How to Determine the Silk Content of a Fabric
Silk has always carried a special value in textiles. It is costly, beautiful, comfortable, durable and culturally important. Because of this, many fabrics are sold in the market with names such as pure silk, blended silk, part silk, art silk, soft silk or silk mix.
For a buyer, student, merchandiser or retailer, the important question is: how much silk is actually present in the fabric?
The Indian Standard IS 15824:2008, Textiles — Requirements for Marking Textile Materials Made of Silk — Specification, gives a method for determining the silk content of textile materials and also explains how silk fabrics should be marked. The standard applies to silk textile materials containing not less than 20 percent silk fibres.
Why Silk Content Matters
Silk content is important because the label of a fabric should not mislead the consumer. IS 15824:2008 was developed because imitation and artificial textile materials are often sold as silk materials in the market, even though pure silk materials are costlier and valued for better aesthetic and comfort qualities.
In simple terms, the purpose of determining silk content is to answer questions such as:
- Is the fabric really pure silk?
- Is it a silk blend?
- Is it only part silk?
- Is the declared silk percentage correct?
Classification Based on Silk Content
According to IS 15824:2008, the marking of silk textile materials is based on the silk content in the base or ground fabric only. This is important because decorative materials such as zari may be present, but the silk classification refers to the main fabric structure.
| Marking | Silk Content Requirement | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| Pure Silk | Silk only, subject to tolerance | The material consists of silk only, with manufacturing tolerance up to 5 percent of foreign matter, including metallic and weighting materials. |
| Blended Silk | Not less than 50 percent silk fibres | The textile material contains a significant proportion of silk along with other fibres. |
| Part Silk | Not less than 20 percent silk fibres | The textile material contains some silk, but the silk content is lower than that required for blended silk. |
For blended silk and part silk, the standard permits a tolerance of ±3 percent on the declared silk content.
The Basic Principle of Silk Content Testing
The method is based on a simple chemical idea:
The fabric sample is first cleaned and dried. Then the silk is dissolved using a specified chemical treatment. The residue that remains represents non-silk fibrous matter and other foreign matter. Once this residue is weighed, the silk percentage can be calculated.
In simple form:
\( \text{Silk percentage} = 100 - \text{Percentage of non-silk fibrous matter and foreign matter} \)
IS 15824:2008 gives separate procedures depending on whether the fabric contains non-protein fibres or other protein fibres.
Step 1: Identify Whether Other Protein Fibres Are Present
Before determining silk content, the standard says that the presence of protein fibres other than silk should be identified by preliminary and staining tests as specified in IS 667.
This step matters because silk itself is a protein fibre. Wool, for example, is also a protein fibre. If the fabric contains silk mixed with non-protein fibres such as cotton, viscose, polyester or nylon, one method is used. But if the fabric contains silk along with another protein fibre, a different dissolving treatment is required.
Step 2: Pretreat the Fabric Sample
For textile materials containing non-protein fibres, IS 15824:2008 says that about 10 to 15 g of material should be taken and extracted in a Soxhlet apparatus with light petroleum hydrocarbon solvent for 1 hour at a minimum rate of 6 cycles per hour.
Then the sample is extracted with water for 2 hours, again at a minimum rate of 6 cycles per hour.
This pretreatment removes substances such as oils, waxes, finishes and soluble impurities. Without this step, the calculated silk percentage may be misleading.
Step 3: Dry the Sample to Constant Mass
From the pretreated sample, a representative sample of about 5 g is taken and dried in an oven at 105 ± 3°C until constant mass is reached.
The standard considers the mass constant when the difference between two successive weighings at 20-minute intervals is less than 0.05 percent.
This dry mass is very important because fibre percentages are calculated on a mass basis.
Let this initial dry mass be:
\( M_1 \)
Step 4: Dissolve the Silk
For materials containing non-protein fibres, the remaining sample is treated with at least 100 times its mass of 5 percent sodium hydroxide or potassium hydroxide solution and boiled slowly until the silk fibres are completely dissolved.
After about 10 minutes of boiling, the mixture is filtered through a Gooch crucible.
The residue is then washed first with warm water, then with 3 percent glacial acetic acid solution, and finally with hot water. After this, the residue is dried again at 105 ± 3°C.
Step 5: Clean and Weigh the Residue
The residue must be carefully examined for non-fibrous matter such as burrs, seeds, finishing materials, dyestuff residues or incompletely dissolved matter.
If undissolved silk protein remains, it should be removed by treatment with fresh boiling 5 percent sodium hydroxide or potassium hydroxide solution. Burrs and seeds may be lifted out with forceps.
After cleaning, the residue is dried to constant mass at 105 ± 3°C and weighed accurately.
Let the residue mass be:
\( M_2 \)
Step 6: Calculate Non-Silk Matter
The percentage of non-silk fibrous matter and other foreign matter is calculated as:
\( \text{Percentage of non-silk matter} = \frac{M_2 \times 100}{M_1} \)
Where:
\( M_1 = \text{dry mass of the original sample} \)
\( M_2 = \text{dry mass of the residue after dissolving silk} \)
Then the silk content is calculated as:
\( \text{Silk percentage} = 100 - \frac{M_2 \times 100}{M_1} \)
This same determination is repeated on remaining specimens, and the average value is calculated.
Example Calculation
Suppose the dry mass of the original sample is:
\( M_1 = 5.00 \text{ g} \)
After dissolving the silk and drying the residue, the remaining non-silk material weighs:
\( M_2 = 1.50 \text{ g} \)
Then:
\( \text{Non-silk matter} = \frac{1.50 \times 100}{5.00} = 30\% \)
Therefore:
\( \text{Silk content} = 100 - 30 = 70\% \)
So, the fabric contains approximately 70 percent silk by mass. Under the classification of IS 15824:2008, such a fabric may fall under Blended Silk, because it contains not less than 50 percent silk fibres.
What If the Fabric Contains Other Protein Fibres?
If the textile material contains other protein fibres, the standard modifies the method. In this case, the procedure is similar, but the silk is dissolved using 80 percent sulphuric acid solution instead of 5 percent sodium hydroxide or potassium hydroxide solution.
This distinction is important because silk has to be separated from other fibre types correctly. A wrong chemical treatment may give a wrong result.
Percentages Are Calculated by Mass
IS 15824:2008 clarifies that all percentage contents refer to percentages by mass, calculated from the mass of materials in standard condition: their oven-dry mass plus the appropriate regain.
This is an important technical point. Fibres absorb moisture differently. Silk, cotton, wool, viscose and synthetic fibres do not hold the same amount of moisture. Therefore, textile fibre composition is not simply a visual or volumetric estimate; it is a mass-based determination under defined conditions.
Why This Cannot Be Reliably Done by Touch or Burning Alone
Many people try to identify silk by touch, shine, sound, burning smell or drape. These tests may give clues, but they cannot accurately determine silk percentage.
A fabric may feel like silk but contain viscose, polyester or nylon. Similarly, a fabric may have a silk warp and a non-silk weft, or silk may be blended with another fibre.
Touch, shine and burning tests may help in preliminary identification, but accurate silk content determination requires a laboratory method involving pretreatment, drying, chemical dissolution, filtration, residue cleaning and precise weighing.
Difference Between Silk Identification and Silk Content Determination
There are two separate questions:
| Question | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Is silk present? | This is identification. |
| How much silk is present? | This is content determination. |
IS 15824:2008 refers to preliminary and staining tests for identifying protein fibres and then gives a mass-based method for determining the silk percentage.
Labelling Should Not Mislead
The standard also says that detailed description of the contents of the material should be given by indicating the percentages of silk and other fibres in descending order. It also states that such a description should not be misleading.
For example, a fabric should ideally be labelled in a way such as:
Silk 70%, Cotton 30%
Silk 55%, Viscose 45%
This is much clearer than vague words such as silky, silk touch, or soft silk without composition clarity.
Conclusion
Determining silk content is not a matter of guesswork. As per IS 15824:2008, it is a systematic laboratory procedure based on mass. The sample is cleaned, dried, chemically treated to dissolve silk, filtered, dried again, and the remaining non-silk matter is weighed.
The silk percentage is then calculated by difference.
\( \text{Silk content} = 100 - \text{Non-silk residue percentage} \)
This method helps protect consumers, supports correct labelling, and allows textile materials to be properly classified as Pure Silk, Blended Silk, or Part Silk.
Source Acknowledgement
This article is based on IS 15824:2008, Textiles — Requirements for Marking Textile Materials Made of Silk — Specification, Bureau of Indian Standards.
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