Mohair belongs to a class of animal fibers collectively called speciality fibers, due to the fact that these fibres are luxurious, rare and often expensive relative to sheep wool. South Africa produces more than 50% of the world total mohair production. The price differences between speciality fibers and wool is believed to be the major factor causing adulteration and mislabeling of textile products. The textile industry hence needs evaluation of the fiber composition of a fiber blend used in a textile product.
Reference:
Notayi, M, Engelbrechts, J.A.A, Lee, M.E, Goosen, W.E, Hunter, L and Botha, A.F. 2013. Cuticle scale measurement of animal fibers by SEM and AFM. In: 51st Microscopy Society of Southern Africa (MSSA) Conference, Farm Inn, Pretoria, 3-6 December 2013
Notayi, M., Engelbrechts, J., Lee, M., Goosen, W., Hunter, L., & Botha, A. F. (2013). Cuticle scale measurement of animal fibers by SEM and AFM. http://hdl.handle.net/10204/7315
Notayi, M, JAA Engelbrechts, ME Lee, WE Goosen, Lawrance Hunter, and Anton F Botha. "Cuticle scale measurement of animal fibers by SEM and AFM." (2013): http://hdl.handle.net/10204/7315
Notayi M, Engelbrechts J, Lee M, Goosen W, Hunter L, Botha AF, Cuticle scale measurement of animal fibers by SEM and AFM; 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/10204/7315 .