7 Key Performance Indicators Affecting Nonwoven Fabric Quality: A Must-Read for Buyers & Engineers

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As a professional nonwoven fabric manufacturer, we understand that different applications (medical, hygiene, filtration, packaging, agriculture) have very different requirements. Determining whether a batch of nonwoven fabric is “qualified” depends on whether its key performance indicators meet the standards. This article systematically breaks down the 7 major indicators affecting nonwoven fabric quality.

1. Uniformity – The Foundation of Quality

Uniformity means consistency in basis weight, thickness, and fiber distribution. Poor uniformity leads to weak spots or performance fluctuations.

  • Test Method:Coefficient of variation (CV) of basis weight, visual inspection, or online scanning.
  • Key Factors:Fiber opening, carding process, web formation & bonding uniformity.
Comparison of uniform vs non-uniform nonwoven fabric showing streaks and thickness variation
Uniformity directly affects converting: poor uniformity leads to local weak spots

2.Tensile Strength – Ability to Withstand External Forces

Tensile strength is the maximum force before break, measured in machine direction (MD) and cross direction (CD).

  • Applications: medical, packaging, geotextiles require high strength
  • Test Method:Universal tensile tester, testing both MD (machine direction) and CD (cross direction).
  • Key Factors:Fiber strength, thermal/spunlace/spunbond process parameters, fiber entanglement degree.
  • Improvement: better fiber entanglement, calendering parameters
Tensile strength testing machine pulling a nonwoven fabric strip until break
MD tensile strength is typically higher than CD; both are critical for end-use performance

3.Elongation at Break – The Balance of Deformation

Elongation at break is the percentage length increase before breaking. Too high – dimension unstable; too low – brittle.

  • Typical Range:Spunbond nonwoven typically ranges 20–60% (depending on formulation).
  • Impact: affects tear resistance during lamination, cutting, or wearing
Stress-strain curve of nonwoven fabric showing elongation at break point
Elongation at break balances flexibility and dimensional stability

4.Permeability – Liquid Strike-Through Rate

Permeability refers to the time for liquid (e.g., urine, blood) to penetrate from top to back surface. Critical for hygiene products.

  • Test Method:Liquid strike-through time and rewet value (e.g., hygiene standards).
  • Factors: fiber fineness, pore size, hydrophilic/hydrophobic treatment
Liquid drop penetrating quickly into a nonwoven fabric surface showing good permeability
Fast liquid permeability is essential for hygiene and medical nonwovens

5.Hydrostatic Pressure – Water Resistance

Hydrostatic pressure indicates resistance to water penetration, in cm or mbar. Key for medical gowns and waterproof materials.

  • Test Standard:AATCC 127 / ISO 811, expressed in cmH₂O or mmH₂O.
  • What the Number Means:Higher hydrostatic head = better water resistance. Typical protective gown requires >100 cmH₂O.
  • Improvement: fine fiber layers, water repellent additives
Hydrostatic head tester with water column pressing on nonwoven fabric sample
Hydrostatic head above 100 cmH₂O is common for protective medical gowns

6.Air Permeability – Air Exchange Capacity

Air permeability is the airflow through fabric per time & pressure (mm/s or cfm). Affects comfort and filtration.

  • Range variance: face masks require moderate, filter bags high
  • Key Factors:Pore size, thickness, thermal bonding area.
Air permeability tester measuring airflow through nonwoven fabric
Higher air permeability improves comfort but may reduce filtration efficiency

7.Antistatic Property – Safety & Cleanliness Assurance

Antistatic property prevents static buildup – avoids dust attraction, shocks, or explosion risks. Used in electronics packaging, surgical gowns, cleanrooms.

  • Test Method:Surface resistivity (Ω/sq) or half-life decay time.
  • How to Achieve:Add antistatic masterbatch or apply surface coating.
This is white anti-static non-woven fabric, commonly used for precision electronic components, electronic product packaging, cleanrooms, and surgical gowns.
Antistatic nonwovens are critical for cleanroom and electronics packaging applications

Conclusion: How to Balance These Indicators?

A good nonwoven doesn’t maximize all indicators – it achieves the optimal combination for the application. For example:

  • Medical gowns: high hydrostatic pressure + moderate air permeability + antistatic
  • Baby diaper topsheet: fast strike-through + low rewet + uniformity
This is the workshop of a non-woven fabric manufacturer in China, where two high-speed production lines are producing white non-woven fabric for use in furniture, mattresses, sofas, surgical gowns, electronics packaging, and more.
Takewind Nonwoven Company operates high-speed nonwoven production lines and possesses over a decade of experience in nonwoven manufacturing, giving us an intimate understanding of the performance requirements for these materials. Our technical staff are able to precisely control critical production parameters—such as formulation, temperature, and speed—thereby ensuring the superior quality of our nonwoven products.

As your Chinese nonwoven partner, we can customize these performance indicators to your needs.

Contact our technical team for samples or let us know your requirements.

7 Key Performance Indicators Affecting Nonwoven Fabric Quality: A Must-Read for Buyers & Engineers

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