Abstract
IT is well known that when dyed cellulose fabrics are printed with pastes containing the reducing agent sodium sulphoxylate formaldehyde, and steamed, in order to produce a white design on a coloured ground, the white parts of the pattern are sometimes weakened1,2. The weakness is due to oxidation of the cellulose at the printed places, and it has been shown that the oxidation occurs only when the fabric is left in humid conditions for some hours after the steaming operation and before the residual printing paste is washed off. During this period the unused reducing agent undergoes oxidation by atmospheric oxygen, and this reaction is accompanied by one in which the cellulose is oxidized. The simultaneous oxidation of sodium sulphoxylate formaldehyde and cellulose, in the absence of the printing adhesives, has recently been investigated in these laboratories. In some of these experiments cellulose fabric was impregnated with a solution of neutral sodium sulphoxylate formaldehyde to which naphthalene-1-sodium sulphonate had been added. The impregnated fabric, after storage in a moist atmosphere for several hours, was made alkaline and treated with an excess of diazotized sulphanilic acid, whereupon a pink colour developed. This pink colour can only have arisen by the coupling of the diazonium compound with a naphthol derived from the naphthalene sulphonate, and it is difficult to conceive any way in which hydroxyl groups can have been introduced into the naphthalene sulphonate except as free hydroxyl radicals (cf. Weiss and Stein3,4). No evidence, either of the oxidation of cellulose or of the presence of free radicals, has been obtained when sodium bisulphite, sodium bisulphite formaldehyde, or alkaline sodium sulphoxylate formaldehyde are oxidized on cellulose in this manner. Neutral sodium sulphoxylate formaldehyde is also oxidized quite readily on glass fabric, but without formation of hydroxyl radicals.
Similar content being viewed by others
Article PDF
References
Taussig, W., Ciba-Rdsch., No. 71, 2643 (1947).
Pinte, Pierret and Rochas, Bull. Inst. Text. France, 3, No. 15, 43 (1949).
Weiss, J., and Stein, G., Nature, 161, 650 (1948).
Loebl, H., Weiss, J., and Stein, G., J. Chem. Soc., 2074 (1949).
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
HOLDEN, R. Detection of Free Hydroxyl Radicals during the Oxidation of Cellulose in Air. Nature 173, 539 (1954). https://doi.org/10.1038/173539a0
Issue Date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/173539a0
Comments
By submitting a comment you agree to abide by our Terms and Community Guidelines. If you find something abusive or that does not comply with our terms or guidelines please flag it as inappropriate.