Viscose
Viscose is a viscous organic liquid used to make
rayon and
cellophane.
Cellulose from
wood or
cotton fibres is treated with
sodium hydroxide, then mixed with carbon disulphide to form cellulose xanthate, which is dissolved in more sodium hydroxide. The resulting viscose is extruded through a slit to make
cellophane, or through a spinneret to make viscose
rayon (sometimes simply called
viscose).
The process for manufacturing viscose was discovered by three British chemists, Charles Cross, Edward Bevan and Clayton Beadle, in 1891. Viscose is becoming less common because of the polluting effects of carbon disulphide and other by-products of the process.