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Textile Recycling’s Hidden Problem: Surface-Modified Fiber Fragments Emitted at Every Stage
Summary
Researchers investigated microplastic fiber release during chemical recycling of polyester-cotton blended textiles and found that the dye removal stage generated the highest fiber counts, averaging around 10,055 fibers per gram of textile waste. Alkaline hydrolysis reduced fiber emissions during the treatment stage by nearly 88% compared to acid hydrolysis. The study highlights that textile recycling processes, while essential for sustainability, can themselves be a significant source of microplastic fiber pollution.
Chemical recycling methods for post-consumer textile waste are effective for sustainable textile waste management. However, recycling synthetic and blended (cotton and synthetic) textiles can contribute to the release of microplastic fibers (MPFs) into the environment. This study investigated MPF release across different stages of two chemical recycling approaches, acid and alkaline hydrolysis, of polyester/cotton-blended textiles. Recycling involves various stages, including dye removal, treatment stage, and product. In the treatment stage, acid hydrolysis breaks down cotton into cellulose, leaving the polyester (PET) intact, whereas alkaline hydrolysis degrades PET, allowing cotton recovery. Across all stages, dye removal generated the highest MPF count, averaging nearly 10,055 MPFs g-1 of textile waste. Statistical analysis confirmed that the recycling approach significantly affected MPF release (p < 0.05), whereas the fabric type did not (p > 0.05). Alkaline hydrolysis reduced MPF release during the treatment stage by 87.55% compared to acid hydrolysis, indicating that recovering cotton and chemically degrading PET can significantly minimize MPF emissions during recycling. Ridge regression analysis identified the reaction conditions as key factors in MPF fragmentation, with blend ratios influencing the number of released MPFs. Surface characterization revealed treatment-induced fiber alterations, raising concerns regarding MPF emissions throughout the process. These findings highlight the textile recycling industries can be a source of MPF release into the environment, but recovering PET through degradation or dissolution can help minimize this impact of the treatment stage.
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TextileRecycling’s Hidden Problem: Surface-ModifiedFiber Fragments Emitted at Every Stage
Researchers investigated microplastic fiber (MPF) release during chemical recycling of polyester/cotton-blended textiles, finding that the dye removal stage emitted the highest MPF count at nearly 10,055 MPFs per gram, while alkaline hydrolysis reduced MPF release by 87.55% compared to acid hydrolysis during the treatment stage.
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