Title: Investigation of Dye-Fiber Reactions in SC-CO2
1Investigation of Dye-Fiber Reactions in SC-CO2
- NSF Green Processing Summer Research Experience
for Undergraduates - Faculty Mentors Dr. David Hinks and Dr. Gerardo
Montero - Graduate Student Mentor Mr. Ahmed El-Shafei
- North Carolina State University, College of
Textiles - Undergraduate Student Nneka C. Ubaka-Adams
- Bennett College and North Carolina Agricultural
and Technical State University
2Abstract
- This project is one phase of the push to use
carbon dioxide as an environmentally safe solvent
as opposed to the traditional solvent of choice,
water. The piece under investigation is the
reaction between a specific functional group and
nylon and wool fibers at varying temperatures.
The bond strength was measured indirectly by
measuring the color fastness. After the dyed
fiber was measured for color depth (by way of
reflectance curve) it was rinsed with acetone and
measured again. Extreme loss in color implied
weak or incomplete bonding minor loss in color
indicated complete or very near complete covalent
bonding. It is expected that temperature will
have a direct effect on the degree of complete
covalent bonding.
3Objectives
- To demonstrate and quantify dye-fiber covalent
bond formation between selected dyes and nylon,
wool and cotton fibers in a supercritical carbon
dioxide medium - To optimize reaction conditions (temperature,
pressure and time) - To conduct a literature review
4Who and What does this Research Affect?
- Economy
- The dyeing industry
- The entire textile industry
- Health
- Factory Workers
- water systems
- Quality of Products
- Textile consumers
5Background
- Conventional dye-fiber reactions use water as a
transport medium, and result in - Low reaction efficiency due to the competing
hydrolysis reaction with hydroxyl ions in water
(hydrolyzed dye cannot react w/fiber) - Environmental problems due to residual,
unreacted/hydrolyzed dye present in effluent - Replacing water with supercritical fluids (SCF)
as a transport medium can result in - Eliminating toxic waste (no hydrolyzed
by-product) - Lower costs for the entire dyeing process
6Hypothesis
- Color fastness of fibers dyed in supercritical
fluid will be similar to fibers dyed in water - Color fastness of fibers dyed with disperse
(non-reactive) dye will be extremely low - Dye-fiber Reaction (color fastness) will be
directly proportional to the temperature increase
7Chemistry of Dyes
- Reactive dyes for cotton, rayon, silk, and wool
form stable chemical links with textile materials
to produce colored fabrics with excellent overall
fastness, other dyestuffs only form loose bonds
with fibers (VS-dye) - Acetate, nylon, and polyester fibers colored with
dispersed dyes retain their color even after
repeated exposure to sunlight and washing (ES-dye)
8Conventional aqueous-based dye-fiber reaction
Polyamide (nylon 6.6.)
9Dye-Fiber Reaction in SC CO2
Polyamide (nylon 6.6.)
no hydrolyzed by-products
10Sulfonyl-azo-dyes
11Dyeing Procedure
- Add fiber and dye to vessel
- Pressurize system (with CO2) up to 800 psi and
stir at approximately 850 rpm - Heat to required temperature (100 -180 ºC)
- Pressurize to 3500 psi hold for 2 hours
- Release pressure, remove fabric
12(1) Gas cylinder of CO2, (2) High pressure pump,
(3) Autoclave reactor vessel with stirrer, V
1000 ml, (4) Circulation pump- acquisition in
future (5) Electrical heating jacket
CO2 Dyeing System
13High Pressure Batch Reactor
14Testing Dye-Fiber Reaction
- Measure color strength (K/S) of each dyed fiber
- Wash fiber with acetone (remove surface dye)
- Conduct soxhlet extraction using ethyl acetate
(to remove unreacted dye) - Compare effect of vinylsulfone reactive group on
dye fixation
15Results
16Results
17Comparison of Dyed Fabrics
18Initial Conclusions
- Color depth improved with increasing temperature
- Strong evidence for dye-fiber bond formation
using vinylsulfone-based dye on nylon and wool - ES-dyeing on wool fibers showed extremely low
color yields after extraction (no reaction) - 94 fixation at 180 oC/ 3500 psi on wool
19Future Work
- Test time as a factor- 60-90 min
- Test with cotton fiber
- Test with commercial dye
- Test with different amount of dye- i.e. 0.5
o.w.f, 1.5 o.w.f. - Extract nylon fibers with a better solvent
20Acknowledgements
- NSF Green Processing REU
- North Carolina State University, College of
Textiles - Dr. Christine Grant
- Dr. Steve Peretti
- Dr. David Hinks
- Dr. Gerardo Montero
- Mr. Ahmed El-Shafei
- Mrs. Kirsten Reberg-Horton
- Mr. Lynell Williamson
- Jacob Hooker
- Mr. Jeff Krauss
- Mr. Chris Cazzola
21Acknowledgements
- This research was conducted with the support of
the NSF - Green Processing Undergraduate Research Program
with a - grant from the National Science Foundation, Award
- Number, EEC-9912339.