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Photographic gallery.  Thousands of particles under the microscope.
Mohair

Mohair

This is a sample mohair from the sample-set provided by Textile Fabric Consultants, Inc.

Transmitted 20 Degrees Off Crossed Linear Polarized Light

Definition/Function:

Mohair is from the Angora goat. Originally from Turkey it is now breed world-wide. It is classified as a wool but can be distiguished from sheep wool microscopically.

Significance in the Environment:

Characteristic Features:

Mohair has a refractive index along its length of about 1.56 and perpendicular to its length of about 1.55. It has a birefringence of about 0.01 and a positive sign of elongation. The cuticle pattern is much finer than in sheep hair and barely overlaps. It is an irregular waved mosaic. The number of scales per 100 micrometers is about 5 compared to the 9 to 11 for sheep hair. Mohair tends to have a very circular cross-section and most of the fibers have no visible medulla. When the medulla is present it tends to be unbroken.

Associated Particles:

References:

Von Bergen, Werner, WOOL HANDBOOK: VOLUME ONE, Interscience Publishers, pp. 315-342, 1963