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Fractionation of Foreign Matter in Ginned Lint Before and After Lint Cleaning

Authors :
Thomas D. Valco
Dennis S. Findley
C. B. Armijo
Derek P. Whitelock
Michael D. Watson
Gregory A. Holt
J. C. Boykin
Edward M. Barnes
Michael D. Buser
Source :
Transactions of the ASABE. 52:419-426
Publication Year :
2009
Publisher :
American Society of Agricultural and Biological Engineers (ASABE), 2009.

Abstract

One goal of lint cleaning at a cotton gin is to reduce the non-lint material to an acceptable level with minimal fiber damage. In an effort to improve lint cleaner performance, an initial study was conducted on lint collected before and after lint cleaning at nine commercial gins across the cotton belt to characterize non-lint content. Samples from this study were first processed with an MDTA-3 (Micro Dust and Trash Analyzer 3, SDL Atlas, Stockport, U.K.) to determine trash, fiber fragment, and dust content. The trash portion was retained for additional manual fractionation to determine the percent of material classified as seed coat fragments (SCF), motes, funiculi, sticks, leaf, bark, lint, and "other" material. Leaf, SCF, and sticks were the largest fractions, accounting for 81% of the total trash sample. Overall, total trash decreased by 57% due to lint cleaning, and trash fractions remained consistent in samples before and after lint cleaning. Lint cleaning efficiency in terms of SCF was less than the overall cleaning efficiency, and lint cleaning efficiency for bark, mote, and other (all minor components) was higher than the overall cleaning efficiency. The lint cleaning efficiency for SCF was increased significantly when higher SCF levels were found before the lint cleaner, but this trend was not found for other fractions. Results of this experiment will help direct future studies to improve lint cleaning.

Details

ISSN :
21510040
Volume :
52
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Transactions of the ASABE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........f8e03bd6fb6debd610f5e80eb3dd1dd7