Textile Recycling Technologies, Colouring and Finishing Methods


Table 13: Developments in New Fibre Materials



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Table 13: Developments in New Fibre Materials
 20
 
Company 
Technology/Material 
Agraloop Bio-refinery 
Production of natural fibre from crop waste 
Algiknit 
Fibres from seaweed extract 
AMSilk 
Synthetic silk biopolymers 
Aquafil and Genomatica 
Bio-based caprolactam for Nylon 6 generation 
Bolt Threads 
Synthetic spider silk 
Invista * 
142,143 
 
Bio-based Lycra (elastane) derived from renewable butanediol 
(raw material source made from dextrose, derived from corn) 
Ioncell-F 
Conversion of wood pulp to cellulosic textiles 
Mango Materials 
Production of naturally occurring biopolymer 
(polyhydroxyalkanoate polyesters -PHAs) from waste 
biogas/methane emissions, used for production of biodegradable 
PET products 
Orange Fibre 
Citrus by-product-based fibres 
Pinatex 
Pineapple leaf-based fibres 
Qmilk 
Milk-based fibres 
Resyntex 
Biochemical processing to produce value-added products from 
wool (resins and adhesives), cotton (bioethanol), polyester (bio-
based plastic bottles), nylon (new chemicals) 
Spinnova 
Wood fibre-based yarns 
Virent, with Far Eastern 
New Century * 
144
 
Plant based polyester, Bio-PET 
* commercialized 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 


Textile Recycling Technologies, Colouring and Finishing Methods | Le 
39 
4.0 TEXTILE COLOURATION AND CHEMICAL FINISHING 
Enormous amounts of chemicals and water are used during textile production to facilitate physical 
and chemical processes to achieve desired properties. Dyes and chemicals applied during finishing 
stages of the production process may be used to impart aesthetic (colour) or functional qualities 
(flame resistance, water repellency, wrinkle resistance, etc.). Significant efforts have been made 
in the management and treatment of chemicals and effluents from the various processing routes. 
Many technologies have been developed and applied from fibre to finished product stages to 
reduce energy, effluent loads, processing costs, and improve wastewater treatment.
145
At present, there is a lack of information and traceability of chemicals and their content remaining 
in textile products from usage to end of life, specifically in post-consumer textiles. Additionally, 
with labelling, legal requirements and regulations differing from country to country, this results in 
the lack of knowledge regarding potentially hazardous chemicals used in sourced textiles. In recent 
times, the European REACH regulation (Registration, Evaluation, Authorisation and Restriction 
of Chemicals) has been criticized for further aggravating the issue of hazardous textile chemicals 
on the environment and human health.
146
The regulation has been blamed for causing increased 
relocation of the European textile dye sector to Asia, where supply chains are less regulated, and 
rife with environmental pollution, thereby creating a loss of jobs, stifling innovation, and resulting 
in chemical monopolies.
146
  
It has been noted that chemical coatings and dyes may comprise up to 5-15% by weight to a 
finished garment.
6
 Additionally, in the realm of automotive textiles, it is estimated that one car 
may contain an average 23 kilograms of dyed and finished textiles.
146 
This poses potential risks to 
human health, commonly through skin contact, and implications on material recovery, owing to 
limited understanding of the interaction of chemicals present in feedstock with process chemicals 
applied in recycling treatments.
28
 In addition, potential pre-treatment or cleaning steps that may 
require more costly and toxic chemicals to achieve their removal.

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