Austria's TU Wien develops efficient filters from cellulose waste
29 Apr 24 3 min read
Insights
- Efficient filters developed at TU Wien use cellulose waste to remove harmful dyes from water.
- A nanostructure combines waste cellulose with polyacrylonitrile, creating a high-surface-area nanoweb.
- Tests show 95 per cent removal of violet dye in three cycles.
- Further research aims to evaluate mechanical properties, biocompatibility, and scalability.
Organic dyes represent the largest group of synthetic dyes, including so-called azo compounds. They are widely used in the textile industry, even in countries where little attention is paid to environmental protection, and the dyes often end up in unfiltered wastewater. "This is dangerous because such dyes degrade very slowly, they can remain in the water for a long time and pose great danger to humans and nature," said professor Gunther Rupprechter from the Institute of Materials Chemistry at TU Wien.
There are various materials that can bind such dyes. But that alone is not enough. "If you simply let the polluted water flow over a filter film that can bind dyes, the cleaning effect is low," explained Rupprechter. "It's much better to create a nanofabric out of lots of tiny fibres and let the water seep through." The water then comes into contact with a much larger surface area, and thus many more organic dye molecules can be bound.
"We are working with semi-crystalline nanocellulose, which can be produced from waste material," said Qaisar Maqbool, first author of the study and postdoc in Rupprechter's research group. "Metal-containing substances are often used for similar purposes. Our material, on the other hand, is completely harmless to the environment, and we can also produce it by upcycling waste paper."
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This nano-cellulose is ‘spun’ together with the plastic polyacrylonitrile into nanostructures. However, this requires a lot of technical skill. The team from the TU Wien was successful with a so-called electrospinning process. In this process, the material is sprayed in liquid form; the droplets are electrically charged and sent through an electric field.
"This ensures that the liquid forms extremely fine threads with a diameter of 180 to 200 nanometers during curing," added Rupprechter. These threads form a fine tissue with a high surface area - a so-called nanoweb. A network of threads can be placed on one square centimetre, with a total surface area of more than 10 cm2 .
The tests with these cellulose-coated nanostructures were very successful: In three cycles, water contaminated with violet dye was purified, and 95 per cent of the dye was removed. "The dyes remain stored in the nanoweb. You can then either dispose of the entire web or regenerate it, dissolve the stored dyes and reuse the filter fabric," explained Rupprechter.
However, more work needs to be done: evaluating the mechanical properties of the sophisticated nanowebs, conducting biocompatibility tests, assessing sensitivity to more complex pollutants, and achieving scalability to industrial-grade standards. Now Rupprechter and his research team want to investigate how this dye filter technology can be transferred to other areas of application. "This technology could also be very interesting for the medical field. Dialysis, for example, also needs filtering out very specific chemical substances from a liquid,” concluded Rupprechter.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (RR)
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