From a Nonwoven Roll Manufacturer to You
Have you ever wondered how a roll of polypropylene spunbond nonwoven fabric is made?
Unlike traditional woven fabrics (which require spinning yarn, then weaving on a loom), spunbond nonwoven is produced in a single, continuous, highly efficient process.
Let's walk through the production line step by step.
Everything starts with 100% virgin polypropylene (PP) resin — small, translucent pellets that look like tiny plastic beads.
These pellets are the same base material used in many plastic products, but for nonwovens, we use a specialized grade with specific melt flow index (MFI) — typically 25–40 g/10min — which ensures proper fiber formation.
Optional additives (UV stabilizers, flame retardants, pigments) are mixed with the resin at this stage.
The PP pellets are fed into a heated extruder. Inside the extruder, a rotating screw pushes the pellets forward through heated zones — typically 220°C to 260°C (428°F to 500°F).
The pellets melt into a thick, honey-like polymer liquid.
The molten polymer passes through a filtration system to remove any contaminants or unmelted particles. Then, a metering pump precisely controls the flow rate to the spinneret — ensuring consistent fabric weight (GSM).
The molten polymer is forced through a spinneret — a metal plate with hundreds or thousands of tiny holes (typically 0.3–0.6mm diameter).
As the polymer exits the spinneret, it forms continuous liquid filaments. Immediately, high-speed air (quench air) blows onto the filaments to cool them from liquid to solid.
This is the "spun" part of spunbond.
After cooling, the solid filaments pass through a high-speed air drawing nozzle. This stretches the filaments to several times their original length, which:
The drawn filaments are then laid onto a moving conveyor belt (called a forming wire). A vacuum system underneath the belt pulls the filaments down, creating a uniform, random-laid web.
This random orientation is what gives spunbond its uniform strength in all directions — unlike woven fabric, which tears easily along the weave.
The random web has no strength yet — the filaments are just loosely resting on each other. Now they need to be bonded.
The web passes through a calender (heated rollers) — typically two rollers:
Heat and pressure (around 150°C–170°C) partially melt the filaments at the contact points, fusing them together. The result: a strong, cohesive fabric.
This is the "bond" part of spunbond.
Depending on the application, the fabric may receive surface treatments:
The finished fabric passes through edge trimming (to ensure clean, straight edges), then is wound onto large cardboard cores — typically 3-inch or 6-inch inner diameter.
Roll widths typically range from 1.6m to 3.2m, depending on the production line. Roll lengths vary by GSM and customer requirements.
Before shipping, every roll undergoes quality testing:
Passing rolls are wrapped in protective plastic, labeled, and prepared for shipment.
| Stage | Equipment | Output |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Raw material | Hopper / Resin silo | PP pellets + additives |
| 2. Extrusion | Single-screw extruder | Molten polymer |
| 3. Spinning | Spinneret + quench air | Solid continuous filaments |
| 4. Drawing | High-speed air nozzle | Oriented, stretched filaments |
| 5. Web formation | Forming belt + vacuum | Random-laid filament web |
| 6. Bonding | Heated calender rollers | Bonded nonwoven fabric |
| 7. Winding | Winder / slitter | Finished rolls |
| Advantage | Why It Matters |
|---|---|
| High production speed | Up to 600 m/min — much faster than weaving |
| Continuous filament | No lint, no fraying, no weak spots from short fibers |
| One-step process | From resin to fabric in minutes — low energy, low labor |
| Uniform properties | Consistent GSM and strength across the entire roll |
| Recyclable | 100% PP — can be reprocessed into new products |
| Process | Fiber Type | Typical Strength | Common Applications |
|---|---|---|---|
| Spunbond | Continuous filament | High | Medical, agriculture, packaging, geotextiles |
| Meltblown | Microfiber | Low | Filtration, mask middle layer |
| Carded (Staple fiber) | Short cut fibers | Medium | Interlinings, wipes, insulation |
The spunbond process is elegant in its simplicity — melt, spin, lay, bond, wind. From raw resin to finished fabric in a single, continuous line.
No weaving. No knitting. No sewing. Just high-strength, uniform, cost-effective fabric produced at industrial scale.
That's why spunbond nonwoven has become the material of choice for billions of disposable and durable products worldwide.
Looking for a reliable supplier of PP spunbond nonwoven rolls? We manufacture single-layer spunbond from 10gsm to 150gsm, with custom widths and colors available.
Contact us for samples or a quote – Let's discuss your nonwoven needs.

E-mail : marketing@henghuanonwoven.com
Add : No.260 Liqi Road Hangcheng Street, Changle District, Fuzhou City, Fujian Province, China
leave a message
Scan to Wechat :
Scan to WhatsApp :