Enter Your keyword

Search the whole station Pandemic Supply

What is the difference between woven and flocked swabs?

Woven and flocked swabs differ primarily in their fiber construction and absorption properties, making them suitable for different applications, especially in medical, diagnostic, and industrial settings.

  1. Woven Swabs
    Construction: Made from tightly woven or braided fibers (often cotton or polyester).

Absorption: High liquid retention due to dense fiber structure.

Linting: May shed fibers, which can interfere with sensitive applications (e.g., DNA sampling).

Common Uses: General-purpose cleaning, wound care, and non-critical medical applications.

  1. Flocked Swabs
    Construction: Features short, perpendicular nylon fibers attached to the tip (like a brush).

Absorption: Rapid liquid absorption and release (better sample collection for diagnostics).

Linting: Virtually lint-free, reducing contamination risks.

Common Uses:

Medical/Diagnostic: COVID-19 testing, DNA/RNA collection, forensic sampling.

Industrial: Precision cleaning (electronics, optics).

Key Differences
Feature Woven Swabs Flocked Swabs
Fiber Type Woven/braided fibers Short, upright fibers
Absorption High retention Fast absorption/release
Linting Possible shedding Lint-free
Precision Lower Higher (better sample collection)
Cost Usually cheaper More expensive
Best Choice?
For diagnostics (PCR, viral tests): Flocked swabs (better sample elution, no lint).

General cleaning or wound care: Woven swabs (cost-effective, high absorbency).

Would you like recommendations for a specific application?

The prev:

Related recommendations

Expand more!

We value your privacy
We use cookies to enhance your browsing experience, serve personalized ads or content, and analyze our traffic. By clicking "Accept All", you consent to our use of cookies.
Our Privacy Policy

Accept All