The industry is desperately in need of newer and very efficient dyeing, finishing, and functional treatments of textiles. There is a growing awareness and readiness to adapt to new perspectives on industrial upgrading through the Cleaner Production Programme. Such new technologies help enterprises achieve green production and cost reduction simultaneously. Green production has become necessary for enterprises under the upgrade and transformation policy. Therefore, there is an urgent need to promote new technologies in textile dyeing and finishing, injecting new thoughts into the industry.
Electrochemical Process Technology
Electrochemistry refers to the use of electrical energy in initiating chemical reactions, replacing traditional aid agents in direct chemical reactions. Taking sulfur dyes as an example, in traditional technology, sulfides (such as sodium sulfide, Na2S) are used as reducing agents. Although the reduction process is fast and direct, a large amount of chemical energy is wasted, and wastewater with a high chemical oxygen demand (COD) value is produced, making long-term operation inefficient. If direct electrochemical reduction is adopted, no reducing agents are needed, and the COD value of wastewater can be largely reduced, hence lowering the cost of wastewater treatment.
Direct electrochemical reduction is undoubtedly more efficient than traditional technology, and the underlying chemical principle is also simple. However, as the stability and oxidizing/reducing power of different chemical substances are not the same, dyes may not be directly and effectively reduced by electrodes. Hence the scope of utilizing direct electrochemical reduction is quite narrow. The principle of indirect electrochemical reduction is the same, but in operation, another strong oxidizing/reducing agent acts as a medium, which makes the technology more applicable to different kinds of dyes. Taking indigo as an example, traditional technology uses sodium dithionite (Na2S2O4) as a reducing agent, and the product should be re-oxidized in the air afterward to fix the color. Just like traditional reduction of sulfides, a large amount of chemical energy is wasted, and wastewater with high COD value is produced.
Enterprises attempt to reduce the amount of sodium dithionite used to lower production costs, but such attempts produce other difficulties as well. For example, injecting nitrogen can reduce the oxidation of sodium dithionite but is too expensive. Adding aldehydes or directly powering with electricity can improve the reducing power of sodium dithionite, but the problem of wastewater remains.
If indirect electrochemical reduction is adopted, the medium can replace sodium dithionite as the reducing agent. The medium can provide both oxidizing and reducing substances and can regenerate so that both waste and pollution can be reduced. Past experiments show that reduction by electrolysis can save about 90 per cent of production costs when compared with reduction by sodium dithionite.
Apart from reducing dyes, electrochemical process technology can be utilised in other aspects. Taking bleaching as example, the core principle of electrochemical mercerizing and bleaching is that bleaching chemicals can be produced by electrical energy and can be regenerated; hence the process is easily controlled, waste-reducing and energy-saving.The process can be monitored so that bleaching occurs evenly. Also, the cost and danger of transportation is greatly reduced, particularly regarding hydrogen peroxide which is explosive.
Another emerging project is the technology of ozone electrolysis. Ozone is strongly oxidizing and can be used in decolourising and other waterless dye treatments (e.g. ozone jets to prevent wearing out of jeans). As ozone can selfdecompose, it will not cause pollution problems once carefully treated.
Supercritical Fluid Dyeing Technology
Supercritical fluid refers to the phase of a substance with both temperature and pressure higher than the critical point (the point where liquid and gaseous phases of a substance become indistinguishable). This phase of a substance enjoys many advantages and can replace water in the dyeing process. The supercritical fluid normally used is carbon dioxide (CO2), as the critical temperature and pressure are easier to achieve than that of other substances. Moreover, carbon dioxide is also non-flammable without residues, so it is suitable for industrial use.
In traditional water-dyeing technology, textiles should undergo multiple processes with the help of aid agents, chemical salts, surfactants and reduction clearing agents. In contrast, for the supercritical waterless dyeing technology, only supercritical fluid is needed for dyeing and circulation, after which the pressure and temperature can be lowered and the whole process is finished, without producing any wastewater. Also, as carbon dioxide automatically detaches from textiles and remaining dyes, the latter can be reused. More importantly, as operation procedures are reduced, the dyeing cycle is also shortened from several hours to 15 to 60 minutes; energy is also saved due to the lower operational temperature.
Regarding the cost, although the equipment required for the process is quite expensive, the supercritical substance (carbon dioxide) is cheap and the technology enjoys an overall advantage in cost. On the other hand, although the technology is not mature enough regarding application in natural fibres, the quality of the end-product made of synthetic fibres is high. Overall, the effects of interactions between different textiles with supercritical substances are yet to be fully discovered.
Plasma Treatment Technology
When a substance in its gaseous phase absorbs enough energy, the outermost electrons in the atoms will escape the nucleus control and become free electrons, while the atoms become positively charged. This chemical status of a substance is called plasma. As it is volatile, it can discharge electricity under certain physical conditions and react with other substances (including textiles), leading to various chemical fusions and fissions. These effects can alter the surface structure of textiles; hence plasma is suitable for surface treatment.
Since only the surface structure of materials is altered by plasma, the substrate characteristics of textiles will not be affected.
Also, as small amount of plasma is enough to produce profound effect and one set of equipment can accommodate to different kinds of gaseous chemicals, the equipment is relatively cost effective and user friendly.
The kinds of plasma undergoing testing are varied, including silanes (SinH2n 2) (waterproof), freons (increasing surface tension and oil- and dirt-proof effects) and phosphoruscontaining organic monomers (fireproof), etc.
Plasma treatment technology can also improve existing dyeing technology, including the newly developed technology of metallised fabrics. On the other hand, HKPC attempts to integrate plasma reatment technology and supercritical fluid dyeing technology, and replace supercritical fluid with plasma in the dyeing process.
The low pressure plasma dyeing technology is still being developed.
The textile dyeing and finishing industry is considered energy-wasting and highly-polluting, which will be forced to withdraw under the upgrade and transformation policy.
However, with technological development on a full swing, traditional industries are able to overcome technical difficulties and revive after the financial crisis.
Originally Published in New Cloth Market, Jan-2011
Comments