Chemical Footprint of the Wet Processing
of Cotton Fabric
Research and development
Authors:
- Qian Weiran
School of Fashion Design & Engineering, Zhejiang Sci-Tech University, Hangzhou, China - Qiu Xiaoxiao (j/w)
- Guo Yiqi (j/w)
- Ji Xiang (j/w)
- Li Yi
Ningbo University, Zhejiang, P. R. China - Wang Laili
School of Fashion Design & Engineering, Zhejiang Sci-Tech University, Hangzhou, China
Nr DOI: 10.5604/01.3001.0014.8236
Full text | references | Abstract: The chemical footprint (ChF) can identify the harmful effects of discharged chemical pollutants, helping producers to select environmentally friendly chemicals to reduce their negative environmental impact. This paper quantified and evaluated the ChF of the wet processing of cotton fabric with data collected from a dyeing enterprise. The results showed that the discharged sodium hydroxide caused the most severe impact in terms of both human toxicity and ecotoxicity due to the extensive usage and its high toxicity. The discharged sodium carbonate and dimethyl silicone oil also had a greater environmental impact. Comprehensive evaluation of human toxicity and ecotoxicity with a multi-objective grey target decision-making model indicated that the pretreatment process had the most significant impact, followed by the finishing process and dyeing process. More attention should be paid to the pretreatment process, such as the selection of environmentally friendly textile chemicals, in order to reduce the native impacts of the wet processing of cotton fabric.
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Tags:
chemical footprint, USEtox, human toxicity, ecotoxicity, grey target decision-making model.
Citation:
Qian W, Qiu X, Guo Y, Ji X, Li Y, Wang L. Chemical Footprint of the Wet Processing of Cotton Fabric. FIBRES & TEXTILES in Eastern Europe 2021; 29, 4(148): 100-104. DOI: 10.5604/01.3001.0014.8236
Published in issue no 4 (148) / 2021, pages 100–104.