Phenolic yellowing is a storage-induced discoloration in white and pastel textiles caused by a chemical reaction between nitrogen oxides (NOx) in the air and butylated hydroxytoluene (BHT), a common antioxidant found in packaging films and cardboard. It matters because it causes yellow staining on high-end lingerie, underwear, and white sportswear during warehousing. For garment factory managers, the practical decision is to use BHT-free packaging bags and apply anti-yellowing agents in the dye house.Most existing articles focus on general wash stains, but they under-explain the exact chemical mechanism of gas fading and phenolic BHT reactions in cardboard storage. This matters because standard washing cannot remove phenolic yellow stains, leading to bulk rejection. This guide provides chemical prevention parameters, packaging rules, and Courtaulds test standards so QA teams can prevent bulk defects.
The Chemical Mechanism of Phenolic Yellowing
Phenolic yellowing is not caused by dirt, mould, or UV exposure. It is a chemical reaction that occurs under specific conditions:
Because spandex and nylon fibres have polar sites that attract acidic and phenolic gases, intimate apparel and sportswear made from nylon-spandex or polyester-spandex are highly susceptible to phenolic yellowing.
- BHT Migration: Butylated hydroxytoluene (BHT) is an antioxidant used to stabilise plastic wrap, poly bags, and recycled cardboard boxes. BHT easily vaporises and migrates from the packaging material onto the fabric fibres.
- Reaction with NOx: Air pollutants (nitrogen oxides from vehicle exhaust, gas burners, and factory emissions) react with the BHT deposited on the fabric.
- The reaction forms a yellow compound called stilbenequinone. This chemical reaction is alkaline-sensitive. If the fabric's pH is neutral or slightly alkaline (pH > 6.0), the yellow stain becomes highly visible. To prevent this, the fabric finishing bath must be controlled to an acidic target (pH 5.2 - 5.8) using acetic acid.
Factory Prevention Controls for Phenolic Yellowing
Preventing phenolic yellowing requires cooperation between the dyehouse, the sewing factory, and the packaging department. The table below lists the core prevention parameters:
| Prevention level | Action / Control parameter | Purpose | Sourcing red flag |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dye House Finish | Anti-yellowing agent & acetic acid bath finishing (pH 5.2 - 5.8 control) | Prevents the fabric fibres from reacting with gas pollutants | Finishing bath pH > 6.5 or lack of acid neutralization (alkaline conditions trigger yellowing). |
| Packaging Materials | 100% BHT-free LDPE packaging bags (< 10 ppm BHT content) | Eliminates BHT chemical contact with the fabric | Standard poly packaging bags containing > 10 ppm BHT stabilizers. |
| Cardboard Storage | Recycled paper boxes with low BHT | Blocks transfer of phenolic compounds to the textile rolls | Recycled boxes stored in humid warehouses with high exhaust gas. |
| Quality Inspection | Courtaulds Phenolic Yellowing Test (<a href="https://www.iso.org/standard/44626.html" target="_blank" rel="noopener">ISO 105-X18</a>) | Simulates storage conditions to predict yellowing risks | Relying on simple light box colour matching without chemical tests. |
How to Test for Phenolic Yellowing Susceptibility
To predict whether a batch of white fabric will yellow during transit or storage, laboratories perform the **Courtaulds Phenolic Yellowing Test**. The standard testing procedures include:
To learn more about standard fabric quality controls, read our guide on color fastness in fabric testing. You can also review how fibre parameters affect fabric quality in needle gauge, denier, and fabric weight.
- ISO 105-X18: Textiles - Tests for colour fastness - Part X18: Assessment of the potential to phenolic yellowing of materials. The test uses a control fabric wrapped in paper impregnated with a phenolic compound to simulate ageing.
- M&S C20B: Marks & Spencer standard test method for phenolic yellowing assessment. Highly recommended for retail brand compliance.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Can phenolic yellowing stains be washed out?
Phenolic yellow stains are acid-reversible. Washing the stained garment in a mild acidic solution (such as citric acid or dilute acetic acid) can make the yellow stain disappear. However, the stain will reappear if the fabric pH rises back to neutral or alkaline.
What is the difference between phenolic yellowing and light yellowing?
Phenolic yellowing is caused by gas contact (BHT + NOx) in dark packaging, whereas light yellowing is caused by photo-chemical degradation of fibres under direct UV or sun exposure. They require different chemical stabilisers to prevent.
Are recycled cardboard boxes a BHT threat to fabrics?
Yes. Recycled cardboard often contains residual adhesives, inks, and stabilisers that release BHT. Using a barrier lining (like a BHT-free plastic inner bag) is necessary to protect fabric rolls inside cardboard packaging.
Send Fabric Enquiry
To prevent phenolic yellowing in your white lingerie or sportswear orders, contact Changle Textile at andy@changletextile.com for custom GRS-certified BHT-free fabrics and anti-yellowing treatment options.
