Scientists come up with technology to recycle used clothes rather than simply burning them
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- January 13, 2024
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January 12, 2024 This article has been reviewed according to Science X's editorial process and policies . Editors have highlighted the following attributes while ensuring the content's credibility: fact checked peer reviewed publication trusted source proofread by Jeppe Kyhne Knudsen, Aarhus University When you go running in the woods in your running tights, elastane is the reason they fit you so comfortably.
Elastane is an elastic material that allows the fabric to stretch and adapt to your body. But when elastane fibers are mixed with cotton, wool, nylon or other fibers, as is the case in many clothes today, the clothes become almost impossible to recycle. It is extremely difficult to separate out the different fibers, and therefore the materials in the clothes cannot be recycled.
For this reason, clothes and other textiles are among the materials that we are the worst at recycling. Only about 6% of clothes thrown away by Danish households are recycled. In comparison, 32% of all plastic packaging is recycled in Denmark. But this may change, says Assistant Professor Steffan Kvist Kristensen from the Interdisciplinary Nanoscience Center at Aarhus University.
Together with a number of colleagues, he is behind a new technology that can separate out fibers in mixed fabrics. The work is published in the journal Green Chemistry . "We've developed a method to remove elastane completely from nylon. We're not quite there yet with cotton, because some of the cotton fibers are broken down in the process.
But we believe that, with some minor adjustments, we can solve this problem," he says and continues: "In other words, we can disassemble the fabric so that we can recycle far more textiles in the future." It is not easy to separate elastane and other fibers once they have been woven together.
Clothes are made by winding the main fibers, such as nylon or cotton, around the elastane fibers, which consist of long chains of molecules. The fibers only break apart if we break the long chains of molecules, explains Steffan Kvist Kristensen. "The many links in the elastane chain are bound together by a small molecule called a diamine.
By heating the clothes to 225 degrees Celsius and adding a specific alcohol, we have found a method to break down the bonds in elastane. When this happens, the chains fall apart and the materials separate. "The whole process takes place in what is in effect a large pressure cooker that we feed the textiles into.
We then add a little alcohol and some base and heat it up. Then we let it cook for just over four hours, and when we open the lid again, the different fibers will have been separated." When the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor on 7 December 1941, the United States not only lost several thousand soldiers, hundreds of aircraft, and many of its largest warships.
The country also lost access to about 90 percent of the natural rubber they depended on so much. Therefore, like the Germans, they began to produce synthetic rubber . After the war, production of synthetic rubber led to the discovery of a number of derived synthetic fibers that could be used in textiles.
One of these fibers was elastane. In 1958, the chemist Joseph Shivers invented elastane, or Spandex as it is also often called in the United States. Since then, elastane has found its way into more and more of our clothes.. Because most of the fibers in the clothes need to be recyclable, using harsh chemicals is not an option for Steffan Kvist Kristensen and his colleagues.
Instead, they use alcohol and add a potassium hydroxide base. "Potassium hydroxide is one of the main ingredients in ordinary drain cleaner. We found that adding this accelerated the process. It simply increases the speed of the chemical reaction," he says. He doesn't know why this happens exactly, but it does break the bonds in the elastane.
"We're pretty sure that potassium hydroxide increases the reactivity of our alcohol. Either that, or the bonds are broken down slightly by the potassium hydroxide , so it is easier for the alcohol to break them completely," he says. So far, Steffan Kvist Kristensen and his colleagues have only experimented with two nylon stockings at a time.
The technology is therefore not yet ready for implementation at industrial scale. This will require being able to decompose much larger amounts of clothing. "We can only scale things up a little because of the limitations in our equipment. So it's up to industry to embrace the technology and scale it up in earnest," he says.
However, according to Steffan Kvist Kristensen, Denmark does not currently have the facilities to exploit the technology at large scale. You'll have to look south of the border for this. "The chemical industry in Denmark is small, but Germany has some of the largest plants in the world. They will most likely be able to use our method to recycle large amounts of fibers from elastane containing clothes.
"If we're to succeed with this, we need to get the large chemical plants on board. But they must see a business model in buying recycled materials and using them in the production of new fibers. If they don't, the technology will never take off." More information: Martin B. Johansen et al, Selective chemical disassembly of elastane fibres and polyurethane coatings in textiles, Green Chemistry (2023).
DOI: 10.1039/D3GC02994H Journal information: Green Chemistry Provided by Aarhus University.