Tuesday 3 November 2015

Banana Fiber-The Latest Sustainable Trend




Plant fibers have been used for making paper and clothing for a long time and the need for use of natural fibres has increased greatly. Among natural fibres, 90 per cent are of vegetable origin and among them 80 per cent is constituted by cotton and the remaining by other long vegetable fibres like flax, jute, hemp, sisal, ramie, coir, abaca, banana and pineapple fibres.
Banana

The bananas or the plantains are essentially hot climate plants. Their original home is said to be the tropical forests of Asia.
All varieties of banana trees abound in fibres. In fact almost each and every part of this plant gives fibres of various strength, colour, beauty and staple length thus, can be used for various purposes. In the leaf sheaths, coarse and strong fibres are found on the outer ones, fine and silky in the inner most ones and those of the middling quality in the intermediate ones. The core, from the roots to the point of its emergence from the covering of the false stem contains an extremely white fine fibre. The fruit stems contain fibres of a rough variety, while the midribs of the leaves yield a fibre of exceptional strength and durability when properly processed.



Manufacture:

Fibre is extracted from the leaf sheath or pseudostem of the banana plant by decortication of the sheath.
It can be extracted by hand scraping, by retting, by using raspador machines; it can be extracted chemically, for example by boiling in NaOH solution. Extraction of the fibre for local use (in cordage) or for cottage industries in India has been through manual means. The manual process is adopted in the Phillipines and is called stripping. On the plantation site, the plant stems are desheathed, the sheaths flattened, a knife inserted between the outer and middle layer, and a 50-80mm wide strip is separated and pulled off along the length. The strip is called as a tuxy and the separation procedure is called tuxying .

Two methods of tuxying are employed in Philippines. In the first method- Bacnis method, the trunks are pulled apart and the sheath separated according to their position in stalk. They are then flattened and the fibre is stripped from the stem by cutting the pulpy portion and pulling away the tuxy. In second method , the tuxies are pulled off the stalk from one sheath at a time. In either of these methods tuxies are tied into bundles of 23 to 27 kg and brought to the stripping knife for cleaning. In India,Dew retting and water retting are the methods most commonly adopted.

After the harvesting of the fruits, the tree is cut as near to the ground as possible. The foliage is removed by cutting away. Two or three outer sheaths are removed and rejected. Inserting a knife lengthwise strips of 7.5 cm or so in breath are prepared. These are scraped to yield strands either manually or using a motorized spindle. A Raspodos machine can also be used. The fibres contain acidic matter which is removed by hackling. The hackle consists of steel needles mounted on a small board. This reduces the strands into individual fibres. The fibres are then washed and rinsed in clean water and spread out in the shade to dry. The second process to remove the acids is to soak the strands in a well, tank or running water for a few hours. The third process is to soak the strands in dilute alkali or soap solution. The strands are then rinsed in cold water, wrung, rinsed and spread out to dry. When semi dry they are hackled and the fibres are spread out to dry in the shade.
Application:

The stronger fibres are ideal for cordages while the weaker white inner fibres are best suited for value added fancy items. They are being produced and exported in India from Kerala. The fibre is suitable for manufacturing strings, ropes, cords, cables and ship building thread. It can also be used to make sacks and packing fabrics as well as mats and rugs.
Banana Fibre can be used as fibre to manufacture fabrics. It is being used for making bags, table mats, ropes and twines. It can be blended with cotton or viscose fibre to produce blended fabric. Since Banana fibre is fully plant origin natural product, it has very good compatibility with other natural fibres like cotton, Coir, Pineapple fibres and Jute in blending. Banana fibre can also be dyed easily like other natural fibres and cloth made from it can also be dyed and printed like cotton cloth. It has good strength and has silk like luster. It can partly replace cotton fibre and hence we can estimate potential for it on the line of estimating demand for cotton fibre. It may be noted that good quality Banana fibre is having strength and luster like silk and in the Philippines various garments are already manufactured from Banana fibres. Apart from it, Philippines is exporting huge quantity of ready-made garments like shirts, kimonos, gowns, nightwear etc.
The banana fibres were reported to be elegant and highly versatile. As they do not crumple easily, these fibres have been used in the manufacture of dress materials. The fineness of texture depends on the quality of the fibre used. The material has a beautiful sheen and is used for making wedding gowns and barongs. 
Hand-extracted fibres have been used to produce handbags, wall hangings, table mats and other fancy articles. The fibre can be powdered and different colors of fibre obtained using natural dyes, which can be made into beautiful pictures. Portraits drawn and filled with colorful banana fibre chips have become popular in the handicraft industry in Mizoram, India, and have good potential in the export market.Thus, this fibre is having very good potential. It can be blended with other natural fibres or synthetic fibres without any problem to produce large varieties of garments from this fibre.

However, the inherent drawback of banana fibre is its poor quality and higher irregularity, owing to the multi-cellular nature of the fibres. The individual cells are cemented with lignin and hemi-cellulose and thus form a composite fibre. Banana fibre is classified as medium quality fibre and performs very well in combination with other fibres for making fine articles like handicrafts, currency, etc.


Reference:

1.        G.K.Ghosh, Non Conventional Textiles in India, APH Publishing Corporation, 2000, p 89 99.
2.       J.Gordon Cook, Handbook of Textile Fibres, Vol I Natural Fibres, Woodhead Publishing Limited, 2001, p 27.
3.       Fibre plants for making paper, A. Balasubramanian and ShyamalaKanakarajan, The Hindu.
4.       MenachemLewin, Handbook of Fiber Chemistry, Marcel Dekker Inc., 2nd Edition, p 508 519.