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Acrylic fabrics as a source of microplastics from portable washer and dryer: Impact of washing and drying parameters
Summary
Researchers quantified microfiber release from acrylic fabrics during washing and drying in a portable appliance under various conditions, finding that doubling wash or dry time approximately doubled fiber release and that using detergent increased release nearly 3-fold compared to water alone. Fiber release decreased across successive laundering cycles as the fabric shed its most loosely attached fibers early in its use life.
Increasing uses of synthetic textiles are now a concerning issue as these synthetic textiles are shedding microfibers during the laundering of the fabrics and are considered as a potential source of microplastics (size <5 mm). In addition, manmade fibers like polyester, acrylic, and nylon represent 60% of the worldwide consumption of textile fibers. The novelty of this study is to assess the releasing trends of microfibers from acrylic fabrics during washing and drying under different conditions from a portable washer and dryer machine. Washing and drying effluents were filtered out which were further quantified with gravimetric analysis to determine the net weight of the released microfibers. Among different washing parameters, the mean length and diameter of the released microfibers were found to be approximately 2411 ± 1500 μm and 18 ± 4 μm, respectively. The results indicate that the release of microfibers increased by 2 and 1.4 times respectively when washing and drying time increased from 30 min to 60 min due to high mechanical stresses and longer rotational forces on the fabrics. The use of detergent during washing also promoted more microfiber release (162.49 ± 44.21 mg/kg) when compared to without detergent (60.22 ± 13.32 mg/kg). Moreover, microfibers were released approximately 1.8 times higher from washing when washed with 40 °C of water than with 20 °C of water. However, subsequent washing and drying cycles showed decreasing patterns of microfiber release as microfiber released 45% and 67% less during the 7th washing and drying cycle, respectively, compared to the 1st cycle. Results of this study would help to understand the releasing patterns of microfibers which can help to improve the existing systems to reduce the microplastic emissions from laundering.
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