The Nonwoven fabrics are produced by bonding fibers together using methods like heat sealing, needle punching, chemical adhesion, and water jet entanglement. Since they are not formed through typical yarn weaving, they can take the shape of paper-like sheets, soft lining fabrics, or structured industrial membranes. The fiber bonding creates materials known for strength, softness, breathability, and absorption. Nonwoven fabrics offer advantages such as quick production, low cost, customization, and compatibility with many functional treatments like water resistance, fire resistance, antibacterial coatings, and enhanced filtration. These fabrics also help reduce raw material waste because production distributes fibers only where needed.

Their versatility supports a wide range of applications. In hygiene products, nonwovens are used in diapers, feminine hygiene layers, wipes, absorbent pads, and disposable underwear systems. The medical sector uses them in face masks, surgical gowns, hospital bedding, sterilization wraps, and wound care applications. Other sectors adopt nonwoven fabrics in agricultural crop covers, house insulation layers, automotive product linings, geotextile road protection sheets, roof membranes, soft fashion textiles, and industrial filters. Many nonwoven fabrics are made with fibers like polyester, polypropylene, viscose, cotton blends, and even biodegradable polymers, which help meet sustainability regulations. Their lightweight yet strong and adaptive structure ensures nonwoven fabrics continue shaping essential everyday and industrial manufacturing solutions.