Chemical Recycling of a Textile Blend from Polyester and Viscose, Part I: Process Description, Characterization, and Utilization of the Recycled Cellulose
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Experimental Section
2.1. Materials
2.2. Methods
2.2.1. Hydrolysis
2.2.2. Composition
2.2.3. Intrinsic Viscosity
2.2.4. WAXS
2.2.5. FTIR Spectroscopy
2.2.6. NMR Spectroscopy
2.2.7. Upscaled Process Layout
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. Experimental Study
Characterization of Reaction Products
3.2. Upscaled Process Layout
3.2.1. Use of Experimental Data
3.2.2. Proposed Process Layout
- There is no heat loss from the heat exchangers;
- The hydrolysis reactor is assumed to be well-insulated, so that the temperature of 90 °C can be held constantly during the reaction, with no need for supporting heat;
- The viscose fraction is still pumpable at a consistency of 30%;
- For the heating of water, the specific heat capacity is 4.2 kJ kg K−1.
3.2.3. Suggestions for Process Optimization
- Lower the textile-to-solvent ratio during hydrolysis significantly from 1:100. Assuming the same alkali consumption for a textile-to-solvent ratio of 1:10 would mean an input of 0.50 ton NaOH/ton textile, a residual alkali of 0.35 ton/ton textile, and a value of ~193 EUR/ton textile that is neutralized. Initial experimental results show that wetting of the cut fabric is possible down to a textile-to-solvent ratio of 1:15, and that full depolymerization of neat PET textile is achieved after 24 h of hydrolysis at this ratio.
- Lower the concentration of NaOH in the solvent from 5 wt%. Similar to the reduction of the textile-to-solvent ratio, this process change must also be experimentally evaluated to determine the lowest possible NaOH concentration without the risk of decreased yields.
- Separate the TPA salt in the filtrate from the dewatering press before precipitation (Figure 7) with a nano filtration (NF) membrane and/or ion exchange technology. By doing so, the permeate, with most of the residual alkali, could be recycled, and mixed back in with the textile feed. There are pH-stable NF membranes that appear as promising candidates which are able to withstand the alkaline filtrate, with a cutoff down to 200 Dalton [33]. The TPA salt (TPA-Na2) has a molecular weight of 210 g/mol, and might possibly be effectively separated in the NF membrane, although this should also be verified experimentally.
- Instead of having a gas burner, low pressure steam could be bought from the pulp mill. This removes the capital expenditure (gas burner) of the viscose/PET process, and, further, the pulp mill steam should be less expensive, as well as renewable, compared to natural gas.
- If it is not possible to separate the EG/Na2SO4 fraction, the existing infrastructure at the pulp mill may offer some alternatives for its disposal. If the EG/Na2SO4 stream can be treated as a normal effluent, it could simply be sent to the wastewater treatment plant. Otherwise, it could perhaps be evaporated, and subsequently incinerated in the recovery boiler; however, this would be at the expense of increased energy consumption in the mill’s evaporation plant. Furthermore, it must be investigated whether the amount of Na2SO4 in the stream will significantly alter the pulp mill’s Na/S balance, possibly increasing the NaOH makeup demand, as well as the associated costs.
- The chemicals used in the viscose/PET process, NaOH and H2SO4, are already used in the pulp mill. The viscose/PET process can potentially directly use the prepared solutions of these chemicals from the pulp mill.
- Other economic benefits related to infrastructure, such as a reduced need for land and ground preparation, shared buildings, and utilities infrastructure (e.g., power substation, fresh- and cooling water), as well as shipping and/or transportation.
4. Conclusions
Future Suggestions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Sample | Composition PET/Viscose | Form | Intrinsic Viscosity (T0) (mL g−1) |
---|---|---|---|
A | 0/100 | Fabric | |
A1 | 0/100 | Never laundered, cut | 167 |
A2 | 0/100 | Laundered, cut | 170 |
A3 | 0/100 | Laundred, shredded | 171 |
B | 30/70 | Filaments | 196 |
C | 30/70 | Garment from blended fibers | n.d. |
Time of Hydrolysis (min) | Viscose Mass Loss (%) | PET Mass Loss (%) |
---|---|---|
60 | 8.0 | 15.6 |
160 | 10.6 | 35.1 |
260 | 10.0 | 56.2 |
360 | 10.4 | 68.5 |
1440 | 11.6 | 99.8 |
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Peterson, A.; Wallinder, J.; Bengtsson, J.; Idström, A.; Bialik, M.; Jedvert, K.; de la Motte, H. Chemical Recycling of a Textile Blend from Polyester and Viscose, Part I: Process Description, Characterization, and Utilization of the Recycled Cellulose. Sustainability 2022, 14, 7272. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14127272
Peterson A, Wallinder J, Bengtsson J, Idström A, Bialik M, Jedvert K, de la Motte H. Chemical Recycling of a Textile Blend from Polyester and Viscose, Part I: Process Description, Characterization, and Utilization of the Recycled Cellulose. Sustainability. 2022; 14(12):7272. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14127272
Chicago/Turabian StylePeterson, Anna, Johan Wallinder, Jenny Bengtsson, Alexander Idström, Marta Bialik, Kerstin Jedvert, and Hanna de la Motte. 2022. "Chemical Recycling of a Textile Blend from Polyester and Viscose, Part I: Process Description, Characterization, and Utilization of the Recycled Cellulose" Sustainability 14, no. 12: 7272. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14127272
APA StylePeterson, A., Wallinder, J., Bengtsson, J., Idström, A., Bialik, M., Jedvert, K., & de la Motte, H. (2022). Chemical Recycling of a Textile Blend from Polyester and Viscose, Part I: Process Description, Characterization, and Utilization of the Recycled Cellulose. Sustainability, 14(12), 7272. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14127272