Detail Specification
Fabric Material | PP, PP+PE, SMS |
Style | With Velcro or ties on collar, ties on waist |
Dimensions size | 120*140cm, 130*150cm |
Color | White, blue, yellow, or as your request |
Certificate | CE, ISO13485, FDA |
MOQ: | 10,000pcs |
Packing design | can be as your design |
Packing | 10pcs/bag, 100pcs/ctn, or as your requirement |
Capability | 50,000pcs per day |
Delivery time | 5-15 days |
Applications | hospital, laboratory, clinic, food industry, dust-free workshop |
Single-use materials are usually made from nonwoven fabric, which is defined as a manufactured sheet, web or batt of directionally or randomly oriented fibers or filaments, excluding paper and paper products, that are woven, knotted, tufted or stitch bonded and have not been converted onto yarns. Nonwovens fibers are bonded to each other by friction and/or cohesion and/or adhesion (AORN, 2003). According to Rutala and Weber (2001) of surgical gown material, the three most commonly used nonwoven fabrics for surgical gowns and drapes are spunlace, spunbond–meltblown–spunbond (SMS) and wet-laid. Spunlace nonwoven fabric is a hydro-entangled material, usually made from wood pulp and polyester fiber. SMS fabric refers to a fabric consisting of three thermally or adhesively bonded layers (spunbond layer provides the strength, meltblown layer is the barrier). Wet-laid fabric is made by suspending wood pulp or a blend of polyester and wood-pulp fibers in water to obtain a uniform dispersion, and then separating the fibers from the slurry by draining the water through a fine mesh screen.