Fiber Degradation (Carpet)

Fiber Degradation

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Fiber Degradation 3

Filaments break off the yarns

Fiber Degradation 4

Filaments on vacuum cleaner housing

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The "V" is the normal carpet

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Localized carpet discoloration and fiber damage caused by chemical exposure or reactive contaminants.

Chemical degradation

Carpet fiber degradation showing weakened and deteriorated carpet fibers

Fibers have degraded to the backing

Chemical Degradation

Fiber Degradation

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Fiber Degradation

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Fiber Degradation

Sierra Exif JPEG

Fiber Degradation

Sierra Exif JPEG

Fiber Degradation

Fiber Degradation

Fiber Degradation

Fiber Degradation 1

Fiber Degradation

Fiber Degradation 2

Fibers on left are normal

Fiber Degradation

Fiber Degradation

Sierra Exif JPEG Fiber Degradation 3 Fiber Degradation 4 Sierra Exif JPEG Sierra Exif JPEG Localized carpet discoloration and fiber damage caused by chemical exposure or reactive contaminants. Carpet fiber degradation showing weakened and deteriorated carpet fibers Chemical Degradation Sierra Exif JPEG Sierra Exif JPEG Sierra Exif JPEG Sierra Exif JPEG Fiber Degradation Fiber Degradation 1 Fiber Degradation 2 Fiber Degradation

Fiber Degradation (Carpet)

Floor Detective® Claims and Conditions Guide

Summary

Fiber degradation is a material performance condition in which the polymer structure of carpet fibers undergoes chemical or environmental breakdown, resulting in reduced strength, reduced elasticity, and gradual loss of structural integrity. The condition may develop through ultraviolet (UV) exposure, oxidative aging, chemical interaction, or combined environmental stress over time. As degradation progresses, fibers may become brittle, fragmented, chalky, or weakened under normal use conditions. Distribution commonly follows exposure patterns such as sunlight, chemical contact, or environmental influence rather than isolated mechanical wear. Fiber degradation affects the internal fiber structure rather than surface compression alone and may resemble matting or fading depending on severity and exposure conditions. See also Carpet Problems for broader context.

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Carpet Problems

Carpet problems may involve seams, backing systems, texture changes, traffic wear, mechanical damage, or installation-related conditions.
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Carpet Fiber Identification (Field and Laboratory Methods)

Carpet fiber identification helps determine how carpet may respond to heat, moisture, cleaning chemistry, abrasion, and environmental exposure.
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Wool and Wool Carpet Properties

Wool carpet properties include moisture absorption, chemical sensitivity, shedding, and appearance variation associated with natural wool fibers.
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Carpet Beetle Damage

Carpet beetle damage is localized fiber loss caused by larvae feeding on organic materials within carpet, often occurring in concealed...
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Fiber Properties

Carpet fiber properties determine durability, resilience, and how flooring performs under traffic and environmental conditions.
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Fiber Properties

Missing Row

Carpet missing rows are manufacturing-origin tufting conditions involving absent yarn along machine-direction rows.
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Missing Row

Browning

Browning and soil wicking are discoloration conditions caused by moisture-driven migration of materials to the carpet surface during drying.
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Browning

Wrinkles in Backing

Carpet backing wrinkles are manufacturing-related distortions caused by backing misalignment, tension variation, or latex lock-in.
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Wrinkles in Backing

Unraveling / Runs (Carpet)

Carpet unraveling runs are progressive yarn withdrawals that follow tuft rows in continuous filament carpet constructions.
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Unraveling / Runs (Carpet)

Core Crush / Roll-Core Pile Reversal (Carpet)

Carpet roll-core crush occurs when pile yarns become compressed around the roll core, creating visible light or dark banding near...
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Core Crush / Roll-Core Pile Reversal (Carpet)