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Recycling Textiles: From Post-Consumer Polyester Garments to Materials for Injection Molding
Summary
Researchers explored recycling post-consumer polyester garments into materials suitable for injection molding, testing the effects of color sorting and chain extender additives on processability. They found that dark-colored textile flakes showed more degradation during processing, but bisoxazoline-based chain extenders significantly improved material ductility regardless of color. The study demonstrates the industrial feasibility of converting textile waste into valuable recycled plastic products, supporting circular economy initiatives.
The significant waste generated by the fashion industry necessitates sustainable textile recycling strategies. Polyester, made from poly(ethylene terephthalate) (PET), is abundant in post-consumer textiles. Technologies have been developed to convert low-density garment waste into flakes, but the role of color sorting in achieving uniform aesthetics in injection-moldable plastics remains underexplored. This study compares materials extruded from dark color-sorted polyester garment flakes with those from light-color flakes in terms of processability in extrusion and injection molding. The properties examined include melt fluidity, injection molding shrinkage, and mechanical and thermal properties. Commercial chain extenders with anhydride, oxazoline, or epoxide reactive groups were added during extrusion. Interestingly, only dark-colored extruded pellets showed significant degradation, but all the chain extenders allowed melt fluidity to be controlled during reprocessing. The bisoxazoline-based additive was the most promising, due to the highly improved ductility of the samples, regardless of whether they were dark-colored or light-colored. The results indicate significant potential for the industrial recycling of post-consumer textiles and highlight the industrial feasibility of repurposing post-consumer polyester garments. This approach not only supports initiatives of circular economy but also offers a viable solution for managing textile waste, particularly in the fashion industry. Additionally, the suggested recycling route combats the production of microplastics.