A customer requested “amino silicone oil” — without specifying whether the amine value should be 8 or 15. The result? The fabric softener caused severe yellowing.
“We used the same supplier as before — why did this batch turn yellow while the previous one didn’t?”
During a complaint review, a technical director from a textile auxiliary manufacturer traced the issue back to one vague instruction: “Send us some amino silicone oil,” with no clarification of the required amine value.
This is not an isolated case.
In textile, leather, and nonwoven finishing, amino silicone oil is widely used for its excellent softness and smooth hand feel. However, the amine value directly determines two critical properties: softness intensity and yellowing risk.
The higher the amine value (e.g., 12–18 mmol/g), the greater the amino group density. This enhances fiber adsorption and delivers a fuller, fluffier hand feel. At the same time, free primary amines are more prone to oxidation under high temperature, alkaline conditions, or light exposure, forming yellow quinone-type structures. This leads to fabric yellowing — particularly noticeable on polyester-cotton blends, nylon, and other light-colored or white fabrics.
To support precise product selection, we summarize a quick reference guide:
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Amine value < 5 mmol/g: Very low yellowing risk. Suitable for white or light-colored fabrics and high-temperature heat setting. Provides smoother rather than fluffy softness.
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Amine value 5–10 mmol/g: Balanced option. Good compromise between softness and color fastness. Suitable for most conventional fabrics.
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Amine value > 10 mmol/g: Strong adsorption and high bulk softness, but sensitive to yellowing. Recommended only for dark fabrics and ideally used with anti-yellowing agents.
“Many customers assume ‘more amine means better softness,’ but too much can backfire,” an application engineer noted. “We once helped an export-oriented manufacturer reduce the amine value from 15 to 8 and optimize pH control — yellowing complaints dropped to zero while maintaining the required hand feel.”
It is also important to note:
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Amine value ≠ total amine content. Some modified products using secondary or tertiary amines can reduce yellowing tendency.
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Emulsification process, drying temperature (recommended ≤150°C), and residual alkali on the fabric surface are also key influencing factors.
As an amino silicone oil supplier, we recommend that customers clearly specify three parameters when placing an order: target amine value, fabric type, and finishing process conditions. We offer standard grades across different amine value ranges and support lab-scale sampling and application trials to minimize yellowing risk at the source.
Softness should never come at the cost of yellowing.
Choosing the right amine value is the first step toward professional finishing.