The impact of textile wet colouration on the environment in 2011


Autoria(s): Hurren, Chris; Li, Qing; Wang, Xungai
Contribuinte(s)

[Unknown]

Data(s)

01/01/2011

Resumo

Wet textile colouration has the highest environmental impact of all textile processing steps. It consumes water, chemicals and energy and produces liquid, heat and gas waste streams. Liquid effluent streams are often quite toxic to the environment. There are a number of different dyeing processes, normally fibre type specific, and each has a different impact on the environment. This research investigated the energy, chemical and water requirements for the exhaust colouration of cotton, wool, polyester and nylon. The research investigated the liquid waste biological and chemical oxygen demand, salinity, pH and colour along with the energy required for drying after colouration. Polyester fibres had the lowest impact on the environment with lowest water and energy consumption in dyeing, good dye bath exhaustion, the lowest salinity levels in their effluent, relatively neutral pH effluent and low energy in drying. The wool and nylon had similar dye bath requirements and outputs however the nylon could be dyed at far lower liquor ratios and hence provided better energy and water use figures. The cotton and wool required high energy consumption in drying after colouration. Cotton performed poorly in all of the measured parameters.

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10536/DRO/DU:30042297

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

[EDFGC ]

Relação

http://dro.deakin.edu.au/eserv/DU:30042297/hurren-theimpactof-2011.pdf

http://acedf.zstu.edu.cn/hy_en/hy_index_en.asp

Palavras-Chave #colouration #dyeing #environmental impact #energy #cotton #wool #polyester #nylon
Tipo

Conference Paper