Tyvek

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File:Tyvek house wrap.jpg
Tyvek house wrap

Tyvek (Template:IPAc-en) is a brand of synthetic flashspun high-density polyethylene fibers. The name Tyvek is a registered trademark of the American multinational chemical company DuPont, which discovered and commercialized Tyvek in the late 1950s and early 1960s.

Tyvek's properties—such as being difficult to tear but easily cut, and waterproof against liquids while allowing water vapor to penetrate—have led to it being used in a variety of applications. Tyvek is often used as housewrap, a synthetic material used to protect buildings during construction, or as personal protective equipment (PPE).<ref name="coccolini">Template:Cite journal</ref>

History

Tyvek is a nonwoven product consisting of spun bond olefin fiber. It was first discovered in 1955 by a researcher for the DuPont textile company working in an experimental lab, who noticed a type of white fluff coming out of a pipe.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> That fluff was a form of polyethylene, which DuPont requested a patent for within a year of the discovery. After technologies improved during the next few years, in 1959 DuPont discovered that when the fluff was spun at high speeds it produced a durable fabric that could be cut with a blade. While the product Tyvek was used since 1959, DuPont did not trademark the actual brand until 1965, making it available for commercial purposes in April 1967.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> By 1970, Tyvek had reached the mainstream construction industry on both a national and global scale. Its products were often used for the construction of houses due to its ability to keep out liquid, while allowing vapor through.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In 1972, DuPont released Tyvek packaging for sterile instruments that were to be used by surgeons and doctors in the medical field.<ref> Template:Cite web </ref>

21st century

DuPont currently manufactures Tyvek at the Spruance plant in Richmond, Virginia, and in Sandweiler-Contern, Luxembourg. In 2018, the company announced plans to expand the Tyvek production capacity of the Sandweiler-Contern factory.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Scientific characteristics and properties

File:TyvekExpressMailEnvelope.jpg
Tyvek USPS Express Mail envelope

Adhesion and bonding

To bond Tyvek to both itself and a variety of substrates, DuPont recommends starch, dextrin, casein, and animal-based adhesives over most synthetic-based adhesives, emphasizing the effectiveness of water-based and quick-drying glues. DuPont also claims that the following adhesives are highly effective:

Heat sealing can be used to melt Tyvek and cause it to bond to itself, but this form of bonding tends to create puckers in the otherwise flat material. Dielectric bonding can be effective in some circumstances, as is ultrasonic welding.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Recycling

Though Tyvek superficially resembles paper (for example, it can be written and printed on), it is plastic, and it cannot be recycled with paper. Some Tyvek products are marked with the #2 resin-code for HDPE, and can be collected with plastic bottles as part of some municipal curbside recycling programs. DuPont runs a program in the United States where disposable clothing, coveralls, lab coats, medical packaging and other non-hazardous Tyvek disposable garments can be recycled, as well as providing a mail-in recycling program for envelopes.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

As plastic bag recycling has become more prevalent in the United States, the American Chemistry Council has recommended that plastic film drop-off recycling locations should be able to accept Tyvek.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Properties of Tyvek

According to DuPont's website, Tyvek fibers are Template:Cvt (compared to Template:Cvt for a human hair). The nondirectional fibers (plexifilaments) are first spun and then bonded by heat and pressure, without binders.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Tyvek is also:

  • Lightweight
  • Has a Class 1 flammability rating. "When exposed to a flame, Tyvek (R) shrinks away rapidly. If the flame is made to follow the shrinking sheet, Tyvek (R) will melt at 275 F (135 C)" <ref name="auto">"DuPont™ Tyvek® CommercialWrap" Product Information Sheet.</ref><ref>"Material Safety Data Sheet TYVEK (R) SPUNBONDED OLEFIN (ALL STYLES)", DuPont Australia.</ref> and will burn at 750°F (400°C)<ref name="auto"/>
  • Chemical-resistant
  • Dimensionally stabilized
  • Opaque
  • Has a neutral pH
  • Tear-resistant

Uses

Construction/engineering

File:Newone - FedEx Tyvek envelope.jpg
Tyvek envelopes

Shipping

Government use

Banknotes

Fashion/personal use

Medical

  • Tyvek is extensively used for laboratory and medical packaging as the material withstands conditions such as gamma irradiation or ethylene oxide gas which are used to sterilize equipment and surgical devices.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
  • NSW Police, Australia uses Tyvek overalls to preserve the integrity of forensic evidence at a crime scene, while also protecting "the wearer from the risk of exposure to biological substances, dirt and liquid splashes."<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Personal protective equipment (PPE)

File:Tyvek Suits (cropped).jpg
Tyvek coveralls

See also

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References

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