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Ow...I think I need some help with my laundry.
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Hey there, washed and left out to dry. Trace here rockin' some duds on DNews. You might think
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science is something only done in labs, but every week or so chances are you suspend organic
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and synthetic fibers in a solution of water, enzymes, surfactants, and detergents to confine
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particulates and relax molecular bonds. In layman's terms: you do laundry, and when you
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think about it, you're really doing controlled chemistry! Unfortunately, we don't all do
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this at-home science in the same way, which is why when doing laundry, we've all messed
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up our favorite sweater or shrunk a pair of pants. But why do all of these things shrink at all?
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What's going on there?
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So, firstly, there are a couple kinds of fibers used to make clothing: synthetic and natural.
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In general, synthetics are man-made polymers like polyester, Kevlar, or acrylic.
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Their fibers are strings of petroleum-based chemical chains. Synthetics made from petroleum
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products don't typically shrink in laundry because the washer and dryer do not get hot
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enough to mess with their molecular structure or anything else. So, let's ignore those.
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Natural fibers, on the other hand, they come from animals and plants. The fibers of cotton,
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wool or silk are naturally curly and tangled. So when you want to weave these threads into
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fabrics, you have to stretch then, and to pull them out to make them straight. But if given the opportunity
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to return to their natural curly state? They will. And scientists have discovered all that heat
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and mechanical energy in laundry let them do just that, in a process they call, funnily enough,
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Shrinkage.
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There are three kinds of shrinkage: Relaxation, Felting, and Consolidation.
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Relaxing is the immediate release of that stretching and pulling tension left behind
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from the straightening of the natural fibers and manufacturing. That tension exists on a molecular level,
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and is leftover from that process. When tepid or warm water is added to the natural fabric,
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the warmth will let the fabric swell, reducing the size by about 1 percent.
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Not too shabby.
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Felting shrinkage is when the fibers themselves actually get shorter. If you magnify wool
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in an electron microscope, it's made of tiny scales, just like human hair. According to
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a paper in the Textile Research Journal, the heat from the washer can expand these scales
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letting water get in between them. Water is slippery, so it reduces the coefficient of friction,
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and those scales then slide together, contracting rootward, like a retracting car or radio antenna! Super cool!
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The third type is Consolidation shrinkage, and it happens in the laundry process itself.
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The mechanical bouncing action of your washer and drier beats up the fibers, causing them
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to curl back up again.
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A 2002 study in The Research Journal of Association of Universities for Textiles. found the structure
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of the fabric can affect shrinkage too. Denim jeans are tightly-woven cotton so they
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shrink a little, but sweaters, they're mostly air! So they can shrink by as much as 30 percent according
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to Popular Science.
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Even the natural moisture content of the fibers themselves can affect the shrinkage: cotton has
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about 5 percent, and wool has about 17 percent, so over-drying can will inevitably cause clothing
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to change shape.
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In World War II, Nazi scientists added plastics to wool to fill in the spaces and solidify
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the fibers. Today this continues with manufacturers weaving in non-shrinking
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synthetics, and chemists inventing new anti-shrinking agents to cover natural fibers and keep them
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from curling up. More researches obviously needed.
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Look, scientists who did write these papers on shrinkage were quick to point out: everyone does laundry
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differently. Water temperature, amount of time, detergent, clothing fibers, and even
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machine manufacturer can all add variables to to this at-home science project
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The best way to love your clothes is to remember that, one, the instructions on the tag is there for a reason
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the people who made the clothes know how to clean it. And when in doubt don't
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add heat and mechanical energy. Use cold water and avoid the dryer. And two: remember that
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natural fiber clothing is made from the parts of living things! Living things aren't supposed
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to last forever. And that's actually kind of okay.
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Skinny jeans, sweaters, tiny t-shirts… why am I reminded of hipsters?
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Oh, because they're all the same! At least, that's what this mathematician discovered! So I did a whole video about it.
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Grab your fancy coffee and give it a click.
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Hipsters are difficult to describe as a group.
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But we know one when we see one, right?
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And a new mathematical neural science paper explains why that is:
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The Hipster Effect. When anti-conformists all look the same
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Do you love laundry? Do you hate it? Are you super meticulous about how things get folded?
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Let us know down in the comments! Make sure you subscribe, so you get all of the Dnews that we got up in here.
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And thanks for watching!