Fabrics working near heat sources deal with conditions that ordinary textiles just weren't built to handle. Constant heat, open flames, flying sparks, chemical exposure, mechanical wear — all of these can wear down fabric structure over time and chip away at how well it performs day to day. For anyo...
read moreStandards are the yardstick for industry progress. In the emerging field of functional composite fabrics, BlackFire has once again taken a solid step forward, demonstrating its technological strength and industry responsibility. Recently, the China National Textile and Apparel Council's group standa...
read moreIndustrial workplaces often expose equipment and surrounding materials to continuous heat, temporary high temperatures, or repeated thermal changes. Under such conditions, ordinary fabric may gradually lose its original shape or become unsuitable for long-term use. Material selection therefore becom...
read moreHeat reaching fabric does not trigger a single instant reaction. Surface usually feels the change earlier, while deeper layers stay stable for a short delay before temperature slowly moves inward. That small gap between outer layer and inner structure often decides how long material keeps its shape ...
read moreOn June 26th, to celebrate the 105th anniversary of the founding of the Communist Party of China and the 20th anniversary of the establishment of the Gongrenlu Community, the Gongrenlu Community of Beigan Street, Xiaoshan District, Hangzhou City, held a themed gala entitled "Two Decades of Unwaverin...
read moreIn the field of fire safety, two terms are easily confused—"flame retardant" and "non-combustible." Many people believe they are just different ways of saying the same thing. However, this seemingly minor difference can mean the difference between life and death in a real fire. Today, we will use th...
read moreWhy Do Textile Fire Retardant Materials Matter in Industrial Safety Design Industrial environments contain many sources of heat and ignition. Welding arcs, hot surfaces, electrical faults, and chemical reactions all pose fire risks. The materials used in these settings need to address those risks. T...
read moreHeat comes at a barrier in two distinct ways, and each demands a different defense. Radiant heat shoots across open space like light from a fire, warming whatever surface it lands on without necessarily heating the air along the way. Convective heat travels differently, hitching a ride on moving gas...
read moreAs June arrives, temperatures have been soaring. For most people, summer means air conditioning, watermelon, and sunscreen; but for frontline workers in factories, workshops, and repair shops, summer means something else entirely—the season with the highest risk of fire has arrived. This is not an e...
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