Abstract: | Studies of properties such as water sorption of grafted wool have shown the importance of the location of the polymer in the fiber. Electron microscopy and low-angle x-ray diffraction studies have been used to determine the location of grafted polystyrene in wool. Samples grafted from 15 to 800% (dry weight increase) all exhibit a large increase in contrast in the cell membranes (IR) and nuclear-remnant regions (NR) in the electron micrographs. This is considered to be due in part to an unevenness in mechanical response to sectioning and in part to the deposition of ungrafted homopolymer in IR and NR, particularly at grafts of greater than about 100%. Analysis of the change in the 83 A. equatorial x-ray reflection suggests that most of the grafted polymer resides in the keratinous matrix regions between the microfibrils within the cortical cells. At larger grafts the wool still retains its basic histological character, but the increase in this spacing is no longer proportional to the amount of graft, and the desposition of polymer becomes very inhomogeneous. |