was first synthesized by
Wallace Carothers at
DuPont. The first successful process was developed in 1894 by English chemist
Charles Frederick Cross and his collaborators
Edward John Bevan and Clayton Beadle. They named the fiber "
viscose". This was because the reaction product of
carbon disulfide and
cellulose under alkaline conditions gave a highly viscous solution of
xanthate. The first commercial viscose
rayon was produced by the UK company
Courtaulds in 1905. The name "rayon" was adopted in 1924, with "viscose" being used for the viscous organic liquid used to make both rayon and
cellophane. A similar product known as
cellulose acetate was discovered in 1865. Rayon and acetate are both artificial fibers, but not truly synthetic, being made from
wood.
Nylon, the first synthetic fiber in the "fully synthetic" sense of that term, was developed by
Wallace Carothers, an American researcher brought to chemical firm
DuPont in 1927. The first nylon was nylon 66, synthesized on February 28, 1935. Nylon made its debut in the
United States as a replacement for
silk just in time for the introduction of rationing during
World War II. Its novel use as a material for women's
stockings overshadowed more practical uses, such as a replacement for the silk in
parachutes and other
military uses like
ropes. The first
polyester fiber was patented in Britain in 1928 by the International General Electric company. It was also produced by British chemists working at the
Calico Printers' Association,
John Rex Whinfield and James Tennant Dickson, in 1941. They produced and patented one of the first polyester fibers which they named
Terylene, also known as
Dacron, equal to or surpassing
nylon in toughness and resilience.
ICI and
DuPont went on to produce their own versions of the fiber. The world production of synthetic fibers was 55.2 million tonnes in 2014. ==Descriptions==