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No. 3155:
Wrinkle-Free Cotton
Audio

by Andy Boyd

Today, we wash and wear. The University of Houston presents this series about the machines that make our civilization run, and the people whose ingenuity created them.

The way we launder clothes has come a long way from washbuckets, scrubbing boards, and hanging the laundry out on clotheslines with clothespins. We have washing machines, dryers, and an assortment of additives - specially engineered soaps, stain removers, and fabric softeners. And if we're a little careful, we can get by without ironing - thanks in large part to a woman named Ruth Benerito.

Ruth R Benerito
Ruth R Benerito   Photo Credit: Wikimedia

Benerito was born in 1916 in New Orleans - a time and place where women were expected to remain at home. But thanks to a dedicated father, she entered Tulane University at the age of fifteen. There, Benerito was one of only two women given permission to take chemistry classes. She ultimately completed a PhD in physical chemistry at the University of Chicago.

Almost all cotton clothing is wrinkle free these days. But it's not due to changes in the way cotton is grown. Without proper chemical treatment, cotton wrinkles badly when it gets wet. For most of the twentieth century, ironing boards were household fixtures as women spent hours a day making our cotton clothes look good.

So when synthetic fibers like nylon appeared in the mid 1930s, they posed a challenge for cotton growers. Properly cared for, synthetic fabrics are less prone to wrinkling than their cotton counterparts. Would consumers give up the feel of cotton for the convenience of synthetics? It was a real possibility.

Enter Benerito. While working at the U.S. Department of Agriculture, she came up with an idea for treating cotton fabric. It made cotton molecules line up more like those found in synthetic polymers through a process called cross-linking. The result? Permanent press.

Wrangler Jeans ad
Wrangler Jeans ad   Photo Credit: Flickr

Her process went through many refinements. It was good for clothes made of heavy materials, like pants, but weakened the cotton too much for thinner items. A big breakthrough came in 1993, when Japanese manufacturers introduced the no iron cotton shirt. And new no-press processes are under constant development - processes that make the cotton last longer, resist stains better, and keep the cotton fibers strong.

No iron cotton shirt
No iron cotton shirt   Photo Credit: Andrew Boyd

But it all started with Benerito. She went on to file a total of fifty-five patents in her career. But her achievements certainly aren't limited to patents. She received the Lemelson-MIT Lifetime Achievement Award for her work on textiles, but also for her lifelong commitment to teaching. Benerito was a role model for generations of students, and taught well into her eighties.

In 1970, the Department of Agriculture conferred on her the distinguished service award - its highest honor. And in 2008, she was inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame - one of only a handful of women honorees. Remarkable achievements for anyone - but especially so for a young girl from the long-ago Mississippi delta.

I'm Andy Boyd at the University of Houston, where we're interested in the way inventive minds work.

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Wrinkle-Free Stuff: Ruth Benerito. From the website of the Chemical Heritage Foundation: https://www.chemheritage.org/historical-profile/ruth-benerito. Accessed January 2, 2018.