Towards Sustainable Textiles for a Safer Planet: Main Topics
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- Serious financial imbalances;
- Recession in the US and Europe;
- Oil price volatility;
- Energy and water costs increasing;
- Sustainability and environmental awareness;
- China and India becoming dominant economic players;
- Africa and certain Asian and Subcontinent countries gaining importance;
- Slower textile consumption internationally, with less than 2% growth forecasted through 2020.
2. Circularity and Sustainability
3. Specific Characteristics of the Textile Discipline
- ▪
- The management of transport processes (water, air, water vapor, other liquids);
- ▪
- Protection against deleterious environmental influences, which include microorganisms, UV radiation, extreme climatic conditions, and ecological production;
- ▪
- Ease of care, including washing and ironing;
- ▪
- Ecological processing of wastes (recycling, new structures, biodegradability);
- ▪
- Achieving new effects (cosmetic, self-cleaning property, health care support, etc.);
- ▪
- Controlled active identification during limited visibility.
- ▪
- Low deformation to break and low creep;
- ▪
- Resistance to environmental influence (e.g., UV radiation, moisture, temperature, etc.);
- ▪
- High abrasion resistance;
- ▪
- Possibility to withstand long-term exposure to heat or cold;
- ▪
- Resistance to cyclic stress and exposure to chemicals;
- ▪
- Low degradation while stored and slow aging under the condition of use.
4. New Tools for the Design of Textiles
5. Selection of Fibrous Materials
- Class 1: Extracted directly from cellulose-based biomasses with or without modification. Example: starch-modified polymers and polymers derived from bacterial cellulose.
- Class 2: Produced directly from microorganisms in their natural or genetically modified state. Example: Polyhydroxyalcanoates (PHAs).
- Class 3: Obtained with the participation of bio-intermediaries produced by renewable raw materials. Examples: PLA; bio-polyethylene (BPE) by polymerization of ethylene produced from bio-ethanol, bio nylon via diacids from biomasses, and bio-polyurethanes from polyols of vegetable origin.
- Raw materials
- B.
- Durability
- C.
- Processing after the period of use
6. Production of Textiles
- Realization of ecological production (not adversely impacting the environment and not endangering life on the planet);
- Reducing the production of waste (waste-free technologies utilizing concepts of regeneration, recuperation, and reuse);
- Reduction in energy consumption (use of alternate reaction media), process optimization, and alternate energy sources;
- Use of renewable resources (biotechnology, green chemistry);
- Elimination or replacement of potentially toxic compounds usually due to degradation processes (new kinds of solvents, replacement of heavy metals, and some dyestuffs);
- Disposal of waste and used products (biodegradation, reuse of raw materials, transformation, and upscaling into high-value products).
7. Utilization of Textiles
- They are mainly fiber fragments and are usually needle-shaped. The reason is the internal fibrillar structure of the fibers and the geometric shape of the textile fibers, which are long and thin. The consequence of the needle shape can be easier mechanical damage to tissues and cells, mechanical disruption of cell walls, etc. [53,54].
- Compared to other polymers, textile fibers are usually contaminated with potentially non-polymeric toxic compounds, which can be textile dyes, finishing agents, TiO2-based matting particles, and, more recently, metal and metal oxide particles.
- Fiber microplastics are a consequence of the everyday use, maintenance, and reprocessing or mechanical recycling of textiles, so their adverse cumulative effects are serious.
8. Waste Processing
- (i)
- Reuse loop: extending the life of the product by multiple uses;
- (ii)
- Repair loop: After completion of a preceding product cycle, damage control or repair is required to make the product ready for successive cycles;
- (iii)
- Reconditioning: use of the used product as a raw material for the manufacturing of a new product;
- (iv)
- Recycling loop: Waste generated is collected and reprocessed to prepare starting material for the new products. Recycling textiles into lower-quality products (downcycling) is especially not very challenging, as the products require less stringent compositional and mechanical properties. In order to recycle textiles into higher-quality products (upcycling), new kinds of fibers from waste are obviously needed.
- During yarn production, textile secondary raw materials are processed on shredding machines into fibers that are used as an admixture to primary fibers. When processing fiber waste, the length of the fibers must be checked, in particular with regard to spinnability [60].
- The production of non-woven textiles currently uses the largest share of textile secondary raw materials. Non-woven textiles for the technical industry do not place such an emphasis on color or surface appearance, as is the case for home textiles. Non-woven textiles made from secondary raw materials are mainly used as heat and sound insulation material in the construction industry, as sound insulation and filling material in the construction of vehicles and aircraft. These materials are suitable as insulating materials in the electrical industry. They are also used in the clothing, footwear, and housing industries [59].
- Industrial cotton wool (waffle) is formed by densifying the fibers into a fleece, in which the fibers are held together by natural cohesion. In order to preserve the characteristic features, industrial cotton wool is sometimes strengthened by applying a binder to the surface of the fleece. Bandage cotton wool is made from raw cotton material; a fiber mixture is used for the production of industrial cotton wool. Textile waste is also used as a secondary raw material for non-textile processing, e.g., for the production of paper, special boards, flat textile boards, fillers, and reinforcing materials [59].
- Used clothing that can be pre-sorted or part of municipal waste. For pre-sorted waste, the main problem is both the mixture of different fibers and the presence of non-fibrous materials (buttons, zippers, membranes, plastic and metal parts, etc.). Municipal clothing waste is normally heavily polluted and can be attacked by various microorganisms. These wastes are normally created only after the physical or moral wear of clothing textiles or the termination of their real applicability.
- Used home textiles, such as carpets, covers, curtains, etc., which are usually multi-layered and contain a predominant proportion of non-fibrous materials in some layers. In some cases (e.g., replacement of floor coverings in US department stores), there will be a local need to process a large volume of practically the same waste, which will facilitate the search for an economically advantageous solution. These wastes are created over a longer time horizon.
- Waste from industrial textiles (e.g., construction textiles) and composites containing a fiber component again contain a significant proportion of other polymeric or non-polymeric components that are normally combined in one layer. In a number of cases (e.g., the automotive industry), it is a requirement that the problem of waste processing already be solved at the product design stage, which leads to the selection of materials in order to facilitate the process of recycling or further processing. These wastes are created in the medium to long term.
- Economic disadvantages: Many recycled textile wastes are unsuitable for use due to the widespread production of lower-grade products from textile recycling. Prices of recycled textile fibers are influenced by the high cost of the recycling processes.
- Composition of textile products: The base components of many textile products make them unsuitable for recycling. There are difficulties in separating the mixture of various polymers with different properties. Increased textile fiber strength complicates their shredding.
- Non-availability of recyclable wastes: The quantity of textile waste that is suitable and accessible for recycling is insufficient. A limited quantity of textile waste only is usually collected and sorted for recycling.
- Technological limitations: There is a lack of technologies for sorting textile waste in preparation for recycling. Most methods cannot separate dyes and other contaminants from the rest of the waste fibers.
- Limited public participation: Knowledge (ignorance of what to recycle) and attitude (non-commitment to the ideals of recycling) barriers.
- Quality of wastes containing PET
- B.
- Pretreatment of wastes
- C.
- Depolymerization system
- D.
- New synthesis of PET
- E.
- Preparation of fibers
9. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Characteristic | Energy Consumption [kW per kg Fiber] | Freshwater Consumption [liter per kg Fiber] | CO2 Emissions [kg per kg Fiber] |
---|---|---|---|
Cotton | 48 | 1559 | 2.2 |
Polyester | 108 | 21 | 3.3 |
Polyamide | 160 | 40 | 8.3 |
Wool | 120 | 530 | 17 |
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Militký, J.; Křemenáková, D.; Venkataraman, M.; Aneja, A.P. Towards Sustainable Textiles for a Safer Planet: Main Topics. Sustainability 2024, 16, 5344. https://doi.org/10.3390/su16135344
Militký J, Křemenáková D, Venkataraman M, Aneja AP. Towards Sustainable Textiles for a Safer Planet: Main Topics. Sustainability. 2024; 16(13):5344. https://doi.org/10.3390/su16135344
Chicago/Turabian StyleMilitký, Jiří, Dana Křemenáková, Mohanapriya Venkataraman, and Arun Pal Aneja. 2024. "Towards Sustainable Textiles for a Safer Planet: Main Topics" Sustainability 16, no. 13: 5344. https://doi.org/10.3390/su16135344
APA StyleMilitký, J., Křemenáková, D., Venkataraman, M., & Aneja, A. P. (2024). Towards Sustainable Textiles for a Safer Planet: Main Topics. Sustainability, 16(13), 5344. https://doi.org/10.3390/su16135344