Reclaiming spent liquor from cotton reactive dyebaths using nanofiltration membrane for possible reuse of water and salt


Autoria(s): Shu, L.; Waite, T. D.; Bliss, P. J.; Fane, A. G.; Pailthorpe, M. T.; Jegatheesan, V.
Contribuinte(s)

Panswad, T.

Polprasert, C.

Karnchanawong, S.

Data(s)

01/01/2003

Resumo

During dyeing, salts are placed in a dyebath to aid the fixation of various dyes on to the fabric while bases are added to raise the pH from around neutral to pH 11. Afterwards, the used dyebath solution, called dyebath spent liquor, is discharged with almost all the salts and bases added as well as unfixed dyes. Consequently, a lot of raw materials are lost in the waste stream ending up in the environment as pollutants. In this study, possibilities of reusing water and salts of dyebathes were investigated, using a nanofiltration membrane. When the salt concentration in the spent liquor was increased from 10 to 80 g/L, the salt rejection by membrane was found to decrease initially; however, the salt rejection increased over the time, which was not expected. The aggregation of dye was also studied and found to decrease in the concentrate when the salt concentration was increased. This may be due to the aggregation of salt in the concentrate, which explains the increase in salt rejection. This information is useful for the textile industry in evaluating the treated water quality for the purpose of reuse.<br />

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10536/DRO/DU:30039594

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

IWA Publishing

Palavras-Chave #dye aggregation #dye rejection #nanofiltration membrane #salt associates #salt rejection
Tipo

Conference Paper