Despite the wide applications in clothing, furniture, and transportation, the well-known "scaffolding effect" in polyester-cotton fabric has caused significant fire hazards compared to sole polyester or cotton fabrics. Therefore, it… Click to show full abstract
Despite the wide applications in clothing, furniture, and transportation, the well-known "scaffolding effect" in polyester-cotton fabric has caused significant fire hazards compared to sole polyester or cotton fabrics. Therefore, it is of practical significance to endow polyester-cotton fabric with excellent fire safety. In this work, an organic-inorganic composite coating comprising nitrogen-phosphorus-silicon-containing flame retardant and silver nanoparticle-loaded halloysite nanotubes (Ag@HNTs) was designed and prepared to improve the fire safety of polyester-cotton fabrics. Microscale combustion colorimeter results indicated that the peak heat release rate of the modified polyester-cotton fabric with such a composite coating was reduced by 47%. Meanwhile, it could self-extinguish in 9 s after being ignited, and the limiting oxygen index was up to 25%, indicating excellent fire safety. In addition, the total smoke release of the coated polyester-cotton fabric was reduced by 21%, illustrating that the coating of Ag@HNTs could eliminate the smoke generated. The treated fabric also exhibited superior water resistance. Flame retardant mechanisms were well investigated using thermogravimetric analysis-infrared spectrometry analysis and chemiluminescence by studying the gaseous degradation products and hydroxyl radical in the gas phase. This work provides an effective approach to fabricating high-performance flame retardant and smoke-suppressive coatings for textiles.
               
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