linters การใช้
- In the UK, linters are referred to as " cotton wool ".
- Linters are too short for successful use in fabric.
- Linters removed from the cotton seeds are available as first and second cuts.
- The seed is further crushed to remove any remaining linters or strands of minute cotton fibres.
- Cotton linters are fine, silky fibers which adhere to the seeds of the cotton plant after ginning.
- Linters are traditionally used in the manufacture of paper and as a raw material in the manufacture of cellulose.
- The seeds remain, surrounded by short fibres known as linters for their short length and resemblance to lint.
- The construction of the radio centre and the cable way as a whole was proposed by engineer Jnis Linters.
- Pima cottonseed, which is free of linters by default, and delinted cottonseed are other types of cottonseed feed products.
- Lexers and parsers are most often used for compilers, but can be used for other computer language tools, such as prettyprinters or linters.
- Second-cut cotton linters have a normal average fibre length of 1.45 祄, and have similar properties as a short softwood pulp.
- Cottonseed hulls serve as an excellent source of feed for the livestock as they contain about 8 % of cotton linters which have nearly 100 % cellulose in them.
- Cellulose, usually from cotton linters or wood pulp, is processed to make viscose, which is then extruded into clear, tough casings for making wieners and franks.
- Most design teams cannot migrate to SystemVerilog RTL-design until their entire front-end tool suite ( linters, formal verification and automated test structure generators ) support a common language subset.
- Compressing plants pressed and stored bales, textile plants processed the fiber, and cottonseed oil mills crushed seeds, using the residue oil for food products, the linters to make paper, the hulls to mix with livestock feeds, and the cake and meal to feed animals.