deeper test coloration indicates greater oxidation because dye can more rapidly penetrate the treated cuticle. However, the Turin-based researchers report that their method, which employs a colour reaction instead, has the advantage of greater differentiation. It relies on nitration of specific amino acid residues in wool protein to cause yellowing - a xanthoproteic reaction. Oxidative treatments increase the accessibility of the innermost parts of the cuticle which are richer in these residues by attacking the outer layers. Consequently, the xanthoproteic method not only signals the extent of the finish but also readily reveals its levelness. This Feature article therefore demonstrates the basis for an improved means of securing reliable and consistent finishing of wool.
3
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
262
Migliavacca, G; Ferrero, F; Tonin, C
01 Contributo su Rivista::01.01 Articolo in rivista
restricted
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/224951
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