0
Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Environmental Sources Sign in to save

Textile microfibers valorization by catalytic hydrothermal carbonization toward high-tech carbonaceous materials

iScience 2024 5 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
S. Parrilla-Lahoz, Marielis C. Zambrano, Joel J. Pawlak, Richard A. Venditti, Tomás Ramı́rez Reina, J.A. Odriozola, Melis S. Duyar

Summary

Catalytic hydrothermal carbonization using iron-nickel catalysts successfully converted cotton and polyester textile microfibers into carbon nanostructures including carbon nanotubes, offering a circular economy pathway for the 0.28 million tons of microfibers shed annually during laundry.

Polymers

Microplastics fibers shed from washing synthetic textiles are released directly into the waters and make up 35% of primary microplastics discharged to the aquatic environment. While filtration devices and regulations are in development, safe disposal methods remain absent. Herein, we investigate catalytic hydrothermal carbonization (HTC) as a means of integrating this waste (0.28 million tons of microfibers per year) into the circular economy by catalytic upcycling to carbon nanomaterials. Herein, we show that cotton and polyester can be converted to filamentous solid carbon nanostructures using a Fe-Ni catalyst during HTC. Results revealed the conversion of microfibers into amorphous and graphitic carbon structures, including carbon nanotubes from a cotton/polyethylene terephthalate (PET) mixture. HTC at 200°C and 22 bar pressure produced graphitic carbon in all samples, demonstrating that mixed microfiber wastes can be valorized to provide potentially valuable carbon structures by modifying reaction parameters and catalyst formulation.

Sign in to start a discussion.

More Papers Like This

Article Tier 2

Upcycling textile derived microplastics waste collected from washer and dryers to carbonaceous products using hydrothermal carbonization

Researchers collected real textile microfiber waste from washing machine and dryer microfilters and converted it to carbon materials using hydrothermal carbonization at different temperatures and durations. The resulting carbonaceous products showed promising properties as adsorbents and electrode materials, offering a pathway to upcycle laundry-derived microplastic waste into functional materials.

Article Tier 2

Charting a path to catalytic upcycling of plastic micro/nano fiber pollution from textiles to produce carbon nanomaterials and turquoise hydrogen

Researchers demonstrated proof-of-concept for catalytic upcycling of polyester and cotton textile-derived microfibers into structured solid carbon products, using a defined fiber feedstock to establish a pathway for converting fiber pollution into value-added carbon materials.

Article Tier 2

Valorization of synthetic textile waste using CO2 as a raw material in the catalytic pyrolysis process

Researchers developed a catalytic pyrolysis process using CO2 as a raw material to valorise synthetic textile waste, addressing microplastic release from synthetic fibres as an upstream source reduction strategy. Thermal cracking of waste textiles under CO2 produced syngas and CH4, demonstrating a pathway to convert non-biodegradable synthetic fibre waste into value-added products.

Article Tier 2

Spectroscopic Analysis of Microplastic Fibers Released During Laundry Washing Cycle

Researchers analyzed microplastic fibers released from synthetic textiles during laundry washing cycles using FTIR spectroscopy, demonstrating that spectroscopic identification of fiber polymer type is feasible and identifying key fiber release characteristics from different fabric types.

Article Tier 2

In Situ Functionalisation and Upcycling of Post‐Consumer Textile Blends into 3D Printable Nanocomposite Filaments

Researchers developed a one-pot chemo-thermo-mechanical process to convert blended post-consumer textile waste directly into 3D-printable nanocomposite filaments without pre-separation, offering a route to upcycle mixed synthetic garments and reduce textile waste.

Share this paper