Products

Bamboo Fiber

    • Product Name: Bamboo Fiber
    • Chemical Name (IUPAC): Cellulose
    • CAS No.: 93342-05-3
    • Chemical Formula: (C6H10O5)n
    • Form/Physical State: Solid
    • Factroy Site: Nanbao Development Zone, Tangshan City, Hebei Province
    • Price Inquiry: sales7@bouling-chem.com
    • Manufacturer: Tangshan Sanyou Group Co., Ltd
    • CONTACT NOW
    Specifications

    HS Code

    108147

    Material Bamboo Fiber
    Origin Natural plant (bamboo) derived
    Appearance Soft, smooth, similar to cotton
    Biodegradability Highly biodegradable
    Breathability Excellent air permeability
    Antibacterial Naturally antibacterial
    Moisture Absorption Strong moisture absorption
    Hypoallergenic Low allergenic potential
    Eco Friendly Sustainable and renewable resource
    Strength Good tensile strength
    Static Resistance Resistant to static electricity
    Thermal Regulation Keeps cool in summer, warm in winter
    Dyeability Easily dyed with vibrant colors
    Softness Very soft texture
    Uv Protection Natural UV blocking properties

    As an accredited Bamboo Fiber factory, we enforce strict quality protocols—every batch undergoes rigorous testing to ensure consistent efficacy and safety standards.

    Packing & Storage
    Packing Bamboo Fiber, 1 kg, packaged in a durable eco-friendly kraft paper bag with resealable zipper and clear product labeling.
    Container Loading (20′ FCL) Container Loading (20′ FCL) for Bamboo Fiber: Typically loads 10–12 metric tons securely packed in bales or bags, maximizing container utilization.
    Shipping Bamboo Fiber is classified as a non-hazardous material for shipping. It should be packed in sealed, moisture-proof bags or containers to prevent contamination and maintain quality. Store and transport in dry, cool conditions away from direct sunlight. Bamboo Fiber does not require special handling or regulatory documentation during shipment.
    Storage Bamboo fiber should be stored in a cool, dry, and well-ventilated area, away from direct sunlight and sources of moisture. It must be kept in sealed containers or packaging to prevent contamination and absorption of odors. Avoid storing near chemicals or strong acids and bases. Proper storage conditions help maintain the fiber’s integrity and prevent mold or mildew growth.
    Shelf Life Bamboo fiber has a shelf life of 2-3 years when stored in cool, dry conditions, away from moisture and sunlight.
    Application of Bamboo Fiber

    Purity 98%: Bamboo Fiber with purity 98% is used in textile manufacturing, where enhanced softness and reduced skin irritation are achieved.

    Moisture Regain 12%: Bamboo Fiber with 12% moisture regain is used in sports apparel production, where improved breathability and moisture-wicking properties are delivered.

    Fineness 1.7 dtex: Bamboo Fiber with 1.7 dtex fineness is used in home bedding applications, where higher drape and improved fabric smoothness are realized.

    Tensile Strength 3.2 cN/dtex: Bamboo Fiber with tensile strength 3.2 cN/dtex is used in composite reinforcement, where increased durability and structural integrity are provided.

    Length 38 mm: Bamboo Fiber with length 38 mm is used in nonwoven hygiene products, where enhanced fiber entanglement and uniformity are achieved.

    Whiteness Index >65: Bamboo Fiber with whiteness index greater than 65 is used in high-end paper manufacturing, where brighter and more visually appealing paper is produced.

    Thermal Stability 180°C: Bamboo Fiber with thermal stability at 180°C is used in automotive interior textiles, where prolonged material performance under high temperatures is ensured.

    Antibacterial Rate ≥99%: Bamboo Fiber with antibacterial rate ≥99% is used in medical textiles, where effective microbial growth inhibition is obtained.

    Linear Density 1.5 denier: Bamboo Fiber at 1.5 denier linear density is used in fine knitted fabrics, where lightweight and enhanced hand-feel are achieved.

    Ash Content ≤0.5%: Bamboo Fiber with ash content less than or equal to 0.5% is used in eco-friendly packaging, where minimized residue post-processing is ensured.

    Free Quote

    Competitive Bamboo Fiber prices that fit your budget—flexible terms and customized quotes for every order.

    For samples, pricing, or more information, please contact us at +8615371019725 or mail to sales7@bouling-chem.com.

    We will respond to you as soon as possible.

    Tel: +8615371019725

    Email: sales7@bouling-chem.com

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    Certification & Compliance
    More Introduction

    Bamboo Fiber: Direct from the Manufacturer’s Floor

    About Our Bamboo Fiber

    We specialize in producing Bamboo Fiber for industries that value both performance and responsibility. Sourced from managed bamboo stands, our fiber does not just ride the “green” marketing wave. It delivers tangible benefits for manufacturers looking for natural alternatives to synthetic and wood pulp-based fibers, with the added bonus of a stable, reliable supply chain managed under one roof. Our production team oversees sourcing, preparation, and finishing from start to finish. This keeps quality tightly controlled and lets us respond to practical feedback from our direct industrial customers.

    The journey from culm to finished fiber means getting to know the nuances that matter in a finished product. Every factory batch reflects the lessons learned as we climbed the learning curve: variations in climate, stalk size, and moisture affect pulping outcomes. We have worked through issues with fiber length and fineness, tuning our processes so textile manufacturers, food packaging producers, plastic compounders, and even paper converters know what to expect—consistent length distribution and no odd odor. Our regular customers include businesses that want not just a raw material, but a partner who solves problems with them.

    What Defines Our Bamboo Fiber?

    Our standard line centers around fiber lengths averaging 4-7 mm, a range that works in injection molding, carding for textiles, and pulp blending. These values didn’t appear by accident; these are the specs proven by our plastics compounding partnerships and our work with paper mills seeking cleaner, stronger additions to their base furnish. Fineness hovers in the range that supports open, breathable yarns or gives paper a desirable deckle edge. Bulk density falls in a regular, manageable band that helps with dosing and prevents clumping under storage, which we monitor carefully to protect our downstream partners from downtime.

    We’ve developed a model for tight color control, too—natural bamboo can range slightly in hue, but we minimize the yellowing that puts textile dye-houses in a tough spot. Compared to competitors’ chopped fibers with more bark, pith, or dust, our production lines deliver a much cleaner cut. That means less “trash” when blending, and fewer issues with shedding during downstream finishing.

    Real Differences—Bamboo Fiber vs. Conventional Options

    Other producers often use wood pulp or recycled synthetics for the products that end up next to people’s skin or in food-contact packaging. Bamboo fiber offers an alternative that solves specific pain points. First, it’s faster to regrow than most softwoods, drawing down carbon and regenerating without chemical fertilizers or irrigation. That sustainability argument stands on practical ground: we’ve traced supply chain origins ourselves and enforced controls, not just paperwork.

    Our customers in molded plastic and paper demand another difference—performance. Wood pulp can add stiffness or density, but it brings a higher risk of splintering and inconsistent blending. Synthetics contribute strength, but at a carbon cost and with challenges when it comes to compostability or recycling. Bamboo fiber, in our experience, threads the line between workable performance and improved environmental profile. Engineers who work with our fiber notice a good “hand feel” in finished composites without unexpected popping or “dust-off” in heated processes. In food packaging, producers want natural-looking material that can slide through automatic feeders and not gum up their lines; our fiber rarely causes snags, thanks to our brushes with those exact line problems during scale-up.

    Of course, cost plays a role in every purchasing decision. Across several years of feedback, we’ve heard from small run and high-volume users that our vertical approach—not farming out critical steps to subcontractors—keeps price swings less dramatic. That is especially important for small manufacturers who cannot absorb big jumps in raw material budgets quarter to quarter.

    How Industries Actually Use Our Bamboo Fiber

    In textiles, mills blend our fiber with cotton, viscose, or even wool to build up lighter summer weights or moisture-wicking sports fabrics. The resulting yarns offer comfortable thermoregulation and a smooth hand. Our technical team took the time to optimize parameters for carding and spinning, side-by-side with floor managers who gave us feedback live as they ran our batches. We listened to frustration about oversized knots and smoothed out the process, so fiber no longer clumped during reopening or blending.

    In molded plastics, especially PLA or PP, bamboo fiber can reinforce composites for disposable cutlery, trays, or eco-lodge furnishings. One customer issue we addressed: bamboo’s natural tendency to retain moisture. Through low-temperature drying and sealed packaging, we ensure fiber is ready to blend, not stuck in the compounding extruder. Plastics developers want natural fillers that disperse easily and stay even throughout extrusion, not clump at the die. Our own technical staff routinely visit client sites to help adjust process settings—real experience we’ve built into our product model.

    For paper and board, the addition of bamboo helps reach opacity and wet strength targets without maxing out on more expensive softwood pulp, and in some trials, paper runs flatter with less curl on the final roll. Our own lab set up pilot runs, then adjusted fiber fineness, water-washing, and drying cycles in response to the feedback sheets—helping customers move away from hardwood without trade-offs in printability or paper dust issues.

    In bioplastics and “green” single-use items, our bamboo fiber reduces the fossil fuel fraction, offering smoother flow and a more natural look. Some larger converters shared a challenge: early blends with competitors’ fiber caused resin burn or discoloration where the fiber had not been properly cleaned. We sweat these details in our purification and drying process, so you don’t see sticky or off-color sections in the final product.

    Meeting Industry Regulations and Honest Claims

    Many end-users ask about certifications and compliance. We test our batches for residual chemicals, heavy metals, and odor. Several of our product runs meet guidelines relevant to food-contact use, and we back our claims with third-party lab results. Manufacturers who need real documentation—not just a generic “eco” statement—receive lot-specific reports. We invest in this traceability because environmental marketing claims fall apart fast under real audits. As a manufacturer standing behind the product, we know that walking the line with both regulation and actual performance is what keeps contracts coming back.

    We get asked about compostability, migration, and compatibility. Instead of vague claims, we provide real test data or arrange joint pilot runs so a converter or packager can see results first-hand. That removes much of the uncertainty from trialing a new material. If a client’s process presents challenges our fiber has not seen, we listen, run in-house trials, and suggest adjustments—sometimes shifting how we cut, wash, or surface-treat fibers until results line up with commercial production needs.

    Why Bamboo Fiber Matters Now: Manufacturer’s Insights

    Demand across several sectors keeps rising, driven by a combination of regulatory shifts, consumer perceptions, and the clear limits of current resources. We operate in a region seeing stricter controls on plastic additives, and buyers—both direct users and their downstream customers—ask for tested alternatives that can maintain output and reliability. This has forced us to keep improving extraction, washing, and drying processes, as well as quality controls for dust, color, and length uniformity.

    Our real advantage lies in anticipating problems before batches ever ship. Over a decade of working side-by-side with processors forced us to examine raw material sourcing and tracking, fiber chopping, bulk density, and moisture so no one has to halt a line due to surprise variability. From experience, we know how easily a seemingly small variation in input turns into a recurring quality problem for end-users. We’ve been called in to troubleshoot fiber that sheds, scorches, or blocks filters, often with little grace period to adjust.

    Many clients switching from traditional fillers or reinforcers, like talc or groundwood, face headaches integrating “new” fibers. Support from a partner who both understands field harvest and lab analysis closes the gap for scaling up. We have seen our fiber shift companies out of cycles of repeated trials, allowing them to lock in supply and quality, and focus on product development, not damage control.

    Addressing Practical Challenges in Bamboo Fiber Production and Supply

    Bamboo varies by the growing season, stand rotation, and even altitude, which means the raw material is not as “standard” as industrial wood pulp or oil-based synthetics. Years back, we experienced pressure from buyers wanting ever tighter specs, only to learn firsthand that over-specifying creates more production headaches and waste. By running enough pilot batches, we identified what parameters actually impact downstream performance and fine-tuned our process to target those areas.

    Logistics also show up as a daily challenge. Bulk fiber is not compact; storage and movement require careful planning. We developed custom compression methods without damaging the fiber integrity or causing fines/dust build-up in the bale. Local staff oversee warehousing and shipment—if fiber picks up moisture in transport, it can lose value fast. We learned this lesson after seeing too many complaints about fiber “clumping” due to improperly sealed containers.

    As bamboo markets grow, keeping the supply base stable matters. Over the last five years we built direct relationships with growers, not brokers, and regularly visit to confirm sustainable harvesting and prevent over-cutting. That’s given us real insight and control when weather or logistics throw up roadblocks. The ability to tweak supply in response to sudden demand spikes gives our buyers the confidence that production can continue uninterrupted.

    Working Together for Future Adaptation

    Bamboo fiber stands out because it solves a set of modern challenges: resource constraints, shifting regulations, and an end-user base that values traceability alongside price and performance. Our experience manufacturing and refining bamboo fiber taught us that direct coordination with clients, not just selling on spot markets or pushing marketing sheets, delivers meaningful progress. Fielding questions from operators on the shop floor guided new drying techniques and washing steps; pilot line errors became quality checkpoints; complaints about “burnt” smells, sticky blends, or jamming led to line changes in our mill.

    If new regulations shift ingredient demands further, we already possess the flexibility and technical base to adjust processing and documentation. As product engineers with practical hands-on experience, we can run development trials in tandem with users, reducing risk and shortening the time from concept to successful production scale-up.

    The reality of scaling bamboo fiber from occasional specialty batches to mainstream use required resilience, technical rigor, and honest conversations with both our farmers and our industrial partners. We continue to invest in in-house lab support, advanced drying and cleaning tech, and traceable sourcing to live up to the expectations not just of today’s market, but of the evolving landscape of the future.

    Further Potential and Ongoing Innovations in Bamboo Fiber

    From our perspective as the factory, bamboo still offers untapped advantages. Research partnerships with universities and downstream users let us test new finishing chemistries, blends, and processing methods. Our development team is working on functionalizing fiber surfaces for improved compatibility with a broader range of polymer resins, and on blending techniques that preserve softness while adding strength.

    Early-stage work in our R&D lab aims to produce even finer grades of fiber for filtration and advanced nonwovens, while maintaining manageable production costs. Stronger collaboration with customers who share their in-line process data let us close feedback loops. Our future as a manufacturer depends on staying close to production realities, gathering feedback quickly, and applying what we learn as quickly as possible.

    While market demand for sustainable materials continues to rise in textiles, plastics, food packaging, and hygiene products, the pace of innovation is often limited by material processing obstacles. Tackling fiber odor, color, and consistency at the source, and investing in more efficient water-use and fiber recovery systems, form part of our ongoing strategy. These practical steps—not just claims on a product brochure—make our fiber a preferred choice across real-world applications.

    A Manufacturer’s Commitment: Serving Customers Directly

    We have found that long-term partnerships built on technical support and material consistency drive not only sales but sustainable growth for our customers and ourselves. We stand behind our bamboo fiber because the learning, experimentation, and investment come from first-hand, daily operations in our own facility, not just from trading or repackaging someone else’s product.

    Capacity continues to expand, but attention to real-world detail remains central: from keeping dust and bark out of each bag, to stemming moisture migration and ensuring every lot matches the agreed critical specs. As our own team works side-by-side with industry partners and field staff, every challenge becomes another step toward perfecting the process and product. We see bamboo fiber not merely as another sustainable ingredient, but as the result of years of tackling real business and technical challenges head-on and building a supply chain that can evolve with the industries we serve.

    If your procurement or technical team seeks transparency, material stability, or direct collaboration with people who manufacture and continuously refine fiber at the source, our plant and our approach stand ready. We openly share what we’ve learned and invite direct engagement—because only by building together can we move the industry forward, piece by piece, bale by bale.