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Enzymatic Washing (Bio-Wash) for Cellulosic Scarves
Cellulase enzyme process parameters, pilling grade improvement data, and softness outcomes for cotton, viscose, and lyocell scarf fabrics.
What Is Enzymatic Washing?
Enzymatic washing — also called bio-polishing or bio-washing — uses cellulase enzymes in an aqueous bath to selectively hydrolyse protruding micro-fibrils and loose fiber ends on cellulosic fabric surfaces. The result is a cleaner, smoother fabric with significantly reduced pilling tendency and a softer hand feel, without the mechanical damage or excessive weight loss associated with stone washing.
For cotton and viscose scarf production, bio-polishing is one of the most effective tools for improving finished product quality: pilling grade (ISO 12945-2) typically improves by 1–2 steps, and surface smoothness allows silicone softeners to bond more evenly in the subsequent step. Combined bio-polish plus softening is now the standard wet-processing sequence for premium cotton scarves.
Standard Process Sequence
Enzymatic Washing Methods
Exhaustion Method (Jet / Winch Dyeing Machine)
The most common production method. Fabric or garments tumble continuously in the enzyme bath inside a jet or winch machine. Mechanical action assists enzyme contact with the fabric surface, improving efficiency. Process control is critical: temperature, pH, and time must be held within specification to prevent over-processing. Used for all fabric weights and most cellulosic scarf constructions.
Pad-Batch Method (Continuous / Open-Width)
Fabric passes through a padding mangle to pick up enzyme solution (70–80% wet pickup), is batched in roll form, and dwells at room temperature for 12–24 hours. The absence of heat requires longer dwell time and typically a neutral-to-alkaline cellulase enzyme. Better suited for lightweight woven cotton scarves where jet tumbling would cause creasing. Less common than exhaustion but useful for large-width open-fabric runs.
Combined Bio-Polish + Softening
An optimised single-bath or sequential process that performs enzymatic polishing and silicone softener application in the same machine run after enzyme inactivation. The softener is added directly to the jet machine after the inactivation rinse, reducing water and energy consumption versus separate processes. Standard for premium cotton and lyocell scarves requiring both pilling control and premium hand feel.
Pilling Grade Improvement Data
ISO 12945-2 (Martindale method, 2000 cycles). Factory-measured batch data, acid cellulase exhaustion method.
| Fabric | Pilling Grade — Untreated | Pilling Grade — Bio-Polished | Improvement | Weight Loss |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 100% Cotton jersey knit (160 gsm) | 2–3 | 4–5 | +2 grades | 3.5% |
| 100% Cotton woven (180 gsm) | 3 | 4–5 | +1.5 grades | 2.8% |
| Viscose (rayon) knit (150 gsm) | 2 | 3–4 | +1 grade | 4.2% |
| Lyocell (Tencel) woven (130 gsm) | 3 | 4–5 | +1.5 grades | 2.2% |
| Modal knit (140 gsm) | 3 | 4 | +1 grade | 3.0% |
| Cotton / polyester 50/50 knit | 3 | 3–4 | +0.5 grades* | 1.8% |
*Cellulase acts only on cotton fraction; polyester contributes residual pilling unaffected by enzyme treatment.
| Parameter Deviation | Effect | Risk Level |
|---|---|---|
| pH too high (>6.5) for acid cellulase | Enzyme inactive; no effect | Medium |
| Temperature too low (<45°C) | Slow reaction; incomplete polishing | Medium |
| Temperature too high (>65°C) | Enzyme denaturation; reaction stops | Medium |
| Over-processing (time / concentration) | Excessive weight loss (>8%), back-staining, strength loss | High |
| Incomplete inactivation | Continued hydrolysis in storage; progressive strength loss | Critical |
| Insufficient liquor ratio | Uneven polishing; streaking | Medium |
Fiber Suitability for Enzymatic Washing
100% Cotton
Primary substrate. Full enzyme affinity. +1.5–2 pilling grade improvement. All construction types benefit.
Lyocell / Tencel
High enzyme affinity. Lower weight loss than cotton. Excellent pilling improvement with minimal strength impact.
Viscose / Rayon
Good response. Higher weight loss risk — reduce concentration to 0.5–1.0% owf and monitor carefully.
Modal / Bamboo Viscose
Responds well. Finer fiber structure means lower enzyme concentration needed. +1 grade typical.
Cotton / Polyester Blends
Cellulase treats only the cotton fraction. Polyester pilling is unaffected. Net grade improvement is reduced.
Wool / Polyester / Acrylic / Nylon
Cellulase has no affinity for protein or synthetic fibers. Bio-washing provides no benefit — alternative finishing methods apply.
Common Misconceptions
“More enzyme concentration always gives better results.”
Over-concentration causes excessive fiber hydrolysis: weight loss >8%, back-staining (removed fuzz re-deposits on fabric), and tensile strength reduction. The optimal concentration window is narrow (1.0–2.0% owf) and must be validated per fabric weight.
“Bio-washing is the same as stone washing.”
Stone washing uses abrasive pumice for a worn, distressed appearance with significant fabric weight loss (5–15%). Bio-washing uses enzyme chemistry for a clean, smooth surface — weight loss is 2–5%. The visual and tactile outcomes are completely different.
“Enzymatic washing works on all types of fabric.”
Cellulase enzymes are substrate-specific: they only hydrolyse cellulose (β-1,4-glucan) bonds. Wool, polyester, nylon, and acrylic contain no cellulose — enzymatic washing has zero effect on these fibers.
“You don’t need to inactivate the enzyme — it washes out.”
Cellulase is not fully removed by rinsing alone. Residual enzyme remains active and continues hydrolysing cellulose during storage and transit — causing progressive strength loss. Thermal inactivation at 80°C for ≥10 minutes is mandatory.
Buyer Specification Guidance
WHAT TO SPECIFY IN YOUR TECH PACK
- Bio-polish requirement Yes / No
- Target pilling grade ≥ 4 (ISO 12945-2)
- Max weight loss allowance ≤ 5%
- Tensile retention minimum ≥ 90% of untreated
- Combined with softener Yes / No + type
- Enzyme type Acid / Neutral cellulase
FACTORY DOCUMENTS TO REQUEST
- Enzyme process record Conc., pH, temp, time
- Inactivation confirmation Temp + duration log
- Pilling test report ISO 12945-2 per batch
- Weight loss measurement Before vs after, per lot
- Tensile test report ISO 13934-1
- Enzyme safety data sheet Oeko-Tex / GOTS compliant
Frequently Asked Questions
Related Technical Guides
REFERENCES & STANDARDS
- ISO 12945-2:2020 — Determination of fabric propensity to surface fuzzing and pilling (Martindale method)
- ISO 13934-1:2013 — Tensile properties of fabrics (strip method)
- ISO 105-C06:2010 — Colour fastness to domestic and commercial laundering
- GOTS Version 7.0 — Global Organic Textile Standard (approved substances)
- Oeko-Tex Standard 100 — Tested for harmful substances
- Textile Wet Processing Technology — Woodhead Publishing, 2022
- Cellulase Enzymes in Textile Processing — Journal of Cleaner Production, Vol. 268, 2020